Authors: Fiona McFarlane
âNo tea, no thanks,' I said. âSorry.'
âIf you don't mind, I'll have some. âA “spot of tea”, yes? I'll ring the bell. Something cool for you, perhaps, Bill?'
His hand was poised in midair, holding a small silver bell. Did I mention we were both sitting, him behind his desk, and me in front of it? It was like being at school again.
âYes please, something cool,' I said.
I pressed my hand against my forehead, and when the something cool came, I pressed the glass against my forehead too. Father Anthony looked concerned. He looked on the point of ringing his little bell again.
âWhen you agreed to give this presentation today,' said Father Anthony, âyou asked for a favour in return. You said there was a scientific matter we could help you with. Is it to do with your squid?'
âWith Mabel, yes,' I said. âStrictly speaking, of course, she's not
my
squid. She's not anybody's â not even God's. Do you see? I want to free her. That's what I want your help with.'
âYou agree, then, with those activists in town?' said Father Anthony. I realised he was referring to the young people I'd seen at the port; I understood that Mabel was no longer a secret and they were here to protest her captivity. This explained why Eric had been so unforthcoming with me.
âI don't know who they are or what they believe,' I said.
âThey want the very same thing you do â to release the squid. You could ask for
their
help.'
I thought of the boys in the bar and the girls on the dock, of their sincerity, their photogenic martyrdom, and the primary colours of their T-shirts, and I said, âTomorrow, Father Anthony, it has to be tomorrow. Before they find her and turn her into something she isn't.'
âTurn her into what?' he asked.
âDo you know very much about colossal squid, Father Anthony?'
âOnly the information you presented in your lecture today,' he said. âTheir brains are round with holes in them, like donuts. They have eight arms and two long tentacles.'
âThe most important thing I said about colossal squid today, Father Anthony, was that we don't know anything about them. And even though I've been watching Mabel for over a year now, I still know nothing. It's even possible that Mabel is still immature, that she could get bigger. How can we be sure of the true size of the colossal squid? Who knows what we'll fish up some day â the gargantuan squid? We might have gone a step too far, calling this one colossal. Soon we'll run out of superlatives. Wouldn't it be better just to leave things be? They've recorded a mysterious bloop, you know, coming from somewhere underwater, which could only have been made by an animal of unthinkable size. I hope we never find it.'
Father Anthony waved his hand in the direction of his tree-crowded window as if mysterious bloops were none of his business.
âThe squid an infant â interesting,' he said. âBut wouldn't it look different if it were so young? Forgive me, but you must know that at least? You scientists?'
âNo!' I cried. âIt's impossible to tell. Darwin talks about it in
Origin
: “There is no metamorphosis; the cephalopodic character is manifested long before the parts of the embryo are completed”. A squid is always a squid, right from birth â so we talk of mature or immature squid, but never of infants. The squid has no infancy, which means no nostalgia. It has no Romantic period. Squid think Wordsworth is full of horseshit. They have no childhood! None at all! They're born adult, and the only change they undertake is death. There is no metamorphosis!'
At the end of this speech I felt as pink as Father Anthony looked. There was a ticking in the room; I thought it came from the ivory Jesus crucified on the wall.
Father Anthony drew a long breath. âDo you like it here on our island?' he asked.
âActually I'm thinking of leaving.'
âDo you crave human company? That's only natural.'
âI want to be surrounded by people again, but I don't have much desire to talk to them.'
âBut you have so many ideas to share,' said Father Anthony. âIf you'll excuse my asking, do you feel quite well? Not everyone can withstand this climate. I myself, many years ago, spent an entire year supine on my bed. The heat, you see, and it led to a sort of spiritual crisis, a lack of faith, you might say, in the sustaining hand of God. I thought I may have dreamed winter. It was only prayer that gave me strength, Bill â the strength of God against the burden of His creation.'
âPrayer!' I said. âCan I ask you a question? Doesn't faith feel to you like a deep-down knowing, something you've discovered rather than made? And what do you do when you've lost that
knowing
? Hope that praying to something you no longer
know
will get it back for you?'
âWould you like me to pray for you, Bill?'
