braga
(7,000
words)
Epilogue Glossary
To
the fin-folk, who never disappeared, except beneath the
skin.
The
Old Rectory had been haunted since before it had been built.
Everyone on Brusa knew this, and most people on the islands
nearby, knew it, too. They had heard the stories at mother's
knee, warning them to keep away, or threatening them with
some dark figure drawn inevitably from the echoing, unvisited
(yet in another sense, much visited) halls of Brusa Rectory.
It was what had drawn Frame to this place, after all. The
incipience of a darkness, greater than his own. He'd researched
the whole matter painstakingly, over half-pints of thick,
dark beer and elegant, thin cigars. He sat, alone in the
summer's late evening light which slanted in through the
large latticed window, in what once had been the Rectory
library and went over it all in his mind. From outside the
window, the sound of the sea came and went like breath.
For
years, stretching back beyond even the long tongues of the
spey-wives, pounding Neolithic forces had danced around
the flat knoll by the water, bringing down rain or snow
or wind or whatever necromantic element had been needed
to fulfil their megalithic, tribal rituals. Later, various
axe-blooded Norsemen were said to have used the area as
unhallowed burial ground for hooded heretics. In the Sixteenth
Century, some stragglers from the Great Armada of El Rey
Filipo II had been shipwrecked in the cauldron seas which
rose up against the rocky coves, and had come ashore and
set up camp on the knoll. They stayed there for six nights,
but on the seventh, a great wind blew up (started, some
say, by the fin-wives of the deep who had wanted to keep
the sailors for themselves) and the entire camp was swept
over the edge of the cliffs. At first, it had seemed strange
to Frame that a religious building would have been constructed
on the site of so much unwanted psychical activity, but
there it was. Perhaps, he'd hypothesised as he'd driven
through the midsummer's afternoon towards the place, it
had been a deliberate act on the part of the old Church
custodians. A statement, if you like. In the late Nineteenth
Century, science - even in church circles - had been in
the ascendant, and the man who became the first Rector of
Brusa, the Reverend Archibald Farquharson, was a Fifer who,
quite simply, did not believe in ghosts. In the name of
progress, he'd wanted to abolish superstition, once and
for all, from the Orkney islands, so that, by the dawn of
the Electric Century, they would no longer be, as it were,
islands. It was he who had driven the church to raise a
respectable rectory on Brusa, that he might cater better
for the growing population of the island, which had been
newly-swelled by an influx of herring fishermen and their
families. Frame had searched, long and hard, for a photograph
of the man, but as yet had failed to find even one. That,
too seemed odd. Surely, he'd thought, such a prominent local
figure in the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries
would have had at least one sitting taken. The only solid
piece of evidence relating to Rector Farquarson's existence
was a one-line document which had been copied down in copperplate
by some assiduous clerk from a burned fragment of a diary
after the rest had been destroyed:
At midnight,
the sea came to my door.
[top]
But
then he'd learned from a former shepherd, an old man known
on account of his once-ruddy hair as, Red Hector, that after
he'd died, all the Rector's belongings, including a pile
of books which had stretched halfway to the sky, had been
burned and the ashes scattered across the waves. Not his
body, though. That had never been found.
Frame
shuddered, and instinctively he glanced back at the equipment;
an atomic chronosphere and a lenticular stereoscope; both
of which he'd placed on a broad, sturdy-legged, wooden table.
The first was to measure relative time, since paranomal
beings tended to exist in a variety of time-space continua
which possessed quite different physical laws from those
of own. The stereoscope was a fairly conventional instrument
which could take several photographs at once and fuse them
into a single, multi-dimensional image. The number of potential
dimensions in the known universe had reached twelve, so
the number in those cosmological regions which had not yet
been exposed to the glare of theoretical physics eventually
would attain almost Kabbalistical levels. The Victorian
table was the only loose furniture left in the library -
that, and two battered-looking armchairs. He'd tried each
of them in turn and finally, had sat on the one whose springs
had seemed a little less sprung.
[top]
The
heat of the day was beginning to dissipate, yet the sky
remained cloudless. The Rectory had not been visible from
the road, being hidden by a clump of trees and by the rounded
shoulder of the knoll's inland edge. Frame had parked his
clapped-out, rusting hulk of a hatch-back just off the only
road on the island, which itself, was little more than a
track. Anywhere except Brusa, it would've been a track.
