Authors: Aubrey Flegg
âGod love you, child. Just some old memories. Haven't you cured me of all that?'
She turned away and looked up the road. Two black dogs were trotting purposefully towards them. A shiver went down her spine though she had never been afraid of dogs.
âThere's two fellows up to no good,' said Father. At the sound of his voice the dogs stopped, stared, and then turned away over the bank and vanished out of sight into the fields beyond. What had they heard? Katie wondered foolishly, peering in the direction they had gone.
To begin with, the attacks of madness or whatever it was were frequent, and always came when they were alone and far from home. Katie started having nightmares then, and the black dogs came into her dreams trying to hear what Father said. Her nightmares were not just about the horrors of war; there were dreams too in which men in white coats came to take her father away. Terrified that she would lose him, Katie told no-one, not even her mother. Was Father a madman? No one must know â ever! Gradually Father's attacks became less and less frequent; he even lost the habit of throwing back his head to ease the tightening muscles in his neck. There seemed to be no point in telling Mother then â he was better, and it was Katie who had cured him.
* * *
From her bed Katie listened to the whistling below in the yard and smiled. What on earth had got her dreaming of the black dogs again? Happily, that time was long over now. It was time to think of herself and of the summer ahead.
âK
atie, are you going to lie in bed all day?' Mother called from the yard, banging lustily on the basin of hen-feed as she called, â
Chook
, chook, chook, chook.'
Katie pulled up her knees, then shot her legs down again so that the sheet billowed out over the end of the bed. She swung her feet on to the rush mat beside her bed and cocked her head. She could hear the hens pecking on the corrugated iron sheet in the open cart-shed opposite; it sounded like rain on a tin roof. She got up, knelt on the window ledge and leant out. The top of her mother's head was just disappearing back into the house below. Late-comers among the hens were hurrying towards the shed, their necks stretched out. Marty was standing by the byre door. He looked up, saw Katie, and began an exaggerated yawning and rubbing-eyes routine. His bare feet were covered with muck.
âWash your feet,' she called. He kicked one foot up and wiggled his toes at her. Then he pretended to try to lift the other leg, using both hands, and nearly fell over. Despite herself, Katie laughed and ducked back into the room. Against the wall
by the door was a wash-stand. On it was a china basin with red painted roses, and a tall china jug that nearly matched. The soap dish was a saucer which she'd chosen because it also had roses on it. She leaned forward to look in the mirror. A broad freckled face, two blue eyes and an unruly mass of red hair looked back at her. The face was still smiling from Marty's antics, so she stuck her tongue out at it, then she dipped a hand into the water jug and gave two token dabs at her face, one on each cheek, and reached for the towel. She was just burying her face in it when she stopped. The visitors! She'd forgotten about the visitors. She wasn't sure whether her heart sank or not. It was a Welsh man, a friend of her father's from the war, coming to advise him about reopening their slate quarry. He was bringing his son â for the experience apparently. She wondered what he'd be like. She was fifteen; perhaps he'd be Seamus's age and working now?
To begin with she had been angry at the thought of having visitors at the beginning of the holidays. But now, rather to her surprise, she realised she was looking forward to the visit. She poured water from the jug into the basin. She imagined the boy in her mind. She'd never felt any real need for boys and most of the nicer ones had left school at fourteen. Anyway, she'd had Father to look after â perhaps the boys had kept away because he was always there. She wasn't going to start
bothering
about them now. Laughing at herself, she scooped water over her face and neck and washed thoroughly before taking her best frock from behind the curtain which closed off the press in the corner. She had a pleasant feeling of anticipation. Father had promised to take her with him when he went to collect the visitors in the horse and trap; a trip into Nenagh was special. She battled briefly with her hair until she could catch it at the back with a ribbon, then she poured the water from the
basin into the enamel bucket under the wash-stand and ran downstairs.
âOh Katie,' said her mother, seeing her dressed up, âI should have said â the train will be late. The postman looked in to say there has been some trouble in Dublin. The train will not be in till twelve or later.' Katie hesitated, wondering if she should go back up and change. Then she noticed that her mother had stopped working the bread dough that was caking on her hands.
