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Cristina Rivera Garza - Lilianas Invincible Summer A Sisters Search for Justice

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Cristina Rivera Garza Lilianas Invincible Summer A Sisters Search for Justice

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Copyright 2023 by Cristina Rivera Garza All rights reserved Published in the - photo 1
Copyright 2023 by Cristina Rivera Garza All rights reserved Published in the - photo 2

Copyright 2023 by Cristina Rivera Garza

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Hogarth, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

H ogarth is a trademark of the Random House Group Limited, and the H colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

This work, while originally written in English, is based on and shares themes with El invencible verano de Liliana by Cristina Rivera Garza, published in Spanish by Literatura Random House, Barcelona, in 2021.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Rivera Garza, Cristina.

Title: Lilianas invincible summer : a sisters search for justice / Christina Rivera Garza.

Other titles: Invencible verano de Liliana. English

Description: First edition. | New York : Hogarth, [2023]

Identifiers: LCCN 2022014200 (print) | LCCN 2022014201 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593244098 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593244104 (ebook)

Subjects: LCSH: Rivera Garza, Liliana, 1969-1990. | Rivera Garza, Cristina, 1964Family. | Intimate partner violenceMexico. | Murder victims familiesMexico.

Classification: LCC PQ7298.28.I8982 Z4613 2021 (print) | LCC PQ7298.28.I8982 (ebook) | DDC 362.88/20972dc23/eng/20221028

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022014200

LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022014201

Ebook ISBN9780593244104

randomhousebooks.com

Book design by Jo Anne Metsch, adapted for ebook

Cover design: Cassie Gonzales

Cover illustration: Eric Zener

ep_prh_6.0_142549205_c0_r0

In the midst of winter I found there was, within me, an invincible summer.

Albert Camus

Contents

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I
AZCAPOTZALCO

Time heals everything, except wounds.

Chris Marker , Sans Soleil

[here, under this branch, you can speak of love]

The tree is brimming with invisible birds. At first I think it must be an elm treeit has the same sturdy and solitary trunk supporting the sprawling branches that I recognize from my childhoodbut soon, just a couple days later, it is clear that it is an aspen, a foreign species transplanted long ago to this part of Mexico City, an area poor in native vegetation. We sit beneath it, right on the edge of a yellow curb. The sun slowly setting. Across the busy street and behind tall metal gates, gray factory towers stretch upward, and heavy power lines bend, barely horizontal, against the sky. Trailers drive by at great speed, as do taxis and cars. Bicycles. Of all the evening noises, the sound of birds is the most unexpected. I have the impression that if we move beyond the trees shadow we will not be able to hear them anymore. Here, under this branch, you can speak of love. // Beyond lies the law, the need, / the trail of force, the preserve of terror. / The fief of punishment. // Beyond here, no. But we listen to them and in some absurd, perhaps unreasonable, way their repetitive and insistent singing triggers a calm that cannot erase disbelief. Do you think she will come? I ask Sorais as she lights a cigarette. The lawyer? Yes, she. I have never known what to call that movement, when lips pressed together stretch toward one side of the face, dismissing any illusion of symmetry. Im sure well see her soon, she says in response, spitting out a strand of tobacco. In any case, it wouldnt hurt to wait another half hour. Or another hour. Looking at her sideways, hesitantly, I have to admit to myself that I mentioned the lawyer because I wanted to avoid asking her to wait with me. Supplicate is the verb. I did not want to beg. I did not want to beg you to wait here with me for a little longer because I dont know if I will be able to, Sorais. Because I dont know what animal I am unleashing deep within. We are now six hours and twenty minutes into a journey that started at noon, in what now seems to have been another city, another geological era, another planet.

[twenty-nine years, three months, two days]

Wed agreed to meet at noon at the place where I was staying. An old house turned into a boutique hotel. A white fence flanked by bougainvillea and vines. An old gravel passageway. Palm trees. Rose bushes. And while I wait for Sorais with some anticipation, I dont take my eyes off the city on the other side of the windows. It welcomes just about everyone, this city. It kills just about anyone too. Lavish and unhealthy at the same time, cumulative, overwhelming. Adjectives are never enough. When Sorais arrives at the house that is to be my home those few autumn days in Mexico City, I dont know if I will be able to.

There are two things I must do today, I tell her right away as we hug and exchange greetings. The aroma of soap in her hair. The moisture of her skin after a hot bath. Her voice, which I have known for years. Well lets go then, she answers immediately, without even asking for more details. It might take all day, I warn her. And it is then that she pauses, looking into my eyes. So where are we going? The intrigue in her voice betrays expectation, not suspicion. I am silent. Sometimes it takes a bit of silence for words to come together on the tip of the tongue and, once there, for them to jump, to take the unimaginable leap. This dive into unknown waters. To the Mexico City Attorney Generals Office, near the downtown district. She keeps quiet for a moment now, paying close attention. About two weeks ago, I tell her, on another trip to the capital city, I met up with John Gibler, the journalist who helped me start the process of finding my sisters file. She looks down, and then I know for a fact that she knows. And understands. After a brief search in the newspaper archives, I continue, John found the news just as it was published in La Prensa twenty-nine years ago. He managed to contact Toms Rojas Madrid, the journalist who wrote the four articles that documented the murder of a twenty-year-old architecture student in a surprisingly restrained tone, in language devoid of emotion or sensationalism, succinctly depicting the crime that had alarmed a neighborhood in Azcapotzalco on July 16, 1990. And I came, I continue explaining, to meet the two of them, the two journalists, at the Havana Caf, that famed and crowded place, and walked with them to the building of the Mexico City Attorney Generals Office. Because I wanted to file a petition there, I tell her. How does one even formulate such a letter? Where does one learn the protocols for requesting a document of this nature?

October 3, 2019. Mexico City.

C. Ernestina Godoy Ramos. Attorney General of Mexico City.

My name is Cristina Rivera Garza, and I am writing to you as a relative of LILIANA RIVERA GARZA, who was murdered on July 16, 1990, in Mexico City (Calle Mimosas 658, Colonia Pasteros, Azcapotzalco Delegation). I am writing to request a full copy of the case file that at the time corresponded to Public Ministry record no. 40/913 / 990-07.

If you need more information, please do not hesitate to contact me at the following address.

Best regards.

There is only a slim chance of recovering the file, I clarify again, after all these years. Twenty-nine, I added, twenty-nine years and three months and two days. I am silent again. Things are so difficult sometimes. But they are supposed to have an answer for me today, I say.

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