If you think the world is in bad shape, you might consider it was predicted many centuries ago . . .

In the Apocalypse.

1 Be sure of this, that in the world’s last age there are perilous times coming.

2 Men will be in love with self, in love with money, boastful, proud, abusive; without reverence for their parents, without gratitude, without scruple,

3 without love, without peace; slanderers, incontinent, strangers to pity and to kindness;

4 treacherous, reckless, full of vain conceit, thinking rather of their pleasures than of God.

5 They will preserve all the outward form of religion [!] , although they have long been strangers to its meaning. From these, too, turn away.

6 They count among their number the men that will make their way into house after house, captivating weak women whose consciences are burdened by sin; women swayed by shifting passions,

7 who are for ever inquiring, yet never attain to recognition of the truth.

This prognosis helps in perceptive.

More of same from the day’s 2nd Paul to Timothy 2: 8-15 :

Beloved: Remember Jesus Christ, raised from the dead, a descendant of David: such is my Gospel, for which I am suffering, even to the point of chains, like a criminal. But the word of God is not chained.

Therefore, I bear with everything for the sake of those who are chosen, so that they too may obtain the salvation that is in Christ Jesus, together with eternal glory.

This saying is trustworthy: If we have died with him we shall also live with him; if we persevere we shall also reign with him.

Hope springs, yes.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN Fr. Devlin at sixes and sevens. Moves out of parish. Back and forth with garrulous girl friend. Jewish friend backs him into corner. “Pat, you do take all,” Nate said.

Not laid aside for Devlin, however, was the bigger question of What To Do. He was past the age of decision-making as regards life goals. He was with a woman outside of marriage or intended marriage or even a looser relationship that fitted in with the rest of his life. If he were a footloose bachelor, he reasoned, it would be different. Who would care? Who would be surprised. But he was a total anomaly as things were. And the hell of it was, that aside from Ginny he had no one to discuss the matter with.

Ginny looked at him when he told her that. Again, two days after the lusty Sunday when he floated his right-and-wrong ideas in bed, they lay across from each other. It was early evening. He had greeted her when she got home from work. They had coupled hungrily, sans supper, and now lay talking, each with head resting on palm, elbow on sheet.

“Patrick,” Ginny said, reaching over to feel his cheek with the backs of her fingers. “It’s the nature of the relationship.”

He bit a finger lightly. “Exclusive.”

“What is it you want to say, anyhow?”

“To my nonsignificant other, my insignificant other, whoever he or she may be?”

“Yes.”

“Oh, I would want to recite the ways my true love pleases me. How about that?”

“Write poetry.”

“Poetry?”

“Absolutely. Look in your heart and write about your true love and how she pleases you. The world is waiting. Go ahead.”

“I could preach about it.”

“Patrick, for God’s sake don’t preach about it. You’ve done enough oddball preaching already.”

“You didn’t think it was oddball when you wrote that wonderful article about me.”

“I don’t now either. I take it back. Unconventional. That’s it. You’ve done enough unconventional preaching.”

“I’m not sure about that.”

“Well now that you mention it, neither am I.” She paused. “Patrick,” she said.

“What?”

“The hell with it.” She moved toward him and went at him in a flash.

As they grappled and twisted, he managed a final comment: “Trouble with you is, you know all my weak spots.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Devlin moved in with Dolan a few weeks after he heard from Crowley that his replacement had been named at St. Denis. He rushed the process, leaving even before the new man came. Dolan had implied it would be better that way.

“You’re in an interim period, aren’t you?” he asked Devlin.

“I guess so,” he said.

“Anyhow, a comfortable bed awaits you at St. Emma’s,” Dolan said.

Devlin refrained from observing that the St. Emma’s bed made two where he was welcome. That was the last thing Dolan needed, to hear about Ginny’s hospitality.

“What does it mean?” Ginny asked when he told her about the move. “Have they found out about me?”

“No.”

“How do you know?”

“Nobody’s said anything, for one thing.”

“What would they say? How would they handle it? Who would handle it?”

“In this archdiocese, here and now, the vicar general, the archbishop’s right-hand man. He’d probably call me down and put me on the archbishop’s carpet. Then the archbishop would order the torturers up from the basement.”

“Patrick!”

“Just kidding. They might put me on a one-legged stool under a bright light for hours on end, questioning me, but no rough stuff.”

“You’re very funny.”

“It’s my way of masking my despair. Laughing on the outside and all that.”

