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A Swift Pure Cry

Siobhan Dowd




  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Part I

  Spring

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Part II

  Autumn

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Chapter Twenty-two

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Chapter Twenty-four

  Chapter Twenty-five

  Chapter Twenty-six

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  Chapter Twenty-eight

  Chapter Twenty-nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-one

  Part III

  Winter

  Chapter Thirty-two

  Chapter Thirty-three

  Chapter Thirty-four

  Chapter Thirty-five

  Chapter Thirty-six

  Chapter Thirty-seven

  Chapter Thirty-eight

  Chapter Thirty-nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-one

  Chapter Forty-two

  Chapter Forty-three

  Chapter Forty-four

  Chapter Forty-five

  Chapter Forty-six

  Chapter Forty-seven

  Chapter Forty-eight

  Chapter Forty-nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-one

  Chapter Fifty-two

  Chapter Fifty-three

  Acknowledgements

  Copyright

  To G. with love

  It soared, a bird, it held its flight, a swift pure cry,

  soar silver orb it leaped serene, speeding, sustained...

  James Joyce, Ulysses

  The South of Ireland

  1984

  Part I

  SPRING

  One

  The place brought to mind a sinking ship. Wood creaked on the floor, across the pews, up in the gallery. Around the walls, a fierce March wind chased itself.

  The congregation launched into the Our Father as if every last soul was going down. Heaven. Bread. Trespass. Temptation. The words whisked past Shell's ears like rabbits vanishing into their holes. She tried wriggling her nose to make it slimmer. Evil. Mrs McGrath's hat lurched in front of her, its feather looking drunk: three-to-one odds it would fall off. Declan Ronan, today's altar boy, was examining the tabernacle, licking his lips with half-shut eyes. Whatever he was thinking, it wasn't holy.

  Trix and Jimmy sat on either side of her, swinging their legs in their falling-down socks. They were in a competition to see who could go higher and faster.

  'Whisht,' Shell hissed, poking Jimmy in the ribs.

  'Whisht yourself,' said Jimmy aloud.

  Thankfully, Dad didn't hear. By now he was up at the microphone, reading the lesson like a demented prophet. His sideburns gleamed grey. The lines on his massive forehead rose and fell. This past year, he'd gone religion-mad. He'd become worshipper extraordinaire, handing out the hymn books, going round with the collection boxes every offertory. Most days he went into nearby Castlerock and walked the streets, collecting for the Church's causes. On Sunday mornings, she'd often glimpse him practising the reading in his bedroom. He'd sit upright in front of the three panelled mirrors of Mam's old dressing table, spitting out the words like bad grapes.

  Shell, on the other hand, had no time for church: not since Mam's death, over a year back. She remembered how, when she was small, Mam had made her, Jimmy and Trix dress up clean and bright and coaxed them through Mass with colouring pencils and paper. 'Draw me an angel, Shell, playing hurling in the rain' 'Do me a cat, Jimmy, parachuting off a plane.' Mam had liked the priests, the candles and the rosaries. Most of all, she'd loved the Virgin Mary. She'd said 'Sweet Mary this and that' all day long. Sweet Mary if the potatoes boiled over, if the dog caught a crow. Sweet Mary if the scones came out good and soft.

  Then she died.

  Shell remembered standing by Mam's bed as she floated off. Dr Fallon, Mrs Duggan and Mrs McGrath had been there, with Father Carroll leading a round of the rosary. Her dad had stood off to the side, like a minor character in a film, mouthing the words rather than saying them. Now and at the hour of our...On the word 'death' Shell had frozen. Death. The word was a bad breath. The closer you got the more you wanted it to go away. She'd realized then she didn't believe in heaven any more. Mam wasn't going anywhere. She was going to nowhere, to nothing. Her face had fallen in, puckered and ash-white. Her thin fingers kneaded the sheets, working over them methodically. In Shell's mind, Jesus got off the cross and walked off to the nearest bar. Mam's face scrunched up, like a baby's that's about to cry. Then she died. Jesus drained off his glass of beer and went clean out of Shell's life. Mrs McGrath put the mirror Mam had used for plucking her eyebrows up to her mouth and said, 'She's gone.' It was quiet. Dad didn't move. He just kept on mouthing the prayers, a fish out of water.

