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    Maggie Now

    Page 3
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    than him and he goes and! says they made my birth

      certificate out wrong in City Hall that I'm too young for

      him! I got a beautiful home and I got Widdy from him.

      Timrny will never let me want. No. I love this man. If he

      goes away and never comes back, I'll still be lucky because

      I already got a thousand times more then I would-a had if I

      never got married to him.

      "No, Timmy," she said. "You got to go. What kind a man

      are you anyway, when your mother needs you and all, to

      even think about not going?"

      She knew he'd say he'd go only if she went along, so like

      a kind and thoughtful person she made things easy for

      him.

      "I wish I could go with you, Timmy, but I can't. I can't

      take Widdy out of school."

      "He could stay with your mother."

      "There's the money . . ."

      "I could borrow on me insurance . . . maybe.''

      "Why do you always argue all the time? Go and go

      alone. And come back the same way. Hear?"

      What have I ever done, he mused, to have all this luck? A

      fine good wife like her! I don't deserve her a dope like me.

      A tear ran down his face. He took the towel from her

      and wiped it away. He looked ashamed.

      ~ '7 ]

     

      "Gee! The wav you sweat!" she said tactfully-.

      "Well, don't just stand there," he said. "Get the can and

      I'll get the beer and v.7e'11 eat."

      ~ (.'HA P TER THREE ~

      THE tavern was smoky, crowded and smelled of warm,

      spilled beer. Rory-Boy's fiddle was squealing wildly and

      Patsy Denn was jigging his heart OUt. It was a noisy

      Saturday night. The door opened and a big, red-headed

      stranger came in. He wasn't exactly red-headed, being

      almost bald, but there was a rusty glow where his hair had

      been. A clot of ale-drinking men at the bar opened up to

      let the stranger in md then closed about him; absorbing

      him, as it were.

      Rory-Boy saw the stranger come in and his Irish

      intuition told him that the stranger was Maggie Rose's big

      brother come all the w ay from Brooklyn to beat the hell

      out of Patrick Dennis. He was too scared to warn Patsy.

      He forgot the notes of "The Irish Washerwoman" as his

      fingers froze on his fiddle strings. His desperately sawing

      bow brought out a continuous one-note, high wail. Patsy

      thought the tune was ending and he went into the frenzied

      leap into the air where he usually clicked his heels to-

      gether in a finale.

      "Never have I le'ppe.l so hitrh! he called to his friend as

      he went up.

      Indeed his leap was prodigious. He went up . . . up

      without the volition of his legs and he stayed suspended in

      the air. For a second, he felt like an ;mgel with wings,

      then he wondered what made his pants so tight. He found

      out.

      Timothy (Big Red) Shawn had slipped out of the knot

      of men, and at the moment of Patsy's leap he had, like a

      trained acrobat, gotten a purchase on the seat of Patsy's

      pants and on the scruff of his neck and had given Patsv's

      leap a grand fillip. As Bertie, the Broomlllaker, who

      happened to be there, later wrote 1: /lY :1

      in a letter for a gossiping cl ent: All corlviviality ceased and

      silence reigned.

      Big Red held Patsy in the air and shook him as though

      he w ere a rag puppet. Big Red had rehearsed a speech

      coming over in the steerage. He had planned to give it as

      a prelude to a thrashing, but he forgot it entirely and had

      to ad-lib.

      "You durtee, wee, little black'ard you!" he said loud for

      all to hear. "I'll learn youse to break the only heart of me

      only mother and . . ." (Shake! Shake!) ". . . scandalize the

      name of me baby sister. You jiggin' monkey! You durtee

      bog trotter, you!"

      "What do you mean, bog trotter?" gasped Patsy, scared

      but insulted. "I never cut peat in all of me life."

      Finally Big Red set him down and gave him one of those

      oldtime licking,. When he had finished, he threw Patsy in

      the gen

      eral direction of the exit and dusted off his hands.

      "And don't forget, fancy man," he said, "there's more

      where that come from."

      Patrick Dennis backed out of the tavern. He wasn't

      taking any chances of being kicked in the behind.

