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371 lines
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371 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
softly. The murmur went on in a sort of mantra for some time, a
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drone that was so low and monotonous it could have sent me to
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sleep, but then it started to get louder and I looked up at her to see
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that her eyes were half closed. She looked almost in a trance.
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Then her eyes snapped open and she looked straight at me.
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‘A long life, Nicky Ryan of the MacConnors and the MacBeths.
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A long life to you, and that means that I can sleep. Born on the
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midsummer and conceived on half—night day. A joining and a
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rejoining. A life to be saved and a life to be owed, a child of one and
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a man child awakes, a storm and a battle. There’s madness here,
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and slaughter and there’s hate but there is love. Hold on to the love
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for it is for you three and for ever, and greater than you know.’
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I didn’t understand a word of that.
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‘You cannot write yet. But you will. You fear for your talent, but
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you have it. It will come after the bad days are past. The Cu Saeng
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reaches out to you and the others. It saps the strength, it snares the
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will, it sends fear. But you will win. .
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‘Take care of the child. The man will grow. The woman will
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hurt .... ’
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Her voice trailed off and the fierce look which was drilling into
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the back of my eyes softened. She smiled again and her whole
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expression changed.
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‘The one and onlies?’ she laughed. ‘That was more true than you
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could have known. And I suppose you now know what a virginia
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is?’
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‘How the hell did you know that?’ I asked, astonished. That last
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statement, straight out of a ten year old’s memory, threw me right
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off balance.
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‘I told you before. It’s not how I know, but what I know. And
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that you’ve got to learn. That was just to teach you that you should
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maybe believe an ancient lady down in a hut at the point.’
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Then she laughed out loud at the expression on my face.
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So an old woman had told me a tale. An interesting and scary old
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tale. And then she’d looked into the bottom of a teacup and she’d
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come up with some sort of riddling prophecy and then she’d
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plucked a memory out of my childhood and a thought right out of
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my head. I liked the legend, like something out of Slaine MacRoth,
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my favourite strip cartoon Celtic hero. I couldn’t make head nor I
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tail of the riddle, or whatever it was, but the last two threw me, as
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you can imagine. I suppose that’s what they were meant to do. I’d
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gone down to the windy point to get some fresh air and clear out
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the cobwebs that were slowly filling my mind with self-doubt and
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I’d ended up just as off balance as before.
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99
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When old Kitty MacBeth had laughed at my expression, she
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motioned me across to her and put her arm on my shoulder, using
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me as an extra crutch, and half beckoned, half shoved me to the
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door.
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‘Come on, I’ll show you something} she said, still having a great
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old giggle to herself. She reached behind the door into a bag
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hanging on a bent nail and pulled out what I thought was a piece of
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stiff canvas, and braced herself on my shoulder again. We went
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along the path that led to the big standing stone , slowly, while Kitty
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half skipped at my side. She placed herself in front of the monolith,
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on the south side where the salt-spray-laden wind had weathered
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the black face to a polished smoothness.
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‘The old folk knew a thing or two,’ she said. ‘Look here. It’s all
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smooth with thousands of hard years facing that firth. But you look
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at every tree you see. The moss and lichen grow on the north side,
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and on this point the winds never come from the north, only the
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south and west.
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‘Come round here,’ she said, gesturing me to follow as she did
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the crab walk round the other side of the basalt spine. ‘Look at
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this.’
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I looked. She was right. On the straight, slabbed north face of
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the stone, a thin sheen of lichen covered the flat surface.
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‘And look now,’ she said, taking the piece of canvas in her hand
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and folding it around her fingers. It cracked as she wadded the
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material.
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‘Dogiish skin. It’s as good as any sandpaper,’ she said, reaching
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up to scrape gently at the slick green covering. She did that for a
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few minutes, then took the skin away and rubbed with a wetted
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linger.
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On the surface, thin lines appeared, etched in the stone. It
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looked like some form of script, but what kind I couldn’t tell.
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The whole area, maybe the size of my hand, was completely
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covered in tightly drawn figures and letters which were etched in
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the stone and had been completely protected from the elements by
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the natural insulation.
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‘They told the whole story, but people forgot how to read it,’
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Kitty said. ‘They told what they did and why they did it, and they
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wrote down the way to send Cu Saeng back, but there was not
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enough people to do that, not enough of the right people, so it must A
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be killed.
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‘This part speaks in a riddle. It is a foretelling, and that’s why I’m
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showing it to you, Nicky Ryan.’
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‘Why, what does it say‘?’
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100
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‘If I tell you, will you believe me?’ she asked.
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‘To tell you the truth, I don’t know. It all sounds a bit weird to
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me.’
