He’d
wanted so much to be nice to him as well. Ever since the boy had arrived, he had looked unhappy. No-one ever tried to involve him in
anything. It must be awful living in
total silence. Jack couldn’t understand
how anybody could bear it. He’d tried
stuffing cotton wool into his ears but even then he could still hear things
like the chimes of the clock on the mantelpiece in his granny’s front
room. Westminister chimes, she’d called
them. And not being able to speak
either must make the boy’s life an utter misery. So when Jack had come across a chart showing
the hand movements for talking to deaf people, he had decided to try and learn
the alphabet. His uncle Harry had asked
him what he was doing.
“Wanna
try an’ talk to that boy stayin’ at the Kellys’”.
“Ah,
Theresa’s son!
She
certainly put the cat among the pigeons when she turned up with him!
She
didn’t bring ‘er man with ‘er.
Oul
Stephen would have lettim have ‘t with his shotgun if he’d banged on the door.
But
they all calmed down when she got married, and he came over one time when I was
home on leave.
Saw ‘m in Dunhill’s, drinkin Stephen under the table.
Nice
fella but ah couldn’t unnerstan’ a word he was sayin”.
Harry
had tried to put on an accent but his efforts just made Jack laugh.
Jack
admired his uncle. Harry had joined the
Royal Ulster Rifles when he was eighteen and had ended up in Korea in the
same year. Jack knew from what his da
had said that it had been a bad war and there were millions of Chinese soldiers
trying to kill the British and Americans. Trying to kill Harry.
His
granny had fretted all the time that Harry was away. He was home on leave once and they’d had a
big party for him. Da had caught Jack in
the scullery drinking all the little left-overs from the empty Guinness bottles
and everybody had laughed and called him a real McCabe. So Da said.
But
Jack knew that that had been in 1951 when he was only two, so he didn’t believe
it. He’d asked Harry once and he’d said
no, it was later, when he’d come back from Cyprus where he was fighting
somebody called Aeoka – something like that. Granny had been a McCabe to her own name before getting married. Everybody always said that Jack took after
her side of the family in the colour of his eyes and hair and his build.
Harry
was always laughing and pulling people’s legs. He was a great singer and he could play the spoons. When he was in the army he had learned Irish
dancing. Jack had never heard of another
Protestant who could do Irish dancing and he was proud of his uncle. Harry always told him that the big rule in
your life was to do what you wanted to do and not let anybody else do your
thinking for you.
Jack’s
da was like that too. When two Orangemen
had come to the door to get him to put Jack in the Junior Lodge, Da had told
them to bugger off. Jack had never heard
him talk like that before to anybody. Then his da had slammed the big door and said to Jack,
“Don’t
you ever join the Orangemen or the Masons or ye’ll be shown the door”.
He
had looked very angry. His da had been
in the air-f orce during the war but when he came back to Portnamon before Jack
was born he couldn’t get a job. The Catholic firms wouldn’t give him work
because he was a Prod and the Prods wouldn’t because he wasn’t in a Lodge. So his da had to join up again and Jack had
only seen him now and again when he was home on leave. He’d only come two years year ago and Jack
was still getting to know him. He had a
job in the Creamery now where he drove a lorry. He went round a lot of farms outside Portnamon collecting big churns of
milk. The Creamery had both Catholics
and Protestants working for it. But Jack
knew that most firms were like Haughey’s Bakery, where they were all RCs, and Stanton’s Mill where they
were all Protestants.
And
all the Orangemen went mad on the twelfth of July and all the Nationalists on
August the fifteenth. Jack didn’t
understand what they all made such a fuss about. Da said it was all to do with The
Border. He said they’d all fight with
their own shadows and if the border wasn’t there they’d fight about something
else. And he said that Portnamon was
falling to pieces because the Stormount government was Unionist and Portnamon
was a Catholic town and they wanted to spend all the money looking after the
Orangemen in County Antrim and posh places like Bangor
and the Malone Road
in Belfast.