“Are you in despair?” she asked. “For your soul? Now I feel guilty.”

“For helping a soul go to hell? Are you kidding? God, some of you Protestants are guilt-prone.”

They were eating breakfast in her apartment. He had taken a few days off after his move to St. Emma’s, which was unsettling for a reason he hadn’t considered: it was a move from his house to another’s. Speak all the democratic sense or nonsense you want about the new church, it still mattered to be a pastor. He’d been demoted and it hurt.

“If I feel guilty, it’s not because hell is on the horizon for you.”

“It isn’t,” he said. “I’d die before I’d go to hell.”

“It’s because your life is unravelling.”

“Cherchez la femme.” He shrugged. They were at her kitchen table, with morning sun coming in. “Women do that, don’t they? Unravel men’s lives?”

“Piece by piece, until there’s nothing left. It’s a terrible burden. We know what we’re doing. That’s the trouble.” She’d gotten into the swing of it with her Patrick: point and counterpoint, indirection, riposte here and riposte there. “Quo vadis?” she said.

“Whither go I?”

“Right.”

“What Jesus said to Peter.”

“Yes. Famous novel title. Curious Protestant school girl checks it out, gets the meaning, stashes it away for future use. Discovers use one morning years later as she eats breakfast with priest lover. What a world we live in, eh, Patrick?” She was grinning.

He laughed. “Breakfast with blasphemy. You’re Jesus, I’m Peter.”

“Sure. Remember how you did that as a kid? Take parts at a moment’s notice. ‘You be Susie, I’ll be Joe! Then off to wonderland, to a world of our own making.”

“No,” he said.

“No what? You didn’t do it?”

“I don’t remember it.”

“You don’t?”

“No. I blocked it out, I guess.”

“Unhappy childhood?”

“I don’t remember,” he said, as she started to supply the answer with her own “You don’t remember.”

“I really should have seen that coming,” she said.

“Do you remember your childhood, frequently recall things? Are you frequently reminded?” he asked.

“Well, not frequently. But often enough. Yes, I’m often enough reminded that way.”

“I almost never am.”

“Hmm. Is that bad, or good?”

“I don’t know,” he said. “I accept it. It’s part of my life. I’m fatalistic about it.”

“You can’t be. You believe in God.”

“Let’s not get on that one. Anyhow, some very bitter people believe in God, and resent him. They take God seriously enough to be very angry at him.”

“I know,” she said. “We have people at the office who are totally blocked on the subject by what goes wrong in the world. One guy jokes — I think he jokes — about buying in with the devil. The devil’s his guy, God’s your guy, that sort of thing.”

“Manichaean.”

“Manicotta?”

“Every time I get serious, you bring up cheese.”

“Manichaean?”

“Yep,” he said. “Good and evil two eternal warring principles. Never the twain shall meet. Clash of two titans. Pay your money and take your choice. A good sixteen-hundred years old. Manichaeism, I mean. Not a new idea.”

She listened, fascinated. “I don’t see things that way at all. I don’t even begin to see them that way.”

“You know why? Because you lack faith. You’re a modern secularist without the faith to be a heretic.”

“I didn’t know I was so bad off.”

“I didn’t say you were bad off. You’re not faith-oriented, that’s all. You’re the kind of people I was preaching to with my notorious atheistic sermons. The sermons that got me in trouble because they, or I, did not assume my Sunday listeners believed in God. I still think I was right, but that’s ancient history.”

“You know what I should have done,” she said. “When I wrote you up?”

“What?”

“I should have interviewed your parishioners.”

“You should have. You’re right.” He leaned forward. “See what they thought about it. As a matter of fact, so should I have done that. I should have interviewed them, and then preached my little heart out. Maybe I was wrong about it. Who knows?”

————

“Why are you at St. Emma’s? What happened to St. Denis? Are you in hot water?” Nate Goodman wanted to know.

“Nate, it’s a long story,” said Devlin. “I thought you knew.”

“How would I know? Was it in the Jewish Daily Forward?”

“Listen. Where are you?”

“I’m home. Carol just told me. I’m on my way downtown.”

“Have you had breakfast?”

“No.”

They set up breakfast down the street from St. Emma’s. Over coffee Devlin explained.

“It started with my sermons on atheism. For them I got suspended.”

“Without pay?”

“With pay. But I couldn’t preach about anything.”

“Not about anything? Not even on, say, the ten commandments? Something solid, where mistakes were practically impossible?”

Devlin shook his head.

