The Williamses hadn’t heard from Father Devlin for two weeks, so Arthur called the St. Denis rectory. He was told to call St. Emma’s.
“What are you doing at St. Emma’s?” he asked Devlin.
“I’m between jobs.”
“Why aren’t you at St. Denis?”
“I was judged unfit for such an illustrious parish. Couldn’t cut it. They needed a safer man.”
“You’re not safe? Safe for what? Or from what?” You’re being your usual mystical self.”
“Nobody has accused me of being mystical.”
“Why don’t we jog together some morning? Tomorrow? Since you moved deeper into the village, we’ll stay out of Columbus Park.”
They set it up for next morning.
Arthur came by the rectory at six-fifteen on a lovely June day. If he knew the names of the flowers, he would have announced they were blooming to Devlin, who was bouncing up and down on the sidewalk.
“The flowers are blooming, the flowers are blooming,” he announced instead.
“The sun is shining. All’s right with the world,” replied Devlin. They got in step and headed north down a side street.
“God’s in his heaven, right? That’s the line, right?” said Arthur.
“I think so,” said Devlin.
He slowed them down to a half bounce, half shuffle, pleading stiffness. “A priest in the morning can’t overdo it, Arthur. How’s Melissa and the kids?”
“Kids are fine. So is Melissa, except when she remembers you and the night at Corona and so forth. How’s Ginny, by the way?”
“Ginny is fine, except when she remembers the Corona business. And the Tribune item.”
“Was that you and she at McDonald’s other night? Living it up?” They stopped at Lake Street, waited for cars to pass, then continued.
“None other. I was helping her with her homework.”
“Hey. No need to explain. You’re not gonna do anything stupid. I have confidence in you.”
“Whoa there, big fellow. You too?”
“Me too?”
“Worrying about me.”
“Worrying about you? I said I’m not worried.”
“Not worried about what?”
“Whoa there, big fellow yourself. I say I’m not worried, and you say not about what?’ If I said I was worried, what would you say? Or do?”
They jogged along in silence for a while, taking in the fresh air and big green lawns that village-son Ernest Hemingway once said belonged to people with narrow minds. Spots of red popped out at them from the midst of shrubbery. They loped past the big houses.
“O.K., Arthur,” said Devlin. “You got a point.” They ran along a half block more in silence. “But don’t ask me to be responsible quite yet, OK?”
“You’re not ready for that.”
“Right.”
“Well don’t put it off too long. It can get to be a habit.”
Devlin looked at him. “You know?”
“I know.”
“You too were once a priest on the ropes?”
“Not quite. I was, you might say, a member of society on the ropes. I teetered on the edge for a while.”
“Of society?”
“You betcha. I stood like a kid on a fence, balancing one minute, beginning to lose it the next.”
“Why? What was your beef?”
Arthur looked at him quickly. “What was my beef?” he repeated, half smiling.
“I take that question back,” Devlin said, expressionless. “In every conversation, you get to take back one question. I just took mine back. No questions asked.”
“Anyhow,” continued Arthur, “there I was, wanting freedom now and yelling it on a Loop street in the midst of a bunch of other freedom-Lovers, watching white men in three-piece suits across the street watching me with strange looks on their faces. And there I am looking back at them with what to them had to be the strangest look since the little men from Mars peeped into their kitchen windows.”
“Freedom now.”
“You better believe it. The issue, as I recall, was police treatment of demonstrators the day before.”
“Demonstrators? What were you?”
“A demonstrator. I was demonstrating for the demonstrators. Get it? It was a very productive effort for all concerned. The ‘sixties. You know.” He grinned.
“And what had those demonstrators been demonstrating about?”
“The day before?”
“Yeah.”
“I don’t remember. Christ, Pat, it could have been one of a dozen things. Take your pick. Housing, swimming pools, jobs with the fire department, slums. Oh, I said that, didn’t I? That’s housing.”
“What happened?”
“I was hot and bothered, let me tell you. Twenty years old and loaded with wisdom and experience. Revolutions are made with people like me as I was then. And you know somethin’? My parents didn’t even know I was there. I was playin’ hooky and demonstratin! And my momma and poppa thought I was some place else. I’m yellin’ ‘Freedom now,’ and I haven’t even worked it out with my parents.”
“You were a mean little kid.”
“I was bad, let me tell you.”
“What happened?”
“I saw this cop who had been in the midst of it the day before, pushing people around. Real mean mother. And there he is in front of the federal building with this look on his face, watchin’ us march around. To the three-piece-suiters we were just weird. To him we were familiar. And he hated us.”
“White cop?”
“What you think, Pat, some nigger’s lookin’ at us like we were traitors to the human race? They had all the black cops on the other side of town anyway. Yes, this was a white guy. And you know what I did?”
“What?” Devlin took his eye off trafic as they crossed Division Street, beginning to fill up with rush-hour drivers, and a car swerved and honked, the driver looking astonished and angry at the two joggers, himself almost hitting oncoming traffic when he looked back at them a moment too long. The two kept running.
“I gave him the finger.”
“Whoops. Ill-advised, under the circumstances.”