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‘Ah yes. That’s the right word. It is your weird. And mine. But it
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will get through to you as time goes on, and I don’t think we have
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too much of that. You can’t avoid it, so I might as well tell you.’
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She lifted her hand and pointed out some lines. They could have
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been Greek or runes for all I knew.
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‘Yet come three, alone yet one, earth—day born. Awakens one
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who sleeps and strays, two return to iight the wrath. Sacred How
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and sacred grow and sacred stone to end the rule of Cu Saeng.’
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‘What does that mean?’ I asked, not entirely convinced that the
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old woman could actually read those scratches on the rock, or
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even, if she could read it, that she could understand it.
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‘Well it could have many meanings, but I think that you three,
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your one and onlies, fit the first part.’
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‘How come?’
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‘Because there are three of you. That’s easy enough. Alone yet
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one, only children, single children, but you were close enough then
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to be one, at least last time you did whatever you did on Ardhmor.
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And you’re all earth-day born. You on midsummer, the girl on the
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autumn equinox and the boy in spring.
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‘The chances of that happening in a small place like this are
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surely millions to one. Especially when you consider that you all
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have the blood of the MacConnors and the MacBeths in you,
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though a touch more diluted than I’d like, but it’s there.
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‘It has to be you, and the other two, and you have to watch the
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walls. The bad thing’s coming, for I can feel it, and I cannot watch
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the walls.
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‘Look at me. Broke my leg like a silly old fool down on the rocks.
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Hobbling around like a shore crab. Set it myself, but it takes so
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long, and we don’t have long.’
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She nodded across the bay to where Ardhmor sat squat. ‘I can’t
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get over there, and something’s happening that I can’t see. You
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have to be my eyes and hands now. It’s just like last time, when you
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were a boy. My mother was dying, and I was away from here. I
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came back on the night your grandfather was searching for you
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down at the rock. If I had not been away, maybe we could have I
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ended it then. And now, with this old crippled leg, I might as well
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not be here.’
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Kitty took one of my hands in hers and smiled again.
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‘Remember, a long life. You can believe that anyway, because I
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do. It means that you will beat this thing, although how you will do
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101
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strike me as odd, although it’s not on the same side of the house as
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my bedroom or the kitchen. I padded through on my bare feet and
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my grandfather looked up from the rocking chair and smiled. His
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face was half in shadow and his old, big hands were curled around
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the smooth arm of the chair.
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I stood there, paralysed. Just as I started through the doorway,
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I’d taken a drink of the cold water and now it stuck somewhere
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between my throat and my stomach and seemed to want to move
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two ways at once.
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‘Come in, come in,’ the old man said. ‘Come in and sit yourself
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down.’
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He motioned me over to the armchair at the other side of the
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fireplace where the white coals had long fallen to dust since the last
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fire had been lit. I was rooted to the spot, which is a phrase I’ve
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always disliked, but it was nonetheless true. It was as if my whole
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body was clamped in a block of stone. My heart thudded wildly — I
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could hear it in my ears — and from way down in my stomach I could
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feel waves of panic layering up on top of each other, building up to
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one huge scream.
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That’s not what happened. My old grandfather’s eyes caught the
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moonlight, black and blue under his brows, and he gestured again
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to the easy chair. Some force took my feet and lifted them one by
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one off the floor where they’d been nailed down and walked me
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across the room and sat me down. I didn’t do it. It happened.
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‘Ah, Nicky boy, you’ve grown,’ he said in that big gravelly voice
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that I had often remembered with that warm jolt of affection. It
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now seemed to come from a million miles away, dry and cold.
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‘And you’ve come back to stay with me, eh? That’s good. Very
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good.’
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He nodded, almost contentedly and his eyes looked into the
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fireplace.
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‘But you’ve been a bad boy. A very bad boy. I’ve told you not to
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go down to the rock, and you went down there.’
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He paused and seemed to consider.
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‘I told you not to have anything to do with that old witch, but
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you’ve been speaking to her, haven’t you‘?’
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I sat and stared. No sound would come out of my throat. I could
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hardly breathe. .
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‘If you want to stay with me, you’ll have to be a good boy.’
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He raised his eyes from the fireplace and turned his head slowly
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round in my direction. I could hear his head turn on his neck, a dry
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sound like old hawsers taking up strain. And he grinned a huge
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grin. That wasn’t my grandfather. Of course it wasn’t my grand-
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103
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father, for he’d been dead for years. But whatever this was, it
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wasn’t even him. My old grandfather laughed, or he smiled, or he
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roared. But he never grinned.
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I stared at the apparition. My eyes must have been opened so
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wide they were in danger of falling right out of my head.
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The grin widened until it showed an impossible array of teeth
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that were long and thin and blue in the unearthly light.