“Pat, there can’t be that many preachers around, and they bounce you unconditionally from the pulpit? It must have meant a lot to them.”

“It did. As a priest I’m a helper and all that, but I’m also an authority figure. This is not a laissez-faire church. You know that.”

“From the pulpit you speak with authority.”

“Right,” said Devlin. “I’m up with nineteen hundred-plus years behind me. Not to mention my claim, such as it is, on the Old Testament centuries.”

“Such as it is.”

“Right. So I can’t just pop off.”

“Some do.”

“On this or that subordinate issue. Racism, nuclear war, et cetera. But not on God questions. That was my mistake. I played around with the big God question, whether there is or isn’t, and the word got around, and I got suspended. Then I pulled in my horns and got reinstated, and then I got in the newspaper explaining myself, and then they decided I needed a new arena. No more St. Denis. Meanwhile, the new man is heading there, and I’m at St. Emma’s, between jobs. I didn’t mention it the other night because I didn’t feel like going into it.”

Nate sighed. “Now what?”

“Now I keep my lines out and wait for an assignment.”

“Milwaukee maybe?”

“No, it’ll be in the archdiocese. Somewhere in Cook County or Lake County. Four hundred or so parishes, plus assorted nursing homes et cetera. Somewhere there’s a place for me.”

“I still don’t get it,” said Nate.

Devlin looked at him. “Where are the holes in my story?”

“Well, here you are with twenty-plus years in the business, a pastor in Chicago before you’re fifty. You told me once that was an achievement.”

“Used to be more than it is now. Go on.”

“You’re running a big operation, big church, with a vote equal to any two, I’m sure. Anyhow, you’re in charge, more or less, at least as far as someone like me is concerned. You’re over the hump about whether you want to be a priest when you grow up . . .”

“Very funny.”

“Well, it’s in the news a lot, isn’t it? Or used to be. Have things died down a bit? Have priests settled in for the long haul? Or are they still reviewing their options, like a few years ago?”

The waitress brought eggs.

“It’s people like you I think the archbishop and others of his ilk are chiefly worried about. He doesn’t want to look bad in the eyes of the unwashed public.”

“Now there’s an area I’ve never heard you go on about, the archbishop and his, as you say, ‘ilk.’”

“You won’t, either. I don’t want to get involved with that. I’ve got enough problems of my own.”

“He’s one of them, from where I’m sitting. He’s bouncing you around, isn’t he?”

“Yes, but not without cause. Insufficient cause, but cause nonetheless. Knowing him, I should have known better.”

“Than to do what?”

“Preach with my mouth full.”

Nate laughed. “Like the little kid at table.”

“Yeah. I should have kept my mouth shut about my various doubts and probing, one, and I should have stayed out of the newspaper, two. Another archbishop might have handled me differently, but there I was to be handled, one way or another.”

“And now you’re out on your ass.”

“Well at least I’m not driving a cab or pumping gas.”

“What priest ever drove a cab or pumped gas?”

“Are you kidding? The cabdriver’s been written up, but long after he went beyond the pale. He’s a social-action radical, puts the ax to the root and all that, very direct, very much on archbishop’s shit list.”

“He made the list, did he?” said Nate. “Like the dean’s? In college?”

“The gas-pumper’s another story, not yet told. He needed the money.”

“To live?”

“That’s what I understand. Maybe to support his charities. He was in a parish where you get I.O.U.’s in the collection basket. Anyhow, he pumped gas for a while.”

“Must have been a nonconformist in the first place.”

“I don’t know. But you’re right. That would have been a problem. It’s a very carefully organized institution.”

“Very efficient, right?” asked Nate.

“Second only to General Motors, the old saying goes. It’s wrong.”

“Well what’s going on inside you?” asked Nate. “Are you cracking under the strain of being part of it?”

“Do I look it?”

“Frankly, no. In fact, you been looking better. But Pat, you had to be thinking overtime to go with those sermons, which from what I hear were not run-of-the-mill stuff.”

“I was under a strain, yes.”

“And now you’re not, I’d say, lost parish and all. Which points to some sort of resolution.”

Nate looked at him, and Devlin looked back. Nate didn’t look away. “Right?” he said.

Devlin blinked. “You want to know what’s going on,” he said.

“I know what’s going on,” Nate said, but a shadow crossed his mind as he said it. “I want to know what you’re going to do.”

“Like what?”

“Like are you going to wait around St. Emma’s until they find a spot for you in Midlothian? Or are you going to make a few moves of your own?”

