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CHAPTER ELEVEN
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According to Jimmy Allison, Arden is older than all hell. That’s
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probably how he would have put it, but that’s not how he wrote. I
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was amazed at the depth of his research in geography and history,
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archaeology and palaeontology. He’d studied just about every
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major work ever written to find out what he could about the place
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of his birth. As he once explained to me, it had started with him a
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long while back when there was some dispute over whether the
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Priory — as it was then — was older than Westbay church, and
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Jimmy’s research for the newspaper had settled the issue one way
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or another.
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‘It was the finding out of one fact that led to questions,’ he would
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tell me.
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‘The more I knew, the more I realised how little I knew.’
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So it had gone. The more Jimmy Allison discovered, the clearer
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became the pattern. Every now and again — and there was no clear
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regulation, no set timescale — Arden went through a period of
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disaster and destruction. Oh, the town stayed on, older than all
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hell, but there were times when it took long to recover. There were
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times when it almost never recovered.
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J immy’s history starts way back when the great lava plugs were
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cooling down. Ardhmor, Dumbuck, Dumbarton Rock, Dumbuie.
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Those vents of towering volcanoes that had spread their ash and
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dust and nutrient-rich rock all over the centre of Scotland. Just at
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that junction where the basalt welled up against the old red
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sandstone, a fault developed which lifted and twisted the hills into .
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the highlands, while everything south was a shallow sea filled with
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sharks as big as a train and shelled monstrosities that have left their
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marks in the fossils of shale. Out of that sea poked the volcanoes
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that heaved and thrust up from the mantle of the earth and drained
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off the water and formed the basis for the level plain that would
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become the Clyde valley, the central lowlands of Scotland. Arden
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was right at that point where the plain butted up against the great
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folded ancient mountains that marched north. There were
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swamps, dragonilies as big as birds, centipedes that were six feet
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long and more. Later on there were reptiles and then mammals
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132
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and then came the great ice sheets that covered everything and
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bore down the earth with such a weight that it sank. And when the
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ice melted the water came back, flooding the plain again; then the
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land started its slow rise with the weight gone, shuddering its way
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up from the depths around the dead volcanoes. And when the land
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came back, man came with it.
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The man they found in the dugout canoe on the mudflats, so well
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preserved by the chemicals, had been one of the early explorers.
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Short, squat and strong.
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Jimmy Allison’s view is that these people, who hunted mastodon
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and elk, were of the same people as the Fir Bolg, the Irish tribes
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that lived throughout the west.
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They were stone-age people, who made spears out of rowan and
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axeheads out of basalt. Their needles were bone and their
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hammers were antler. They killed the bear and the wolf and their
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descendants put up stone teeth to show that they had been here
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and had gone.
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In more recent times, only four thousand years ago, there were
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more people from the west, from Ireland. The descendants of
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Bryan Boru, Conchobhar and Cu-Chulain, sailing in their big
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currachs up the Clyde and mixing their blood with the old people.
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They cut the ring stones and started the harvest festivals, burning
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their sacrifices in the wicker man at Samhain.
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Then came the Romans and their legions up to the dear green
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place of Glasgow and beyond, building their wall that split the
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country north and south and sending raiding parties into the north
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to quell those who were now the Picts, and the Scots, the blue
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barbarians. Some of those legions never came back again. The
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Ninth Legion has been a mystery since it left Old Kilpatrick, the
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most northerly outpost of the Pax Romana, and walked their hob-
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nailed boots past Dumbuck Hill and into legend. They were never
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seen again.
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St Columba came and St Kentigern, with their new way and their
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new god, and won over the chiefs of the western isles, the warriors
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of Argyll.
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The Normans came next. They didn’t conquer Scotland, but
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married it and wore it down that way until one Scot, Robert the
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Bruce, defied English rule and sent them home to think again. The
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Bruce and the Wallace won their wars, and the King of Scotland
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came back to the west to live by Arden. And when he came here he
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rotted away and died. He was not the only one.
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The clans rose against the oppressors and the Colquhouns
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marched north into Glen Fruin just above Arden and were
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133
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massacred. There was plague, and there was famine and there
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were killings.
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Arden took it all and stayed put.
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Every now and again, in all the records since written history
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began — pieced together fact by painful fact — was the evidence that
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Arden harboured some sort of curse that inflicted it with madness
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or war, or sickness or death.
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Kitty MacBeth called it Cu Saeng, the ravener, the evil thing
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that lived among the roots, brought into this world by terrible
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spells in terrible times.
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The monks called it the wrath of God. Jimmy Allison and the old
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people said it was a bad summer.
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Whatever it was, an ancient scribe, writing on a goatskin,
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summed it up in his runic script, in a word that everybody would
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agree with. He called it a bane.
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Father Gerry came roaring along the narrow street in his speed
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machine and did a wide sweep to the other side of the road to point
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the front wheel through the narrow space and right up to the front
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door. I was watching through the front window as he curved in,
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wrenching the throttle hard to bump the front wheel up on the
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pavement and dart, in a cloud of exhaust, between the stone pillars
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that held the gate with only an inch on either side of the
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handlebars. The sun gleamed on the shiny black dome of his crash
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helmet and reflected from the tinted visor that came down right
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over his face like a huge insect eye.
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In the kitchen, he unstrapped the skid-lid as he called it and took
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several minutes to free himself from the expensive black leather
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jacket.