The Ordnance Survey maps had it down as a dotted line. The
Rectory itself was missing from the charts. It was as though
even the ink of its existence had faded, so that now it
lay, unrecognised in the cartograph of this world, yet very
much alive in the minds of the Brusi, as the folk of this
most remote of the Orkney islands were known. Frame had
pulled the car to a halt at the end of the track. The old
metal chassis had creaked as, at once, it had begun to cool.
He had thought of leaving the window open, but then had
decided against it, and had rolled it up instead. Frame
remembered thinking that the car wouldn't last long in the
grey and salt of the Northern Isles. There were no vintage
vehicles up here; the rust had set in, long ago.
He had
been here before, some days earlier, when he had come to
reconnoitre the area. No particular atmosphere had struck
him on that occasion, but then, he had not been about to
spend the night in the place. Sometimes, Frame wondered
why he did this work for the Society. It was hardly fun,
being treated either as a crank or an interloper. He had
expected the Rectory to smell musty, dead, but actually
he had found that it smelled of the sea. The water's edge
lay less than 100 yards away, just a black selkie leap from
the gale-blown, latticed glass of the front window. For
the Rectory had been built to face the open ocean, as though
Farquharson had constructed it as a Babel to the might of
the sea, as though he had challenged the sea to render up
its secrets so that he might do battle on behalf of his
rational, missionary god, on the sands and grasses of Brusa.
Tonight, though, there was no breeze and the heat lay like
kirkyard earth over everything. Frame was sweating from
carrying in the equipment. Over the past few months, he
had felt a certain weakness begin to creep over his limbs.
Maybe it was time to move on, to do something else, to stop
searching in dark corners for that which did not exist (or,
if it did, then it had no desire to reveal itself). But
move on where? He had come to the end of the land - beyond
the end, actually - because, really, where else might an
extreme situation present itself? Change came only through
such extremes. Once, he'd had love, then he'd had none;
once, he'd had money, then he'd been poor. He'd been young
and now
he wasn't exactly old, but time seemed to
be in a state of perpetual acceleration and like a stupid
fish, he was caught at its centre. Well, this was his way
of stepping right out of it. For a while, at least. Thinking,
and writing, about paranormal phenomena rendered to his
mind a place to roam, free of lawyers, money-worries, morality.
There was no morality in science, and none in buildings
either, if the truth be told. It was human beings who imposed
moralities, and Frame had had his fill of human beings and
their concepts. He just wanted facts, or non-facts, it didn't
matter which, really. Either way, they would lift him out
of himself, and out of the darkness which lay at his centre
and which made lunatic time reel ever faster onwards.
[top]
The
library was empty, in fact the whole house was virtually
a shell. Where books once had sat, the rows of bookshelves
were marked, shadowed, so that he could make out the exact
sizes of the volumes. But I'll never discover what had been
in the books, he thought, nor what had driven the good people
of Brusa to pile them high, and set them alight. They had
burned, especially the books. The chronograph lay still,
its needle poised above the paper at the zero mark. The
stereosphere made no sound. On one occasion, some years
ago, both machines had gone completely crazy, their mechanism
had become possessed by what Frame - then at the beginning
of his investigative career - had imagined to be some form
of visitation from the other side, some kind of invisible,
ectoplasmic activity, but which had turned out to be simply
the raging of an underwater stream. He'd felt a fool, and
had vowed never to repeat the mistake of giving in to fear.
Ever since then, he had investigated sites - usually houses,
but sometimes open spaces - with an exactitude of which
any forensic cop would've been proud. He'd been all over
the British Isles, but this was the first time he'd come
this far north, to this strange land which seemed to consist
disproportionately of sky and water. He'd been here a week,
and in spite of his long-held, rigorous, para-scientific
attitude, Frame had found himself beginning to sink, mentally,
into what he could only describe as sand, the white money
dust of the coastline, and that was why, finally, he'd decided
to terminate his researches which had taken him to the incongruously
pink Cathedral of Magnus with its skull'd, Masonic tombs
and its perfect acoustic luminescence, into the various
public libraries and into the cottages of some of the older
folk of the island, and eventually, to venture into the
shell of the Rectory itself.