“Get out?”

“At least begin to cover your ass. Or is it your ambition to be a cabdriver or gas-pumper?”

“You’re talking economic plans,” said Devlin.

Nate threw up his arms and rolled his eyes. “What do you think I’m talking about, a hobby?”

“Well there is a major vocational question here, Nate,”

“I know there is, but you seem to be attacking it on your own.”

“What do you mean?”

“What do I mean? Here you are thrashing about like a hooked fish, stripped of your command after twenty years, shelved at fifty, or whatever you are, having by your own admission provoked retribution after obviously entertaining rebellious nonconformist thoughts at least for a while, and you don’t know what I mean when I say you’ve been attacking your vocational problem?”

Devlin looked at him. “No,” he said weakly.

“Pat, you do take all,” Nate said, drinking some coffee and looking away.

Devlin blinked and drank some coffee too.

(End of Chapter 14)

CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Fr. Devlin’s friend Fr. Dolan wrestles with Fr. Devlin’s issues, they hit the golf course. Fr. Devlin getting comfortable. Remembers Gottlieb Schwab’s. Beds with girl friend . . .

The next day Dolan considered the way the world was going for him and his friends. He did so before, during and after mass, which he said in a somnolent state, half between sleep and wakefulness. The movements were second nature. It was a rote effort that fit in with the moment, before the day had gotten going, in a quiet church with twenty or so people watching. This day he dispensed with the short homily he’d become accustomed to giving even on weekdays, because he had Devlin on his mind.

He held out the wafer at Communion and the people took it from him, putting it in their own mouths. A few held their mouths open, tongue out, head tilted back in the old style, preferring not to touch the sacred host. Dolan didn’t blame them. They’d been brought up with tales of possible sacrilege if even a crumb fell to the floor. As a young priest, he had sent the altar boy running for a “purificator,” a starched white napkin folded in thirds, with which to wipe the spot where a host had fallen. The altar boy who caught one on the paten he held out under outstretched chin was a minor hero. Nothing to match the boy saint who died at the hands of pagans rather than surrender the host, of course. But a hero none the less.

He was thinking how you couldn’t understand some early Graham Greene stories unless you knew about pre-reform reverence by Catholics for the host as he put the chalice away after communion.

“Let us pray,” he intoned, and the mass was over in a few minutes. In the sacristy he stayed and prayed a little bit, kneeling at the cushioned pre-dieu, holding forehead in hand. Prayer was more and more a time for him of reflection interspersed with a few quiet moans of semi-hopefulness. He had long ago decided that either he hadn’t understood the instructions he’d been given about prayer or the instructions were meant for someone else, not him, or the instructions were just stupid. They were probably some of all three, he decided further. So he went his own way, trying this and trying that.

The first thing he pitched was any whiff of forced cheeriness about it. Then he taught himself to think of saints and even Jesus as human beings like himself, who if they didn’t have moods and resentments like his, had their own to contend with. He decided the saints and Jesus had been badly treated by almost everybody who had been written about them.

At the point of this realization, his language began to deteriorate from a priestly norm. From the time as a seminarian when he observed the proprieties, he had descended to his present state in which he cut loose with epithet, excoriation and even curse when the spirit moved in. Not the Holy Spirit, he felt pretty sure, but then how could you tell?

Back in the rectory, he took a call from Barney Crowley of the personnel office, asking if he had room for Devlin at St. Emma’s. They had a replacement ready for Devlin at St. Denis, but nowhere to go yet. Westchester had been taken by a man two years younger than Devlin, who’d been on the West Side for twelve years and wanted out of that ministry.

“Sure I’ve got room for him, Barney,” said Dolan. “Too bad he couldn’t get Westchester.”

“Yes, it is too bad,” said Father Crowley. “But something else will come along, and meantime he has to go somewhere. Staying in Oak Park seems a good idea, and you’re his friend. It makes sense.”

Dolan agreed. They hung up. He called Devlin. “Little golf today?”

“It’s not my day off,” said Devlin, who was planning lunch with Ginny downtown but didn’t care to burden Dolan with that information.

“Well how about making it your day off?” Dolan was struck with the curious sense of duty that kept a prince from golf on a work day in the midst of courting a girl friend. “Or half day? Few hours?”

Devlin did some fast figuring. “O.K.,” he said. “This afternoon.” He’d make hospital rounds in the morning, then get back from the Ginny lunch in time for Dolan. They made a date for three at St. Denis, from which they would head right away for Columbus Park.

