The chapel was packed to the rafters on this final Sunday. Billy had checked the strangers coming in and watched the look of joy on the faces of the men who had someone they could call their own. Ryan hadn’t come again and it was with a heavy heart that Billy took a seat in the front of the chapel so that he didn’t have to look at any of the visitors. He was deeply confused. If he agreed to go to St Peters in two days he would be even further removed from contact with the boy, who now appeared not to want him in his life anyway.
A short message was given by the Salvation Army chaplain, who congratulated the men who had completed the three weeks of the first stage in their rehabilitation. Each was asked to come up to receive a Bible, the traditional parting gift from the Salvos before they were transferred to one of the other venues chosen for the next stage in their rehabilitation – St Peters or Miracle Haven, a working farm outside Morisset. This was followed by a reading from Morgan, who spoke in a surprisingly wellmodulated voice, somewhat different from his usual manner. Morgan hadn’t talked much about himself. Despite his wisecracks and his flip manner, he was the least forthcoming of Billy’s room-mates.
After the reading, there was a call from several of the men for ‘Power!’ as ‘Power in the Blood’ was called. A lusty and wholehearted rendition followed and then others nominated various hymns. Almost to his own surprise, Billy found himself calling out ‘Amazing Grace’ for the final hymn.
The pianist started the refrain and the congregation began to sing the beautiful hymn when suddenly Billy became aware of a voice that rose above them all, a voice so pure and perfect that it didn’t seem possible. The rest of the congregation stopped and the single voice, a boy soprano, rose to fill the hushed chapel, the words perfectly, gloriously enunciated.
Billy turned to see Ryan standing at the doorway, singing alone, clutching his skateboard under his arm, his dirty little face raised to the ceiling. His voice rose higher and higher, then dropped, until the congregation felt sure it must falter. Billy found himself weeping uncontrollably. Ryan had come at last. The lad had forgiven him.
At a signal from the chaplain, the congregation resumed their seats and Billy was forced to turn his back on Ryan. A final short prayer followed, which seemed endless to Billy, who could hear his heart thumping in his chest. Sunday chapel was finally over. Billy rose, barely able to contain himself, but Ryan was no longer standing at the door.
Billy pushed people out of his way as he ran from the chapel and down the stairs to the foyer below and towards the door. ‘Ryan! Ryan!’ he shouted. Vaguely he heard the buzzer as the receptionist locked the electronically controlled door and Billy slammed into it, breaking his nose and falling to the floor. ‘The boy!
Did you see a boy?’ he shouted, oblivious to the blood pumping from his nose.
‘You can’t leave, Billy,’ the receptionist said calmly.
‘You are not allowed to go after him.’
Billy looked down to see his nice soft-blue cotton shirt stained with blood.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Billy was taken to the clinic and from there to St Vincent’s where they reset his nose. He asked to see Dr Goldstein but he was off duty. The reception clerk was also different and he learned that Mrs Willoughby, Ryan’s opponent, hadn’t lasted the distance and had long since departed. He had hoped to hear something of the boy, thinking that perhaps his mother had been a patient in Billy’s absence, but even the two gay security men were off duty and there was nobody who could help him.
When Billy returned to William Booth, his mind was made up, he would leave the rehabilitation program and find Ryan. The boy’s appearance, and then abrupt disappearance, could only mean one thing, he was extremely confused. Billy told himself that an elevenyear-old child wouldn’t come all the way to see him and then run off. There had to be something very wrong.
Back at William Booth, Billy was told that Major Cliff Thomas from Foster House had called to deliver three letters for him. Not finding him present, he had left a note.
Dear Billy,
How can I apologise to you? These three letters have been waiting for you at Foster House, the first for two weeks, the second for over a week and the third one arrived yesterday. I just happened to notice the one yesterday and then looked to see if there were any others. I am not normally responsible for the mail, and the person who is, not knowing your present whereabouts, simply assumed you’d call around in due course to collect it. I can only pray they are not important. I hope your nose is all right and that you’re feeling better.
Yours in the blessed name of Jesus,
Cliff Thomas
When writing to the principal of Pring Street Public School and to Ryan, Billy had used the Foster House address in Mary Street, Strawberry Hills, not at the time knowing the correct one for William Booth. He’d neglected to make arrangements with Cliff Thomas to forward his mail. Such a small mistake might have had disastrous consequences and Billy’s hands shook as he tore open the first letter, which was written in an educated hand on light-blue paper using a fountain pen.
Pring Street Public School
22 July 1996
Dear Mr O’Shannessy,
Thank you for your letter in which you showed concern for the welfare of Ryan Sanfrancesco. I only wish that the news I could give you was positive. Ryan’s grandmother passed away and since then his attendance at school has been irregular. We have tried to talk to him about it, but he refuses to speak to us other than to say ‘It’s cool, she told me she was gunna die’.
We are aware that he needs counselling, but the school’s facilities are very limited and we have informed the Department of Community Services of the situation with his mother. As there have been no formal complaints of abuse, they have noted Ryan’s case as Priority One. Do not think that this means they consider his welfare a priority, this category simply means they will open a file and if there are no further reports in twenty-six days, his case will be closed.
