by Edna O'Brien
“We’re getting our act together … well over a hundred guards are being recruited … army, infantry, helicopter backup, house-to-house enquiry, underwater unit, sniffer dogs … What more do you want?”
“Three and a half days since Eily went missing … twenty-four hours since you learnt that O’Kane was seen at close range in the back of her car …”
“I have heard she looked very relaxed when she was seen with him in her car.”
“Bullshit … she was scared to death, but she was simply not a priority for you.”
“We treat every case with the same degree of importance.”
“But you did nothing.”
“Look, we have no evidence of any abduction … none …”
“So where do you think she is … by a hotel pool? And where do you think he is?”
“Bobby … I run this show, not you.”
“One of your officers told her sister that next thing we would be asking to name her Housewife of the Year.”
“That does not reflect gardai policy.”
“Only when the priest went missing did you sit up …”
“As I said on the local radio, and I will say it again, any case that involves boundaries makes things more complicated … gardai in one station or another having to liaise with their colleagues.”
“So where is O’Kane?” she asks.
“There are two or three woods that he frequents … he’s in one of them.”
“Get him,” she says with a vengeance.
He turns away from her and defers to Joseph, one of the foresters, who has his back to the crowd and is bent over a series of maps, marking out particularly dense areas with a red pen.
“Why did you call off our search yesterday?” Vera asks him, a little nervous and a little piqued.
“Because you were all going criss-cross up there … it was useless, you were getting nowhere … no organisation, no strategy … Today we have a strategy, and Joseph is best suited to mastermind it. He knows those woods, he planted those trees, he patrols there,” and turning to Joseph, he asks him to brief them.
Joseph is a little shy and coughs a few times and begins: “What we do is this … we form lines about one foot apart … ten to a line. Now the person in front of his or her line takes the lead and goes into the forest and after about fifty yards shouts ALL CLEAR … The second person picks that up and follows and repeats the coda, and so on to the third and fourth and fifth …”
“Might she have jewellery on?” someone asks.
“That’s a good point,” the sergeant says, and asks those who knew her to recall things they’d seen her wear. Vera remembers a leather thong with a wooden pendant, and Madge starts to speak but, succumbing to emotion, keeps saying, “I’m a blatherer … I know I’m a blatherer … but I am her friend.”
“Are we talking a doomsday scenario here?” Declan, a little drunk, asks as he staggers to where maps of the forestries are spread out on a desk.
“No … bad as he is, O’Kane would not kill,” a young guard says, and turns for confirmation to the sergeant, who is already counting and herding them into groups of ten. At that moment a stranger rushes into the room in a thrall of excitement, waving a sheet of paper and carrying a rowan branch as if it is a wand. He is tall and sallow, with a long white robe under his raincoat and his hair tied in a ponytail.
“She is there,” he says, pointing to a star on a drawing which he has made, a perfect depiction of a country area with green colouring for the forest, brown for the humped bridges, and an outline of an empty house with creeper hanging from the eaves.
“Where is there?” Vera calls out.
“I am not familiar with the place-names … I’ve never been to these parts … I was guided here.”
“It’s been in every paper … a woman and a child and a priest are missing … it’s on every radio station,” he is told.
“I don’t listen to radios … I listen to my dreams … I meditated and the answer came to me.”
“What answer?”
“A woman in a swath of woodland who is prevented from screaming.”
“Who are you?” the sergeant asks, irritated by his arrogance, his sandals, his John the Baptist robe.
“I am a link in the chain … a bond of connection between the missing woman and yourselves,” he says, unruffled, and goes out with the same smiling rapture as when he came in, propelled by some inner calling.
Donnagh
IT’S LIKE we are looking for a wolfman who leaves his traces and then vanishes. The question now is will we ever catch him. Has he powers beyond the natural, that is what is being said. The truth is, we’re all feeding on our fears, men and women both, retreating into blindness like into a dark cave. When Liam Purcell and myself came on an empty cigarette carton and banana skins on the cow walk, our antennae were out.
We stopped first at Glebe House, which has not been occupied for years. There was a good newish caravan cushion on the floor. It was brown corduroy with leather buttons. Liam said it was not there two days ago when he looked in that window. He has cattle up that way and fodders them morning and night, so he notices anything unusual. On the side of the track into the wood there was a lady’s black sweater, and I picked it up with a stick and put it in the back of the car to bring to the guards. Then two hundred feet into the forest we came on the remains of a lunch — an empty biscuit packet and a tin that had sardines. I also picked them up for evidence. Farther on I found a blue torch with a red battery submerged in a pool of water. When I switched it on, the light was weak. Nearby was a fertiliser bag. Things.
My wife, her friend Josie, and myself visited our cousin Mary Kate down at the shore, as she feels in real danger there because Eily Ryan lived in that very same apartment for a short while. The whole conversation hinged on the disappearance of Eily and her child and a priest and the possible connection with O’Kane.
