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Authors: Michael Arditti

BOOK: The Breath of Night
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‘Business,’ Amel replied in a sinister echo. ‘He’s been doing some small jobs for Brent and me.’

‘Really? He never mentioned it. But then he’s not himself right now. His sister died.’

‘That was three weeks ago.’

She was his sister!’

‘He has another one, doesn’t he?’

‘So?’

‘So he should take care.’

‘Are you threatening him?’ Philip asked, mystified by the change in Amel’s manner since their lunch on Qingming.

‘Not at all. Just offering him a word of advice. Which I’d be grateful if you’d pass on. Now please excuse me, I must go back to my guests. And we’ll meet again on Friday, won’t we, Max?’

Philip turned to find Max behind him, clasping a brimful glass of champagne.

‘Don’t remind me!’

‘We will?’ Philip asked.

‘I hope so. It’s Max’s birthday. We’re throwing him a
celebration
at the club.’

‘Which club?’

‘The Mr Universe, of course.’

‘Why “of course”?’ Philip asked Max, as Amel walked away. ‘He talks as if he owns the place.’

‘He probably does. Tucked away in some portfolio or other.’

‘But Mr Universe. A male go-go… what do you call it?’

‘Macho dancing.’

‘Macho dancing club, that’s right! It’s all so tacky.’

‘Believe me, “tacky” is just the tip of the Lim brothers’ iceberg.’

‘And they’re giving you a party?’

‘So it would appear.’

‘Then you’ll get me to the club after all. If it’s not an indelicate question, how old will you be?’

‘A great lady once told me –’ Philip gazed instinctively into the house. ‘No, another one! This great lady once told me that a true friend was someone who remembered your birthday but forgot your age.’

‘I’ll be sure to put a single candle on your cake. Let’s walk round to the front and wait for the car. I really don’t feel
comfortable
among all this.’ He stretched out his arms to include both the buffet and the guests.

‘Not your idea of a fun evening?’

‘Don’t worry, it hasn’t been wasted. I thought I’d understand Julian by meeting the people who were closest to him, but I’ve understood as much – if not more – by coming here.’

‘I expect I’m being very obtuse but… what the hell do you mean?’

‘What right-minded person faced with all this – the
extravagance
and the waste, not to mention the cruelty – wouldn’t want to blow it up?’

‘You are talking figuratively?’

‘Am I? I used to wonder whether Julian had taken an active role in any of the NPA’s campaigns and, if so, how far it would have jeopardised his faith. I feel now that his faith would have been jeopardised if he hadn’t taken action.’

‘I doubt that’s the sort of thing that Hugh wants to hear,’ Max said, his voice suddenly sombre.

‘What do you mean? He sent me here to find out the truth.’

‘No, he sent you here to assist the investigation.’

‘And I shall do both. If the miracles are genuine – and all the evidence points that way – then it shows that God has singled Julian out. He won’t be a turn-the-other-cheek saint like St Francis, but an I’ve-come-to-bring-a-sword saint like St Joan.’

‘Well, I only hope that God is on hand to plead his cause in Rome, because he’ll get short shrift from the cardinals. And, while He’s at it, perhaps He’ll plead mine with Hugh. If you screw this up, I’m the one he’ll blame. He’ll think that I haven’t opened the right doors, given you the right tips, pointed you in the right direction. Sixty-nine years old, that’s the answer to your question! No, who am I trying to kid? Seventy-one! My work for Hugh – however dull, however demeaning (do you think I enjoy playing nursemaid?) – is all I have left and I warn you, I won’t give it up without a fight.’

Philip’s phone bleeped.

‘The car’s outside. We should go.’

They walked back across the patio and into the house, where a crowd had gathered around a singer. Although unable to see above their heads, Philip was transfixed by the voice, which swooped up and down the scale like a pubescent boy’s.

‘It’s her! Just like the old days. Sh-sh!’ Max said to a speechless Philip. ‘Isn’t it wonderful? They’ve persuaded her to sing.’