âWhat's the matter? What sort of trouble? You look worried, Mother.'
âI am worried â¦' she hesitated, âI think there may be fighting.'
âHow can there be? Isn't the war against England over? We have Home Rule now, haven't we?'
âWe have and we haven't, child. The sad fact of the matter is that we can't trust the English. For as long as we have to swear allegiance to their king they have us like a pig on a string, and that's how they think of us too. Any excuse and they'll take back what they've given, and they have the forces to do it too. We want them out of Ireland â all of Ireland â once and for all. I can see that treaty splitting us apart like a badly snagged turnip.'
âWell, it won't split our family, Mother,' said Katie, leaning forward, avoiding the doughy hands and kissing Mother on the cheek. âI won't let it.'
âI hope you're right, chick. I hope you're right.' Mother placed the moist dough into a floured baking tin and slid it into the range. âWell then. Your porridge is inside the pigs by now. Will you have an egg?'
* * *
Katie loved a ride in the trap. Since she was tiny she had liked the bounce of the springs and the feeling of being locked in once
the little door at the back of the trap was closed. She used to think that she had only to say the right word and Barney, farm horse that he was, would spread wings and together they would fly out over the patchwork of fields of her beloved Tipperary. They would swoop down then and gallop so low over Lough Derg that his hooves would catch the blue wave-tops and the wheels would spin in the foam. Then they would rise up and fly over the little harbour of Garrykennedy and look down on the castle and the up-turned faces of the people unloading the turf that had come all the way from Galway in barges blown on brown sails. This morning Barney seemed to catch her
enthusiasm
and, for a while at any rate, they clipped along at a fine rate between the hedges, making for the main road.
Father had made a loop in the left rein for his hook, but the horse needed little guidance. They could see the line of the main road before they got to it from the white dust clinging to the hedges. The loose chippings had been recently rolled and the pot-holes filled in, so it felt almost as smooth as if driving on tar when they turned on to it. There was little traffic on the road, just a few carts, but Father kept a look out for the
steam-roller
. Father often said that Barney was too flighty for a farm horse and certainly, if Barney had a mortal dread in the world it was of this hissing, clanking, smoking monster. If they came upon it by surprise they might find themselves back home or even in the county Clare before they could stop him! They met no monsters, and Father let Barney walk as they came into Nenagh.
They clopped down Kenyon Street and turned into the station yard. They could see the line, and there was no sign of a train. Father went to ask about it, leaving Katie in the trap holding the reins. She looked about with interest at all the activity. A squad of soldiers marched in, halted and were then
dismissed. Some lit cigarettes while others looked for shade. An army lorry backed towards her. Perhaps they were expecting supplies on the train. Barney shifted uneasily and Katie wished she was holding his head instead of sitting in the trap, but that would mean dropping the reins while she got out. One of the soldiers in the station doorway hitched his rifle up on his shoulder and walked over. He talked quietly to Barney and stretched up to scratch the horse on the nose. Then his hand slipped down till he was holding the bridle. The lorry backed past.
âSteady, boy,' the soldier said, and looked up at Katie.
âHe's quiet,' she said.
âI know that old lorry, it can backfire like a field-gun,' he said, smiling.
Katie looked down into a brown, sunburned face. It was screwed up against the light. She wanted to say something but her wits seemed to have deserted her.
âHe's tired as well,' she managed finally.
âCome far?'
âPortroe way.'
âThat's over towards the Shannon, isn't it?' He couldn't be much older than Seamus, and not a local either. Galway perhaps, from his accent.
âYes.' She pulled her thoughts back. âUp at the slate quarries.' Why couldn't she think of anything better to talk about than old slates?
âYour father in the quarries?' he asked, tipping his head towards the station where Father had disappeared.
âHe was till they closed for the war; one of the small quarries.'
âWill they open again?'
âThat's what he's trying to do now.'