“I wonder will he come for me,” Mary Kate said. She kept looking towards the window.
“Don’t say that … in God’s name don’t say that,” my wife said.
“I know he will,” Mary Kate said, and went up the stairs for the umpteenth time to look to see if her child was safe.
We sat there smoking, drinking cup after cup of coffee, turning on the wireless at news times, expecting some bulletin. At one point I just sensed that O’Kane was nearby. I don’t know how or why I felt it, but I just knew. I opened the window in her living room and heard movement to the right and told them to shush.
“Is he there?” Mary Kate asked.
“There’s someone there,” I said and I called out and we switched on the outside light and we went out with sticks, the four of us shouting, but he had disappeared. We stayed an hour longer to give Mary Kate courage, but finally we had to leave because of work in the morning.
When we passed Tuohey’s milk parlour, their security light was on and I said I found that odd, as it was worked by sensor and no vehicle had passed up or down the road while we were in Mary Kate’s.
“That’s not normal,” I said.
“Nothing is normal now,” my wife said, and Josie and she huddled together in the back, screaming, as if they were going to be shot.
At Houlihan’s pier we saw a blue flame, about twenty feet high off the ground, and I thought at first it was a lifebuoy on fire, and I wanted to swing to the right and investigate, but the women wouldn’t let me, they said, “Drive on, drive on.” They kept insisting then that it was a crowd of drunks who had lit a fire on the harbour and that it would be awful to call the guards at that hour of night.
Deep down we believe he has been sent by God, as punishment upon us.
Houlihan’s Pier
“CRIPES … a dancing girl,” Frank says as he slows down the car to look.
“A mermaid,” Paddy says as they stare at the ball of lit blue that seems to be above the water, skimming it.
“It’s a gas explosion on that houseboat … We better call the fire brigade,” F
rank says, a little less skittishly.
“I’m one of the fire brigade,” Paddy says, and splutters. They are both half drunk and they are enthralled by it. It is well after midnight, and each had promised the other that they would leave the pub after the next drink, and on and on it went, Frank’s uncle looking at his watch and begging them to bring him home to his bed.
“We better get out and investigate.”
“We had not … we better be going back to Lawler’s Pub and ring the brigade … The funny thing is, it wasn’t there five minutes ago when we were driving down …”
“That’s the thing with fire … it’s a phenomenon,” Paddy says, his tongue tripping on the big word.
On their way back to the village they come on Charlie, who is carrying a pregnant sheep into his yard, and they shout out to him about a boat being on fire and how they’re going up to Lawler’s to ring.
“Ring from here … it’s faster,” he calls back.
While they are waiting for the fire brigade to arrive, the three men decide to go back, and getting there, walking in a closed knot, trampling their lit-up shadows, they find a car halfway in over the pier, as if someone has tried to push it but failed. They are drawn to it, closer and closer, like men seeing fire for the first time, the lick of the flames dancing across their faces, their hands blackened by going too close to it, and already they guess the worst.
“It’s O’Kane’s style,” Paddy says, and as they gape at it, the sharp and brittle crack of a gunshot is heard and a bullet lands somewhere in the ornamental bushes around the ruin of an old house.
“He’s around …”
“Let’s get the hell out of here.”
They waited in Charlie’s house until the guards came, and when they returned the fire had almost ceased; the car a black shell with nothing to show of itself, no windows, no seats, no number plates, just a cavity in which rosary beads dangled inside from a charred dashboard.
The fire engine arrived soon after, but without its siren on, and the firemen jumped out, still half asleep but fully togged, ready to do their gallant work and a little crestfallen at finding they had come as the last puttery flames were ebbing, dying out. They walked around it saying the same commiserating things, and the fire engine itself, its silent bells, its roped ladder, and its coils of hosing looked like a big toy, faintly ridiculous in that scene of catastrophe.
* * *
One of the guards found a registration branded into the glass of the rear window, and they took turns to peer at it with a torch, then with the naked eye, to read the letters and the numbers, with collars of soot around them. With infinitesimal care he removed the soot with some sticky tape, and the other men watched in a strained, admiring raptness. They deliberated, then each man called out the lettering and the numbering as he believed it to be and their guesses matched.
Charlie’s house was suddenly like a canteen. Neighbours had gathered because of hearing the cars and the fire engine, and Charlie’s wife, her hair loose and flying as if she belonged in some ancient drama, kept plying them with warm scones, repeating the miracle that had happened while the men were gone, that a sick sheep that they were sure was going to die had given birth to twins. She marvelled that it was twins and that the sheep, poor creature, had had a dropped womb and wasn’t it a good omen. It was only when the guard came back in from the hallway where he had been ringing the station that she seemed to take in the gravity of what was really happening.
“It’s the priest’s car,” the guard said.