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‘Great jacket for the road,’ he said, ‘but too damned hot when
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you stop.’
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The kettle hadn’t long boiled and I poured him a cup of instant
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which he drank, leaning back in the pine chair with one boot
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crossed over the other on the top of the table.
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‘I heard you needed last rites,’ he said after the Hrst sip.
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‘That was days ago. I need the rites that come after the last ones.’
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‘Well, you look all right to me. Mr Bennett told me you’d been
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nearly killed}
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‘By the time the story gets to the other side of town, I probably
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will have been.’
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‘What happened, then?’
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‘Some idiot threw half a brick at me. Nearly took my head off.
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At least that’s what it felt like next day.’
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134
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‘Jimmy Allison said you were feeling better. He’s looking a bit
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unsteady on his feet with that bug he’s had. Anyway, you look
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none the worse for it.’
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‘That’s just my image,’ I said, and he laughed.
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‘Listen, what are you doing today?’
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I told him I’d planned to plough through some paper work. I was
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still reading Jimmy Allison’s stuff, but I hadn’t been out in the last
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few days and had been toying with idea of a stroll down the shore or
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up Cardross Hill.
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‘I brought another helmet,’ he said. ‘Just in case you fancied
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coming up to the God spot.’
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‘God spot?’
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‘The big house. I’ve been planning this damned harvest thing for
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weeks. It’s about time I had a day off. Come up for lunch.’
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He saw me hesitate. I didn’t really feel like socialising, especially
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with a bunch of old priests, or eager young acolytes.
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‘Aw, come on,’ he said, dark eyes flashing and mischievous. ‘It’ll
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get you out of all this. And I’ll tell you what . . . we’ll throw in some
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altar wine as well, blessed or unblessed.’
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He nudged me on the shoulder and winked like an honest to God
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car salesman.
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‘Or are you still sworn off the drink after your last case of the
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heebie-jeebies?’
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‘OK, OK, I’ll come on up, as long as I don’t have to sit through a
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service or preaching or anything like that.’
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‘Come on, times are changing. Anyway, they don’t let me
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preach. They think I’m the red under the bed trying to subvert the
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young ones.’
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‘You probably are.’
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‘That’s right, and they know it. I’m the devil’s advocate. A
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walking example of what a priest should never be.’
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‘Amen to that.’
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‘Here, and I thought you never prayed,’ he said, raising his eyes
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skyward. ‘There’s more rejoicing for one sinner.’
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I ‘After the last couple of weeks I’ve had, I reckon I should start,’
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I said.
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‘Why? Are things still not going right for you?’
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‘You could say that. I don’t think things are going right for
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anybody.’
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‘That sounds pretty deep,’ he said, taking his boots off the table
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and swinging forward towards me. ‘How do you figure that out?’
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‘I know you’re going to think it’s stupid, but I think something’s
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going wrong around here.’
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135
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‘Go on,’ he urged, leaning forward even more, and staring
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intently at me.
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‘All right. Take the night when the lifeboat from the Cassandra
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went missing at Ardmhor. They haven’t found a sign of it ever
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since. Nothing, not a trace.’
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‘Accidents happen at sea. They’ll find something sooner or
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later.’
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‘Oh, you think so? I don’t. It’s happened before, you know,
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years ago, and there was never any trace. An oar, or a hat, or a
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boot. Something that floats. Not nothing}
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‘I’ll concede that. All right, you have a disaster that takes place
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at night, in the middle of a storm, and a lifeboat goes down with all
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hands. Mysterious that they haven’t found it, but not impossible.
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There was a storm, you know. So now what?’
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I’ll tell you what. That fishing boat disappeared in exactly the
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same way, from the same stretch of water, back at the turn of the
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century. Calm sea and a bank of fog, and it’s gone. Nobody knows
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where. Like it’s just been spirited away. Again, not a sign.’
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‘So what you’re saying is that we’ve got a Bermuda Triangle in
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the firth. A local disaster zone?’
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‘Wait until you hear more,’ I said. ‘We have the lifeboat, and the
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fishing boat years ago. Then we have Andy Gillon. I was there
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when he died. It was grotesque, horrible. But what’s been preying
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on my mind ever since is what he said, just when he died. He told
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me the tree jumped. And I swear to God, when I looked at that
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stump, it must have. I just don’t know how that tree could have
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fallen on him. It was yards away from where the roots were
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planted.’
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‘Wasn’t there a fatal accident inquiry?’
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‘Formal verdict. Accidental death,’ I said.
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‘And didn’t you mention any of this?’
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‘I wasn’t called to give evidence. I wasn’t needed. But even if I
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had been called, I don’t know if I would have said anything at the
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time. It was just too way out. And at the time, I thought I must
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have been mistaken. I’m sure Sergeant Morrison wondered, but
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when it came right down to it at the inquiry I don’t think even he
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wanted to say anything. I can’t blame him either. It’s just when I
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look at it in the light of all those other things that I begin to see a I
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pattern, and I don’t like what I’m seeing?
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Gerry was about to interject, and I held up my hand to forestall
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him.
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‘After that came Edward Henson, who took off both his hands
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with an outboard motor. His mother shot him and then she shot
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136
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herself. And before you say anything, I’ve got to tell you that his
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father lost both hands way back in 1961 in another weird accident.
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And that was the year there were a whole lot of crazy things
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happening in this town, although I didn’t realise it at the time.’
