The Furys (69 page)

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Authors: James Hanley

BOOK: The Furys
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‘Denny! Denny! Come here!'

She put her hand to her forehead and held it there for a moment.

‘Your wife's calling you,' she heard Mulcare say, and now she saw her husband climbing the stairs. As soon as he reached the top she gripped him by both arms, saying, ‘Denny, dear Denny! Do you mean that? Do you mean that?'

‘Of course I do! Him or me. I've had enough.'

The woman, filled with dread, leaned on him and asked, ‘Do you mean it?'

Then she became excited and pushed her husband into the room. She clung to him.

‘Denny! Don't be foolish. Stay here. Stay with me. I
don't
want you to go. Let Peter go. I don't care now, only about you.'

‘All right!' There was no doubt about Mr Fury's determination. He went to the landing and shouted:

‘Peter, come up here at once!'

He stood waiting for him.

‘Go in!' he said. ‘Your mother wants you.'

Peter went into the room. The man went out, hearing her say, ‘Come here! Please kneel down.'

Mulcare began his pacing of the kitchen again.

‘Everything's here, Mike! She's got a full bag for the lad.' He pulled out his watch.

‘What time's the tide?' he asked. It was now ten to twelve.

‘Three thirty-five.'

‘Bags of time,' said Mr Fury.

He stood looking at the man. This continual walking up and down began to get on his nerves.

‘So you lost sight of Hagan,' Mr Fury said.

He began cleaning his pipe. He was calm again, as though no such things as Brigid and Miss Pettigrew, Peter and his mother, had turned the house topsy-turvy.

When Mulcare sat down Mr Fury smiled. What a relief! The fellow seemed to him to be restless. Hang it! there was plenty of time.

‘Oh! I don't know where the hell he went. We went to a house last night,' said Mulcare, ‘and I'm afraid one of the ladies turned his head completely. I haven't seen him since he retired with her.' He lit a cigarette.

‘I want you to look after our lad,' Mr Fury said. ‘Of course, I know you will. Tell me, how did they manage to get the ship down the canal to the Moreston? Has she got all her crew?'

‘Yes,' replied Mulcare. ‘She's got all she wants. They were a deck-hand short, and I told the bo'sun I was bringing a boy along. Anyhow, your damned strike is finished.' He laughed now and began scratching his neck. He was wearing a blue suit and a jersey and his Australian hat.

‘I'll show you his rig-out,' said Mr Fury. ‘That woman has more foresight than ten thousand.'

He went into the back kitchen and brought back the sea-bag, into which Mrs Fury had put all the clothes Mr Kilkey had brought.

‘Splendid!' Mulcare said. ‘Even matches and his plate and spoon.'

‘Well, Fanny's packed my bag for thirty years,' said Dennis Fury, ‘so she's no amateur, is she? Look here,' he said suddenly, ‘will you have a drink? I can give you a drop of brandy and plain water.'

‘No, sir, thank you.'

‘Have a cup of tea, then?'

‘No.' replied Mulcare. They were silent for a moment as though they had both stopped to listen to the speakers in the room above.

‘Would you take a jump, Fury, if she turned out to be short-handed?'

‘No, I wouldn't,' said Mr Fury. ‘I wouldn't leave my missus for twenty quid a week. And that's that.' Then he said, ‘Ssh! Ssh! She's coming down.'

Without looking at her son, Mrs Fury said, ‘Come here. Kneel down.' She was herself kneeling in front of this altar in the front room. As he knelt down he said, ‘I don't want to go to sea, Mother. I could get a job on the railway.'

She seemed not to hear. She lifted her head high and looked at the lamp.

‘Bless yourself,' she said. Peter made the sign of the Cross.

‘I want you to go away now, Peter, for your own good and my peace. I sent you to college years ago. Now you are back again. I ought to have let your father take you to sea long ago. I can see now how foolish I was. But I have no more regrets. All that is wiped out. I have forgotten it. My own life has flashed by, and I've hardly noticed it. I have done everything I could. And your father wants you to go. Your father and I have talked about it, night after night. We have watched you about the place. We know you feel your position. From now on you owe it to yourself.' She turned her head so that the red glow from the lamp fell upon it. ‘Are you listening?'

‘Yes, Mother.'

‘All I ask of you is this. I ask you to be clean, to be honest and upright, to hold your faith. Will you swear that now?' Her eyes rested upon his face. ‘Will you at least promise that?'