7 July 1983

My dear Mother,

I write straight after reading your letter. What on earth was Greg thinking? Let me put your mind at rest: I have NOT joined a gang of Communist assassins – although, to give them their due, the NPA, whom I take to be the assassins in question, are a highly professional revolutionary force. I’m touched by your concern, but please, please, I beg you not to commit such
tittle-tattle
to paper. I remember warning you about the vulnerability of the mail when I first came out here. The warning is even more urgent now that tensions are running so high.

That said, what’s so terrible about Communists? Have you ever met one outside the pages of
The Times
? I have, and I can assure you they’re not all cold-blooded commissars shooting plucky grand duchesses or brainwashed students brandishing little red books. They’re decent, high-minded people who think deeply about the world and set about improving it with a zeal that would put the average priest to shame. And, before you tell me that priests should concern themselves with the next world rather than this one, may I respectfully point out that Our Lord Himself instructed his followers to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, protect the vulnerable and, here’s the clincher, sell everything they had for the benefit of the poor? What’s more, there are striking parallels between Christ’s and Marx’s social teaching. ‘In so far as you did this to one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did it to me’ finds echoes in ‘From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs’. And think of the first apostles who ‘owned everything in common’. That’s where you find the authentic note of the early Church,
the true spirit of Christianity, not in papal tiaras and bishops’ thrones.

I should explain what I mean by ‘tensions’. Obviously, Father’s funeral was neither the time nor the place to discuss parochial problems but, in the twelve years I’ve lived here, I can’t
remember
a period of so much friction. If you ask whether I think that the
haciendos
have plotted with the civil and military
authorities
to launch a concerted attack on people’s rights, my answer would have to be ‘No’. If, however, you ask whether they’ve decided to stand shoulder to shoulder to snuff out any flicker of resistance, my answer would be ‘Yes. Absolutely. Beyond a shadow of a doubt.’

Events have unfolded with a sinister synchronicity. Every
barrio
has been affected, but by far the hardest hit has been the Arriola estate. Its particular difficulties stem from the logging concession granted by President Marcos to don Bernardo’s cousin back in the seventies, and the legal challenge mounted by a group of farmers to the supply road, which would have cut across their fields. The interminable case has finally exhausted don Bernardo’s patience. In an effort to put pressure on the farmers, he’s resorted to ever more draconian methods. First, he demanded that his
encargado
impose heavy penalties on the gleaning and foraging that provide families with a vital source of food. Then he arbitrarily revoked the traditional right of estate workers to plant their crops between his coconut palms. When they carried on regardless, he summoned the local army chief, insisting that he apply the full force of the law. Either from common decency or, as Benito would have it, an inadequate pay off, the officer refused. Quesada, the Constabulary Commander, showed no such scruples, ordering his men to shoot any ‘land invader’ on sight.

A week later, I stood at the altar in front of eight plain wooden coffins. The church doors were open to include the vast overspill congregation in the square, but I suspect that even those who secured a place inside caught only a fraction of my words above
the shrieks and moans. None of the
haciendos
or their stooges deigned to attend although, to her credit, doña Teresa
Romualdez
paid her respects, standing meekly at the back, her
trademark
black taking on new poignancy. I neither know nor care whether the government spy, who drives down from Baguio every Sunday and sits ostentatiously taking notes during my sermons, showed his face, but if he did, he’d have been amply rewarded. Gone were the days when I exhorted the victims to turn the other cheek; now I reminded them of Christ’s claim that ‘I have come to bring fire to the earth, and how I wish it were blazing already!’. Moreover, I declared that we had no need to wait for Christ to return to establish His kingdom (which would merely be another form of dependency) but had it in our own hands to establish Heaven on earth.

