Authors: Jessica Stirling
âWhy didn't you go with her?'
âI decided to stay in case â in case you wanted to talk to me.'
Gowry seated himself on the sofa. He glanced into the recesses of the dining-room where four Guards officers were gathered at a corner table. From the saloon bar came the faint strains of male voices chanting one of the hymn-like battle songs of which the Welsh were so fond.
âWhy didn't you just come up to the hospital?' Gowry said.
âI wasn't sure you'd want me to.'
âWhy did you have to use my mother as a go-between?'
âThere was no one else,' said Sylvie. âCharlie's in prison.'
âYes, Ma told me.'
âWhat else did she tell you?'
âThat Hagarty was murdered. Is that true?'
âYes. I was in one of Vaizey's cells when it happened.'
âI'm not surprised Vaizey wanted rid of him.'
He spoke in a strange pedantic manner, not slurred but clipped, the porcelain teeth clicking a little. He sat back, pressed into the box end of the sofa as if he might suddenly start up and leave at any moment.
Sylvie adjusted Sean's little jacket once more, praying that he wouldn't start fussing. What she had to do was difficult enough without having to wrestle with one of her son's tantrums. He was quiet for the moment, though, not drowsy but attentive, staring intently at Gowry as if he were envious of those fine, big, adult teeth.
âTell me what happened,' Sylvie said. âWhere were you wounded?'
âGuillemont,' Gowry stated.
If she'd hoped for an account of heroism and endurance she was disappointed. Gowry closed his lips over the awkward rubberised wedge and said nothing.
âYour mother tells me your handâ¦'
âAye, my hand,' Gowry said, shrugging.
âDon't you want to talk about it?'
âNo,' he said. âI'd rather talk about Maeve.'
She told him about Maeve, Jansis and the downfall of the Shamrock, how she had fared in the uprising and what had occurred afterwards. She spoke quietly, not fishing for sympathy. When she told him about the missing letters and how she had tricked Flanagan he shook his head, and when she told him how they had all supposed him to be dead he shook it again. He hardly seemed to be listening, though, and refused to look at her. He gazed into the depths of the room beyond the archway where the Welsh officers were gathered round a white tablecloth. She wondered if he felt more affinity with them than he did with her, if he had left a part of himself in the trenches, the way a bee leaves its sting.
She told him about Pauline, Breen Trotter and Father Mack: names new to him, folk who had no role in his life. And she told him a great deal about Maeve, for only when she spoke of Maeve did he give her his full attention.
âSo where is she?' he asked.
âI sent her to Wexford to spend a few days with Breen and Pauline.'
âDoesn't she want to see me again?'
âShe was desperate to see you,' Sylvie assured him. âBut she wouldn't have been happy just seeing you. She would have wanted to go with her grandmother to the camp at Frongoch to visit her sweetheart.'
âShe's too young to have a sweetheart.'
âHer friend then, her friend Turk Trotter.'
âTrotter!' Gowry said, with another little shake of the head. âWhy did you write to my mother of all people?'
âTo tell her you weren't dead after all.'
She waited for him to ask why she'd brought Fran's child with her. If she was asking Gowry's forgiveness â and she wasn't at all sure that she was â then she would have to ask it on her son's behalf too.
Gowry said, âYou made a mistake, Sylvie.'
âI know I did.'
âYou shouldn't have trusted her.'
âHer?'
âMy mother.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âShe only agreed to help you because she wants rid of the baby.'
âRid ofâ¦'
âA mark of shame, she called him.'
âOh that!' Sylvie said. âI told her to say that.'
âBut why?'
âTo see how you would react.'
âYou haven't changed, Sylvie. You're just as devious as you always were. What are you doing here? What do you want from me?'
âI want you back.'
âSecond-hand?' Gowry said. âSecond-best?'
âI admit I was taken in by him.'
âI know you were.'
âFran wasn't the man I thought he was.'
âIn bed,' Gowry said, âor out of it?'
âI'm not going to beg, Gowry.'
âI'm not asking you to.'
âWe really thought you were dead. We thought we'd lost you.'
âPerhaps you have,' Gowry said.
âIs there someone else?'
