In Teige’s story Tomas saw the dead horses and thought of his youngest brother. In Teige’s story, Tomas’s heart wept then as he remembered the times innocent ages since when he and his brothers had ridden horses and ponies in fields daisied and green. Tomas remembered all their days and nights and weakened there on the roadside and did not think he could continue, until sometime later a family came passing and the emaciated father asked him if he would carry one of their boys.
Tomas carried two. Without discourse, without nicety of introduction or comment of any kind, they left that scene where the horses were denuded of even their tails and the crows pecked with impunity the glassy eyes. They travelled silent and with graven, inconsolable expression and shouldered among many others of that kind into the city of Cork.
There Tomas walked along the dockside in scenes teeming with all humankind. The air was sharpened with men’s cries and commands as families stood and jostled and bargained and bought passage across the ocean. Women wore grim, stoic expressions. Their mouths were small and thin-lipped, as though food were a fading memory, and their children sat and lay curled on the ground and made a low wailing that issued without effort. In the story that Teige told himself in the long nights on the island, Tomas found work there on the docks loading chests and supplies on board tall ships that creaked on the changing tide. He worked and was paid pennies and stayed in a cramped and crowded boardinghouse with others waiting to escape. And in four weeks he bought passage for himself on a ship called Liberty. He stepped belowdecks for the first time in his life and as he went deeper down into the ship found the daylight fractured and then gone altogether. He stumbled and reached for his way while the bosun’s whistle sounded and men ran to and fro and commands were called out on the decks above him. He heard them hurrying about over his head. At last then Tomas arrived in the quarters of the poor and sat amidst the huddled hundreds who stared through the gloom and said nothing but coughed in the queer damp air of that place that was to be their home below the surface of the sea.
Of the twins, Teige’s stories were less sure. He imagined Finbar in extravagant worlds of myriad and mortal dangers. He dreamed pirates, raging armies, weird weathers of hurricane and typhoon, thick, suffocating snows of white goose feathers, huge floods red as roses, tigers sabre-toothed and snarling, snakes, elephants, a whole terrain crawling with spiders, strange exotic natives with pierced tongues who ate the skins of others. Mammoths, dragons, flocks of bloodsucking bats, mutilators, murderers, thieves, and bounty hunters with skulls dangling and knocking like coconuts by their saddle’s side. All of these and more populated Teige’s stories of Finbar and the gypsies. Of Finan the stories were less clear. He had killed a man and was gone off for contrition. He had become a healer, a layer-on of hands, or had joined up with a troupe of actors and performed in tragedies Shakespearean and made all weep with the deep and potent veracity of his grief. He wore greasepaint and his eyes were darkened hollows and nightly he was struck down and died and from such was his own soul briefly healed. Sometime when Teige could not bear the tale or the vision he saw of his brothers’ afflictions, he summoned a land of lovely women. He closed his eyes on the night and smelled and remembered scent of the room of Elizabeth and saw her multiplied a hundred times and standing naked and tender and beautiful like flowers in a field. And for the remainder of that night then he did not leave that imagined place but stayed with her and forgot the world of pain and allowed his brothers rest and peace.
And all this while, across the way, his father sat in Saint Senan’s tower and bowed his head and stared endlessly through the telescope at the sky. He placed his eye to the glass and for hours did not move it away, and this, though the clouds did not pass and there were no stars to be seen.
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In truth by that time Finbar Foley had led the gypsies on the long walk south out of the snowy mountains and bartered with what things they had and those they found for the timber that made new caravans. It took some time before they were again ready and equipped to travel, but the pause was welcome to all.