Devlin had heard from Crowley also, with word of his replacement and the suggestion that he live with Dolan for the time being. And just when things were starting to look up, he thought. He was clicking all over the place lately, bouncing from teen night to nursing homes to the pulpit and back, spreading cheer all over the place.

He’d known his days at St. Denis were numbered. He’d raised too much hell when he was groping around preaching about atheism. And yet he hadn’t done anything wrong. He’d just been careless about his constituencies, especially the one on State Parkway.

“You knew the archbishop would land on you, Pat,” Dolan had told him. “You should have been more careful.”

He’d known that but had pressed too hard. One part of him felt unfairly treated, but the other told him he should have known better. Dolan railed against Archbishop Houlihan as much as anybody, and his position was well known. But he never gave the old man a handle with which to fling him about, as Devlin was being flung about. The personnel board, priests like himself, knew that, but they also knew Devlin had given cause. Not sufficient cause but cause nonetheless, and they had other fish to fry. So Devlin was being moved. So find him some place else. He hasn’t lost his health insurance, has he? No. O.K., let him flourish, his suspension finally lifted, in Westchester or Justice or Bloom Township. They weren’t the ends of the world.

When Devlin was floating around emotionally, he agreed with that line of thought. Now he wasn’t so sure. So Crowley’s call caught him unawares and gave him a bad feeling in the stomach. Then Dolan called, and now he had a full day ahead of him.

– – – – – – – – – –

Dolan came promptly at three. The two decided to walk to the golf course, a few blocks to Jackson, the street where Devlin, jogging, had been overtaken by Arthur Williams, and then a few more east to the golf course itself.

They looked out of place in the middle of a week-day afternoon, the two of them lugging bags of clubs, dressed like workman. As they crossed Austin at Jackson, they caught a few yells from a pickup-load of city workers on their way to plug a pothole or two. The proper response was a middle finger held straight up, followed by waving golf clubs if the truck stopped to unload its offended passengers, followed by street melee if the spirit (not the Holy one) moved all concerned, all of it a typical city-street confrontation of the 1980s between well-meaning adult males.

Instead, the two priests ignored the yells and went their way, reaching the first tee and finding nobody there but the attendant, who took their money and waved them on.

The game was their usual hacking exhibition. The talk was guarded, because the main subject was becoming unmentionable.

“How’s your teen club coming?” asked Dolan, addressing the ball with an old driver.

“Not bad,” said Devlin.

Dolan hit his drive and didn’t pursue the teen-club topic, Devlin said no more about it.

“How are the Skeltons?” Dolan asked.

“That reminds me,” said Devlin. “I was supposed to —” He stopped. Dolan was taking a shot and so was somewhat distracted.

“What’d you say?” he asked, when he’d swung and sent the ball on one of his low line drives.

“You asked about the Skeltons,” said Devlin. “They’re fine.”

“You started to say something about what you forgot,” said Dolan.

“That was nothing,” said Devlin. It was that he was supposed to press Ginny again on what was happening to Mimi Skelton’s columns at the Sun-Times, but he didn’t want to go into that with Dolan.

“How’s your friend?” asked Dolan.

“Wait a minute,” said Devlin, who was making extended efforts to line up a five-iron shot. He did so, took the shot, and clucked satisfaction as the ball landed on the green, rolled a few feet and stopped.

“She’s fine,” he said, smiling and looking at Dolan, but adding nothing.

“Good,” said Dolan, who then swung viciously with his five-iron and took a huge piece of turf, which went almost as far as the ball. Thin-lipped, he picked up his bag and stalked the ball the twenty yards it had flown, attacked it again, this time sending the ball in a beautiful arc up and past the green by the twenty yards he had just achieved. Devlin got the divot and replaced it, eyeing his friend as if to keep him from doing any more damage.

Neither said anything as Dolan, white-faced, propelled the ball in his next shot to the side of the green from which he had just come and in another managed to dribble onto its edge, gaining extremely long-putt distance to the cup.

Devlin was only a few yards from the cup. Dolan’s first putt was true but very short. His next was the right distance but well off the mark. His third stopped at cup’s edge. Devlin’s only putt was on the button. It would have sunk in a cup half the size, so centered it was. Devlin loved the hollow clicking sound the ball made as it fell in, but he didn’t say so. It was no time to take bows. He was travelling with a wounded lion.