  They'd waked her in the house over three days. Mam's face turned waxen. Her fingers went blue and stiff, then yellow and loose again. They threaded them with her milk-white rosary beads. Then they buried her. It was a drama, the whole village bowing, the men doffing their hats. There were processions and candles, solemn stares, prayers, and callers night and day. I'm sorry for your trouble, they'd say. A feed of drink was drunk. Shell didn't cry. Not at first. Not until a whole year passed. Then she'd cried long and hard as she planted the grave up with daffodils on a November day, the first anniversary.

  The less religious Shell got, the more Dad became. Before Mam died, he'd only ever gone through the motions, standing in the church's back porch, muttering with the other men about the latest cattlemart or hurling match. Mam hadn't minded. She'd joked that men fell into two categories: they were either ardent about God and indifferent to women, or ardent about women and indifferent to God. If she'd been alive now, she wouldn't have known him. He was piety personified. He'd sold the television, saying it was a vehicle of the devil. He'd taken over Mam's old role and led Shell, Jimmy and Trix in a decade of the rosary every night, except Wednesdays and Saturdays, when he went straight down to Stack's pub after his day of collecting. He'd given up his job on Duggans' farm. He said he was devoting his life to the Lord.

  Today, he was almost yelling. Avenging angels, crashing temples and false gods resounded in the small church, hurting the ear. Mrs McGrath's hat slid off when the shock of the word thunder set the microphone off in a high-pitched whine. Dad's eyes flickered. He was momentarily distracted. He looked up at the congregation, staring into the middle distance, seeing nobody. He clenched the lectern's sides. Shell held her breath. Had he lost his place? No. He continued, but the steam had gone out of it. Jimmy punched the bench, making it boom, just as Dad faltered to the end.

  'This-is-the-word-of-the-Lord,' he trailed.

  'Thanks be to God,' the congregation chorused. Shell for one meant it. He'd done. Jimmy smirked. He made the hymn sheet into a spyglass and twisted to inspect the people in the gallery. Trix curled up on the floor, with her head on the kneeler. Dad came down from the altar. Everybody stood up. Shell averted her eyes from Dad as he shuffled up beside her. Bridie Quinn, her friend from school, caught her eye. She had two fingers up to her temple and was twizzling them round as if to s
ay, Your dad is mad. Shell shrugged as if to reply, It's nothing to do with me. Everybody was waiting for Father Carroll to do the Gospel. He was stooped and old, with a soft, sing-song voice. You could go off into a sweet, peaceful dream as he pattered out the words.

  There was a long pause.

  The wind outside died down. Crows cawed.

  It wasn't Father Carroll who approached the microphone but the new curate, Father Rose. He was fresh from the seminary, people said, up in the Midlands. He'd never spoken in public before. Shell had only seen him perform the rites in silence, at Father Carroll's side. There was a quickening interest all around.

  He stood at the lectern, eyes down, and turned the pages of the book with a slight frown of concentration. He was young, with a full head of hair that sprang upwards like bracken. He held his head to one side, as if considering a finer point of theology. When he found the place, he straightened up and smiled. It was the kind of smile that radiated out to everyone, everywhere at once. Shell felt he'd smiled at her alone. She heard him draw his breath.

  '"The next day, as they were leaving Bethany..."' he began.

  His voice was even, expressive. The words had a new tune in them, an accent from another place, a richer county. He read the words as if he'd written them himself, telling the story about Jesus throwing over the tables of the moneylenders outside the temple. Jesus raged with righteous anger and Father Rose's mouth moved in solemn tandem. The air around him vibrated with shining picture bubbles. Shell could hear the caged birds under the arches, the clink of Roman coins. She could see the gorgeous colours of the Israelites' robes, the light shafting through the temple columns. The images and sounds cascaded out from the pulpit, hanging in the air, turning over like angels in the spring light.

