Witch of Portobello

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Witch of Portobello Page 9

by Paulo Coelho


  So what kept me sitting there, trying to keep the conversation going? The answer is very simple: curiosity. I couldn’t understand what that brilliant light was doing there in the cold hotel foyer.

  I continued: “Mircea Eliade wrote books with strange titles: Occultism, Witchcraft and Cultural Fashions, for example. Or The Sacred and the Profane. My teacher”—I inadvertently let the word slip, but she either wasn’t listening or else pretended not to have noticed—“loved his work. And something tells me it’s a subject you’re interested in too.”

  She glanced at her watch again.

  “I’m going to Sibiu,” she said. “My bus leaves in an hour. I’m looking for my mother, if that’s what you want to know. I work as a real estate agent in the Middle East, I have a son of nearly four, I’m divorced, and my parents live in London. My adoptive parents, of course, because I was abandoned as a baby.”

  She was clearly at a very advanced stage of perception and had identified with me, even though she wasn’t aware of this yet.

  “Yes, that’s what I wanted to know.”

  “Did you have to come all this way just to do research into a writer? Aren’t there any libraries where you live?”

  “The fact is that Eliade only lived in Romania until he graduated from university. So if I really wanted to know more about his work, I should go to Paris, London, or to Chicago, where he died. However, what I’m doing isn’t research in the normal sense of the word: I wanted to see the ground where he placed his feet. I wanted to feel what inspired him to write about things that affect my life and the lives of people I respect.”

  “Did he write about medicine too?”

  I knew I had better not answer that. I saw that she’d picked up on the word teacher and assumed it must be related to my profession.

  The young woman got to her feet. I felt she knew what I was talking about. I could see her light shining more intensely. I only achieve this state of perception when I’m close to someone very like myself.

  “Would you mind coming with me to the bus station?” she asked.

  Not at all. My plane didn’t leave until later that night, and a whole, dull, endless day stretched out before me. At least I would have someone to talk to for a while.

  She went upstairs, returned with her suitcases in her hand and a series of questions in her head. She began her interrogation as soon as we left the hotel.

  “I may never see you again,” she said, “but I feel that we have something in common. Since this may be the last opportunity we have in this incarnation to talk to each other, would you mind being direct in your answers?”

  I nodded.

  “Based on what you’ve read in all those books, do you believe that through dance we can enter a trancelike state that helps us to see a light? And that the light tells us nothing—only whether we’re happy or sad?”

  A good question!

  “Of course, and that happens not only through dance, but also through anything that allows us to focus our attention and to separate body from spirit. Like yoga or prayer or Buddhist meditation.”

  “Or calligraphy.”

  “I hadn’t thought of that, but it’s possible. At such moments, when the body sets the soul free, the soul either rises up to heaven or descends into hell, depending on the person’s state of mind. In both cases, it learns what it needs to learn: to destroy or to heal. But I’m no longer interested in individual paths; in my tradition, I need the help of—Are you listening to me?”

  “No.”

  She had stopped in the middle of the street and was staring at a little girl who appeared to have been abandoned. She went to put her hand in her bag.

  “Don’t do that,” I said. “Look across the street at that woman, the one with cruel eyes. She’s put the girl there purely in order to—”

  “I don’t care.”

  She took out a few coins. I grabbed her hand.

  “Let’s buy her something to eat. That would be more useful.”

  I asked the little girl to go with us to a bar and bought her a sandwich. The little girl smiled and thanked me. The eyes of the woman across the street seemed to glitter with hatred, but for the first time, the gray eyes of the young woman walking at my side looked at me with respect.

  “What were you saying?” she asked.

  “It doesn’t matter. Do you know what happened to you a few moments ago? You went into the same trance that your dancing provokes.”

  “No, you’re wrong.”

  “I’m right. Something touched your unconscious mind. Perhaps you saw yourself as you would have been if you hadn’t been adopted—begging in the street. At that moment, your brain stopped reacting. Your spirit left you and traveled down to hell to meet the demons from your past. Because of that, you didn’t notice the woman across the street—you were in a trance, a disorganized, chaotic trance that was driving you to do something that was good in theory, but, in practice, pointless. As if you were—”

  “In the blank space between the letters. In the moment when a note of music ends and the next has not yet begun.”

  “Exactly. And such a trance can be dangerous.”

  I almost said: “It’s the kind of trance provoked by fear. It paralyzes the person, leaves them unable to react; the body doesn’t respond, the soul is no longer there. You were terrified by everything that could have happened to you had fate not placed your parents in your path.” But she had put her suitcases down on the ground and was standing in front of me.

  “Who are you? Why are you saying all this?”

  “As a doctor, I’m known as Deidre O’Neill. Pleased to meet you, and what’s your name?”

  “Athena. Although according to my passport I’m Sherine Khalil.”

  “Who gave you the name Athena?”

