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Authors: Christina McKenna

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The couple made up for it, however, in the course of the holiday. Each day was a re-run of that introductory day, but with more food than our bellies could handle. Our consumption was gross and unseemly; this was every Christmas and birthday multiplied by 21 and squared to the
n
th degree. During those three weeks we were never again allowed to feel the hunger pangs of that first day.

Every morning we'd rise to find the Maltese Broad in the kitchen, flipping and tossing onto plates the raging contents of a skillet. We picked up the jargon pretty quickly because Carol talked of little else: eggs over-easy, hash browns, gammon rashers, crêpes suzettes with maple syrup, cornbread, potato cakes. I'm sure there was
an endangered species or two in there as well. This was coronary thrombosis on a plate.

And all the while we were shovelling and glugging, John Henry fizzled about – I was certain that carbonated blood coursed in those veins – making more noise than the frying pan. He was recalling the old days while cutting his coffee with copious sloshes of whiskey, halting sometimes with an empathic, ‘Jesus, Mary!' or ‘Gaddammit, Mary!' He'd lament the decline in morals in the USA: ‘Those gaddammed Beatles ruined this country, Mary!' He'd get down on his knees and thump the floor to hammer home a point while mother and I sat looking on in wordless astonishment and Carol kept the food coming.

The food! It seemed that no sooner had we finished eating, gone to the loo to freshen up than we'd come back to find another charge-laden table waiting. There was no such thing as humble elevenses of tea and a biscuit here, I'm afraid. The table would groan under the weight of bagels and cream cheese, Oreos, muffins, cookies and buckets of chocolate-chip ice cream with toffee sauce. In retrospect, mother's speed-induced, sweat-suited diet was a fortuitous preparation.

In the evenings we dined out. John would don his nautical outfit and Carol would waddle in his wake, wearing spandex leggings and a dayglo smock which only just concealed her burgeoning hips. She was not a rare sight; most of Sacramento seemed to be populated with enormous people who resembled bouncy castles, and wobbled and undulated under tent-like structures that passed for clothing. Mother and I kept staring in amazement, but no one else seemed to pay them a second glance.

John drove us in that mighty saloon car of his, swearing and swerving over the highway, making eye contact with
us instead of the road. Miraculously we arrived at each destination with our limbs intact.

If I didn't know better I'd swear that John had had assertiveness training at the School for the Insecure Irish-American Male Approaching a Mid-Life Crisis. No sooner were we in the door of a restaurant than he'd start to vandalise the silence and complain about the ‘gaddamn service'. These exchanges followed a pattern I began to recognise.

Waiter: ‘Hello, how are you, sir … ladies.'

John: ‘We're pretty damned good, as a matter of fact, but this table ain't.'

Waiter: ‘Pardon me, sir. I'm real sorry, sir, I'll see what I can do.'

John: ‘You sure as hell better. This is my sister Mary and her daughter, who I ain't seen in thirty-three years. You got that? Thirty-three gaddamn years! And they've just flown six thousand miles from Ireland to see me. And we ain't gonna sit with our backs to the view in the middle of this restaurant like some gaddamn monkeys in a cage. We want that table by the window, you hear, and we want it now.'

And he'd point to a table already occupied by a couple tucking into their steaks and fries.

Mother and I would sit red-faced, curling our toes in the silence that followed. We were not ones for causing a fuss in public. The waiter would stand there glaring at us and we knew what he was thinking; it was all
our
fault. Sometimes mother would feel moved to intervene.

Mother [
whispering timidly
]: ‘The table's all right, John.'

But John was having none of it.

John: ‘Mary, we ain't sittin' at this second-rate table and if things don't start to improve round here pretty gaddamn soon I'm callin' the gaddamn manager.'

A hint of urgency would enter the waiter's voice.

Waiter: ‘Yes sir, I understand, sir. We'll see what we can do.'

We'd be ushered into the lounge for complimentary cocktails and the waiter would approach the couple by the window. They'd invariably move to another table without question. We were to learn that the Americans are uncommonly obliging to their Irish cousins. I could not imagine the same scenario in an Ulster restaurant.

