Read The Secret Journey Online
Authors: James Hanley
A young lady came out and sang. Brigid Mangan gave one look at the skirt and exclaimed under her breath, âHow disgraceful, Fanny! These English fashions are so low. Just look at that woman. What man could mistake that bump behind for anything else but what it is? I think it's atrocious the way the silly girls bottle themselves upâthose kind of skirts, why, one can hardly walk in one.' The young lady sang her two songs with a most vibrating effect not only upon her larynx, but upon those of the audience to whom she cried, âCome along, boys, all together.' And the whole audience sang with great fervour the last verse of âOh, Willie, I have missed you.' The audience deafened the theatre. Brigid Mangan kept glancing at her sister. Fanny Fury seemed to have lost that harassed expression.
âAre you enjoying it, Fanny?' she asked, and sat closer to her sister. âThis is just the kind of thing you want, Fanny! You must go out more often, cheer yourself up. It isn't good to be always nursing one's worries. I never worry, and look at me.'
âOh! it's not always the worry, woman,' said Mrs. Fury. âSometimes it's my feet. I have awful trouble with them. The last time I visited this place, I had to go home before it had gone half-way.'
âAnd are they all right now?'
âYes. They're much better. Ah! Just you wait until everything has quietened down. When Dad and you have gone, and when my last two are off, just like the rest, I'll have such a good time. No more worries, no more planning, everything as clear and clean as a pikestaff. I'll be really well off. I'm going to have a grand time one of these days, Brigid, and don't you forget it. You're having yours now, but everybody gets a turnâsoon it'll be mine.'
âSsh! not so loud, Fanny, people are looking at us,' said Brigid. âAnd what about Denny?'
âLet them look! If they couldn't go on with their looking, what in heaven's name would there be left for them to do? Denny! Oh! he'll turn up like the proverbial bad penny. His father had five sons, and four of them were prodigals. Denny's a nice manâbut being nice isn't everything. One wants something more than being nice to a person, Brigid. He can't say a thing against me, excepting that I had my head in the sky and not in the gutter like his own, maybe, and that I tried to do too much. Ah! The man used to make me sick. All right for him to talk. Men hate responsibilities. They go out and work and bring the money in, but there it ends. I reared the children, not Denny, and he knows it. But what can you expect, my good woman, what can you, from a man like that who was born for nothing else but green water?'
âBut don't you love him, Fanny?' asked Miss Mangan. She sat back in her seat to allow two latecomers to crush past. âDenny's all you have now.'
âOf course I love the old fool,' said Fanny, who began to rock with laughter at the sudden appearance of a red-nosed comedian on the stage. âLet's not talk now,' she said, âfor I like these funny men.'
âI wonder if I oughtn't to ask her about Dad's box,' thought Miss Mangan. There seemed no harm in it. And, Fanny was certainly in good humour. âWhy am I getting so nervy over this business of Father? Brigid Mangan, you're being ridiculous. Maybe, for all you know, this woman is laughing at you.'
No! She couldn't do it. Fanny would take offence at once. It would spoil their evening. Yet he had a box, and there must have been some papers in it. âIf Mr. O'Toole is right, then Father had some money all along, as I very well knewâand if he took it out of the post-office savingsâwhere is it now? He didn't have any in that box, for I would have seen it. I wonder if Dad transferred it here. Oh! I think I ought to ask a question or two.' She sat very thoughtful, following the contortions of the comedian with her eyes, but not in the least interested in what she called âhis efforts to be funny.'
âAre there any things to go with Father, Fanny?' she asked. âClothes or personal treasures. I believe he used to have a black japanned box. At least, I remember his taking it with him. And there's his gold hunter. Has he still the watch?'
Mrs. Fury, her eye still on the stage, replied,' Box! Oh! we broke that up years ago for firewood. Yes, he still has his watch. I hope you don't think I took any of his thingsânor my children.'
âHow sensitive you are! I wasn't meaning anything like that. But if there are things to go with him, I suppose they'll have to be packed, won't they? Did he have nothing in the box at all?'