âI'm not well,' I said. âI have headaches.'
âI understand,' said Father Anthony, reaching out a hand, and I was able, then, to imagine him laid out on a bed, dreaming winter. âWhy not leave?'
âMabel.'
âMabel is the squid, yes?'
âShe belongs in the sea.'
âAnd what do you propose?'
I explained that the net with which we'd plugged Mabel's bay was impossible to move with only two men. I corrected myself â one man. Of course he didn't know about Darwin. Could a priest see the ghost of Darwin? Unlikely. But if all the students were to come down to the bay and we worked together, we could unfasten the net and, very swiftly, move it from one side of the bay to the other, so that Mabel, on escaping, wouldn't tangle herself in it. (Confession: when I imagine this, I have in mind a delirious scene from the Marlon Brando version of
Mutiny on the Bounty
where the girls of Tahiti, bare-breasted, hold an enormous net in the water, into which the native men drive schools of fish.) Father Anthony seemed concerned about this plan. He asked if there would be any danger. I told him no, there would be no danger â unlike octopi, squid are not dangerous to human beings. All those old etchings of whaleboats embraced by monstrous tentacled creatures are completely false. I said this, but we don't really know. No one has ever swum with a colossal squid. But just to be on the safe side, it's my plan to feed Mabel all the fish I have while the girls move the net. I'll get into the water to distract her if I have to. I'll get so close I'll fill her clever eyes.
âSelect your strongest swimmers,' I said to Father Anthony. âThose girls will take the end of the net farthest from the beach. They'll be the ones to swim across the entrance to the bay.'
âI see you've thought this through. Would you excuse me for a minute? I must consult a colleague.'
I let him go with regret. It had begun to grow cool in the room, if it's possible here to have any sense of what cool truly is, and I fancied that this relief emanated in some way from Father Anthony. His pink skin suggested not clammy heat but the smooth, cool skin of a baby. I was content, sitting there in that office. My presentation had gone well. I was acting on my belief that Mabel should be free. It was good to talk to another man again. And, as if offended by this betrayal, Darwin â who was he, if not another man? â appeared at the window with the air of someone casually strolling by. He peered in.
âIt's safe,' I said in a loud whisper. Then I gave him the victory sign, at which he looked puzzled.
âWhere is he?' asked Darwin.
âGone for help.'
âHelp for whom?'
Darwin ambled away from the window and out into the trees, but I could see the bright camel colour of his naturalist's coat among the greenery; he hadn't gone far. Sitting comfortably in that cooling office, I considered the ways in which Darwin had never been particularly helpful to me, despite the initial promise of his appearance. After all, to a man â a scientist, no less â who has recently lost his faith, the ghost of Darwin could be a rich resource. We might have sat and talked about God's sovereignty, and then about its dissolution: a little of God vanishing into the dodo, a little into the long-lost ichthyosaurus. But he seems impatient when I raise these topics, and I've come to avoid them. I used to think of Charles Darwin in the same way some people think of Jesus Christ: he was a real man who existed in a specific historical time and he taught some valuable lessons, many of which I could adopt with no sense of contradiction. In short, I was a sensible man. I was no Creationist. I was reconciled with Darwin. I weighed it all up, and with the same clever hands I held something else entirely: that joyful faith of mine, impregnable.
I was once quite certain that God so loved the world. How sudden it was, on day 282: God's absence upon my shoulders, like a heavy flightless bird that can still hop to a height. How sobering to pass from Dr William Birch, beloved of God, to Bill Birch, organism. Just to be there on my sticky cliff and feel this way for no specific reason â it was a kind of grief. And I saw Mabel differently after that. How could I help it? She has nothing to do with me. I can't eat or reproduce with her. She's without complication. I was sure of one thing, until I was no longer sure; now my conviction is that Mabel must be free. And not for her own sake, no; although I love her, I would have put her in a tank and watched her in it for the rest of her life, or mine. But now I think she should remain a mystery. There must be some things in the world that no one sees and no one knows. Some monsters.