  “No one important. But I didn’t ask you for your name, I asked who you are and why you spoke to me. And why I felt the same need to talk to you. Was it just because we were the only two women in that café? I don’t think so. And you’re saying things to me that make sense of my life.”

  She picked up her bags again, and we continued walking toward the bus station.

  “I have another name too—Edda. But it wasn’t chosen by chance, nor do I believe it was chance that brought us together.”

  Before us was the entrance to the bus station, with various people going in and out—soldiers in uniform, farmers, pretty women dressed as if they were still living in the 1950s.

  “If it wasn’t chance, what was it?”

  She had another half an hour before her bus left, and I could have said: “It was the Mother. Some chosen spirits emit a special light and are drawn to one another, and you—Sherine or Athena—are one of those spirits, but you need to work very hard to use that energy to your advantage.”

  I could have explained that she was following the classic path of the witch, who, through her individual persona, seeks contact with the upper and lower world but always ends up destroying her own life—she serves others, gives out energy, but receives nothing in return.

  I could have explained that although all paths are different, there is always a point when people come together, celebrate together, discuss their difficulties, and prepare themselves for the Rebirth of the Mother. I could have said that contact with the Divine Light is the greatest reality a human being can experience, and yet, in my tradition, that contact cannot be made alone, because we’ve suffered centuries of persecution, and this has taught us many things.

  “Would you like to have a coffee while I wait for the bus?”

  No, I did not. I would only end up saying things that might, at that stage, be misinterpreted.

  “Certain people have been very important in my life,” she went on. “My landlord, for example, or the calligrapher I met in the desert near Dubai. Who knows, you might have things to say to me that I can share with them, and repay them for all they’ve taught me.”

  So she had already had teachers in her life—excellent! Her spirit wa
s ripe. All she needed was to continue her training, otherwise she would end up losing all she had achieved. But was I the right person?

  I asked the Mother to inspire me, to tell me what to do. I got no answer, which did not surprise me. She always behaves like that when it’s up to me to take responsibility for a decision.

  I gave Athena my business card and asked her for hers. She gave me an address in Dubai, a country I would have been unable to find on the map.

  I decided to try making a joke, to test her out a little more. “Isn’t it a bit of a coincidence that three English people should meet in a café in Bucharest?”

  “Well, from your card I see that you’re Scottish. The man I met apparently works in England, but I don’t know anything else about him.” She took a deep breath. “And I’m…Romanian.”

  I gave an excuse and said that I had to rush back to the hotel and pack my bags.

  Now she knew where to find me. If it was written that we would meet again, we would. The important thing is to allow fate to intervene in our lives and to decide what is best for everyone.

  VOSHO “BUSHALO,” SIXTY-FIVE, RESTAURANT OWNER

  These Europeans come here thinking they know everything, thinking they deserve the very best treatment, that they have the right to bombard us with questions that we’re obliged to answer. On the other hand, they think that by giving us some tricksy name, like “travelers” or “Roma,” they can put right the many wrongs they’ve done us in the past.

  Why can’t they just call us gypsies and put an end to all the stories that make us look as if we were cursed in the eyes of the world? They accuse us of being the fruit of the illicit union between a woman and the Devil himself. They say that one of us forged the nails that fixed Christ to the cross, that mothers should be careful when our caravans come near, because we steal children and enslave them.

  And because of this there have been frequent massacres throughout history; in the Middle Ages we were hunted as witches; for centuries our testimony wasn’t even accepted in the German courts. I was born before the Nazi wind swept through Europe and I saw my father marched off to a concentration camp in Poland, with a humiliating black triangle sewn to his clothes. Of the five-hundred-thousand gypsies sent for slave labor, only five-thousand survived to tell the tale.

  And no one, absolutely no one, wants to hear about this.

  Right up until last year, our culture, religion, and language were banned in this godforsaken part of the world, where most of the tribes decided to settle. If you asked anyone in the city what they thought of gypsies, their immediate response would be: “They’re all thieves.” However hard we try to lead normal lives by ceasing our eternal wanderings and living in places where we’re easily identifiable, the racism continues. Our children are forced to sit at the back of the class, and not a week goes by without someone insulting them.

  Then people complain that we don’t give straight answers, that we try to disguise ourselves, that we never openly admit our origins. Why would we do that? Everyone knows what a gypsy looks like, and everyone knows how to “protect” themselves from our “curses.”

  When a stuck-up, intellectual young woman appears, smiling and claiming to be part of our culture and our race, I’m immediately on my guard. She might have been sent by the Securitate, the secret police who work for that mad dictator—the Conducator, the Genius of the Carpathians, the Leader. They say he was put on trial and shot, but I don’t believe it. His son may have disappeared from the scene for the moment, but he’s still a powerful figure in these parts.

  The young woman insists; she smiles, as if she were saying something highly amusing, and tells me that her mother is a gypsy and that she’d like to find her. She knows her full name. How could she obtain such information without the help of the Securitate?

