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I was going to sleep. I knew I’d be able to. In the morning I’d tell Sinbad that I hadn’t woken him up.

I listened.

Nothing, then they were talking. Her, him, her, him for longer, her, him long again, her for a bit, him. It was only talking, normal talk. Him talking to her. Man and wife. Mister and Missis Clarke. My eyes had closed by themselves. I stopped listening. I practised my breathing.

–I didn’t wake you up, I told him.

He was ahead of me. It was going all wrong.

–I could have, I told him.

He didn’t care; he’d been asleep. He didn’t believe me.

–But I didn’t.

We’d be at the school soon and we couldn’t be together there. I made myself get up beside him, and then in front. He didn’t look at me. I got in his way. I spoke when he was going around me.

–He hates her.

He kept going, wide enough for me not to grab him, the same speed.

–He does.

We were into the field in front of the school. The grass was long where there were no foundations yet but there were paths worn through the grass and they all joined one path at the end of the field right opposite the school. It was all hay grass in the middle, and nettles and devil’s bread and stickybacks where the ditches were left.

–You don’t have to believe me if you don’t want to, I said.—It’s true though.

That was all. There were piles of boys coming through the field, joining up on the big path. Three fellas from the scholarship class were sitting having a smoke in the wet long grass. One of them was pulling the hay off the grass and spilling it into his lunch box. I went slower. Sinbad got past some fellas and I couldn’t see him any more. I waited for James O’Keefe to catch up.

–Did you do the eccer? he said.

It was a stupid question; we all did the eccer.

–Yeah, I said.

–All of it?

–Yeah.

–I didn’t, he said.

He always said that.

–I didn’t do some of the learning, I said.

–That’s nothing, he said.

The eccer was always corrected, all of it. We could never get away with anything. We had to swap copies; Henno walked around giving the answers and looking over our shoulders. He spotchecked.

–I’m analysing your writing, Patrick Clarke. Tell me why.

–So I won’t write in any of the answers for him, Sir.

–Correct, he said.—And he won’t write in any for you.

He thumped me hard on the shoulder, probably because he’d been nice to me a few days before. It hurt but I didn’t rub it.

–I went to school once myself, he said.—I know all the tricks. Next one: eleven times ten divided by five. First step, Mister O’Keefe.

–Twentytwo, Sir.—First step.

He got James O’Keefe in the shoulder.

–Multiply eleven and ten, Sir.

–Correct. And?

–That’s all, Sir.

He got another whack.

–The answer, you amadán.

One hundred and ten, Sir.

–One hundred and ten. Is he correct, Mister Cassidy?

–Yes, Sir.

–For once, yes. Second step?

Miss Watkins had been much easier. We always did some of the homework but it was easy to fill in the answers when we were supposed to be correcting the ones we’d already done. Henno made us do the corrections with a red colouring pencil. You got three biffs if the point wasn’t sharp. Twice a week, on Tuesdays and Thursdays, we were allowed, two by two, to go up to the bin beside his desk and sharpen them. He had a parer screwed to the side of the desk—you put the pencil in the hole and turned the handle—but he wouldn’t let us use it. We had to have our own. Two biffs if you forgot to bring it in, and it couldn’t be a Hector Grey’s one, Mickey Mouse or one of the Seven Dwarfs or any of them; it had to be an ordinary one. Miss Watkins always used to write the answers on the board before nine o’clock and then she’d sit behind her desk and knit.

–Hands up who got it right? Go maith.[22] Next one, read it for me, em—

Without looking up from her knitting.

–Patrick Clarke.

I read it off the board and wrote it down in the space I’d left for it. Once, she stood up and came around the desks and stopped and looked at my page; the ink was still wet and she didn’t notice.

–Nine out of ten, she said.—Go maith.

I always made one of them wrong, sometimes two. We all did, except Kevin. He always got ten out of ten, in everything. A great little Irishman, she called him. Kevin did Ian McEvoy in the yard when Ian McEvoy called him that; he gave him a loaf in the nose.

She’d thought she was nice but we’d hated her.

–Still awake, Mister Clarke?

They all laughed. They were supposed to.

–Yes, Sir.

I smiled. They laughed again, not as much as the first time.

–Good, said Henno.—What time is it, Mister McEvoy?

–Don’t know, Sir.

–Can’t afford a watch.

We laughed.

–Mister Whelan.

Seán Whelan lifted the sleeve of his jumper and looked under.

–Halften, Sir.

–Exactly?

–Nearly.

–Exactly, please.

–Twentynine past ten, Sir.

–What day is it, Mister O’Connell?

–Thursday, Sir.

–Are you sure?

–Yes, Sir.

We laughed.

–It is Wednesday, I’m told, said Henno. And it is half past ten. What book will we now take out of our málas[23], Mister—Mister—Mister O’Keefe?

We laughed. We had to.

I went to bed. He hadn’t come home. I kissed my ma.

–Night night, she said.

–Good night, I said.

There was a hair growing out of a small thing on her face. Just between her eye and her ear. I’d never seen it before, the hair. It was straight and strong.

I woke up. It was just before she’d come up to get us out of bed. I could tell from the downstairs noises. Sinbad was still asleep. I didn’t wait. I got up. I was wide awake. I dashed into my clothes. It was good; the curtain square was bright.

–I was just coming up, she said when I got into the kitchen.

She was feeding the girls, feeding one and making sure that the other one fed herself properly. Catherine often missed her mouth with the spoon. Her bowl was always empty but she never ate that much.

–I’m up, I said.

–So I see, she said.

I was looking at her feeding Deirdre. She never got bored with it.

–Francis is still asleep, I said.

–No harm, she said.

–He’s snoring, I said.

–He isn’t, she said.

She was right; he wasn’t snoring. I’d just said it; not to get him into trouble. I’d just wanted to say something funny.

I wasn’t hungry but I wanted to eat.

–Your dad’s gone to work already, she said.

I looked at her. She was bent down, behind Catherine, helping her get the last bit onto her spoon, touching her arm, not holding it, aiming the spoon at the porridge.

–Good girl—

I went back upstairs. I waited, listened; she was safe downstairs. I went into their room. The bed was made, the eiderdown up over the pillows and tucked behind them. I pulled it back. I listened. I looked at the pillows first. I pulled it back more, and the blankets. She hadn’t done the bottom sheet. Only her side had the mark of a body, the right creases; they matched the pillows. The other side was flat, the pillows full. I put my hand on the sheet; it felt warm on her side, I thought it did. I didn’t touch his.

I didn’t tuck the eiderdown back in; to let her know.

I listened. I looked in the wardrobe. His shoes and ties were there, three pairs of shoes, too many ties, tangles of them.

I changed my mind; I tucked in the eiderdown and flattened it.

I looked at her. She was cleaning the baby chair. She looked the same. Except for the hair, and I couldn’t see that now. I tried hard, I looked at her, I tried to see what her face meant.