One of the soldiers over by the station shouted something
and followed it with a guffaw of laughter. The soldier frowned and their conversation faltered. He hitched his rifle up on his shoulder. The sun shone on the oiled wood. Katie found herself staring, fascinated. This was a gun, a real gun, like her father talked about; she'd never been close to one before. It was
beautiful
but yet terrible at the same time. Was it really made for killing people? It seemed extraordinary that this shiny piece of wood and oiled metal carried death, and for whom?
âIs it heavy?' she asked.
âOh, you get used to it,' said the soldier, following her eyes. âWe're not supposed to put them down in case they get stolen. It seems there's fighting in Dublin.'
âWho could be fighting now?' Katie asked.
âSoldiers like me fighting soldiers like me.'
âIrish soldiers fighting Irish soldiers? That sounds silly.'
âYes it is. I thought the treaty Mr Collins brought back was good enough, something to build on; it gave us the Free State, and isn't it freedom we were looking for? But no, the
Republicans
want nothing less than a Republic â no king. They're ready to fight us for it too.'
âYou?'
âYes, us â the army. So we call them Rebels, and they call us Staters, while the English split their sides laughing. So, there you are,' he said with a grin.
Katie thought of what Mother had said that morning. She didn't know what to say. Was she a Rebel or a Stater? She wanted him to go on talking but a gap was yawning in their conversation. Why had her mouth gone dry? On the butt of the rifle was a triangular patch of lighter wood set into the darker stock.
âWhat's the yellow triangle for?' she asked, nodding towards it.
âSomebody got a bullet or a bit of shrapnel in it, I reckon,' he said.
âWas he ⦠hurt?' she said, unhappy at having raised the subject. She had nearly said âkilled'.
âNot by me, at any rate,' the boy laughed. âI suspect he got the fright of his life though. Maybe it saved him,' he added with a smile, as if to reassure her.
Katie warmed to him. It was nice to have someone
reassuring
her. She liked him; the day was turning out well. At that moment a bell rang in the station and the signal changed with a clunk.
âThat'll be the train,' said the soldier, and Father appeared from the door leading to the platform, walking rapidly.
âJust coming in now,' he said. âWe'd better watch Barney, he might think it's a steam-roller.'
âYou go on, Sir, the Miss too, I'll hold him. He'll be all right.'
Father noticed the soldier for the first time. âWell, thank you very much, young man. Come on, Katie.'
The boy reached up and pulled the horse's head down on to his shoulder and fondled its ears. He smiled at Katie as she passed.
They could see the train approaching down the line as they walked on to the platform. A thin jet of steam shot up once, then twice, and two shrill whistles came down the line.
Everyone stepped back as the engine hissed by. Katie was reminded of the day she had come to fetch her father, but the vapour did not linger as it had on that cold December day. Doors swung open as the train slowed. Her father stood on tiptoe searching over the sudden bustle on the platform. Katie could sense that he was excited.
âThere he is â that's Griffith, with the cap â Mr Parry to you â and that must be Dafydd.' He started thrusting his way
through the crowd. Katie struggled after him. She could see the man Father had pointed to looking about him, but no sign of his son. A pale gawky lad was helping a lady, his mother perhaps, with a case that looked too heavy for him.
âGriffith!' Father was pumping the man by the hand.
âSergeant O'Brien, it's good to see you again.'
âCall me Eamonn, or I'll start calling you Captain.'
âThere's a threat for you!' and both men laughed, still
gripping
hands, reluctant to let go.
âNow, where's that son of mine?' asked Mr Parry, looking around.
K
atie stood frozen, eyes riveted on the boy who was now grinning amiably up at the two men. It was the sickly lad she had seen. He too wore a cap. His head was small, his ears large; he had a short body with long arms and legs. He seemed to alternate between big and small all the way down, ending in half-mast trousers and a pair of huge hobnailed boots. Katie found herself staring at him in disbelief. Where was the
handsome
Welsh boy she'd imagined waiting to sweep her off her feet? This boy looked pale and frail with black smudges under his eyes. Only that Father had told her on the way to the station that he was fifteen, she'd have said he was Marty's age, no more. She thought of the picture she had built up of him that morning and felt foolish and resentful all in one. Then she realised they
were all looking at her. She tore her eyes away from where they had lodged, on his boots. She could feel a blush rising. It started at her neck and burst on to her face like a flame. The boy seemed to notice. He blinked, as if to adjust to a bright light.
