“Did they defrock you finally?”
He threw away a cigarette he’d been drawing on. He was one of those incorrigible smokers, smoked during a smoke. In a weird way, I was kind of glad to see him and that shows the depth of my desperation. He said,
“Who are you on the run from, Taylor?”
I nearly laughed. He was unchanged and, in a world of darkness, he had at least stayed true to his nature. I indicated a pub on the corner, asked,
“You want to grab a pint?”
He gave me that ecclesiastical stare, long on disapproval and short on compassion, and said,
“I’ll consider it penance.”
The bar was quiet, one middle-aged guy tending who greeted,
“Fathers.”
Irish.
They can spot the clergy at close range. That he thought I was one was just more insult to my burdened mind. We ordered some pints and chasers. The guy said,
“Grab a table and I’ll shoot them over to ye.”
We sat and Malachy reached for his cigs. I cautioned,
“You can’t smoke here.”
He tried defiance for a moment then decided not to. When the drinks came, he sank the Jay fast, belched, said,
“Ah.”
I know the feeling, nothing else quite like it, a split second when the world lights up and you have such peace, then...
He asked,
“Why are you hiding out in this heathen land?”
He still spoke like a character from Synge. I said,
“Bit of a break.”
He snickered, started on his pint, said,
“I’m here for a symposium on church and communication.”
He thought for a moment, added,
“Whatever the fuck a symposium is.”
His face took on that flush of the habitual drinker. It could almost pass for ruddy health, seen from a certain angle. He said,
“I don’t think I hate you anymore, Taylor.”
I said,
“Makes me feel all warm.”
He was ready for another round, shouted,
“Bring more drink.”
Then,
“I used to think you were an arrogant drunkard who was the death of his sainted mother.”
There was a time when I might have argued the toss but now I simply didn’t care, said,
“To tell the truth, Father, your feelings of me never mattered a good shite to me.”
We continued in this vein for another round, softly exchanging insults. Then he got a wistful look, sighed, asked,
“Did you ever experience love?”
First, I put it down to drink talk and was about to be scathing when I realized he was deadly serious. I stalled by draining my pint, then,
“Years ago, there was a child, she had Down syndrome...”
I trailed off, couldn’t revisit the death of Serena-May, who had died on my watch or, rather, my absolute lack of watch. He actually listened, which was rare. Priests take confessions, have parishioners come with their troubles, but listen?
Not since the penal days.
He said,
“I have never known it.”
I was going to try, Surely the love of God, but his expression was so serious that I went with,
“My mother.”
Nearly choked on this but persisted,
“My mother, um, seemed, to like you well enough.”
He gave a nasty cough, said,
“Your mother hated the world and everyone in it.”
True enough.
I asked,
“But why did you spend so much time with her?”
He looked up at the ceiling, which was discolored from the years when people smoked, said,
“The oldest reason in the book.”
“To give her comfort.”
“For money.”
I could have lashed him for taking sorely needed cash from our strapped household but what was the point? He seemed to be in a hell that was hot enough already. I had stoked plenty of fires in my life. He said,
“Terrible curse to be in a job you have no faith in and the very people you are meant to serve distrust and loathe you.”
Try as I might, I had no sympathy for the clergy. Even now they ruled with an arrogance that was breathtaking. I said,
“So resign, stop whining, do something.”
He laughed, almost amused, asked,
“And what pray would I do? Where would I live? I know some half-remembered theology and some half-arsed Latin, not exactly cutting-edge stuff.”
I reached for my coat, there is only so much self-pity you can endure. I said,
“I’d like to say it’s been a blast.”
He looked at me, asked,
“How are you fixed?”
I wanted to scream, being touched by a priest, so many ironies therein. I said,
“Keeping the tradition alive are you? Tap the son now?”
He near whispered,
“Couple hundred is all.”
Jesus and his mother.
At the bar, I laid a twenty on the counter, said to the guy,
“Buy him another.”
I didn’t look back.
“They buried him deep. Again.”
(Joe R. Lansdale, The Return)
Park was cruising in his aunt’s BMW, relishing the feel and control of the car. It was like the rules of language, rewarded proper usage. He headed out toward the bay and, as he cleared the promenade, opened her up, letting the speed rise to eighty.
Chirp... the beep of the siren and he saw the Guard car in his mirror. Considered giving them a run but sighed and slowed, pulled into the verge.
Waited.
Watched as Sergeant Ridge sauntered toward him, arrogance in all her bearing. This woman was becoming a serious nuisance, like an apostrophe in all the wrong places. She signaled for him to roll down the window, said,
“License and registration.”
He took a deep breath, letters spun and whirled before his eyes. He had to push down the compulsion to grab her and smash her head against the road. He said,
“It is my aunt’s vehicle. I, alas, don’t have my own license with me.”
She gave a hollow laugh, said,
“Now that is too bad. Get out of the car.”
Waited a beat,
Then added,
“Sir?”
He got out slowly, a cloud of letters dancing before his eyes
K H e
i
r ll
He stared at the formation and Ridge took a step back, not liking the expression of fascination on his face.
He cupped his hands and arranged the letters.
Exhaled as they danced, whirled, then formed,
Kill
Her.
He said,
“Not yet.”
Ridge put her hand on the baton fastened to her tunic, asked,
“Are you all right, sir?”
He gave her a beatific smile, said,
“Completely.”
She composed herself, shaken more than she wanted to admit, said,
“As you have no license, I’m afraid I will have to forbid you from driving this vehicle. I could bring you to the station but your lawyer would throw a fit.”
Park stared at her, a dreamy slant to his eyes, said,
“You are right about that.”
She asked,
“What?”
“Being afraid.”
Sergeant Ridge was more rattled by Park than by anyone else in a long time. For a Guard, threats were a daily occurrence. You took note of them without letting them run riot. You were supposed to log the threat and time at the station lest, God forbid, you got hurt. That way they had not only evidence but a written record.
She didn’t log it.
There was something so radically different about this case. It kept her off balance and she had the uneasy feeling that Park was so off the radar that normal rules didn’t apply. Back at her apartment, she tried to relax, had a glass of white wine, but her taste ran to something with more bite. She’d been born and raised in the Gaeltacht, the Irish-speaking part of Connemara. Wine was viewed as penance, what you had when you gave up drinking for Lent.