Read The Songs of Manolo Escobar Online
Authors: Carlos Alba
âDid any members of your family fight in the war?' She pressed.
I had no idea if any of my family had fought in the war or not, and, what was more, it was the first time in eighteen years that it had even occurred to me that I didn't know. I was barely aware of the names of my extended family, far less anything they had done. âEh, I don't know, it's not something my parents speak about much,' I mumbled.
âAh,
el pacto de olvido,'
she said.
I looked at her blankly.
âThe pact of forgetting?'
âAh yes, that's the one, the old pact of forgetting,' I said, nodding as though I knew what she was talking about.
âWhat side did they support?'
I felt the heat rising from my face as I sought frantically for the names of the opposing sides in the conflict. I was sitting next to the most beautiful girl I'd ever met, she was taking an active interest in my background and my family, and I was displaying all the erudition of a monkey.
I'd already let slip that I didn't speak Spanish, and now I risked
revealing that I didn't know who had participated in the single most important event in my native country's recent history. I racked my brains, remembering from the time of Franco's death that he'd led one of the sides in the war, but what was it called? The Francoists sounded familiar, but was that too obvious? In any event, Papa hated Franco, so even knowing the name of the side he led was not much use.
Cheryl smiled with gentle curiosity as I continued to dither. I willed myself to speak, to say something â anything â to break the mounting silence. Then, suddenly, from a weed-strewn corner of my brain, I managed to dredge the contents of a long-forgotten argument between my parents.
âMy dad was an anarchist,' I said hesitantly.
Her face broadened into a joyful, accepting smile. She edged back a few inches and scanned the length of my body as though she were reassessing me in light of this new information.
âGod, an anarchist,' she said with unconcealed admiration. âHe'll have fought with the FAI militia, then?'
I grinned weakly.
âLa Federación Anarquista Ibérica?' she said expectantly.
âYes, probably,' I replied. âLike I say, he doesn't really discuss it.'
Much to my surprise, Cheryl asked me to join her for the screening of a documentary film about the Spanish Civil War at the Glasgow Film Theatre the following week. I threw budgetary caution to the wind and bought some new clothes from Millets with the last of that term's grant money â a pair of stonewashed drainpipe jeans and a red plaid lumberjack shirt, which I wore with a blue velvet jacket I'd picked up at Paddy's Market for three quid.
I arrived at the union bar early and bought myself a pint of snakebite and blackcurrant, then sat in a booth and opened a copy of
Socialist Worker
I'd bought to impress Cheryl. By quarter past five, with no sign of her, I started to panic, convinced she'd stood me up. I waited another twenty minutes, then just as I was about to leave she walked in. My heart swam. She was laughing,
chatting away with Max Miller, who followed close behind her. My heart sank.
âYou don't mind if Max comes along, do you?' she asked.
âCourse not,' I replied, forcing a smile.
The bombing of Guernica, said the crackling, blunt-needle voice of the film's narrator, was a landmark event, because it was the first air attack on a civilian population and a rehearsal by the Luftwaffe for subsequent bombing raids on London and Coventry. The market town in the north-east corner of Spain, he explained, was symbolically important as a centre of Basque ethnic nationalism and Republican resistance against Franco's rebels. On the afternoon of Monday, April the 26th, 1937, a market day, it was attacked by fighter planes of the Luftwaffe Condor Legion and the Italian Fascist Aviazione Legionaria. It had no aerial defences, and until then it had been untouched by the war. With no warning, the population was subjected to almost three hours of sustained bombing, during which time 1,654 people were killed and 889 injured.
Until then I had known little about Guernica, other than that it was the name of a Picasso painting, and I'd never felt compelled to find out any more about it or the bombing. It was part of a war anchored in a history that meant little to me and evoked no particularly strong emotional response. The Second World War, in contrast, had a central place in my world, and its primal, us-against-them, good-versus-evil dichotomy was embedded in my imagination and my culture. I learned about it at school, read about it in books and comics, devoured countless films about it, discussed it with my friends and played games with it as the backdrop. Its outcome defined my very existence.
