To be fair, I have to state at this juncture that this
girl was minding her own business, and I, being from Warrenpoint had never seen
her before. But Brian Dean said to me,
'Do you see that
one over there?
Call her Annie Oakley!!
But, give me a head’s start!
Wait until I get up as far as Casey's pub'.
I followed his instructions to the letter. I gave
him ample opportunity to get as far as Casey's pub. Then I innocently ambled up to this person
and greeted her in a friendly manner,
'Well! Annie
Oakley'.
I should have guessed, I suppose, from Brian’s
attitude. Still I never realized how ultra-sensitive
she was to that nickname! I can tell you now, she gave me some hiding
for my indiscretion. I quickly regretted
adhering so rigidly to Brian's instructions.
She came at me like Kali, the eight-armed Hindu
Goddess of Destruction. She never took time to draw her breath, raining down
blow after blow upon me. I never got a hammering like it before or, thank
God, since.
I recall it yet, trying to stagger away, a painful but
chastened young man, making pacts with God, [I will never do that again! Please save me
from further punishment! I will be good
from now on'] I was virtually immobilized with pain.
Brian Dean, under a misplaced sense of loyalty [I
hope] and from the comparative safety of the William St./ River St. junction, started to taunt her
again,
'Annie Oakley! Annie Oakley! Annie Oakley!'
As she could not get at him, she laid into me all over
again. She was incandescent with rage by
this juncture, the smell of blood was in her nostrils, but this time it was
like Mike Tyson in his prime coming at me.
Had it not been for that one-legged man with the
crutch, Peter Carr, interceding on my behalf, she would probably have left me a
basket case.
I wished I was back in the 'Point, where, in that
boring, but calm little oasis of tranquility, terrible calamities like these just
did not happen.
When I eventually got back to the sanctuary of my
Auntie Sue's and Grannie McCann's 'down the entry' in No.6, Chapel St. I never again
ventured beyond Minnie Grant's corner shop until it was time to return to the
'Point.
I would happily have faced the Mescalera Apaches
rather than face that Amazon! I was
thoroughly traumatized by the whole unsavory episode.
Running around with
Brian Dean was always great crack! He was a larger-than-life character, but you
had to grow up very quickly if you were to survive the 'Annie Oakleys' of this
world.
Apparently 'Annie
Oakley' now lives in Dublin
and has married quite well. I am
sincerely happy for her, but for a long time after that traumatic night in the
summer of 1958 I did not wish her so well.
As well as that, when
Brian Dean gave me any sort of advice thereafter, I thought long and hard about
it before acting rashly.
This was definitely the less painful option.