Jack
walked into Taylor’s
shop. It was probably the only
Protestant shop in Portnamon that was open today, apart from the pubs. Da said that Albert would sell his mother if
somebody offered him a tenner.
“A
barra fruit an’ nut, please”.
He
handed over the florin that had felt so heavy in his pocket.
“Bad
cess te ye, young Jack. Have ye nothin
smaller than that?
Yer
da mus’ be flush. Yer takin’ half my
change”.
As
Jack left the shop he heard somebody shouting his name. His uncle Harry was crossing the road from Victoria Street,
kicking up little puffs of bonefire ashes. Despite the heat, he was wearing his old army greatcoat, and Jack knew
what that meant. Harry had been out the
Newtownedwards road after rabbits. And
unless he’d had a bad morning, there’d be at least two stuffed inside his coat.
“Where
were you this morning? Thought ye said
ye’d come out wi’ me?”
“Sorry
Harry, ah forgot. Ah was down the town
doing the messages for Ma”.
“Well
come an’ help me now. You’re the expert
skinner. An’ niver forget who taught ye
all ya know”.
As
they walked up to his granny’s house, Jack thought about the first time Harry
had taken him snaring, a year before. They’d walked out the Nextownedwards road, passed the sub-station with its
green railings and the white warning signs with red lightning flashes and the
letters EBNI, and turned right after about a quarter of a mile into the Rathmore Road. Somebody had walked some cows along the road
earlier and the discs of cow-clap were beginning to crust over in the
heat. When they were drier, stepping on
them made them burst like a pimple, sending out a squirt of yellow liquid. His uncle led the way into the drive leading
to McMillan’s big house. A light breeze
was making the ash-trees shiver. Somewhere in the distance a tractor was phut-phutting.
Harry
ducked between two of the trees and they walked into the larger of McMillan’s
two fields. Little piles of fresh,
shiny goat-pills lay here and there like blackcurrants. As Harry headed up the slope towards the
fairy ring of horse-chestnut trees, he kept glancing back at the house. McMillan and his wife were solicitors and
would be in their office in Court Hill, but they had a nanny who lived with
them and Harry didn’t want to be spotted. He relaxed as he gained the cover of the trees. The earth around the fairy ring was home to
large numbers of rabbits, and Harry set snares regularly. He often said that he was doing McMillan a
favour by reducing the number of rabbits available for raiding the big
vegetable patch immediately behind the house. Harry had told Jack that when he’d come back from Korea you couldn’t get
any rabbits because something called maxamatosis
was killing them all off and you could find them all over the place with
swollen bellies and gunge in their eyes. He said the rabbits had suffered something awful and if he found them
still alive he would break their necks with a stick to put them out of their
misery.
Harry
pulled six snares from his pockets and dropped them on the ground. He’d shown Jack how to make them. First he had used a hatchet to split a length
of wood from a Portnamon Creamery butter-box to make the peg for the snare. Opening his jack-knife, he cut a notch in one
end of the wood. He made a noose from
steel wire about two feet long and knotted it around the notch with
pliers. Then he sharpened the other end
of the peg to a point. Jack had made one
and Harry had said that it was very good.
Harry
prised a big ducky out of the ground with his jack-knife. He knelt beside the first rabbit-hole and
drove a peg into the ground using the stone as a hammer. When he’d set the six snares at various
points they went back the way they had come, with Harry saying that they would
come back later in the day to see what they’d caught. Jack was thrilled. Harry said that they were hunters. And why pay Fallon the game dealer in
Cathedral Yard two bob for a mangy rabbit when you could catch your own fresh
ones? And there was nothing like a big
bowl of rabbit stew to set a man up for a night on the drink.
While
Jack had been mulling over all this, they had walked up the street and entered
his granny’s house. In the scullery,
Harry opened his greatcoat. He had sewn
two big pockets inside it which were just like bags. From them he produced three rabbits. They had twisted mouths and dark blood around
their necks where the wire had cut into the flesh. Jack felt sorry for them, but Harry always
said that it was better for them to die like that than get maxamatosis. And
he said that it was no worse than Big Frank Murphy next door smacking pigs over
the head with a hammer or somebody poleaxing a cow.