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‘It seems to me you’ve strung together a lot of unfortunate
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coincidences and come up with some sort of reason for them. You
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must have seen a lot of disasters in your travels; a whole lot worse
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than this, I don’t doubt. So allowing for the fact that these
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accidents have happened, and it’s terrible that they have, why
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should there be any reason for it?’
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‘Some people believe this place is cursed,’ I told him, watching
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his eyes for the merest hint of amusement.
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‘Cursed? Like in black magic? That sort of thing?’
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‘Yes, something like that.’
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‘And you believe it?’
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‘I didn’t say that.’
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‘Well, what are you saying?’
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‘I’m saying that there’s something weird going on here. There
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have been times when there have been chains of disasters in
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Arden. Whole bunches of them one after another.
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‘And they’ve been going on for a long time,’ I said, and paused
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to spoon sugar in my cup.
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‘They call it a Bad Summer. The old folk do. The last one was in
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sixty one. Before that it was 1906. There was another in the
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eighteen fifties, and yet another in 1720. And more, going back a
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hell of a long way?
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‘How do you know all this?’
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‘I’ve spoken to a few people. And I’ve got a friend who’s spent
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years studying this place.’
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‘Maybe it’s just an unlucky town. But I imagine if you study any
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town’s history you’ll find terrible disasters, natural and otherwise}
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‘Maybe you will. But in the old times, they believed there was
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some sort of creature, a demon or whatever, that woke up and
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haunted this place, and caused accidents and death.’
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The look he shot me was one of total incredulity.
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‘Demons, eh? And you an agnostic! Do you really believe in all
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this?’
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‘Listen, Gerry, I don’t know what to believe. I don’t want to
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make a complete arse of myself, but I’ve got to tell you, I feel
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everything going wrong. I’ve got a horrible feeling of oppression,
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as if I’m at the centre of a cyclone, and just waiting for it to hit and
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blow me away. I know that sounds crazy. Really I do. But I’ve got a
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real bad feeling inside me that something terrible is going to
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137
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happen.’
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‘Maybe it’s you,’ he said, softly. ‘Maybe everything that’s
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happened has unsettled you.’
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‘That’s a nice way of saying I’m cracking up.’
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‘No, it’s not. In your job you report on disaster. My job is to
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handle it when it happens, and try to prevent it happening. I think
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you may just be under a lot of strain. I’ve seen it happen. You need
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to give yourself a break, and just stop thinking about all this for a
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while. If you don’t, then you will start to crack up. Believe me, it’s
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hard enough, even for a priest, to hold on to his spiritual integrity
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with what the world can throw at us. We see the disasters all the
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time, at first hand, and every time we ask: how does He let it
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happen? But they happen all right. No curses, no demons. Just a
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crazy world and too many crazy people.
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‘You’re not crazy. Not even nearly crazy. But you could do with
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a break. ’ He pushed himself up from his seat. ‘Come on, let’s go for
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a wander and get some fresh air. Nature’s best cure.’
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Gerry spent ten minutes lacing and strapping himself back into
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his splendid leather jacket. He was dark and good looking and I
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could readily imagine the ladies of the parish, no matter to which
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denomination they leaned, seeking out the young priest for
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spiritual comfort. Or any comfort they thought might be available.
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He looked charming and roguish and clean cut and piratical all at
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the same time. The one thing he did not look like was a priest. I
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wondered why he had become one, and asked him straight out.
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‘Haven’t a clue. I just woke up one morning when I was sixteen
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and knew that’s what I was going to be. I hadn’t thought about it
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before. I’ve thought about it since, though. Wouldn’t be human if I
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didn’t. My mother was delighted. Dad was furious for a while. I
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was supposed to take over the business. He’s as rich as sin, you
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know. But they let me go ahead.’
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‘How about the vows?’
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‘Ah, you mean the vow. The big one?’
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‘I suppose I do.’
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‘We1l, to be frank, it’s like chronic haemorrhoids. A real pain in
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the ass. And all the time. Being a priest doesn’t interfere with your
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hormone levels. It just makes them more acute.’
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I laughed, and he joined in ruefully. ‘It doesn’t help to have this
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film star’s face, either,’ he said, still grinning. ‘The number of the
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blue rinsed brigade who have told me it’s a total waste, you
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wouldn’t believe.’
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‘And you’ve never . . . ?’
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‘Broken my vows? Have you ever revealed a source? That’s
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138
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between me and Him upstairs,’ he said, bobbing his head to
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indicate the direction of the third party. ‘And He’s not telling?
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When he was finally strapped in, he pulled on his gauntlets which
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completed the slightly menacing ensemble, and clapped me on the
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shoulder.
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‘I won’t ask you to trust in the Lord,’ he said, ‘because that
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would be a waste of time. Just trust in yourself. Don’t dwell on
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things. They give you headaches and constipation.
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‘Remember the final commandment}
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‘And what’s that?’
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‘Thou shalt not give a damn about things you can’t do anything
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about.’
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‘Up yours too, padre,’ I said, returning his cheery smile.
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Before I knew it I was sitting on the back of the big Honda and
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roaring behind the Prince of Darkness past Mr Bennett’s
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smallholding on the smooth tarmac that led to the seminary.
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He handled that machine as if he had a death wish, but his
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control was superb. We slewed into the gravel forecourt of the big
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ivy—covered main building, kicking up half a ton of small stones. I’d
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left my breath and my stomach a quarter of a mile behind. Gerry
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took off his helmet and his face was flushed and alive. He might
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have made his vows of chastity and obedience, but he hadn’t made
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any promises about speed.
