The Death of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son (22 page)

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Authors: Pat Conroy

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Personal Memoirs, #Literary, #Military

BOOK: The Death of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son
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“I’ll be at the Savannah airport tomorrow afternoon,” I said to Mike.

On the way over the Atlantic the next evening, I thought that my mother had just learned of the immensity of a circle’s power. The reason all my siblings and I had started laughing at the terrible news of my mother’s leukemia was because of a priest named Father Dave, who had befriended my parents when Dad was CO of the Marine Air Division in Pensacola, Florida.

Mom and Dad had always taken great pleasure in the company of Roman Catholic priests and loved nothing better than to treat those priests to dinner at the officers’ club. Whenever these men visited our house, my parents were fawning and unctuous, with Dad laughing too loud at the priests’ jokes and Mom cooing with pleasure when these interchangeable priests would spout some thought she took in as wisdom brightly dispensed. Mom saw genius and a depthless spirituality whenever she spotted a man in a white collar. I think my mountain mother, with her upbringing in the primitive Baptist church, believed that converting to Roman Catholicism was a step upward in the social order. Of course she was wrong; when I grew up in the South, a Roman Catholic was the weirdest thing you could be. There was no second place until the Hare Krishnas showed up with their tambourines and saffron robes in the Atlanta airport. The only thing my mother understood about the Catholic Church was its teaching on birth control.

Father Dave was a handsome but forbidding man, one of those taciturn priests who treated children as though they were houseplants. I had met him one Christmas when I was still a cadet, on a visit to the family in Pensacola. Father Dave’s personality was unglittering and severe. His Christmas sermon could have put an insomniac to sleep, but he would end up playing a larger part in my family’s sad history than I could ever have dreamed.

My mother had taken up golf as a hobby and played almost every day with Father Dave, who had bought her an expensive set of clubs. Something about that made me worry. All during my visit, my family seemed like a vessel of pure madness to me, with hopelessness our daily bread. I became concerned my mother was having an affair with Father
Dave, whom I had come to hate in a very short time. One day Mom had asked me to meet her at the golf course to watch her on the driving range. She wanted me to witness firsthand the joy the sport of golf had brought into her life. It was a pleasure standing by my car to watch my mother select a three wood and drive a golf ball a hundred yards with a swing that was surprisingly fluid. Also, I noticed from a distance the raw power of my mother’s physical beauty, her full-breasted figure, and the coquettish pleasure she took in just being pretty.

Then I saw a man move toward her, talking to her with great intimacy, and recognized Father Dave, who began giving her tips to correct her swing. He moved behind her and folded his arms around her. Through five practice swings, Father Dave kept his arms around my mother. I could have been watching a golfer taking the time to correct the imperfections of an amateur’s swing, but there was a carnality and intimacy in the embrace that disturbed me in the extreme. I drove back home conflicted about how I was supposed to react to such a scene, which could be explained away in a dozen innocent scenarios. Returning to my parents’ house, I was met by my sister Carol Ann, who asked me if I’d been out to the golf course. I told her Mom had given me bad directions and I couldn’t find it.

“She golfs with Father Dave almost every day,” Carol Ann said in a conspiratorial voice. “There is something sicko-sexual in their relationship. Mom’s always been weird about these misfit priests.”

“I think she feels safe with them,” I said.

A few years later, after my father’s departure for Vietnam in 1970, the creepy and reptilian Father Dave arrived at my mother’s house in Beaufort for a two-week stay. His presence alarmed my brothers and sisters so much that the house was seething with anxiety every time I came over for a visit. My mother had sent my sister Kathy out of her downstairs bedroom and up to the guest room on the top floor. Father Dave took possession of Kathy’s bedroom, which had a door connected to my mother’s room. My mother kept that door locked when Kathy was staying in the room, but Carol Ann found it unlocked the day of the priest’s arrival.

Every morning, they would golf on the course on Parris Island and often go out for drinks and dinner at the air station officers’ club. Mom
would dress as though she were going to a party after the Oscars, and Father Dave would wear his dapper navy uniform. It was the first time I noticed that my mother had simply stopped raising her children, and already, I thought, she had caused irreparable harm to my youngest brothers, Tim and Tom.

