Chapter Six
CHAPTER SIX
The next day, I woke up early to help out Kawayan in his studio. He wasn’t up yet, so I decided to clean up a little first. I noticed that the box I brought for him was still where I left it, unopened. I picked it up and placed it on the shelf near the paints, where he would be sure to see it. I brought in a bucket of soapy water and a rag, dusting the windows, then cleaned the brushes, lining them up by size. It was what I used to do for my grandfather. There were also several unfinished paintings of seascapes scattered around the studio, and I stacked them up in a corner.
I also noticed a bulky mass, probably a sculpture, covered in a moist blanket. When I uncovered it, it was a deformed clay sculpture of a woman. It looked like Amihan’s mother. It was then that Kawayan made his entrance. He spoke from the entrance of the studio, the first time I’ve ever heard him talk. His voice was a deep baritone.
“What are you doing?” he asked. He sounded angry with me.
I let the blanket fall back, startled by the sharpness in his voice. “I was just cleaning up a bit…”
“I never told you to clean up here.”
I didn’t know what to say. “I’m sorry sir.”
Kawayan stared at me sharply for a few moments and then brushed past me to cover up the unfinished sculpture. He went to the current sculpture he was working on, selecting a hammer and a chisel.
There were so many questions I wanted to ask him. Why didn’t he ever leave his island? Was a guy like him—a famous painter and sculptor—sick of life in the city? Maybe he disliked the ugliness in the urban world, or did he think that he could concentrate on his art more if he lived in Puerto del Cielo? Maybe it was like what Paul Gauguin did when he left Paris and lived in Tahiti for a while. Did he want to protect Amihan and Ishmael from the outside world? Who knew? But he wasn’t going to talk to me today. Not yet.
He gestured to a huge lump of clay in a nearby table and told me to knead it to get the air out. He left me there for about an hour, while I perspired, kneading the clay, and then he returned with Amihan, who seemed as confused as I was. She looked like she had just bathed and was dressed in a white, gauzy and lacy ballerina dress, something out of a Degas painting.
Kawayan laid out a mat on the floor in the center of the studio and then plunked Amihan down on it. “Come,” he said to me.
I went closer. Kawayan adjusted Amihan’s pose as if she were no more than a doll or a mannequin. He kept doing that for several minutes until Amihan cried out after he pulled her arm to hard. Kawayan ignored her and went on trying to get the position he wanted.
“Are you all right?” I asked Amihan.
Amihan nodded quietly. It seemed like around her father, she was serious and never laughed. She let Kawayan adjust her some more, and when he was finished, I realized it was the exact same pose as the unfinished sculpture that he didn’t want me to touch. Kawayan stood back and looked at Amihan from different angles. Amihan had been placed in an awkward half-lying position, her arms splayed. I knew how hard it was for models, trying to maintain a position like that for hours.
“You can start now,” Kawayan said to me.
I blinked back at him, opening my mouth, but no words come out. “But”—
Kawayan didn’t seem to hear me and left the studio without glancing back. I looked at Amihan for a moment, and then got some paper and a pencil from the shelf. I crouched in front of her, and not knowing what to do, I started to draw her. I’d seen grandfather do this before he sculpted anything. He made plans and sketches. But truth to be told, I didn’t know what I was doing.
“I think he wants you to make a sculpture…” Amihan whispered.
I frowned. “But I’m only staying here for a few days. There’s no way I’d finish a sculpture…”
Amihan tried to shrug as best as she could in her awkward position.
When Amihan got tired, she decided that we should go to the beach. So I put aside my sketches and plans for her sculpture, and cooked some rice in their earthen stove, while Amihan prepared some fresh fish, chopping up onions and tomatoes to stuff the fish with, and then packed them in banana leaves. Later, she grilled them in a fire she made by the shore, and we had lunch under the trees. I asked her what Ishmael was doing that day, and she said he was busy working and didn’t want to be bothered, so it was just the two of us for the day. I brought my camera with me, and some sun block.
