Authors: James Hanley
âWhat have you done! Tell me! For God's sake. You look like a drunkard. A madman.'
âBe careful,' the other son said, soft voiced. âYou can't come here shouting and raving about money.' He saw blood on his brother's hands. He was silent then. He watched, and like the mother was afraid of this shouting brother.
âMoney! Money! Money! It's a song. A song! I heard it since I was born. Since I grew up. Since I went away. Money! We want money! More and moreââ' he yelled. âMoney! Give us money! I haven't enough money. I can't manage to-day. To-morrow! Sorry the fees were late. Oh, Mr. Priest, the feesâthe feesâfeesâfeesâfees.'
They saw him dance on the floor.
âGod! Oh, mother of God!' she cried. This one was drunk. This wretch. This youthâthis priest-to-be. He was drunk. âWhere have you been?'
They saw him sit on the floor. He dug his hands into his pocket. âMoney! Bloody old money! Always looking for money. Hell! Here's your money! Here's the dirty, rotten, stinking, bloody money!'
He jumped up, emptied his pockets. Money rattled, notes flew into the air. A bundle dropped. He picked it upâunloosed it, threw it into the air. âYour bloody, crying money. Money! Money! Money! There it is.'
He threw it into the air, again, a cloud of notes, a cloud of money. He grinned at his brother.
âThere it is.' He drew more from his pocket, whirled his arms about, flung it into the air. He moved nearer, and she was afraid and drew back and cried: âPeter! Are you mad?'
He touched her face with his. Then he drew more notes from his pocket. âHere's the stuff you cry about. Here's your money.'
He spat on a note and stuck it on her face. She began to cry.
âHere, you devil. Have you gone mad?' the other one said. He rushed at him. âComing here drunk, you ought to be ashamed of yourself.'
They fought. She watched them, through fingers that tried to hide the sudden horror on her face. She watched him fling the fair-haired one to the floor.
She cried: âAnthony! Quick. Get somebody. Get Joe.'
He ran out. The other still shouted. He must be stark raving mad. No! He was crying. He was laughingâhe was smiling. He was bent over her shouting. He spat on another note, stuck it on her eye.
âHere's the stuffâthe bloody money, money, money!' He gathered it up, threw it over her. He plastered her face with the notes. He pushed her head back, tried to force a bundle of notes into her mouth. âHere! Here it is.
MONEY
! Bite it, taste it, feel it, kiss it, suck it, eat it. Go on. Eat the bloody stuff. The money! Money! Money!'
She cried to herself.
He plastered her face with notes. He stuffed it down her blouse. The room was full of money. The air was full of it. He kept picking it off the floor, flinging it into the air. He smothered her with money. Yes. There it was. Money! Piles of it. Money! Bags of it.
âEat the bloody lot.' He stood still then, watching her.
The brother came in, a man following behind him. They did not look at the woman but at him. The newcomer saw his hands and coat-sleeve. âBetter send for the police,' he said.
She cried: âPeter! Peter!' Her body threshed the bed. It turned, heaved, stretched, rose, fell. Suddenly all was quiet again. She lay there breathing heavily. The one with the bright instrument went out. The door closed. All was quiet again. Evening drew on.
She cried: âNo! No! Not that! Not that! Peter! Not that! Not that!'
He said: âRemove the woman from the court.'
She fell; they picked her up, long serge coat trailing in the dust, carried her out of sight.