Those meals out were generally served on ‘platters' as opposed to plates. The steaks were so thick that it seemed only an acetylene torch could cut them. There were mountains of fries and vegetables. I may be exaggerating but I seem to remember washing everything down with gallon beakers of cola and litre glasses of wine. Dessert was considered compulsory rather than optional, so we helped ourselves from the trolley. Again the American idea of pudding was not what we were used to. We could choose from belly-heaving portions of pecan pie, chocolate flan, apple strudel, cheesecakes, trifles, gâteaux with melting heaps of ice cream in every conceivable consistency and combination. There was creamy thick, double creamy thick, double creamy, creamy thick, and the unimaginable, extra-double-creamy-thick, in blueberry, chocolate chip, toffee, strawberry, and on and on and on. It appeared that everyone in the restaurant – ourselves included – was engaged in some kind of eating marathon, heads down, elbows working like pistons.

I consumed so much I could even feel my head getting fat. There was no end to these bacchanals. When we finally got home and struggled into the house the Maltese Broad would stagger off to the kitchen and re-emerge bearing platters of bedtime snacks: pretzels, peanuts, corn chips, potato chips and a host of dips and relishes. I'd collapse into bed and remain comatose until
morning – when my senses were assaulted by the aromas and sounds of Carol doing what she loved best: fixing breakfast.

Halfway through our vacation John took us to his place of work: the offices of the
Sacramento Bee
newspaper, where he was employed as a printer. The
Bee
, I learned, had quite a colourful, proud and impressive history. Perhaps no one exemplified that more than its founder, James McClatchy, an Irishman and great-grandfather of the present publisher.

After emigrating from Ireland in 1840, McClatchy became a writer for the
New York Tribune
. But the lure of the California gold rush drew him west in 1849. He boarded a ship to a Rio Grande port, crossed Mexico on foot (that's right, on foot), was ferried up the coast, walked 300 miles to San Diego, then made his way overland to Sacramento.

After disappointing results in his quest for gold, he returned to journalism. McClatchy was clearly a man of great resource and enterprise; the McKenna brothers could have learned a thing or two from him.

He died in 1883, leaving behind a newspaper that today serves an area of approximately 12,000 square miles, covering most of Northern California.

All these facts and more besides were related to us by a public relations officer for the company, Errol T Johnson, an impressive Denzel Washington look-alike whose duties included guiding visitors around the
Bee
's offices. John felt we needed to be fully briefed before we met his co-workers. He was also very proud – and rightly so – of his employer's history and achievements.

Mother and I, hung over and bloated from the night before, followed Denzel around like a pair of sheep, nodding and feigning interest.

Denzel: ‘The
Bee
's combined average circulation totals one point four million daily and one point nine million Sunday editions.'

Mother: ‘God save us!'

Denzel [
looking puzzled
]: ‘Yes, ma'am. We're a newspaper that has a rich history of standing up for human rights and engaging with environmental issues. In the eighteen-sixties we took a strong stand against slavery and voiced adamant opposition to the Ku Klux Klan.'

John: ‘Remember those gaddamn bastards, Mary? Wore those pointy pixies with the eyes cut out. As bad as those sons-a-Protestant-bitches back home. Them Protestants ruined dear old Ireland and those goddamned Beatles ruined
this
country.'

Mother: ‘God, that's terrible, John.'

John: ‘Tell you something for nothin', Mary: there'll never be peace in good old Ireland till the Provos whip those gaddamn British asses the hell outta there.'

And he was off like the clappers of hell. Denzel patiently checked his gold watch and adjusted his tie while he waited for John to finish his rant on ‘gaddamn British imperialism'.

Denzel: ‘The courageous voice of the
Bee
was heard again in nineteen twenty-two when it published the names of Sacramento's Klan members – including prominent citizens – in a front-page exposé. Such fearless reporting has earned the
Bee
twelve Pulitzer prizes, three of which were coveted gold medals for public service.'

John: ‘You hear that, Mary? Twelve Pulitzer prizes and three gold medals.'

Mother: ‘Heaven's above, John, that's a terrible lotta prizes. He was a great man that McCracken. Where'd you say he was from?'