âPleased to meet you,' he said in a funny sing-song voice, putting out his hand. Then he changed his mind and took off his cap instead. The men laughed. Mr Parry shook her hand and called her beautiful. Father scooped up a sack of tools of theirs, which was lying on the platform, with his hook.
âYour luggage is in the guard's van?' he asked. âDon't worry about it now, the carter will bring it up this evening as long as it's labelled.' The crowd on the platform was thinning. The soldiers were beginning to file on to the platform. âWe'd better relieve that young man of yours, Katie.'
They found the soldier walking back from the other side of the yard with the trap. Thoughtfully, he had taken Barney away from the line as the train came in.
âYou don't like trains, do you, old lad?' the soldier said, patting the horse's neck. âI'll hold him till you're in, Sir.'
âKatie, you and Dafydd move up to the front, we'll sit in the back and keep the weight off the shafts. Barney will be quiet now, you'll be able to hold him.'
Katie gathered up the reins, feeling a sudden rush of longing. She wanted to stay in Nenagh talking to the handsome soldier with the smiling face and teasing eyes. She knew that he was looking up at her from Barney's head now but she felt too shy to look down. Perhaps he would see what she was feeling. Then she realised she was staring at the boots of the Welsh lad opposite and the two white sticks of his legs emerging from his trousers. She mustn't blush again. She turned to look down at the soldier. He had his head slightly to one side, an eyebrow raised, smiling.
âThat's better,' he said quietly, and he might have been saying it to Barney or to her. Then he turned the trap towards the gate and stood back.
âThank you,' called Father as they passed. âHand in that rifle of yours and we'll teach you how to make slates!'
âSoon now,' replied the lad. Then to Katie, âNo reckless driving!'
There were people and carts and a couple of motor cars in the station yard and Katie had to concentrate. But she managed one glance back as she left the yard. He was still there. He raised a hand. Katie wanted to wave back but her hands were full. Then they were in the street being carried along by the flow of traffic.
As they left the town behind them she kept thinking of all the bright, clever things she could have said to the soldier instead of being tongue-tied like a schoolgirl. Then she realised she didn't even know his name! She'd never see him again. How had the beautiful day, which had promised so much, gone wrong? Suddenly she was in a foul temper.
With the two men in the back, the front of the trap was raised like the prow of a ship, and Barney had no weight on him at all. Katie wanted to stand up, like the English queen she had seen in a magazine, driving her chariot to war. Out of the corner of her eye she could see the little Welsh boy. Oh Mother of God! â a summer with those boots! They were clear of the town now. She slapped Barney with the reins, half stood up, collided with the boy's knees and sat down with a jolt. Barney broke into a canter.
âSteady now, Katie,' said her father. She gripped the reins tightly. In the picture, the queen's chariot had had scythes on the wheels. She drove as close as she could to the edge of the road, imagining mowing the dandelions down as if they were her enemies.
By the time the road crossed the Newtown bridge and Barney slowed for the rise through the village, the heat of her anger had passed. She thought she ought to try to be civil. Keeping her eyes away from his boots, she glanced across at the boy. âTell me about your quarry. Do you work in it?'
âNo, no â still at school I am. Just in the holidays. Odd jobs, like,' again that lilting accent.
The men had stopped talking. âHe splits a very nice slate, does Dafydd,' the boy's father stated.
Dafydd blushed. âFather's the foreman â see â next to the manager. Met your Dad in the war. Always talking about working with the Irish in the war he is. You see, nobody thought much of the Welsh miners, digging under the German trenches to blow them up. Treated the Welsh like dirt. But the Irish didn't, they were all right. The English didn't like the Irish any more than the Welsh, see. “Two dogs with a bad name,” Dad says.'
