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![]() Irish Author Hazel McIntyre |
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Fear
was the weapon
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| Fear
was the weapon |
| The missionaries came with touring caravans towed by big black Ford motor
cars, straining and puffing black fumes from their exhausts; a rare sight
indeed in 1950's rural Inishowen. They set up camp in a bare green field
a mile or so from the village. They were charismatic characters, who went
from house to house with their 'good news' message, aimed at the young they
said. The venue was the village hall, they promised refreshments afterwards,
and a choir. And so we set off through the quiet lanes on an early autumn
evening to hear the 'good news' and avail of the refreshments.
The hall was almost full of children and teenagers when we arrived. A
table at the rear was set with jugs of orange juice, small dainty sandwiches
and biscuits. The choir began to sing sweetly, accompanied by a portable
organ. Time and reason allayed most of the terrors and showed God in a truer
light, which enabled most of us to enjoy our childhood and youth. But,
sometimes departed childhood awakes and we reach into that special cupboard
of the mind, where we thought we safely stored our fears, only to find
their dark echoes still there. |
| We
walked up the steep hill and along a narrow lane to reach Jimmy's house.
The house was tucked neatly under a hill, and was sheltered by six pine
trees. He was seated by a roaring fire made up of turf and bog fir; one end of which stretched a considerable length down the floor. "Welcome to you all. It's a raw cold night," he greeted us, pushing the bog fir a bit further into the fire. "Try as I might I couldn't get this fir block split up and in the finish, I broke the shaft of my hatchet," he said sitting down again. The dancing flames leaped and danced around the big log of fir, lighting up the weather beaten creases in his face, and deep set blue eyes framed by dark bushy eyebrows. Jimmy was the best storyteller in the neighborhood, and we were regular visitors. We loved to listen to his stories about ghosts and banshees. "I'm just about to make my cocoa, would you all like a cup?" "Aye, thanks," we all chanted. With our cups of hot cocoa in our hands we were ready for a good frightening ghost story. "Have you any new ghost stories to tell us?" Joe asked. "Well now, let me see if I can think of any I haven't told you before. MM. .... mmm," he muttered, staring into the fire in deep concentration. Then he lit his pipe, lifting his eyebrows with a frown to keep them safe from the flames that leapt from the thin fold of newspaper that he used instead of matches. As the story progressed we could feel the goose pimples rising on the backs of our necks. His bright blue eyes moved from one wide eyed scared face to the other as he told the story. "I had just reached the top of the brae beside O'Neill's derelict house, when I saw the black cloaked figure of a woman walk right through the stone ditch, not an inch from me. As I stood there in the moonlight I knew that I had witnessed a being, not of this world."Walking home through the darkness we linked arms for safety, and when we reached O'Neill's brae we shuffled along in a huddled fearful mass, with eyes and ears on red alert for the cloaked figure of a supernatural woman; but she was nowhere to be seen. "My father says there is no such things as ghosts. He says Jimmy just makes up his stories as he goes along," Sara said in a shaky wee voice, as her shaking fingertips dug into my upper arm. "Well I believe in ghosts no matter what your father says. And besides a world without ghosts would be no fun," Joe's voice came back from the blackness. Much to our disappointment we reached home without a ghost or ghoul to be seen.In the early spring a builder from the nearby town started to renovate O'Neill's old house. Rotting windows and doors were replaced, the roof was repaired, and finally the