Amongst Women (22 page)

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Authors: John McGahern

BOOK: Amongst Women
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‘Please don’t do anything to upset Daddy,’ Maggie pleaded as the plane prepared to land.

‘Of course not. I won’t exist today,’ Luke answered.

‘What do you mean by that?’ she asked anxiously.

‘It’s Sheila’s big day. To draw attention to myself would hardly be good manners.’ He wore black shoes, a dark pinstripe suit and a deep red tie and he looked very sober by Michael’s side, whose suit was a flashing blue. They took a taxi from the airport to the church and were the first to arrive. On the empty concrete outside the church if Luke was nervous he showed no sign of it as they waited, smiling reassurances back to each of Maggie’s silent inquiries. Michael appeared to find the whole situation amusing and several times broke into unsuppressed laughter.

‘I’m glad you find everything so funny,’ Maggie said sharply which sent him again into peals of laughter.

‘I can’t take it any other way.’

‘Take what?’ she asked, exasperated.

‘The whole set-up,’ he laughed. ‘The whole bloody lot of us and yer man at the helm.’

‘It’s one way to deal with it,’ Luke said quickly to calm Maggie. ‘I’m sure there are worse ways and worse set-ups.’

The groom and his family were the first to arrive. Sean Flynn introduced them quickly to Maggie and the two brothers.

‘I suppose we should be all going in,’ Sean said.

‘I’ll wait till the bride gets here,’ Luke said and the three waited on. Sheila and Rose and Mona and Moran all came in the same car. Mona was the bridesmaid. After he had embraced Sheila and Mona, Luke shook hands formally with Rose and Moran.

‘I’m glad you got here,’ Moran said darkly.

‘I’m glad to be here.’

‘We better be going in,’ Moran said.

‘We never see you nowadays except at weddings,’ Sheila said to him out of nervousness.

‘Aren’t they the best of all places?’ he responded. ‘Especially when it is your wedding, Sheila.’

‘We better be going in,’ Moran said again.

Sheila took his arm and they walked in silence up the aisle to where Sean Flynn and his brother waited at the altar rail. Only once during the ceremony did the happy couple’s eyes meet and it was in mutual sympathy at what they had agreed to put one another through.

Photos were taken outside the church while the wind blew newspapers about on the concrete and women placed steadying hands on hats and veils. Confetti was thrown. A car with white streamers took them down the road to the Avonmore Hotel. A long diagonal handle crossed the curtained glass of the hotel door.

Inside, a horseshoe desk in the hallway faced the open door to the reception room where a long table was laid. The young priest who had married them sat at the head of the table and the two families faced one another across its narrow board. Sherry or whiskey was offered but most people took orange juice. Those who drank thought it was more polite to take the sherry. Except for the priest’s promptings it was clear that they could have gone from the soup to the chicken to the sherry trifle without pausing for speech or toast. Moran made the longest speech, stressing the importance of the family. There were times when the sense of his own importance seemed to overwhelm him but never sufficiently to lose thread of the grave and carefully crafted speech. His old practice at writing letters stood him in good stead. By the time he sat down there were tears in Rose’s and the girls’ eyes. In contrast, the father of the bridegroom was the picture of acute misery as he stumbled through the whole of one short sentence welcoming Sheila into his family. While he spoke his enormous hand encircled his sherry glass as if it were a stalk of grass.

If there had been a great show of music and drinking and dancing it might have hidden the awkwardness of the occasion. Only the worn face of Sean’s mother was a study of pure emotion. He had been her first boy, her beloved. From an early age she had encouraged him at school, protecting him from the rough work of the farm; at times she had even fed him separately from his brothers and sisters. During the long summers when he came home from boarding school she made sure that he was able to read or go on walks even when his sisters were pressed into farm work. He was her special one. One day she would kneel and watch him raise the Host in the local church and after she was gone he would say Mass for her soul. When he entered the civil service instead of continuing to Maynooth, the disappointment stayed with her like a physical injury for months. Now she was losing him to another woman and he was taking on the mere life of any man with a woman. Her eyes were mutely fastened to him as he was getting ready to leave. When he took her in his arms – ‘Mind yourself, Mother!’ – at last she broke into the relief of tears. She watched the two heads framed in the back window of the car taking them to the airport disappear in the traffic. He did not look back once.