They walked to the next tee in silence. Devlin could hear Dolan taking deep breaths. Devlin drove, continuing his amazingly good play with a long, straight shot that lifted in steps as it roared down the fairway, then seemed to hang there a fraction before landing softly and then rolling a few yards.

Dolan watched it as if hypnotized. He gave Devlin a look of half amazement, half spite and went past him to the tee, plugging his ball into the ground with a vicious twist, standing in front of it squarely and sending his ball off into the distance over the tops of trees that led back to the densest wooded section of the course.

He stood watching it disappear, then looked at Devlin, who watched with a strained seriousness. He saw his opening, however, and took it: “You really hit that one, Terry,” he said, and they both dissolved in laughter.

“You bastard,” said Dolan, and teed up another one.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Devlin was past discussing Ginny with Dolan. He wasn’t sure exactly when this became his decision. Maybe during the Sunday-night session in which Dolan let his hair down about the whole question of Dolan-cum-girl-friend and related matters.

At no point that night was Devlin angry at Dolan. He accepted his friend’s rejection of the Ginny business, no questions asked. Dolan was keeping himself away from consideration of “alternate life style” as an option for himself. When Devlin began to move toward such a change for himself, it was too close to home for Dolan. He couldn’t go along, Devlin decided.

“Hello, my love,” he said, talking into the telephone in his room at the rectory.

“Pretty sure of yourself, aren’t you, Buster?” Ginny said, talking from the city room.

“No surer than is reasonable for a genial, fortyish cleric who has found a friend.”

“Fortyish sounds a bit generous in the direction of thirty, one, and two, you found your friend in Jesus a long time ago, Buster. Don’t give me that stuff.”

“I love it when you call me Buster. It’s so, uh, intimate.”

She laughed. “Bullshit. Intimate. Hah.” She laughed some more.

“Dinner?” he said.

“No. Lunch is enough for one day. We don’t want to overdo anything.”

“We don’t? You don’t go along with that comedienne, what’s her name? Tomlin. The counterculturist?” he said.

“Nine to Five.”

“Yes, but not that. I didn’t see that. I saw her live in concert or some such, at the Goodman. She trashed her mommy and daddy, and the other counterculturists ate it up,” he said. “Lots of witticisms, like ‘Don’t believe it when your mother says enough is enough.’ That sort of thing.”

“Well it’s always fun to trash your parents. You get them back for trashing you. Anyhow,” she said, “I have work to do, and so do you, remember? Teen Club or whatnot? Right?”

“Whatnot. I’ve got lots of whatnot tonight. Schedule loaded with whatnot,” he said.

“Which you can handle easily, I’m sure. G’bye.”

Devlin hung up, smiling, and sat back, hands folded in back of his head. By all odds, he should be feeling intolerable strain, he thought, but he didn’t feel any strain, or he felt very little. Something must be wrong. He felt as if he ought to have his conscience checked, to see if it had sprung a leak or needed a new fan belt.

Where were the agonies of indecision? Even modern heroes have pangs, not to mention Shakespearean. His conscience was making no coward of him at all. He was plunging ahead with abandon, alacrity, panache even. Where had this newfound panache of his been all his previous life?

Telephone. Nate Goodman, the Skeltons’ friend and his from boyhood days in Columbus Park. Last time he saw Nate was at Skeltons’.

“Hello, Buddy, how you doin’?” Devlin said.

“My complaints are few. How about you?”

They covered a few bases, asking after mutual friends. Nate’s timing was right. Only when he began talking to him did Devlin realize he welcomed a break from his thoughts. He was feeling good, but still he was about to burst with his thoughts.

Nate’s wife Carol was working at home, on something she was writing. The kids were staying over at friends’. How about the two of them getting a bite to eat? Discuss Irish-Jewish relations. Something like that.

“I’ll bring my map of the Middle East?” said Devlin.

“And I mine of Ulster,” said Nate. “And of course, you’ll have yours of Ireland with you as usual.”

“On my face. Yeah, yeah, I know.”

They settled on Richard’s, in Forest Park, one of the last bastions of German beer-—drinking in a village that once had nothing but, with names like bungalow-filled streets.

“Remember Gottlieb Schwab’s?” Devlin asked as they sat in the rear of Richard’s, at formica-topped tables.

“The place on Circle Avenue. Dark beer and all. It’s a gay bar now, isn’t it?”

“I don’t know. I’ve heard there’s one around there. It was gay then, for my money, in the old meaning of the word,” said Devlin.

“Before liberation and enlightenment,” said Nate.