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‘I’ll probably walk back,’ I said, when I gathered enough saliva
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to make my voice work again.
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‘Rubbish. I was only doing seventy. That beast goes all the way
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up to a hundred and forty.’
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‘Not with me in the saddle. There’s a law against suicide.’
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‘Trust me. If we come off, I’ll hear your confession on the way up
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and give you absolution on the way down again} He was loving
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this. My knees were being less than supportive.
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‘And who’ll hear your confession? For murder.’
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‘God takes care of his own,’ he said with a laugh. ‘That’s
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sacrilege, I suppose, but I hate waste, and it would be a waste of
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that lovely machine not to let her go now and again. The good Lord
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gave me good reflexes and told me to go forth and rev up. And if
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the monsignor heard me talking now I’d be on bread and water on
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my knees for a week.’
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‘Make it a month, you irreverent young scoundrel,’ came a voice
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from the arched doorway, ‘and clean your mouth out in the font on
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the way in.’
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Standing in the dappled light against the worn recl sandstone was
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a tall, thin priest with a serious, forbidding face that was deeply
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. 139
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creased on each side of a sharp, hooked nose. His hair was iron
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grey and cut short in what would have been a navy crew-cut if it had
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been taken any further. He had strong dark eyebrows and deep set
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eyes that were hidden under the shadow of his brow, and his
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mouth, between those two furrows, seemed set in a line of grim
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and un-fun-loving determination.
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` He looked like how I would have imagined a latter-day
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Torquemada would have appeared. Self—righteous, virtuous, a
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man with God’s message, and with God’s personal permission to
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nail it home.
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‘Monsignor Cronin, meet Nick Ryan,’ Gerry said brightly,
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totally ignoring the stern-sounding admonition of his religious
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superior. ‘I’ve invited him up for a look around the place, seeing
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how I’m bored out of my brains running your daft harvest festival}
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The monsignor’s eyebrows arched up, hauling away the great
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shadows under the crags and revealing a bright blue pair of eyes
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that fastened on me. I was prepared for the wrath of God to come
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and strike one or possibly both of us.
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What I got was a deep rumbling laugh that was totally out of
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place in such a forbidding figure. It came storming up from
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somewhere deep, like a basso-profundo Santa Claus, shaking the
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whole frame of the man in the black cassock.
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‘Bored‘? Bored? I’ll tell you young feller, you’ve got the best job
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in the place,’ he boomed. ‘There’s priests here would fast for a
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month for the life of Riley you’ve got.’
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I couldn’t have been more wrong in my at-first-sight assessment
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of Monsignor Cronin, christened Michael, but known as AJ. for
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reasons fairly obvious to everyone but the students. He was a
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hugely humorous, witty man who, I was soon to discover, took
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great delight in almost everything he came across. He had a face
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that would scare an orphanage but a sunny nature that seemed
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incapable of taking offence or seeing anything but the best in
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people.
|
||
‘Come away in, Nick. And you too, you rapscallion,’ he roared
|
||
in his great opera singer’s voice.
|
||
The vigorous handshake all but jarred my shoulder from its
|
||
sockets. The handshake and the voice were completely incon-
|
||
gruous in the slender figure. Both belonged to someone ten stones
|
||
heavier. Underneath that elongated robe, I assumed the
|
||
monsignor must be all bone and steel.
|
||
I heard Gerry snigger as I almost stumbled under the friendly pat
|
||
on the back and entered into the atrium. It was clean and smelled
|
||
not of incense, as I’d fancied, but of flowers. There were stacks of
|
||
140 .
|
||
|
||
them around a little votive statue to the virgin, beautiful chrysan-
|
||
themums, fuchsia and freesia, arranged with loving care.
|
||
A.] . ordered Gerry to give me the grand tour and disappeared in
|
||
a brisk swish of black, his long legs carrying him along the corridor
|
||
at a swift pace.
|
||
‘Terrif`rc guy,’ Gerry said. ‘He scared the hell out of me the first
|
||
time I saw him. I thought "God, what have I let myself in for?" ’
|
||
‘I thought he looked like Torquemada when he stepped out of
|
||
the doorway,’ I said.
|
||
‘Oh, that’s beautiful. He’ll love that one.’
|
||
‘Don’t you dare,’ I warned.
|
||
‘Oh, don’t worry about it. Old A.] . is aware that his face was
|
||
never his fortune. He says it has outlived four bodies. His heart’s
|
||
his best feature. Big enough for all of us and more besides. He’s a
|
||
real hero.’
|
||
‘How do you mean, a hero?’
|
||
‘]ust that. He’s my hero. Everybody’s hero. I mean, he’s the
|
||
boss here, and short of just about a papal decree, he can do what he
|
||
likes here. But he treats everybody so well, from the youngest
|
||
student up. He sees good in us all. He loves us collectively and
|
||
individually. That’s what I call a hero.’
|
||
Gerry paused for a moment, then laughed to himself. ‘I suppose
|
||
that’s the kind of guy I want to be when I grow up. But A.] .
|
||
declares that I never will.’