After lunch, Amihan collected shells, and hoarded her finds in her skirt, holding up the hem. While I cleaned up, she stood by the shore, watching the waves lap at her feet, and then she would run backwards as the waves approached, and then run after the waves as the water fell back to sea. I took her picture several times. She could be on the cover of a fashion magazine—she was that beautiful, despite not changing her clothes or taking a bath. Her hair definitely looked like it needed shampooing and combing. It was a pity. But she was just a kid. Maybe she would wise up to it in time.
I helped her collect shells for a while, and then I dozed off under the sun. When I woke up, she was making a huge sand sculpture of a woman, about ten times larger than she was, with seaweed for hair, red flowers for lips, shells for earrings and a necklace and white stones for eyes. When she was finished, she danced around her sculpture for a while and sang a strange song. I didn’t know what language it was, probably German or something. I could tell without asking that the woman she had made was her mother. I watched her as she ended her dance by lying in the arms of the sculpture, and I scaled some rocks to get a birds’ eye view picture of her. It looked like she was being cradled by the sand woman to sleep.
When I came down again, she was still lying on her sculpture. She looked up at me as I stood beside her head. I was standing on the chest area of the sculpture.
“What are you thinking about?” she asked me.
I shrugged.
She sat up slowly. “Do you want to go home that badly?”
I smiled and sat down next to her. “Actually, I hadn’t been thinking about that for a while…” I was starting to appreciate this kind of life; there were no deadlines, and nobody was waiting for me to do something and expecting me to get my act together. It was around two in the afternoon by my guess, I’d stopped checking the time. I’d even put away my watch. In this kind of place, I didn’t need to know about the time. Nobody cared.
“Maybe you’d like to stay longer?” Amihan asked hopefully, smiling a tiny smile.
I smiled back at her. “Would you like me to stay longer?”
Amihan brushed the sand off her elbows. She nodded earnestly. “There’s the sculpture you have to do for my father…and Ishmael enjoys talking to you…and you might be a good influence on father…”
“But I’ve only talked to Ishmael once, and your father doesn’t talk much, does he?”
She scrunched up her face. “I guess not.” She looked at the sea.
“Was he always like that?”
She shrugged. “I never noticed…” She picked up some sand and let it sift through her fingers. I watched her do this for a while.
“Hey, shall we have a race?” she suddenly asked me, brushing her hands off.
“A race to where?”
“To the Atlantic Ocean.”
“What?”
“You know—the Atlantic Ocean? The Pacific joins with the South China Sea, and then we go down the Palawan Passage, through the Java Sea, then the Indian Sea, then the Atlantic.” She seemed serious about it. “I want to be the only person who has swam all the way to the Atlantic Ocean.”
“Why do you want to do that?”
“Just to see if it can be done.” She smiled at me. “I’ve been practicing.”
“But I thought you never want to leave your island?”
“I don’t…” She paused. “It’s not the same. It’s the sea. I won’t go ashore.”
“But if we swim to the Atlantic, we’re leaving Puerto del Cielo.”
“No, I won’t. I will be in water all the time, so it’s not like I’ve even left. It’s like I just went for a really long swim.”
I laughed. “It will be a long swim all right…”
Amihan seemed to find it strange that I laughed at her. “You don’t think I can do it, do you?”
“But you won’t make it. You’ll get tired. The sea is really big.” I couldn’t help chuckling. Amihan really was just a child.
She got testy. “But have you tried it?”
I hesitated. “No….”
“Then how would you know if you haven’t tried it?” she asked.
“I don’t have to try it to know”—I tried to think of something to dissuade her from her crazy plan, but decided it was a lost cause. Let her believe what she wanted to believe. Maybe in her child’s mind, it was something that could be done. In her logic, it was possible. I decided to play along with her.
“So what about it?” I finally asked.
“What about what?”
“You said you wanted to race”—
“But you don’t believe me.” She looked upset and wouldn’t look at me.
“But I haven’t tried it yet, so I wouldn’t really know…” I tried to smile at her and reached for her hand, while I removed my camera from my neck with the other. “Come on, we’ll swim together.”
“I know we won’t make it. Ishmael and I tried,” she said in a tiny voice, as she took my hand. “But it’s nice to think that maybe we can. That maybe we’re not just strong enough, right?”