As I led the cortège out of church, I found myself face to face with Quesada, who slowly, mockingly, doffed his cap,
releasing
the shoulder-length hair that he wore in defiance of official regulations and to set himself apart from his men. Flashing me a grin like a knuckleduster, he fingered the gun on his belt before raising his hand to his chest, to what at first looked like a
pectoral
cross, but on inspection proved to be an
anting anting
in the shape of a scimitar. Whatever its provenance, it failed to impart the necessary protection since that brief glance was the last I saw of him. Two days later he was killed, along with three soldiers in a textbook NPA ambush. While publicly and privately
lamenting
the loss of life, I couldn’t put my hand on heart and condemn the killers. All my training has disposed me to follow Christ who, even in the turmoil of His arrest, restored the high priest’s servant’s ear. Lately, however, I’ve found alternative inspiration in the Old Testament leaders who took up arms on behalf of their downtrodden people.

As you can imagine, Quesada’s death left the constabulary hell-bent on revenge. No matter that he’d treated his own men almost as brutally as he had the populace, beating them with his belt, his rifle butt and his bare fists when they failed to carry
out his increasingly erratic orders (and this was a man who’d cherished ambitions to be a priest!), the honour of the company was at stake. As they combed the parish for the perpetrators, our only hope, as so often in the past, lay in the bitter rivalry between the various authorities, with the police and the regular army joining forces to prevent the constabulary from indulging in an orgy of reprisals.

I found myself in a quandary when the Constabulary Regional Commander asked me to celebrate Quesada’s requiem. I’d assumed that his body would be returned to his family on Mindoro, but no one from the island came forward. To add to the confusion, when I asked to meet his widow, he turned out to have three (is there such a word as trigamist?), each of whom had been unaware of the others’ existence. After much soul-searching, I informed the Commander that I would fulfil my obligation to give him a funeral blessing but I was under no such obligation to celebrate his requiem. The officer was
outraged,
as were the
haciendos
in whose name Quesada had been acting, along with the Mayor and Police Chief, who had no love for Quesada but a vested interest in maintaining the status quo. They appealed to the Bishop, who summoned me for a meeting. Much to my surprise, he accepted my argument that by burying Quesada in the full solemnity of the Church, we’d be tacitly endorsing his tactics. He refused to yield to the mounting
pressure,
and the simple service went ahead in the presence of the military top brass, the provincial elite and the three widows, who jockeyed for position beside the coffin. Quesada’s baleful
influence
lingered to the end when, during the three volley salute on the church steps, a rifle backfired, taking out the gunner’s eye.

The Bishop was bitterly attacked for backing me, with our enemies even playing the race card but, far from swaying him, their cheap jibes appear to have strengthened his resolve. He asked, in return, that I should lie low for a while and added that if I were to do anything in the future that might compromise him, I should tell him only under the seal of the confessional.
I thought that very fair, and have been happy to enjoy a time of reflection and recuperation, my own version of R & R. So here I am in my study, listening to Haydn’s
Creation
, one of the records you sent me via Isabel all those years ago and which I have at last had a chance to play. Yes, the twentieth century has finally caught up with us, only eighty-three years late,
bringing
electricity (who knows, in another eighty-three we might have the telephone!). It’s wonderful to be able to play the music of my choice – or rather, your choice, thank you – instead of depending on whatever comes crackling over the airwaves. My one regret is that Consolacion, who in another life would have been a regular concert-goer, refuses every invitation to join me, preferring to sit deferentially on a hard chair in the hall.

On which note – and a very melodious one – I shall sign off, but not before sending you every blessing for the move to the Lodge. I remember how reluctant you were to leave it at the end of the war; I pray that you and Cora will find an equally happy home there now.

Your loving son,

Julian

The Quiapo market spread out in all directions, blurring the distinction between street and mall, arcade and square.
Well-stocked
stalls of exotic fruit and vegetables stood beside meagre crates of carrots, leeks and turnips, which seemed to have been scratched out of dusty backyards. Fresh fish, their raw eyes gleaming accusingly from a heap of tarnished scales, lay next to strips of dried squid, redolent of rodents. Dusters, with
parrotlike
plumage, were jumbled with bright pink plastic bowls and coconut fibre doormats. Old men roamed through the crowd peddling cigarettes, lighters, batteries and soap, and boys with more spirit than acumen proffered matchboxes containing fighting spiders, several of which appeared to have suffocated in confinement. While other traders haggled over prices, a gnarled fortune-teller sat impassively beneath a scrawled sign setting out her services, on which there was a fifty per cent discount for senior citizens, whose futures were presumably easier to predict.

