Authors: Richard Zimler
*
About a year after her arrival in London, she visited Swanage to place a pebble from the surrounding grounds on Midnight’s gravestone, as was the Jewish custom. The minister of the parish church had been in the town for only two years and knew nothing of an African who had died in the vicinity, however. The body had probably been placed in an unmarked grave. This upset her greatly, but she realized in the end that Midnight was safe wherever he was and that he would not have cared, since all the earth to him was home. She wrote to me that we would surely both meet him again on the Mount of Olives and that he would be wearing an elegant scarlet waistcoat and breeches, but no shoes. Carrying his quill and hollowed ostrich egg
shell, he would be
very,
very
pleased to see us. That was what mattered now.
*
In my work, I devoured all that Master Gilberto could teach me about potting and tile-making. When he allowed me to begin making my own designs, my first project was a tile panel
illustrating a comic sketch of Goya’s – a monkey painting the portrait of a donkey. Over the next two years, I transferred many of his works to tile and even painted some of his figures on vases and teapots. Then I began to execute works of my own
inspiration
based on the stories Midnight had told me. Gilberto
purchased
my first tile panel – nine squares depicting a great white feather falling into the Bushman’s outstretched hand.
*
Over her first three years in England, Mother offered all manner of excuses for being unable to return home for an extended visit, until I realized what ought to have been obvious from the very beginning: Absence was not increasing her fondness for Porto one whisker and she would not be making the journey home anytime soon. I read between the lines that she was fearful of the emotions that seeing our house and Grandmother Rosa would stir in her.
So in October of 1812, I inquired if she would like me to visit, and she replied that she missed me each and every day and that my coming to London would be a solemn blessing. As the idea of passing a winter fighting my way through the frigid English rain was unacceptable to me, I begged permission from Gilberto to visit her for two months that spring. I was now less than half an inch shy of six feet in height and wore my hair long, tying it with a black velvet ribbon in back, which I regarded as terribly dashing.
*
In the world beyond my immediate surroundings, Napoleon’s dream of European conquest all but died in November of 1812, when, starving and frozen, his troops retreated from an
ill-advised
attack on Moscow. Within eighteen months his throne in Paris would be handed to Louis XVIII. In consequence, another French invasion of Porto was impossible – for the time being. Yet I refrained from unearthing the mementos of
Midnight
and Daniel I had buried. Like Mother, I had no wish to confront such vestiges of my past.
I
set sail for London in time for my mother and me to celebrate my twenty-second birthday together. I was filled with
trepidation
, principally owing to a glorious complication that had occurred just before I left.
I had been out strolling when I caught the eye of a lass standing on her second-story balcony. She had long black tresses and darkly glowing eyes. Playfully, she lifted the edge of her royal blue mantilla and held it over her mouth, as though it were a veil. I could easily have believed her a sorceress of the forest, born during Midnight’s Age of the First People.
Before I could call out and ask her name, she crossed her arms over her chest, pirouetted round, and disappeared inside her house. I waited for two hours, but she failed to emerge.
The next evening at sundown, I found her seated on a stool on the street beneath her balcony, selling plants and flower bulbs. She didn’t see me, as she was painting a pot a fiery orange. Her hair sat in a swirl atop her head, except for delicate ringlets by her ears.
“Good evening,” I said gallantly.
Startled, she dropped her brush onto her skirt.
“Shit! Look what you made me do!”
I was charmed that she had uttered a curse word. “I heartily apologize, young lady,” I said, offering my handkerchief to her with what I hoped was a winning smile.
“But I shall ruin it,” she said, plainly considering me daft to even suggest it.
My next reply would provide Luna Olive Tree and Mama with mirthful shrieks of laughter for many years. I held out my offering to her with redoubled sincerity and said, “I should not
mind you painting all of me orange, if it meant being touched by you everywhere.”
How in God’s name I could have said such a ridiculous thing, I do not know. Incensed, her dark eyes flashed ominously. She bluntly refused my handkerchief and wiped her fingers on her apron instead.
Humiliated and tempted to rush away, I tried my best to turn the conversation toward a safer topic. “It is a lovely sunset – all that pink and gold.” Receiving only silence by way of a reply, I cleared my throat and shifted my weight to my other leg in what I hoped was a gentlemanly manner.
“You are standing in my light,” she said, not even deigning to look at me.