I nodded solemnly and put my camera on the sand. I gripped her small hand in mine. “Shall we?”
“Thank you.”
She squeezed my hand back. There were grains of sand between her fingers.
Together, we ran towards the shore and then jumped into the water.
“Yaaaaah!!!” Amihan shouted, laughing.
The water splashed on my eyes, and it stung. I tasted salt. I threw my head back, sending an arc of seawater in the air, and I laughed with her. We started swimming toward the horizon and it looked as if the sea would never end, behind us was Puerto del Cielo, and although for Amihan, it might look like there’s only sea for many miles—she had never seen other places—but I knew San Cristobal was just ahead.
Amihan swam ahead of me. She was really a good swimmer. My muscles burned and my heart constricted with the effort, and my eyes were smarting from the salt, but I didn’t want to stop. I savagely pulled myself forward trying to reach Amihan.
“Manuel!” Amihan yelled.
I lifted my head out of the water, looking around me. Amihan was just a tiny blob in the distance, and from where we were, I could still see Puerto del Cielo. I felt a little relieved. Amihan waved to me and slapped her hand on the water, sending it spraying towards me.
“Hey!” I yelled, and sprayed some water at her too.
“Hurry up!” Amihan yelled, laughing. “We have to make it to the Atlantic in time for dinner!”
I looked back at Puerto del Cielo. I was just going to swim to her, and then we’re swimming back. I realized I’ve never swam this far before. I suddenly felt uneasy. What if I didn’t have enough strength for the swim back?
She started to swim towards me as well, and when we reached each other, she took my hands in hers and intertwined her fingers with mine, and then she grinned at me. I grinned at her, breathing fast.
Amihan got a gleam in her eye, and then without a word, she submerged herself, dragging me down along with her. Underwater, her hair whipped about like long and skinny black snakes. It was weird. Here with her, it was so quiet, it was like we went to hide in our secret place, and we were safe from everything. Everything moved in slow motion and I tried to take in as much as I could. It was like we have fallen from the world for one minute, and when we come back, it would be right where we left it.
I didn’t know she did it, but Amihan was smiling underwater. I had enough trouble trying to breathe. I smiled back, but I smiled too wide, and before I knew it, I was swallowing water. I tried to resurface, but she was holding me down. She came closer and I saw that she had lost her smile. She seemed incredibly sad all of a sudden, and she might have been crying, but I couldn’t see her tears. She came closer to me until our noses were touching and our bodies were pressed together, and she said something in my ear, her lips were right against my ears, but I couldn’t hear her.
Suddenly, she was swallowing water too, and we came up for air, gasping, sputtering and laughing. It was starting to get dark when we resurfaced, and it seemed like the world had changed totally, as if I had just imagined everything that happened underwater.
“Shall we go back?” I asked her.
Amihan looked toward the coastline of Puerto del Cielo. “The Atlantic Ocean will still be there tomorrow, wouldn’t it?” she asked in a mournful tone.
“Yes.”
She smiled at me, a sad smile.
Amihan wanted to show her shells and rocks to Ishmael, and we went up to his room when we returned to the house. I lifted the blanket covering Ishmael’s door for her, as Amihan was carrying the shells and pebbles in her skirt and couldn’t manage it herself. Ishmael seemed to be working on a sculpture before we came in, and he hastily covered it up as we entered the room. Before he was able to cover it completely though, I saw that it was neither their mother nor Amihan. It was some other woman.
Amihan spilled the shells and rocks into a bucket and sat cross-legged on the floor and started cleaning her finds with water and a rag. I sat beside Ishmael. “What are you going to do with those?” Ishmael asked.
“I’ll make a necklace…” She stood up. “I’ll be back…” She took her bucket of shells and stones with her when she came out.
I went over to their shelf of records and looked at the labels. No Beatles or any normal music like that…just piles and piles of classical Italian opera. Listening to that stuff made me think of Italian restaurants and pasta and ravioli. I decided I’d go to Italianni’s as soon as I got back to the city and eat all the ravioli I wanted.
Meanwhile, Ishmael was preparing a pipe for us. He handed it to me and lit it up. While I was puffing away, Ishmael uncovered his sculpture and started working on it.
