The bats have not been entirely honest with me. All this time, while roosting in the loft, wrapped in their leathery cloaks of invisibility, they have been listening. I thought that they were asleep when I gently, gently lifted the wooden hatch, the curtains drawn in the room below to keep out all but the faintest light. I am trying just to be Room Service. Come to change the sheets. Discreetly. I won’t be a moment. The old torn cloth which I laid out to catch their droppings is whisked away to the laundry and another in its place.
Long-eared Brown Bats. A large family group, old and young. A proper community. They cuddle tightly together in the apex of the roof. Too close to count. Always in exactly the same place. The previous owner of our one-bedroom ramshackle cottage in the hills of Donegal told us that he had bought an ultrasound deterrent and they had left. We joked that we’d have paid him half as much again if they’d stayed. At any rate, he thought we were joking. Happily, we got the bats and didn’t have to pay extra.
All day, every day, we know they are there, a few feet above us. Often we find ourselves standing still and speechless, as if we had forgotten what we had come for, just underneath where they are roosting. We hold the chalice of their presence and listen intently for the sound of their silence. Is this grace? It seems that it might be.
Of course the world continues to turn. We chatter and babble. People visit and there is talk of weighty matters. We eat, we write, we griddle the old Stanley peat stove and cough when it smokes, brow-beaten by an easterly wind.
All the while the bats are listening carefully. We are the first of our kind that they have encountered. This cottage, whose floor is simply the earth beaten flat and overlain with giant flagstones, has only now, with our arrival, been separated from the long lineage of the people of this place. The responsibility weighs heavily on us.
We listen to the speech of the tribe whose land this is and try to form the sounds with our clumsy tongues. They tell us only some of their stories. We quietly uncover myths of our own and talk respectfully to the two rounded hills which are actually a mare and her foal, resting here these last few million years.
Mostly we talk a lot of nonsense, no different from the people who lived here before. Even indigenous people’s days are full of tittle-tattle and minutiae. That’s fine. The bats have filters. They can pick the signal from out of the noise. What they glean from our chatter disturbs them. It makes them wonder if they should intervene.
It is clear to them from the outset that we think we know things. That we lack humility. From us they also hear, for the first time, the state of the world and how deeply we are hurting it. The old man and woman who had lived here for so many decades before us were born in the age when things were possible. When many roads and paths were open for the taking. Nobody had updated this childless couple on the journey’s progress. So the bats are only now hearing how far down the last cul-de-sac we have driven. They frown and confer. Something must be done.
In the evening, at the failing of light, we see them emerge from beneath the lead flashings around the chimney. They move sideways over the slates, grotesquely crab-like. Horror-film gargoyles come to life. What is this as yet unnamed emotion, part love, part terror, that we feel for them?
As soon as they are airborne we know that they must be speaking to the trees, to the walls, to the empty taciturn darkness. To the moths. They are touching everything with the fingertips of their voice. But we are grown old and there is no chance that our ears can reach up even to the lowest rungs of their frequency ladder. They have to find another way to reach us.
She came alone. Into our dreams, through an open window. Like a giant butterfly. We have so achingly little of the untamed animal left in us. But still we knew she was with us in the bedroom, without sight or sound or smell. She fluttered in and out between dream and waking as if there were no divide.
Her overtures made, she lands on the curtain and waits. So vulnerable that the stars hold their breath. The long fingerbones of her wings are as fragile as the stalks of summer grass gone to seed.
By the swaying yellow glow of a single candle I go to her and offer my cupped hands. I dare not speak. What catastrophe of thunder and earthquake would my voice be to her? And what use would my words be to me? I would hear them going outbound through the bones of my skull, dull and brutish, impinging on the world like conquerors. But I would not hear them return in the way that she receives an answer to her call. This is what she has risked her life to tell us. She is trying to remind us that a voice is only the ache of an amputated limb if we do not hear the world’s response. And if we could learn again to hear creation’s reply it might, even now, allow us to turn away from our own destruction.
She blinks. Her mouth opens and sound comes out. I cannot hear it but her voice reflects off my face and she receives back the echo which is now partly her, partly me. Is this heaven? It feels that it must be.
Again - breath-taking and beautiful David. Thank you so much for sharing this, and for listening to the bats.
We love bats too. Absolutely adore them. They are among the most remarkable of mammals, the only one that truly flies. There are two colonies of them living in my barn and one of our favorite things to do in summer (both J and I) is to go upstairs in the barn at dusk, sit very quietly in a couple of chairs placed in the middle of the large 30' by 40' floor for this very purpose, and wait for the bats to wake up.
They start out with one or two, and then ten and then a hundred or more, all flitting about so close that we can feel the flutter of their wings as they pass by us. They twitter and squeak, they are flying so quickly that it's utterly amazing that they never collide. They never touch us even though they fly within inches. And it is completely obvious that they are fully aware of our presence. For two or three full minutes we are awe-struck and still amidst a joyous flurry of bats. And then, on a single instant, as if one of them decides and gave a secret signal, and they pour out of the barn in one liquid swarm, a living river of wings off on their separate journey to eat their pounds of mosquitos.
The experience is so magical as to bring tears of gratitude and appreciation to us both. I often experience such deep feelings of connectedness to these wondrous little creatures that I can't speak for minutes after the event. And J has expressed similar feelings.
Most of the bats in the northeast are seriously threatened by the white-nose fungus. It interferes with their metabolism and wakes them up in the middle of the winter when they should be in deep hibernation. Once the fungus awakens them in winter they are doomed.
Scientists have discovered something that can treat the fungus, but that discovery is a long, long way away from being implemented in wild bat populations. They are all dangerously threatened. Every once in a while I get a call and am privileged to do a bat rescue. As a rehab volunteer, I hold them as worthy of my assistance and support as is a hummingbird, a bald eagle, a starling, a raven, a vulture, or a peregrine. They are beyond beautiful, these - our delicate and shimmery kin singing in the hidden night skies.
I can't say I was a lover of bats until one snowy day in early autumn, my friend found a brown bat clinging to the school wall. She slipped back in and found a box where she gingerly placed the bat. On the way home, she bought some mealworms. I have to admit my reaction was not the best:)
She placed a damp cloth in beside the bat (they need moisture) and fed the mealworms that were graciously accepted. The box was moved to the cold cellar and "Buddy" was looked in on every night until he fell asleep. My friend wintered Buddy over until one day in spring, I heard a rustle and called her downstairs.
Then every night for two weeks, she opened a window on the second floor, fed the bat and gave him the choice to stay or leave. She would place him on a heavy glove and he'd walk to the end of her arm look around and walk back. Then, one night he turned, looked at her and flew out the window. He circled around past the window and flew off. I swear he was thanking her. We both stood by the open window, tears, with a sense of loss mixed with thanksgiving for Buddy.
Thank you for bringing that memory back.