|
||
The guided tour was a delight. As a youngster, I had trespassed
|
||
on the seminary’s extensive grounds, stealing fruit from the
|
||
orchards and trapping the occasional rabbit. To me it was just a big
|
||
school-type building with a farm around it, but it really was a
|
||
model of self—sufficiency. There were acres of potatoes in Hower
|
||
and almost ready for a main crop harvest, and lines of turnips
|
||
mottled yellow and green in the light breeze. The orchard was
|
||
smaller than I recalled as a boy, but still huge, and still filled with
|
||
apple and pear trees that were getting heavy with fruit. There were
|
||
plums turning that deep red of late summer and a vast greenhouse
|
||
filled with an ancient twisted vine that was bearded with great
|
||
black grapes. Not a weed dared poke through that hallowed soil in
|
||
the walled orchard. Beyond the wall, fields of corn and barley
|
||
gleamed gold in the sun in a bountiful harvest. In the distance, a big
|
||
red combine harvester was cutting its swathe through the gold and
|
||
shooting the ears on to a massive mound in the truck that ground
|
||
alongside. There were men working in the fields, on tractors and
|
||
on foot, young and old, sweating as the sun rose high towards
|
||
noon.
|
||
141
|
||
|
||
We took a lane down to the mill at the Kilmalid Burn where a
|
||
wheel turned slowly in a sparkling crescent of bright water. In the
|
||
mill an old priest delighted in showing us the ancient wooden
|
||
machinery of cogs and wheels that turned the giant millstones in an
|
||
unceasing iiow of line iiour. He pointed out the beech and oak, the
|
||
ash and elm woods that were used to make the individual parts of
|
||
the mill’s elaborate workings. It was old and efficient and
|
||
beautiful.
|
||
‘Be sure to be at the harvest festival,’ said the dust-covered
|
||
priest. ‘Father Lynn promises to be working overtime to make the
|
||
best bread you ever tasted from all of this,’ he said, gesturing to the
|
||
bulging sacks with a white hand. His urging brought back the taste
|
||
of that fresh bread in those long ago harvest festivals. Bread still
|
||
warm from the ovens, delicious and soft where the butter melted
|
||
through. I almost watered at the mouth.
|
||
At twelve o’clock a bell rang in the far away tower in the main
|
||
building and in the fields, everybody stopped, dropped their tools
|
||
and switched off engines and got down on their knees in the field
|
||
and faced the slender cross that topped the tower. Gerry, who had
|
||
changed into a pair of cavalry twill smart trousers, did the same,
|
||
regardless of the dust underfoot.
|
||
I shuffled about a bit from one foot to another, embarrassed with
|
||
indecision and the feeling of being the odd man out, then
|
||
compromised by sitting down on a hummock of grass. Gerry
|
||
turned and iiashed me a quick smile, then went back to the serious
|
||
business of praying. After a few minutes, he got up and dusted his
|
||
knees off, sending up little light clouds.
|
||
‘Sorry about that,’ he said. ‘I forgot to tell you about the
|
||
Angelus. It’s a bit of a tradition here. Everything stops at twelve.’
|
||
‘You do that every day?’ I asked.
|
||
‘Only on the premises. We don’t get down on our knees if we’re
|
||
elsewhere, although we’re supposed to say it to ourselves no
|
||
matter where. But here on the farm, it’s just part of the way of life.’
|
||
‘What happens if it rains?’
|
||
‘Well, we don’t actually have to grovel in the mud. But some of
|
||
the others do just that. It’s their own way.’
|
||
We made our way down towards the seminary, and Gerry
|
||
pointed out interesting parts of the farm. The Jersey cows with
|
||
their huge promising udders; the big Aberdeen Angus beef bull
|
||
that snorted and stamped in a paddock of its own. He explained
|
||
that the farm itself was a mini—ecology of its own. No added
|
||
chemicals, no preservatives. They made honey and jam, and flour
|
||
and cheese and butter, and took care of their land as the priests and
|
||
142
|
||
|
||
monks had done for centuries before them.
|
||
Lunch in the big, bright refectory was plain, but hearty. A good
|
||
thick broth, followed by exquisite steak pie — and if you have never
|
||
heard steak pie described thus, believe it — with new potatoes
|
||
covered in butter, and fresh peas and carrots. Everything, I was
|
||
assured, was completely home-grown and organic. There was a
|
||
delicious red wine which the monsignor said was elderberry, but
|
||
tasted like a full-bodied French vintage, and which he swore he’d
|
||
made himself and bottled some years back. I had two glasses and
|
||
that was enough, even though I wasn’t driving. It had a kick like a
|
||
jack—hammer.
|
||
During lunch, A..I. insisted I tell him all about my adventures, as
|
||
he called them, and I regaled him with one or two tall tales from my
|
||
roving days.
|
||
He laughed uproariously at all the funny bits and never seemed
|
||
to notice how every time he did so a wave of silence swept through
|
||
the ranks of young, clean shaven faces at the long trestle tables
|
||
down each side of the refectory. When the monsignor’s great
|
||
booming laugh bounced off the plain walls, the low, murmured
|
||
conversations halted abruptly and a few of the more inquisitive
|
||
turned to see what the hilarity was all about. I gathered that A..I.
|
||
must be the light entertainment in amongst all that serious talking
|
||
that seemed to be going on among the recruits.
|
||
The monsignor countered with a few tales of his own from
|
||
equally far—ilung places where he’d worked. He parried any light
|
||
probes into his former profession with quick wit, telling me he’d
|
||
joined the staff of the Great Brigadier, and expected a transfer any
|
||
year now.