      Patsy's mother clucked over his bruises. He told her his

      bicycle had hit a rock and that he had been thrown into

      the brambles.

      As often happens, those most concerned in an incident

      are the last to know of the motivating forces behind it. For

      instance all the village knew that the Widow Shawn had

      sent for her son, Big Red. Yes, all knew except Lizzie

      Moore and Patsy. An hour after the beating, all knew of

      Patsy's humiliation except his mother. Yes, Patsy was the

      last to know of Big Red's arrival and his mother was next

      to the last. Someone had told her just after Patsy had left

      for the tavern. It was news to her and she assumed it

      would be news to her son.

      "Ah, the grand power of writing," she said, as she raved

      homemade salve on her eye apple's bruises. "Only half a

      shilling he charged to write the letter. Bertie, the

      Broommaker. And the words on the letter spoke out so

      clear that he was back in the shanty where he was born a

      month to the day when the letter left here. Timmy Shawn,

      I mean. Big Red they call him."

      "Shawn? Shawn?" asked Patsy, beginning to understand.

      1' I9 1

     

      "The same. And a fine strapping man Brooklyn made of

      him. 'Tis said he's the head constable and his wages is a

      forchune."

      "Tell me plain, Mother: Is it Maggie Rose's brother you

      tell of 2"

      "The same."

      "And she sent for him to come-"

      "May God strike me flown dead! She did. 'Twas Nora

      O'Dell told me."

      "I could nor see it ahead. I could not see it ahead,"

      mourned Patsy

      "What, son?"

      "The big rock in the road that chucked me off me wheel

      when I was coming home to you this night."

      The next day, Sunday, a scared, chastened Patsy went to

      Mass with his mother. He saw his girl wedged in between

      her simpering mother and her burly brother. Patsy started

      to feel sick as he stared at Big Red's broad back.

      Father Rowley came down from the altar and stepped

      to one side of it before the railing to make the routine

      announcements of the week. Patsy hardly listened to the

      rise and fall of the voice until, as in a nightmare from

      which there is no awakening, he heard the sound of his

      name.

      ". . . weekly meeting of the girls' Sodality." The priest

      cleared his throat. "The banns of marriage are read for

      the first time between Margaret Rose Shawn and Patrick

      Dennis Moore. Your prayers are requested for the repose

      of the soul of . . ."

      Lizzie Moore gave a hoarse honk like
    a wild goose

      calling the flock in for a landing. There was a stir like a

      great sigh as the congregation turned to stare at Patsy and

      his mother. Big Red turned around and gave Patsy a grin

      of victory. His lips silently formed the words: There's more

      where that came from.

      Patsy was caught and he knew it. Trapped, he moaned

      to himself. And by what thrickery did he get me name up for

      marrying and me the one should have the say of it? Caught!

      Before two veeks is out I'll be married forever.

      His mother wept foggily into the hem of her top

      petticoat. He kept it front me, she mourned. Me Iyin' 5071.

      He went to the priest with the girl and gave himself up. And

      Big Timmy was sent for to give the girl away and she having

      no father to do so.

      1 ' 1

     

      Oh, for me son to treat me so, and he me last baby and the

      hardest to bring into God's world with his head the size of a

      hard, green cabbage at the time.

      She wept and Patsy was ashamed. He left during the

      final prayer. Maggie Rose, kneeling, turned as he got up

      and made an instinctive movement to follow him but Big

      Red pulled her back down.

      Outside, Patsy hid behind a tree to wait for his mother.

      He saw Rory-Boy come out surrounded by most of the

      young men of the village. He tried to catch Rory-Boy's eye

      but his friend was too busy.

      To Patsy's horror, he saw Rory-Boy entertain the boys

      by pantomiming the thrashing of the night before. First,

      he was Big Red, chest stuck out, fists clenched, entering

      the tavern. Then he was Big Red holding up an invisible

      Patsy and shaking him as a bulldog shakes a rat. Then the

      rat or Patsy was set down and Rory-Boy gave his

      impression of the thrashing.