“Exactly. Spoken like a true reactionary.”

“I do my best,” said Nate, looking around.

The waitress brought two schooners.

“Anyhow,” said Devlin, wiping foam off his lip, “When it was Gottlieb Schwab’s, 1957, I think, a hot week night. I was almost newly ordained. With some pre-seminary school buddies, married mene Boys! night out, that sort of thing. Me in soft clothes, of course.”

“Reverting,” said Nate.

“Right. Returning to my disgusting origins. You get it. The primordial ooze.”

“Slime?” asked Nate.

“Good. Slime. That says it. Ah, you Jewish fellows are so smart. You get that way from studying Hebrew when you’re little kids. Right?”

“No,” Nate said. “Latin makes you smarter.” He smiled.

Devlin grinned. “Why do I joust with you? Where does it get me? All I ever do is lose.”

They ordered soup and sandwiches.

“Back to Gottlieb Schwab’s,” said Nate.

“Yes. So we sat drinking beer for an hour or so, reliving past triumphs and all that, and at some point one of us, maybe me, spilled some and called to the young-guy bartender — who wasn’t any part of this, you understand,

We were a bunch of outsiders, maybe dimly understood to be Micks —”

“At least he knew you weren’t part of his immediate family,” said Nate.

“Right. He knew we weren’t -— what’s the word? —- landsmen.”

“You didn’t live on his block, mainly,” said Nate.

“We were not among his familiars. Anyhow, one of us called for something to wipe up the beer, and he pitched a rag at us, and it brushed my face?”

Devlin said it almost as if looking for confirmation, and Nate nodded. Devlin continued, moving around to make gestures. “And you know how after a few beers the veneer wears off?”

“Of civilization,” said Nate.

“Right. The controls aren’t there. Well, the rag brushed my face on the way to our table, and I was up in a flash at the guy.”

“You went for him?”

“No, thank God. But I braced him. You know, I looked at him with cold and unblinking eye and so forth and told him what I thought of his hitting me in the face with the rag.”

“What’d he do, pull a shotgun from behind the bar?”

“He didn’t do anything. Just stood there.”

“Looking at you in cold, Teutonic fashion?”

“Right. While I looked at him in hot, Celtic fashion.”

“Geez,” said Nate. “It’s enough to cause rain. Then what?”

“Then I guess I satisfied myself with taking the guy’s measure and/or ran out of steam and went back and sat down.”

“Wow. End of crisis in the OK corral. Lucky thing too, for the hapless barkeep.”

“You kiddin’?” said Devlin. “He probably had a sap under the bar, ready to slap me with if I made a move. I’d ‘a been caught cold. I was

lucky I went back to drinking beer.”

“Not to mention the nice start to your priestly career,” said Nate. The Oak Leaves could have given you a nice play. ‘Local boy, newly ordained, is sapped by bartender. Refuses to press charges. Takes free beer instead as balm for troubled psyche.’”

Devlin laughed. “Oh boy, Nate, you should be in the newspaper business instead of a lawyer. You’ve got a great touch.”

He thought of Ginny as he said it, and a sweet wave swept over him, as of nepenthe he had drunk, he thought, mixing some poetry he had memorized as a school kid years ago with the friendly bullshit he was enjoying with his friend Nate.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

The days wore on for Devlin, to the few he had left at St. Denis. Crowley had given him two weeks, and then he would move to Dolan’s place

a mile away, deeper into the village, away from the city’s edge. Travelling light as he had over his years of the priesthood, he faced the change with a fair degree of detachment. That’s what the spiritual counselor had talked about at Mundelein, the ancient Jesuit who had studied theology at Innsbruck and recommended long walks after dinner followed by a tall, cold glass of water before digging in for the night’s study.

You had to be detached, the bent old guy would explain, himself a fair model of it, to the point sometime where Devlin wondered what made him tick. He’d go on about the love of God which surpasseth all understanding during a retreat talk, and Devlin had no cause to accuse him of insincerity. But he always wondered anyhow if the man was misguided one way or another. Something about him didn’t fit, but what did he know, a sprout in his twenties, looking the graybeard up and down, seeking chinks in armor?

But Devlin had bought the idea of detachment. If you go for the spiritual, then you better guard against the material. The old Jesuit quoted St. Augustine right and left. Someone else said Augustine was a Platonist, with was logical if nothing else. Any other approach seemed harder to grasp. Later, in the ‘60s, he heard the “Which Side Are You On?” song of the civil-rights protesters, lifted from old labor struggles.

