At that moment, as if to underscore the poignancy of our exile, there was a rap on the door and an oh-so-Anglican clergyman, a canon of the cathedral, opened it.
He was as tall and lean as those upper-class clerics with the best jobs always are. Though he was middle-aged, his face was boyish and his hair was closely cut, giving him the look we once associated with marines, but now with homosexuals. Not that he was one of
those;
his wedding ring flashed. His foppishness was a function of mere breeding, not sexual preference. It was no longer considered bad form to look like what he was. In the sixties men like this let their grooming go and pretended they were the sons of plumbers like the rest of us. But not anymore. In his clerical collar and striped seersucker suit he looked like a chaplain of the British Raj, and I realized it had been glib sophistry to assert that little remained to separate Episcopalians and Roman Catholics. In that "little," revealed in meaningless details like the color of a priest's clothing, were buried millions of colonized and murdered people, many of them Irish and many Catholic. In that "little" were buried my own ancestors and Michael's. In that "little" was lost the distinction between the people who built the Cloisters and the people who clean it. Nothing separated us but history. It was a whole new reason to resent our own Church, that its intransigence abandoned us to the exquisite civility of the rich. For the point was that, at that moment, we would go anywhere and embrace any heritage and accept any offer of hospitality, even the smuggest one, if it included a simple, direct proclamation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
"Carolyn?" he began familiarly. Then, seeing me, he put his manicured hand out. "Hello, I'm Martin Putnam, the dean's assistant."
I stood and shook hands with him. I felt oafish in my monastic mufti. I needed a shave and a shower. "I'm Frank Durkin," I said. The priest stared at me so intently I had to look away. And then my discomfort exploded into humiliation when for the first time it occurred to me that, after all those years, I had a part in Michael's legend too. I was the FBI informant.
Canon Putnam turned back to Carolyn. "I hate to bother you with this, but there are television people outside. I've told them no interviews, of course. But I wanted to know your feelings about letting them film the service."
Carolyn looked at me.
"No," I said without hesitating. "Absolutely not."
Putnam ignored me and continued to stare at Carolyn. "The more dramatic their footage, the more likely they'll use it. What better way to memorialize Michael than to draw attention to the killing in Beirut? Wouldn't he seize the opportunity to denounce...?"
"I beg your pardon, Canon Putnam." I touched his shoulder. "But we don't want camera crews in church." Did I have to explain myself? Did I have to say it's against our religion? The man had the instincts of a publicist. So would you if you had the largest cathedral in the world and no congregation to fill it. No wonder he offered it to aerialists and jazz musicians and renegade Catholics.
Carolyn said, "Television? Why is television here?"
The canon touched her. "Because Michael is still news, my dear. He was a great American when America needed one." How did he manage to make even that tribute seem condescending? I pictured him, years before, as a seminarian who'd gone into the ministry, instead of the family investment firm, to avoid the draft. Nicholas Wiley would have been about his age by now.
He waited for Carolyn to contradict me. When she didn't he said, "All right. But we can't stop them from filming outside." He looked at me. "Just so you'll know."
I nodded at him, but the image of stars arriving at some premiere seemed ludicrous to me. No one would be coming to Michael's funeral. Television was there because Canon Martin Putnam, the Impresario Priest, had called them.
"Dean Evans has mentioned you," he said. "You were a friend of Michael's, weren't you?"
"Yes, I was his friend."
It was easy to read the canon's expression, and he wanted me to:
What friends poor Michael had, you and Archbishop O'Shea.
Somehow I found it possible to continue looking at him this time. A surge of anger rescued me from my embarrassment.
You Anglicans don't believe in excommunication, do you? And you never betray your best friends either. You have manners.
If he says something ingratiating, I told myself, I will hit him.
When Carolyn took my hand I was surprised. It was a manifestation of her loyalty, and I was grateful for it.
Canon Putnam said to her, "Dean Evans will keep his remarks brief of course. He asked me to tell you that he intends to draw the connection between Michael's ministry and what's happening in Lebanon. Is there any other particular point you want him to make?"