âBut the Irish were fighting
with
England,' said Katie indignantly. âDad was a volunteer, “Fighting for the freedom of small nations”. Little countries like Belgium!'
âPerhaps it's just because we're both different from the English. Different languages too.'
âWhy? What do you speak at home?' asked Katie, surprised.
âWelsh, nothing but Welsh, except in school and with the quarry manager. I like speaking English though.'
âOur teachers are off to school themselves next week to learn Irish. In a few years we'll all be speaking Irish too.'
âI never spoke a word of English before I was six,' said Dafydd. âThat's why Dad wanted me to come. Brush it up, that and â¦' He looked up the hill then as something caught his attention and called, âHey, Dad, look at the slate tips. Doesn't that make you feel at home?' pointing to the tips of
waste slate now just visible from the road.
âAsk him in Welsh,' Katie challenged.
âMore than my life's worth.'
They clopped on steadily for a while. Katie was listening to the talk of the men in the back. The news from Dublin sounded serious.
âSo you had an exciting time in Dublin?' Katie asked.
âWe had no idea there was a war on.'
âI'm sure there isn't really, it's just we all get so excited about politics. Seamus, that's my big brother, and Mother, they are the Republicans in the family. Father is for the Treaty â says we'll never get a better deal out of the English. Nobody wants to fight over it though.'
âWell, they were fighting in Dublin. Never heard such bangs â it was like when we're blasting in the quarry.'
âOh I'm sure it's nothing. If it is, half the families in Ireland will be split down the middle.' She laughed uneasily, thinking of Mother.
âHey, Dad,' Dafydd called out. âTell them about the station master.'
Mr Parry laughed, shook his head, and said, âGo on, you tell them.'
Dafydd turned to Katie, who had been watching, with interest, the sun shining pink through his ears. âWe heard the shooting first when the train from Kingstown crossed the bridge over the river ⦠what was the river, Dad?'
âThe Liffey,' said Mr Parry.
âThat's it. The railway bridge is high up in the air. We thought the driver stopped because he wanted to see what was happening. Well, I tell you, at the first bang Dad sat up like a hare. You could see his ears twitching.' Dafydd grinned. â“Field gun,” Dad says, then there were snapping sounds.
“Rifles, several rifles ⦠listen ⦠and ⦠there! a machine-gun,” ratta-tat-tat. I was standing at the window, all excited, when a puff of smoke appeared up the river and we heard this big bang. Dad got all heroic then, pulled me back, and sat on me.'
âDon't exaggerate,' laughed Mr Parry, âyou can keep the drama for when you write your journal for Megan â and remember, it
has
to be in English!' Then he turned to Father again. âMegan's his twin sister,' he explained. âIt did seem though, Eamonn,' he went on, âthat I had jumped out of the fat into the fire. I never thought I'd hear a field-gun fired in anger again.'
âWell, you pinned me back in my seat,' continued Dafydd, undaunted. âThere was a pudgy little man in the carriage too, pressed into the corner, eyes popping, holding his briefcase in front of him for protection. When the train started again we went in a big loop. Past a lot of houses â poor looking â then through a tunnel. I thought that would be the end of it, the shooting I mean, but no, we were shunted backwards into Kingsbridge station which seemed to be right in the thick of it.
âThe bangs seemed really close and I wanted to go and have a look, but Dad said that he hadn't survived the war to be shot on his holidays in Dublin. Everyone else was having a peek though, like it was a firework display, not a war. Then along came the station master, very pompous and important he was, like a general conducting a war. He said he was going out to “inspect what was going on”. Dad said not to be a fool, but off he marched, straightening his hat. Silence. Then we heard a couple of shots followed by pounding feet, and into the station came the station master, bent double with his hat held over his backside. Talk about indignant! Someone had shot at him!' Katie had to laugh and noticed that Mr Parry joined in.