Before Sheila left with her husband she went up to Luke. ‘Now that you have found the way you’ll have to come home more often.’

‘I hope you’ll both be very happy,’ he replied and though she kissed him warmly she made it dear that she knew that he was avoiding answering her.

He was quiet throughout the afternoon, listening attentively

to anybody who spoke to him, asking polite questions, smiling, raising his glass. He sat between Mona and Michael and as Moran did not look his way there was no difficulty until the meal ended and people were preparing, with relief, to go their separate ways. Moran could be seen to be more obviously avoiding Luke. He stood in a cloud of moral injury. Noticing this, Luke went directly up to Moran. Seeing their brother go straight up to their father, the girls froze in an old fear of violence.

‘I want to thank you.’ Luke said.

‘For what?’ Moran asked.

‘For the meal, the day, for everything.’

‘I hope it never comes to such a state that you have to thank your father for a meal.’

Luke bowed to Rose who was straining close to tears. ‘I have to thank someone.’

‘Aren’t you travelling further than this after all these years?’ Moran asked as his son seemed about to turn away.

‘I have to be back in London this evening.’

‘For what?’

‘I have work to do there.’

‘There’ll be work long after you’re dead and gone.’

‘I know that but it will not be my work,’ Luke said with the first and only hint of firmness that day.

‘God help you,’ Moran said.

‘Goodbye then. If you are ever in London it would be a pleasure to see you.’

‘We’ll not be in London.’ Moran refused his son’s hand.

As he was about to go to the airport Luke said to Maggie, ‘You see, I kept my promise: I did not exist today.’

‘You could have made more of an effort after all this time,’ Maggie said reproachfully. She had left her son with a sister- in-law in London in order to be free to go to the wedding and to Great Meadow for a fortnight afterwards.

‘It was the best I could do,’ he said. ‘I left Ireland a long time ago.’

‘We all left Ireland,’ Michael, who was standing with them, chuckled. ‘I’m afraid we might all die in Ireland if we don’t get out fast,’ and he laughed louder still at his own elaboration. He too was going home to Great Meadow that evening.

The small car was full as it headed out of the city, Mona, Maggie and Michael crammed in the back. Moran drove in silence. Rose, sitting next to him, tried to lighten the slow journey with delicate titbits of small talk, each ploy more of an open suggestion to the others rather than any statement or judgement of her own. ‘So we’ve lost Sheila,’ she said at last.

‘You thought you’d got rid of me but you still have
me
to put up with – large as life,’ Maggie responded.

‘We did our best but weren’t able,’ Michael said.

‘You are hardly the man to speak,’ Rose reminded him.

‘I was only joking.’

‘No one is ever lost to the family unless they want to be,’ Moran said stolidly as if reciting a refrain.

‘I wonder how poor Sheila will get on with her new in-laws,’ Rose said. ‘You know how particular she is about people.’

‘They appeared to be decent hardworking people,’ Moran said.

‘The mother of the groom didn’t seem to be enjoying herself very much,’ Maggie said.

‘The poor woman did look upset. I suppose it was very strange to her.’

‘Or Sheila was stealing her darling boy.’

‘I suppose it is the old story,’ Moran said but he did not say what the story was. They were relieved that he had been drawn out of his silence.

By the time the car got to Longford they were tired and cramped. Moran did not offer to stop. If we say the Rosary now we’ll have that much out of the way by the time we get home.’

‘That makes good sense,’ Rose added.

‘We offer this Holy Rosary for Sheila’s happiness,’ Moran began.

The murmur of ‘Glory Be to the Father’ following ‘Hail Mary’ and ‘Hail Mary’ and ‘Our Father’ was as smooth and even as the purr of the engine passing Dromod, Drumsna and Jamestown. Once Michael tried to nudge Maggie into irreverent laughter as she recited her Decade but the elbow she gave him in return was sharp enough to alter his merriment. The last prayer ended as they came to the bridge in Carrick. No one spoke much afterwards except to murmur the names of the houses they passed.