Your letter to Ryan has been duly received and, as part of my responsibility as his principal, I have been obliged to read it. I have passed it on to the Department of Community Services, who have issued instructions that Ryan may not receive your letters until you have identified yourself personally to the appropriate Community Services District Officer.
I know that in my previous letter I encouraged you to write to Ryan, as I was convinced your friendship was both important and honourable and I remain of that opinion. I am personally sorry that this is the outcome as I feel sure that your association with Ryan is very important to the boy. I hope you understand my hands are tied in this matter and I am in no position to disobey the department’s instructions.
In the meantime we all worry about Ryan, who is such a bright and talented boy, and it would be a terrible shame to lose him. It is such a pity that your present circumstances make it impossible to see him, although of course I fully understand your situation.
If it doesn’t seem presumptuous, may I wish you every success in what you are personally attempting to do with your life.
Yours sincerely,
Dorothy Flanagan Principal
Billy’s first reaction was one of utter dismay. Ryan hadn’t received his letters and, worse still, the Department of Community Services had forbidden them. In his present emotional state, Billy felt betrayed. He hadn’t met Ryan’s principal and now he felt she’d simply, as Morgan would have put it, ‘covered her arse’. It wasn’t until much later that he realised that, under the circumstances, it had been a responsible attitude for her to adopt.
Billy sat for a while thinking, not opening the second letter. How the hell had Ryan tracked him down if he hadn’t received either of his letters? Why had he appeared suddenly in the chapel and then run away? Billy opened the second letter, and glancing quickly at the bottom of the page he saw that it too was from Dorothy Flanagan but this time it was typed on the schoo
l’s letterhead.
Dear Mr O’Shannessy,
I have received your second letter to Ryan and as you must have received my last letter I cannot understand why you would write a second one. You must understand that my position in this matter is quite clear, I cannot disobey my instructions from the Department of Community Services. Your letter to Ryan would have been studied by a qualified child psychiatrist and I am not at liberty to go against their decision. I am very sorry but I must ask you not to write to Ryan again care of this address.
Yours sincerely,
Ms D. Flanagan - Principal
cc. Mary Kennedy, School Counsellor - DOCS
A second page was attached and on it appeared a single typewritten line in a different typeface.
I have told R. of your whereabouts.
Ryan’s principal, God bless her, was covering her tracks. Billy’s heart soared, Dorothy Flanagan had seen Ryan and spoken to him.
Billy now opened the third letter, this one again handwritten.
Dear Mr O’Shannessy,
Today has not been one of the better days in my teaching career and I have no idea why I am writing to you other than that you have shown that you care about Ryan Sanfrancesco and God knows very few people seem to. Please forgive me if I appear overemotional. I have been teaching for thirty-two years and I keep telling myself that I am beyond being surprised. Pring Street is not an easy school to administer, but having been offered several so-called better choices, I chose this school to see out my career, my motive being that I thought I might be able to bring my experience to bear and in the process help maintain some sort of balance in the often topsy-turvy lives of so many of our children.
Occasionally we are rewarded with a gifted child such as Ryan, so it is especially distressing when we lose the battle to save him because of circumstances beyond our control.
This afternoon I had a visit from the police looking for Ryan and, while I don’t know the full story yet, they explained that Ryan had called the ambulance service, saying that his mother was having an asthma attack and needed to go to St Vincent’s. The operator told the police that the child sounded very distressed, convinced his mother was dying. One of the paramedics who had picked her up on a previous occasion remembered that she was a heroin addict and that there might be complications, so they responded immediately with a full resuscitation unit.
When they arrived, the front door was ajar and they found Ryan’s mother dead. There was no sign of Ryan. The police have been looking for him for several days as the post-mortem on his mother showed that she was ill from Hepatitis C. According to the police, she had not been to work for ten days (I am told she was an exotic dancer) and the cause of death was not an asthma attack but a heroin overdose. Apparently the heroin she had injected in her weakened condition was too pure and she died of a massive heart attack. I am not at all sure that there is anything you can do. We have asked all the children here at Pring Street to report to me if they see Ryan and to assure him that if he comes to me I will make sure that he is safe and cared for. If he should in some way try to contact you, please let me know as we both have his welfare at heart.
Yours sincerely,
Dorothy Flanagan
Billy had gone to his bed to read the letters and now, with his torso concealed behind the pillar, he couldn’t stop trembling. Ryan was a brave and capable child, he’d taken his mother to St Vincent’s on numerous occasions so why had he fled the house at such a critical moment? Was it the shock of seeing his mother die? Did a child know when someone was dead? The way Dorothy Flanagan had described it, Ryan’s mother must have died while the ambulance was on its way. Or was it just the child’s way of alerting the authorities to his mother’s death? It didn’t sound like the Ryan he knew, that child didn’t run away. He recalled how he’d first met Ryan, who’d been standing squinting at the statue of Trim on the window ledge of the Mitchell Library. He hadn’t even flinched when Billy had shouted, threatening him. Then there had been the incident with the receptionist at St Vincent’s when Billy had broken his wrist, and, before that, the brazen boldness he’d shown in going into the Cesco Bar to buy him a cup of coffee. Billy also recalled how he’d stood up to Con at the New Hellas Cafe. Ryan simply wasn’t the sort to run away from anything. It just didn’t make sense. Despite everything, he’d loved his mother and he even seemed to take responsibility for her. It was almost as if she was the child and he the adult. Why? Why? Why? None of it made any sense to Billy.