As the sun was behind her and my shadow fell in the opposite direction, I presumed she was joking. Encouraged, I gave a small laugh and launched another inane volley her way. Looking at her plants, I said, “I wonder if one might eat a tulip bulb. Some people call them
batatinhas,
you know – little potatoes. Do you suppose they are poisonous? Perhaps if they were cooked.”
“Sir,” she declared, “if I knew they were poisonous, you may be assured I would offer one to you at this very moment.”
My eyes filled with tears at her harsh words.
“Oh, sir, what have I done?” she exclaimed.
Burning with shame, I ran off.
I barricaded myself in my bedroom and cursed all women as daughters of Lilith, queen of the demons. Then I took off my clothes and scrutinized myself in Mama’s old cheval mirror. I was far too tall and pale. I wondered if a mustache might improve matters.
I made myself stay at home the next evening, but the day after saw a return of my blind courage and I risked approaching her again. At sundown, I found myself carrying a red damask shawl to her that I had purchased for a small fortune on the Rua das Flores. When she appeared on her balcony, she stared at me, and this time it was her eyes that welled with tears.
I tied two knots in the shawl and tossed it up to her. She caught it eagerly, then dropped her black mantilla to me.
She wore my shawl about her shoulders and flapped it like wings. Then she rushed inside.
By the next morning, I could stand no more insomnia. Begging Gilberto to be patient with me, I walked to the house of my tormentor once again, waited till the tolling of nine o’clock, and knocked on the door. I had practiced an eloquent speech for her parents all through the night, including impressive references to philosophy and art, but when a short man with a grizzled beard and long gray hair falling about his shoulders came yawning to the door, I fumbled my greeting.
“Speak up, son!” the man said gruffly.
“There is a young lady … a young … girl who appears on your balcony in the evenings. She sells flowers in the street as well.”
“My daughter Maria Francisca.”
“Yes, yes, that must be her. But … but perhaps if I begin again … My name is John Stewart. I am sorry to inconvenience you with my coming so early to your door.”
“No, no, I am pleased.” He smiled. “And starting with your name is always a splendid idea. But before we proceed any further, I should like to know precisely what your interest in my daughter might be.”
“Well, sir, I … I intend to marry her.”
I cannot explain why I dared to make this reply, except that I truly meant it.
Francisca’s father laughed. “You are not the first to suggest that,” he said. “But it is much more important” – here he reached for my arm to lead me inside – “to be the last.”
He introduced himself as Egídio Castro da Silva Martins. He had only three or four crooked teeth in his head, but large friendly eyes and a sweetly puckered mouth. He told me that he was a flower seller and that his shop was near St. Anthony’s Hospital.
A painting of Francisca’s mother hung above the mantelpiece. I saw that her daughter had inherited her thick black hair and mysterious eyes. They both looked like women who knew how to keep secrets – and create them too. Senhor Egídio told me she had left him ten years earlier when Francisca had been seven. He
made a fist and shook it at her. “You done me wrong, you wicked woman!” he bellowed.
After I commented on her likeness to their daughter, he looked bemused and said, “As you can see, I well understand your dilemma, son.”
About his daughter’s future, he made it quite plain that he would allow her to make her own decision with regard to a husband. I then explained that I wished to invite her to stroll with me along the riverside.
“I shall put that proposition to her this afternoon, young man, and if you will return at eight this evening, you will have an answer.”
I thanked him for his help and then confessed that I had to leave in four days for two months in England.
“Perhaps it is a good thing,” he reassured me. “You will get to know each other over the next evenings, if Francisca agrees. And if a true bond of affection develops between you, one that is not severed by weeks of separation, then we all might be inclined to believe that a promising future awaits you.”
“And one other thing, sir …”
“Don’t be shy, son,” he said, slapping my back.
“I should only like to add that my Father was Scottish and my mother, though Portuguese, is of New Christian origins. I am, in short, half-Jewish and half-Scottish. I wish to make that plain from the outset. I shall understand if you consider it an obstacle, but I can assure you that – ”
Senhor Egídio held up his hands and smiled.
“Son, all that matters between the young is loyal affection. The rest is simply decoration.”
*
True to his word, for the next three evenings, Francisca and I were permitted to stroll through the city. She wore a different mantilla every night, and I bought colored lanterns for her to carry.
I was astonished to discover how timid she was: She refused to look into my eyes for any length of time. Months later, she told me that I was the first man she had ever felt an attraction for and that it sent chills through her down to her toes.
On our second evening, as we stood by the river, I talked of Daniel.
