Read The Railway Station Man Online
Authors: Jennifer Johnston
Sometimes his eye shone a brilliant blue, she noticed, sometimes it faded almost as you watched to a pale, tired grey.
âThey can have it when I die. What's left of it. I think they're afraid I'll leave it to some absurd charity. Do you think I'm mad?'
âWe all have a right to live the way we want.'
âThat wasn't what I asked you.'
âI don't know the answer,' she said after a long pause. âI mean, I don't think you are a person to be afraid of in any way ⦠but, beyond that ⦠I have to admit, I'm not sure where the boundaries are between sanity and madness. I mean anywhere ⦠not just you. There is such a fine line between people who can accept the formalised madness of the world and those who can't. In Russia, after all, they put poets in lunatic asylums.'
âHere we leave them outside but don't bother to read what they have to say. There's madness for you.'
She laughed. No more tension. His eye lost its dazzle, softened in colour.
âYou like the box?'
He gestured with his hand, embraced with the gesture the brass and shining polished wood, the boxes and handles, the telephone high on the wall in its cradle, the high-standing desk with grooves for pens, the inkwell sunk in one corner and also, outside where the line had once curved away from the station, the curve slightly falling with the slope of the hill, the hedge that had been neatly dipped beyond which she could see the first signal standing at danger.
âIt's beautiful. It looks just â¦'
âJust?'
âWell, ready for use.'
He nodded and opened the door.
âIt's the boy. Damian. He likes things to be perfect.'
He jerked his head towards the door, commanding that she leave the box.
âI've wasted a lot of your time.'
âOh no.' She moved out on to the top of the steps. Leaves scurried along the platform. They descended the steps in silence. He grunted slightly each time his right foot thudded down on to the wood. They walked along the platform.
âI'm glad you said that,' he said.
Blue smoke twisted up from the chimney of the house. She could hear the sound of Damian digging at the other end of the platform, the rhythmic crunch of the spade entering the earth, the occasional clatter as he threw an unwanted stone out of his way.
âSaid what?'
âAbout my not being a person to be afraid of. I wouldn't like you to be afraid of me.'
âI must get home, back to my cigarettes.'
âYou'd better say hello to Damian before you go. Just a quick word.'
The tiny waiting room, she could see as they walked past, had a bench running round the wall and a polished table in the middle of the floor.
âA visitor, Damian,' said Roger.
Damian straightened up and stuck his spade in the earth. He wiped his right hand on the seat of his trousers and held it out towards Helen.
âHow are you doing?'
She shook his hand.
âYou're working hard.'
âThere's no let-up around here. The boss there would have had the pyramids built in half the time.' He winked.
âHe's a slave driver is he?'
âAh no,' said Roger behind her. âSweet reason is more my style.'
âJack is coming up next week and bringing a friend. Perhaps you'll come up to the house and see them. Have a drink or something?'
Damian pulled the spade out of the ground and began to dig once more.
âI'm sure he'd be pleased.'
He pressed his foot down on the spade and it sliced deep into the earth. âIf Jack wants to see me, he knows where to find me.'
âYes,' she said and turned away from him. âYes, of course. I'm sorry.' She walked quickly back along the platform, feeling a fool. Roger followed her. She walked through the hallway, past the window of the ticket office and out the door. She picked up her bicycle.
âHe was rude,' said Roger, âbut then you were pretty silly.'
âI know. Fulsome, motherish, interfering, daft. We can't all be perfect.' She got onto the bike and sat, one toe on the ground looking at him. âPeople say he's a Provo.'
âPeople say stupid things. Invent things.'
âIn a small community like this, they usually know what they're talking about.'
âHe never talks politics. I never talk politics. I have no politics in my head to talk. If he's a Provo it's his own affair.'
âThey kill people.'
âYes,' was all he said.
âInnocent people, children. Blow people's arms and legs off.' She thought for a fleeting moment of Dan. How surprised he must have been when those bullets hit him. No time for pain or anger, perhaps not even time for surprise.
âBefore the British dropped us fools on Arnhem, they bombed a lunatic asylum. They were told that was what it was. They were told there were no Germans there, but they bombed it just the same. Better sure than sorry, I suppose some top brass hat said. The woods were full of poor mad creatures ⦠just wandering, crying some of them. Lost. They were dressed in white sort of pyjama things. We all kill when we think it is expedient.'
