by M. J. Hyland
‘I’ll lie down then.’
‘Maybe I should sleep in here with you again, and that will help you sleep.’
‘I think I’d better be alone in the bed.’
‘Will you let Da come back if he says he’s sorry?’
‘I’m too tired to talk about this now and you know far too much already.’
‘But can’t you tell me what’s going to happen?’
‘Enough, John. Please leave me alone. I’m going to try to sleep now.’
32
It’s the middle of the night and my mother comes to my bedroom door. This is the fourth night in a row she has come to my door during the night and she says the same thing, more or less, each time.
‘I didn’t mean to wake you. I just came to see how you were. Just came to see whether you were having trouble sleeping too.’
‘I was sound asleep.’
‘Sorry. Go back to sleep then.’
The first two nights I got up with her and went to the kitchen and we made hot milk and, on the third night, we played backgammon for an hour or so, until she said she was sleepy enough and she went back to bed.
But tonight is different. She turns on the light and is leaning against the doorframe, as though she can’t stand up.
‘Mammy, what’s wrong?’
‘Oh, it’s just the worry. I miss Michael.’
‘Do you want me to come and sleep in your bed?’ I ask.
‘If you’d like,’ she says.
‘OK,’ I say.
I get out of bed and go with her to her bedroom. I like the smell of her bedclothes now that my father has gone. They smell like the soil after it has rained.
‘I’ll keep my light on for a while and read my book. Will that disturb you?’
‘No,’ I say, and go quickly back to sleep.
In the morning, she doesn’t wake me, and when I go into the kitchen at half nine she is there, sitting at the table, with a letter in her hand.
‘It’s from your granny,’ she says. ‘Your father has gone back to Gorey.’
‘When did the post come?’
‘It’s from yesterday.’
‘Why didn’t you read it then?’
‘I didn’t have the courage.’
‘But it’s from Granny. You should have opened it. It’s from Granny.’
‘I know well enough who it’s from. I don’t need you to tell me.’
She hasn’t been angry with me since the day I came home from school and found her sitting on the hallway floor.
‘And who cares when it came? I’ve read it now and it says Michael has gone back to his mammy. And isn’t that what you wanted? Did you not want to see the back of him?’
This doesn’t make any sense to me and I begin to shake with anger. If anybody is going back to Gorey, it should be us, not him. ‘Why is he back in Gorey?’ I ask.
I am hardly able to breathe.
‘Your father has promised your granny that he’ll continue to work. They’ve made a truce.’
‘So, then we can go back?’
‘Come here to me a minute,’ she says. ‘Come and sit.’
‘I don’t want to.’
‘Suit yourself.’
I take the letter from the table and read it.
‘But Granny says she wants to see us. Doesn’t that mean we’ll be going back too?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘But what does she mean?’
‘Why don’t you ring her and find out? Then I want you to go to school.’
‘But I’ll be too late.’
‘You’ll only be a bit late.’
It takes my grandmother a long time to answer the phone.
‘Hello, Mrs Egan here,’ she says.
‘Hello, Granny? It’s me, John.’
‘Hello, John. How are you getting on?’
‘I’m getting on fine.’
‘And your mother? How is she?’
‘She’s fine too.’
‘That’s grand.’
‘How’s Crito?’
I have a picture in my mind of Crito sitting on my bed, looking out the window at the trees and chewing on her foot, her nose snuffling.
‘Crito’s fine. She’s asleep by the fire at the moment, purring away.’
‘Is Da there?’
‘He is indeed. He arrived on Saturday night.’
‘But he said he was going to live with Uncle Tony.’
‘Well, he came here, and he’s safe and that’s the main thing.’
My breathing is short and shallow; to speak without sounding puffed I must go slowly, one word at a time.
‘But … did … he … tell … you … what … he … did? Did … he … tell … you … what … he … did … to … me … and … Mammy?’
She sighs. ‘You’ll be wanting to talk to your father about that.’
I can’t speak. The world has turned upside down. I want her to fill in the silence and ask me one simple question, a question like ‘Are you all right?’, but she is silent and I can hear my breath against the mouthpiece.
I sense she wants to say goodbye. I say ‘Don’t you know that I told Mammy the truth? Don’t you know that I can tell when people are lying?’
‘Now, now. This is not for us to talk about. This is not a soap opera where people blurt things out whenever they feel the urge.’
I hear a man’s voice in the background. ‘Was that Da? What did he say?’
‘Yes, that was your father. He was only after calling out to tell me that the postman is here.’
‘Does he want to talk to me?’
‘I’ll see. Wait a moment.’
She calls out to my father and says something else too, something about Dublin, all of it in Irish, so that I won’t understand.
I wait and wait but the phone is quiet and I wonder if she has hung up. I wait and wait some more, and when she comes back, at last, she sounds out of breath.
‘He says to say he loves you.’
‘Doesn’t he want to say hello?’
‘He does sure, but he has something he has to do at the moment.’
‘Oh.’
‘Shall I tell you a story about a mouse in Gorey?’
‘No!’ I say. ‘I don’t want you to tell me a story about a mouse in Gorey.’