Elbowing his way through the shoppers, Philip emerged in front of the Quiapo church. A young woman, cradling a baby low in her arms, offered him a garland of wilted sampaguitas, which he politely refused, before heading for the row of
herbalists
who sat, as Maribel had described, beside the railings. She had been up all night with severe menstrual cramps and, although he had begged her to see a doctor, she insisted that the most effective remedy was an infusion of
makabuhay
leaves. Despite his scepticism, he had come to buy them, partly because he could not bear to see her in such discomfort, but also out of guilt: guilt that their last full day together had been blighted by a condition which, in some indefinable way, seemed to be related to his pleasure; guilt that the very pains she was suffering relieved his fears about the split condom; guilt, above all, that he was already thinking about her in the past.

He stood in front of the least intimidating herbalist, whose stall resembled a window box, lined with plants, grasses, seeds and stones. ‘Do you have any
makabuhay
?’ he asked. She flashed him a suspicious look and addressed him in speech so slurred that it would have been impenetrable even in English. He passed her the paper on which Maribel had written the name. ‘
Makabuhay
,’ he repeated. She pointed to a vine and held up three fingers of a maimed hand. ‘Three hundred pesos?’ Philip asked
uneasily
, in case the missing fourth finger were to be included in the calculation. She nodded, at which he took out his wallet and counted the notes. Just as he was giving them to her, a heavy blow from behind felled him to the ground, causing him to crack his shoulder on the edge of the stall.

His first thought was that he had been mugged, but seeing his wallet still in his hand he wondered whether a bomb had exploded, and the terrorist threat that had stalked him since the Wanted posters in the airport had finally materialised. But there was no blast, no smoke, no screams; the disturbance was centred on him. He made to rise, whereupon his arms were wrenched behind his back and his wrists handcuffed, sending a further wave of pain to his shoulder. Someone was shouting at him, but the voice was at once too high-pitched and too garbled to comprehend. He pressed his body into the ground, using the logic of dreams to escape from the nightmare, but found himself dragged to his feet and frogmarched away by two men whose faces were outside his field of vision. The crowd around him parted with ominous compliance. ‘What’s happening?’ he cried, but any answer was drowned by the thump of his heart. He was led through the square to a white police car with the words
Manila’s Finest
stencilled like a sick joke on the door. He ducked, just in time to avoid banging his head on the roof as he was bundled on to the back seat.

‘What’s happening?’ he repeated, as he struggled to sit up straight without the use of his hands. ‘There’s been a terrible mistake,’ he said to the officer who sat down beside him. The
studied silence forced him to adopt a different approach. ‘Do you know who I am?’ he asked, sounding like his mother
hectoring
an obdurate tradesman. The officer ignored him and spoke briskly to his colleague. ‘Are you arresting me? On what charge? Don’t you have to read me my rights? Or don’t foreigners have any rights in the Philippines?’ His attempt at irony foundered on the memory of Julian. ‘How do I know you’re a genuine police officer?’ he added, although, as he glimpsed the man’s gun poking out of its holster, the alternative was too terrifying to
contemplate.
‘I demand to know where you’re taking me!’ he said. ‘I’m a British citizen. You have a duty to contact the Embassy at once.’

‘Be quiet,’ the officer next to him said, in a voice far
friendlier
than his manner. ‘You will have your chance to speak at the station.’

Any hope that this would mark the start of a dialogue was dashed. Philip sat back in confusion as the car, which was granted no special privileges, crawled through the streets. His senses were numbed apart from smell, which had grown more acute. He retched at the officers’ body odour before realising, with disgust, that the stench stemmed from him.

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