Peter looked at his mother's face. Then he whispered, ‘Yes, Mother.'

She caught his hand and raised it in the air. With her right hand she blessed herself.

‘You swear that now you will be clean, decent and honest, and that you will hold your faith.'

She threw her arms round him and continued: ‘You are my son, Peter, and I still love you. No matter what my family has done, I have never forgotten that. You have had your chance. A chance that the others never had. They have seen things you will never see. Whether I see eye to eye with my married children or not, I know this, that they worked hard, that we managed to keep our family together in good times and bad times. Your father has done his share. Well, there, I shan't say any more.'

She loosed her hold upon him and rose to her feet. But Peter remained kneeling. All her words were nothing, he had not even heard them. She had lifted his hand towards the lamp, but he could not remember. He knew he was kneeling, but there was no altar there. There was a bed, and a woman upon that bed. And he was kneeling in front of her.

The door closed. His mother had gone downstairs, but he did not hear her go. He did not pray. He only tormented himself with questions, with vague hopes. How could he see Sheila now? How could he go? He got up and went to the window. ‘Poor Mother!' he said. ‘She still believes in me. And I do not want to go. I only want to work ashore so that I can see Sheila. I love her. No. I don't want to go!'

Whilst he stood there his father came into the room. ‘All right, Peter,' he said. ‘You come downstairs and get a bite to eat before you go.' Then he went out again. His father had not come near him. He had not even talked to him. Then his father must hate him. He closed his eyes and saw again the face of Mulcare in the window as he came up the yard. He had gone into the kitchen, and the first thing his father had said was, ‘Well! Get your things ready. Mr Mulcare's ship sails at half-past three, and you're going on it.' Yes, his father had finished with him. He had flung himself upon the sofa, saying, ‘I don't want to go! I can get a job on the railway with Desmond. I can get a cleaner's job.'

‘It's either you or me!' his father had shouted, and he had caught him by the hair. ‘You or me!' Then his father must know. He went slowly downstairs. There was the bag, already packed and secured by the lanyard, and there was the man with whom he was going away and with whom he would share his life. There was his mother. She looked as though she had been crying. And his father, standing by the mantelshelf, hands behind his back. He would not look at him, but continued to stare at the carpet. He looked angry. And there was his grandfather, huddled in the chair, mouth wide open, staring at nothing in particular. They seemed to him like the figures from a dream. He stood in the middle of the floor, and they all looked at him. He could feel their eyes, as though they were ransacking him, searching for his thoughts. Nobody spoke. He wanted to shout, ‘Stop looking at me! Stop looking at me! It's all right. I'll go.' Then his father drew himself up, and put out his hand, saying, ‘Well, there is only one other thing.' He pulled him by the arm and they went into the back kitchen. Mr Fury closed the door. ‘There is only one other thing. Where have you been all morning?'

Peter replied, ‘That doesn't matter now,' and stood back, thinking his father would strike him.

3

‘It's time to go now,' Mulcare said. He picked up his slouch hat and swung it in his hand. ‘Come on, my boy, slip to it.'

‘Yes, he's really going,' said Mrs Fury to herself. ‘He's really going. Another to the sea,' as she watched her son pick up the canvas bag and place it upon his shoulder.

Mr Fury was standing by the mantelshelf.

‘Your cap,' he said.

‘Let him take this one,' replied the woman.

‘Ready, Fury?' said Mulcare; and immediately Mrs Fury went up to the man by the door.

‘
He's
not going down,' she said. ‘I'm going.' Her smile was brave as she added, ‘That man would take a jump this minute. I know it.' Her husband grinned at her. ‘Please wait,' she said quickly, and hurried upstairs. In a few minutes she was down again.

‘I'm ready now.' She wore the same clothes as she had put on for the visit to Mr Lake.

Peter stood, now, looking at his mother. He had dropped the bag between his knees. Mr Fury crossed over to him and put out his hand – he did look at his son. His attitude was, ‘Here's my hand – take it or leave it.' ‘Good-bye,' he said, ‘good luck.' Peter did not answer him. He put the bag on his shoulder again. Then he turned round and looked at his grandfather.

‘Where'll you be when I come back again?' he was saying to himself. ‘Staring in the grave?'

