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Fourteen-year-old Catherine
Murphy walked down towards Mount
Street thinking about Mr Brown. He might have said that he was all right, but
he didn’t look very well. Only the day
before, she had heard her mother telling a neighbour that he looked very
failed. Most of the young people in the
street thought that he was a bit peculiar. He was always dressed in black and sometimes
rode a really ancient bike, but her mother always said that he was a gentleman.
He had lost his
wife years ago, her mother had once told her, and he had never been the same
since. He was very quiet and he never
seemed to get drunk like most of the other men in the street. And although he was a Protestant, he wasn’t an
Orangeman, which was unusual. People
even said that when he was young he had learned to speak Irish.
Catherine turned
left into Mount Street
and walked briskly towards Woolworths. She
had been saving up her pennies and could now do what she had wanted to do for a
month. She was going to buy a hula-hoop.
Most of her friends had one, and she had
been feeling like the odd one out. Even
Sister Dorothea had told them in school that for once the Americans had
invented something that was good for children, not like chewing-gum and Mars
Bars. Just as long as the girls didn’t
use them in front of boys. Catherine
hadn’t understood that bit, but she’d worry about it later. All the girls were saying that a hula-hoop was
great for the figure. Now that she had
breasts she wanted to make sure that the difference between her waist and her
chest could be seen, that everybody could see that she was really growing up. And the girls all said that it was great for
the hips too. She was worried about her
hips because her grand-mother and her mother both had huge hips and Catherine
didn’t want to turn out like that.
There was a queue
in the corner where the hula-hoops were hanging on a wooden frame with branches
like a coat stand. Months earlier, she
had felt like an idiot standing here in a big queue of boys to buy a Davy
Crockett hat for her younger brother Frank as a Christmas present. But this was different. As she left the shop carrying her hoop,
Catherine thought about what she planned to do later. She knew that in about an hour there’d be a
football match starting in Bagnall
Park and that George
Smith would probably be there with Brendan McFee. He usually was. He didn’t play very often because he wasn’t
very good and was rarely picked. So it
would be a good chance to stand near him and maybe he would talk to her. And after that who knew what could happen?
She’d been thinking about him all the time for
weeks. Every time she met him in the
street or the shop or the park she felt her heart race and her face blush. She became very conscious of her freckles and
tried her best to stick her chest out a bit so that he could see she was very
different from the time years ago when they had swung on ropes around the lamppost
opposite her house. He had once pulled
her pigtails and run off because she had shrieked that her mother would hit him
with the sweeping-brush. She smiled and
then grimaced when she thought how differently he must look at the girls in the
Protestant Grammar School where he had gone after
passing the Eleven-Plus. She’d failed
hers and was at the Catholic Secondary Modern. Now she wished she’d worked harder in case he
thought she was a bit stupid. And who
cared if he was a Prod? Sure, her own mother had been one and it
hadn’t stopped her marrying Catherine’s da. Mind you,
she didn’t think George would change his religion. His da was very nice but she knew he was a
Mason and might even be an Orangeman, though she’d never seen him marching in a
parade. And she could never become a
Protestant. Even her mother had told her
that she wouldn’t want any of her children having a mixed marriage. Ma was a convert and took chapel even more
seriously than some of her da’s family.
But never mind. Who knew what could happen if two people fell
in love? And one of them – herself – had already done
it. She just had to work on him. He was a bit shy and she wasn’t much
different. But she’d reached a point
where she had to do something. She
couldn’t wait any longer. She thought of
him last thing before she went to sleep after saying her prayers, in which she
now automatically included him. She was
sure that praying for a Protestant was probably even more important than
praying for Catholics. She was always
afraid something awful might happen to him. What if he broke his neck playing rugby? What if he got polio? She thought of him every morning when she woke
up. Was he up? Would he fall in love today with some other
girl? Would some hussy ask him out? She couldn’t even eat all her porridge any
more and her mother kept asking her if she was all right and looking at her in
a very worried way. Yesterday morning
she had mentioned Doctor O’Connell.
“Ah’m O.K. ma! There’s nothing wrong with me. Niver mind the
doctor. There’s nothin wrong. Honest.”