walls were whitewashed. One day in late June as we made our way to the shore, we saw that the house was occupied. "Holiday makers from Scotland have rented the place out," Pat informed us while we stood in the door of the byre as he milked the cows. "It must be thirty years or more since anybody slept under that roof," he added as he headed for the house carrying two buckets of milk.July began wet and windy, but soon gave way to warm sunshine. One morning on our way to the shore two young girls with red hair sat on the stone ditch outside O'Neill's. "We are going down to the shore for a dip. Do you want to come with us?" I asked them a little shyly. "I'll go and ask my Ma," the bigger of the girls said as she hurried off into the house. "What's your name?" Sara asked the girl sitting on the wall. "I'm Edith, and she's Fiona," she answered nodding in the direction of her sister who had just reappeared. Before the day was out we had formed a bond of friendship. They came from Glasgow, and lived next door to the man who owned O'Neill's old house. The following morning we set off with our newfound friends on a tour of the neighborhood. As we rounded a comer in the lane Johnny Mc Laughlin was putting his cows out. Fiona stood in the middle of the lane and let out a piercing yell, while the astonished cows turned around and bolted back towards the farmyard. "God in heaven what possessed you to roar like that?" Johnny spat throwing his stick to the ground in anger. From the ditch sandwiched between two hawthorn bushes Edith said in her Glasgow lilt, "She is terrified of cows, and so am I." "If I'm any judge, the cows were more terrified of you wailing like a banshee than you were of them. But you are city wains I suppose," he added graciously. To our amusement their fear of animals extended to anything on four legs, and that included Neddy. However, a ride in the cart was irresistible, and facing backwards they giggled with glee as they bumped noisily along the lane. But when Neddy in one of his stubborn moods sat down between the shafts of the cart, they hightailed it to a safe distance, while we tried in vain to persuade him to get up again. On the last day of July we all sat on the beach reluctant to say goodbye to our Glasgow friends. "I wish we could stay longer, but we will come back next summer." Fiona said a little sadly. "We all want to come back next year except my mother," Edith said, as she absently made holes in the sand with a stick. "Why does your mother not want to come back?" Sara asked. "Because she thought she saw the ghost of a woman in a black clock at the head of the stairs. |
| Elizabeth
is the second eldest of the family. She made herself responsible for keeping
the younger members of the brood clean. On bath nights she would descend
on us unawares, leaving us no escape route from her clutches. On one fine September afternoon mother had given us instructions
to collect a roll of linoleum from the village shop on our way home. With
the aid of the shopkeeper we got the linoleum into the trap, then we all
piled in around it, and headed for home. |
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The hall door was open when they reached the house. They
knocked and went in. When we were introduced she stood up to greet us.
She was tall and was elegantly dressed in a fawn suit; she wore red lipstick
and red nail varnish. Bending down she gave each in turn a big slobbery
kiss. They had munched their way though a pound of the 'Yankee'
candy by the time they reached the home straight. Willy, their nearest
neighbour was leading a red cow into the byre as they neared his farmyard.
His wife Sara appeared from the back door of the cottage. "Andy's just
bought another cow," she announced. They followed her into the byre, dimly
lit by a hurricane lamp. "She looks a grand animal" she said, with pride.
"I must bless her." She reached up to a shelf at the far corner and took
down a bottle. |
| The snow came
silently while we slept, and we awoke to find a white, snow-covered landscape.