‘Kiss your grandfather,' said his mother. Behind her Mulcare smiled. Peter bent down and kissed Mr Mangan on the forehead. Then they went out, leaving Mr Fury sitting by the fire. He was thinking of Mulcare's words: ‘Your time's finished, Fury.' Yes, no doubt about it, his time was finished. He would never get another boat. Strike him pink, he had had his last bout with the sea. Again he could hear his wife saying, ‘Denny, don't go! Stay with me.' He could see her face now, as she had stood under the altar in the front room: ‘Please don't go!' Yes, it had touched him. And he wouldn't go. He would stay with his wife. Soon they would have the place to themselves. Then they would have a little peace. He got up and picked from the floor a piece of orange-coloured cardboard. Mrs Fury had dropped it from the vase as she searched the dresser for a pin.

‘Kilkey!' said Mr Fury. ‘That's Kilkey, or I'll eat my hat. Good old Joe!'

Mulcare was talking to his mother, but Peter did not hear what they said. They were walking by his side, but somehow he himself was alone – intensely alone. The world around him seemed to have drawn down its shutters, and now, even as he walked, he knew, he could feel and see them, there were two figures, one each side of him. The street had changed. There were three long ladders, and he was on the middle one. He climbed warily. Sometimes he missed his footing and the woman said, ‘Take my arm'; and just as he was about to catch hold, the man with a deerstalker hat leaned forward, leered in his face and said, ‘Take mine.'

‘You mustn't stand like this,' said Mulcare. ‘We have to hurry,' and Mr Mulcare put a hand upon his shoulder. Peter jumped, then shot forward, almost overbalancing the white bag from his shoulders.

‘Yes. All right! I am hurrying.' And the ladders had flashed from sight, and he was crossing the bottom of Hatfields. The world about him took shape again. He could see the black shutters being rolled up.

‘You need never worry on that score,' Mr Mulcare was saying. ‘I shall look after Peter. In six months you won't know him.' She felt no qualms about letting Peter go now. Then Mulcare asked:

‘Did you really think your husband would have gone?'

‘Gone!' The woman burst out laughing. ‘He would have gone like a shot. I know him too well.'

‘How foolish that would have been!' he said, and looked at her passionate face. Peter walked along as though they did not exist. Only when his mother said sharply, ‘Turn here,' did he realize where he was. From time to time he had stopped, looking distractedly about him, as though in a moment the smiling face of Sheila Fury might penetrate the brickwork at which he stared, or from some hole in the pavement Professor Titmouse might emerge, put his spectacles on, and, leering at him, say, ‘I think you are a little sly – even callous. Ha ha!'

‘Don't stand like this!' Mrs Fury had raised her voice. Peter was now in the middle. His mother walked near the wall, Mulcare on the outside. They turned from Dacre Road, and Mulcare, catching the boy by the arm, said:

‘Can't you hear her winches? She's just finishing loading. Look!' All three stopped. Yes, there was the ship, sure enough, there her towering masts, her sleek funnels painted blue, and that delicate white band encircling them. There she was, her stern facing them. Actually on the street. And as the winches sang and the cargo rose high from the sheds and whirred dizzily down her holds, the water rose. As the water rose, the ship sank. The roofs seemed to rise higher even as they stood looking at her. It was as if the street itself had imprisoned her, had flooded her with its bricks and masonry.

Peter looked at the stern, and read her name in gold lettering. The ship was loading, she was waiting for him, for Mulcare.

‘It's a big ship,' said Mrs Fury as they continued their way down the street. As they came nearer the woman said:

‘Fancy! There are men actually working down here. I thought …'

‘But they're all going back to work,' Mulcare replied.

‘Thank God!' she said. ‘Thank God!'

‘We better go down through the shed,' said Mr Mulcare. They crossed the road and passed under the wall of the grain warehouse. Well, there they were at last. Along the shed there lay an old discarded chute. On this they sat.

The woman raised her head and looked at the masts. To her they seemed to touch the sky. Men were loading her for'ard hatches. The others were being covered up. The network of falls that hung from her derricks was being taken down, the blocks unshipped. A quartermaster was standing behind the binnacle on the monkey-bridge. In the air there rose the smell of old rope, of pitch, of meat and fruit. Had she ever dreamed that she would sit on an old cargo chute and see her last child follow the same path as her husband? Had she ever dreamed that she would sit by this other man, Mr Mulcare? Some men with bags had arrived and were now climbing her gangway. Mulcare got up.

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