Read The Bird Woman Online

Authors: Kerry Hardie

The Bird Woman

Contents

Copyright

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Epilogue

Glassary

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Also by Kerry Hardie

FICTION

A Winter Marriage POETRY

POETRY

A Furious Place

Cry for the Hot Belly

The Sky Didn’t Fall

The Silence Came Close

Copyright

Copyright © 2006 by Kerry Hardie

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including
information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may
quote brief passages in a review.

Little, Brown and Company

Hachette Book Group

237 Park Avenue

New York, NY 10017

Visit our website at
www.HachetteBookGroup.com

www.twitter.com/littlebrown

First eBook Edition: October 2009

The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author is grateful for permission to include the excerpt from the following previously copyrighted material:
The Gift Healers.
Reprinted by permission of Anne Walsh and Clodagh Gleeson. First published by Brandon Press in 1995.

ISBN: 978-0-316-08681-3

For Sean, who walked with me

every step of the way

Every year in Ireland about twenty thousand people go to healers…
looking for cures for an extraordinary range of things: burns, brucellosis, skin cancer, bleeding. And many claim to be cured.

[These healers are not] chiropractors or homeopaths or that whole section of alternative medicine: those who have developed
unorthodox skills and knowledge to put at the service of the sick…. They claim neither special training, knowledge, nor skills,
but a gift passed from God. Or from nature. Or from inheritance. Or passed on from someone else. Ultimately they do not know
whence the gift comes….

They are not faith healers either. An infant who heals can hardly be said to have faith…. Faith healers rely… on prayer and
faith: these do not. The phenomenon of these healers is comparable to water diviners in that they use a gift that nobody can
begin to understand, yet many avail of….

The more you know of these gift healers the more baffled you become. No one seems able to offer an explanation for their extraordinary
abilities…. The more baffling this mystery grows, the more fascinating it becomes. “There are more things in heaven and earth,
Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

—F
ROM
The Gift Healers
BY
R
EBECCA
M
ILLANE
,
B
RANDON
P
RESS
1995

Prologue

K
ILKENNY
, F
EBRUARY
2001

S
ometimes life goes on at an even pace for months, years, the rhythm the same, one step following after the step before, so
you get to thinking that it’s always going to be this way, and maybe part of you even longs for something to change.

Then all of a sudden it does. And when it does, it doesn’t change only the once. The first change comes, then the next, and
before you know it the changes are at you so thick and fast that you’re running as hard as you can and still you’re not keeping
up.

The phone call came from Derry, and everything changed.
My
brother, Brian, rang, only he didn’t

he got his wife, Anne, to phone for him. I listened until I’d got the gist; then I made her go and get Brian.


I’m not being uncivil,” I told Anne. “But it’s
his
mother we’re talking about, not yours. Some things even Brian has to do for him
self.”

I heard Anne put down the phone; then I heard footsteps and voices off, then footsteps again and the phone being lifted.


Yes, Ellen,” Brian’s voice said down the line.

It was strange hearing Brian. If you’d asked me I’d have said I’d forgotten what his voice even sounded like, but the minute
I heard it I knew every nuance and inflection

I even knew what his face looked like as he talked.

Only I didn’t. It was more than ten years since I’d laid eyes on Brian; he might be fat and bald for all I knew, he might
have grey hair and reading glasses, he might have three toes missing from his right foot or no right foot at all.

But if he did, all that was in the future. For the moment I spoke to the brother who lived in my mind.


Cancer,” I said to Liam, the word sounding strange, as though I was being needlessly melodramatic. “It seems she had a mastectomy
two years ago, but she wouldn’t let them tell me. This is a secondary

something called ‘metastatic liver cancer.’ They’re talking containment, not cure.”

Liam stirred in his chair, but he didn’t speak; he waited for me to go on.


Brian said she’s been living with them for the last two months.
Anne’s
off work, and the Macmillan nurse has been calling in. She took bad four nights ago, and now she’s in the hospital. They told
him she might have as much as two months, but more likely it’ll be weeks…. No one’s mentioned sending her home.”

We had ordered the children next door to do their homework, had banished them, unfed, and with no explanation. They were too
surprised to object. Now Liam was searching my face, but I kept it blank and calm. Liam had never been to Derry, had never
met any of my family; my life up there predated him and belonged entirely to me.

There was power in that and also safety: I could dispense information as I felt inclined, could tell him or withhold from
him, I didn’t have to let him see what I didn’t want seen.

