Strumpet City (49 page)

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Authors: James Plunkett

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BOOK: Strumpet City
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His interest in the traffic flagged. Yearling returned his watch to his pocket and walked as far as the bridge, in the hope that the name on the parapet would restore his good spirits:

‘Balls Bridge

Erected 1791

Rebuilt 1835

Widened and improved

1904’

Henry Grattan, he remembered, had fought a duel here when Ireland still had a parliament of her own. Self-government had been sold in return for place and pension. Pitt’s fear then had been a French invasion. Now England’s anxiety was that the same old Home Rule question would cause a civil war between the Redmondites and the Carsonites with weapons supplied to both sides by courtesy of the Kaiser. A distressful country. Napper Tandy was right.

It was an August morning of bright sunshine. When he lifted his eyes to the water and then upstream towards Herbert Park its beauty filled him with pleasure. The trees crowding over the river from either bank broke the sunshine into gleaming shafts; the water was a living floor of black and gold in a tunnel of green. At a point where the bank sloped gently into the water a little girl was washing a handkerchief. The sight put him in mind of a street rhyme which he was trying hard to recall when Bradshaw tapped him on the shoulder and said urgently:

‘Where on earth is Father O’Connor. Hasn’t he arrived?’

‘I can’t understand it,’ Yearling said.

‘But you were to meet him on the corner. What are you doing on the bridge?’

‘Trying to remember a street rhyme,’ Yearling admitted.

‘I wouldn’t be surprised if you’ve missed him.’

‘I missed something,’ Yearling confessed, ‘but not Father O’Connor. Youth, probably.’

Bradshaw stared at him.

‘Yearling,’ he said seriously, ‘you are becoming distinctly odd. Florence and I sometimes worry about you. Do you realise that you’re talking a lot of incomprehensible nonsense?’

‘Is it incomprehensible that a man should mourn over his youth?’

Bradshaw fumbled impatiently for his watch.

‘It’s half past eleven,’ Yearling informed him, ‘I’ve just looked at mine.’

Bradshaw pushed his watch back again.

‘I am anxious about Father O’Connor. And you take it all so lightly.’

‘I can see the corner perfectly well from here. Besides, I like the name of this bridge. It amuses me.’

Bradshaw hesitated, saw what he meant and said:

‘I am not entertained by undergraduate bawdiness.’

‘I remember now that you never were.’

‘Some day,’ Bradshaw added, ‘it will land you in trouble. It comes out sometimes in the wrong company.’ Yearling turned again to the parapet, sorry to have roused the other to ill temper. It was an easy thing to do. Bradshaw did not mean it. Blood pressure was responsible. Or some abiding anxiety about society and the world.

The child was still gravely at play.

‘Look at the little girl.’

‘What’s she up to?’ Bradshaw asked, peering.

‘She’s washing her handkerchief.’

‘That’s an odd thing.’

‘She’s playing at being a mother, I imagine. The instinct comes out, even at that age. Don’t you find it moving?’

Bradshaw peered more intently.

‘She’ll fall in,’ he decided.

‘Now I’ve remembered the street rhyme,’ Yearling said, ‘it goes like this.’

He closed his eyes, digging deep into his memory for the words.

‘Down by the river where the green grass grows
Where Mary Murphy washes her clothes
She sang and she sang and she sang so sweet
And she called for her sweetheart down the street
Sweetheart, sweetheart will you marry me?
Yes love, yes love at half past three
Half past three is very very late
So we’ll have our party at half past eight.’

With guarded politeness Bradshaw asked:

‘Where do you hear these things?’

‘From the children of the back streets when I’m on my way to the foundry. They play these singing games. I find them fascinating.’

‘I’m sure.’ Bradshaw was fidgeting again.

‘It’s nice to have seen Mary Murphy,’ Yearling said. ‘I wonder will I ever meet her sweetheart?’

Bradshaw turned suddenly away from him and waved.

‘There he is.’

‘I beg your pardon?’

‘Father O’Connor, dammit, he’s crossing the street.’

Yearling turned from the river too and saw the priest, with quick glances to left and right, hurrying through the traffic. When he joined them his face was red with exertion. He tried to shake hands with both of them at once.

‘I’m so sorry to have kept you.’