I confronted Mom about her children’s unanimous disapproval of the presence of Father Dave. It was one of the most disagreeable conversations we ever had. Though I knew she would be defensive, I didn’t have the slightest notion that I would be caught out in the open field trying to bell a tigress.

“Father Dave, Mom?” I said to her as she was gardening in the late afternoon.

“What about him?” Mom said, her hackles aroused.

“The kids don’t like him.”

“Which ones?”

“All seven of us.”

“What don’t you like?”

“We think he’s an asshole,” I said. “And the whole thing feels odd. Him living in your home.”

“Are you brats accusing me of having an affair with a Catholic priest, a man as good and holy as Father Dave?” she asked, her voice biting.

“That’s a pretty good summarization of how we feel,” I said, growing more uncomfortable in my role of her inquisitor.

“I’ll not dignify that with an answer. So all of my children have turned on me?
Et tu, Brute?
” Her eyes flashed with rage and mortification. Mom adored peppering her speech with literary allusions that long before had become clichés.

“Yeah, ol’ Brute feels pretty strong about this one.”

“It’s none of your goddamn business!” she shouted.

“That’s true, Mom. So why don’t you just deny it and I’ll get the word back to the kids.”

“That my own children would turn on me. I rue the day I brought any of you bastards into the world.”

“You can rue the day all you want. But you got seven kids who love you, Mom, and every one of us is worried as hell about you.”

“Get the hell out of my yard,” she said. “You’re on private property.”

I laughed and said, “Ditch the creep, Mom. Good advice from a son who adores you.”

I bided my time and finally caught Father Dave off guard when I found him reading
Golf
magazine on the back porch of my mother’s house. He looked up, nodded to me, then went back to reading his magazine—we had noticed before that he never spoke to the Conroy kids, so his silence was rude, but not unexpected. Finally, he put the magazine down and said in an aggravated tone, “Do you want something from me?”

“Hey, priest,” I said, “are you fucking my mom?”

“No, of course not,” he said, outraged.

“My brothers and sisters think you are.”

“They’re wrong, and you’re a horse’s ass to even ask the question,” said the bristling Father Dave.

“I ever find out they’re right, then you’ll have a very bad day.”

“I’m a priest. The church will excommunicate you if you lay a hand on a priest.”

“Be still, my heart,” I said.

“Your mother and I are very good friends. I’m her spiritual counselor.” His voice was chilling.

“The spirit’s fine. The body ain’t,” I said, walking out of the house.

After the priest described this inelegant encounter to my mother, she entered my house suffused with an ungoverned fury. Her rage spread in crimson blotches across her face in a way I had once seen, when she stabbed my father.

“How dare you insult a guest in my house,” she spit.

“We had a discussion,” I said.

“He said you threatened to beat him up.”

“I implied it, with great delicacy.”

“We’re not sleeping together,” she said, and then, in her frustration, burst into tears. I was rendered helpless when my mother’s tears entered the playing field.

“Fine, Mom. I’ll tell the kids,” I said.

“None of you believe me.”

“I’ll tell them anyway,” I said.

The off-duty priest began to bedevil our lives as he moved through
the rooms of my mother’s house with a slither rather than a pace. The whole house felt unholy, haunted by some unclean spirit who answered only to the archfiend. Though he was a handsome man, his demeanor appeared scorched by an unclean spirit rather than an angel of light. The house on East Street, which had seemed like a hermitage of great serenity when my family first moved there, suddenly seemed in dire need of an exorcism.

At night, Father Dave and Mom dressed up with great style and went out to one of the base clubs to dinner. They would come in after midnight and often even later. The reason I knew this was because the family spymaster, Carol Ann, was in residence that summer. From the time she was a little girl, Carol Ann displayed a prodigious talent for espionage. When I was seven and Carol Ann five, she showed me the hiding place for all our Christmas presents and said that belief in Santa Claus was bull. I cried in the attic because I still believed in Santa Claus. Mom and Dad’s bedroom was an area of supreme interest to Carol Ann, and she would make periodic sweeps through their room, searching out incriminating evidence that our parents were having sex.

