“How about Bellwood?”
Barney Crowley had a list in front of him, with a check next to St. Luke’s in Bellwood, a blue-collar integrated suburb on the county’s western edge. Not a plum but interesting.
“I’m interested,” said Devlin, sitting on the client side of Barney’s desk in the archdiocesan personnel office in a cemetery.
“0.K, I’ll put you down as one of their candidates, No promises, but you’re a front-runner,”
“Really?”
“What’d I say?”
“It’s hard to believe that. I’ve got a reputation,” Devlin said.
“That you do, but the post is not the pinnacle of the average priest’s ambition, and damn few are asking for it. It’s not a crowded field.”
“I shouldn’t have given that newspaper interview.”
“I couldn’t agree with you more. You should have left town or checked into a hospital or asked the guy in for coffee and politely declined. You weren’t indicted or running for office or anything. You didn’t have to say anything.”
“It was a woman,” Devlin corrected him.
“What difference did that make?”
“A young, beautiful woman.”
Crowley, sixty and rarely surprised, sat back. Devlin gave a pained smirk. ”Oh hell,” Crowley said quietly.
“Nothing happened,” Devlin said emphatically. “I just was a pushover for the interview, that’s all. I’m a pushover where good-looking women are concerned.”
“How far do you let yourself get pushed?”
“Well not overboard, if that’s what you mean,” said Devlin.
“That’s exactly what I mean. I got a nice spot for you in New Mexico if that’s what you mean,” said Crowley, referring to the R&R center for wandering priests, where they relaxed and thought things over, having removed their celibate heads out of the lion’s mouth.
“No, I just get tense about it. I don’t unwind.”
“Well damn it, Dev, we all get tense about it.”
“I know, I know. I’m just telling you how I got roped into the interview.”
“The article didn’t go into that stuff at all. Did the interview?” asked Crowley.
“No. The article reflected the interview. It was about my sermons. She asked questions about my theology, not my morality.”
“She sure did, and the story splashed big, [ can see that headline now. ‘Priest preaches atheism.’ Bad enough you were suspended and had one bad session already with Houlihan under your belt. Then the newspaper story.”
“Water over the damn,” said Devlin.
“Still seeping through, I’m afraid,” said Crowley, looking back to his list of open parishes. “How about Markham?” he asked, naming a distant south black suburb.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
The newspaper article had featured Devlin as something of a hero. He naturally appealed to the young reporter, who believed in independent thinking if nothing else; and her city editor, distracted by a North Side ax murder when she suggested it and then bemused by the piece when she had written it and let it go trough. Then the editor was embarrassed by it and ordered it killed after the first edition. But a presidential candidate was blowing through town and the makeup man was distracted, so the thing made another edition, and more damage was done.
Devlin, 49-year-old Catholic pastor, was depicted as a latter-day Martin Luther, chafing at the egregious thought control of a domineering church. Yes, he had preached the sermons the reporter had heard about. Indeed, he had copies of them to show her. And out of Devlin’s files came the finely honed (in his opinion), carefully nuanced appeal to the unbelieving in the midst of his flock (and to himself, he observed to the reporter in a devastating burst of candor).
He later was lectured by Dolan on the inadvisability of giving anything nuanced to a reporter, much less a sermon for atheists that read half the time like a call to atheism. “They are trained to simplify things, which is important, considering their audience. You and me, for instance, when it comes to city government. But they are not trained to catch your nuances, Dev. Maybe as you delivered your sermon, but not reading it later, cold.”
In any event, Devlin became a celebrity. He turned down two talk-show appearances and a write-up in a community newspaper, but now, much later, he was still approached now and then, most recently by the National Enquirer, whose clip service had just caught up with him and whose editor decided Devlin was indeed a live one.
“We’d like to do an article about you, Father Devlin,” said the friendly voice over the phone one Saturday morning. “We’re very interested in the important social implications of your stand.”
“My stand?” said Devlin.
“Yes, for freedom of conscience in the church.”
