Authors: David Park
My father is never consciously unkind to me, but because I never know him I never understand what it is he wants me to be. Our life together seems uncertain and fragmented. I scurry behind him on the beach, stretching my stride to step in his
footprints,
wondering why he always has to walk to the very end when the wind snaps my hair and stings my eyes. Sometimes he takes me with him when he plays golf. I pull the rusted trolley of mismatched clubs and he calls me his caddy and requests the clubs, calling out their numbers like announcing hymns in church. When a ball is sliced into the tundra bordering the narrow fairways we search until we find it or it is deemed irretrievably lost. He is pleased when I find a ball and he laughs and always says, âThat which was lost is now found.' I think he is happy when he plays golf or when he swims. Mostly he plays the course alone, never replacing a single divot or ever marking a score card. When he plays well or is in good spirits he stops on the way home at Lavery's and buys me a quarter of midget gems or clove rock. I always hope it will be midget gems as the clove rock is burny and sticks to the paper bag, but I never tell him this.
I haven't spoken yet of my mother. I find it harder to bring her into the open, to find the words which will draw her out of her world. Somehow it seems unkind, an intrusion into the privacy of her self, but I want to tell everything and she is a part of me that can't be left out, if you are to understand, if I am to tell what I have seen.
Eleanor Sarah Arnold is the only daughter of the Arnolds, who own a shoe shop in Dunglen. She is thirty-six when she marries my father, six years younger than him, and I do not know if she marries for love or because she knows that if she turns down his offer there will be little chance of any other. By sixteen she has left school and it seems that the parameters of her world are destined to be the same as her parents' â a future of measuring children's feet, selling slippers at Christmas, her life transmuted into a window display which changes with the seasons. She has a gift for music and can play the piano and sing. When he first comes to Donegal my father stays in a holiday home the Arnolds own. She meets him at church. She plays the organ in church and when the inevitable happens it is
considered
by all to be a good match, of mutual benefit, a prudent investment against the vagaries of the future. A congregation prefers its minister to be married. The wife has an important part to play in social functions, in administering those delicate aspects of pastoral care, where a woman's touch is considered desirable and gives an impression of stability to a man.
When I look at the few wedding photos she keeps in an old jigsaw box, I wonder what emotions hide behind the smiling faces, but there is no way of telling and it is a question I cannot ask. On that day I think she is beautiful, in the wedding dress made by her aunt which ripples round her feet like surf, and the white shoes that come from her father's shop. A slight woman, her face pale as her dress, with wild roses in her hair â the hair she always lets me brush and comb. When I finish she brushes mine and when I complain about its colour, its shape, she shushes me and tells me it is beautiful and that if I were a nun in a convent out on the Point I would have no hair at all and that would be something to cry about. I'm glad she cannot see it now.
She has a fine white seam of scar on her scalp, smooth to the touch, and I make her tell me over and over about the day she was knocked down by an American tourist, how he sent her dolls and presents every Christmas for years and years, and she laughs and says that every other child in the village hoped it would happen to them. But I remember too, the first time I find the whisper of grey filtering her hair and know that some day she will die. I hope she will not die before my father. And at night, as the sea gnaws hungrily at the shore, I torment myself with the fear of standing by her coffin, seeing her grey hair folded lightly below her like a pillow.
My mother loves music and to my father's irritation she has the radio in the kitchen going all day. Most evenings she plays the piano she has brought from her father's house and sings. Sometimes she sings in Gaelic and then the soft-vowelled
ballads
conjure up romantic mystery that nothing else in the house can emulate. I sit beside her on the stool and watch her white fingers skim over the yellow-edged keys that look like fingers stained by nicotine. I don't think my father likes her singing in Gaelic, but he never says anything and when he sits behind a book or a paper I know he is listening to her voice. If there is never any public display of emotion, they are always respectful and often kind to each other. They do not kiss or even hold hands in front of me â I am the only evidence of their physical intimacy â but I know they care for each other and, in their different ways, for me.