It was
said by some, Red Hector being one, that Rector Farquharson
had had no wife because he'd lost her with child awhile
back, and that was why, if truth be told, he'd wanted to
build his house so close to the sea's edge and on a reputedly
haunted site, to boot. Frame had listened to Red Hector's
tale, and had accepted the cigar which the old crofter had
proffered, but somehow, he had doubted whether the islanders
would have come to that conclusion before the disappearance
of the Rector. He'd seen it first from the plane: an ugly,
dark block of a building, quite out-of-place on the undulating,
sandy island. It had risen like a fist towards the sky and
towards the tiny nine-seater plane in which he had been
travelling, and for a moment, Frame had been seized by a
terrible, irrational thought that the Rectory might rise
like a giant hand from the sand, from the sea, and the fist
open and the fingers tear down the plane, the sky, the world.
He'd kept a close eye on the altimeter until the moment
when, elegantly and remarkably comfortably, the plane had
touched down on the rough stones of the landing strip. His
fellow-passengers had already got off at previous stops;
Brusa was last, furthest out, least regarded in the archipelagic
scheme of things. And apart from the fact that he'd needed
his car to haul the equipment along, that was why, this
time around, he had come by ferry. The sea had seemed a
lesser danger, though when he'd glanced at the red ink poster
which had been pasted like a Red Madonna to the outside
of the disembarkation post, warning of unpredictable tides
and incipient flooding due to the inordinate lack of incline
on the island, he'd not been so sure. It seemed that Brusa,
like a skerry, had just risen from the sea-bed and might
return there at any time. What a place to erect a stone
house, Frame had thought. The 3-storey Rectory was taller
than it was, broad and had dark, elongated windows. Like
everything in Orkney, it was made of a tough, grey-brown
sandstone which was the hardest sandstone Frame had ever
rapped his knuckles across. Not that he'd been rapping for
ghosts
[top]
He lit
one of the candles he had brought with him. Midnight sun
was wishful thinking on Brusa. You have to go another few
hundred leagues north, beyond the Westrays and the Whalsays
and the Yells and up to the Faeroerne, to bask on a rock
in that clear light. But there was only one Whalsay, he
reminded himself. But then, there were two of everything,
really, weren't there? And especially so, with these islands.
There were the lands you saw and could walk on - the full-breasted
mountains of Hoy, the sinking sands of Sanday, and so on
- and then there were the islands which you could never
see, or touch, or walk upon, unless you be Jesus. Beneath
all the low crofts, the fishermen's cottages, the grass
of disused manses, there lay rock the colour of sand, and
beneath that, the shifting, sliding, savage female body
of the sea. Wherever you went, it was there. He'd felt it,
right from the moment he'd stepped off the plane. The smell
of daberlacks, the cold sweat of the open ocean, and beneath
the soles of his feet, the sensation of seething, magnetic
waters, pulling him down, down and north
Seven
beats of the oar,
To a northern beach,
Where the sand courses like molten silver through the water,
A prophetic land of stone tablets and steel Bibles.
Any
anyway, how had he known all that, the names of the different
islands? He shrugged, then remembered he was alone in the
room. He'd figured he must have read it somewhere, in some
archive or other. It was funny, the things which caught
in the nets of your mind. The candles cast long shadows
across the walls, and caused certain cracks and deficiencies
to appear which he hadn't noticed before. Every so often,
the flame would bend and sputter and dance and its movement
reminded him of the silken chorea of the sea of the northern
reaches, in the long leagues before the water turned to
ice. He rubbed his fist. The rock had almost broken the
skin. The rock of the wall.
Suddenly,
Frame wondered why was there. Why, really, had he come to
this northern place where night never fell but where the
day danced like selkie foam along the edge of the horizon
as it moved, imperceptibly, widdershins, from west to east?
A messy London divorce, no children, the onset of a sterile
middle age, a waning, subtle but inexorable, the turning
to earth
a subsistence job. The dark loneliness of
the city. No solitude. It was a long time since he'd had
a woman. And Frame had come at length to lose any desires
he might once have regarded as being as important as, say,
food or breath. It was odd how one could do without those
things of the flesh. The Society for Psychical Research
had been his refuge. A glossy, Sabbath bolt-hole for losers
and obsolescent engineers. But he had gone further than
most; the whole thing had begun to take over his life, to
assume control, if not of his thoughts, then of his actions.