He hesitated. âNo, no one else.'
âI heard you had a woman friend in Tipperary.'
âWho told you that?'
âVaizey, I think. He said you had a woman on the road.'
âI didn't have a woman on the road; I had a friend. Her name's Maggie Leonard an' she's old enough to be my mother. I lodged with her when I was down at Tipperary. She was never more to me than a friend, Sylvie, though why I should have to justify myself to you because of some lie Vaizey toldâ¦'
âDo you want to go back to her?' Sylvie put in.
âNo.' He hesitated. âBesides, I don't think she's there any more.'
âIsn't there?'
âHer son was a sergeant in the Connaughts, killed at Heuvert. I wrote to Maggie but she didn't write back. I think she might have sold up and gone away. She has daughters in America.' He put out a hand, his good hand, scooped Sean from her arms and dandled him on his knee. âShe was only a friend, Sylvie, and by God I needed a friend at that time.'
âI don't blame you for wanting someone else.'
Sean wriggled, stretched out his arms and punched his tiny fists into Gowry's chest, not in temper but in play.
âThere's no one else,' Gowry said after a pause.
âThen come back to Dublin,' Sylvie said. âThere's room enough in Endicott Street for all of us, at least until you get back on your feet. Maeve still needs a father.'
âAn' you, what do you need, Sylvie?'
âWhatever you're prepared to give.'
âHow do I know there won't be another Fran Hagarty? How can I be sure some other smarmy seducer won't come along and sweep you off your feet?'
âYou don't.'
He held the boy against his chest and, patient as always, let him poke and pry at his mouth with inquisitive little fingers.
âYou're asking a lot, Sylvie.'
âI know I am.'
âI don't have a lot left to give.'
âI'll take whatever you have,' she said.
Still he would not or could not make himself meet her eye. It wasn't guilt or embarrassment that prevented communion between them but something else, something she couldn't put a finger on.
She had read that the war affected soldiers in odd ways or she might have played up to him, flirted with him, even shed a few pathetic tears. How many pals had he seen die, though, how many Germans had he killed? She couldn't imagine her husband killing anyone, not even a German. Whatever his experience in France, apparently it hadn't made him callous, only distant, unreachably distant. She was too astute to force herself upon him when he was occupied with Sean. She watched him tickle Sean's nose with his bandaged hand, the wrecked and ruined hand, and let the boy wrestle with the ugly, upright thumb.
âOw,' Gowry said. âOw, what a grip. What a grip you have, wee man.'
Sylvie said, âWhen you're well again will you come home?'
âI might,' Gowry said.
âWhat does that mean?' Sylvie said.
âIt means I'll have to think about it,' Gowry said and, handing Hagarty's son back to her, got up and walked out of the Fortress without another word.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âWhat did he say about me?' Maeve asked. âDid you tell him I want him to come home? Did you tell him about the mix-up with the letters? Did you tell him we've room enough here forâ'
âI told him as much as he wanted to hear,' Sylvie said.
âThen he just walked out?'
âHe â he isn't himself.'
âWell, I could have told you
that,
' Maeve said, grandly. âHe's been fightin' in the trenches for months, never mind gettin' blowed up. How does he look?'
âAwful,' said Sylvie.
âHas he really only got one hand?'
âHe's waiting for a new one.'
âThey can't give him a new hand,' said Maeve. âCan they?'
âThey saved the thumb. Apparently they can do all sorts of things if they save the thumb, so he told Gran McCulloch. She didn't believe him. She thought he was raving. Even so, I think she got more out of him than I did.'
âIt's your own fault,' said Maeve. âYou should've took me with you instead of Sean. Did Gran get to see Turk?'
âShe got to see Peter. He isn't well.'
âIf he dies it'll be another murder,' Maeve said. âBreen says the British are worried about what's happenin' in the camp. Breen says he's heard the prisoners run the place an' they've appointed new leaders.'
âI didn't know Breen was interested in politics.'
âIt ain't politics,' Maeve said. âIt's revenge.'
âWhatever it is,' said Sylvie, âyou'd best keep out of it.'
âUh-huh!' said Maeve with just a hint of scorn. âSure an' I will.'