Katie was not sure what made her turn at that moment. The
absence of Father's ready laugh perhaps, or was it that
persistent
tap-tapping she had been hearing for some time. When she did she gasped. To her horror Father was staring past her, eyes unfocused, a little foam flecking the corner of his mouth, his steel hook going tap-tap, tap-tap on wood of the trap.
Memories
of Father's madness swept over Katie. She glanced at Mr Parry. He was looking at Father too. Dafydd's voice was
prattling
on. Barney drifted towards the middle of the road while she was turned. She heard the growl of the approaching lorry too late to do anything about it.
âLook out!' Dafydd yelled as the lorry came around the corner with a snarl and a great gush of black smoke.
Barney side-stepped alarmingly as the lorry nearly grazed the trap. Katie braced her feet, leaning all her weight on the reins to turn his head from the ditch. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw a line of green uniforms and intent faces, the light flashing from the goggles they wore against the dust. Rifles were standing upright between soldiers' knees.
âCrossley Tender,' she shouted to Dafydd as the dust swirled about them. âSee how the soldiers sit back-to-back. Can shoot in any direction.' Barney was still dancing and short-stepping.
âWell done, girl,' Mr Parry said.
Katie's mind went racing back, remembering another day and another road, when the uniforms were not green but were the hateful black and khaki of the Black and Tans â the scum of the British Army and the scrapings of their prisons, Father had called them. It was the last summer of their walks together. There had been room on the road for the English Tender to pass them but the driver had deliberately forced them both into the ditch. The jeering faces of the men looking down were still fixed in her mind, their dust-goggles the glazed eyes of
monsters. As they passed they had levelled their rifles at them.
âGet down, Katie,' Father had shouted, pushing her into the ditch and lying on top of her. No shot came; perhaps they were short of ammunition. But she was covered in nettle stings. Later that day, they had climbed together to a place called the Graves of the Leinstermen and sat looking out over the lake. In the scent of summer gorse, while the sun dipped towards the hills of Clare, beyond the Shannon, Father had told her how his regiment had got in the Welsh miners to explode a mine under the Germans and how something had gone wrong â and he had lost his hand. It was then that he had dropped his head and whispered, âI ran, Katie, God how I ran.'
Which way had he run? Could shame cause madness? Was Father mad? He had never used her name before, not in one of his fits, and to this day she could not tell whether or not he knew that he had told her of these terrible things. She had locked her thoughts up deep inside her and told no-one.
* * *
Katie was relieved when home came in sight. Their house always appeared smaller than it really was, set below the level of the road, the farm buildings backed up into the hill, but the walls gleamed white with a dash of blue from the washing-blue her mother ceremoniously added to the barrel of whitewash when it was ready each Easter.
âThere we are, that's home,' Katie announced.
âBeautiful,' Dafydd said. âHey, Dad, look â it's like snow. Not like our Welsh houses,' adding by way of explanation, âours are all dark stone.'
âThat's our quarry, straight ahead, past the farm. You can just see the tips and the sheds.' Katie held Barney back firmly as they dipped steeply down through the gate into the farmyard. Marty appeared from an outhouse, saw Katie
at the reins, and fled in mock terror.
âThat's Marty,' Katie explained resignedly. âHe's the farmer of the family. Don't pay any attention to him, he's always fooling around.' Then she added loudly, so the
still-apprehensive
head poking round the corner of the shed could hear, âHe's terribly afraid of horses.' Marty came out, grinning sheepishly. As if on cue, Mother appeared from the kitchen and Seamus from the harness room, where he usually went to think; he seldom mended any harness. He was tall, with dark eyebrows that formed a bar across his forehead. He had a slow smile that Katie knew would melt the heart of any girl, if only he would care to use it. He took Barney's head. Katie had loved Seamus with a passion verging on idolatry while Father was away at the war. Later, during the Black and Tan war against the English, while she had looked after Father, Seamus had fretted because he was too young to fight. He'd tell Katie how he'd love to fight for Ireland, but all they'd let him do was run messages.