|
||
Later, he asked me to join him in the flower garden, which, it
|
||
transpired, was one of his passions. He, I discovered, had grown
|
||
the flowers for the array around the Virgin’s statue, and had
|
||
arranged them himself. When he told me that, I suddenly got a
|
||
picture of a Samurai warrior, hard, and tough, and deadly if
|
||
necessary, but with a love of beauty and a delicateness of thought
|
||
and a gentleness of nature. He seemed a man who had come to
|
||
terms.
|
||
As we strolled through the gardens, the tall priest pointed out his
|
||
ilowers that burgeoned in riots of colour. He knew all the names,
|
||
and their Latin classification too, explaining the relationships
|
||
between the varieties, their differences in colour and perfume; I
|
||
occasionally nipping off a bud or a leaf as we passed. Walking
|
||
through the garden, I wondered what I was doing here. All right, I
|
||
had accepted a casual invitation , then reluctantly allowed myself to
|
||
143
|
||
|
||
be virtually hijacked by a suicidal, but likeable maniac, and found
|
||
myself surrounded by a bunch of priests who I’d never met before.
|
||
And now I was strolling in a flower garden with a tall, ex-
|
||
commando who was explaining the joys and rewards of horti-
|
||
culture. It may be strange, but I was enjoying myself. For a short
|
||
afternoon I seemed to have found a hideaway from the anxiety and
|
||
chill that had crept up on me. It was as if that cyclone had died
|
||
down and dissipated, leaving me in a calm stretch of clear water.
|
||
A.J.’s voice, deep and resonant, was telling me something which,
|
||
in my momentary reverie, I missed.
|
||
‘Pardon?’ I begged.
|
||
‘Our dark knight mentioned to me that he thought you might
|
||
need some help?’
|
||
So that was the reason for the hijack.
|
||
‘Dark knight‘?’ I dodged gauchely.
|
||
‘Father Gerry. Our caped crusader.’ He wasn’t fooled.
|
||
‘He seems like a good guy,’ I said.
|
||
‘Oh, he is. One of the best. I worry about him, you know}
|
||
‘Why, in case he crashes that bike?’
|
||
‘No, I trust in his reflexes and hope for the best. He’s so gifted
|
||
and dedicated. The motorbike is just his way — his lock on the land
|
||
outside the cloister, his bridge to the other side. If he didn’t have
|
||
that I don’t know what he would do.’
|
||
‘Why do you worry about him, then?’
|
||
‘Doing too much, working too hard. He never stops. I can’t stop
|
||
him. He just keeps pushing himself, and tries to carry everybody
|
||
else. I gave him this harvest festival thing to organise, hoping it
|
||
might make him drop one or two other things he’d got involved in,
|
||
but no, he just added it to the rest. I fear he’s going to burn himself
|
||
out. ’ The monsignor paused to pluck a tiny white flower from a low
|
||
cluster. He gave it to me and told me to smell it. It had a scent like
|
||
wild honey.
|
||
‘Alyssum,’ he said. ‘Delightful, isn’t it?’ It was.
|
||
‘I expect he’ll settle down, but until then I’ll have to keep
|
||
praying for him, otherwise he’ll exhaust all his energies and his
|
||
talents. I’d hate to lose such a gifted and dedicated man.’
|
||
The tall priest turned and beamed his blue eyes from under the
|
||
great crags of his eyebrows.
|
||
‘I gather he’s adopted you as one of his causes. I asked him to
|
||
bring you up to lunch.’
|
||
‘I think I know what you’re talking about. I told Gerry
|
||
something the other day which should perhaps be left unsaid.’
|
||
‘Yes, he told me what you said, and he asked me what advice he
|
||
144
|
||
|
||
should give you. On the question of curses and what-not.’
|
||
‘He thought I was heading for a nervous breakdownf
|
||
‘Yes, I imagine he did. And does. I told him to bring you here for
|
||
some peace and quiet.’
|
||
‘That was really nice of you. I’ve enjoyed myself a lot,’ I told
|
||
him, genuinely.
|
||
‘T hat must have come as a surprise,’ he said, with uncanny
|
||
accuracy.
|
||
‘Well, I suppose you’re right. I expected a lot of prayers and
|
||
religious tedium.’
|
||
‘That makes two of us. I expected that when I came here too,’ he
|
||
said, and laughed again.
|
||
When he stopped laughing, his face went all serious again. ‘Tell
|
||
me about this curse,’ he said quietly.
|
||
‘Why do you want to know?’ I asked.
|
||
‘Let’s say I’m curious,’ he said, and one side of his mouth turned
|
||
up in a half smile.
|
||
‘Do you believe in curses?’ I countered.
|
||
‘I believe in a lot of things. Like you, I’ve travelled, and I’ve
|
||
done some things that man shouldn’t do to man. All a long and
|
||
misguided time ago, of course. But I believe in good and I believe
|
||
in evil.’
|
||
‘I’m not sure what I believe in.’
|
||
‘I also believe in history. And we have a lot of it here. This place
|
||
has been inhabited by religious orders since the time of St
|
||
Kentigern — St Mungo to the Glaswegians. They kept records, you
|
||
know.’
|
||
‘Records of what?’
|
||
‘Oh, the usual things. Births, deaths, marriages. Harvests.
|
||
Battles. The usual comings and goings. Very efficient record-
|
||
keepers, were the old monks. Had a mania for writing things
|
||
down.’
|
||
‘Go on,’ I urged.