I began to worry about Father Anthony. Why was he taking so long? I rang the silver bell and a girl appeared. She was about sixteen, neat and shy behind heavy hair, and I felt like a
Bounty
sailor encountering beauty for the first time. I thought of the one mutineer who had the date on which he first saw Tahiti tattooed on his quivering arm.
âHello,' I said.
âHello,' she answered. She was solemn, and so was I. The heat had returned.
âWho are you?'
âI'm Faith,' she said, and she was so allegorical, standing there, she may as well have been draped in white robes, placed on a plinth above a plaque that read âFaith'. I laughed, which startled her.
âIs that really your name?' I asked. âOr did Father Anthony ask you to come in here and tell me that?'
She was confused but pleased. I knew I wouldn't touch her â I'm not so mad as to have touched her â but I wanted to. I want to. Oh, Tahiti! Was Darwin ever there? No, I don't think so. He preferred dustier places, godforsaken places like the Galápagos, prehistoric with tortoises. This girl and girls like her would come to the beach with me and draw aside the net.
âDo you like to swim, Faith?' I asked.
âYes,' she answered.
Father Anthony entered the office, and behind him was Eric, the driver.
âFaith!' Father Anthony cried, as if overjoyed to see her, and he ushered her merrily out. She looked back at me very quickly, the way she might look over one shoulder while swimming. Where had she appeared from and where would she go now? Father Anthony went behind his desk but didn't sit down. Eric leaned against the bookshelf.
âNow, Bill,' said Father Anthony. âYou mentioned headaches. The brain is a very delicate thing, which you as a scientist would know very well. The brain and the mind â two different things, yes? Both very delicate. If we're going to help you, I'd like you to do me a favour first.'
âI already gave the lecture,' I said. âYou owe
me
a favour.'
Father Anthony laughed.
âVery true, very true,' he said. âYou're right. But perhaps you'd consider doing this favour anyway. For my sake. Let me just tell you what I have in mind. I'd like you to see a doctor about these headaches of yours. Symptoms that seem harmless enough in other places become much more serious on an island like ours. When I first arrived, I was reluctant to see doctors. I thought I could cope with all the discomforts. But things escalated until I was in the grip of a brain fever.'
âYou called it a spiritual crisis,' I pointed out.
âIt was, Bill, it was,' he said, smiling, pinker than ever. âI want you to travel back to town with Eric. There's a doctor on the supply ship, and he's willing to see you. It's either today or you'll have to wait another month. Why suffer needlessly?'
âAnd the squid?'
âYou see the doctor,' said Father Anthony, âand then we'll worry about the squid.'
âIt has to be tomorrow,' I said.
âTomorrow,' nodded Father Anthony.
Of course he was transparent; a man like Father Anthony always is. He was perched on the edge of his desk, becalmed in his own solicitude, hoping I would submit without fuss to his will. So I did. I allowed myself to be ushered out, I allowed him to assure me that my supplies had been refrigerated, I allowed myself to be seated comfortably in the jeep. Father Anthony followed the jeep as Eric reversed it onto the road, he waved us off as if with a valedictory handkerchief, and I turned my head at the first corner to see him walking toward the school with his arms behind his back, his head lowered, as if in prayer.
Around that first corner I offered to pay Eric to stop the jeep.
âNo, no,' he said, intent on the road.
âPlease, Eric. This is important. How can I make you understand?'
âForget it,' he said. âI'll lose my job. You know how hard it is to earn money here if you want to stay legal? I have a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Auckland and this is the only work there is. I'll drive you into town. After that you do what you want, I don't care, and if anyone finds out, it's not because I've told them.'
We drove on. Soon afterward I noticed movement in the trees alongside the road. There was Darwin, running. I've never seen a man move so fast. He couldn't quite keep up with the jeep, although he managed it for stretches of a minute or two and at times seemed to extend his right arm out to reach the car door. Perhaps he was trying to warn me of what I already knew. Faithful Darwin sped beside us, the wings of his coat flying out behind him, his feet a blur and his face a study of determined strength. We lost him shortly before town, when it was necessary to cross a river and he made the mistake of plunging into the water rather than waiting to follow us on the narrow bridge. I turned to look and saw him thrashing about with the incredulous fury of an Olympian who's just lost the final.