In her clandestine surveillance of every nook of our mother’s house in Beaufort, my sister finally hit pay dirt. With her spy-in-training sister, Kathy, Carol Ann had discovered something so shocking and disgusting that it would transform the history of our family. Even though Carol Ann had always been a drama queen of prodigious skills, she sounded more a harlequin and fool with this announcement than she did a leading lady. Her joy was at her discovery of some undisclosable documents she had found while reconnoitering my mother’s dressing table. She phoned me, with Kathy, usually scrupulous in her anonymity, backing her sister up this time.

“It is irrefutable proof of our mother’s perfidy,” Carol Ann said. “You must come over here quickly, Pat; I’ve called a family council to confront Mom.”

“Hold your horses,” I cautioned. “Remember Tim and Tom are still little boys.”

“They’re old enough to learn about perfidy,” she said.

When I arrived at the East Street house, the tension was almost unbearable. Mom sat in her chair looking murderous as Carol Ann
and Kathy formed a witch’s tribunal, with the Conroy kids as the only witnesses. Carol Ann stood up to assume her role as lead prosecutor as I sat on the couch with Tim and Tom. Carol Ann began her inquiry with her remarkable gift for subtlety. “I have conclusive proof that you are having a sordid affair with Father Dave. Do you admit it, Mother?”

I put my hands over my face and groaned and heard my mother spit the words, “I most certainly do not.”

“Kathy and I were conducting surreptitious operations in your bedroom. We discovered a secret compartment in your jewelry box that we’d never known was there. Naturally, we inspected it.”

“You sneaky little bitches!” my mother cried.

“We discovered two plane tickets to Washington, D.C. One was in your name and one was in Father Dave’s name. You’ll be staying in a little love nest for a week before you come back to Beaufort.”

The announcement stunned me into a withdrawn silence. My jaw felt like a dentist had just anesthetized it with Novocain. My mother’s eyes had turned into hornets’ nests as she stared my sisters down with an unconcealed hatred. Then Peg Conroy took a deep breath, brought herself under perfect control, and delivered a soliloquy that—in its shocking content—would hand back her two daughters’ heads on a plate.

“I didn’t want to upset my children. Your father was horrible this summer. You kids had to put up with a lot. I certainly wanted to protect you from bad news about my health.”

“What does Father Dave have to do with your health?” Carol Ann demanded.

“I asked Father Dave up here and he came as a personal favor to me. He’s taken me several times to the Naval Hospital in Charleston and once to the Eisenhower Medical Center in Augusta. Next week we are flying to Washington so I can check into Bethesda Naval Hospital to be treated for my disease.”

“What disease?” We screamed it in one voice.

My mother paused with chilling effect, then said, “I’ve come down with the deadliest form of leukemia. I’ll probably be dead in two weeks.”

Each of us burst into tears, which streamed down our faces as we ran toward our mother, begging her forgiveness for our puritanical doubts against her. Carol Ann and Kathy were on their knees with
their arms around her legs, trying to find ways to correct their apostasy concerning her moral character. They recanted their tainted evidence, and as they did, Mom said with a steel-edged voice, “Give me my goddamn tickets back.”

So my mother traveled north to Bethesda and disappeared among the oncologists of the navy and returned a week later and never mentioned her cancer to any of her children again. A couple of months after she returned I was driving my brother Tim to school one morning when he began weeping at a stoplight.

“What’s wrong, Timmy?” I asked, hugging his neck, his sobs out of control.

When he started breathing normally again, Tim looked at me and said, “Why isn’t she dead?”

“I don’t know, but I’m sure glad she isn’t,” I told my brother.

Now, fourteen years after Peg Conroy told her kids that she would be dead in two weeks from leukemia, she had leukemia.

•   •   •

The Conroy clan had begun to gather in earnest as I was flying across the Atlantic the next evening. When I saw my mother in a coma, I burst into tears. I sat on her bed and kissed her face and hands. From my point of view she looked as though she might die in the next minute. Empurpled from bruises all over her body, she resembled the survivor of a terrible car crash. I prayed as hard as I could and even found myself whispering the confiteor in Latin from my years as an altar boy. I spent the rest of that week in a state of shock, but the week proved fruitful, because the only subject on anyone’s lips was the life and hard times of Peg Conroy.

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