In June 1990 I found myself in Romania again: in Constanta. Another television assignment. A survey conducted by the French Antenne Deux gave me a chance to show off my knowledge of my native land. We went around asking women how they had gotten by in the years of the dictatorship. A lady formerly prominent in provincial society nostalgically described to us the glory of bygone days in a harbor town full of interesting consular officers of various nationalities (preferably Italian) and marvelously dashing naval officers. This splendor came to a sudden end followed by years of adversity during which (before her husband — an engineer who owed his unemployment to his bourgeois origins — died) she had been forced to sell all her “real” carpets. She had survived only thanks to her marriage “far beneath my station” to an electrician. When he died he left her a two-room apartment and a small pension. No heartrending tragedy this; her tale was more or less typical of the flat-footed spiritual lives of the bourgeoisie.

The next was a prototypical harem beauty: roundly full-fashioned from top to bottom with magnificent black hair luminous eyes cherry mouth and a faint shadow of mustache beneath a finely curved nose. Gay as a goldfinch she told of three simultaneous lovers who made her life endurable: a Party functionary to protect her; a cook at a state-run restaurant to give her food; a customs official who spoiled her with luxury products (perfumes silk stockings and American cigarettes). After the coup she’d declared the Party official superfluous and given him the boot. The two others were still current. She expected of the newly established democracy that in future she could limit herself to a single lover.

The third woman we interviewed was a young prostitute: dirty-blond pretty as a picture slender limbs fine features. She’d been plying her trade since the age of fourteen. Now she was twenty-three. It was impossible to understand how such a creature survived the patronage of dockworkers Russian Turkish and Bulgarian sailors East German vacationers from Mamaia.