Authors: J. Robert Janes
The necktie was a thing a French girl had given him years ago and Mary knew she must remind him of that girl and that this had probably been one of the reasons they had married.
The drapes were drawn, the blackout being observed in this place but not in the South, never in the South.
5
Belfast had been bombed in April and again in May. Terrible damage and loss of life,
6
but since then the Luftwaffe had left Northern Ireland alone and the country had gone back to being just what it was, the centuries of silence and the fight, of course, their precious âRebellion.'
The gold-rimmed eyeglasses were perched well down on the bridge of his nose. A hank of thinning hair, once reddish blond, now of sand and getting grey, hung over the right side of his brow. He seldom gave a care for such things. Perhaps he once had, but in all honesty she felt Hamish was trapped by time, circumstance and profession, he wanting only to revert to his essential self.
Just what that was she hadn't quite decided.
âMary, I've awakened you.'
He started to get upâuncrossed his legs and closed the book, threw off the dust of his subconscious as she brushed a cheek against his own and momentarily hugged him.
âI couldn't sleep,' she said.
âDublin go all right?' he asked as she turned to sit in the armchair by the fire. Her chair, his sofa, and the dog not even stirring or taking any notice of her.
âYes, fine. Easier than I'd thought. And you? You're late.'
âAnother incident at the castle. A second lieutenant this time. The Leutnant zur See Bachmann, a nice boy, Mary. Only twenty-four and a great pity it had to happen.' More he wouldn't say but they both knew the truth would soon be out. Nothing stayed buried for long in these parts. Not unless the Irish wanted it that way.
âPlease don't distress yourself, Mary. War makes prisoners of us all. It makes men do things they oughtn't.'
And here she'd thought he would be upset with her. âWould you like a nightcap?'
âBushmills?'
âIn the cabinet. I could only get two, though.'
The newspaper was the copy of the
Irish Times
she'd bought yesterday, and she knew then, as he went to get the whiskey, that Hamish had taken a look in the car himself and had retrieved it. He'd been talking to Jimmy. He would know all about what had happened at the border.
âA little water?' he asked, not turning to look at her.
âYes. Yes, I'd like that.'
Hamish was almost old enough to have been her father. Fifty-four and not worrying about it, though. Not looking it either. Not really. A grand, tall, humble man with loose arms and a jacket that hung on him giving lots of room because he liked it that way and often had to pull the sleeves up or take the blessed thing off.
There were wrinkles, especially at the far corners of his eyes. The complexion was ruddy, the face broad and very Scottish with a full, if sometimes frightening nose and a chin that jutted out to accept both wind and rain with equal disregard.
There were bags under his eyes, a sag to the cheeksâhe'd been biting himself with his back molars and had said over breakfast once, âI'm beginning to fold in on myself.'
As he handed her the cut-glass tumbler, their fingers touched and he stood before her, stood there looking down at her wondering, was he? Wondering what he was going to do about her? He had that look about him, had it in the smoky warmth of greeny-brown eyes that searched for answers now and could not be defied for long.
But then, on some sudden thought, or perhaps because of something he'd been reading, he smiled, and at once this was reflected in his eyes and she felt herself slipping back to him and wanted to say, to shout, âDon't make it any harder!' but could only smile wanly up at him, knowing that she would remind him of the girl he'd found in France and the one he'd rescued from the shores of Loch Lomond in the spring of 1939.
She took a sip. Fraser sat down opposite her on the sofa, wouldn't touch his whiskey yet, he thought, would just stare at it and wish away the gulf between them, though Mary couldn't really know this nor how much he wanted simply to forgive and forget. âThe IRA are trouble, lass. A great deal of it. Captain Allanby had his reasons for being insufferableâorders from the top, no doubt, and word that someone close to this bomber, if not the man himself, would try to slip back into the North at that crossing, though why any of that lot would bother is beyond me. A border crossing when they've the whole of the border to slip through? It defies reason, but an order is an order, the High Command omnipotent, and no matter the consequences.'
Still untouched, he set his whiskey aside to take out his pipe and tobacco pouch.