|
||
‘We have them all here. In our library. It’s a hobby of mine,
|
||
since I’ve been here, to acquaint myself with everything that’s gone
|
||
before. And in reading through all those old records, I’ve
|
||
discovered that this place has had more than its fair share of
|
||
turbulent times.
|
||
‘I’ve got a roll of parchment skin that was written by a monk who
|
||
was one of the few survivors of a famine in the seventh century
|
||
here. He spoke of a plague of madness that afflicted the villagers,
|
||
and said that the survivors had gathered here in the chapel to
|
||
escape the curse. It is written in Latin mixed with Gaelic, so I dare
|
||
145
|
||
|
||
say he was a local man. He said the ravener had awoken to steal the
|
||
minds and souls of the people. At the time he wrote, there were
|
||
sixty survivors in a village of seven hundred.’
|
||
‘The bane,’ I said.
|
||
‘Yes. That’s how he described it. A bane.’
|
||
‘And do you take it seriously?’
|
||
‘Let me say I don’t close my mind to anything.’
|
||
‘I’m surprised,’ I told him.
|
||
‘Oh, don’t be surprised. I’m not superstitious, or a religious
|
||
fanatic. Suffice it to say that I’m a man who has seen the effects of
|
||
both sides and have chosen one. I believe in good, and I believe in
|
||
evil, and there are many things that I cannot explain. And the trail
|
||
of devastation that has centred on this little place is one of the
|
||
things that I cannot explain.
|
||
‘But if I believe in a good, and a God, then I must believe in the
|
||
converse.’
|
||
‘An evil force‘?’
|
||
‘If you will. The archbishop would probably have me sent to
|
||
Rome for decontamination, so I’d be obliged if this conversation
|
||
was kept strictly off the record, for the moment, as you journalists
|
||
like to put it.’
|
||
‘I don’t think anybody would believe it.’
|
||
‘Quite.’
|
||
He paused again, gathering his thoughts.
|
||
‘Father Gerry said you were concerned about some recent
|
||
happenings.’
|
||
‘Yes, I am.’
|
||
‘Why?’
|
||
‘It’s a long story.’
|
||
‘Well, if you’re not in a hurry, sit down and tell me,’ he said,
|
||
taking my arm gently and leading me to a rustic bench that had
|
||
been lovingly put together with natural branches of yew, and we
|
||
sat down.
|
||
I told him everything. He just sat and nodded encouragingly as I
|
||
started right at the beginning, the dreams, the deaths, the
|
||
disappearances. My conversation with Kitty MacBeth and my
|
||
study of Jimmy Allison’s work. The dig and the discovery at
|
||
Ardhmor. The legends, and the history. He soaked it all up like a
|
||
computer assimilating data. At the end of it I asked: ‘Do you think
|
||
I’m cracking up?’
|
||
‘No,’ he said. ‘I don’t.’
|
||
The monsignor stood up when I had finished, and we started to
|
||
wander around the flower beds again in the bright sunlight. The
|
||
146
|
||
|
||
bees were toiling busily amongst the incandescent hues of the
|
||
flowers in that little haven of serenity where I had spilled my soul
|
||
about things that could not possibly be true in that place and on
|
||
that day.
|
||
‘Cu Saeng,’ I said. ‘Could such a thing be true?’
|
||
‘Is there life beyond death?’
|
||
‘I don’t know,’ I confessed.
|
||
‘I do. Otherwise I would not be a priest. But I don’t believe that
|
||
we have the monopoly on such knowledge. Christianity is such a
|
||
young religion. But my God is not young, and neither is man in this
|
||
place.
|
||
‘If good and evil existed from the start, then even primitives
|
||
were entitled to believe and worship. It does not matter to me, nor,
|
||
I suppose, to God, what they called Him, or any manifestation of
|
||
Him. The same goes for the dark side, and when a minion of evil is
|
||
in the world, it is difficult to get him out again.’
|
||
‘You believe that?’
|
||
‘Read your Bible laddie, with an open mind. I don’t expect
|
||
anybody to take in the Old Testament word for word. But the spirit
|
||
of it must be true. The old legends have a basis in fact. Arthur
|
||
found the secret of melting iron, and gave his people the sword that
|
||
vanquished. Wotan climbed his tree to flee the wolves and
|
||
hallucinated in thirst and became Odin. The legends couch what is
|
||
true. Jesus Christ struggled with the Devil himself, and the
|
||
Gazarene swine became lemmings.
|
||
‘I ask you, what, under God’s miracle that we call life, might not
|
||
be true? Does the old battle still rage, or have good and evil so
|
||
pervaded man that all is grey?’
|
||
‘I don’t know what to believe,’ I admitted.
|
||
‘Neither do I. But I am uneasy about what not to believe, ’ he said
|
||
vehemently.
|
||
‘I’ve heard the phrase "Bad Summer" before. Twice this year,
|
||
from old people to whom I’ve given extreme unction, on their
|
||
death beds. I too am aware of what has happened in this place of
|
||
late, and it so resembles other times that I fear there is more than
|
||
coincidence.
|
||
‘That is why I am talking to you, alone, of this. Because I am
|
||
afraid that there is something bad that I must iight, and I am
|
||
considering how best to fight it.’
|
||
‘You mean with prayer?’