  It’s best not to get on the wrong side of people who have government contacts. I tell her that I know nothing, that I’m just a gypsy who’s decided to lead an honest life, but she won’t listen: she wants to find her mother. I know who her mother is, and I know too that more than twenty years ago, she had a child she gave up to an orphanage that she never heard from again. We had to take her mother in because a blacksmith who thought he was the master of the universe insisted on it. But who can guarantee that this intellectual young woman standing before me really is Liliana’s daughter? Before trying to find out who her mother is, she should at least respect some of our customs and not turn up dressed in red if it’s not her wedding day. She ought to wear longer skirts as well, so as not to arouse men’s lust. And she should be more respectful.

  If I speak of her now in the present tense, it’s because for those who travel, time does not exist, only space. We came from far away, some say from India, others from Egypt, but the fact is that we carry the past with us as if it has all just happened. And the persecutions continue.

  The young woman is trying to be nice and to show that she knows about our culture, when that doesn’t matter at all. After all, she should know about our traditions.

  “In town I was told that you’re a Rom Baro, a tribal leader. Before I came here, I learned a lot about our history—”

  “Not ‘our,’ please. It’s my history, the history of my wife, my children, my tribe. You’re a European. You were never stoned in the street as I was when I was five years old.”

  “I think the situation is getting better.”

  “The situation is always getting better, then it immediately gets worse.”

  But she keeps smiling. She orders a whiskey. One of our women would never do that.

  If she’d come in here just to have a drink or look for company, I’d treat her like any other customer. I’ve learned to be friendly, attentive, discreet, because my business depends on that. When my customers want to know more about the gypsies, I offer them a few curious facts, tell them to listen to the group who’ll be playing later on, make a few remarks about our culture, and then they leave with the impression that they know everything about us.

  But this young woman isn’t just another tourist: she says she belongs to our race.

  She again shows me the certificate she got from the government. I can believe that the government kills, steals, and lies, but it wouldn’t risk handing out false certificates, and so she really must be Liliana’s daughter, because the certificate gives her full name and address. I learned from the television that the Genius of the Carpathians, the Father of the People, our Conducator, the one who left us to starve while he exported all our food, the one who lived in palaces and used gold-plated cutlery while the people were dying of starvation, that same man and his wretched wife used to get the Securitate to trawl the orphanages, selecting babies to be trained as state assassins.

  They only ever took boys, though, never girls. Perhaps she really is Liliana’s daughter.

  I look at the certificate once more and wonder whether or not I should tell her where her mother is. Liliana deserves to meet this intellectual, claiming to be “one of us.” Liliana deserves to look this woman in the eye. I think she suffered enough when she betrayed her people, slept with a gadje [Editor’s note: foreigner], and shamed her parents. Perhaps the moment has come to end her hell, for her to see that her daughter survived, got rich, and might even be able to help her out of the poverty she lives in.

  Perhaps this young woman will pay me for this information; perhaps it’ll be of some advantage to our tribe, because we’re living in confusing times. Everyone’s saying that the Genius of the Carpathians is dead, and they even show photos of his execution, but who knows, he could come back tomorrow, and it’ll all turn out to have been a clever trick on his part to find out who really was on his side and who was prepared to betray him.

  The musicians will start playing soon, so I’d better talk business.

  “I know where you can find this woman. I can take you to her.” I adopt a friendlier tone of voice. “But I think that information is worth something.”

  “I was prepared for t
hat,” she says, holding out a much larger sum of money than I was going to ask for.

  “That’s not even enough for the taxi fare.”

  “I’ll pay you the same amount again when I reach my destination.”

  And I sense that, for the first time, she feels uncertain. She suddenly seems afraid of what she’s about to do. I grab the money she’s placed on the counter.

  “I’ll take you to see Liliana tomorrow.”

  Her hands are trembling. She orders another whiskey, but suddenly a man comes into the bar, sees her, blushes scarlet, and comes straight over to her. I gather that they only met yesterday, and yet here they are, talking as if they were old friends. His eyes are full of desire. She’s perfectly aware of this and encourages him. The man orders a bottle of wine, and the two sit down at a table, and it’s as if she’s forgotten all about her mother.

  However, I want the other half of that money. When I serve them their drinks, I tell her I’ll be at her hotel at ten o’clock in the morning.

  HERON RYAN, JOURNALIST

  Immediately after the first glass of wine, she told me, unprompted, that she had a boyfriend who worked for Scotland Yard. It was a lie, of course. She must have read the look in my eyes, and this was her way of keeping me at a distance.

  I told her that I had a girlfriend, which made us even.

  Ten minutes after the music had started, she stood up. We had said very little—she asked no questions about my research into vampires, and we exchanged only generalities: our impressions of the city, complaints about the state of the roads. But what I saw next—or, rather, what everyone in the restaurant saw—was a goddess revealing herself in all her glory, a priestess invoking angels and demons.

 

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