âThe Belfast organization is by far the strongest at the moment,' he went on, choosing not to look at her but to busy himself. âThey've the whole of the nine northern counties to slip into and away, not just the six of Ulster, and as anyone knows, they're not to be tampered with.'
âJimmy was just being insufferable, Hamish. He knows I can't stand himâI wish I could, a little, that is, but I can't. I've had nothing to do with those peopleâhow could I have?'
Still he would not look at her. âMy thoughts exactly,' was all he said and, striking the match, brought it to the bowl of that pipe of his to look down its length at her.
âScotland Yard are certain Liam Nolan was the man who set off that bomb and took the life of that little girl, Mary, the poor wee thing worried only about having to leave her mother. Nolan's been keeping himself out of sight since those Belfast bank jobs they pulled off last spring. Gone to ground, as they say, but â¦' He waved the match out and flicked it into the grate. âBut perhaps the Yard have got it all wrong.'
Mary knew she would have to say something, but that she'd have to still the panic in her. She didn't know of this Nolan; Brenda Darcy had said nothing of him. Nothing! âWouldn't it make more sense to think the Irish Sea would stop him in wartime?'
âThere are fishing boats. They still do get acrossâthe IRA, that is, and others.'
It was her turn to stare emptily at her whiskey. Her voice lost, she sadly whispered, âIt seems such a horrid thing to have done. Utterly senseless.'
To let his gaze settle on her would take some doing when her eyes were downcast like this, Fraser warned himself, but he'd have to look for signs and not give in. He knew she was an enigma to him, that beneath the lie of innocence a herculean struggle was going on, that she had a conscience, a strength and depth of character he'd yet to fathom.
The slender hands that had been folded in front of her flattened themselves against her thighs. âI didn't go to the dentist, Hamish. I ⦠I just had to get away again. This place ⦠You know how it is. I know you do. I stayed at the White Horse Inn on Wilton Terrace, overlooking the Grand Canal. I went for walks. I â¦'
Those lovely eyes of hers lifted to meet his gaze, she giving him that shrug he knew so well. âMary ⦠Lass, there's no harm in that. Did you enjoy yourself?'
Must they play this game? âNot really. I missed you. I ⦠I felt awful.'
Fraser told himself to say nothing of the cigarette butts they'd found in the motorcarâJimmy Allanby was just being himself, a bitter, lonely, overly suspicious man with a chip on his shoulder and one she knew well enough.
Och
, he would reach for his glassâaye, that's what he'd do.
But he didn't. Mary heard him get up. He set his pipe aside and stepped around the coffee table. âYou must be tired,' he said, and she felt him take her by the hand, wished he'd say something sharpâanything!âbefore it was too late.
In the morning, the rain had gone. A grey mist hung over the fields and woods, and in the gardens behind the house droplets of water lay on every petal and on all the blades of grass.
Each day had its hushes. The most intense was, of course, not just before dawn but as now when the light of a struggling sun tried to break through the tops of the most distant beeches which stood dark in clusters on the endlessly rolling crowns of the drumlins, and the land, with its meadows, fields, hills and hedgerows of mossy stone and bushes or bracken gave to the world but a whisper and the brown-eyed cattle returned from their milking.
Mary stopped by the bridge where the Loughie ran dark amber with its taste of peat and the reeds were turning brown. Breathing in deeply, she listened to the hush, picking out the faint sound of Parker O'Shane's lead cow and best milker, named Mary just like herself. Though she wouldn't go there today, the sly laughter and swift asides of each exchange came readily enough, Parker with his gumboots mired in cowpats and sucking on that fire of his just as Hamish sucked on his. These visits, she knew, were bright spots in this life of hers, but was it a day for confessions?
Getting on the forest-green Raleigh with its wicker carrier basket up front, she started out again, a lone woman on her bicycle amid the green, grass-green of a landscape that had gone to grey with a mist whose trailing tendrils felt their way into every hollow.
The house, situated a good three miles from the village of Ballylurgen, was some twelve miles as the raven flew to Armagh in the County Armagh. She'd had such an idea of the place, such a picture of it when Hamish had first told her about it. Romance and him wanting to get away from the war, wanting to keep her safe from it. Escape.