Billy spent a sleepless night driving himself to distraction and in the morning he was already waiting outside the office of Vince Payne, the program director, when he arrived at work at eight o’clock.
‘Morning, Billy, here to see me?’ Payne asked.
‘Yes, if I may, please.’
‘How’s your nose? You’ve got two bonzer black eyes, mate.’
‘Fine, thanks.’ Billy had been so distressed that he hadn’t shaved or even glanced in the mirror when he’d attempted to wash his face.
‘Come in, come in,’ Payne urged, unlocking his office. ‘Sit!’ He indicated the straight-backed kitchen chair. ‘Make yourself comfortable.’
Vince switched on his computer as a matter of habit. He’d brought in a styrofoam mug of coffee from Rocco’s, which he balanced precariously on a bundle of papers among the many that covered his desk. ‘Would you like a decent cup of coffee, mate? You look like you could use one. I’ll send someone?’
‘No, thank you, Vince, I’ve already had breakfast.’ Although he’d been to breakfast, Billy had been unable to eat or drink anything.
Vince leaned back in his rickety office chair. ‘So, what’s on your mind, Billy?’
Billy cleared his throat, his nose throbbed and one eye felt as if it was only half open. ‘I’m afraid I have to leave the program, Vince, I won’t be going on to St Peters.’ Vince Payne looked shocked. ‘Why, Billy?’
‘It’s private, there’s something I have to do.’ Vince looked serious. ‘But there’s something you have to do at St Peters, Billy. Something very important!’
‘I’m sorry, but I can’t explain. I just have to leave.’ Vince Payne had heard it all before, the life and death assignation, wife dying, kids ill, they were the most common lies, but there were many more. Many of the alcoholics were schizophrenics and had used alcohol to stop the voices in their heads. When they detoxed, the voices returned and their reasons for leaving the program could be anything from a call from Spiderman to help save the world from certain disaster to a message they’d received saying that the William Booth Institute was a hotbed of communist activity and was about to be blown up by the CIA.
In Billy he thought he recognised the usual underlying reason, simply a desire to get away because he was unable to face the idea of a further seven months spent in an institution. The street drunks who lived in the socalled Starlight Hotel, the open air, were particularly vulnerable. After three weeks incarcerated at William Booth, they had a desperate need to break out. As program director there wasn’t a lot he could do under the circumstances, it was unlawful to hold a client against his will. He’d have to try a delaying tactic, anything to give Billy time to reconsider, or it sometimes helped to read the riot act and make a firm appeal to commonsense, which in Billy’s case seemed the more productive course of action.
‘Now listen here, Billy, you’re not being fair to us or to yourself,’ Vince said, his voice firm.
‘Oh?’
‘Billy, I’ll be perfectly frank with you. When you came in I told myself you’d be lucky to last a week. Old blokes, confirmed alcoholics, don’t usually rehabilitate. Well, one in a hundred, anyway.’ Vince had located Billy’s file among the clutter on his desk and was flicking through it. ‘Your counsellors’ reports are outstanding, only yesterday at the end of the course meeting Jimmy said, and I quote: “Billy has made an outstanding contribution to the group and h
is attitude suggests that he will do well at St Peters.”’ Vince stopped and turned the page. ‘Ah, here it is.’ He turned back to Billy. ‘We give every client a prospective rating, a recovery potential, your rating is a full twenty points above the norm. For an old bloke that’s outstanding.’
‘Thank you,’ Billy said quietly, ‘but I have no choice, I must leave.’
Vince Payne picked up the biro and started the annoying business of tapping on the frame of his computer. ‘Is it over the incident in chapel yesterday?’
‘Yes,’ Billy admitted.
‘Would you like to tell me about it?’
‘No, I don’t think so.’ Billy was surprised at himself, he’d said it with a certainty that belied his own confusion.
Vince decided to try the second tactic. ‘Look, Billy, you’ve broken your nose, you’re upset, you’ve got two days here before you go to St Peters. Just give us the two days, then you can decide, eh?’ Billy shook his head slowly. ‘I’m sorry, I can’t.’ The program director decided to throw caution to the wind. He straightened up and leaned forward, pointing the biro at Billy. ‘You won’t achieve anything. If you go after the boy and can’t find him right off, which is on the cards, you’ll be on a downer and you’ll go straight to the pub. In forty-eight hours you’ll be back where you were five weeks ago! Billy, listen to me. You can’t make it on your own out there, not at this stage of your rehabilitation, you’re simply not ready, mate, you’re too fragile. You’ll be back on the sauce and then what good will that do the boy? The boy doesn’t need another drunk in his life, does he?’
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