Within the limitations of our world, the narrowness of our alloted space, I suppose we are not a particularly unhappy family. There are no bitter arguments or recriminations, no displays of petulance or passion. But it is also true that there are too many moments of silence. We exist in a sober, often sombre, world and although I have little with which to compare the quality of our life, I come gradually to feel that it has been absorbed in the greyness of the steely sea, and bleached of any vivid colour or experience. As I grow older I remain close to my mother, share the few secrets I can muster. But as I stand in front of my mirror I dream another me, dream another life.
Only the summer months bring some respite, some unpredictable variety, as the coastline fills with holiday-makers and even our own stretch of beach spawns family clusters when the weather is good. Dour village shops suddenly hang out postcards and fluorescent buckets and spades, and the roads are full of caravans and camper vans. My father pretends to resent this sudden influx but I think he really enjoys it. His Sunday congregation swells to almost double its size and he delivers his sermon with greater gusto, performing for his audience with a fresher verve. It is in July too that he brings out his Orange sash and white gloves and marches with a black bowler covering the bald egg of his head. As he sets off down
the
road we watch from an upstairs window and press our hands to our mouths to suppress the rising giggles, and as his broad stride takes him further away we let the laughter come bursting out like air from a balloon. There is always something between us, an unarticulated conspiracy which strengthens as I grow older.
My mother is the kindest person I have ever known. Kindness is a word that the world has tainted with sentimentality, infected with weakness, but now I know its strength, the purity of its resolve. Her kindnesses were unobtrusive, undramatic, uncelebrated, an intrinsic part of her being. I shall not tell you of them because they were secret, quiet things and if told I am frightened the clumsiness of my words would make them brittle, the heaviness of my touch break them into pieces. Only this moment will I tell, because it is my first glimpse of a world I have never seen and because all these years later it comes back again.
My father had been taking part in some convention at the Guildhall in Derry. It is a Saturday afternoon, and when the meeting goes into private session I leave with my mother to do some shopping. Parked along a street is a line of taxis; the first one has its diesel engine purring, the musk of its fumes filtering into the air. The shiny black frieze of head-to-tail cars wears a transfer of the sky and buildings. A knot of men stands on the pavement, some leaning back against the first car, and as we walk towards them we hear their laughter and then the knot loosens and the men step back to form a circle. In the middle of the circle is a man. He is shouting, âGive it back, give it back!' and I see the first glint of a yellow ring being thrown across the circle. It is a game which children play, but as we get closer I know it is not a game. The man clutches at air, his hand like a claw, and his voice splinters into swearwords like broken shards of glass. As it rises into a scream the mesh of laughter is a skein of hate falling over his head, tightening his loss of control. We are close enough to see the disturbed skitter of the man's
eyes
as he jerks round, like some animal goaded and prodded trying to break out of the ring of pain which encloses it. His flailing arms convulse in the black frieze of the doors, and flecks of spit stipple the edges of his mouth. The men laugh louder and I pull my mother's hand away but she walks on. One of the men sees her in the corner of his eye and for a second is distracted and the ring he is about to catch tinkles to the ground, then rolls towards us. I am frightened but I feel my mother's hand tighten on mine and then she puts her foot on the ring, trapping it under her sole. One of the circle steps towards her, bends down to retrieve it, but she doesn't move her foot. Doesn't move at all, only stares at the men and says nothing until one by one they move to the side of the pavement, turn back to their vehicles. The owner of the ring is kneeling now, sobbing, and she helps him to his feet, takes his hand and presses the ring into his palm, and then we walk on and never speak of what has happened.
As I grow I carry the moment with me but it is only now I begin to know its meaning. As I look back, there is very little I know about the world. The little I discover is pieced together from books or from the few fragments of my experience. When I bleed for the first time I am sick with fear and shame. I do not understand. And so I smuggle the stained knickers out of the house and bury them deep in the sand, placing a little pyre of stones on the burial place. Now I lie here, I want something to flow out of me, something that will tell me that everything is not dried up, tell me that I am alive inside and not that dusty, stony river bed. But I have no tears, no warm wetness to stir and course into life. All I have is words, more words than I have ever known.