âIs that true ⦠about the lunatic asylum?'
âOh yes, absolutely true. I only found out about it years later. I always presumed that those poor white creatures were part of my dementia. Sometimes I was conscious, then I suppose I was unconscious, but I always saw those white figures. Floating. They seemed to me to be floating.
Il Purgatorio
. You don't know how privileged you are never to have suffered.'
She blushed and kicked at the pedal of her bicycle. âHow do you know whether I've suffered or not?'
âDon't be angry with me. After all you said yourself you were not very well acquainted with pain.'
âI'm not angry ⦠It's just that so many people seem to believe that unless you have been through some sort of ⦠oh God, what word can I use ⦠hell, torment, anguish, you're not a whole person ⦠you lack a whole dimension to your life. That's a form of arrogance I can't accept.'
His face was delighted.
âYou are angry. You have such an untroubled face I thought perhaps you might never get angry. Anger is a very healthy emotion.'
She pushed off with her foot and left him standing there, idiotic grin dragging at his mouth. At the corner she turned and saw him still standing there grinning. She flapped a hand at him.
âGoodbyeee,' he called. âGoodbyeee.'
Mrs O'Sullivan was mopping round the kitchen sink when she arrived home.
âMy floor is only washed.' She looked with suspicion at Helen's feet. The veins on the backs of her hands bulged as she squeezed and bent the cloth. Helen sometimes had visions of her wringing the necks of chickens, rabbits, unwanted puppies even, her deep brown eyes quite calm as the hands moved. It wasn't that she was unkind, savage in any way, she just had all this power inside her, was unaware of her own strength.
âYou're all red. It doesn't do to get overheated.'
It was the wind as much as anything else, blowing in my face.'
âI've just made the tea. Will you have a cup?'
âLovely. Thank you.'
âThere's nothing like a cup of tea when you have everything red up.' She flapped the cloth out in front of her and hung it on the rail in front of the Aga. She picked the teapot off the range and brought it over to the table.
âSit you down and rest yourself a minute. Let yourself cool off. Biking is for young ones. Not,' she plonked two mugs on the table, âthat young ones would give you two pence for a bicycle these days. It's cars they want.' Mrs O'Sullivan's huge hand fished in the pocket of her overall for her cigarette. She always seemed to have a partially smoked one in there with a box of matches. She would have a few puffs and then carefully pinch it out and put it back in her pocket again, waiting for the next cup of tea. Then out it would come again.
âI was over at the station.'
Mrs O'Sullivan gave a deep and somewhat bronchial laugh.
âNow in the name of God what did you want to go over there for? Isn't that cowboy half-mad? You want to mind yourself with people like that.'
âI just thought I'd like to go and see what he was doing.'
âCuriosity killed the cat,' she said cheerfully.
âIt's amazing. He and Damian Sweeney have done a great job. It really looks as if trains could start moving through it at any moment. All fixed up.'
âNow what sort of a person would want to do a thing like that at all? Half-mad is right ⦠or whole mad. More money than sense.' She took a great swig of tea and swished it round inside her mouth before swallowing it. âI mind well the time you could go all the way to Dublin in the train. You had to change of course in Letterkenny and Strabane. All the way to Dublin. I had cousins in Omagh. God when I think of the gas we used to have on them ould trains. The buses were never the same at all. And expensive. Holy God!'
Another little swish of tea.
âMy uncle Eoin, that was my father's brother, he was signalman up there for near on thirty-two years. His heart was broke after they closed down the line. That's what they said anyway. He was too old then for a job on the buses. Some of them got jobs on the buses but he was too old to learn the new ways. You know what I mean? He lived for the trains. Loved the trains. Six months was all he lasted after that. I remember the very day he died. We had the Emergency then and nothing would do but my auntie Bridie had to pack her bags and away over to Glasgow to live with her daughter Alice. Emergency or no Emergency, said she couldn't face it here without Eoin. My mother and father begged her not to go. Sure as eggs is eggs, they said, you'll be killed by the bombs. She wouldn't pay them a blind bit of heed. She took a new lease of life over there, lived to be seventy-eight. Ah, sure you wouldn't remember them days.'
âWell, I do a bit you know.'