Telling Dolan about that conversation later was one of the light moments of a very heavy period in Devlin’s life.
“Freedom of conscience in the church? Is that what he said, Devi?” Dolan was laughing and had trouble getting the words out. “In the church? Free conscience? Oh my. Don’t they teach those guys anything at journalism school? Oh my.” He laughed until tears came.
Devlin laughed too, but not as hard. “He was interested in the social implications,” he offered during a lull in Dolan’s laughter, and Dolan went off again, pointing and nodding and bending his head in uncontrollable glee.
“Social implications, I mean.”
Dolan calmed down. “There might be some already,” he said. “But I wouldn’t worry about them, if I were you. Last thing you need at this point is to picture yourself another Martin Luther. Skip that one. There’s no market for it.”
“Well I did intend to accomplish something with my sermons, Terry.”
“What?”
“I wanted to reach the fence-sitters. With all our seriousness about some things, we don’t take atheism seriously. And until we do, how can the fence-sitters take us seriously?”
“Yes. Well, it’s an interesting point of view, Dev. Meanwhile, you reached the National Enquirer, if nothing else.”
“They redid the original story,” said Devlin.
“I know they did, and more power to ‘em,” said Dolan. “If the truth is known, you can’t complain about any of it. They did more to publicize your position than a thousand sermons ever could. Can you imagine implications of a National Enquirer audience as opposed to your journeyman Sunday sermon?”
“Taking it further,” said Devlin, “imagine a ministry through the pages of the National Enquirer. Consider the power of such a ministry.”
“No thanks. Consider the power of Jimmy Carter opening his dear Baptist heart in that Playboy interview. That sure did a lot of good. For that matter, the piquant comments by the pope, on the same general subject . . .”
“Lust,” interrupted Devlin.
“None other,” said Dolan. “Consider John Paul the Second’s comments on lust for one’s wife and what a salubrious splash they made,
“None other,” said Dolan. “Consider John Paul the Second’s comments on lust for one’s wife and what a salubrious splash they made. Score one for the papacy, not to be outdone by that Georgia cracker.”
“Well now, Terry, the pope was making a point about how marriage should be founded on mutual respect, the wife should not be a sex object and so forth.”
“And so forth is right. His effort was doomed from the start. There he is in his white cassock and beanie popping off on something he’s supposed to have first-hand experience of. You know my position on that, Dev. As the world’s best known celibate, he’s the world’s best-known eschatological symbol, and he ought to let it go at that. It’s burden enough for any man.”
“He’s not a banker either, Terry, but do you want him to shut up about dishonest business practices?”
“I don’t want him to specialize in it, Dev. That’s my point. There are a lot of hard questions he can ask without setting himself up as having the last word on the subject. Why do celibate popes and bishops claim authority in matters of sex? It’s the one thing they ought to stand back at and at most ask hard questions about. He is too a banker anyhow, or he works closely with bankers. He moves a very big budget every year; so he can be expected to know something about money. But sex? What does he know?”
Devlin was at the point where he considered that to be the pope’s problem. He didn’t have time. Not that his priestly labors were such a burden. In fact, he was officially on the shelf, serving a cooling-off period until he could complete his rehabilitation and take a new parish, whatever came first. He was convinced the cooling off was to be by the archbishop.
If he, Devlin could lie low for a while, the archbishop would eventually be distracted and would cool down, so that Devlin could go back where he was before he drew down on himself the old man’s irritation. He wouldn’t call it anger, much less rage. There was something Olympian about rage, or might be, and something noble about anger. With Houlihan, who was not Devlin’s favorite prelate, it was more a matter of bitchy irritability. He couldn’t figure the man out.
As vain as the day was long, he dropped names right and reacted like a little kid to flattery or deference. In the middle of their conversation after Devlin was suspended because of his sermons, with Devlin playing the rum-dum role to the hilt as the little priest who couldn’t keep his mouth shut, Devil dropped a remark about how well the program for married deacons was going in the archdiocese. Next thing he knew, he was hearing a capsule history of the program from the horse’s mouth itself, or himself. The passing reference was all it took. For ten minutes, the case of Patrick Devlin, incipient atheist, was forgotten.