‘Something happened, Father,’ Bradshaw said, ‘I know by your manner.’

‘Something dreadful,’ Father O’Connor said.

‘Rest for a moment,’ Yearling advised.

Father O’Connor leaned against the parapet.

‘I had to walk,’ he said, ‘there were no hackneys available. Everything hirable has been snapped up.’

‘But . . . the trams?’ Bradshaw asked.

The truth flashed suddenly into Yearling’s mind. Of course something had been missing, something so large and obvious that he had not thought of it until now.

‘The trams have stopped working,’ Father O’Connor said. ‘Mr. Larkin stopped them at ten o’clock.’

They saw for themselves afterwards, while on their way to the Imperial Hotel for lunch. Tramcars lay abandoned all along the route, left at whatever spot they happened to have reached at the appointed hour of ten o’clock. Their numbers grew until at Nelson’s Pillar a whole fleet stood driverless, surrounded by an excited crowd. There were more policemen than Yearling had ever seen before. They had surrounded the drivers and conductors.

‘What are they up to?’ Yearling wondered.

‘Arresting them, I hope,’ Bradshaw said.

‘They can’t arrest them for going on strike.’

‘They can arrest them for causing obstruction,’ Bradshaw answered. ‘I’ve heard it argued very convincingly.’

So Mr. Larkin had carried out his threat. Yearling pulled up his motor car some distance from the hotel. It would be better to walk the rest of the way. A police inspector, seeing them approach, called two policemen to escort them to the hotel.

‘Too bad this should happen during Show week,’ he said to them.

‘Is it a total stoppage?’ Yearling asked.

‘Seems to be,’ he said, ‘they’ve left the cars lying all over the routes. We’ll be making an effort to bring them in very soon.’

‘Plenty of your chaps around.’

‘Enough to keep the situation under control, I would hope,’ the inspector said, smiling.

‘I wonder,’ Yearling said.

Mrs. Bradshaw found lunch a disappointment. She had looked forward so much to a day of elegance, fashion, interesting conversations, pleasant encounters. Instead the sole topic of the dining room was the situation. Men kept rising from their tables to stare through the windows at the crowded street below. Latecomers brought further news.

‘The company is organising a skeleton staff,’ one of them said to Yearling, ‘but the police say the cars won’t be allowed to run after dark.’

She knew nothing of these matters and found the last remark quite frightening.

‘This is only giving in to them,’ Father O’Connor said.

Bradshaw looked at Yearling, who raised his eyebrows.

On their way back to the car they saw the police at the Pillar clearing a pathway through the crowd. A tramcar rattled past them. Two policemen stood on the front platform, guarding the driver. Later, in Mount Street, they saw the same tram. All its windows had been shattered, glass and woodwork littered the street. The driver and the two policemen were not to be seen.

The incident made a deep impression. Father O’Connor, who was to have gone to the Bradshaws for dinner, decided it would be better in the circumstances to go straight home from the Show grounds. There would be no trams after dark to take him from Kingstown, hackneys would be uncertain, it would be unfair to let Mr. Yearling drive him. Darkness might well bring serious trouble. He decided to walk back on his own, so that Mrs. Bradshaw would not be obliged to travel into the city with them. All agreed with reluctance that this was wise. There might be unpleasant scenes. He hoped they would enjoy their evening and set off.

It was strange to walk back alone. A few trams were now running, each guarded in front and at the back by a policeman. Impulse brought him towards Mount Street. The shattered tram had gone. What had happened, he wondered, what outbreak of back-street violence had ambushed and wrecked it? He examined the fragments of wood and broken glass which had escaped whoever had tidied up. There was blood on the ground. The clotted stains made him feel sick. He remembered the night, years before, when a torchlight procession and the thunder of socialist speeches affected him in the same way. He had thought at first it was the wine Yearling had pressed on him, but it had not been that at all. Anger and violence and blood unmanned him, yet some morbid need now sent him searching the streets aimlessly for further evidence. Perhaps it was the need to look them in the face.

He crossed back over Mount Street Bridge and found himself passing Beggars’ Bush Barracks on his way to Sandymount. At first the roads were busy with Horse Show traffic, but at Irishtown this was left behind. He saw no additional signs of violence and when a tram approached at last he signalled it to stop. The police sergeant at the back saluted and helped him to mount.