“Who’s that?”
“When I was a child…she used to come here to Puerto del Cielo to play with me and Amihan. I don’t see her that much anymore…But I think she would look like this now…”
I watched him for a while, then asked, “So people used to come to your island?”
But before he could answer, Amihan came back, and Ishmael hastily covered up the sculpture. She was now wearing different clothes. Her head was covered in a blue heard wrap, and she has whitened her eyebrows with make up. She stopped in front of me, striking a pose with her back to us, her head inclined to look at us. She was wearing pearl earrings.
“What are you doing?” I asked, amused. But Amihan said nothing. I turned to Ishmael, but he merely smiled at me. I turned my gaze back to Amihan. She stood there, unmoving.
In my mind, a famous painting slowly superimposed itself over Amihan. Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring.’
“You look like Vermeer’s ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring…” I said slowly.
At my words, Amihan’s face broke into a huge grin and she danced around the room, skipping about and waving her arms, tugging on my sleeve. I smiled at her, confused but pleased.
“You’re wonderful! You guessed it! You guessed it!” She hugged me and then let go, a delicate frown on her face. “But maybe that was too easy…”
She grinned at me with her maddening smile and went to Ishmael and started whispering something into his ears.
Then they made me close my eyes while they prepared something. When I opened my eyes, Amihan’s feet were flat on the floor, with her torso lifted, her arms supporting her. Ishmael was on his back, on Amihan’s legs, his legs bent at the knees, hanging off the bed, his arms stretched backwards to enclose Amihan. Amihan raised her right hand at an angle and was touching her left temple.
I stared at them hard, thinking of all the art I’ve studied in the past. It looked like a Rodin, but it wasn’t The Kiss, or Paolo and Francesca. It looked a lot like—
“‘Fugit Amor’,” I said, grinning slowly. “Auguste Rodin.”
Slowly, Amihan and Ishmael resumed normal positions.
“Am I right?” I asked.
Amihan exchanged a serious look with Ishmael. “Ishmael, what do you think?”
Slowly, they both smiled. I didn’t get it.
Amihan took out a necklace made of tiny shells from her pocket. It looked just like the one she and Ishmael were wearing.
I sat up, curious.
“We’re going to make you our brother…And we will give you a new name,” she told me. “You don’t have a nature name, like we do. I’m Amihan, and Ishmael’s Tubig Ulan…”
“But I don’t like that name, so you have to call me Ishmael,” Ishmael interrupted.
“Don’t disrupt the ritual!” Amihan cried.
“I’m sorry, Magdalen,” Ishmael said, smiling.
“Magdalen?” I repeated.
Ishmael shrugged. “Her real name’s Amihan Magdalen Seer-sha. S-A-O-I-R-S-E.”
Amihan, I realized was the kind of girl who left out important things like their real names. “That’s a pretty name. What does it mean?”
“It means freedom.”
“Wow.” I nodded. “Can I choose my own name?”
Amihan merely smiled her maddening smile at me, and then put an arm around Ishmael and whispered something to him, which made him laugh. After their conference, Amihan went back to me, holding out the necklace like it was some sort of sacred relic.
“We really thought long and hard about the name that will describe you, the essence of who you are…It will be your name from now on. We will call you by that name…Please close your eyes.”
I was starting to feel ridiculous, but I decided to just play along. I felt Amihan’s lips whispering strange words to my ear, and then there were two pairs of hands on my head, barely touching, Amihan’s and Ishmael’s. Then Amihan slipped the necklace over my head.
“From now on, Manuel delos Angeles is no more. You are now Manuel…” she paused with dramatically. “…Bayawak delos Angeles.”
“Bayawak?” I opened my eyes.
Amihan and Ishmael burst out laughing, and then she hugged me tight and danced around me, singing something in German, to which Ishmael sang along to. I was the only one who didn’t understand. These two had a secret, strange bond between them that nobody was allowed to penetrate, but today, they seemed to let me get a glimpse of what it was like, but still, only for a moment. Were they just children, or was what I was seeing something else, something special and extraordinary? I never had anything like this with anybody, this kind of human experience, and as I sat there and watched them, I realized I wanted very much to be a part of it.