The snow was still falling thick and fast by school time, and it was decided
that we should have the day off. At eleven o'clock Aunt Bea moved over to her window seat to wait for the postman as usual. "Poor Eddy will have a struggle this morning," she said, her eyes glued to the distant road. Her white hair was pinned up in a neat bun, and perched sedately on top, her black beret with the little tassel on it. She had reached the grand old age of eighty, and could still walk the two miles to the village for her pension each Friday. With unfailing eyesight she was able to knit our sweaters without the aid of spectacles. Reading and letter writing were her other pass times. "I should have had a letter from Mary before now. It must be all of six weeks since I wrote to her. And I was sure that my cuckoo clock would have come weeks ago," she said, dropping her eyes to her knitting again. "Oh Lord! Eddy's down, and the letters are scattered everywhere," she suddenly shrieked. "Run, quick, one of you, and help him. Poor Eddy, he's too old to be out delivering mail on a day like this." John and I scrambled into our coats, and made off down the lane at speed, to rescue Eddy. As we neared the spot where the unfortunate Eddy came a cropper, he suddenly sprang to his young and sprightly feet. "We should have known it was you up to your tricks again," John said, as William came towards us with a broad grin. Behind him lay a trail of old newspaper squares scattered in the snow. "Was she watching? Did she think it was Eddy?" he asked us still grinning. "Aye, she thought it was Eddy all right. I wouldn't show my nose for a while if I were you," John warned, as the three of us walked back up the lane through the snow. "You are a right bad rascal, playing a trick like that on me," she scolded when he came in, "And there was me thinking poor Eddy might have broken a leg." "I just couldn't resist it. I knew you would be watching," he said with a chuckle. An hour or so later, Eddy made his appearance. "It's a day neither fit for man nor beast," he announced shaking the snow from his coat as he came into the kitchen carrying a parcel. As my mother busied herself making him hot tea, we set about the parcel. Out of the wood shavings and cardboard emerged Aunt Bea's cuckoo clock. "It's all in one piece anyway, nothing broken," she commented with a broad smile of pleasure. After the instructions were carefully read, and understood, the clock was carefully hung on the wall. We waited patiently as the hour of one came closer. Then on the dot, the little wooden doors sprang open, and out popped the bird, "cuckoo! cuckoo!" it chanted loud and clear. Aunt Bea beamed with pleasure. "Isn't the cuckoo a wee dote," she exclaimed. We all nodded in agreement. The snow didn't let up that afternoon, and we became bored and restless. We finally went outside to play in the shed. John began target practice with his treasured air gun. "Another bulls eye," he shouted triumphantly at intervals. "I'm sick of that flipping gun, that's all you seem to want to do anymore," I complained as I headed for the house again. In the kitchen the hour was approaching three, and Aunt Bea's eyes were held firmly on the clock. "Cuckoo, cuckoo, cuckoo," rang out again much to her delight. As the weeks passed the clock was beginning to grate on the nerves of everyone apart from its proud owner. The "wee dote" became "that damned cuckoo," especially as the hours grew to high niunbers. Ten cuckoos became just too much for the nerves to bear. One night in February, the family sat around the fire. Only the soothing sounds of knitting nee ' dles clicking and newspaper rustling disturbed the silence. None of us were aware of the impending disaster, as the hour of ten o'clock drew near. The wooden doors on the clock opened, "Cuc....... and then BANG! All eyes were suddenly on John, where he sat on the sofa; the air gun still poised in mid air. The cuckoo hung limply from its perch, suddenly silent. "You young rascal, you shot my poor wee cuckoo," Bea cried out in anguish. John dived for the door, my father grabbing the gun before he disappeared outside. "I'm hiding this gun, where you won't get your hands on it again," he called after him. William set to work at once on the repair of "the wee dote" When the intricate operation was finished, we waited again as the hour drew near. The doors opened, and out popped a lopsided cuckoo, sitting precariously on his perch, " ook, ...ook, ...ook, ...ook," he crooked miserably. "Good lad, you fixed it," Aunt Bea said in obvious delight. "This is one occasion when loss of hearing seems to be a blessing," my father said quietly. |
We slowly made our way home from school, feasting on nature's autumn goodies along the lanes in the warm sunshine. "Will you be needing us?" I asked, hopefully, as a day of freedom from school loomed invitingly before me. He shook his head ruefully, but went off in the direction of the rocks where the crabs hung out. Ten minutes later he emerged from behind a rock, holding two large wriggling crabs. When the fire was lit, and the bucket of spring water had reached boiling point, we immersed the poor unfortunate crabs into the bubbling water, while we turned our heads the other way. While the crabs and winkles cooled, we washed the potatoes in the sea and boiled them in the same water. When the feast was prepared, we invited the workers to dine. But when the feast was over, and our stomachs full, we had no further excuse to avoid the potato gathering. "You have to be careful with the electric you know," she said, while we stifled a giggle. Then she went over to a shelf, and came back with a can of oil. We watched her fill the oil lamp carefully with the oil, and as she sat down again, she said, "Just in case." |