Being suspended meant Devlin couldn’t preach, of course. But neither could he say mass in public or hear confessions or do anything else except in danger of somebody’s death, in which case he could confess, absolve, bless and anoint the departing soul. But hell, so could an apostate or skid row bum or international roué, assuming he’d once been ordained.
Devlin had to laugh at the possibilities. The bum happens on an accident. It’s the city’s Irish mayor. Cops are all over. The bum staggers up, says he’s a priest and moves to bless the stricken chief executive. The cops move on him, and he ends up in a cell at the Chicago Avenue station, all punched out and achy.
Or: Story he’d heard from one of his Jesuit teachers at the seminary. The not yet ordained Jesuit commonly wears or used to wear black suit and collar black suit and collar on the street. One of them came on an accident in downtown Manhattan. Irish cop spots him and calls him over. Dying man in need of blessing and all that. Jesuit naif explains to the harried policeman, “I’m not a priest.” The cop responds, “Then what are you wearing the outfit for?” and slugs the imposter on the spot.
A million stories in the Naked City, to be sure. Devlin loved that one.
— — — — — — — — — —
“I go after the story, not a story,” Ginny Morgan explained.
“What’s the difference?” asked her escort, a sleek young man with a full mustache.
“There’s a lot of difference, a whole world of difference,” she said. “One kind of story is to titillate, the other is to stimulate.”
“What’s the difference?” repeated the young man, taking an ice cube in his mouth and swirling it around.
“Between titillate and stimulate? Are you kidding?”
“No. One way or the other, it’s a tickle. What’s the difference?”
“When I say titillate, I mean tickle. When I say stimulate, I mean the mind, the conscience, whatever there is out there that distinguishes the doers from the herd.”
“Dewar’s is my favorite scotch,” he said, smiling.
Ginny fumed. This beautiful face in front of her was driving her crazy. It was finally dawning on her that this guy making “thirty-K,” as the head hunters’ ads put it, was a dumbbell or was acting like one or was insulting her. All he had to do was say she was pretty when she got mad, and he’d get her drink in his lap.
“You know something,” he began.
“What?” she said, balancing her drink in her hand.
“You’re pretty when you’re mad.”
Ginny unbalanced the drink into the young man’s lap as he sat on the bar stool next to hers.
“What the fuck are you doing?” he squalled, jumping to his feet while the glass fell to the floor and broke.
Ginny smiled her nastiest Walter Jacobson smile, slapped a ten-dollar bill on the bar — “For the drink, the glass and maybe part of your cleaning bill, if necessary” — gathered her raincoat from the back of her stool and stormed outside. She waved a cab down and was pulling away when her escort followed her outside to shout obscenities. The cabbie ignored him and her, except to get her destination (home) straight.
She settled into her cab seat to fume some more, but with a sense of achievement at the same time. That jerk, she thought. That know-nothing, stupid, self-assured, ignorant nothing. Still, she felt good about it. He had asked for it and got it, and she could count on seeing him no more. After her ass, pure and simple. Bored with issues, bored with discussion of anything that called for putting two sentences together in a row, he was ready for nothing but one-liners.
Very bright when it came to “the numbers,” as he flipped the word around, but damn it, even bored with that, it seemed. Proud of being “laid back,” he was in fact a basket case as far as humanity was concerned.
Ugh! She sat back and let the cabbie take her home. He was a no-nonsense black guy out to make a buck by giving good, fast service. She was at her door and tipping him well in twenty minutes. Upstairs and in her apartment, sitting with a book in ten minutes more. The evening could be saved yet. She would read up a storm.
Her telephone rang. City desk.
“Hi, Ginny, it’s Louie.” Louie on middle watch, looking for information. “Remember that priest you wrote about? The atheist?”
Louie had it not quite right, but it didn’t matter. “Yeah?” she said.
“What parish was he at?”