It had become, almost a religious process. Not that he'd
minded; it was quite comforting to feel that there might
be some or other moving force in the midst of his personal
oblivion. A kind of sublimation, perhaps. Very post-modern.
Very London. The new celibacy, provoked as much by a fear
of intimacy, a subtle paranoia of the senses, as a fear
of the slow virus, the creep of wormwood. Love and death
walked the streets of the city, hand-in-hand. Life had grown
too closely to resemble the Crucifixion, and he wanted no
part of it. He ran his palm over the bald surface of the
chronosphere. It reminded him of an unmapped world; this
is what it had been like, at the beginning. And the spirit
of God moved upon the face of the waters
Perhaps that
was what had attracted him to this place; the view of the
waters, first thing in the morning, was transfiguring. He'd
looked it up, himself. The Haunted Sites Of The Orcades.
A blusteringly pompous, mid-Twentieth Century tome, long
out-of-print, penned by some Middle English colonel-type
for upper middle class tourists with a middling familiarity
with the colonies and the classics. The Northern Isles were
about as close as they could've got to the Other, without
actually having to leave the shores of Albion. But who was
he to scoff? Perhaps, one day, he would come back to live
here, by the sea which knew no fixed reference points and
which did not judge and compare, but which simply swelled
and heaved to the rhythm of the moon, and glistened with
pearl dust. He ate the last of his sandwiches. His thermos
coffee had long gone cold. The cheese was stale.
[top]
He was
onto his second candle. He glanced at his watch. Two hours
beyond midnight. The darkest point of the night. And not
even the ticking of a clock, he thought, to remind me that
somewhere on this earth, my heart still beats. But it was
not really dark. The east-facing window was a shade of purple.
It would be another fine day, later. At some point during
the night, a mist had fallen like a curtain across the island.
Frame knew that it might not lift for days. And there would
be no planes, or even ferries, either in or out, till it
did. He sniffed the air, and then began to pace the floorboards
around the library. I should've brought a book, he mused,
and then he laughed out loud. His laughter sank into the
dark shelves of the bookcases, and brought to him a sudden
consciousness of being completely alone. He stopped pacing.
The wood was silent. It was a sign of incipient lunacy.
But there would be no moon, tonight. No moon, and no lifting
of this oppressive feeling which blanketed the island and
filled his chest so that each breath became a measured effort,
a breaking down of time inside of himself. He went over
to the window and gazed blindly into the white darkness
beyond. He tried to imagine where the mist might end, somewhere
out over the water, a shifting, ragged sweep of the sea
which might lie anywhere between the hard-blown glass of
the Rectory and the coast of Norway. The way of Nor. If
I gaze for long enough, he thought, I shall grow irreversibly
myopic, until I will be able to look, only inside my own
head. Every path in this life led to madness.
No-one
had stayed in the place since the late 1960's, when some
hippies had come up with an agit-prop theatre company and
used the Rectory as a radical squat. Reputedly, they had
cultivated various species of mushroom and herb, both in
the rooms and outside in the garden, and had held strange,
naked rituals by the sea's edge. Dancing skin circles around
the skeletal rocks. But they had left when winter had come
roaring in, and the plants had withered and perished. No-one
else had wanted to stay there after that. The place had
been left to rack and ruin. Surprisingly, in spite of the
prevailing sou-westerlies and the sporadic and perishing
north-easterly gales, roof and windows had not fallen in
and since no vandals had reached that far north, the Rectory
still stood, over a century after its construction, overgrown
but essentially intact. I'll not find anything here, he
thought. It'll be another of those one-flip sites; one flip
of the needle would be all. He would leave whenever he could,
cold, hungry and sleep-deprived. He was sleepy right now.
Frame's mobile phone lay on the table beside the silver
ball of the chronosphere. Now, why on earth have I still
got that, he wondered. It's just a remnant of a past life.
I don't need it any more and anyway, the waves don't even
reach this far out. Partly to avoid falling asleep, he stood
up. He looked at the black plastic phone and saw that its
battery had run down So he slid open the top drawer of the
desk - which was the only drawer left - and shoved it in.