‘Sit near this end here, Father,’ he advised.

Father O’Connor noticed his unfamiliar badge.

‘You are not a member of the Dublin Metropolitan Police, are you?’ he asked.

‘No, Father. Royal Irish Constabulary. We’ve been drafted in to give a hand.’

‘Will it be as bad as that?’

‘It could be bad enough.’

‘A terrible state of affairs,’ Father O’Connor said. His hands were trembling.

He took his seat. He had barely done so when the tram, turning the bend that led to Ringsend Bridge, ran into the outskirts of a riot. The driver stamped his foot continuously on the bell. They had got only a little way when the crush became so great that it brought the car to a standstill. The focus of attention lay somewhere on the route in front and at first no one seemed concerned about the tram. The sergeant dashed upstairs to survey what was ahead. When he came down he called his younger companion to him.

‘Is that a tram depot in front?’ he asked. He was new to the city.

‘It’s Ringsend power station,’ the Dublin policeman said.

‘Whatever it is there’s bloody murder going on around it,’ the sergeant said, ‘go up and look for yourself.’

Father O’Connor followed the young policeman upstairs. The street was jammed tight with people. In the distance a solid mass of police and people were at grips. Batons flayed about above a tumult of heads.

‘It’s an attack on the power station,’ the young policeman confirmed. They went downstairs.

‘Get the passengers off,’ the sergeant said to the conductor. But it was impossible. They stood in the tram and waited, surrounded by a wall of bodies, until pressure from far in front began to pack the crowd more tightly. It began to retreat, step by step. Hundreds of faces passed slowly by the windows as Father O’Connor watched. For the most part they were men with cloth caps and women with shawls. The movement backwards increased. They jostled and began to claw at each other. Then in a swirl of faces and writhing bodies the battle between police and rioters came abreast and surrounded them. Sticks and batons beat at each other in a desperate mêlée. He saw foreheads running with blood and sweat, torn hands and faces, hatred and brutality in hundreds of pairs of eyes. The thumping of bodies and sticks against the bodywork of the tram was terrifying. He stood in the inner doorway of the cabin, as far from either window as the small space allowed. The rioters fell back until he could see only policemen’s helmets through the windows on both sides of the tram. They were rescued.

‘Keep steady,’ the sergeant said, ‘we’ll be able to move soon.’

The tram driver went up front again, waiting for the police to be clear of the line. He stood ready, fear and eagerness to be away making his hand tremble on the control lever. The last line of policemen passed the conductor’s platform.

‘Now,’ the sergeant shouted, ‘get her away—fast.’

The driver made a clumsy and eager movement and the tram jolted forward, but after a few yards it stopped again.

‘Keep her moving,’ the sergeant shouted. He went up forward.

‘I can’t,’ the driver said, pointing. Several men, remnants of the battle, lay bleeding on the line.

‘Come on,’ the sergeant said to the young policeman, ‘you and I will get to work.’

‘I wouldn’t advise it,’ the young policeman ventured.

‘The street ahead is clear.’

‘The street is clear,’ the younger man agreed, ‘but the houses aren’t.’

The sergeant looked about him. They became aware, for the first time, of the tenements. On either side windows mounted above rows of windows, silent, watchful, menacing the now isolated tramcar.

‘You know more about this city than I do,’ the sergeant conceded.

If there was danger behind those windows two uniformed police alone in the street would be the right provocation.

‘Our lads will be back to guard that power station,’ the sergeant added, ‘we can clear the street then.’

They stayed in the car and waited.

‘No need for alarm now,’ the sergeant assured the passengers, ‘there’s plenty of help at hand.’

‘Here they come,’ the conductor called.

The police were returning in marching order. They too had suffered severely, Father O’Connor saw. Many of the faces under the protecting helmets were bruised and bloodied. The sergeant stepped off the platform to consult with them. The column came to a halt. They talked for some moments before anything happened. Then Father O’Connor saw one of the upper windows being raised. A missile, aimed at the sergeant, flew wide and shattered the glass in the tram. The passengers began to panic and the sergeant, breaking off his consultation, climbed back on to the platform.

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