âQuite rightly the prisoner's plea has been disregarded by his counsel and by this court. Gentlemen of the jury, you have heard the evidence and much besides. Remember you are only concerned with the evidence. Counsel for the defence in his admirable exposition has laid weight upon certain factors which, however, are not relevant in law. I am not sitting here either as a scientist or a sociologist. I am here simply to administer the law. It may or may not be news to you that in our day such people as the deceased could exist, let alone thrive in any civilized city. During the course of this case I may say I have received lettersâfour letters, all from individuals who are pleased to instruct me that an interest of eight hundred per cent. on loaned money is no exception. They inform me they know of this or that person who, duly licensed by the corporation officials, charges one thousand per cent. I dealt with those letters in the only way one can. I had them destroyed. We are not here to determine rates of interest. Nor are we here to concern ourselves with the fact that this young man was in love with his brother's wife, or that the mother was unwise to the fact. Counsel for the defence has informed you that if these pools of vice did not exist the accused would not be where he is to-day. Again it has been laid before you that he is oversexed and they instance the effect his early life has had upon him. The effect of an early life. But the youth is only eighteen. I ask you to disregard that. The evidence for the prosecution is clear and simple. He struck this woman down. I am sure, and I have felt so all along, that the witness Corkran is an honest man. From what he has publicly declared on oath you will have learned that there was not one woman, but two. Distressing as the facts are, you must, nevertheless, cast from your minds everything not entirely relevant to the case. I know that you will consider your verdict wisely and justly.'
âSwing for it.'
âTen years.'
âToo young to swing.'
âHot on the women.'
âOnly a kid.'
âListen.'
âHere they are.'
âNot yet.'
âThey
ARE
.'
âPeter! Peter! No! No! Not that! God, not that.'
âRemove the woman from the court.'
âListen.'
âHard lines.'
âLooks only a kid.'
âDamn! Recommended to mercy.'
âRemove that woman at once.'
âAnd I shall see that the recommendation is forwarded to the proper quarters.'
âClear the court.'
âPeter! Peter!'
âClear the court.'
âThis woman has fainted. Carry her outside.'
âI never deserved this. Never!
NEVER
! NEVââ'
âStick your hand on her mouth. Poor old bitch. Who is she, anyhow?'
âI dunno.'
âCoat's full of mud.'
âThat's better. Fresh air do her good.'
â
Gelton Times
!
Gelton Times
!'
âVerdict in Ragner case! Special.'
âPeter! Peter!'
âWho is she?'
âDunno.'
âWe don't know.'
âI don't know.'
âNobody knows.'
âSpecial! Special! Ragner case verdict! Special! Ragner caseââ'
The body lunged in the bed. Turned, twisted, the lips were framed with slobber.
âCry! Cry! Cry, you wretch! Oh God! I neverââPeter! Cry! You devil ⦠Iââ'
âI can't cry.'
The cell was square, and by the door one watched, hands jammed through a belt.
âGo on! You wretch, cry! Oh, Peter! I'm disgraced! Oh God! Why! Why! I triedâI tried â¦'
âMotherâIâI can'tâcry. I'm sick. I'm going to be sick.' He leaned on the wall.
âYou must say your good-byes now,' the one fingering his belt said. He looked away.
She looked at her son, seemed to fall on him. She slobbered into his ear.
âI'll never forget this. Never! All my life I've believed in two things. In God and in being clean. Peter, my dear son. You can't look me in the face now. It'll kill your poor father. Oh, Sacred Heart of Christ, I never dreamed this.'
âMust go now.'
âBye, byeââ'
âIââ'
âBye, bye. God help you, you poor weak creature you. You poor weak creature.'
The door banged. Winds blew down the corridor. The stones stared.
âPeter! Peterââ'
âPlease! Please!'
âThis is the woman. Put her in a cab and have her sent home.'
âI am her solicitor.'
âYes, sir. I see! Remove her now.'
âThis way.'
âIs there nobody here who knows this woman?'
âDunno.'
âHave you nobody here to take you home, Mrs. Fury? Your daughterâhusbandâson?'
âMy name is Joseph Kilkey, and I will take the woman home.'
âThat is very kind of you. Thank you.'
The taxi rushed through soundââSpecial! Special! Ragner case verdict! Special!' The taxi lurched. He saw the huddled heap. She saw him. She cried out: âI loath you! You ugly wretch, I hate you!'
Mr. Kilkey remained silent. He looked out of the window.
âKeep away from me.'
He thought she would pitch towards him. The taxi rocked.
The bed creaked, the body swayed. She was caught. Tied. She could not run.
The clock ticked, the hours fell. If she tossed much more the heart might burst. She ran, ran from all the known things. She ran from Hatfields. She ran, crying, her mind circled by two words. Filth! Filth! They carried her back to the house.