‘We’re home!’ Michael said as soon as the dark yew above the gate came into sight.

‘I’m dying for a cup of tea,’ Rose said and everyone in the car strained at the weariness and the relief of being able to stretch limbs and breathe in the open air and walk about.

Sheila and Sean spent the week of their honeymoon in Majorca and then came straight to Great Meadow to be with the others during the last week of their holidays. Not for years had the house been so full. Michael was moved to a storeroom at the back to make way for the couple. He was seldom in the house, always out late at dances or with girls, often sleeping well into the early afternoon. Moran and he got on well enough now, by ignoring one another mostly.

Moran was more focused on his new son-in-law. He asked him about his job, his ideas, his ambitions. Sean expected to be liked without effort. He answered Moran lazily, smiling with tolerant indulgence at his questioner. This irritated Moran intensely, and the cost of the wedding reception the week before was fresh in his mind. The attack came without warning.

‘What do you mean
you
don’t think much of the civil service?’

‘It’s a job. That’s all. You can’t say much more for it. It’s no big deal.’

‘You must be joking,’ Moran said derisively.

‘It’s not everything. There must be more to life than that.’

‘You mean a good dry job stretching to infinity with a pension at its end is of no importance? You must be talking of another world.’

‘I still think it is far from everything,’ Flynn defended as well as he was able.

‘I see you have a lot of growing up to do. You can think those things when you are single. You are a married man now. I expect more maturity than that from the members of my family.’

‘There’s more to life than security. There are even people who think it is the death of life,’ Sean tried still to defend his ground but Moran was content to retreat into silence.

Sheila was furious when she learned of the attack. ‘
I
was never so insulted all the times I was in his house. Luke was right when he said years ago that he has the manners of a dog,’ she said emotionally to Rose.

‘Daddy didn’t mean anything,’ Rose said.

‘Didn’t mean anything?’ she repeated with angry sarcasm. ‘You must be joking.’

It was far from easy for her when she had to face Moran directly. ‘I see you are taking to cutting down your visitors to size nowadays as well.’

‘I said nothing to your husband other than to put him right about a few bald facts of life.’

‘You seem to forget he’s a visitor in your own house.’

‘He’s a member of the family now like everybody else.’

‘He is if he chooses to be,’ Sheila said hotly. ‘He’s not here to be insulted.’

He did not respect Sean. Now he despised him for running to a woman with his story. He was furious at his daughter’s defiance of his authority. ‘I’ll be hard up when I have to ask you what is good or bad manners in my own house.’

‘You might learn a few decencies if you did.’

‘I have meadows to cut,’ he ground out. ‘Go and trim that poor husband of yours if you want something to trim. I’d say you’re the man for the job all right.’ Before she had a chance to answer he had gone into the fields.

The forecasts promised several days of hot weather and because he had help in the house Moran decided to cut all the meadows. For hours they heard the clatter of the mowing arm circling the fields, the roar of the tractor closing and moving away. When Moran did not come in for his tea Rose and Maggie brought a can of sweetened tea and sandwiches out into the fields. They walked over the swards of two cut meadows. Only a thin strip was still standing in the centre of the third meadow and they waited on the headland, watching the grass shiver and fall in front of the arm. Two young hares bounded free as the grass narrowed into the last sward. ‘They just got out in the nick of time,’ Rose said with relief. ‘Daddy hates to kill them but they can’t be seen in the grass.’ The young hares paused in bewilderment for a moment after they had run clear but then, seeing the roaring tractor turning once again, they bounded from the field and were gone. Moran noticed the waiting women as he circled and as soon as he cut the last sward he stopped the engine. The cut field looked completely empty and clean. As Rose and the girls were crossing the swards to the tractor they almost stumbled over a hen pheasant sitting on her nest. They were startled that she didn’t fly until they saw feathers on the swards. The legs had been cut from under her while she sat. Her eyes were shining and alive, a taut stillness over the neck and body, petrified in her instinct.

‘The poor thing,’ Rose said. ‘Still sitting there.’ Neither could bring themselves to look again.

‘You got a hen,’ Rose said as she handed him a mug of tea, laying out the sandwiches on the red hood of the tractor.

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