Catherine walked
into the house and straight up the stairs. “Ah’m back ma!”. No answer. Her mother was probably down at the market.
The back bedroom
was tiny. There was just enough room for two beds with a gap of a few inches
between them, and a small wardrobe. There was a tiny fireplace that was never
used. Not even in the winter when you
woke up to find ice on the inside of the windows. The black mantelpiece was made
of metal and there were tiles with flower designs down each side of the grate. Catherine and her sister slept in one bed,
their two brothers in the other. It
hadn’t bothered her when she was young, but now she wished she could have some
privacy. She wondered how George Smith
would react if he could see inside her cramped little home. If he could see that they used overcoats on
the beds in the winter because there was only one eiderdown and that was on her
parents’ bed. And sheets made from big
white flour-bags cut up and sewn together by her mother. How could she ever invite him back here? It must be great living in one of those big
houses in Victoria Street.
Hanging above the
mantelpiece was a picture of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Catherine looked at the red heart surrounded
by thorns with the burning fire of love behind it and felt a sudden tremor of
apprehension. Should she even be
thinking about a Protestant boy the way she was? Only last month the family had made a special
novena to the Sacred Heart - nine days of prayers. All through June the little red vigil light
had burned beneath it day and night. She
thought of the second promise to St Mary Margaret – “I shall give peace in
their families”. What peace would there
be in her family if she ended up going out with George Smith?
She lifted each
foot in turn to pull off her sandals. She
jumped onto the boys’ bed by the back window. It was a bit lower than her own and her head
wouldn’t touch the ceiling. She looped
the hula hoop over her head and lowered it to waist height. Holding it with her hands just above her hips,
she thrust her pelvis forward and started to rotate her hips. She immediately lost her balance and fell onto
her knees. She stood up again. This time
she placed her feet wider apart. She
tried again and let go of the hoop. It
caught against her right hip and she managed to move it through two full turns
before it fell round her feet. This was
going to be hard work! She left the hoop
where it was and stepped onto her own bed and then onto the floor.
She paused and
looked through the small sash window at the garden. Most of the houses in Bagnall Street had either no garden at
all or had what amounted to an extended back yard with a few feet of coarse
grass. But the Murphys had a real garden
about thirty yards long. Close to the
house was a small shed in which her father kept three pigs. The garden was
their territory and they had rooted everything up so that there was no grass
left, just hard earth and dust in the
summer and mud or frozen earth in the winter. Today the sun was splitting the trees and the
pigs were staying in the shed. Her
father sold the wee pigs and occasionally slaughtered one of the boars he had
kept and raised.
Catherine had
some horrible memories of the slaughtering, which had been happening as long as
she could remember. First her father
would get three or four of the neighbours to come and help him. The pig would be dragged out of the shed with
a noose around its neck and one around its front legs, a third around the back
legs. It would be screaming with an
ear-piercing intensity. They would drag
it on the ends of the ropes down the four steps onto the concrete surface of
the back yard. While the men struggled
to hold the pig, her father would lift up his huge killing hammer. This had a cone-shaped head with a flat end
which narrowed to a pointed spike. Lifting
the hammer high, her father would whack the pig with the flat end, then, when
it had collapsed, he’d roll the shaft, raise the hammer and bring the spike
down hard on top of its head. The bone
would splinter and the twitching body would gradually become still as the pig
died. A horrible thick slobber would
foam from its mouth. Once, she
remembered, a pig had managed to drag the men back into the garden after being
struck the second time, and had pulled them along with blood and bits of brain
spewing out of its skull.
She shivered at
the memory. It all seemed really cruel to her but nobody else seemed to think
there was anything wrong with what they were doing. From a big black iron pot on top of a gas ring
attached by a rubber pipe to a tap in the kitchen, her father would pour
boiling water over the pig and shave the bristles off with a cut-throat razor. The skin was always pink and shiny when he did
that. Then the men would haul the pig up
on a steel ring fixed in the side wall of the back yard, using the rope strung
round its back legs.
