The long grass stems with feathery ears like barley
sprang back together as he stood up. Nearby four girls were skipping with a long rope. George Smith and Brendan McFee were playing
marlies. Bertie Anderson was sprawled
in the grass watching Sandra Gordon bouncing three balls off the wall of the
Big Hut. It was hot and Liam could feel
drops of sweat trickling down the back of his neck. His feet felt hot and swollen. Under his left foot he could feel a fold in
the piece of cornflake packet he had put there to cover the hole in the sole of
his boot. His right boot had a black
leather lace. The left boot was laced
with a piece of string.
Liam spent most of his time in Bagnall Park
or wandering the narrow country roads that threaded the boggy fields on the
north-east side of Portnamon. He
sometimes did this with friends but was just as happy doing it on his own. He was a tall, skinny youth of fifteen. His protuberant eyes looking out from behind
round-framed National Health glasses had earned him the nickname of ‘Specky
Four Eyes’: this was until that
memorable day when he had inflated his first frog.
The trick was to insert a straw into the frog’s
backside and blow steadily into it. From
that moment he was simply called “Froggy”.
As the story spread, it became necessary for Liam to
repeat the trick again and again and prove that it could be done, just to
counter the inevitable comment “Bo***x”. There
had never been that many frogs in the park to begin with, but there were even
fewer now.
Froggy’s problem was that he had actually become quite
hooked on frog-inflating. It made him
feel special. Nobody else was keen on
doing it so it was somewhat of a badge of distinction. He spent part of every day looking for frogs
and always felt quite disappointed when he couldn’t find any.
Froggy had a gang. As a bit of a misfit, it was perhaps inevitable that his gang consisted
of other misfits who weren’t welcome in any other local gang. Froggy’s claim to leadership was based on a
simple quality – a streak of viciousness that set him apart from all the other
kids in the area. His frog-inflating was
a mere hors-d’oeuvre to the other items on the menu of his predilections.
When it came to dog-kicking, cat-swinging or
bird-stoning, hammering rats flat and bloody with a shovel in his backyard or
simply tearing the wings off butterflies, Froggy was without peer. He was a sadist, although if anyone had said
the word to him he wouldn’t have understood it.
One thing that he did know was that he didn’t like
Prods. Portnamon was a Catholic
town. About two per cent of the
population were Protestant. Froggie
couldn’t quite get his head around the notion of “two per cent” but he knew
that it wasn’t a lot. Unfortunately most
of them seemed to live in his street and in those around it. Every July, Union Jacks and other Prod
symbols were rigged up in the lower end of the street where the Prods
lived. The only house that didn’t have
an English flag sticking out of a metal tube screwed to the wall under the
bedroom window was the McCulla’s. Froggy didn’t know why that was, but a year ago on the 11th of July he had taken a
perverse pleasure in grabbing eight-year-old Jack McCulla behind the Big Hut in
the park.
Jack had struggled in vain. Froggy’s gang had held him down. Froggy had broken a dead twig from the
rhododendron bushes and speared a piece of dog-sh*t on the end of it. Sean
Kennedy had squeezed Jack’s mouth with his finger and thumb and nipped his
nostrils together with his other hand; the boy’s lips and teeth had opened like
the hole in a doughnut and Froggie had shoved the dog-shit right into the back
of his mouth. He had held it there firmly and Jack had eventually
swallowed it. When they let him go, Froggie had said,
“That’s for bein a f**kin Prod bastard ye wee Orange
shi**!” He knew that Jack’s family had nothing to do
with the Orangemen, but Jack was the smallest available Prod. As the boy ran off, Froggy shouted, “If ye
tell anybody we’ll kick yer b***s up inty the back of yer neck!”
Unluckily for Froggy on that occasion, Freddy Loughlin
had been walking up Bagnall Street
past the park as Jack McCulla reached the pavement on his way back to his granny’s
house. Freddy worked in the local broo office. As Jack reached the edge of the pavement, he
stopped suddenly, bent over with his hands clasping his knees and vomited into
the gutter. Freddy turned back and asked
him if he was alright. The boy coughed
up more vomit and in answer to Freddy’s questions told him what had
happened. The result was that a minute
later Froggy was being led up the street by the ear and a full account of his
dog-s**t attack was given to his mother. Three hours later, when his father came back from a hot day’s work at
Haughey’s bakery, Froggy was thoroughly trounced. His
father was already in a foul mood because he had two big burns on one of his
arms that he got while knocking out loaves from a baking tin. Froggy
never forgave Freddy, and quietly glowed with pleasure three months later when
Freddy was found dead in his tiny front room, the walls and ceiling splattered
with blood because he had slashed his neck with his cut-throat razor.