The next day, I woke up early to help out Kawayan in his studio. He wasn’t up yet, so I decided to clean up a little first. I noticed that the box I brought for him was still where I left it, unopened. I picked it up and placed it on the shelf near the paints, where he would be sure to see it. I brought in a bucket of soapy water and a rag, dusting the windows, then cleaned the brushes, lining them up by size. It was what I used to do for my grandfather. There were also several unfinished paintings of seascapes scattered around the studio, and I stacked them up in a corner.
I also noticed a bulky mass, probably a sculpture, covered in a moist blanket. When I uncovered it, it was a deformed clay sculpture of a woman. It looked like Amihan’s mother. It was then that Kawayan made his entrance. He spoke from the entrance of the studio, the first time I’ve ever heard him talk. His voice was a deep baritone.
“What are you doing?” he asked. He sounded angry with me.
I let the blanket fall back, startled by the sharpness in his voice. “I was just cleaning up a bit…”
“I never told you to clean up here.”
I didn’t know what to say. “I’m sorry sir.”
Kawayan stared at me sharply for a few moments and then brushed past me to cover up the unfinished sculpture. He went to the current sculpture he was working on, selecting a hammer and a chisel.
There were so many questions I wanted to ask him. Why didn’t he ever leave his island? Was a guy like him—a famous painter and sculptor—sick of life in the city? Maybe he disliked the ugliness in the urban world, or did he think that he could concentrate on his art more if he lived in Puerto del Cielo? Maybe it was like what Paul Gauguin did when he left Paris and lived in Tahiti for a while. Did he want to protect Amihan and Ishmael from the outside world? Who knew? But he wasn’t going to talk to me today. Not yet.
He gestured to a huge lump of clay in a nearby table and told me to knead it to get the air out. He left me there for about an hour, while I perspired, kneading the clay, and then he returned with Amihan, who seemed as confused as I was. She looked like she had just bathed and was dressed in a white, gauzy and lacy ballerina dress, something out of a Degas painting.
Kawayan laid out a mat on the floor in the center of the studio and then plunked Amihan down on it. “Come,” he said to me.
I went closer. Kawayan adjusted Amihan’s pose as if she were no more than a doll or a mannequin. He kept doing that for several minutes until Amihan cried out after he pulled her arm to hard. Kawayan ignored her and went on trying to get the position he wanted.
“Are you all right?” I asked Amihan.
Amihan nodded quietly. It seemed like around her father, she was serious and never laughed. She let Kawayan adjust her some more, and when he was finished, I realized it was the exact same pose as the unfinished sculpture that he didn’t want me to touch. Kawayan stood back and looked at Amihan from different angles. Amihan had been placed in an awkward half-lying position, her arms splayed. I knew how hard it was for models, trying to maintain a position like that for hours.
“You can start now,” Kawayan said to me.
I blinked back at him, opening my mouth, but no words come out. “But”—
Kawayan didn’t seem to hear me and left the studio without glancing back. I looked at Amihan for a moment, and then got some paper and a pencil from the shelf. I crouched in front of her, and not knowing what to do, I started to draw her. I’d seen grandfather do this before he sculpted anything. He made plans and sketches. But truth to be told, I didn’t know what I was doing.
“I think he wants you to make a sculpture…” Amihan whispered.
I frowned. “But I’m only staying here for a few days. There’s no way I’d finish a sculpture…”
Amihan tried to shrug as best as she could in her awkward position.
When Amihan got tired, she decided that we should go to the beach. So I put aside my sketches and plans for her sculpture, and cooked some rice in their earthen stove, while Amihan prepared some fresh fish, chopping up onions and tomatoes to stuff the fish with, and then packed them in banana leaves. Later, she grilled them in a fire she made by the shore, and we had lunch under the trees. I asked her what Ishmael was doing that day, and she said he was busy working and didn’t want to be bothered, so it was just the two of us for the day. I brought my camera with me, and some sun block.