      He was Big Red slapping Patsy on either side of the

      face. Then he was PatsNr with his head going back and

      forth like a pendulum under the impact of the slaps and

      blows and so on. The fellers around clapped their hands

      noiselessly in rhythm and tapped their feet.

      Although suffering, Patsy viewed the pantomime with a

      professional eye. A little music along with it, a ballad made

      up by Henny, the Hermit . . . Not bad, he thought with

      professional detachment.

      Rory-Bov was going into the ending of the act. He was

      Patsy backing out of the door with his hands protecting his

      buttocks. Here, Rory-Boy ad-libbed. He acted out Patsy

      being kicked in the backside and, in reaction, leaping

      awkwardly into the air with his face distorted in fright.

      A lie! A black lie! Patsy wanted to call out. It was not

      that way. And then he was crying tears in his heart. Ah, he

      decided, RoryBoy no longer seems like a friend to me.

      Maggie Rose came OUt with her mother and brother

      and the girls surrolmded her an I smiled and gushed and

      hugged her. Maggie Rose turned away and pulled her

      shawl lower over her face. The Widow Shawn accepted

      the congratulations of her friends complacently and the

      men greeted Big Red heartily and

      [21 1

     

      pumped his hand. It was like a vedding reception.

      Patsy saw his mother come out supported by two crones

      who patted her arm and gave her spurious sympathy the

      while they leered with delight at her comeuppance. When

      Lizzie Moore saNv Maggie Rose, she braille loose from

      her crones, made her hands into claws and went for the

      girl. She was pulled off by the crones.

      She went down the road supported by them and from

      time to time her knees buckled and she slumped down

      like a drunken woman and had to be pulled up again. The

      young girls looked after her and her escorts; whispering,

      giggling, laughing aloud and being silenced, laughingly, bv

      each other.

      Father C'rowley came out and stood on the steps of the

      church. He frowned and clapped his hands sharply. The

      talk and giggling and horseplay stopped at once. The

      crovds broke up into little groups and the congregation

      went home.

      Patsy felt friendless and disgraced. He was sure that by

      now all the village knew he had been licked by his girl's

      brother. Before night the whole village would know

      whatever trick Big Red had used to get the bawls read

      and he, Patsy Denny, would be the laughingstock of the

      county.

      Sure, he fmust have promised leather a crate of Hennessy's

      l: our Star to make hint read th. bimns, thol'`,ht Patsy.

      Rory-Boy: That hurt! I hey were through. Rory-Boy no

      longer had need of a part-per nor of his fiddle. NO He

      could perform in the taverns as a single giving his

      pantomime of "The Thrashing of Patrick I tennis Moore."

      Oh, they'd laugh and throw coppers at him. A!ld after

      he'd play ed out the village pubs. he could go on to the

      next village; the next county to all of Ireland. And he

      was sure Rory-Boy would do exactly that because that's

      what he, Patsy, would do were he in Rory-Boy's shoes.

      And Rory-Boy would never want for anything because

      the Irish dearly loved an entertainer and they'd clothe him

      and feed him and house him the \~ay they did witl1

      idiots whom some believed to be God's pets.

      It came too late to Patsy too late- the knowledge that

      he loved .laggie Rose and would never love any other

      woman. Why, oh, vlly hadn't he married her when their

      love was fresh and new before it had been dirtied by

      scandals and beatings and public disgrace?

      1

      We could' have gotten along smite way, he thought. '4/:,

      but leer mother! And me own mother, too. The sin is theirs

      Jor is there any law in the world that ways I must not marry

      if me mother says so and I must marry if the girl's mother

      says so? No.

      Could eve not have lived with me another? No! he

      answered himself. She'd never have the girl in the house.

      But the Widder Shawn! She would. If she wouldn't we'd go

      to live there anyhow counting on. her getting used to it in

      time. And maybe I could have gone to work. Would not the

      Clooney give me the job of drawing ale in his tavern, me

      who could dance a jig or two between servings? Could ~

      not go to the TVidder Sharon and Big Red with me hat in

      one hand and me pride in the dust and say: I'm willing?

      No, I could not. And I cannot stay here because Herlny,

      tee Hermit, is starting to work on me the while l'n, standing

      here. And when he's done with me there will be no place in

      all of Irelan.l where I can hide me head.