Her father would take a well-sharpened
carpenter’s knife and cut its throat, then slash it down from between the back
legs to the ribs. As the flesh opened,
its blood would pour out. Then her father
would pull all the blue and purple guts out into a wooden tub which one of the
men would have shoved underneath. Even
little Jack McCulla would have watched it all happening, standing with a big
plate to get the liver for his mother. Catherine’s
father would then take the pig’s bladder and blow it up like a balloon. When he’d tied the neck with a piece of
string, the boys who had come through the house to watch would start kicking it
around the garden like a football.
As the pig hung dripping, her father, blood
drying on his hands, would light Woodbines for all the men, give them a
shilling each, and then hose the blood down the grating outside the back door. For days the neighbours would come to the
house to buy their meat cheaper than at the butcher’s. They had helped to raise the pig by giving all
their refuse to her father, who simmered it for hours in a Burco boiler in the
yard, sending a sweet-sour stink over the walls and roof and down the street.
Catherine eased
her feet back into her sandals and went downstairs, through the front room and
into the kitchen. There was a mirror in
a dark varnished frame hanging on a hook on the back of the kitchen door. She
looked at herself carefully and decided that she was stuck with what she’d got
and couldn’t do anything to make herself more attractive. Her mother would have a fit if she found her
wearing lipstick. He’d have to make do
with what she had if he was interested in her.
She left the house, leaving the front door
open as usual, and walked across the road towards the park where the boys had
started to gather for the match. As she stepped onto the opposite pavement, she
glanced down the hill to see if there was any sign of George. A small group of people were gathered at the
McFee’s front door. She saw that one of
the window-panes was broken and there were bits of glass on the ground,
glittering in the sunshine. Joe must
have come home drunk again and started throwing things around. She thought it was a pity for the McFees and
how lucky she was that her parents had such a happy relationship. They had arguments like everybody else but
there was never any violence or swearing. Poor Brendan and Sean must be really unhappy a
lot of the time and their mother must be absolutely miserable. Suddenly the front door of the McFee’s house
was slammed in the faces of the people on the pavement and she saw them turn
away, one of the men shrugging his shoulders.
Catherine saw
George at the bottom of the hill, walking past Albert Taylor’s shop, where
little Jack McCulla and Bertie Jones were looking into the window. She stood behind one of the trees at the back
edge of the pavement and was able to watch George by tilting her head slightly
to the right. He wouldn’t be able to see
her. He stopped at the McFee’s house and rapped on the door. He pushed his
hands into his trouser pockets and waited. After a few moments he knocked again. When the door remained closed he continued up
the hill. She turned and walked into the
park, keeping the trunk of the tree between them. She had no idea what was going to happen now,
and she felt a little breathless. But
she smiled to herself. He’d be on his
own.
About a dozen
boys had arrived on the old tennis courts which were now used for football. There was no grass now, just hard earth with a
few weeds poking up here and there. One
half of the pitch was nearly a foot above the level of the other, but over the
years boys had dug away the edge between the old tennis courts and the result
was a gentle slope at the halfway point which didn’t interfere with their
playing. She had heard her mother and
Mrs Lawson talking about the days before the war when people from places like
the Ardee Road
had come here to play tennis. Some had
even come in motor cars. It was the only
part of the park that was level, where Bagnall Street flattened out before
climbing once more to meet Henry Street. The
rest of the park sloped up in a series of banks to the churchyard wall. Her mother had said that it was ridiculous
before when well-off people could come to play tennis but the boys had nowhere
except the street for playing football.
When a game was
organised it was simply a case of anyone who was interested turning up. The team captains then picked their sides. Froggy Connelly was one captain, Will McDonald
the other. This lent the games the extra
interest of Froggy’s team being Catholic (Derry City)
and the other mostly Protestant (Linfield). There was always an argument about the width
of the goalposts (piles of jerseys) which had to be paced out to everybody’s
satisfaction. There was never a referee. Arguments about play were settled by shouting
and sometimes threats and even blows. The
girls could never understand why the boys bothered. It was so different to playing hopscotch or
with ropes and balls, when everybody had a good time and did things together.