Froggy felt like doing something special. Failure to find a frog left him feeling
empty. He walked past the Big Hut. Sandra Gordon was talking to Big Bertie
Anderson. She appeared to be trying to
show him how to bounce balls off the wall. Some hope. Bertie was as thick as two short planks. He had as much chance of doing that as Froggy
had of joining the Junior Orangemen. And she was a Prod an’ all. They all deserved to be shot: the lot of them.
Froggy climbed the grassy bank, walked along a flat
bit and then toiled up a steep slope to the bottom of the graveyard wall. The wall was about eight feet high. It was roughly mortared and bulged outwards
halfway up. Froggy jumped against it, fixing his left boot
against a projecting stone. His hands
grabbed a clump of hanging ivy and he pulled himself up far enough to throw his
arm over the top. He hauled himself right up, twisted around and eased his
backside onto the top of the wall.
Looking down across the park at Bagnall Street, he could see the open
half-doors of the little houses. Old Olly McCrum was sitting on his window-sill
smoking his pipe. He never seemed to do
anything else. Rose and Bridget O’Connor
were cleaning their windows. They never
seemed to do anything else either. Eileen Callaghan was down on her knees with a bucket of water scrubbing
a half-moon on the footpad outside her front door. A Wordie’s delivery cart was standing outside
the Mallon’s house, the horse between the shafts standing absolutely still with
its head lowered almost to the ground. It was a hot day, but smoke rose from many of
the chimneys. Although most people had
town gas cookers, most of them preferred to cook on their open ranges. Scones
and potato bread cooked on a round cast-iron griddle on top of the grate. Guinness bottles on the hearth opened by the
easing of the corks from the bottles by the heat from the burning coals in the
range.
Froggy swung his legs up, pulled himself around and
faced the church. Father Donnelly had
told them in school that the English had built it in the fifteen hundreds. But it
wasn’t a real church. It was false. It was heretic. Froggy wasn’t
quite clear about the meaning of “heretic” but the priest had said it was bad. So as far as Froggy was concerned it was bad,
and everybody who went to it on a Sunday morning was bad as well. And the father had said that it was a
Garrison church. That meant that they had lots of English army flags hanging in
it. Those bastards had killed Irishmen
and that was bad too. And the people buried in the graveyard were
all Prods. But their souls couldn’t have
gone to heaven. They must be in
Purgatory. And there was nobody to pray
for them and get them enough grace to go into heaven because God wouldn’t
listen to Protestant prayers. They would
stay in Purgatory forever. They deserved
it because they had turned away from the true church and the Holy Father. That’s what Father Donnelly had said so it
must be right. That wee bastard McCulla deserved dog-shit down his neck. And even the clock was wrong. It was ten minutes fast. I t pleased Froggy
that the Prods couldn’t even get the time right.
Froggy launched himself down off the wall. He landed on a big flat gravestone, his hands
breaking his forward flight. In the
Catholic graveyard where he went with his mother to clean his grandfather’s
grave and put flowers in the granite pot he wouldn’t have dreamed of walking on
a grave. But this wasn’t a proper grave.
It was just a hole in the ground with a
dead Prod in it. That didn’t count. And all around the slab the ground was covered
in weeds. They couldn’t even look after
their dead. He jumped off the
gravestone, landing lightly on the gravel path. He felt a gravel chip puncture the cardboard
in his boot. He looked down at the flat
slab with the worn, carved inscription. He
saw the name “Fraser” and the date 1882. The rest was weathered and he couldn’t be
bothered trying to work out what it said. Besides, he was impatient to go to another
part of the graveyard.