She cried: âDon't touch me! I'm tired.' They left her sleeping.
She was alone in the house. She woke suddenly. âFifteen years,' she said. âFif-teen.'
She sat up. People looked in. She heard voices. A man came in by the back door. âI asked you to keep away,' she began shouting. âI hate the sight of you.'
Mr. Kilkey remained quite calm. He knew the woman. He understood the woman. Her pride was gone. She walked round the kitchen, then said: âWhy don't you go?'
He sat down instead. That would pass soon. She was frenzied yet, he thought. She insulted him againâsuddenly said: âIf he was here. If Denny was here.'
âDid Maureen come?'
âNo.'
âDid the other fellow?'
âWho?'
âDid Desmond come?'
âNo. Here's a letter. From your sonâI think.'
âPeter?'
âNo, Anthony. Here's another one. It's your husband's handwriting. Know it anywhere.'
âI don't want them. Burn them. I'm going away. Why don't you leave me alone?'
âI can't, Mrs. Fury.'
âI'll strike you with something. I'm sick of people. I want to hide. Go away.'
Faces pressed on the window. No check on Geltonian curiosity.
A priest came in. Mr. Kilkey went away. He did not see her again. The priest consoled with her. She began to laugh. He was sorry for her.
A woman came in, then another. They put her to bed. She slept heavily.
A draught of air came into the ward. Two came carrying cloths. Bending down they wiped the sweat from the tossing twisting body. The ward grew dark. Outside a light came on. One went away, one remained seated. Watching.
âI won't hope any more. I don't believe in people! Go away from me.'
The nurse wiped more sweat away. This would end soon. She knew. A light shone over the bed. Beyond the window darkness banked up like a black mountain. The nurse breathing, and the creaking bed. She wiped the mouth clean from which the words flooded out.
âThis is the third night. It cannot last longer. She will collapse.'
âShe will! The heart is quite sound. But she cannot remain here. It's mental.'
âYes. She
will
have to be moved Friday. These nightmares are weakening.'
âThe temperature is still high. Call in Doctor Tomlin.'
âYes! He would be able to say better than anybody.'
The body gave a final convulsive movement, then lay still.
âShe will be removed on Friday. It's nervous collapse. She is doing no good here.'
Two men came in, stood at the end of the bed. Both watched, the nurse focussed the light full upon the woman's face, they saw drops of sweat glisten on the forehead.
âThat will do.'
âNo visitors may be allowed to-morrow.'
They leave the room.
Again silence makes an arch. Beyond it lights are dimmed. Faint sounds of running water in the distance. From the river the echo of a siren swelled out, diminishing. A rush of something wheeled down the corridor. The woman's mouth opens and closes, as though mouthing this silence. The lips are dry. The hair combed out, the face washed, the hands hidden under the clothes. The bone of the nose showing under the light, a lightning ivory spread under the skin.
The hill is green and the women pass. Their veils are blue. She smiles, watching them. The soft rain comes without a sound. She listens to the distant singing. The sun comes out, and raindrops glisten upon the tips of hoods, upon sleeves, her hat. She walks along and the air is full of earth smells. She says a decade of the rosary, following them. A black mass of rebellious hair is held by the hat. They watch her following, a man winks at her. The Children of Mary at Barrymore.
Hey's Alley is narrow and one can hide there. She will go to-morrow. Where was Denny?' Denny! Denny! Don't go away any more. Please stay! Denny!'
âI have to,' Peter said.
âWretch! You disgraced me who asked nothing but cleaniness of you, to remember your God.'
âI'm sorry! Iââ'
âAm I?'
âOh, Mother.'
âMy name is Kilkey. I will take this woman home. My name is Kilkey, Kilkey.'
âEat the bloody stuff. Suck it. Choke yourself with money, but don't cry: “Money.”'
âThe signed contracts, bad or good, form no part of the evidence of this case.'
âBlood does.'
âThe knife was long.'
âI said Jesus Christ, man! What are youâhaveâdone?'
âRemove that man who laughed. Silence in the Court please.'
âIs it to be expected that people living amidst these cesspools of vice and greed â¦'
âRemove that woman.'