Mrs O'Sullivan crimped the end of her cigarette carefully between her finger and thumb.
âMaybe he's a spy.'
She dropped the butt into her pocket.
âWho?' asked Helen, surprised by the turn of things.
âYour man above.'
Helen exploded into laughter.
âWhat on earth would â¦?'
âI'm just telling you what they say. I'm not saying he is a spy. He could be a spy.'
âThere's not much spying anyone could do here.'
âYou find them everywhere these days. Tell me why else would he be here â¦? Messing around with that old station? Where would he get the money to do a thing like that?'
âI think he's quite rich and he likes trains. That's all. Obviously loves trains ⦠like your uncle did. He's nice I think.'
âSo they say. A gentleman, even an' he's had half his brains blown out.' She dipped a ginger biscuit in her tea and nibbled at the damp edge. âMind you what he wants to go getting mixed up with that Damian Sweeney for, I can't think. He's a bad lot if ever there was one.'
âHe works hard.'
âHe works when it suits him. He's all mixed up with ⦠you know.'
She looked sternly at Helen, defying her to say a word.
âHe keeps secrets from his mother. Now, the one thing I have to say about my lot is, they never keep secrets from me. Never did and never will. Open.'
âHow do you know?'
âI rared them, didn't I? I brought them up in the fear of God and not one of them has ever set foot outside the marks; that's the truth. Mrs Sweeney gave those kids too much liberty and look at them now. Two in America doing God knows what, and Damian. Never puts his head inside the church from one end of the year to the next. I said it to her, so I did, face to face, so I'm not speaking out of turn. Cissie, I said, you made your own bed, now you must lie on it. Too soft she was with them altogether. You know yourself.'
She gave Helen an accusing look.
âOh dear,' said Helen.
âYou know yourself Mrs O'Sullivan repeated the words triumphantly.
âWell â¦'
âIt's all in the raring.'
That seemed the end of the conversation. Helen filled up her cup with hot tea and retreated across the yard to the safety of her shed.
Next morning she walked to the northern tip of the beach. No one ever came here at all. Rocks grew up through the sand, grey lumps of granite. The odd cow wandered down from time to time from the unfenced fields on the hill. Sea birds lazed and strutted, hardly concerned by her presence. In the winter storms the sea lashed right up to the edge of the sloping dunes, but now the sand was still dry and bright with a tiny powdering of shells. She spread her towel beside a rock and sat down. She unwrapped her sketch book and began to draw, examining for her own edification the objects she saw around her: the strands of acid-green weed clinging to a broken razor shell, piles of discarded sand thrust up by some burrowing worms, the angle of a beak probing for food, the tight, delicate mechanism of a poised leg, the curve of rolling swell and the exact moment the spray burst. Page after page she filled. Behind her the rock still held the remains of summer warmth. She remembered having seen some notebooks of Leonardo, the explicit studies of a hand, fingers crooked, ridges of muscles running into the wrist; a bent leg full of power, the angles between jaw and neck, the tensions created even in stillness. After a long time her eyes were hurting, the fingers of her right hand felt as if someone had held them in a vice. She put the book and pencils down by the towel.
She stood up and pulled off her jersey and shirt and then her jeans and her pants and ran across the sand into the sea. She waded out over the breaking line of waves and then, falling forward onto the water, she swam straight out to sea, something that she normally wouldn't dream of doing, fear always keeping her within scrabbling distance of the land. She swam for a good six or seven minutes, thinking of nothing but the movement of her body through the water, the soft cleaving of arm after arm, the rhythm of her stretched legs beating, then suddenly frightened by her own courage she turned and swam back towards the shore. The rhythm was lost and her limbs felt the strain. She faltered, splashed, gulped mouthfuls of water. She moved from her kind of crawl to a more staid breast stroke. She turned over on her back and lay resting for a few moments, her eyes closed, her feet moving only enough to keep her steadily afloat. Having got back her nerve she began to swim again, feeling rather foolish. The tide was with her and she found she was moving quickly and calmly towards the beach. Once she found herself inside the arm of the bay she relaxed and began to enjoy again the motion of swimming, the weightlessness. What a life mermaids must lead, she thought. She shook the water from her face and eyes and looked towards the shore. A tall figure was standing beside her clothes. A hand went up to greet her. It was Damian Sweeney.