The Patron Saint of Ugly

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Authors: Marie Manilla

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Table of Contents

Title Page

Table of Contents

Copyright

Dedication

Preface

The Legend of Saint Garnet del Vulcano

Mating Habits of the Ferrarus Disgusticus

Nonna’s Mojo Risin’

My Cursed, Cursed Birth

The (Abridged) Life of a Saint

Corpus Christi

Electricity

Doll versus Doll

La Strega

The Saint Brigid’s Day Massacre

Mirror, Mirror

Sibling Rivalries

Portafortuna

SS Edmund Fitzgerald

The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln

Acts of Contrition

Mommy through the Looking Glass

Get Thee to a Nunnery

Three on a Match

Thoroughly Modern Miracle

La Vigilia

Epilogue

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Copyright © 2014 by Marie Manilla

 

All rights reserved

 

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

 

www.hmhco.com

 

The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
Manilla, Marie.

The Patron Saint of ugly / Marie Manilla.

pages cm

ISBN
978-0-544-14624-2 (pbk.)

1. Catholic Church—Fiction. 2. Mental healing—Fiction. 3. Psychic ability 4. West Virginia. 5. Psychological fiction. I. Title.

PS
3613.
A
5456
P
38 2014

813'.6—dc23

2013045658

 

e
ISBN
978-0-544-13348-8
v1.0614

 

The photo of Mount Etna is used by permission of the photographer, Paul Gunning. Original line art of trinacria by the author.

 

 

 

 

For Concetta Ferrari Lapelle Manilla, my Sicilian grandmother, who has haunted me my entire life

 

 

HOTEL SICILIA

 

SWEETWATER, WEST VIRGINIA

 

September 9, 1975

 

I’ve just ordered room service, and though I am exhausted I must commit to paper a sketch of my initial encounter with Garnet Ferrari, the subject of the committee’s current investigation.
I was greeted at Garnet’s door by her aunt Betty, a flustered soul, all chatter and tics, who genuflected deeply and kissed my hand before I could stop her. She deposited me in the library, where Garnet was standing before the lit fireplace, fists clenched as if she were a pugilist in the ring. She was dressed in track shorts and an orange tank top just a shade off from the color of her hair—a voluminous mane that roams at will. Most of her skin was exposed for my benefit, I believe, as if to say: Take a good look!
I did.
The background tone of her flesh is pale, but the birthmarks decorating her skin are varying shades of purple: deep mulberry, magenta, the faintest mauve. It looks as if someone took a map of the world, cut out continents and islands, provinces and cantons, and glued them willy-nilly on Garnet’s body. I distinctly identified Alaska on her right cheek, the Aleutians trailing over her nose; Mongolia on one shoulder; Zaire on the other; Crete on her knee; Chile on her ankle; and many others. There is a kind of beauty in her birthmarks, God’s holy design imprinted on her skin.
Garnet directed me to sit as her Sicilian grandmother pushed in a teacart loaded with cookies and a samovar of coffee. Nonna Diamante is quintessentially Old World with her white bun and orthopedic shoes. When she saw me she began to kneel and reach for my hand, but I forestalled the gesture. Nonna backed out of the room mumbling, “Garney, watch-a you mouth and behave.”
Once we were alone Garnet broadened her shoulders, thrust forward her chest, and jutted out her chin. The display reminded me of that toad in my sister’s garden that doubles its size by inflating with air to deter predators.
Finally Garnet sat, draped her legs over her chair arm, and said, “You know I don’t believe any of this bullshit.”
Given the resistance—and mockery—the committee has been met with thus far, I was prepared. “Perhaps you don’t, but people all over the world do.” I pulled from my briefcase a sampling of the many letters the Vatican has received from people claiming to have been healed by Garnet.
“Don’t these people have anything better to do?” She sat upright, grabbed the letters, and unceremoniously flung them into the fireplace.
I stifled my impulse to rescue them, fearing that any sudden movement might send Garnet running.
I then pulled out a stack of before-and-after pictures of various healed skin disorders. I fanned them out for her perusal, careful to hold on tight. “Are you saying these are fabricated?”
Garnet looked at the photos and sighed. “I’m not denying that people are being healed. I’m just saying that I’m not responsible.”
A sudden roar erupted from the pilgrims keeping vigil outside Garnet’s home. Garnet’s head bowed under the magnitude of their pleas. When she looked up, her eyes betrayed weariness. “How do I put an end to this crap so I can get on with my life?”
It felt as if we were in a confessional, and I wished I had an inspired answer. All I could do was hand over the standard questionnaire and a tape recorder for her use during our inquiry. “Start here.”
Garnet flipped through the onerous document. “Are you kidding me?”
“The Vatican has a duty to investigate, I’m afraid. And we are very thorough.”
For a moment it looked as if the girl might cry, an astonishing notion that made me want to scoop her into my arms and hug her, as a father might. But that would have been inappropriate, and perhaps misconstrued. “The sooner you begin, the sooner it will be over with.”
Garnet nodded, stood, and led me to the front door, the weight of the world heavy upon her neck.
After meeting Garnet I find myself of two minds. Half of me wants to prove that Garnet is the source of the miracles whether she claims responsibility or not. The other half wants to refute the pilgrims’ assertions so that she can live in peace. It is up to God to reveal the truth.
Ah! My veal scaloppine has arrived.