He went over and sat down again. From beyond the window,
from the thin strip of scrubgrass and sand which was all
that lay between the Rectory and the sea, Frame felt a swell
begin to build. It wasn't something he was able to hear
or see. It wasn't really a sensation, at all, but something
much deeper, a swaying feeling that moved within the template
of his body. All at once, it made him feel smooth and loose
- he couldn't have described it any more accurately than
that; it was a bit like the way he'd have felt after a work-out
or a swim. But beneath it all, there was a noise. A scratching
sound. At first, Frame thought there might be rats in the
ceiling and instinctively, he ducked, but then he noticed
the machines. The chronosphere needle had gone wild and
was tearing across the paper in a manner which had never
happened before, not even with the subterranean stream.
He shivered, and drew his arms around his body. The window
was firmly closed, but it was as though it had just swung
open. Everything had turned intensely cold. His bones froze.
Frame felt fingers slip across his back. The Rector. But
something didn't fit. The touch had been that of a woman.
Slowly, he turned around.
[top]
She
was seated in the chair opposite Frame, and was looking
at him, and talking in a voice clearer than his own (though
just then, he wasn't doing any talking), but somehow, at
first, he couldn't make out the meaning of what she was
saying. She was speaking in an accent which he recognised
as vaguely Orcadian, yet somehow far older. It were as though
her breath had been pulled through soil from the far past,
from the long stone slabs which once had danced in circles
across the island. He had no fear. He was no longer cold.
Her words emerged into sand.
You
look tired, she said.
What's your name? he asked.
She
held out her hand and in a movement which seemed quite natural,
he rose, bowed and kissed the place just above the line
of her knuckles. Her skin was cool, but soft and the taste
on his lips was pleasantly salty. Her body was lithe, and
beneath her long, grey dress, Frame could see that her breasts
were rounded and firm. Her complexion was fair and her lips
possessed a faint tinge of violet. She wore a necklace of
pearls which, he knew, were real. She had long, soft (he
knew it would be soft) hair which fell about her neck in
silver tresses. It was not the colour of old age, but of
ageless silver. Her eyes held a hint of bemusement - at
the sight of him, no doubt - and were a light blue-grey,
the colour of the Orcadian sea on a rising, summer tide,
early in the morning.
Braga
Farquharson is my name.
How long have you been here?
She
glanced away, and a distant look came into her eyes, and
their movement reminded Frame of the slick of the sea as
it moved slowly over pearls and she sighed, so that he could
feel the grey dress slip ever so slightly across the cream-coloured
skin of her neck.
I was
here when Brusa was filled with the creaking bellies of
wooden ships.
Longships? he enquired, somewhat astonished.
Herring ships.
Oh.
I was
not married to the Rector, but I came to love him. And I
was his undoing.
Frame was puzzled. She had almost no eyebrows, and after
a while, it dawned on him that her body was hairless, so
that her skin seemed to glow with a dim light.
So
you're not Mrs. Farquarson? Yet you took his name.
What happened to the Rector? I assume you are referring
to the Rector Archibald Farquharson.
Archibald? I was his sister.
Frame rocked back in his chair. Felt the ancient wood curl
beneath his spine.
You loved him - as a sister.
As a wife.
He let his breath out, in a stream. The chronosphere needle
hit metal.
It was our sin. A very old sin. A Biblical evil. Yet we
did not feel evil, Archibald and I. You see, we were of
the sea, of the selkie tide, and in the ocean, there is
no evil and no good. There was never any Eden beneath the
waves.
You're a selkie?
She flashed him a look.
Don't insult me, Frame. I am a fin woman. A mermaid. And
where did Farquarson go? He returned to the sea.
And that's where you've come from, today?
The shadows grew longer, and then shrank and the cracks
in the wall appeared and then vanished in tune with the
candle.
[top]
She
did not answer, but turned her slender neck and he could
see that she was gazing towards the window, in the direction
of the sea-line. He looked at the empty bookshelves, at
the lectern where the one large Bible had sat, the Bible
which, he knew, suddenly had turned, one stormy, summer
night of gospels and knives, into the Book of the Black
Art and which Rector Farquharson had read and imbibed like
an oyster, sea-water, and which he had then used to draw
the fin-woman away from the hidden place and to imprison
her in the library of his wisdom, among the books and the
leather and the wood. And in that moment, Frame knew that
the Rector had performed the ancient ritual of the Fin Folk
on a selkie tide, and had become the eternal brother of
Braga of the Silver Tresses, and that since the Fin Folk
recognise no evil and no good, he had possessed her also
as a wife. She had risen from her chair. The table stood
between them. Frame was suddenly aware of her gaze directed
at him.