She was seated in the tub chair that Pauline had left behind, a nursing-seat with torn upholstery that Mam had covered with an old travelling rug. She had Sean on her lap, feeding him his nightly bottle. He seemed none the worse for his trip across the sea or his brief sojourn in Wales. The home crossing had been easier than the crossing out and there had even been a patch of blue sky over the Irish coast, so her mother had said.
There was no ambivalence in Maeve, no division. She was reconciled to life as a changing process, a seesaw of fortune and misfortune. It wasn't constancy she hankered after, just the presence of men to act with and react against in whatever role she chose for herself. It would not be a man like the man her mother had been taken in by, though, not a smooth, complicated chap like Fran Hagarty, for she was immune to charm now and the conceits that went with it. Breen had told her a lot about Turk and the manifest destiny of the Irish â though Breen hadn't put it quite that way â a lot more than she'd ever learned in class from poor martyred Mr Whiteside. Five days with Pauline and Breen Trotter in Wexford had been, she felt, the beginning of her education. She was more assured and more determined than she had been a year ago, even with Turk in jail and her daddy in hospital.
She watched her half-brother guzzle at the teat, wondered what sort of babies she would have when her time came, if they would be gigantic Trotter types right from the start. She had told Pauline of her plans and Pauline had encouraged her to marry Turk as soon as she was old enough. They would live in Wexford with the other Trotters and if Turk wanted to join a new rebel army to fight the English then she, Maeve, would stand with him, shoulder to shoulder.
âWhy did they send Daddy to a Welsh hospital?' she asked.
Mam was propped up in bed, sipping a glass of stout. The journey had tired her, or, Maeve thought, perhaps the shock of seeing Daddy so changed.
âIt's where they do the best repairs,' said Sylvie.
âYou make him sound like a motor-car.'
âWell, perhaps there isn't much difference, not to the doctors.'
âTalking of motor-cars, he won't be able to drive one, will he?'
âI doubt it,' Sylvie said.
âWhat'll he do for a living then?'
âI expect he'll find something,' Sylvie said.
âIf he comes back here at all.'
âYes.'
âDo you think he will?'
âWill what?'
âForgive you,' Maeve said.
âI don't see what else he can do,' Sylvie said with a sigh. âI mean he has nowhere else to go, really.'
Maeve took the teat from her half-brother's mouth and let him grope for it, his gaze hostile.
âHe might come back because he loves us,' she said.
âYou know,' said Sylvie, sitting up, âI never thought of that.'
âThen it's high time you did,' said Maeve.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
On the ninth day of November 1916, the 2nd Battalion of the Sperryhead Rifles was disbanded. There had been too many casualties and too few recruits and the remnants of that gallant fighting force were merged with the Irish Brigade. By coincidence, on that same day Private Gowry McCulloch received both his new wooden hand and his discharge papers and, within a week, was standing, aching, in the rain in dear old dirty Dublin. He felt neither joy nor relief at being there. He, like Dublin, had changed, had become older and wiser and that little bit more decayed.
Even in the rain, in grey afternoon light, he saw how broken the city was and that gangs were still working on clearing debris from the streets. There was dust in the air, a thin muddy dust that caught in the throat. He was no longer in uniform, no longer distinguishable as foe or friend. The haversack he'd bought in a shoddy shop in Cardiff contained everything he valued: Becky's letters, wrapped in canvas. He knew he should destroy them and that he was clinging to something that no longer existed, to memories that would only bring him pain, but pain was better than nothing and grief was his only consolation.
He walked slowly along the City Quay, over the Butt Bridge to âhis' side of the river, the side of the river where the Shamrock had stood and which, against all logic, he still expected to find just as it had been, with Jansis grousing in the kitchen and Mr Dolan sulking upstairs.
He crossed the back of the station, entered a pub and bought himself a whiskey and a Guinness. He didn't know why he did such a thing for he wasn't celebrating and wasn't keen on company. He kept his left hand in his overcoat pocket and drank with the right for a while then extracted the heavy, black-gloved object strapped to his forearm with a cigarette packet pinched between thumb and wooden forefinger.