"His remarks?"
"The eulogy."
"Oh."
Why was it a surprise to her? Clearly she had been unable to anticipate in any way the details of the service. Distress distorted her face, but instead of making her seem helpless, it girded her. She was still the strongest woman I had ever known. "Dean Evans has been wonderful to me, but he can't speak for Michael. I'm sorry, but he can't."
"Well, I ... whatever you..."
She turned to me. "Frank, will you?"
W
HEN
we were children nuns told us that Pentecost was the birthday of the Church. The silliness of that notion, the banality of it, struck me even as a boy in the overheated classrooms of Good Shepherd School. I am not inclined, like so many, to mock the memory of those earnest women. Such easy targets; my instinct is always to defend them. Nuns made the Church possible, and many of their ludicrous imagesâthe Baby Jesus pretending to a drooling helplessnessâmade great mysteries available in ways the obtuse categories of theologiansâHomoiousianânever could. But the birthday of the Church? I remember squirming at the idea of the Apostles gathering around a cake with one candle. Was I supposed to think of its flame as the fiery manifestation of the Holy Ghost? Was the noise they made with their Gift of Tongues the group's off-key singing of the Happy Birthday song?
Now of course I am an informed Christian and I know what Pentecost really was. I refer to it here not for the sake of some blatant, facile comparison between the lives of Jesus and Michael Maguire, as if finally my point is to make Michael a latter-day Christ, but because at Pentecost was revealed the structure of human hope, which begins, of course, in despair. The followers of Jesus had disgraced themselves. They had all abandoned him, or, as Mark put it, rather more mercilessly, "They all forsook him and fled." They left a stranger, a centurion, one of the crucifiers, to finally and formally acknowledge Jesus: "Truly this man was the Son of God."
Those who claimed to love Jesus simply disappeared. They were terrified that what happened to him was going to happen to them. And so they hid. They dispersed. They went their separate ways. Only one thing could have brought them together againâa miracle. Only a miracle could have changed them from confused, inarticulate, and beleaguered peasants into a company of preachers who would in a generation ignite an empire. Pentecost is the day on which the miracle happened. Not a mountain being moved, not the sun being stopped in the sky, the miracle was a eulogy. A eulogy of Jesus.
The eulogist was no orator, and he was no hero. Of all the disciples he had the least right to stand in the main street of Jerusalem and speak of the Lord because, like Judas, who'd had the decency to kill himself, this man had not merely abandoned Jesus, but had explicitly betrayed him. He was Peter. When he stood upâhad Mary asked him to?âand told the simple story of Jesus of Nazareth, everything changed. He told how Jesus went around doing good and how his words and actions fulfilled the promises of Scripture; how he came, like a good Jew, to Jerusalem for Passover, though he knew the leaders of the people plotted against him there; how he was arrested and, though the Romans offered to release him, how the people themselves demanded that he be put to death; how he was crucified among thieves; but also how His Father was faithful to him even in death and so raised him up to glory. In the exposition, the telling of the story itself, those who'd been a part of it were able to grasp its meaning at last, and those who hadn't been a part of it were able nevertheless to see its relevance to their lives.
People from all over the worldâParthians, Medes and Elamitesâheard Peter's words as a new language, but one they understood. And in the recitation of facts with which they were familiar but had never seen whole, as forming like every story a coherent structure with a beginning, a middle and an end, the people recognized the narrative that bound them together, that made them a community, that made them what came to be called the Church.
What came to be called the
kerygma,
the Good News, the Gospel, beganâand this is the miracleâas the coward's eulogy of the only man he ever loved, the one whom he betrayed.
Â
I was in the huge Gothic cathedral alone, walking the aisles. Michael's funeral was to begin in half an hour. A few people had taken places in pews at great distance from each other. Once more I felt the pang of disappointment for him. In that vast space it would seem that no one came, no one cared. He would have passed from the earth unnoticed, unmourned by all but a meager remnant. If the death of this man was insignificant, whose wasn't?