Harry
tied the back legs of two of the rabbits with bits of string. “Hang ‘em up in
the coal-hole, Jack.” Jack pulled aside
the strip of curtain that hung in the entrance to the space under the
stairs. He noticed that there wasn’t
much coal left but the weather was hot and his uncle’s weren’t using the range. The rabbits were heavy but he managed to lift
each of them in turn and hook the string over the big cup-hooks screwed to a
wooden batten on the wall to the right.
“Bring
the hatchet.”
Harry
had filled the kettle and put it on the cooker and lit the gas under it. He took off his coat and dropped it on the
floor in the corner. He lifted his old
pipe and a tin of War Horse plug tobacco off the shelf above the cooker. He took his jack-knife out of his trouser
pocket and sat down at the table. Opening the tin, he screwed a lump of tobacco out of it, pressing the
point of the knife with his right thumb and twisting the tin. He dropped the tobacco into his left hand and
started to slice it with the knife.
“Go
on, Jack. You know what to do. You’re
the expert.”
Jack
leaned back into the coal-hole and picked up a copy of the Portnamon Telegraph
from the top of a pile of old newspapers lying beside the coal. He opened it at the middle pages and spread
it out on the table. He reached under
the paper and pulled out the third rabbit, which he placed on top of the paper,
which had an advert in a big square box which said “Dead Beasts
Collected.” He rummaged in the table
drawer for the big bread-knife and used it to saw off the rabbit’s head. He picked up the rabbit and watched as blood dropped onto the newspaper. Later he would hang it outside the back door
to drain completely. Jack picked up the
hatchet and, with two quick successive blows, chopped off the front feet. One of the feet flew past Harry’s head and
landed on the floor.
“Missed!” Harry picked it up, dropped it on the table
and stepped to the cooker to make the tea.
Jack
took a short, sharp steak-knife from the drawer and cut
the skin around the hock joints of the front legs. He sliced the skin open from the leg joints
down across the lower part of the body. He cut off the tail, leaving an opening like the hole in a
doughnut. Then he clawed the
fingers of his right hand behind the skin there and pulled hard towards the
front, gripping the centre of the body tightly with his left hand. With a slight tearing sound, the skin peeled
off like a fur glove. He made a cut in the body from between the back legs to the
lowest rib. He pulled out the red and
blue slippery guts and the lungs. There
was an immediate unpleasant smell. Harry
got up again and opened the back door to let some air in. Jack left the liver, kidneys and heart inside
the carcass. T hen he picked up the hatchet again and chopped off the back
feet.
“Good
boy, Jack. Perfect”.
Jack
loved his uncle saying that and blushed with pleasure.
“Do
ye know what oul Dr Mahon said the night you were born?”
Jack
had been told many times, but he loved to hear it repeated so he shook his
head.
“Well,
ye were only just over four pound. It’s
a wonder ye lasted the night. Anyway, Dr
Mahon was always three-quarters cut on the whiskey. He was a good doctor, but. Maybe the best in Portnamon. An’ before the free health he would niver
turn anybody away even if they had no money.
Well,
he was well on that night, and when yer ma said ‘what is it?’, he said “I’m not
sure yet. It’s either a skinned rabbit
or a boy”.
Harry
grinned at Jack and reached over to tousle the boy’s hair.
“Yer
a great wee soldier, Jack. We all
thought ye’d niver make it, but ye come from good McCabe stock. And don’t ever forget it”.
Jack
looked at Harry and sighed contentedly. He could see in his uncle his grandmother’s hair, eyes and double
chin. He saw her full, kind lips. Harry started humming and Jack heard his
grandmother crooning “The Spinning Wheel”.
He smiled. He leaned back in his
chair and Harry leaned back in his, the mangled rabbit spread out between them
on the table. Harry pulled on his pipe,
and thin wisps of smoke seeped out of his mouth and slowly curled around the
little room.