During those weeks they did not move on. Now their leader, Fin-bar imagined he must announce to them a destination, but he himself had no clear idea of one. Not being of gypsy blood, he did not understand that such was not required of him; the gypsies never journeyed toward an end, for motion was an end in itself Nonetheless, wrongly believing that this was needed to validate his leadership, Fin-bar Foley sought to give it to them. So, one dawn, he rose from beneath the blanket where Cait the mer-girl was grown large with his twin daughters and he walked out where the embers of the fire smoked and called the gypsies to rise and move on. They did so, coming to life in the grey light and tackling up new horses for the way ahead. When they were ready, Finbar looked along the line of them and felt a surge of pride as if he were some valiant captain trooping into battle. He sat beside Cait in the front caravan and snapped the reins and drove the line of caravans down across that country that lay to the south of the Maritime Alps. Nor by then was Cait the only pregnant woman among them, for in the weeks that followed, one by one of all of those within the perimeters of childbearing years announced themselves to be expecting, as well as two prune-faced women who boasted they were a youthful sixty. Finbar did not announce then that he would bring them to Bohemia, or make speeches on the notion of a homeland, though these loomed in his mind. Indeed, he did not know where Bohemia was but had like others before him fallen upon the idea of its being a spiritual home for gypsies and did not for one moment imagine that he could be wrong. Still, he kept the destination secret. He told the gypsies only that he would bring them to a place where they belonged, and where the weathers would be clement and the people welcome them like cousins lost.
That this was a fantasy of his own making, and born out of the need to believe such a place would exist for his own children, did not stop him from believing in it. Nor did he realize how his hopes fell into the selfsame shapes as those once dreamed by his father.
So, travelling with care for the pregnant, and with such slow indolence that measurement of progress was impossible, the gypsies moved through Liguria like an oil of olives. They arrived at the banks of the river Po and followed along them and bargained and traded with villagers there and heard tales of wars and battles and the affairs of a world in which they were no more than shadows. One of the older women who was expecting her fourteenth child had a vision there of yellow birds flying in her stomach. A night later three more of the women had the same dream and two nights later six more. They were uncertain of its provenance, but to set at ease their wives and to make real the thing imagined, their husbands went and returned with a dozen canaries in wicker cages. The visions vanished then and the canaries hung outside the front hoop of the caravans and rocked there on perches and sang sometimes to the swaying of those roads. It was discovered the birds’ humour foretold the weather; how they sang or perched or flew predicted the rains or wind to come, and the men, learning of this, were pleased to pretend they had known all along and not bargained for the birds merely to placate their women.
Before it reached the sea, the gypsies left the Po and turned northward around the Gulf of Venice. It was the summer of that year. The canaries sang sweetest and the sun shone and the swollen women took to lying in the grass and lifting their shirts and smocks and exposing to the warmth the pale orbs of their future progeny. They said the sun would give them sons. Leaving them so, Finbar sailed to the fabled city that was a thousand islands, and there in the shop of old Fabrizio Benardi he saw his first map of the known world. He could not believe it. He unfurled it across four tabletops and moved his palms outward upon it like two flat-bottomed boats travelling in opposite directions and revealing places of which he had never heard. Old Benardi, who himself had never left Venice, had purchased the map from a navigator who had arrived from the Indies. He had been assured the map was an authentic and accurate rendering even to the point of those islets previously considered too minor to merit inc
lusion. On the map, Fin-bar studied the place where they were, and where he imagined Bohernia to be. It was not so very far away. His sons could be born there, he thought at once, and the sons and daughters of all those in the caravans. It would be a glorious new beginning. He lifted his hands and the world rolled closed. He spun around in the dust that flew upward off all the handmade papers and scrolls of that shop and brought his face close to Benardi’s. Finbar Foley was still an impressive figure, the breadth of his chest, the thickness of his eyebrows, his firm chin and fiery stare all lent him the air of one not to be denied. He told the Venetian he had to have the world, and he offered him gold coins he did not possess for it. The old man agreed the sale, and that afternoon Finbar Foley stole the coins at knifepoint from a Jew he followed from the Rialto. He returned to Benardi’s in haste and later took the map back to the gypsies, along with several bottles of ink, some sheets of yellowish paper, and a half dozen masks that Fabrizio Benardi thrust toward him when he caught the scent of violent desperation burning the dust. That evening the gypsy men gathered to look at the map but to Finbar’s surprise were only briefly interested in it. They could not match the shape of the lines drawn on the paper with the endless terrain they had traversed back and forth in their lifetimes. It was no more like the world than the sketch of a man was like a man. Though Finbar could not see it, it made less of the gypsies’ one great wealth, their intimate and unrivalled knowledge of all the richly varied landscapes that existed. For they alone knew the world.