‘I know you don’t mean that, John.’
I don’t answer. I can’t speak.
‘Bye now, John.’
‘Wait. Can you see if there’s a letter for me? I’m expecting a letter from the Guinness Book of Records.’
‘I’ll call you again if there’s anything there. All right?’
‘Are you sure no letters have come for me?’
‘I’m sure.’
‘All right.’
‘God willing, everything will work itself out. Pray for me now, like a good boy, and pray for your mother and father too. And for yourself, if you can spare the time.’
I hang up without saying goodbye.
I tell my mother what my grandmother said and she looks upset, but she says nothing. She wraps her hand around her cup of tea.
‘What will we do?’ I ask.
‘It’s gone cold,’ she says.
‘Don’t you care? Aren’t you angry?’ I ask.
‘There’s no point.’
‘I’m going to school now,’ I say.
But I don’t go to school. I open and close the front door then go quietly to my room and sit on my bed. A half an hour later, my mother bursts into the room without knocking.
‘I thought you went to school,’ she says.
‘I did,’ I say. ‘But they were going on an excursion and I didn’t have a note from you so the teacher sent me home.’
She frowns. ‘You’re a poor liar for somebody who calls himself a lie detector.’
I’m angry again. My neck hurts and swells. It’s hard to breathe. I move my feet and put my hands in my pocket and stare at her. ‘I’ll go tomorrow,’ I say.
‘Tomorrow. Tomorrow is t
he first day of the rest of your life.’
Is she trying to provoke me with another one of these dumb expressions?
‘I might watch the telly now,’ I say.
‘I might go to bed,’ she says.
‘Again?’
‘I didn’t sleep at all last night. I’m very tired.’
‘Why can’t you sleep?’
‘I don’t know.’
I walk away and sit on the settee. Instead of turning on the television, I fold forward and rest my head on my knees and make my knees jump up and down. I want her back so much. I want her to be the way she was before. She can’t stay the dull and dumb way she is now. This is a problem that must be solved before it’s too late.
33
There’s a comedy on the television, but I can’t enjoy it. My mood is like it was the night in the caretaker’s shed with Brendan; now, like then, there is no escape, and because there is no way to be distracted, and I am alone, it is as though I am exaggerated, and notice everything. I am too alive; too much of myself, all blown up.
I hear knocking at the door, and I get up and open it, but there is nobody there.
I thought it could be him. It would make sense for him to come back now.
I sit on the floor, close to the television screen, but bad memories come. They are the strangest kind of memories, things I thought I’d forgotten. I remember the time I was on the toilet at Brendan’s house. I was in there for a long time because I was constipated. Brendan was standing outside, waiting. I could hear him shuffling his feet and sighing. Finally he said, ‘Hurry up’, and I said, ‘I’m doing a big plop.’
I don’t know why I said I was doing a big plop. I had to stay in the toilet like a prisoner until I stopped being red in the face. I couldn’t see the humour in it, but he kept laughing and ran around the house telling his sisters what I said. He teased me about it all day.
I remember this and turn red even though there’s nobody in the living room. It is as though my brain has decided to run its own dark film with the volume on high; a film of bad thoughts, of bad memories, and every thought is worse than the one before it, and nothing will stop the film from running.
I hear ringing at the door and go to it.
There is nobody there.
I call out. ‘Hello?’
Is it him?
‘Hello?’
I go back to the living room and turn the volume up and the television is much louder, but my brain is stronger and I can’t control it. I go to the kitchen. There’s nothing to eat, no milk, bread, biscuits or Weetabix.
I go to my mother’s bedroom so I can take a few coins from her purse for the shops. I open the door quietly. She is awake, sitting up in bed, her back against the headboard, and staring at the wall.
‘I thought you’d be asleep,’ I say.
‘I couldn’t.’
‘Why not?’
‘It’s been seven days now,’ she says. ‘Seven days and only a few hours of sleep. I’ve had it. Can you believe it? Your mother’s had it.’
There are tears rolling down her face, but she doesn’t make a crying noise.
‘What do you mean you’ve had it?’ My knees buckle and I almost fall.
‘I used to be beautiful. But I’ve had my last beautiful day. I didn’t even know when it was. Was it last month or last winter? Was it my last birthday or the one before?’
I fold my arms to have something to do with myself. I don’t know why she’s talking about the way she looks. She is not ugly and she is not old.
‘My last day of looking beautiful is gone and there was no warning. And it has gone for good.’
She reaches for the glass of water by the bed and takes a small sip. Her lips are dry and bits of skin are flaking and peeling from them.
‘And one day soon it won’t matter what kind of mirror I look in, it won’t matter what the light is like, bright or dark, I will look old.’
‘But you aren’t old,’ I say. ‘You’ll never be ugly. It’s just that lately your hair is messy, and a bit grey.’
‘Come here to me for a minute.’
‘No,’ I say. I don’t feel like being close.
‘Do you miss your da?’
‘Sort of.’
‘I spoke to him today. I told him I forgive him, but he says he won’t be coming back. He says we have humiliated him. He says he has been annihilated.’
‘Why don’t we go to Gorey, then?’
‘We’re not welcome there.’