The evening my parents tell me I am being sent to a girls' boarding school in Belfast, I say very little but am glad. School becomes like a journey into the future and I am grateful for the protective camouflage of a uniform; it affords me enough time to assimilate what I need to know, to simulate knowledge and
experience
where none exists. I listen and learn, absorb everything assiduously. I am a good pupil, conscious always of making up for lost time, cramming everything in. After formal lessons are over I learn what I really need to know from the other girls. I let my hair grow long and remember the nuns out on the Point.
When I go home in the holidays it feels as if I am returning to the edge of the world. Donegal's gaudily painted bungalows, the grotesque shrines at the side of the road, the unrelenting loneliness of the landscape. And if I instantly renew my friendship with my mother, it feels as if some permanent distance separates me from my father. He develops a stilted style of talking to me â âWhat is Naomi going to do today?' âWhat book is Naomi reading?' When I allow it to irritate me I respond in similar style, âNaomi is thinking of going for a walk.' âNaomi is reading. . . .' As the years pass he grows more morose, more disappointed. Only his swimming goes on the same. Sometimes I watch him from my bedroom window, his bald head bobbing in the water like a buoy, little flurries of white where his hands and feet slash the surface. I think he resents that I have broken away, discovered a life other than the one he presides over. Perhaps he is envious â I don't know. He is a strong swimmer but there is an ugliness about his movements in the water. Where others seem able to give themselves to it, become part of the element they move in, he seems to be fighting against it, forcing a path through an unyielding barrier. I am older now, but as I watch him I realize I understand him no better than I did as a child and for the first time it is no longer important to me.
Three months after he disappears, a fishing boat out of Burtonport nets his body with their catch. Even in death he cannot escape. We are not allowed to see him. They say half his face has been eaten away.
We
sit in the courtyard under the shade of a canopy strung from the branches of a tree which Nadra calls Boswellia. She says it produces frankincense, but the only scent which drifts around us is a hybrid of hospital smells and the pungent spicy strain from the kitchens. The word frankincense makes me think of the Magi, and I remember the church crib and the waxen-faced dolls. I stretch out my hand to feel the bark but it's out of reach. All the times I listened to the Bible story, I never really understood what frankincense or myrrh were. Nadra tries to explain but runs out of words. Her efforts are punctuated by the high cries and squeals of children. They are playing a game, their laughter bouncing round the courtyard like a ball. They scamper round the hospital like mice.
It is very hot again, but not the dry, baking heat of the plains or the moist humidity of the coast. It heightens the smell of my body, the salved and sterilized gauze of tissue, and I long to peel the burnt skin away and shed it like a snake. Only the gloved hands stop me scratching at the prickly itch which spreads everywhere. Nadra tries to distract me with a familiar refrain of conversation.
âAnd Ireland is green all the year?'
âYes, all year long. People say there are forty different shades of green.'
âEven in summer, Naomi?'
âYes, especially in summer. Sometimes in summer it rains a lot. Where I lived as a child it rained all the time.'
â
Tell me about where you lived, Naomi.'
I have told her many times but I tell her again, going over the parts I know she likes â the heather, the mountains, the sea. To please her I make it all sound interesting, paint the colours more vividly, but the landscape my memory evokes remains dead to me, the husk of a former existence which has withered finally away.
âTell me about the different seasons, Naomi.'
I am not sure for whose benefit she asks these questions but I tell her anyway; try to explain about winter, about the traditions of Christmas. She fans me and as she does she expresses her disapproval that people should cut down trees to decorate their homes. I try to explain about forestry but we get lost in the words, and then I stem the flow of her questions by asking about the voice I hear in the background. It is an old man reciting the Koran.