  'Please be seated,' Father Rose said at the end of the reading. The congregation sat. Only Shell remained standing, her mouth open. The tables of the moneymen turned into hissing snakes. The multitudes fell silent. Jesus became a man, sad and real, smiling upon Shell as she stood in a daze.

  'Be seated,' Father Rose repeated gently.

  There was a rustle around her and Shell remembered where she was. God. Everyone's staring. She plumped down. Trix tittered. Jimmy dug his spyglass in her side.

  Father Rose came down the altar steps and stood before the congregation, arms folded, grinning, as if welcoming guests over for dinner. There was a mutter at this departure from practice. Father Carroll always went to the pulpit for his sermon. Father Rose began to speak.

  'Well. We've had some real gloom and doom today,' he said. 'Blasted temples, God being angry. But'-he put his two palms upwards and looked piercingly into the congregation's heart-'has it ever occurred to you that where there is no anger, there is also no love?' The sentences fitted and sparkled like precious gems in a necklace. His raiment glittered as he gestured. His thick hair spangled with blonds and browns. He spoke of choices and temptations. He spoke of new beginnings. He described how he'd just given up the fags. He'd jumped on the packet, he said, and ground it into the earth to expel the nicotine curse from his marrow. Maybe that was like the tables going over in the gospel story. He spoke of angels and rebirth. Shell leaned forward, her hands clasped tight. A miracle happened. Jesus came out of the bar and got right back up on the high cross. Mam danced in heaven, waltzing with the spirits.

  When Father Rose finished, everyone got to their feet and sang, 'Praise, My Soul, the King of Heaven'. Between the notes was a hum of gossip. Nora Canterville nudged Mrs Fallon, the doctor's wife, with a grimace. Mrs McGrath fanned her face with her hat, as if the devil had passed by. Dad's eyebrows pulled together, dark as beetles.

  'Ransomed, healed, restored, forgiven...' Shell sang at the top of her voice. She hadn't the voice of her mother but she could carry a tune. She caught Declan Ronan imitating her, shutting and opening his mouth like an anguished fish. 'Praise the everlasting King '. She scrunched her nose up at him and looked away. Even when she remembered she'd to cook the mutton dinner, with Trix and Jimmy plaguing the kitchen like flies, and recalled the schoolwork that she wouldn't do, and the dark, heavy future of her life, nothing mattered. Jesus Christ had come back to earth in the shape of Father Rose. He was walking among them, the congregation of the church, in the village of Coolbar, County Cork.

  Two

  She floated on a cloud of Father Rose the rest of the day. His face-or was it Jesus's?-floated in the potato peelings in the washing bowl. It shimmered in the mirror as the light failed and floated in the dark as she drifted off to sleep.

  The next day, they were up early to pick up the stones in the back field. Dad had been making them do it since the winter. He never gave a reason. If he was planning to plough it over, he gave no sign. By now, she, Jimmy and Trix had a great cairn growing in the north-east corner. Most mornings, they'd be three silent sentinels going up the hill in the half-light, stooped over with their loads.

  Today, Shell picked up the old holdall they used to carry the stones. She was cold and hungry. It was spitting rain.

  'Dad,' she said. He was sitting in his usual chair by the fire, with the poker resting loosely in his hand. He was staring into the flames as if they contained the answer to life's riddle. 'Why do we have to pick up the stones?'

  He glanced up. 'What's that?'

  'Why do we have to pick up the stones, Dad?'

  He frowned. 'Because I say so. Isn't that enough?'

  'It's raining today, Dad. We'll be wet through all day at school.'

  'Beat it, Shell. Go on. Double-quick.'

  'Only--'

  He dropped the poker and came towards her, his hand up, making as if to strike. 'Scram.'

  'I'm off,' she said, scooting through the door.