‘Yes, we are.’
‘No. We are not. We are not welcome there.’
‘Why?’
‘Because we have brought shame to the good name of your father’s family, and that will never be forgiven.’
‘It was the truth. Would you prefer I didn’t tell you? I was protecting you.’
She laughs. A strange laugh, like a bark or a dark cough. ‘Protecting me from what? Syphilis? Gonorrhoea?’ She laughs again. ‘Look at you. An eleven-year-old in the body of a grown man who insists on the ridiculous truth and who has got into a bad habit of lying.’
I walk over to the bed and she straightens up and pulls the covers up to her neck.
‘I’m not a liar. He is,’ I say. ‘You used to say that trust matters more than anything.’
‘I care about avoiding misery wherever I can. I think that’s all anybody cares about.’
‘That’s a dumb thing to think.’
‘Of course it is. But pain is much harder on the mind than ignorance.’
‘You’re stupid,’ I say. ‘I didn’t know you were so stupid.’
‘Maybe I am. Why don’t you make yourself a sandwich?’
‘There’s no bread,’ I say and leave the room without remembering to take the money.
I don’t go to school the next day. I stay at home and eat some spaghetti from the saucepan, and creamed rice out of the tin, and watch television most of the day. I go to the shops downstairs to buy some bread and tea. I bring my mother a pot of tea and a plate of toast and, when I tell her I’m worried about her not being able to sleep, she tells me not to worry for her, that she has a cold, a bad cold, that’s all.
‘But you never sleep. And you’re tired all the time. Can’t you get out of bed? Let’s go out and do something.’
‘What would you like to do?’
‘Anything. Maybe go into Grafton Street or to the zoo.’
‘Maybe tomorrow.’
‘You used to want to do things. You used to want to go to the sea and go for drives.’
‘And I will again. I’m just a bit weary with this cold.’
‘You’ve never had such a bad cold before. And colds aren’t meant to change people and make them so different.’
‘Well, I’m older now.’
I want her to stop talking about being old. I want to break the vase on her bedside table and knock the lampshade over and drag her by the arm onto the floor and change her back to who she used to be.
‘Who cares?’ I say. ‘Let’s go to the zoo or get the train to Dún Laoghaire. And when we get home, maybe there’ll be a film.’
‘Maybe tomorrow. I might feel better tomorrow.’
‘Why don’t you say definitely tomorrow and then you’ll definitely feel better?’
‘All right. Definitely tomorrow. We’ll catch the train to the sea.’
I go to sleep and in the morning I remember the dream I had about me and my mother. We are on a cruise ship and we’re very happy together, on our way to Niagara to see Ripley’s Museum.
We sit near the porthole in our cabin on the top deck and watch while a man dressed in green overalls loads our suitcases onto a chute and we watch the suitcases slide down.
But the chute becomes narrower and some of the suitcases slide down too fast, fly into the air, and drop into the water. People scream and cry but the man in the green overalls laughs. ‘Some will miss,’ he says. ‘Some will miss.’
Then I see my suitcase, a small blue one with a leather strap, and I
am nervous as I watch it slide off the chute. But instead of flying into the water to be lost forever, the case comes towards me. It flies through the porthole window and lands softly on my lap.
I feel happy. I don’t know what happened to my mother’s suitcase in the dream but it doesn’t seem to matter.
I make tea and take it to the bedroom. She’s awake; sitting up in bed, more or less the way I left her yesterday, wearing a pink cardigan over her nightie, staring at the wall.
‘Room service,’ I say. ‘Did you order a cup of tea?’
‘Aren’t you sweet?’ she says. ‘I’d love a cup of tea. Why don’t you sit with me a while?’
She drinks her tea and I lie down next to her. ‘What will happen if you can’t ever sleep again?’ I ask.
‘God help me, if that happens.’
‘So, we’ll go on the train to the sea today?’
She puts her arm around me. ‘My darling, I think at the moment there’s more chance vampire bats will take up drinking hot milk.’
She laughs at her joke, but I don’t want to laugh. ‘Are you saying no?’
‘That’s not what I said,’ she says. ‘This isn’t a good time. It’s a very bad time.’
She has cold blood like my father. And her hair, it’s not only grey at the front, near her temples and her ears; grey strands hang down near her eyes, and it’s greasy and dirty hair too. Dirty and grey.
I wait for her to finish her tea and when she puts the cup down on the bedside table I take a pillow from behind my head and rest it on my knee. I don’t talk, and neither does she. I put the radio on to drown out some of my thoughts.
‘Turn that off,’ she says and, like most of what she says, it is as though she hardly cares, as though what happens next is none of her business.
I turn the radio off, get back into bed, and hold the pillow on my lap.
‘You’re taking up too much room there, John. Can’t you move to the other side of the bed?’
I move across and, without my weight in the middle of the mattress, her body rises up, as though it were something light and plastic in the water. I must be much heavier than she is.
‘That’s better,’ she says as she presses her fingers to her temples. ‘But I’ve got a rotten headache. If only I could sleep. If I could sleep then we could be happy again.’
‘You’d be yourself again? You’d be happy again?’