“St. Denis, on Austin Boulevard. Why?”
“I thought so. There’s a big fire across the street. I’m looking for some eyewitness. The rectory phone isn’t answering. Has he got a private line or something?”
It was eleven o’clock. If Devlin had a private line, she didn’t know about it. She told Louie this, adding, “Why would I know about it anyway?”
“I just thought you might. You had that story on him where he told all, more or less. I’m trying everything to get something on this thing before deadline.”
“OK, Louie, I understand. Can’t help you.”
Louie hung up.
Ginny went back to her book, a blow by-blow account of the battle of Khe Sanh in the Vietnam war. Ancient history now, as newspapers reckoned it, but she wanted to know about the war that had torn apart the country before she was reading newspapers for more than movie reviews. She was figuring out troop movements and code names of military operations when she stopped in the middle of a sentence, almost with a jolt. She thought about Father Devlin.
The difference between talking to him when she’d done the story a while back — the story that Louie on rewrite at the time had remembered so well, as he remembered that might help him on deadline some day — and that infuriating conversation tonight with Joe Dumbbell from Continental Bank was the difference between heaven and purgatory. She read Dante once and knew something about purgatory.
Ginny had found herself asking Father Devlin questions she hadn’t planned at all. Here was this Catholic pastor willing to discuss recent sermons about atheism in which he apparently had identified with the atheist viewpoint. (Someone had tipped her to the sermons, and she’d called him to see if he’d talk about them.) And here was she, secular to her tippie toes, not caring anything about the question at issue, quizzing the Reverend Father.
She quizzed him, of course, but went beyond what she’d intended. They got into his beliefs and hers, and half she got she couldn’t use. She wouldn’t. They had hit it off. He was the first clergyman, of the few she had known, even the first person some years older than she (she wasn’t sure how many, fifteen or so) who hadn’t spoken condescendingly to her. At the same time, he was no kid. No young adult, whatever that is, either. He showed his years but didn’t wave them in front of her face, demanding respect.
A curious man. She sat with her book in her bachelorette apartment, the complete working woman, hustler after stories, spiller of drinks in men’s laps, reader of books, no help to Louie when he called for a telephone number. Her telephone rang.
“Hello.”
“Ginny?”
“Father Devlin!”
“You know my voice?”
“Those stentorian tones? Anywhere.”
“Listen, I’m sorry to bother you, but I knew you were up and just talked to your office. And I was up, and . . .”
“Did you do anything for Louie?”
“Louie? Oh, the guy who called. No, I was in the back of the house. I’d heard sirens but paid no attention. If I jumped at every siren, I’d be jumping too much. How you doin’?”
“QK. How you?”
“O.K. too. Listen, maybe you can help me with something.”
“What’s up?”
“A friend of mine is waiting to hear about something she sent to your paper. She and another woman. Months ago. She and another woman. Months ago. Columns, I think. You know, the guest column sort of thing. She was just mentioning it today. Not upset or anything, but thinking it’s time to rattle some cages. Louie called and I knew you were at your phone. I called on impulse to see if you had any ideas.”
“Qp-ed submission? That’s it, I bet. I can see about it. What’s her name?”
Devlin gave her Mimi Skelton’s and Carol Goodman’s names, explaining the pieces were submitted together and adding that the two had an idea for a regular column too.
“They sound like nice ladies,” said Ginny.
“They are. Very nice. Like you. You’re nice too, even if you did add to my troubles.”
“Oh, I’m sorry. I’m really sorry.”
“That’s all right. Don’t worry. I have no regrets.”
“Good.”
There was a pause. Ginny thought it would be nice if he asked her out. Why not? Then he asked her out.
“I’ll be downtown Wednesday. Want to have lunch?”
“Good idea.”
They set up time and place, wished each other well, and ended their conversation. Ginny was amazed. From banker-on-the-make to father confessor in one night. He’s a nice man, she thought. He said she was a nice lady. Nice, nice. Lunch on Tuesday would be nice.
(end of chapter 5)