Yet also, at the same time, the space itself, however it dwarfed us or because it did, was exactly right for that particular liturgy. In the end that structure overpowered its own history, and its associations with class and denomination meant nothing. It was a Gothic cathedral, and to a Catholic its stones were sacred. Its aisles, its nave, its narthex, its crossing, its transept and choir formed the geography of memory. At first I'd felt entrapped by it, but memory is what saves us when we are faced with death. These were the darkened, mysterious aisles along which I'd run with Michael as a boy. Actually I'd run
after
him, for he was the one who led the way in all our explorations, our adventures. He was the one who'd pushed first into tunnels or who leapt into quarries or who sallied forth on the winter's first ice. I, with others, had stood outside those tunnels, back from those cliffs, on those shores, waiting to see if he made it, to see if it was safe. And we'd cried after him, "Go, Michael, go!"
The pointed patterns of color splashing the stone floor from the stained-glass windows signaled the coming of nightfall, for this was evening light, not morning. Yet my memories had not, as I'd feared, condemned me to an end-of-the-day nostalgia. The sun was gone behind the buildings of the city, but its last light and warmth filtered into that immense yet intimate enclosure. The feelings I had for him filled it, and like angels whose wings could be heard fluttering in the reaches, so also did the memories we'd inherited from our people, of
their
adventures. In this place we'd recognized that those adventures going back eons were ours. That communal memory suggested that
we
had hidden from barbarians behind these pillars;
we
had taken the spiraling stone stairways at a clip, yeomen rushing to the battlements;
we
had crept from cavern to cavern, from vigil light to lantern;
we
had attended coronations and installations and heard anathemas pronounced from the great Chair;
we
had been present when saints were named and kings wed and cardinals invested and nonconformists banished; and
we
had lowered our heads and struck our breasts countless times when the anointed one high above us held for all to behold the broken Body of Our Lord. The Gothic cathedral is the Catholic's Holy Land, and even those of us who were raised in pale parish churches carried in our minds, as Jews did Palestine, the image of that homeland. You see, as Catholics we knew that we, like that very placeâand isn't this what's gone now?âwere made for worship.
I had been grieving for Michael, but for so much more than him. He was the flower of Catholic life, the best we had, the one who went before us and showed that it was safe. Against the numbing sameness of secular culture even as it had encroached upon the Church, he had stood as our champion in exactly the way, as a boy-soldier, he had stood against the enemy for the sake of his friends. He could risk his life because he believed innately that life is made for more than itself. That innate knowledgeâwhat made him a heroâbecame the conscious religious affirmationâwhat made him a priestâof his maturity. The world is made for more than itself: that is what Michael meant. That is what the structure of the cathedral meant. No mere achievement or act of heroism could have justified or explained his life, as no organizational function, no bishop's throne, no social or aesthetic purpose could have justified or explained that church. Michael Maguire was the Gothic cathedral of men. He and it were madeâI hesitate to introduce the word after all this time in the tellingâfor God.
If God did not exist, then that building was a cruel, pompous joke on itself. If God did not exist, then Michael Maguire, war hero, resistance leader and priest-against-the-Church was a figure of the absurd. I did not think, in beginning this story, that it would end religiously. I had thought rather that religion was that cluster of false notes we had left behind. I had gone, perversely, to a desert monastery to escape it. And hadn't Michael abandoned his religion to love a woman and make a family? The Catholic Church, like a good Roman, had fallen on its sword. Hence the unarticulated grief of a generation of sophisticates. We were exactly like the sons and daughters of a suicide, with anger for the past and fear for the future, each so intense we never consciously entertained them. If the Church could not maintain the loyalty of men like Michael, then surelyâand wasn't this to be our theme?âGod's work on earth had failed.
As it had when His Son was crucified, his disciples having fled. As it had until Peter stood among strangers and told the story.