So I talked on, my voice as flat and dead as my face, and I knew as clear as I knew anything that keeping him shut out like
this was dangerous and wrong. But I was a long way off from myself, and I couldn’t get back. I didn’t want to get back; I
was too afraid of what might be there waiting for me if I did.


How many hours’ drive to Derry?” Liam asked. “Five? Six? We’ll bring the children. When do you want us to leave?”


I don’t.”


Wait till she’s nearer the end? You’d be taking a bit of a chance, wouldn’t you? But if you want to be there when she dies…
?”


You’re not listening to me, Liam,” I said. “I’m not going. Not now, not next week, not next month, never. And neither are
they,”


Ellen, she’s your mother, you
have
to go
—”


Have to? Who says? Why do I have to?” So much for flat and dead

I could hear the hysteria rise in my voice.


Because you’ll regret it for the rest of your life if you don’t.”

Liam’s mother had died of a stroke when Andrew was not quite two and I was heavy with Suzanna. It was a long vigil, and they
were all there

her husband, children, grandchildren; her brothers and her only sister. I wasn’t. Liam had said I was better off at home;
he said everyone would understand. But I hadn’t stayed away on my own account, I’d stayed away for Maura herself. I’d liked
Maura; she was a big-boned, overweight countrywoman, red-faced and dowdy, with wonderful deep, warm eyes. She was devout,
too

Liam was anxious when he brought me there first, for all that he swore to me he wasn’t. But she’d never said a word about
my not being Catholic, or our not being married, or Andrew not being christened, not a word. Maybe she’d felt for me because
I was a stranger, or maybe she’d liked me as I’d liked her. Whatever it was, she’d always taken my part.

Liam had thought it the best of deaths, but I hadn’t. I wouldn’t want to die like that myself, everyone pressing and watching,
I’d want a bit of privacy and peace. So I’d cast around for something to do for her, and staying away was all I’d been able
to think of.

But that was Maura. It wasn’t why I wouldn’t go North to see my own mother.


It’s the last chance we’ll have to set things right,” he told me now. “She’ll see her grandchildren before she dies.”

I sat there, my belly full of this cold emptiness, waiting for the surge of anger that would protect me from despair. It didn’t
come. Instead I felt tears rising up in me, and I pushed them down. I looked for the thing that comes through me and into
my hands, but it wasn’t there; my body felt only numbness and exhaustion. I stood up and crossed to the sink, ran cold water
into it, fetched potatoes from the larder, the tears running soundlessly down my face. Liam got up from his seat and tried
to hold me, but I pushed him away.


I have to make the dinner,” I said.


Dinner can wait. Leave that, Ellen. Sit down; we have to talk.”


Talk? What for? What’s there to say? She’s my mother, this is my business, not yours. But I can’t stop you going if that’s
what you want. Do what you want

you will, anyway

but I’m not going and neither are they, and that’s flat.” I dumped the potatoes into the water and covered my face with my
hands.
My
whole body shook with those great gulping sobs I thought I’d left behind me in some childhood drawer with the ankle socks.

Liam had the wit to sit himself down again and wait. Gradually the heaving died down, but the tears still came; they slid
under my hands and ran down my wrists and soaked themselves into my sleeves. At last I wiped my eyes with the back of my hand,
blew my nose in a tea towel, and turned to face him.


I know she’s my mother, you don’t have to keep saying it,” I said. “But I don’t want to see her again. And I never want to
forgive her. Never, ever, ever, Liam. That’s what I’m saying, and that’s what I mean.”


Why?”

I stared.

He stared back, waiting.


You know well why,” I said slowly.


No,” he said, “you’re wrong, I don’t know. I know you don’t like her. But I don’t know what she did to you to deserve the
way you feel.”

I couldn’t speak.


What did she do to you that’s so bad, Ellen, tell me that? Not come to our wedding? I wrote to ask her

you didn’t. It was obvious you didn’t want her there.”


She never came to see the children
—”


You’d have shut the door in her face if she had
—”

I put my hands over my ears like a child.


She made me what I am.”

That silenced him. It silenced me as well. I turned my back and started in on the potatoes, the tears running down my face
again

yet again

and dripping into the muddy water. Sometimes I don’t know what I’d do without domestic tasks. The simple, ancient rhythm of
them. I’d no idea I felt like this, no idea it ran this deep.

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