She was very
conscious that George was now standing only a few feet away. As the teams moved to the side of their
captains, it became obvious that neither Froggy nor Will was going to pick him.
When the match started he was the only
boy who had offered himself who had not been picked. Catherine felt sorry for him but was also
pleased that it gave her a chance to talk to him. She moved closer to him and when she was
standing right beside him she turned and said,
“Hello Geordie.
Is Brendan not here?”
“Hiya Catherine.
No, ah called at his house but nobody answered. And somebody has broke their winda.”
“His da, I’d
think. He’s done that before. Ah don’t know how Brendan puts up with bein’
in that house . His da’s a buck eejit”.
“Yer right. We’ve never talked about it, but he must know
that ivrybody else knows what goes on. Dunno
how he manages to be as nice as he is. His father’s a complete bastard.”
She looked
straight into his big brown eyes.
“Would ye not
like to be playin?”
“Well, ah’m not
exactly Roddy Campbell, so it’s probably just as well”.
She thought how well he spoke nowadays.
“There’s always a
real argument if anybody does somethin stupid.
Here, what did ye
think of Roddy playing for Norn Ireland
against Czechoslovakia In Sweden? He started playing here, you know. Not bad, uh? Bagnall Park to the World Cup!”
She hurriedly
changed the subject.
“D’ye remember
the time ye pulled my hair and I said my ma would whack ye with the brush?”
“God, Catherine,
that musta been eight years ago. Ye remember that?”
“Thinking about
it the other day. We used to play a lot together when we were young”.
“Aye.”
His eyes followed
the play while they talked. She folded her arms and pulled them in and up,
feeling her breasts push outwards.
“D’ye not get
bored just stannin here?”
“Well, usually me
and Brendan talk about things like the fishin if he’s not playing either.” He
was ill-at-ease.
“Ah hope he’ s OK. His door isn’t usually shut like that.”
“I was thinkin of
goin for a wee dander up Miller’s Hill to get some flowers for my ma. Ah
don’t suppose ye’d like ta come wimme?”
She was amazed
she had said that. She felt a blush
flooding her cheeks. She found that she
couldn’t look at him. There was a silence between them. An argument had already started among the
players about whether or not somebody had been tripped deliberately. Froggy Connelly was swearing and gesticulating
at Will Halliday, who suddenly yelled,
“Fenian f**kin liar”.
“Yeah, why not? This is gonna end up in a fight”.
She was taken
aback by his immediate acceptance. They walked out of the park, passing the
darkie boy who was staying at the Kellys’. They walked up Bagnall Street in silence. They passed the pump with its big curved
handle. Some of the houses weren’t
connected to the mains and the pump was their only source of water. Old Annie Mulligan was trying to fill a zinc
bucket but was having trouble with pushing the handle. Her black cat was sitting on the pavement
watching her. It followed her everywhere
just like a dog.
“D’ye want a
hand?”
George filled the
bucket with nine strokes of the handle. Because Annie couldn’t lift it, he
carried it across the road into her house. Catherine thought how good he was. They walked up to Henry Street and turned left. Five minutes later they were outside the town,
climbing a narrow road with hawthorn hedges along each side. A couple of months earlier she had come up
here to pick bluebells. The air had been heavy with the strong sweet scent of
the white hawthorn blossom and she had never felt happier. Now she was wondering if she could ever again
fell so content.
They were walking
close to each other and his arm suddenly brushed against hers. She felt excited. It had been a momentary contact, but they had
touched for the first time since they were children. On an impulse, she reached sideways and
grabbed his hand. She squeezed his
fingers, looking straight ahead. He didn’t
draw back and a few seconds later his hand tightened around hers. Neither spoke. She drew her breath in sharply and released it
in a long slow sigh.
They reached the
top of the hill and looked down along the road curving away towards
Newtownedwards. A crow was picking at a heap of cowclap which looked like a
huge dark-brown meringue in the middle of the road a few yards in front of
them. The crow suddenly flapped into the air with a raw croak and disappeared
over the hedge. Somewhere, a dog started to yap.