“I shall never get over his death,” I observed.
“But you would not want to. If you could, then what would his life have truly meant to you?” She brushed my arm as she spoke. She had beautiful slender hands.
“Aye,” I replied, “he was a wild and handsome lad.”
Thinking
of my betrayal, I added, “And most loyal to me.”
Continuing my policy of revealing my personality flaws from the start, I then said, “The many deaths I have known have left me broken and lonely. If you come to feel a fondness for me, which is what I hope, Francisca, then you will be giving your heart to a man who has done many reckless things and who may be a wayward misfit. I recognize the truth of this now, and the worst part is that I am not at all sorry for it.”
While we walked to her home through the impasse of silence I had created, I fell into despair, presuming I’d scared her off with my direct manner. At her door, I apologized for speaking inappropriately.
“John, please say no more, you have done nothing wrong,” she said, placing her hand over my mouth for a moment. Her touch made me jump. “I understand you better than you think. My father and I, there isn’t a day that passes that we do not miss my mother.” She smiled sadly. “Please come inside and sit with us. There is no need to be reticent. We are people who understand loss.” She took my hand and gazed deep into my eyes. “Please, I am your friend,” she assured me.
Five small words, but the way she said them – with the care of a person setting delicate flowers in a simple vase – convinced me that she understood that it was not mere momentary diversion I sought from her. I brought her hand back to my lips. The possibility that my loneliness was at an end … I smiled and kissed her once more, closing my eyes to breathe in her scent.
We discovered Senhor Egédio stoking the fire. I was touched by the eager affection he displayed toward Francisca and
impressed
by the sense of ease he created around him. He offered me a glass of wine.
“I should like to show you something, John,” he said.
Scratching
the whiskers on his chin, his eyes twinkled mischievously. “I shall return presently. And, Francisca, if you discuss me while I am gone I shall know!” With that, he disappeared upstairs.
“He never sits still. I was born to a weaver’s shuttle,” Francisca whispered.
Egídio came back into the room carrying a stack of mantillas. When Francisca saw them draped over his arm, she hid her head in her hands and groaned.
“What is it?” I asked her.
“The clever lass is embarrassed because she made them,” her father said.
He held them in the cradle of his arm for me to study, as though each were an infant. He had large coarse hands, with flecks of dirt in his fingernails, but his extreme gentleness in all things involving his daughter moved me – and reassured me as well that I was right where I ought to be.
Francisca cringed while we discussed her handiwork and refused to come and join us. “No, no, no,” she said, shooing us both away playfully.
In one mantilla of deep red she had incorporated a fire-colored pattern of autumn leaves. In another of chestnut, she had created a white and yellow blazing sun. I had never seen anything like them, as shawls in anything other than block colors were
generally
not worn in Porto. But what impressed me most was her imagination.
When I caught her eye and smiled, she sighed. “Papa lives to torture his children.”
“It is called
pride,
child,” he corrected with a wink.
Francisca continued to dismiss her work as I asked her
questions
about knitting techniques and methods. “With all that goes on in the world, who could possibly care what I make?” she told me.
I refused to give in to her modesty. “If,” I said, adopting the pose of a fine British gentleman, “if, young lady, I were to commission you now to make a waistcoat for me with the sun – or any other design you choose – incorporated in its weave, would you finally believe my admiration is real?”
As she still thought that I was merely being polite, I gave her a
hard look and tossed her a hundred-
reis
coin, which she caught in both her hands. She shook her head at such an absurdity, then grinned. I could tell that although I may not yet have won her heart, I
had
indeed gained her trust.
*
The next evening she wore the red shawl I had given her as a gift. We walked again by the river, and she suggested that we take the ferry to the far bank. Without warning she looked at me defiantly, hoisted up the fringe of her dress, and raced off toward the boat, laughing all the way. I didn’t try to catch her; it was such an unladylike thing to do that I couldn’t take my admiring eyes off her.
Once on the ferry, I could think of nothing but kissing her, and my conversation was patchy at best.
In great danger of fainting, I risked everything by pressing my lips to hers.
*
Later that evening, defying all convention, we dared to enter my home unchaperoned. We were so nervous that we did not speak. My heart seemed to be beating outside my body.
After we’d kissed for a time once again, I slipped my fingers under the ruffles of her dress. She started when I did so, and I begged forgiveness for my impetuosity. But she clasped my hand and said, “Your fingers are cold, John, that’s all.”
Then she asked where my room was.