“Hmmr?”
“Just joking.”
Mother and daughter lean into each other, hands clasped. Light slides through the curtains and seems to spread itself out at their feet.
“Wel , you might have just loosened it a little,” Francesca says, and then she lays her head on Zoli's shoulder and both of them laugh together as one.
“Wel , I think I did just fine.”
He turns on his heels, stomps back to the kitchen.
The two women sit, foreheads touching. It seems to Zoli the perfect moment, unbidden, unforced. She would like to freeze it al here, rise up, leave her daughter on the couch, in the warmth of laughter, walk through the apartment, pick up her shoes at the door, strol down the stairs, through the quiet streets, and leave al of Paris frozen in this one moment of strange beauty, floating through the city on the only moving thing in the world, the train, heading towards home.
Zoli showers by sitting on the edge of the bath, facing the rain of it. The water mists her hair. She hears stirrings in the bedroom, the fast shuffle of feet, the quick closing snap of the door. Henri's voice is harried, looking for his cufflinks. She can hear Francesca insisting that he hurry up and leave. There is silence from Francesca and then a long sigh.
Zoli closes her eyes and al ows the water to fal along her body.
The front door closes with more than its usual noise and then she hears a gentle knocking on the bathroom door.
“Coast is clear, Mamma.”
They dress together in the bedroom. Zoli keeps her back turned though she catches a glimpse of her daughter in the corner of the mirrored armoire, the skin taut at her waist, the brown length of her leg. Francesca wiggles into a blue dress and a pair of high-heeled shoes.
Zoli leans against the armoire, closes her eyes to the reflection: “Maybe I should skip it, chonorroeja, I'm a little tired.”
“You can't skip it, Mamma, it's the opening night.”
“I feel a bit dizzy.”
“It's nothing to worry about, I promise.”
“I could just stay here. I'l watch for Henri on the TV.”
“And die of boredom? Come on, Mamma!”
Her daughter fumbles in a drawer, then stands behind Zoli and drapes a long necklace over her throat. “It's an old Persian piece,” she says, “I found it in the market in Saint Ouen. It wasn't expensive. I want you to have it.”
Francesca's hand touches, soft, against the pulse of her throat.
“Thank you,” says Zoli.
On the drive over—through a maze of highways and overpasses—Francesca drums on the wheel, saying how it was nearly impossible to find a hotel for the conference. “We had to drop the word Romani and change it to European, just so they'd let us in.” She laughs and wipes a smudge from the windscreen with the end of her shawl. “European memory and imagination! Imagine! And then we had to put the word back in, of course, for the flier, so the hotel tried to pul out. We can't have Gypsies, they said. We had to threaten a lawsuit and then the prices rose, we almost had to cancel. Can you believe that?”
The car loops in front of the hotel, palm-fronted, glassy, glossed over with a high cheapness.
“And they wanted to know if there'd be any horsecarts!” She unbuckles her seat belt before the car stops, laughs hard, and hits the steering wheel and, mistakenly, the horn, so that the car seems to arrive angrily at the curb. She flips open the seat belt across her body: “Academics on Appaloosas! I mean, what century are we living in? ”
Zoli hears birdsong and it takes a moment for her to realize that it is being piped through loudspeakers. So much the world changes, so much it stays the same. She passes through the revolving doorway, treading slowly so that for a moment the electronic door almost hits the back of her ankle. She inches forward and the door goes with her and she feels as if she is moving through a mil wheel.
“I hate those doors,” says Francesca as she guides Zoli along the corridor, past a series of smal signs, to where a giant version of the flier sits outside a large brown-paneled conference room.
Zoli recognizes some faces from Francesca's workplace, their wide-open smiles, and indeed a few of her own—a Rom always knows—she can tel in the swirl of faces, the eyes, the quick glances, the happy grasp of shoulders. My language, she thinks. She can hear it in snatches, like a bird in a room, one corner to the other. It feels as if air has entered her legs. She sways. A glass of water is thrust in her hand.
Zoli sips the water and feels a flush of emptiness. Why the fuss? Why the worry? Why not be back in the val ey, watching the sun sink beneath the windowframe?
Across the hal way she sees Henri pumping hands with a tal man in a banded white hat.
“That's the poet,” whispers Francesca. “And across there, that's one of our big donors, I'l introduce you later. And that girl's from Paris-Match, a reporter, isn't she gorgeous?”
Al the faces seem to blur into one. Zoli wishes for anger but can't dredge it up. She wants to reach out and grasp whatever she can find, a fencepost, a rosebush, a rough wooden railing, her daughter's arm, anything.
“Mamma?”
“Yes, yes, I'm fine.”
A bel rings and Francesca guides her along the corridor into the bal room where circular tables have been arranged with shining cutlery and folded napkins.
Laughter sounds through the hal , but a gradual silence descends at the sound of knives tinkling against glass. A speaker stands up at a podium, a tal Swedish man, and his speech is translated into French. Zoli is lost, but happily so, though every now and then her daughter leans across and whispers the context of the speech in her ear—a sharp sense of our own experience, memory as a funnel, understanding Romani silence, no access to public grievance, the lack of preservation, the implicit memory at the heart of al things. They seem like such large words for smal times, and Zoli al ows them to wash over her as applause ripples through the room.
She watches her daughter walk onstage, swishing up in her beautiful blue dress, to give a brief welcoming speech in Romani and French both, and to outline the three days of conference, the Holocaust, the Devouring, Lexical Impoverishment, Cultural Values in Scottish Bal adry, Police Perception of Belgian Roma, Economic Stratification, and, at the core, Issues of Romani Memory. How proud she is, she says, to see so many scholars, and so much interest at last: “We wil not be made to stay at the margins any longer!” A great cheer goes up from the tables, and there is talk then of names and sponsors and donors and although Zoli has begged her not to mention her name she does so anyway, and it feels as if the room has hushed and the air has been sucked out to fil the space. There is a brief round of applause, brief, thank God, and no spotlight. Henri grabs her hand and squeezes it, and real y al she wants now is to be back in the apartment, lying on the bed with her hands folded across her stomach, but it means so much to Francesca, al of this, she must remain, stand side by side with her daughter, and what does it matter anyway? It is such a smal thing to give. She feels a smal shame at the wal s of her heart. I should stand and applaud her. I should sing out her name. Al I have been is smal against this. Petty, foolish, selfish. Zoli hikes the hem of her dress and stands, applauds as her daughter comes down the steps on her high heels, a beaming smile, a triumph.
They nestle in to one another. This is what I have, thinks Zoli. This is my flesh and blood.
Onstage the Scottish musicians begin to break the skin of the evening and the music fil s the room—mandolin, guitar, fiddle. Laughter sounds out al around and movement blurs the hal . Waiters. Hotel staff. Tal men with leather patches on their sleeves.
Zoli leans back in her chair, touches her throat, and is surprised by the feel of the new necklace against her skin. She barely remembers putting it on. How long, she wonders, since she wore something like this? She closes her eyes to Enrico. He strides up the hil side, towards the mil . His coat is thrown off his shoulders before he even enters. He kicks the mud off his boots and closes the door.