Fludd - Hilary Mantel 5 стр.


The ground had been professionally prepared, for Father Angwin was not about to overtax or overestimate his crew. The gravedigger and his assistant had been called in from the cemetery that St Thomas Aquinas shared with the neighbouring parish; the Fetherhoughtonians did not merit a facility of their own. There had been a discussion (heated) in the church porch, and eventually, and after money had changed hands, the two craftsmen had seen the logic of the priests case. True, they were not employed to dig holes; it was not their vocation, it did not agree with them. For that he might better have employed, as one of them pointed out, a landscape gardener. But given that the holes were grave-shaped, it might be seen as trespassing on their speciality should he retain some other professional; and the holes need not be so deep as graves, so the work would be easy. They had conceded the point, and excavated the ground behind the garage.

When Father Angwin saw the holes he clasped his arms across his chest, hugging behind his soutane a nameless, floating anxiety; what he saw was a graveyard prepared for some coming massacre or atrocity, and he said to himself, as clever children always say, if God knows our ends, why cannot he prevent them, why is the world so full of malice and cruelty, why did God make it at all and give us free will if he knows already that some of us will destroy ourselves in exercising it? Then he remembered that he did not believe in God, and he went into the church to supervise the removal of the statues from their plinths.

Father Angwin had himself a good knowledge of the principles of levers and pulleys, but it was Sister Philomena who, by example, spurred the Mens Fellowship on to the effort needed. By the time the statues were out of doors, and the men had coiled their ropes and picked up their shovels, the scent of her skin had seeped to them through her heavy black habit, and they edged away, their celibate frames shaken by what they did not understand. She was a big, healthy girl, in her woollen stockings. You were conscious of the smell of soap from her skin, of her eyebrows and of her feet, and of other parts you do not notice on nuns. It was possible to think of her having knees.

Sister Philomena lifted her skirts a fraction to kneel on the damp ground, watching intently as the saints were lowered into the earth. At the last moment she leant forward, and skimmed her rough housewifes hand across the mane of St Jeromes lion; then she eased herself back, settled on her haunches and drew the back of her hand across her eyes.

I liked him, Father, she said, looking up. He put out a hand to assist her; she rose smoothly and stood beside him, tipping back her head so that her veil dropped itself over her shoulder into its proper folds. Her hand was warm and steady, and he felt the slow beat of her pulse through the skin.

You are a good girl, he said. A good girl. I could not have managed. I am too sad.

Philomena raised her voice to the Mens Fellowship, who were teetering and swaying one-legged, black flamingos, scraping off their shoes. You all gentlemen should go to the Nissen hut now. Sister Anthony has got the tea urn out and is baking you some fruit-loaf.

At this news, the men looked cast down. Sister Anthony, a rotund and beaming figure in her floury apron, was feared throughout the parish.

Poor old soul, Father Angwin said. She means well. Think of the good sisters, they have to face it every day, breakfast dinner and tea. Do this last one thing for me, lads, and if it is very unpalatable, you must offer it up.

Theres not more than a handful of grit in it, Philomena said, though possibly more grit than currants. You can offer it up as Father says, make it an occasion of obtaining grace. Say Sacred Heart of Jesus, help me to eat this fruit-bread.

Is that what you say? Father Angwin asked her. I mean, mutatis mutandis, with suitable adaptation? For instance, I believe she burns the porridge?

Holy Mary, Mother of God, help me swallow this porridge. Sister Polycarp suggested we might make a novena to St Michael, the patron saint of grocers, to ask him to guide her a little in the foodstuffs line. We wondered if it was the patron saint of cooks we should apply to, but Sister Polycarp said her problem is more basic than that, it is what she can do with the raw ingredients that God alone knows.

And do you all have some pious formula?

Oh yes, but we say it under our breath, you know, not to hurt her feelings. Except Mother Perpetua, of course. She gives her a pious rebuke.

Ill bet she does.

But Sister Anthony is very humble. She never says anything back.

Why should she? She has her means of revenge.

The moon had risen now, a sliver of light over the black terraces. Judd McEvoy, a singular figure in his knitted waistcoat, gave a pat to the earth above St Agatha. Judd? said Father Angwin. I did not see you there.

Oh, I have been toiling, Judd McEvoy said. Toiling unobtrusively. No reason, Father, why you should remark my presence above the others.