You are my seventh.
What?
He had a sense of something sinking in his gut. She had
known his name.
She smiled.
Farquarson was my first, you understand.
For a moment, he thought that he had misheard. Then it occurred
to him that he might be losing his mind. Or that he might
be asleep. But the fact that the smell of the sea had grown
stronger in his nostrils pointed against that.
He heard
a strange sound, a tune familiar to his ears. He tried to
place it. The Old Man and the Sea. It was coming from the
mobile 'phone, from inside the drawer. He smiled. He hadn't
known the phone could play that tune. But then, he hadn't
known the tune itself would seem familiar. He knew that
there was no call coming in, save that of the fin folk.
Suddenly, she was coquettish. She swirled around, as though
she were wearing a long ball-gown and not a tight, grey
dress.
Do you think I am beautiful? she asked, as she danced on
toes light with the notes.
The tune played three times and then stopped, suddenly,
in the middle of the fourth cycle. She stopped in mid-flight.
The dance was broken. She seemed suddenly distant, and intensely
frail. He felt he would be able to snap her in two, like
a seahorse, with a simple twist of his arm. He drew breath,
and spoke quietly.
You are the most beautiful being I have set eyes upon, in
this life or the next.
Her face grew serious.
[top]
There
is no other life. And I wish to prolong beauty in this one,
to extend it so that my eyes shall match the sea, forever
and so that I shall step outside of time's tyranny. I wish
my beauty to be more than merely that which you are able
to see.
Where is Farquharson, now? he asked, a little tentative
after her outburst.
She seemed distracted.
Farquharson? He is in Hether Blether.
The vanishing courts
he whispered. He was no longer
surprised at his knowledge.
She glanced at the window.
It will soon be sunrise. No-one must see me.
No-one can see you, Braga. No-one, but me.
She shook her head.
It is the spey-wives I'm afraid of. With their steel bibles,
they pierce my eyes like the beaks of the brown bonxie.
A tiny shiver ran through her body, so that her grey dress
caught the silver in the dull light of the candle. She went
on, as though driven by some fast-flowing current.
From before the beginning of time, we roamed free through
the ocean. Like thoughts, we took different forms. Then
the metal ships came, and the big nets, and we had to vanish,
to go out of time. We no longer sang to men, except in their
heads. The Rector set out to debunk superstition, to destroy
the non-rational, but gradually, day by day, I sang to him
that which he could not hear, and the sea air blew into
his lungs and replaced the blood in his veins. He summoned
me from the Vanishing Isle, and held me here, in this place.
She swung her arms around her. They were slim, yet he could
see that her chest would be ocean strong. Her's was a deceptive
frailty.
So many books
and yet, at the end, it was I who took
him down.
She looked at Frame with a piteous expression.
I do not want to grow old and ugly like the rest. I will
not disappear.
The she became angry.
I will not be an old fin-wife! Never!
Where are the rest of the fin-folk? he asked, quietly.
Vanished, like the Norn, into men's heads, or else turned
to fin-wives. They have lost all hope. Or else, caught in
the barbarous, unhearing nets of sea-trawlers, or blackened
with oil slicks, or cracked like sea-horses.
Frame started at this. Had she really read his thoughts?
The image of a sea-horse, lying dead and broken on the ocean
floor, was powerful and tragic. Or was it he who had read
the mind of a mermaid? He ran his fingers through his hair,
which once had been long and had been the colour of ripe
corn, but which long ago, had been cropped short, military-style.
Scythed, along with his dreams. Cold sweat beaded his scalp.
I, too have lost hope, many times, he mused, and his voice
seemed to come from the end of a long tunnel. There was
a pause, and the sound of the waves, massing and then seething
back, filled the room. When Braga spoke again, a strange
sense of dislocation had settled in the library.
I took one of the hippies, awhile back. The rest of them
were so far out, they didn't even notice.
He found himself basking in her sense of humour. He realised
it was the first time in years that he had really enjoyed
the company of a woman. Then she opened her mouth, and began
to sing.
He found
himself behind her eyelids.
Her voice was thin and plaintive, and it rose and fell as
she sang the words to a song he didn't immediately recognise,
but with whose cadence he felt he was familiar. However,
the language seemed very archaic, some old, northern tongue,
long-forgotten by all but the dead. He closed his eyes and
after a while, he was up on a hill-top by an unbroken Odin
Stone, the ends of his fingers touching the silhouette bones
of one whom he could not see. The wind blew in his hair,
and he felt his mouth open and close and no words issued
forth.