TAPE ONE

The Legend of Saint Garnet del Vulcano

To the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, Archbishop Gormley in particular:

 

Before we begin, Archie, I want to reiterate that the only reason I’ve granted this intrusion is that the sooner you dispel this sainted nonsense the sooner I can reclaim my life, or perhaps claim it for the first time. Then you and the boys can direct your energies to more urgent matters: rescuing victims of the Banqiao Dam breach, for example, or polishing the papal jewels.

Wait. There’s Nonna at the door.

(Tank-a him for the vis.)

Archie, Nonna wants me to thank you for the visit; a preemptive nicety, since I can hear her spitting even from here with the
ptt-ptt-ptt
and
tocca ferro
, touching iron, jangling the five pounds of skeleton keys she routinely hauls around—as do I. She’s using them to ward off the evil-eye germs she’s certain you left in the upholstery. According to Nonna, anyone with eyes as dark as yours surely harbors the
malocchio
, as they call it in Italy, or the
maloicky
, as they say in Baaston, your holy turf. Nonna wondered about that, sending a Black Irish potato eater instead of a
paesano
to do the pope’s bidding.

(I never said-a that.)

(Most certainly did.)

I apologize for her ethnic fussiness, but she’s mistrustful of murky eyes even if they’re ordained, since everyone knows Pius IX was a bad-karma-flinging
jettatura
, even if it was inadvertent. Tell that to the poor schmucks who fell out of windows or tumbled off scaffolding in his papal wake. After you left, Nonna was a whirling dervish of incantations and phallic hand gestures—
manus obscenus: mano fica, mano cornuta
—though I insisted she stop at sprinkling urine, that holiest of all holy waters, particularly mine, which is why I lock the bathroom door behind me even after I flush.

If it will speed your inquiry I will confess that there is magic here, and I don’t mean just the practical jokes playing out on my body. Someone or something is responsible for the mysteries I’ve witnessed in Sweetwater, but it’s not me. In addition to environmental factors, in my opinion, the true source is Nonna—

(It’s-a no true!
You
are the descendant of Saint Garnet!
You!
)

—It was
Nonna
who packed anti-
malocchio
talismans in her valise when she sailed to America, along with her belief in folk magic—the Old Religion—a faith system, however irrational, that I have been unable to banish from my psyche the way I have the Vatican-sanctioned one.

Admittedly, if it is Nonna, her powers are spotty, so perhaps there’s a third alternative neither of us has considered. Hopefully your investigation will discover who the real conjurer is and thus pull the limelight away from me.

(Garney, you play for the Padre.)

(What? Why did you bring my saw in here?)

(Why you face-a so mad? He will like-a you playing
.
She plays-a the most beautiful saw, Padre! It make-a you weep!)

(Give me that. This isn’t a talent show. And besides, that’s private
. Private!)

(Okay, okay. Don’t getta so flust’. Here, have a cannoli.)

Nonna just made two hundred cannolis for the Saint Brigid bake sale. She’s still recovering from carting tray after tray up from the basement kitchen, though at her age she shouldn’t be baking for anyone, not even me. Apparently hiring a chef is out of the question.
Such a waste
, she says. And besides, no one can match her culinary skills.

(That’s-a true.)

Still, her poor knees—creaking as I speak. I’ve tried valiantly to get her to use the main-floor kitchen, but all those whirring, grinding, icemaking contraptions confound her, especially the Radarange—a complete bafflement. If you really want to unlock a mystery, figure out how
that
thing works. The added truth is she doesn’t want to muss anything up.

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