      Henny, the Hermit, was a one-eyed, dirty old man who

      lived in a hovel in the hills with a she goat. He had a

      zither and he made up ballads about everything that went

      on in the village. On holidays and saints' days he sat in

      the village commons with his goat tethered to his leg and

      his zither in his lap. There he sang his interminable

      ballads in a high, cracked
    whine that he called his voice,

      accompanying himself on the zither with one, monotonous

      note because the zither had but one string. The dirty man

      lived off the halfpennies they threw hi and the milk of his

      goat.

      "The Ballad of Patsy 1). I~loorc! " The dreary drivel of

      untalented Helmy distorting facts and making Patsy the

      butt and burden of the narrative! Children would sing it

      along the road walking home from school. Drunkards

      would bawl it out beating time on the bar with their

      pewter mugs. Even as an old man, the ballad would haunt

      Patsy and shame his children.

      'Tis not to be endured, decided Patsy. OF, better to be

      dead to go to America . . .

      America!

      He'd heard that the steamship company paid your as ay

      and got you a job in America. And there as a little office

      in a illage not

      ~ ~ 1

     

      ten miles away where the steamship man from Liverpool

      arranged everything. He almost whistled as he sneaked

      home in a roundabout way.

      His mother wouldn't spear. to him wlletl he got home.

      She had her good, black dress and a pair of black

      stockings she'd been hoarding for twenty years laid out on

      the bed. She was polishing her black shoes from a tin of

      caked blacking. He chattered, trying to get her to speak to

      him. But she had nothing to say until he asked politely:

      "Are you going a-visiting, ~~lother~"

      "And who would I go see, the way I'm 'shamed to show

      me face in the village? No, I'm getting me good black

      clothes ready the clothes I'm wishin or to be laid GUt

      in."

      "Not for many a year vet, God willing."

      "Soon. Soon. The day you marry is the day you'll see me

      in me casket."

      "Don't die on me," he bcggetl.

      "You marry on me and I'll die on you." She buffed the

      shoe which gloved her hand.

      "I'll never marry the ~ bile you live."

      "Ah, so. Never rnarry~ he says, after having the banns

      read and all! "

      It took him an hour to convince her that the banns were

      said without his consent or knowledge. She refused to

      believe him until he told her of the beatinr' he'd had from

      Big Red.

      "And so he licked you me poor boy, and you saying you

      fell off your wheel."

      "'Twas shame made me say it."

      "And he'll lick you many a time till you say, 'I do.'"

      "I'll die first!"

      "You won't die first on last. You'll be made to marry the

      girl."

      "I can't be made if I go to America."

      "And you'd be leavin,, me like me other chilthren did?"

      "Only for a uThile. I'll send for vou before the year is

      crone."

      "You'll not be sanding for anyorle. You'll bide here with

      me. Die if you have the uish. But you'll not marry and

      you'll not leave me."

      "'Tis hard to die'" lie said. and our Lord forgive me for

      ~ 7' 1

     

      saying I would and me not meaning it a-tall. I will stay,

      Mother dear, and marry Maggie Rose, and I will be

      shamed in the county all the days of me living and I'll not

      be caring, because I love Maggie Rose."

      "You say so."

      "I would do so."

      She put the lid on the tin of blacking. "In a year you

      say? You'll send for me?"

      "I swear it."

      " 'Tis for the best." She put the blacking away. "Go,

      then, to America and make a place for me and I will

      come to you."

      The next morning, he cycled ten miles to the next

      village. The Liverpool sport who represented a steamship

      company made things easy for Patrick Dennis Moore.

      Passage was arranged and everything was free free for

      the time being.

      Yes, Patsy would have tO pay for the ticket in time, but

      that was easy, too. There was a job waiting for him in

      America. One Michael Moriarity and, oh, he was Lord

      Mayor of Brooklyn or something near as grand, was the

      sport's opinion would pay Patsy all of five dollars a w

      eek and give him room and board. And all for what? For

      nothing. For taking care of two darling carriage horses.

     


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