The song ended. He opened his eyes.
She rose, and Frame rose with her. She moved along the bookcases.
Her hand sculpted out the places where books once had sat,
and it was as though she were browsing through the vanished
pages.
The books are gone, said Frame.
She looked at him, and she was far away, in some distant
land beyond the land of the Gor, beyond even the realm of
the Finn.
They are invisible, she said.
I will miss you, he said.
He glanced at the chronosphere whose needle had over-reached
itself and fractured right down the middle, and at the stereoscope
which, he realised, had been emitting a high-pitched, dog
frequency howl in the shape of a lenticule, ever since Braga
had entered. Then he remembered that in fact she hadn't
entered, but had simply appeared, sitting in the chair.
He wondered again if perhaps he really was insane. But then,
if he was mad then so too were the machines and thence,
the whole of science. Several hundred years of lunacy thrown
into disarray by a being who had known neither evil nor
good and for whom such terms were truly without meaning.
For the fin folk, the ocean was a dissonant symphony of
light. It was beyond logic. Or else, it was the supreme
logic. But a persistent thought nagged him.
But what of Farquarson? he asked.
She inclined her head, ever so slightly, and though there
was no detectable wind in the library, Frame thought he
saw the breeze sift through her silvery hair. She smiled,
and her smile was of the back rocks, her teeth were the
flames of koli lamps. Iron seas, her breath in his mouth.
He reeled back, feeling suddenly dizzy. The shelves, the
room, the Rectory swam around him. The lectern, the steel
bible, the pure smell of kirkyard earth.
He was my brother, but he knew it not. We move among human
folk, like silver among copper.
The sea was pouring in through the sand of the glass and
the walls. Her grey dress was turning to silver, and her
cream-white skin, to gold. Around her feet, the sea-water
was swirling like the caresses of a lover. Then the arms
were his arms, and he felt the sea around him, inside him.
His hair was long and silver, and swept around his shoulders
as it had, thirty years earlier when he had cultivated and
partaken of the agit-prop mushrooms and gone on the trip
from whence he had never returned, and as it had, a hundred
years before that, when he had come to this place as Rector,
as scientific Dundonian Christian intent on reform and improvement,
and as it had, a thousand years before that, when he had
returned with the bone ships from a Holy Land steeped in
the blood of fresh crucifixions.
You are my seventh, she whispered, and her whisper was the
warm, prevailing sou-westerly.
The candle blew out.
I am your seventh, Braga whispered, and her whisper was
the icy, winter nor-easterly.
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We
grow young through our mortal lives, each one, longer than
the span of the ancient books. We are become redemption
itself. Together, fin and human, we have ridden the njuggle
across the span of the oceans and we have vanquished the
tyranny of Michael and of Eden. Through our love of unspoken
words, the sea has swept away the King of the Cross and
now we may farm freely beneath the sea.
She was facing him, he could feel her cold fish breath,
and yet he no longer felt it so, and their lips joined and
her long, finned body pressed against his. Her lips tasted
of reef coral. Her heart beat a tide against his chest,
and he was drowned in her blood. Inside him, her bones danced
green withershins in the shape of an earth-curse. Her thoughts
came in whispers that were like kisses. The great underground
chambers of the Fin King's palace flashed before his eyes,
the pillars, the arched roof-beams, the swaying, dancing
ganfer forms and in the deepest chamber of all, he saw a
room which was exactly like the Rectory library. And in
that watery room, so like the inside of an enormous shell,
he saw Braga and the dark stranger who once had been a Norse
warrior, embrace and lie down together, naked in the clear
liquid. Every seventy years, the span of a human life, every
seven warts of the oar, she returned and reclaimed him,
his body, his soul, and so had they avoided both the fate
of the Fin-folk, which was to grow immeasurably aged, and
the destiny of humankind, which was to turn to kirkyard
earth.
My love, do you not remember sailing along the Eastern shore
in the long, long ships of King Karl? Do you remember the
look in the eyes of Earl Paul the Blind? The burning stink
of Thorkel Flayer as his skin leapt from his body into the
flames? Can you not feel the wind as it blows across our
bodies as we lie, between the tidemarks, on the skerry rocks
of Eynhallow? We have loved through many ages of men, and
yet, in our hearts, we grow young. For the sea washes away
all sins, and only knowledge remains. And it is the knowledge
of the waves, of the white spume. Ours is a pure history.