“’Ill-advised under any circumstances I can think of.”
“What happened?”
“You know, to this date, I’m not quite sure. I do know he reached for me. I do know he banged me with his stick. And I do know there was a free-for-all, mainly because I was on the bottom of a pile with this hand hanging on to my shirt and some warm, wet stuff dripping down my face. But like the reporters that wrote it up afterwards, the rest of it was conjecture. Pure conjecture.”
“You got arrested??
“Of course I got arrested.”
Now who’s getting touchy?”
“I am, that’s who. How’d I get talking about this in the first place?”
“You were giving me a lesson in how to be cool under pressure. Something like that. And now you’re breathin’ heavy being amazed at my honky ignorance.”
Arthur kept breathing heavily but didn’t say anything for a block.
They got to North Avenue and turned around.
“Anyhow,” said Arthur as they headed back south, “I got busted and my parents came and bailed me out, mad as hell at all concerned, including me. And I spent a few weeks wrestling with my bruised everything while my daddy gave me a few lessons about long-haul commitment, dealing from strength and all that. And I started attending classes again and ended up jogging in Oak Park with a priest. Is that progress or isn’t it?”
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
“You are not your usual witty self tonight,” said Ginny.
“I didn’t think you’d notice.”
“You and I have been an item now for, what is it? Five weeks? And you didn’t think I’d notice when your quips are not falling where they may?”
“Oh. Right. Dolan always knows when I’m down too.”
“Oh my. It’s a good thing you’re as straight as you are, Patrick. Your life could make you a pushover for gay activity.”
“I’m not a fruit, if that’s what you mean,”
“I know you’re not. Neither fresh, frozen, canned, dried or any other kind. You like girls. That’s your problem, Patrick, you like girls.”
“Specifically, you.”
“Specifically, me. And I like you. If I were a Catholic, I’d have you for my priest.”
“Well you better turn quickly, or you may not have the chance.”
She reached across the bed and moved the backs of her fingers across his cheek.
“I never thought of that.”
“Me leaving the priesthood?”
“No, me turning RC and having you for my priest. What a bizarre idea.”
“You’d be my first convert. Me and my priestly unction and manly charms. Snatched to Rome. Rome unveils new secret weapon in the war for souls with the heretics. Patrick Devlin comes out of the closet. Confesses rampant heterosexuality, takes wife. She converts. Children on way. Wife considered fertile and good catch for Romish priest. Read all about it.”
Ginny laughed. “You could announce me from the pulpit. ‘Sitting in the front row, my dear people, is — dah, da-dah-da-dah, trumpet for the strumpet — my woman. Will you please welcome! dah, da-dah, Ginny (last Protestant in America) Morgan. Her arrival signals the beginning of the end for the revolting heresy that came upon us some four hundred years ago. Praise the Lord.’”
“They might accept you on those terms.”
“Us.”
“Right. Rev. and Ms. Patrick Devlin. Pastor and woman of St. Augustine Church, St. Augustine because he had a woman for many years, ‘woman’ because church law would forbid me to marry you.”
“The woman of St. Augustine. I can hear it now. Also known as Ginny Morgan, formerly reporter for Sun-Times, now reporting to the Lord from St. Augustine parish. Where is St. Augustine parish, by the way?”
“We’d have to invent it.”
“I always said, if there weren’t a St. Augustine parish with live-in woman friend of the pastor, we’d have to invent one. Where should it be?”
“Can’t beat Oak Park. Very progressive community, with a good public high school.”
“Patrick, what does a high school got to do with it?”
“A good public high school, I said. Where the white kids can go without forking over big dough for private schools. Look, in the city you can gentrify an elementary school area, but a high-school district is a lot harder to do. And it usually takes sufficient clout to get boundary lines redrawn. In Oak Park you have the high-school district wrapped up along with elementary schools.”
“You’re losing me.”
“O.K. Live-in pastor’s friend flies only in progressive community, right?”
“Right.”
“That means racial integrationists, up to a point, right?”
“Up to a point?”
“Up to the point where where there aren’t enough white people,”
“The tip point.”
“Right. The point at which white folks head for the doors, move farther west and so forth,” you blame them for that?”
“Ginny, if I were the kind of guy that blamed anybody for anything but child abuse and political torture, would I be here in bed with you carrying on this discussion about racial integration?”
“No.”
“Best you can do is manage normal stupidness so it doesn’t get out of hand. One of the things you do is have a good high school. It keeps things on an even keel.”
“And retains the progressive character of your town.”
“Precisely.”
“I’m being battered by thoughts of the future.”
“They have a way of interfering with enjoyment of the present,” said Ginny.
They lay there for a few minutes looking at the ceiling of Ginny’s apartment.
“Your position is untenable, Patrick.”
“I know.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Don’t ask.”
“T don’t like that answer, Patrick.”
“Neither do I. It’s all I can develop for the moment.”
She sighed. “How’d I get into this?”
He looked at her.
“Neither do I,” she said.
They lay in silence for a few minutes more. Ginny looked at her watch on the bed stand. “You know what?” she said.
“ What?”
“It’s time for the priest in residence to head for the doors.”
(end of chapter 16)