There were a good four acres of gardens to look after or let goâmainly the latterâa stable of sorts and a stableboy because Hamish preferred to use the pony trap, what with the petrol rationing and all, and the wagging tongues of the critical.
Besides the gardener and William, there were Mrs. Haney and Bridget, so a staff of four she'd just as soon have liked to dismiss long ago for various reasons. Love at first, and privacy, but then ⦠why then, the slow and patient withdrawal. Whose fault had it been? Her own? Hamish's? Had they both expected too much of the other? Had this place simply got to them, made her vulnerable but not let her realize how it must have shown?
In any case that was all over and done with, but at the crest of Caitlyn Murphy's Hill, the girl who had died up here during the Troubles just like Nora Fergus, Mary stopped to look back and away to the north, to the house and beyond.
It
was
lovely. Georgian as she'd said so many times. Not the usual Georgian of Northern Ireland. Solidâstill exuding wealth, position, power and paternalism. Well-built by one Royal George Morton in 1770 and not all of that pale grey Armagh granite, but mainly of English brick from Kent, and with only the granite at its corners, sills and lintels or above the front door and in its three low steps.
The trim had been painted white but was green in and under the eaves and over the shutters which were never closed, not since her arrival anyway.
The drive was circular, the broad oval of the fishpond being enclosed by gravel. The fountains were of beautifully sculpted, bronze-green naked boys riding dolphins and misbehaving. There were three of them, the water pissing outwards in long streams so that against all other sounds at night, one had a constant urge to urinate.
âI'm being wicked,' she said. âThe water has now been turned off and the pond drained. The pipes were corroded.'
The house had eighteen rooms plus kitchen, pantry, mudroom and laundry, not to count the attic. It had its wings of equal size and of two storeys, dormers on the fourth floor of the main and a grey slate roof with six good, sturdy chimneys and fireplaces in all the important rooms.
Bay windows, too, and a solarium full of hothouse plantsâa jungleâon the ground floor at the back, overlooking the gardens.
Yes, it was lovely, and yes, Hamish had bought it especially for her, but was it not also, like the land, inherently sad?
Royal George Morton had been well settled by his family, with land holdings in excess of some 582 acres most of which he'd all too soon gambled or drunk away. In the end, he had died of a bullet to the brain from a horse pistol. Not suicide, nothing so grand as that. Murder, foul murder but âjustified, the Lord God willing, for debts unpaid,' Mrs. Haney had said often enough, âand the dishonouring of a young girl.'
The next owner and the next had apparently fared no betterâdid Ireland do that to its immigrants or was it simply the flowering of Mrs. Haney's velum-bound Celtic mind?
It had to be true. And now? she asked but refused to speculate. She knew that Erich Kramer wanted desperately to escape, but that there must also be some very important reason for him doing so and that every day, every week now only made it worse not just for him but for the Reich. It had been Mrs. Tulford at the White Horse who had arranged everything, the disconnecting of the odometer and its reconnecting later, a goodly supply of petrol too, and the meeting with Brenda Darcy late on Sunday out along the coast road to the west of Kinsale. Three cigarette butts in the ashtray and grim last words, cold, so coldly given. âYou're in it now, Mrs. Fraser. Don't ever think you can get out.'
Hamish had introduced her to Erich some seven, or was it eightâcould it really be eight months ago? Hamish loved to play chess. As the castle's doctor he'd taken to spending an hour or so in the prisoners' common room, formerly the great hall, or in the library, polishing up on his German and filling himself in on the other side of the war: what was past and what they thought might happen, especially now with the Russian campaign going so well for them. Like herself, he was starved for intellectual companionship which the German officers could supply. A dangerous thing perhaps, but tolerated by Major Trant and encouraged by Colonel Bannerman.
âAnything to keep them peacefully occupied,' the colonel had said once and it had stuck with her.
Because she had a smattering of
Deutsch
from collegeâlong forgotten, most of itâHamish had encouraged her to help out with the library. She had borrowed books from his own and had been buying them in the flea markets of Armagh and Newry when occasion allowed, but it
had
been Hamish who had started it all by introducing them. âErich, this is Mary, the light of my life.'