And all at once, he was standing by a wheelie-stane, on
his lips, the rub of an old, clay pipe, its stem worn to
the weave of his lips. And from the endless sky which swung
like a cold, white flame across the islands, he heard the
dead-shak song of a quail, and he knew that if the fin-woman
did not come soon, he too would lie with a Bible 'neath
his chin. Aye, he had known Braga Farquharson when he had
been Rector of this place, but he had known her, long before,
in the darkness of fishermen's cottages where the lik-strae
dust bore the sole prints of a mortal father and where their
mother, hidden till the time of the spa ben, lest the peerie
folk should cast their spells, sought out in her dreams
the feather of a black cock to crow awa the trows.
He knew
that outside, the sky would be lightening and the waves
tripping, one over the next like the waves of men who had
come and gone by the water's edge, and that up on the hill,
the light would stretch and pull along the tall stones which
were incised with the initials of long-dead interlopers.
There was blood in the ocean; the ocean was blood. He tasted
it in his mouth, felt it run along the lines of his back,
his legs which once had been stone but which now were turning
like the world and which would take him, ever northwards,
seven times and more, out past Fetlar and Baliasta to the
crags of Gisk and Sekk and then further, up to the White
Sea where those who had known neither Eden nor Fall dwelt
in peace still. He was sinking in the white metal seas,
he was skinned again in the silver and gold of the skies.
And in that liquid moment, which stretched beyond the ends
of time and space, he felt the machines which he had abandoned,
become molten and explode slowly into air, and he knew that
he would spend eternity in the cold ocean which he had never
really left.
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He
stumbled, and reached out to stop himself, but then he realised
that he had already fallen and that he was swimming away,
out through the cracks in the walls which had opened up
like sea rivers, and away from Brusa Island, from the here-and-now
that has never been real, and into the ocean from which
everything comes and to which, at length, all things must
return. And that the ancient fin-man who, in this world,
had been known as Frame and his sister-wife who many centuries
earlier, had taken the name, Braga, once again and forever
would be as one.
Epilogue:
One week later, after the fog had lifted, a pilot flying
a Britten Norman Islander over Brusa Island noticed that
Frame's car had not moved from near the Rectory, and informed
the police. It was rumoured (though never confirmed in official
reports) that when the local policeman had opened the Rectory
door, it had taken more than the usual amount of effort,
and that when, finally, it did open, sea-water had gushed
through the doorway, almost sweeping the policeman off his
feet. A freak flood on a selkie tide had engulfed part of
Brusa Island that night. No body was ever found. The Rectory
was declared dangerous, and an order was issued from Kirkwall
for its demolition. Somehow, the order has not yet been
carried out. Something about the machines needing repair,
or the demolition teams being ill with backache. The dead
spey-wives know better.
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Glossary:
bonxie:
Great Skua, dark brown birds which has been known to attack
people
Britten Norman Islander 9-seater propellor planes which
fly from island to another throughout the Northern Archipelagos
daberlacks: seaweed
dead-shak: the song of the common quail, said to
presage death
ganfer: 'ghost', which appears when a person is about
to die
koli lamp: a small open iron lamp which burned fish
oil.
lik-strae: the straw of the death-bed, which was
burned after the body
had been removed from it.
njuggle: Shetlandic mythical water-horse
spa ben: prophecy bone; the condyle between the thigh-bone
and shank
of a sheep. In Shetland, it was used to predict the sex
of an unborn child
trows: trolls (often interchangeable with fairies)
warts strokes (of the oar): It is said that a fin-man
can sail from Orkney to the coast of Norway with seven strokes
of the oar.
wheelie-stanes: traditional resting-places for coffin-bearers
on the way to the
graveyard.
withershins: widdershins
My
thanks
to Alistair Peebles, George Gunn and Leslie Manson and to
the Orkney Skald which breathes within us all. Also, to
The Mermaid Bride and other Orkney folk tales, by Tom Muir,
The Folklore of Orkney and Shetland, by Ernest Marwick and
to the hidden, unending tale of the Orkneyinga, by the dark
stranger
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