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‘You be a good boy,’ he hissed behind that row, ‘and I’ll let you
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stay with me.’
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He started to giggle and the skin started to flake off his face.
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Hee-hee-hee. High pitched. Mad. And the more he laughed, the
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more the skin shrivelled up like leather on an old boot and split
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down the seams of his face and inside his head seemed to swell. The
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eyes got bigger and paler and the noise of old twisted ropes tearing
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and twisting got louder. The rocking chair creaked as it swung back
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and forth as the thing that had looked like my grandfather swelled
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and split and giggled.
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Then the glass that I’d been holding in my right hand suddenly
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gave way in the pressure of my grip and a jagged edge went straight
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into my palm with such a force that blood just spouted out. That
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was enough to get my breath back and I let out a scream that must
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have been heard from the far side of the firth.
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I leapt out of the chair in terror and instinctively hurled the base
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of the glass and what remained of the water, plus, no doubt, a fair
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quantity of the blood that was pouring out of the gash in my hand,
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right at the thing in the chair.
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In slow motion I watched the glass tumble in the air, catching
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that light, and smash right into the writhing, giggling thing. It hit
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with a muffled thump, and then a crash as it struck through and into
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the turned risers at the back of the chair which tipped over with a
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thump. The thing just disappeared in front of my eyes as if it had
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never been there, leaving me in the middle of the fioor cursing in
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words that I thought I’d forgotten, a stream of invective that
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reverberated back at me from the walls until I stopped, gasping for
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breath, and sank back down into the chair.
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The light from the early morning sun awoke me through the
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space in the curtain that I’d meant to close the night before, and I
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suddenly jerked awake with the vision of that thing still in my head.
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Everyone has experienced that moment of awakening when a o
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dream disappears. I rolled over and out of bed, breathing deeply,
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still shuddering from the visual memory, and I crossed the room
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and opened the curtains fully to let as much daylight in as I could.
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As I did so, I felt a sharp stab of pain in my hand as it brushed
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104
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against the curtain fabric. I looked down and there in the centre of
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the palm was a small, crescent shaped cut that was just beginning to
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scab over.
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Instantly I got a vision of the dream again but I shook it off. I’ve
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had falling dreams when I’ve ended up on the floor, or fire—engine
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dreams just when the alarm goes off. I couldn’t remember cutting
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myself, but that didn’t mean it hadn’t happened yesterday, maybe
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down at the point. I probably just hadn’t noticed it. By the time I
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got dressed and slunged my face with cold water, the shaky feeling
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was receding. The day looked Hne and fresh and I felt like frying up
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a good breakfast and then getting out into the fresh air and away
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from the house for a while. I’d fixed up with Barbara Foster to take
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her and Paddy across to Loch Lomondside for a picnic, so I
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thought after a stroll I’d go up to the shop to get whatever we’d
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need for a day out.
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In the kitchen I had the pan sizzling with good Belfast ham and I
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threw in some mushrooms and set a couple of eggs on to poach.
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The kettle boiled quickly and I had a cup of tea while I was cooking
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and another one while I ate. I felt a whole lot better after that.
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I took a third cup, which was quite strong and thick by the time
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I’d finished and cleaned up the kitchen leaving the plate to drain
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beside the sink, and carried it through to the sitting room.
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There I promptly dropped it on my foot, which would have been
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badly scalded if the tea hadn’t cooled down.
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For the rocking chair lay on its back at the far side of the room.
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And there was a broken glass and shards lying beside it.
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The burn from the tea was painful enough to make me cry out,
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which I suppose helped release the breath that was getting ready to
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back up in my lungs, but the pain quickly receded. All sorts of
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explanations began to line themselves up in my head, but before I
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could think of any of them a face loomed into the window frame so
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suddenly that I jumped backwards in fright.
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If I’d thought rationally, I suppose by this time I would have
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been getting a bit pissed off at the number of shocks my poor little
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thudding heart had been given in quick succession. But when the
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figure looming at the window lifted a black arm to cut off the
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reflection and peer into the room, I recognised Father Gerald
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O’Connor. He wasn’t wearing his motorcycle gear, but the normal B
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black suit and white collar. I motioned him around to the front
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door and he was standing there in the sunlight when I opened it.
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‘Sor1y if I gave you a fright,’ he said affably. ‘You look as if
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you’ve seen a ghost. What were you doing in there? A war dance?’
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‘No, I spilled some tea on my foot.’ We both looked down.
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105
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There was a light red weal where the tea had splashed. It wouldn’t
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come to anything.
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‘Ah, tea. I’d love a cup,’ said the young priest, eagerly, inviting
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himself in. ‘I’ve been up since five o’clock this morning. I’m the
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duty man on the emergency service. I think I’ll get a siren and a
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flashing light.’