âWhy do you keep talking about this box, Brigid? YesâI believe there were some papers in it. But there aren't any now. Perhaps he burnt them. Perhaps we lit the fire with them. Why should we want to delve into Father's private possessions?' She moved about uneasily in her seat.
âThere you go again, Fanny! Isn't it only right I should ask? I mean nothing by it. Perhaps he did burn the papers.'
âAnd if he did, what's that got to do with us sitting here? For heaven's sake damp your curiosity until we get home. If you mention that box again, Brigid, I'll get up and walk home. You ask me to come to the Lyric with you. You ask me to enjoy myself, and no sooner am I in my seat than you start off about his box. Heavens, woman, I half believe you think he had a fortune in it. Let me tell you something, Brigid, before your imagination runs away with you. Father has no money. The man is penniless, and he was penniless when he came here. If, as you think, he had any money, then he must have swallowed it. Brigid, I will go. I'm not going to sit here listening to that. Tell me'âshe looked straight in Brigid Mangan's faceââtell me,
why
have you come over for Father at all? That's what I'd like to know. Very much. I've kept him for years, clothed and fed him, put up with his helplessnessâI've done everything, and now that curious head of yours is imagining all kinds of things. I won't have it, Brigid! God! I won't. I have enough to think about without that. Really, you've spoiled the evening.'
Mrs. Fury at once got up and began pushing her way along the row of benches. And in her wake followed grumbles, murmurs, swearings below the breath. But at last she was clear of the benches and safely isolated in the passage-way. Everybody turned their heads to look, for it seemed that the conversation between the two sisters had arrested attention, so that the comedian upon the stage was left temporarily isolated. Aunt Brigid, quite unconscious of people's stares, sat motionless in her seat. She burned with rage. She had been quite unable to control herself. She had spoiled the evening. Worse, she was now confronted with the awful possibility of her father's destitute condition. Her optimism had received a nasty jolt.
âAnd all I did was to enquire about his black box. Oh! I am a fool. And I thought I could control myself.'
She dug her nails into the palms of her hands. She had done the worst possible thing.
âI've roused her suspicions now.'
The future looked blackâthe horizon, once clear, was now pitted with dark shadows. It wasn't the box, the papers, or the money. It wasn't her sister who spoiled the evening. It wasâand how she hated the very thought of itâit was the possibility that Mrs. Fury might suddenly say, âNo, you can't take him back. Besides, I'd be a fool, worse, I'd be cruel letting him go.'
Miss Mangan wanted to get up and go out as quickly, as silently, and as unnoticed as possible. But she hated to move. Something held her fast in the seat. But where was her sister? Miss Mangan looked round. Fanny was nowhere in sight. She must go now. She couldn't sit here another moment. She must make peace with her sister at all costs. Rows and rows of faces, hundreds of eyes, and somehow not a single one was focussed upon the stage. Rather were they focussed upon Miss Manganâat least, Brigid thought so, and her own face was almost crimson. These faces, these eyes, glared at her. The comedian had begun another song, âWatching the trains come inâwatching the trains go out.' Brigid Mangan, hardly able to breathe from sheer suffocation of shame and misery, rose to her feet. But her passage through that long row of people was difficult at this momentâthey thought of nothing but their own comfort, the slightest disturbance of which was bound to have reactions that might tear the last shred of control from the stout lady who had now begun her task.
âExcuse me,' she kept saying, and âSorry,' as she paused now and again to allow some occupant of the bench to draw in his or her knees, her face so deep a red that it seemed only the slightest breath of air was required to make it shoot into flame. And to herself she kept saying, âLord! Why did I do it?'
And oh, how much she longed, longed with her whole soul, to be back in the peace and quiet of that old house in the Mall. She was half-way down the bench now. Then an astonishing thing happened. A dead silence filled the whole theatre. Even the comedian ceased singing about the trains. An attendant stood at the end of the long row, impatiently watching the tortuous progress of the stout lady in brown. This silence was no silence for Miss Manganâthis silence was a thunderous roar in her ears. And she lowered her head still further, her cheeks burningâher thoughts turned towards that âmiserable woman' who had gone off and left her like this.
âI do believe she enjoys it. Enjoys my being stared at like this. I could tell when I ran for the tram this evening.'