|
||
‘With whatever. I cannot say your Cu Saeng exists and that it is
|
||
an evil entity. But I can say that there have been times when this »
|
||
place has suffered with an intensity and an agony that has recurred
|
||
A 147
|
||
|
||
like a dormant disease, and there is something in my heart that tells
|
||
me that the illness is coming back with a vengeance.’
|
||
‘That just about sums it up for me.’
|
||
‘There is another reason that I asked Father Gerry to bring you
|
||
up here,’ he said, staring intently at me.
|
||
‘I dreamt about you two nights ago.’
|
||
‘About me?’
|
||
‘Yes.’
|
||
‘But we have never met before.’
|
||
‘That’s true. But I don’t ask for a reason. I just accept the gift.’
|
||
‘What did you dream?’
|
||
‘I dreamed that you were standing by the bed of a stream with no
|
||
water. Not as you are now, but as a child. But I knew who you
|
||
were, and I knew that you needed my help, you and the others. A
|
||
boy and a girl. There was a wind that was blowing trees down and I
|
||
had to get to you to give my blessing, but my feet were stuck in mud
|
||
and I couldn’t reach you before the darkness came down and
|
||
swallowed you up.
|
||
‘I awoke in fear that I had failed.’
|
||
I stared at him in surprise.
|
||
‘What were the others like?’ I asked, stupidly.
|
||
‘A girl with golden hair, and a boy with dark eyes and a bow in
|
||
his hand. But I knew you.
|
||
‘When Father Gerry spoke to me of you, I had a certainty that
|
||
you were the child I had failed to reach. There’s a miracle for you.
|
||
When I met you today, I realised the truth of it.
|
||
‘That’s why I insisted that he bring you here to see me, especially
|
||
when he told me of your troubles, and asked how he could help
|
||
you.’
|
||
We had reached the wooden doorway of the walled garden, and
|
||
the monsignor opened it to let me through. The gravel crunched
|
||
under our feet as we walked towards the arched doorway of the
|
||
main building.
|
||
‘Now I’ve been given another chance,’ the priest said as we
|
||
walked inside and into the shade where the little statue of the
|
||
Virgin was enthroned in beauty. He beckoned me over to a little
|
||
font set in the wall and dipped his hand in. I could hear the splash as
|
||
he raised his dripping lingers to my head and marked a cross on my
|
||
forehead.
|
||
‘Bear this blessing and take strength in the name of the Father,
|
||
the Son and the Holy Ghost,’ he said with a strength of feeling and
|
||
such conviction that even the agnostic in me felt the power. It was ‘
|
||
like being charged with force.
|
||
148
|
||
|
||
The water dripped down between my eyes, but I ignored it. It
|
||
was a strange moment, one that I will never forget, ever. At that
|
||
moment there was a bond between me and that tough old, joyful,
|
||
fearful, grizzled priest that was more than words could describe.
|
||
He had given me something. I didn’t quite know what, but it was
|
||
something special, his backing, and the backing of Whoever was
|
||
backing him.
|
||
‘Thank you, father,’ I said.
|
||
‘Call me A.J. ,’ he said, chuckling. ‘They all do behind my back.
|
||
But remember, not a word to a soul, or they’ll drum me out of the
|
||
Brownies. ’ He had shifted his position from being deadly serious to
|
||
devil-may-care with one deft flick of his thumb over my forehead,
|
||
and the spell was broken, as if the previous conversation about
|
||
things beyond the reach of man had never taken place.
|
||
I walked home. Gerry had disappeared somewhere and had not
|
||
come back to give me a hair—raising ride home, for which I was duly
|
||
thankful. As I strolled past the pillars which marked the entrance
|
||
to the long drive, I thought about what the monsignor had said to
|
||
me. Really, it was hard to believe that he had actually said it. He
|
||
had told me that I was not cracking up, not having a nervous
|
||
breakdown. He, a man of God, who was in control of dozens of
|
||
young men who wished to become priests, had actually put some
|
||
credence in the curse, the bane.
|
||
I didn’t know whether to be elated that I had a fellow traveller,
|
||
someone who was as rational as anybody can be, but who was
|
||
prepared to say he believed there might be something happening in
|
||
this place that was way beyond reality. I didn’t know whether to be
|
||
happy, or to be truly shit scared.
|
||
My little, and altogether strange, talk with the priest, had left me
|
||
a little bewildered, but a little stronger. Something bad was
|
||
happening, something I couldn’t identify, no matter what I’d been
|
||
told. I still didn’t really believe in the Cu Saeng, or demons or
|
||
spirits. But like the priest, I had a strange certainty of foreboding
|
||
badness seeping into Arden. Now I had an ally in that certainty.
|
||
Whether this made things better, or a whole lot worse now that
|
||
somebody else had put credence in it, I was unsure.
|
||
As I walked in the sunlight, the water bottle banged against my
|
||
hip.
|
||
Monsignor Cronin had blessed me, then taken me to his study
|
||
and given me the old, worn, canvas covered bottle.
|
||
‘Here take it. It’s a memento of mine from the bad old days. It
|
||
has seen me through a lot of dry spells. We get our font water from .
|
||
the spring at Strowan’s Well. I’ve blessed you. Pass it on to the
|
||
149
|
||
|
||
I
|
||
others if you can. I hope you won’t need it, but it can’t harm
|
||
anybody.’
|
||
I took it, a bit nonplussed, and thanked him. I hadn’t a clue what
|
||
I was supposed to do with it then, but hindsight is a great clearer of
|
||
mysteries.
|
||
150
|
||
|
||
|