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‘What was the emergency?’
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‘Oh, nothing serious. Mrs Black found her father at the foot of
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the stairs and thought he’d had a heart attack. She decided he
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· needed extreme unction. What he needed was extreme black
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coffee and I suppose he’ll have an extreme hangover later this
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morning. And when you think of the voice his daughter’s got, you
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can expect he’ll wish he had died before the week’s out.
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‘What gets me is that she’s not even a Catholic, but that’s the
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third time she’s called me out in the past year for the old man.’
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I put the kettle on and the priest- he said I should call him Gerry
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— said he’d shoot his granny for a bacon sandwich, so I fired up the
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pan and put a couple of rashers in to sizzle.
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‘I just thought I’d drop by in the passing,’ he said. ‘I never got a
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chance to meet you up at Alan’s house the other day. I’m sorry if I
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gave you a fright. Most people are glad to see us. We’re on the
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good side, you know,’ he winked Conspiratorially.
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‘No, it wasn’t you,’ I said. ‘It was something else entirely}
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‘Why, what happened?’
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‘You wouldn’t believe it.’
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‘Try me. I’m a good listener. It’s all the hours we spend sitting in
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a little box.’
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I’m not a religious person, but strangely it seemed a relief to talk
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about it, even to a young priest who ran about on a racing Honda. I
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- sat there and told him about what had happened last night, and
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how I’d woken up thinking it had been a nightmare, and then come
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back down and seen the rocking chair lying in the corner. Just
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before the kettle boiled I took him through and showed him.
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‘What do you think? Am I going crazy?’
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‘Not at all,’ he said, smiling. ‘You’ve been sleepwalking. I used
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to do it all the time when I was small. My mother was worrying but
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my old man said as long as I didn’t pee the bed he didn’t mind.’
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‘I’ve never walked in my sleep before, and I’ve been getting bad
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dreams almost every night? `
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‘You’re probably tense. Are you worrying about anything?’
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‘Nothing that should make me feel like I’ve seen a ghost. I’ve not
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been feeling great, but what happened last night scared the hell out
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of me.’
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106
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‘Well, that’s pretty normal. But I wouldn’t say you’re crazy. I’d
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just put it to the back of my mind ifI were you. Things always look
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different in the daytime.’
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I made the tea and fixed up the bacon sandwiches. He started
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eating them with obvious appetite.
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He took a gulp of tea to wash down a bite and said: ‘The world’s
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got a lot worse to throw at us than ghosts, you know.
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‘Look at that poor woman who killed her son and then took her
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own life. And there’s that farmer, Mr Gillon; you were there,
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weren’t you? If ghosts were all we had to worry about I’d be
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delighted.’
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‘That’s another thing,’ I said. ‘Those two accidents, I mean.
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What could have caused them?’
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‘Accidents happen. No rhyme nor reason. And we’ve just got to
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try to help after they do.’
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‘Have you ever thought that these accidents might not have been
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accidents?’
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‘How do you mean?’
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‘I don’t know. Not yet anyway. But I’ve got a funny feeling. Ever
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since I’ve come back to Arden, things haven’t gone right. Like
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those deaths. In a small place like this two freak accidents seem
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more than coincidence.’
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‘I could say something trite, like "The Lord giveth", but I
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won’t,’ Gerry said. ‘These things happen. I can’t explain them.
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Nobody can.’
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‘What if . . . ’ I said, but I stopped.
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‘What if what?’
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‘Nothing. I’m just a bit shook up. Shaken up, I should say. I’ve
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spent too long in the States.’
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‘You’re a bit too worldly wise for me to give parental advice,’ he
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said, ‘even though I am a priest. I know what I’m like after a
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nightmare. But at least we always wake up. I don’t believe in
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ghosts and ghouls. The Holy Ghost maybe, but that’s between me
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and him.’
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‘I can’t say I’m much of a believer,’ I confessed.
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‘Don’t worry about that. I’m not an evangelist. Even priests
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have their own doubts}
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‘So have journalists who aspire to be writers. Lots of them. Let’s j
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hope you’re right.’
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He finished his tea and we exchanged some chat as he was
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leaving.
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‘Will you be coming to the festival?’ he asked at the gate.
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‘I suppose so. Everybody else will be there}
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107
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‘Yes, I’m looking forward to it. They’re getting things ready up
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at the seminary, so I’ll be kept busy with that for a day or so.
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Listen, why don’t you come up and see the place? You’d like it. I’m
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still amazed, being a city boy, how self-sufficient the old timers
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have got it. Been doing it for hundreds of years, I’m told.’
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I said I would come up sometime, and Gerry suggested
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Thursday — not having anything planned I agreed.
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108
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