Denzel: ‘McClatchy, ma'am. From Lisburn, County Antrim, ma'am.'

We were then shown the rusted typewriter which James McClatchy carried all the way from County Antrim in pursuit of the American dream.

So that was John's impressive place of work: a vast skyscraper full of 1,800 busy bees, all living up to the title of their product. And he was determined to introduce mother and me to each and every one of them.

We started in the basement with the raw grease and inked-up rollers of those gigantic printing presses, and ended 50 floors later at the advertising department, marvelling at the suavity of the designers and copywriters.

Virtually every employee knew John and addressed him by his full name, John Henry. When I come to think about it, it seemed more fitting than plain, dull, monosyllabic ‘John'. He was so full of life that only his full name would do. I can't remember the many people he introduced us to but the routine went something like this:

‘Hi, John Henry, how are you? You're lookin' pretty sharp/neat/swell/good today.'

‘Why, thank you, Vern/Bubba/Marylou/Clarisse. I'm pretty good, as a matter of fact. May I introduce my sister Mary from Ireland, who I ain't seen for thirty-three years?'

‘Gee, John Henry, that's awesome.'

‘And this is her daughter, the poet and artist Christina McKenna.' (I was really chuffed to be described in such terms.)

‘Well, I'm mighty pleased ta meet ya all. You have a nice day, y'hear.'

We grinned and gripped more hands in one day than the Queen of England. I now know how she feels at the
close of yet another state occasion. All evening the echo of that introductory mantra went round and round in my head. John Henry made sure we missed no one.

He was so proud, tugging those cufflinks into view, smoothing down the silk cravat and hankie, the two high notes of that nautical ensemble. He was reminding himself that he was no longer the humble employee but a jazzy showman and we his guest soloists.

Appearances and impressions were important to John Henry. He paraded us as exotic extensions of himself, one Derry lady on each arm; we danced to his tune, being reasonably pretty and decorous, and he made sure everyone in that building saw us.

We went to Reno, Nevada, to try our luck at the tables, and visited casinos that were thumping insults to modesty and good taste. Waitresses paraded in the skimpiest costumes and most of the men looked like small, medium and large versions of Sly Stallone, replete with the chest rug and medallion.

There were ladies of all ages and sizes, and others who looked suspiciously like the Sunday variant of Norrie of Ballinascreen. There were good-time gals with improbable bosoms who'd been stitched and tucked in all the right places. They lusted for the attention that had once been effortless, clinging on to the last vestiges of sex appeal by their fiberglass fingertips. But it was the elderly dames who intrigued me most: vigorous old bats with wind-tunnel face-lifts, their withered throats and wrists shackled with jewellery; juicing the last drops out of life before the inevitable fall. They attacked slot machines with a cold anger, thumping them when they failed to cooperate and cursing like navvies. John swore they could hog a machine for the entire day, feeding it dimes and dollars in the mad hope of scoring that elusive million; those face-lifts had to be maintained.

Such places gave insanity a whole new meaning. This was Dante's fourth circle of hell with tassels and beads – the antechamber to hell's last bawdy-house. I could sense mother's lips move in sibilant prayer and knew the sign of the cross was certain to follow. Sure enough, I caught her in that very act more than once.

There was a message here for all Irish pensioners. Don't spend your final years clocking in old people's homes, gaddamn it! Get out of there and buy a one-way ticket to Reno or Vegas and live dangerously at the tawdry gaming machines, in crackpot paradise. I could picture John Henry doing just that a few years down the line.

Our visit to the States was intoxicating. Indeed, it was more intoxicating than we'd imagined. Halfway through our stay we wondered why we were still suffering from jet lag. The explanation was bizarre. Mother and I had made initial forays to the supermarket, when we managed to escape from John. On one such expedition we discovered a wonderful, sweet-tasting milk with which we liberally doused our cereal and coffee each morning. We'd even finish off with a generous glass or two of the stuff, just to keep us going. We thought there must be something in the air because often after breakfast we'd stagger to the bedroom with barely the energy to get ready, never mind go out for the day's excursion.

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