After lunch, Amihan collected shells, and hoarded her finds in her skirt, holding up the hem. While I cleaned up, she stood by the shore, watching the waves lap at her feet, and then she would run backwards as the waves approached, and then run after the waves as the water fell back to sea. I took her picture several times. She could be on the cover of a fashion magazine—she was that beautiful, despite not changing her clothes or taking a bath. Her hair definitely looked like it needed shampooing and combing. It was a pity. But she was just a kid. Maybe she would wise up to it in time.
I helped her collect shells for a while, and then I dozed off under the sun. When I woke up, she was making a huge sand sculpture of a woman, about ten times larger than she was, with seaweed for hair, red flowers for lips, shells for earrings and a necklace and white stones for eyes. When she was finished, she danced around her sculpture for a while and sang a strange song. I didn’t know what language it was, probably German or something. I could tell without asking that the woman she had made was her mother. I watched her as she ended her dance by lying in the arms of the sculpture, and I scaled some rocks to get a birds’ eye view picture of her. It looked like she was being cradled by the sand woman to sleep.
When I came down again, she was still lying on her sculpture. She looked up at me as I stood beside her head. I was standing on the chest area of the sculpture.
“What are you thinking about?” she asked me.
I shrugged.
She sat up slowly. “Do you want to go home that badly?”
I smiled and sat down next to her. “Actually, I hadn’t been thinking about that for a while…” I was starting to appreciate this kind of life; there were no deadlines, and nobody was waiting for me to do something and expecting me to get my act together. It was around two in the afternoon by my guess, I’d stopped checking the time. I’d even put away my watch. In this kind of place, I didn’t need to know about the time. Nobody cared.
“Maybe you’d like to stay longer?” Amihan asked hopefully, smiling a tiny smile.
I smiled back at her. “Would you like me to stay longer?”
Amihan brushed the sand off her elbows. She nodded earnestly. “There’s the sculpture you have to do for my father…and Ishmael enjoys talking to you…and you might be a good influence on father…”
“But I’ve only talked to Ishmael once, and your father doesn’t talk much, does he?”
She scrunched up her face. “I guess not.” She looked at the sea.
“Was he always like that?”
She shrugged. “I never noticed…” She picked up some sand and let it sift through her fingers. I watched her do this for a while.
“Hey, shall we have a race?” she suddenly asked me, brushing her hands off.
“A race to where?”
“To the Atlantic Ocean.”
“What?”
“You know—the Atlantic Ocean? The Pacific joins with the South China Sea, and then we go down the Palawan Passage, through the Java Sea, then the Indian Sea, then the Atlantic.” She seemed serious about it. “I want to be the only person who has swam all the way to the Atlantic Ocean.”
“Why do you want to do that?”
“Just to see if it can be done.” She smiled at me. “I’ve been practicing.”
“But I thought you never want to leave your island?”
“I don’t…” She paused. “It’s not the same. It’s the sea. I won’t go ashore.”
“But if we swim to the Atlantic, we’re leaving Puerto del Cielo.”
“No, I won’t. I will be in water all the time, so it’s not like I’ve even left. It’s like I just went for a really long swim.”
I laughed. “It will be a long swim all right…”
Amihan seemed to find it strange that I laughed at her. “You don’t think I can do it, do you?”
“But you won’t make it. You’ll get tired. The sea is really big.” I couldn’t help chuckling. Amihan really was just a child.
She got testy. “But have you tried it?”
I hesitated. “No….”
“Then how would you know if you haven’t tried it?” she asked.
“I don’t have to try it to know”—I tried to think of something to dissuade her from her crazy plan, but decided it was a lost cause. Let her believe what she wanted to believe. Maybe in her child’s mind, it was something that could be done. In her logic, it was possible. I decided to play along with her.
“So what about it?” I finally asked.
“What about what?”
“You said you wanted to race”—
“But you don’t believe me.” She looked upset and wouldn’t look at me.
“But I haven’t tried it yet, so I wouldn’t really know…” I tried to smile at her and reached for her hand, while I removed my camera from my neck with the other. “Come on, we’ll swim together.”
“I know we won’t make it. Ishmael and I tried,” she said in a tiny voice, as she took my hand. “But it’s nice to think that maybe we can. That maybe we’re not just strong enough, right?”
I nodded solemnly and put my camera on the sand. I gripped her small hand in mine. “Shall we?”