  Trix and Jimmy were already huddled over the soil. Shell joined them as they trudged up the hill. The stones always seemed to reappear overnight. However many they picked up, there were always more. Halfway up, Shell doubled right over and stared at the world upside down through the triangle of her white, thin legs. If anger and love went together, like Father Rose had said, it must mean that she loved her dad. She knew she had done once, long ago, when he'd swung her in his arms and let her climb up him like a tree. She could dimly recall it. She imagined all the hate pouring out of her brain, trickling out through her ears. Perhaps it worked, because when she stood up, she felt lighter. She looked over the field to the rusty gate, across the road, up the slope and into the yellow soup of sky.

  'Thank you, Jesus, for the stones,' she said.

  Jimmy threw one at her. 'Hate the stones,' he said. 'Hate Jesus. Hate you.'

  The stone hit her right in the belly. Shell rubbed where it hit, and then looked Jimmy in the eye. His face was twisted up. The whiteness around the freckles stood out. She'd been sharp with him of late, she knew. Just the other day, she'd slapped him when she'd caught him stealing one of her new-baked scones from the cooling rack. Then when he'd asked to go to the funfair last Saturday she'd snapped a no. She'd have liked to go herself but there'd been no money. No mon, no fun, she said, and he'd stopped talking to her ever since.

  She stretched out her arms. 'Throw another,' she said.

  Jimmy looked at Trix, Trix looked at Jimmy. 'Go on,' she said. 'Both of you. For the love of God.'

  They picked up two stones and threw them. One missed, the other grazed Shell's cheek.

  'Go on. Don't be afraid.' Scones, she thought, smiling. Not stones. Imagine them as soft, light scones.

  They threw again. On the road, Shell heard a car trawling up the hill. On the third throw, she yelped despite herself.

  'Go on,' she squeaked.

  'No,' said Trix. ''S boring.' She ran off down the field, singing something. But Jimmy picked up a big stone, the size of three scones in one. He squinted, as if the devil was sneaking a peek out of his eye.

  'This'll hurt,' he said.

  'That's right, Jimmy. Fine man. Throw it.'

  He heaved it up to his shoulder with both hands, a miniature Super
man. He grunted.

  'Ready,' said Shell. 'Do it.'

  'Stop.' A voice, dark and deep, like an underground earthquake, called over to them.

  Shell closed her eyes. 'Do it,' she whispered. A breeze fanned her fringe. Inside her eyelids, yellow rockets burst.

  'Drop it, boy.' It was a command, urgent but not harsh.

  She opened her eyes. The devil catapulted out of Jimmy in two shakes. She turned round. Father Rose had pulled up by the gate. She could hardly see him or the car in the strong early light that broke through the heavy clouds. He'd wound down the window.

  'We were only messing,' Jimmy hollered, dropping the stone. He ran off down the hill.

  Father Rose looked towards Shell. 'What was that about?' he asked.

  Shell shrugged.

  'You're the Talent girl, aren't you?'

  She nodded.

  'What's your first name?'

  'Michelle. But everyone calls me Shell.'

  He nodded back and started up his car. 'So long, Shell.' She thought he was going to add something, but he sighed instead. He let down the handbrake and took off up the hill. She blinked. The car flashed purple as he rounded the bend.

  Shell sat down on the damp earth and breathed out hard. She stroked the lumpen stones of the Pharisees that had glanced off her mortal body. 'He who has not sinned,' she murmured, 'let him cast the first stone.' She took up the last stone, the one Jimmy hadn't dared to throw, and cooled her cheek with it. She lay back on the ground and was still. The cold spring morning went deep into her bones.

  Three

  She saw Father Rose again soon afterwards.

  Dad had been collecting for the starving nations of Africa. One week it was flood victims of a sub-continent, the next it was refugees from a minor theatre of war, but when each week ended, he'd seal the money in an envelope and tell Shell to take it to the priests' house. It was the one job she liked: first, because she'd steal a few pence for herself and buy some gums at McGraths', and second, because if Nora Canterville, the priests' housekeeper, answered, she'd get a wedge of coffee and walnut cake.