Despite their indifference, later that night Finbar showed the map to Cait with all the excitement of a New World discoverer. He fingered her their route through the mountains, and pointed the way ahead, and was too rapt in his own fervour to notice her brown eyes turning longingly back to fix on that western island where they had begun.
When they left there, the caravans and wagons creaked under the weight of the pregnancies. They passed northward through lands governed by Hapsburgs and met old peasants on the roadside who asked them what the world was like to the south. There were some among them who remembered the armies of Napoleon and when those same places they stood in had been renamed the Illyrian provinces. And they told of how the maps of that country had been drawn and redrawn many times and the people lived on hungry among the linden trees no matter who their sovereign. And the gypsies agreed and understood this and took their time there and shared what they had and sang songs in the night ancient and sorrowful.
At last the caravans moved on and the summer passed into an autumn mild and tender. Misreading the map, Finbar took them east across the great Hungarian plain when they should have gone north. He allowed the road to take them and they journeyed ever more slowly as the women’s pregnancies neared their time. In the vast wilderness of steppe they saw none but foxes and trundling boars and herds of deer standing or moving like dancers to some music in the wind. It was a place great and empty, and crossing it, the gypsies felt the smallness of themselves and their caravan as though all others in the world had perished. Even the canaries hushed then. The wheels rattled. The birds sat on their perches and swayed. Finally they came to the shores of the huge Lake Balaton. And, as though there were some ancient folkloric mechanism that operated there, once they saw and heard the lapping of the waves the women’s waters broke in unison. Their cries rang out from each of the caravans and at once the canaries burst into song. The gypsies made quick camp and the men lit fires and stood about them and were silent while the few women who were not with child hurried back and forth with cloths bloodied and sleeves rolled. The night fell like a velvet curtain and while the women cried and the men waited stars were spun upon it out of the dark.
All this time Finbar had feared in secret for Cait’s pregnancy. He had suffered dreams where he saw her sex bleed a river. The blood was thick and gushed alarmingly and flowed across the floor and out the door to the sea, and all the time Cait was lain on her back and the gypsies were gathered about her, awaiting the birth. Then in the dream the child was born and its birth was a kind of fluidity or issuance without effort and the gypsies were amazed and applauded. Then they began to laugh. And the laughter took the shape of white gannets and these then were beating in the air above where Cait lay. And when Finbar looked down to see his child, the birds were swooping to attack it, and he had to wave his arms about and it was still moments before he looked down and saw the infant had been born with the lower body of a fish.
He woke then, lathered in a white film with his eyes wide. But the dream recurred on many nights through the pregnancy, and sometimes in the dark he had woken to find the air beneath the hoop of canvas heavy and putrid with the smell of fish and silvery scales upon his tongue.
So, on the Night of Labours, Finbar Foley passed into a kind of torment that, though not equal to that of his wife, wrung him like a cloth. The first of the children was born just after midnight to the sexagenarian mother, who made no cry at all but claimed the birth felt like a hairball dropping softly out of her insides. Her son, Primo, was borne out on the night by his ancient father, and the others who were still attendant on the arrival of their own offspring greeted it with half-glad nods and thin smiles. The child did indeed resemble a ball. Its head was very large and covered with a downy fur, and although the other fathers-to-be did not say anything, there passed through each of them the same painful vision, imagining how such a huge ball could pass out through the smallness of a woman’s sex. The births came on in waves then. The cries and excitements of the midwives passed along the caravans and flamed torches were held aloft and there were embraces among those who were uncles and cousins and bottles of a clear, fiery liquid flashed in the starlight. It was a wonder, the synchronicity of those births like some vast clock set in the heavens and chiming the beginning of a new gypsy age. Or so the fathers said. Hot-faced and exulting in their achievement that was nothing at all, they proclaimed, they made announcement, they sawed the air with their hands and predicted marvels. Moving from one to the other, and taking the congratulations he was given for bringing them there, Fin-bar secretly studied each child for oddities. Secundo was a big boy also, born without defect. As were all the others that were pressed into his arms as if for benediction during that long night. Finbar took them and held them an instant and tried to look pleased, but the truth was that with each perfect one, his soul was tormented further by the certainty that his own child would emerge a monster.