“Thank you.”
She squeezed my hand back. There were grains of sand between her fingers.
Together, we ran towards the shore and then jumped into the water.
“Yaaaaah!!!” Amihan shouted, laughing.
The water splashed on my eyes, and it stung. I tasted salt. I threw my head back, sending an arc of seawater in the air, and I laughed with her. We started swimming toward the horizon and it looked as if the sea would never end, behind us was Puerto del Cielo, and although for Amihan, it might look like there’s only sea for many miles—she had never seen other places—but I knew San Cristobal was just ahead.
Amihan swam ahead of me. She was really a good swimmer. My muscles burned and my heart constricted with the effort, and my eyes were smarting from the salt, but I didn’t want to stop. I savagely pulled myself forward trying to reach Amihan.
“Manuel!” Amihan yelled.
I lifted my head out of the water, looking around me. Amihan was just a tiny blob in the distance, and from where we were, I could still see Puerto del Cielo. I felt a little relieved. Amihan waved to me and slapped her hand on the water, sending it spraying towards me.
“Hey!” I yelled, and sprayed some water at her too.
“Hurry up!” Amihan yelled, laughing. “We have to make it to the Atlantic in time for dinner!”
I looked back at Puerto del Cielo. I was just going to swim to her, and then we’re swimming back. I realized I’ve never swam this far before. I suddenly felt uneasy. What if I didn’t have enough strength for the swim back?
She started to swim towards me as well, and when we reached each other, she took my hands in hers and intertwined her fingers with mine, and then she grinned at me. I grinned at her, breathing fast.
Amihan got a gleam in her eye, and then without a word, she submerged herself, dragging me down along with her. Underwater, her hair whipped about like long and skinny black snakes. It was weird. Here with her, it was so quiet, it was like we went to hide in our secret place, and we were safe from everything. Everything moved in slow motion and I tried to take in as much as I could. It was like we have fallen from the world for one minute, and when we come back, it would be right where we left it.
I didn’t know she did it, but Amihan was smiling underwater. I had enough trouble trying to breathe. I smiled back, but I smiled too wide, and before I knew it, I was swallowing water. I tried to resurface, but she was holding me down. She came closer and I saw that she had lost her smile. She seemed incredibly sad all of a sudden, and she might have been crying, but I couldn’t see her tears. She came closer to me until our noses were touching and our bodies were pressed together, and she said something in my ear, her lips were right against my ears, but I couldn’t hear her.
Suddenly, she was swallowing water too, and we came up for air, gasping, sputtering and laughing. It was starting to get dark when we resurfaced, and it seemed like the world had changed totally, as if I had just imagined everything that happened underwater.
“Shall we go back?” I asked her.
Amihan looked toward the coastline of Puerto del Cielo. “The Atlantic Ocean will still be there tomorrow, wouldn’t it?” she asked in a mournful tone.
“Yes.”
She smiled at me, a sad smile.
Amihan wanted to show her shells and rocks to Ishmael, and we went up to his room when we returned to the house. I lifted the blanket covering Ishmael’s door for her, as Amihan was carrying the shells and pebbles in her skirt and couldn’t manage it herself. Ishmael seemed to be working on a sculpture before we came in, and he hastily covered it up as we entered the room. Before he was able to cover it completely though, I saw that it was neither their mother nor Amihan. It was some other woman.
Amihan spilled the shells and rocks into a bucket and sat cross-legged on the floor and started cleaning her finds with water and a rag. I sat beside Ishmael. “What are you going to do with those?” Ishmael asked.
“I’ll make a necklace…” She stood up. “I’ll be back…” She took her bucket of shells and stones with her when she came out.
I went over to their shelf of records and looked at the labels. No Beatles or any normal music like that…just piles and piles of classical Italian opera. Listening to that stuff made me think of Italian restaurants and pasta and ravioli. I decided I’d go to Italianni’s as soon as I got back to the city and eat all the ravioli I wanted.
Meanwhile, Ishmael was preparing a pipe for us. He handed it to me and lit it up. While I was puffing away, Ishmael uncovered his sculpture and started working on it.
“Who’s that?”