There was a gap
in the hedge to their left. The yellow grass on the bank was flattened and
there were cigarette butts on the road. Obviously a stopping-point for walkers,
courting couples maybe. She waited,
staring at the low hills in the distance. A heat haze wobbled up off the
road.
“D’ye wanna
siddown for a minute? It’s hot”. She nodded.
“OK”.
Her throat was dry and she thought she must
have sounded like the crow. He let go of her hand and they climbed onto the
bank.
They sat for a minute
without speaking.
“Gotta hula-hoop
theday. In Wullworth’s”.
“Yes? That’ll
shape you up. You’ll have all the boys after ye”.
She looked at
him. Did the idea make him feel jealous?
She gnawed her lower lip. When he was
younger he’d have said,“Aye”, not “Yes”. She realised that the way he spoke was now
different to hers. Not all the time, but
often. He was getting posher.
“You must have
somebody at the grammar school you fancy?”
“Me?” He laughed.
“No chance. There’s a lotta them are paying fees to be there. They look down on people like me on
scholarships. Their fathers are bank
managers, solicitors, things like that. Golf players. Some of the ones in my class have even been on
exchange holidays on the continent. Their
mothers are in the bridge club and they’ve all got vacuum cleaners, fridges, that
sort of stuff. They wouldn’t look at me.
They’re more interested in their own
kind. But when I end up at university
I’ll be as good as any of them”.
She was surprised
at the sudden intensity in his voice.
“I prefer people
I belong with. Like you”.
Suddenly he
turned his body towards her and put his left arm around her shoulders. She was so surprised she didn’t move. He
brought his face forward and pressed his lips against hers. He sat back
immediately, blushing. Her heart
pounded.
“Sorry”. He looked sorry too.
“It’s all right.
I liked it.”
He did it again, for longer. He brought his right hand round behind the
back of her head and pressed her face to his. They rubbed their lips together and
their breath came in bursts through their noses. Her whole body stiffened as he
changed hands. His left pressed the back of her head and she felt his right
cupping her left breast. She breathed
even faster and his hand dropped and came up again under her blouse. She felt
his fingers trying to slide under the bottom of her brassiere. She squirmed and trapped his hand under her
arm and pulled back.
“Catherine!
Catherine!”
It was her
da’s voice.
The two of them
scrambled down off the bank into the road. Her father was striding from the top of the
hill, red-faced and angry-looking. He was wearing the lumberjack shirt her
uncle Frank had brought him from Canada at Easter. As she brushed
strands of dead grass from the back of her skirt she trembled. What was he doing here? Somebody must have seen them and told him. What on earth was going to happen now?
“Go home,
Catherine! Go home! You’ve no business bein here! And neither have you”,
pointing at Geordie, who was standing staring down at his feet.
“We weren’t doin
anything, daddy. We were just talkin. Honest.
Sure ye know Geordie”.
Her father looked
at her hard.
“Aye, ah knowim.”
He paused and
sighed loudly.
“Look Geordie,
it’ nothin against you or yer family. God
knows yer ma an da are good people. An
by all accounts you’re a nice lad. Ah’ve
niver heard a word said against ye. But
this kinda thing isn’t on. Ye know as well as I do that east is east an west is
west. Stick with yer own side, ‘cos Catherine’s goin to. Her ma an me are gonna seeta that. God knows we know all about it. It’s taken years for people to drop all the sh*te
about turncoats and traitors and we’re not gonna let any of our ones put
themselves through all that too.”
Geordie looked
straight into Mr Murphy’s eyes.
“That’s OK, Mr
Murphy. Catherine’s right, but. We were just havin a wee craic. She’s gonna pick some flowers for Mrs Murphy. But I’ll get on down to the park. Ah’ll see ye, Catherine.”
He started up the
road and disappeared without looking back. Catherine stood looking at her
father. She had tears in her eyes. She knew how much he loved her, and his face
was sad. She knew he was right but maybe one day things would be different
here. She reached for his hand.
“Ah’ll get the
flowers the morra after chapel.”
Hand in hand,
father and daughter walked slowly over the crest of the hill.
The sound of the
yapping dog faded away behind them.
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