She had reached three-quarters of the way down the bench. There was a sudden pause. An old man had begun to cough, and judging from its severity, the changing expressions on the old man's face, it was an asthmatical one. And this seemed fated to begin just as Miss Mangan, trying to make her bulk as small as possible, reached him. She said, âExcuse me,' her eyes on the floor, her thoughts millions of miles away, this terrific silence filling her ears, seeming like a great weight upon her.
âExcuse me,' she repeated. And then the old man half dragged himself to his feet. It was this endeavour to facilitate Miss Mangan's passage that brought on the sudden fit of coughing, and this, the full force of it, was concentrated upon her bosom. But she, isolated in her misery and shame, was quite unaware of it, or of the fact that the old man's right knee had become wedged so tightly against the bulk of her thigh that he was now in as desperate a strait as Miss Mangan herself. He could move neither backwards nor forwards. Nor, indeed, could Miss Mangan. They were locked tight. It may have been the rude disturbing of the old man's peace, or it may have been a manifestation of his great displeasure with her, but he continued to cough, the full weight of Aunt Brigid's bosom appearing to lie with pathetic abandon upon the head and shoulders of the victim. If Miss Mangan had a horror of crowds and of their brazen staring, they at least were out to demonstrate their versatility and their antagonism. They began to laugh. Miss Mangan's misery was now complete. She was penned. She was pinned tight in the circle, she was the subject of laughter, titters, murmurs, and from the gallery itself, shouts and the rudest remarks. Another five yards, and she would be free. Then she might indeed run, or perhaps miraculously fly. But now some people sitting beyond the old man, who still continued to cough with an almost desperate energy, decided they would not move at all. It was a complete debacle, and Miss Mangan, stupefied by now, realized that if only she hadn't mentioned that japanned box all would have been well. But she had mentioned, and the Devil had paid her for her curiosity. All interest in the comedian had ceased. At the back of the theatre itself approaching voices could be heard. In a theatre like the Lyric, Brigid Mangan was phenomenal.
âFor God's sake,' she whispered desperately, âcan't you please move?' But all in the row merely laughed, and this wilful laughter was punctuated by the coughing of the old man, who managed after a great effort to speak. Brigid Mangan could feel his breath upon the top part of her chest, upon her neck, and upon her face. She wanted to do two things. She wanted to be sick. The other was quite impossible. Aunt Brigid wanted to disappear. It did not matter where, so long as she did vanishâfar from that frightful laughter, that giggling, those under-currents of whispers, and not least this asthmatic and repulsive individual who seemed to be making nothing more or less than a spittoon of the greater part of Miss Mangan's bosom. She began to pushâforward, sideways; she could feel his bony knee in her soft flesh, and it was this feel of the man's knee rather than their laughter that made Aunt Brigid desire with all her soul to disappear, to disintegrate, to vanish into the earth.
The lights had gone. The manager was seen coming down the passage-way. He had managed the Lyric long enough to be able to realize that it was not always his bill of fare that kept the audience in such spirits. And to-night they completely ignored his âfind,' the comedian âwho could really make you laugh,' absolutely ignored him, and one and all, from the gallery to the pit, had begun to enjoy the spectacle of the very stout lady imprisoned in the bench. It was obvious that the lady was not only a stranger, but she seemed, too, to be that kind of lady who is averse to a little good-natured badinageâa lady, to be brief, who could not see any fun in the situation at all.
The manager stood at the end of the row. When Miss Mangan saw him, all shame, all propriety went to the winds. âI can't get out,' she cried. âI'm stuck in the old bench.' A lamentable effort, for the whole theatre seemed to re-echo the broad and musical brogue of Southern Ireland.
So she was Irish! a stranger to the city.
âPray to St. Peter and he'll pull you out,' shouted a man's voice from the gallery. And somebody in the stalls shouted down, âI'd write to the Pope about thisâbegorrah, I would,' making a brave attempt at copying the brogue of the unfortunate woman.
âYou've the wrong colour on you entirely,' somebody shouted. The voice was just behind her.
Miss Mangan shouted at the top of her voice, âManager! Manager! This is disgraceful! This is disgraceful!'