No, but I generally do. Father Angwin turned away. Philomena saw the puzzlement on his face. I like to know where you are, Judd, he remarked, to himself. And louder, Are you going to cut along with the others and get your fruit-bread?

I shall go directly, said Judd. I should not like to be marked out in any way. He knocked the earth off his spade, and straightened up. I think you may say, Father, that all your saints are safely buried. Shall I take it upon myself to draw up a plan marking the name of each? In case the bishop should change his mind, and wish to reinstate some of them?

That will not be necessary. Father Angwin shifted from foot to foot. I myself will remember. I will not be in any doubt.

As you please, McEvoy said. He smiled his cold smile, and put on his hat. I will join the others then.

The Mens Fellowship, edified by the words of the remarkable young nun, were touching their foreheads to Father Angwin and setting off in ones and twos down the drive towards the school. Their murmur arose through the scented evening: Sacred Heart of Jesus, help me to eat this fruit-bread. Father Angwin watched them go. McEvoy went with the rest, casting a glance behind him. When finally he rounded the bend by the convent, and was lost to view, Sister Philomena heard the priest let out his breath, and noted the relief on his face.

Come into the church a moment, Father Angwin said.

She nodded, and followed him. They entered together, through the deep shadows that had gathered in the porch. A chill struck upwards from the stone floor into their feet. Clods of earth lay in the aisles. I will see to this tomorrow, Philomena said, her tone low and subdued. They looked about. Without the statues the church seemed smaller and meaner, its angles more gracelessly exposed.

You would think it would be the other way round, Philomena said, catching his thought. That it would look bigger not that it isnt big enough. Yet I remember when I was a girl and my Aunt Dymphna died, and when we got all the stuff out into the yard, her bed and the chest and all, we went back in to take a last look at it, and the room was like the size of a hen coop. My mother said, dear God, did my sister Dymphna and all her fancy frocks live in this little space?

What did she die of?

Dymphna? Oh, her lungs. It was a damp place that she lived. On a farm.

What did she die of?

Dymphna? Oh, her lungs. It was a damp place that she lived. On a farm.

They whispered, as they were speaking of the dead; Philomena bowed her head, and a sharp picture came into the priests mind, of the decaying thatch of her aunts cottage, and of chickens, who enjoyed comparatively such liberty, scratching up the sacred soil of Ireland under a sky packed with rain-swollen clouds. It was the day of Dymphnas funeral he was seeing, a coffin being put into a cart. I trust she is at peace, he said.

I doubt it. She was a byword in her day. She used to go round the cattle fairs and strike up with men. God rest her.

You are a curious young woman, Father Angwin said, looking up at her. You have put pictures in my head.

I wish you could see the end of this, Philomena said. I feel sad myself, Father. Weighed-upon, somehow. I liked the little lion. Is it true that there is to be a curate?

So the bishop tells me. I have heard nothing more from him. I expect the fellow will just turn up.

Well, he will be able to see that you have done as you were directed. It is rather poor, what remains. She walked away from him towards the altar, stopping to genuflect with a thoughtful, slow reverence. May I light a candle, Father?

You may if you have a match. Otherwise there is nothing to light it from.

A dim outline in the centre aisle, she reached into the deep pocket of her habit, took out a box of matches, struck one, and picked a new candle from the wooden box beneath the statue of the Virgin. When the wick kindled she shielded the flame with her palm, and held the candle up above her head; the point of light wavered and grew and bathed the statues face. Her nose is chipped.

Yes. Father Angwin spoke from the darkness behind her. I wonder if you could see your way to doing anything about it? I am not of an artistic bent.

Plasticine, Philomena said. I can get some from the children. Then no doubt we could paint it.

Let us go, Father Angwin said. Agnes has cooked some undercut for my supper, and besides, this spectacle is too melancholy.

Not more melancholy than the supper that awaits me. I fear it may be the fruit-bread.

I should like to ask you to join me, Father Angwin said, on account of the comradeship occasioned by our nights work, but I think I should have to telephone the bishop to ask him for a dispensation of some sort, and no doubt he would have to apply to Rome.

I will face the fruit-bread, Philomena said calmly.

As they left the church, he thought that a hand brushed his arm. Dymphnas bar-parlour laugh came faintly from the terraces; her tipsy, Guinness-sodden breath, stopped by earth these eleven years, filled the summer night.

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