“Father John’s car … Father John’s car.” The evocation of his name sent shivers through them, and one who knew him spoke of his kindness, his down-to-earthness, the way he mixed with the people and played hurley like any ordinary bloke. She was pressed for more information and all she could think to say was that he had a good dress sense and wore a beautiful gold watch.
“It doesn’t look good,” Charlie said.
“We’ve dragged our feet too long over them missing people,” the men said, eager now to go on a reckless search in the dead of night.
* * *
Around the cold jetty in the sad dawn, twenty or so people converged to see it, and what they saw was a crinkled plastic sheet covering a shell of a car like a shroud. They knew it was the priest’s car, just as they knew of the rosary beads that had not burned up and the shot that had been fired a few feet away after midnight. With a terrible constraint they kept looking towards the lake, believing that Father John was down there among the ghosts of others who had drowned, fishermen caught in a squall, drunk youths coming home from a disco, and Fidelma, who had left her husband after the first night of marriage. No one said so, but each felt he was down there, and standing in the cold, they looked up at the first sight of the helicopter, rackety, invasive, a big threatening bird, bringing unease to fields and meadows, to lanes with gorse bushes all in bloom, to that soft-seeming haze of the biding mountains.
Capture
“THE FOX IS INVISIBLE.” He keeps shouting it from the depths of a ditch where he has hidden all night, shouting it and emptying the rainwater out of his boots.
The heat is on. They are searching boats, harbour front, fields and sheds, shitting themselves because they can’t find him. He has seen his picture in the newspaper next to the woman, like they are a bridal couple. She has both her eyes, gazing. There is a picture of the fecking dog with the number plate in its mouth. A picture of the priest, a lock of hair down over his forehead, holding a hurley stick.
In that ditch before the dawn, he has his first fill of the chopper coming in to get him. He can feel their desperation in the way they tear over the fields, zoom up and down, in and out, skimming the treetops, trying to sniff him.
“You could get me, but you’re afraid of me … scumbags,” he shouts up to the helicopter as it whisks off over to the lake and the island where the butcher grazes his cattle. He gets out of his hole and walks across to a gateway, leans on it, waiting for someone to pass. A creamery lorry drives by, and the driver gapes at him with fear and semi recognition and drives on. He leaves an old bucket upside down in a field, another trick to confound them.
“The fox is flying it,” he says to the bushes, to the hawthorn, and across to the house that he has already targeted. He is merely waiting for the man or the woman to come out, to walk up the road, to open a gate and let the cows make their own way on down to the milking parlour. He has watched them do it each morning, either one of them going up to open the gate and the other going down to the milking parlour to get the machines ready, and Kitty, the daughter, asleep. She is a redhead too, but not golden like the woman, raw, foxy. He bursts out laughing at the thought of her scream.
* * *
At the sound of something breaking Kitty sits up startled and thinks, Jesus, the dishes, I didn’t stack them right in the press, my mother will eat me. Her younger sister, Deirdre, and her grandmother in the far wing of the house, and her parents gone milking, same as always, then not the same.
The bedroom door is kicked in and she screams, she screams at a face masked with black nylon tights, telling her to get up fast. Behind the gauze of the nylon she recognises O’Kane, his eyes like coals, spittle along his lips, and every other word fuck, fuck. To save her grandmother a heart attack she gets out of bed and says pluckily, “There’s nothing for you in this house, O’Kane.”
There are splinters of glass all over the kitchen floor where he has broken a panel, and she has to pick her steps to get the car keys that he has asked for out of the drawer.
“Take them,” she says, and flings them across a work-top.
“You’re coming too, Ginger,” he says.
“I’ve an exam today … it’s a very important day for me,” she says, that little bit less insolent.
“It’ll happen without you.”
“At least let me get some clothes on,” she says, pulling the lapels of her pyjamas across her front.
“Get the fuck out the door and stop me
ssing.”
He sits beside her, the gun across his sprawled legs, and a couple of minutes beyond the gateway she sees her own mother seeing her and flinging her hands up, aghast. He has already mapped a route in his mind.
“Go left.
“Go right.
“Go along the pier.
“Go up to the ash tree.
“Go to Dick’s Cross.”
“You think my mother didn’t know you … you think that mask disguises you … well, it doesn’t,” she tells him.
“You’re a fecking useless driver …”
“You were only a class ahead of me at school … such a shy little lad … you wouldn’t come in the playground … waiting for your mother … and look at you now … having the country at gunpoint.”
“Stop the fecking car,” he orders her, and as he gets out, she thinks she will have a few seconds to bolt, but he has already anticipated that, and levelling the muzzle on her forehead he backs out, opens the back door, and lobs the gun above her head as he settles into the back seat and pulls the tights off. He allows the legs to dangle on his shoulder and gives them a little mocking toss from time to time. He nuzzles them and she thinks, I know who they belong to. He looks less of an ogre without the tights, and she tries talking, as if she is not afraid.