“When I was a child…she used to come here to Puerto del Cielo to play with me and Amihan. I don’t see her that much anymore…But I think she would look like this now…”
I watched him for a while, then asked, “So people used to come to your island?”
But before he could answer, Amihan came back, and Ishmael hastily covered up the sculpture. She was now wearing different clothes. Her head was covered in a blue heard wrap, and she has whitened her eyebrows with make up. She stopped in front of me, striking a pose with her back to us, her head inclined to look at us. She was wearing pearl earrings.
“What are you doing?” I asked, amused. But Amihan said nothing. I turned to Ishmael, but he merely smiled at me. I turned my gaze back to Amihan. She stood there, unmoving.
In my mind, a famous painting slowly superimposed itself over Amihan. Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring.’
“You look like Vermeer’s ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring…” I said slowly.
At my words, Amihan’s face broke into a huge grin and she danced around the room, skipping about and waving her arms, tugging on my sleeve. I smiled at her, confused but pleased.
“You’re wonderful! You guessed it! You guessed it!” She hugged me and then let go, a delicate frown on her face. “But maybe that was too easy…”
She grinned at me with her maddening smile and went to Ishmael and started whispering something into his ears.
Then they made me close my eyes while they prepared something. When I opened my eyes, Amihan’s feet were flat on the floor, with her torso lifted, her arms supporting her. Ishmael was on his back, on Amihan’s legs, his legs bent at the knees, hanging off the bed, his arms stretched backwards to enclose Amihan. Amihan raised her right hand at an angle and was touching her left temple.
I stared at them hard, thinking of all the art I’ve studied in the past. It looked like a Rodin, but it wasn’t The Kiss, or Paolo and Francesca. It looked a lot like—
“‘Fugit Amor’,” I said, grinning slowly. “Auguste Rodin.”
Slowly, Amihan and Ishmael resumed normal positions.
“Am I right?” I asked.
Amihan exchanged a serious look with Ishmael. “Ishmael, what do you think?”
Slowly, they both smiled. I didn’t get it.
Amihan took out a necklace made of tiny shells from her pocket. It looked just like the one she and Ishmael were wearing.
I sat up, curious.
“We’re going to make you our brother…And we will give you a new name,” she told me. “You don’t have a nature name, like we do. I’m Amihan, and Ishmael’s Tubig Ulan…”
“But I don’t like that name, so you have to call me Ishmael,” Ishmael interrupted.
“Don’t disrupt the ritual!” Amihan cried.
“I’m sorry, Magdalen,” Ishmael said, smiling.
“Magdalen?” I repeated.
Ishmael shrugged. “Her real name’s Amihan Magdalen Seer-sha. S-A-O-I-R-S-E.”
Amihan, I realized was the kind of girl who left out important things like their real names. “That’s a pretty name. What does it mean?”
“It means freedom.”
“Wow.” I nodded. “Can I choose my own name?”
Amihan merely smiled her maddening smile at me, and then put an arm around Ishmael and whispered something to him, which made him laugh. After their conference, Amihan went back to me, holding out the necklace like it was some sort of sacred relic.
“We really thought long and hard about the name that will describe you, the essence of who you are…It will be your name from now on. We will call you by that name…Please close your eyes.”
I was starting to feel ridiculous, but I decided to just play along. I felt Amihan’s lips whispering strange words to my ear, and then there were two pairs of hands on my head, barely touching, Amihan’s and Ishmael’s. Then Amihan slipped the necklace over my head.
“From now on, Manuel delos Angeles is no more. You are now Manuel…” she paused with dramatically. “…Bayawak delos Angeles.”
“Bayawak?” I opened my eyes.
Amihan and Ishmael burst out laughing, and then she hugged me tight and danced around me, singing something in German, to which Ishmael sang along to. I was the only one who didn’t understand. These two had a secret, strange bond between them that nobody was allowed to penetrate, but today, they seemed to let me get a glimpse of what it was like, but still, only for a moment. Were they just children, or was what I was seeing something else, something special and extraordinary? I never had anything like this with anybody, this kind of human experience, and as I sat there and watched them, I realized I wanted very much to be a part of it.