I expected the film to be arcane and dryly academic, but instead it was gripping. A war correspondent who had covered the bombing described approaching the town as the German bombers flew low overhead, almost touching the tops of the trees, buzzing those on the ground, driving into them the fear of God. Women wandered unsuspecting and defenceless among the market stalls
in the spring sunshine buying their weekly provisions. As the bombs dropped, they ran for cover. Machine-gun bullets whizzed past them, ricocheting off walls.
Some people stood transfixed as they were strafed by aircraft fire; others screamed, terrified, and soiled themselves. Amid the screaming and bloodshed, buildings crumbled and cars combusted, and soon flames lit up the sky for miles. Children lay in the streets dead, broken and charred, emitting a nauseating smell of scorched flesh. Survivors wandered from street to street or huddled together, crying and praying. At the end of four hours, all that remained standing was a church and a sacred tree, the symbol of the Basque people.
I stared at the floor and held back tears of pity for these long-dead people. Why, I wondered, had the Spanish war assumed such a low profile in my consciousness? The themes were similar to those played out in the wider European conflict that began just a few months after its conclusion. On the face of it, Franco was no different from Hitler â a Fascist dictator. Where were the British, the French and the Americans when this was happening? I wondered. Why, if Franco was Hitler's friend, hadn't he been our enemy?
After the film we went to the bar for a drink, and Cheryl bumped into a man she introduced as âMike from Modern History', who had the well-groomed, coiffed look of a newsreader. He stood over us, pronouncing on the merits of the film while Cheryl and Max hung on his every word. He was evidently an expert on the war, and he was enjoying the attention.
âAlthough Guernica's still a symbol of the one-sidedness of the power relations,' he said, âother atrocities were just as horrific. Lots of people were shot by firing squad and dumped into pits or shallow graves. Some people were killed by neighbours and workmates who became their enemies after the coup.'
Old scores that had rankled in towns and villages for years were settled by people who acquired power suddenly, an accident of the side they had chosen, he told us. Their enemies
were shot, clubbed, butchered or thrown to their deaths from buildings and cliffs. Others were worked to death in forced labour camps, for no other reason than that they had an association with people or organisations who supported the Republic.
âWhy didn't Britain and France do something to prevent a Fascist uprising on their doorstep?' Max asked.
âI suppose it was because the elected government of the Republic included Communists and Anarchists, and Britain and France feared a Bolshevik-type uprising in Spain more than a Fascist government,' Mike said. âOf course, there were atrocities on both sides. In fact, some of the worst violence was perpetrated by the Communists on other supporters of the Republic.'
He left to rejoin his friends, and Cheryl and I sat down at a table while Max got some drinks from the bar.
âListen, I'd really like to talk to your dad about the Civil War,' she said. âI'm thinking of writing my honours thesis about it.'
I stilled a laugh, not because Cheryl was already thinking about the subject of her honours thesis three months into the start of her first year, but because it was the first time anyone I knew had wanted to meet my father, far less try to elicit from him anything remotely detailed about his or his country's past.
âOh, I don't know,' I said warily. âHe's not very forthcoming about that sort of thing.'
But as I considered the idea, it didn't strike me as so preposterous after all. Why shouldn't he be prepared to be questioned about the war? He didn't need to be an intellectual â all he had to do was to talk about his life and how the war had affected him. It occurred to me that he might even be an interesting person, given where and when he grew up.
What was more, ever since Franco's death, he'd taken far more interest in Spain. He'd watched with cautious optimism as political developments unfolded â the new king determinedly sweeping away the old guard, people voting in democratic elections, power being taken away from the previously unassailable
Catholic church and the Guardia Civil, the politically-controlled police force under Franco.