Froggy walked up the path to the front of the church. Like all Prod churches, it was locked, but he
tried the door-handle anyway in case someone had left it unlocked. No luck. He turned the corner and walked towards the Henry Street side
of the cemetery. Henry Street ran along from the top of Bagnall Street to
the point where Brook Street
levelled out at the top of the hill before dropping as Dublin Street towards the river crossing
at Butler’s
Bridge. As he passed a grave with a
polished granite headstone carved to the memory of Arthur McBride, he noticed
an orange butterfly with black spots on its wings settled on a wreath of
withered flowers. He stopped. He moved slightly to the left so that his
shadow wouldn’t fall across the butterfly. Very
slowly, he advanced his cupped sweaty hands to within a foot of it. Suddenly, he separated his hands, lunged them
downwards and brought them back together, trapping the butterfly between his
palms. He could feel the faint
fluttering against his skin. He opened
his hands a little and pinched the wings between the thumb and index finger of
his left hand. The black worm-like body
jerked frantically. Froggy gripped it
between the thumb and index finger of his right hand. He pulled his hands apart. Raising
his right hand to his mouth, he slid the wings between his lips and ran his
tongue backwards and forwards against the roof of his mouth, tasting the
crushed bitterness. He swallowed dryly. He squashed the body against his palm with his
thumb, and wiped it on the leg of his trousers. He moved on.
He arrived at a fork in the path and took the branch
that led down in the direction of Brook
Street. At
the second turning on the left he stopped to get his bearings. Then he turned into the grass patch between
two headstones and stopped. In front of
him there was a grave where somebody had been buried about a month earlier. The dark yellow clay was piled up about six
inches above the level of the path. Wreaths and bunches of flowers were stacked
on top of the clay. The little sympathy
notes were curled and mostly unreadable because rain had made the writing run. Froggy picked up one of the wreaths. The flowers were withered and brown with
rotted patches that looked like wet soot.
Froggy was after wire. As expected, the rain had done its work and
the net-like wire frame into which the flower stems had been woven was well
rusted. It was easy to grasp a section
between the thumb and index finger of each hand and with a rolling motion of
the wrists twist it back and forwards until it broke. Then it was simply a case of unthreading the
length from the rest. Little flecks of
rust flew away as he pulled the wire out of the wreath. When he had removed about two feet of wire, he
rolled it loosely around the four fingers of his left hand. The roll kept its
shape and he slipped it into the left-hand pocket of his trousers. That would make about ten arrows.
Whenever the local boys played Cowboys and Indians,
Froggy insisted on being an Indian. Not
an ordinary Indian, of course. Geronimo.
Froggy had admired Geronimo ever since
he had seen a film called “Broken
Arrow” in the picture house. Geronimo had gone on attacking the whites even
after that big softie Cochice had made peace with them.
He was like the IRA who kept on fighting the English
and the Prods even though the Free
State said they shouldn’t. Froggy’s warriors were his gang, joined by
whatever number of other boys were agreed in the setting up of the game. Usually the Prods were the Cowboys and the
Catholics were the Indians. Sometimes as
many as twenty boys were involved altogether. While the Cowboys all carried cap-guns and
threw stones, the Indians had sticks and they also threw stones. Froggy had a bow and arrow. And he loved using them. He was famous for his bows. Having
stripped the thorns off a four-foot length of bucky briar, he wrapped a thick
winding of string around the middle as a hand-grip. Then he notched each end and strung it with
cord, hooking the string over one end. He
stood this on the ground and leaned on the briar to bend it. Then he
looped the string over the other notch. His arrows were made from the straight stems
of dead nettles which had dried so that they had the consistency of light wood.
A couple of inches of wreath wire
wrapped tightly around the end provided the weight to keep the arrow from
tumbling over and over as it whizzed through the air. It also stood a good chance of inflicting a
satisfying cut on anybody unlucky enough to be hit by it. Froggy had cut a few boys like this, but
nobody had made much of a fuss about it. He himself had a big bump on one side of his
forehead where he’d been hit by a stone and something had happened to the bone
and there was a hard lump under the scar.
Froggy dropped the wreath back onto the grave. It landed upside-down but he did not bother to
touch it again. Instead, he looked
around quickly to make sure that nobody was watching. The church clock struck once for half-past
two. As a small cloud of midges circled
his head Froggy took a long satisfying pee, jetting it over the dead flowers on
the grave. When he had finished, he
shook himself and then tucked himself back into his trousers and buttoned up. He cleared his throat and spat onto the
headstone. It slowly trickled down
across the carved inscription. A big
bumble bee droned past his head. He
turned away from the grave muttering “Fu**in Prod”.
As he walked back up the path, he could feel a damp
patch in his underpants.
He felt good.