His fear was without reason. But as the night drew on and it became clear that Cait was to suffer the longest labour and her screams came piercingly out of the caravan where three women attended her, the fear grew to certainty. He went up to the caravan and dared to lift the flap of the canvas to look in and see the river of blood. But one of the women spun around at once and cursed at him and shook her whiskered chin and pulled the canvas closed again. He stood there and heard his wife cry and briefly he thought of his own mother and whatever world she had gone to. He threw back his head then and shouted out a sound, and the gypsies about him did not understand it, for it was in a language not theirs. And he shouted it again and added before it the name of his family, and shouted it out to the swirling stars of that night by the great lake in the country that was like none any Foley had ever seen before. He shouted the words, and boars in the woods unseen stopped, foxes froze. He shouted the words and in so doing echoed his own father years before when teaching the boys in games of hurling the cry of defiance that led to victory.
“Abu! O Fhogli abu!”
Finbar Foley shouted it out and then raised his fists and shook them in the air as if at the face of some celestial beast.
The other gypsies who were about him then were startled but saw the urgency of his cry and were moved to join him. They all raised their fists and shook them and were a chorus that would not be denied.
And like all swift and traceless epiphanies, it came to Finbar Foley then that he must catch a fish. He looked out across the dark, mutable waters of the lake. He heard the laps and slaps
of soft collapse as the waves sighed, and then he was running out to the water’s edge and followed by the loud surge of the newly made fathers. None had any idea at first what he was about, but each had drunk the burning juniper-flavoured whiskey that was of that place. They splashed into the chill waves and yelled as the cold bit at their calves. But Finbar was farther out still and was waist-deep and then dove out of sight. The gypsies stopped and were like puppets suspended. Their faces were like things fixed in rigid pose, not knowing if he was to come back again. They knew the tales of whole lands hidden beneath the surfaces of lakes, they knew the lore of demons and water sprites and other faery enchantments and of the many who had disappeared without a trace. There was a long moment in the stillness and silvered dark of the lake. Then Finbar broke the surface again. He stood and shook a wide corona of lake water from his long hair and then dove again. This time the meaning of his actions translated itself to the fathers, and in a great rush then they too dove down into the lake. The scene if not beheld was one such as beggared imagination. Like strange nocturnal seabirds the gypsies plunged in the cold waters, some rising as some were vanishing. Bodiless heads appeared and bobbed and then flapped out winglike arms, while next to these were the disappearing legs and lower bodies of others. The lake was alive with them, diving and surfacing again, breaking the glittered reflection of sky and its scintilla of stars. They were like some that had drunk a potion or been charmed under a spell. As though their lives depended upon it, the gypsies dove for fishes. These, coming through the lake in vast schools of gentle fluttered motion, can only have been amazed as the men’s bodies crashed down and appeared bubbling before them, the faces wide-eyed and blind in the night water. The men’s hands reached and grasped, they made slow, broad arcs of attack, causing wild underwater currents and whirling eddies so that the fish themselves were spun about and swam flatly and sideways like ones demented. Still, the gypsies caught some of them. They made nets of their shirts, some of their trousers. Others managed the impossible and bare-handed the fishes into the air. They broke up through the surface with a cry and held aloft in the small light the flashing trophies. The gypsies bobbed there on the cold water and did not know what to do then until Finbar himself appeared with a great thrashing fish and shouted the same cry as before and stepped forward and waded out of the lake with the capture in his arms. The others followed then. They walked up the banks in the night with the fishes in their arms and were like an image out of some perished mythology, fathers cradling with bewilderment the changed forms of their sons. They came to the caravan where Cait was silent now and they stood around in a throng, the men with fishes and the others who held torches. Then Finbar knelt down and placed the one he had caught on the ground before the caravan. All of the gypsies followed suit until there was a small hill of fishes flapping and thrashing out of their element.
The Fall of Light Page 21