Lía glanced at the postcard, said Goofy had always been her favorite, and then asked me sweetly, as if it was nothing, if Franz Liszt hadn’t been an anti-Semite.
The second postcard from Orlando was titled Liszt II. It was another Donald Duck drawing, but this duck was dressed as a painter or a bricklayer, maybe — it wasn’t too clear. Milan wrote: The day of the competition arrives. Josy is ready. When it’s finally his turn, he begins to play beautifully, a virtuoso, a child prodigy, but then suddenly, for no apparent reason, he begins to improvise. The judges disqualify him. Josy is furious and disappointed and runs off. Back at home, Liszt sits before the piano and, still moved by the Gypsy boy’s music, composes a piece, one of his Hungarian Rhapsodies, I think, without realizing the influence Josy’s music has had on him. Count Teleky points this out, but Liszt resents the idea that he might have needed any Gypsy influences to finally become a true composer. Liszt accepts that he has lost the bet. Josy leaps into the room. He’d been spying on them through the window, from the garden. He accuses Liszt of using him just to win a bet, and no matter how Liszt tries to make him see that he has a magical ability to capture the true spirit of music, Josy says they come from two different worlds that will never meet. The movie, in my opinion, should have ended there. Though perhaps not. I don’t know. At any rate, Liszt rushes off to the Gypsy camp and returns with all of Josy’s family and friends. He wants the boy to play his own music, with his own people, for Liszt’s guests. Josy is upstairs. He refuses to come down. Slowly, the Gypsy music begins. Everyone shouts and sings and dances. Josy can’t deny his true character and descends the stairs, picks his old violin up off the floor, and joins in the Gypsy revelry. Everyone applauds. Bravo. Liszt has accepted the Gypsies and has also accepted the spirit of Gypsy music and everyone’s happy and the world is fucking peachy and that’s the end. Do you understand?
I got a postcard that should have arrived much earlier, lost for a time in the hidden recesses of Milan’s subconscious or perhaps in the hidden recesses of the post office’s labyrinthine inefficiency, or both. The postmark said Savannah, Georgia. It was a sepia-colored photo of two elderly black men, solemn and looking preserved in a sweltering vat of muggy air. They were on the porch of a stately old southern home, relaxing in wooden and wicker rocking chairs and sipping lemonade or perhaps iced tea. Also on the porch were a brown cat and a porcelain pot, probably a spittoon. One of the old men had a peg leg. Milan wrote: Ciganin, that’s what they called me at school. It means Gypsy, in Serbian. Ciganin. Or sometimes Cigo. Cigo, and then they’d call me names or throw rocks at me or give me a kick in the ass. To Serbs I’ve always been a piece of shit Gypsy, a filthy good-for-nothing Gypsy. And to Gypsies I’ve always been a piece of shit gadje, a piece of shit non-Gypsy. My mother’s family rejected us. My father’s family rejected us. I’m a Gypsy who can’t be a Gypsy and a Serb who can’t be a Serb. What’s a boy to do, Eduardito, when he’s excluded by one group and excluded by the other and detested by both? He withdraws, that’s what he does. He retreats into himself. And that, no doubt, is my greatest talent. Not music, but the ability to close myself off, ignore people and, what’s more, get people to ignore me. It’s not that I become invisible, as invisibility still implies presence, observation, being a witness, even if a distant, disinterested witness. I can absent myself entirely. Eliminate myself entirely. Not like a corpse, but more like someone who never existed. A world without me.
Maybe because of the photo of the two elderly black men, maybe because of the confessional tone Milan used, this was Lía’s favorite postcard. She would come into my studio and, lighting the obligatory cigarette, contemplate it for a long time as though contemplating something sacred, something mysterious, something that was in fact something else or at least seemed to be something else.
Gyorgy, read the title on the next postcard, a very large postcard of the London Underground logo. In minuscule letters, Milan wrote: Last year the body of a Gypsy trumpeter named Gyorgy Krompachy turned up floating in the Copşa Mică River, in Romania. No one knows why. I’d met him at a weeklong Gypsy music festival in Lucerne. Even though he was my age, he looked much older. He smoked a mixture of hash and tobacco and drank vodka from a rusty canteen. He said vodka was good for playing in seven-eight time, whiskey was good for playing in six-eight, absinthe for playing in nine-eight. I think he was right. Though he was born in Bulgaria, he didn’t consider himself Bulgarian. He’d hop around from Serbian bands to Macedonian bands to Romanian bands to Turkish bands without thinking twice, as if they were modern versions of kumpanias or the caravans of his ancestors. But what he liked to play best, he said, were Serbian kolos, very fast circular dances that were really intense and made him feel, he said, as though he had a very high fever. Similar to Jewish dances. With overstated pride, Gyorgy told me he’d made a brief appearance in the bunker scenes of the Emir Kusturica movie Underground “(I thought of him, Eduardito, when I bought this postcard a few weeks ago). I didn’t believe him, of course, though a long while later I discovered it was true. There he was, Gyorgy Krompachy, smiling and composed and playing his trumpet on top of the spinning cake when the bride goes flying over them. The last night of the festival, after playing a couple of čočeks with Kočani Orkestar, a band from Macedonia, Gyorgy asked me to accompany him to the outskirts of town, on an errand. He was dressed in black, with a sparkling green vest and sparkling white shoes. First, we went to a bar, where Gyorgy had one vodka, and then another vodka, and then, in exchange for a few bills, pawned his trumpet. I remember that before he handed it over, he showed me the inside of its black case, papered over with naked ladies, all Asian. After that, we went to a little shack of mud and corrugated metal, in the middle of nowhere. A Gypsy woman, maybe forty or fifty years old, opened the door. She had gold teeth. Smelled bad. Gyorgy gave her the money and the woman, smiling maliciously, closed the door. That was it. We walked back to the festival tents, with Gyorgy smoking his tobacco and hash and going on and on about Thai vaginas and how enormous they are. The next day, when I woke up he’d already left.