He'd commented on how the pages of the glossy magazines Abuela sent us had changed. I could see what he meant. No longer were they the state-censored organs of Franco's rule. Gone were the unquestioning line-ups of senior political and military figures; in their place stood the new Establishment of celebrities, entrepreneurs and minor royalty. They were younger, better-looking, more relaxed, and they smiled.
âOh, I'm sure I could get him talking. I'm very persuasive, you know,' Cheryl said, holding my gaze.
My stomach fluttered. âI'll give it a try,' I said.
âWhen could you take me to see him?'
âSoon, maybe next week,' I said.
âOkay, let me know. And thanks for coming tonight. I hope you enjoyed it.'
She finished her drink quickly and announced that she would have to leave as she had a lecture first thing. She put her coat on, leaned down and kissed me on the cheek. I breathed in her sweet smell, and as she raised her head her soft hair brushed gently against my forehead. She beamed a smile that I knew would sustain me until our next meeting. I felt light-headed.
âAre you coming, Bobby?' she asked Max Miller.
And I was suddenly thrust back into reality.
âYeah,' he said as he drained the remnants of his glass. He slapped me on the back. âSee you later, Antonio.'
They drifted out of the bar together, hand in hand.
I
flew back from Spain to Scotland, feeling more positive than usual about returning to my parents' home. I was certain that the information I had would bring Papa and me closer together. But when I saw him, I felt a painful sadness. He looked different even since the last time I'd seen him, only a few weeks before. He was characteristically well dressed, in a tailored shirt, slacks and a pastel-blue cashmere pullover, but they draped loosely over his depleted frame. He was stooped and shaky, and what I might otherwise have dismissed as the inevitable blemishes of age now appeared unmistakably to be signs of terminal illness.
Mama had gone to evening Mass, leaving him to make his own dinner. He negotiated the kitchen at an infuriatingly slow pace, plucking the components of a rudimentary meal of bread, olives and Ibérico ham from worktops and cupboards, placing them carefully and deliberately on the table. I stood over him as he ate at the kitchen table.
When I told him about my conversation with the man from the Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory and his offer, he stopped chewing and slammed his glass down, spilling water across the table. âWhy you dae this?' he demanded. His voice was harsh, almost tearful.
âI thought you'd be pleased.'
âYou have nae right, I nae want these people tae dae nothing.'
âThat's my grandparents were talking about, and I didn't know anything about them until a few days ago,' I protested.
âYou nae speak tae me like this,' he said, waving his finger.
His response surprised me, and I thought he might not have understood properly what I'd told him. âThere's nothing to worry about, Papa, these people are on your side,' I said.
âWha people? I nae even know these people.'
âThe association. They're volunteers, archaeologists, anthropologists, historians. They want to help people like you who had relatives who were killed by the Falangists.'
He looked at me sceptically and resumed eating his sandwich.
âIf we give them details of your mother and father, they will trace them through official papers. There may even be a record of their death that you don't know about.'
His face grew redder and he shook his head disapprovingly.
âThey would also speak to people in Alguaire.'
âWho they speak?' he demanded.
âSurvivors, people who have lived in the village for a long time. People who may remember what happened and who would be able to corroborate your story.'
He exploded with anger. âI nae want this, you nae dae this. You tell this people nae, I nae want.'
A small bit of food caught in his throat and he began to cough. I had to pat him on the back to help him recover. He was red and breathless, and I felt guilty at having unsettled him.
âLook, I was only trying to help. I thought that was what you wanted.'
âI nae want. You leave alone. If I want, I dae myself.'
I was confused and disappointed. When I thought about the lengths to which he had gone in Alguaire, I found his refusal of help perplexing.
I told him I wanted to know about his brother, Paco, who had survived the bombing of Lerida but who, Papa believed, had later died. I wanted to know the circumstances. Was he killed during the war. If so, how? Or had he survived the war and died subsequently? And if he was still alive, what did he do? Did he have any family that I didn't know about? I knew that if I didn't push Papa now, I might never know. âIf you don't start to open up to me about this sort of thing, I'll be left with no option but to find out for myself,' I said.