That appealed to him also, with its clean break between right and wrong, or right and left, for that matter. And of course, there was the old radical himself, Jesus, with his uncompromising “He who is not with me is against me.” All had their appeal over the decades for Devlin, though he had been in and out of the civil-rights business without any heavy commitment. He had been no one to count on. In the end, they had their revolution, such as it was, without him.

‘That’s all right, Dev. It’s the thought that counts,” Dolan had told him.

That didn’t bother Devlin. He was used to Dolan’s observations. He wasn’t used to Dolan’s being upset, however, and though the most recent had golf-match exchange had cleared the air between the two, the last exchange before that one, about the various purposes to be achieved in life without a wife, still hung there.

As for Devlin and Ginny, that exchange or series of them went apace, to the detriment of the various all-or-nothing theses that Devlin had embraced during his life. This life went from one of apparent total dedication to one of fairly obvious compromise. He and Ginny, after all, had something going.

“You have a knit brow,” she told him one Sunday afternoon as he lay beside her in her apartment. “Prithee, why so wan?”

“Prithee?” He looked at her quizzically.

“Sure, ‘prithee.’! Why not? Good poetic language. Lover’s lament and all.”

“Lament?”

“Patrick, you’re being difficult,” she said.

“I know.” From flat on his back, he pulled up to resting on an elbow and facing her. “I must have been thinking negative thoughts,” he said.

“You’re not sure?”

“Well, it becomes a hard philosophical question. One man’s negative is another man’s something else. It’s very complicated.”

‘l’ll bet,” she said.

“Oh yes. Very difficult. The whole question of right and wrong, for instance.”

“Just to grab out and reach for a handy, pocket-size item to chew on. You feel guilty about going to bed with me?”

“Oddly, no.”

She laughed, her red hair jouncing about. “Oddly, you say. Oddly?”

“Sure. Hell, here I am your friendly Catholic pastor, in bed of a Sunday afternoon with Miss Voluptuous of 1983. Better men than I have felt twinges. Let’s face it.”

“Miss Voluptuous of, say, 1973? Maybe. But 1983? Not sure.”

“I’ll be the judge of that. Anyhow. To answer your question, while many a lesser man might feel guilty, or better for that matter, I do not. Not as far as I can determine, at least.”

“It’s the sort of thing you’d know, I think.”

“You’re right,” he said. “And I don’t. Which as any counselor knows, makes me a hard case.”

“A lost soul. cherchez la femme.”

“And no need to cherchez very far at that,” he said.

“I’m here,” she said, hiding under the cover, then peeking out, green eyes merry.

“Is that where you are?” he said, plunging under the covers, where he nuzzled, squeezed and poked to the accompaniment of Ginny’s paroxysmic laughter, twisting and moaning. The right and wrong of it were laid aside for the moment.

I took notes over the years, and here’s one about when God spoke to a friend who told me about it one day on the Green Line many years ago . . .

Was talking to a fellow the other day who was celebrating his “epiphany” of twenty-some years ago, he being 70-ish now. Something of a mid-life crisis that turned out well.

His arm went out, the doc couldn’t get it back in, Doc and three others spread-eagled him at Oak Park Hospital. It’s where modern medicine meets grunt ‘n groan. Very painful. The fellow prayed, and arm returned to socket.

In his prayer, he had seen himself on the cross with Jesus, seen himself as Jesus, asked Jesus to take on his pain. Zip, in went arm to socket.

Nurse on scene: Don’t know what you did, but it worked.

Two pain-filled weeks later, reading in the gospel where Jesus wept over Lazarus, he had his revelation — epiphany. Saw that he too should weep, at least figuratively, over other people’s pain. Not crocodile tears either, as political feelers of others’ pain.

No, he remembered one whom he had not helped when he should have, was struck with that recollection and conviction, not a vision but something better, that he should not let that happen again.

His life has not been the same, he said on the Green Line on the way to the Loop. The conviction has remained, regularly renewed. It has not gone away. He remembers more and more people he knows for whom he could have done and could do something helpful.

Years ago, Andrew Greeley, for 18 months now in his own time of spread-eagling since he was dragged by a taxi and banged his head on a curb, wrote once about how many have such prayer experiences as my friend had.

Greeley the social scientist and gatherer of information — a noble calling in a world of, ah, disinformation — had found that lots of people, including the kind we bump into on the street, have reported their own such momentarily heightened awareness of the divine.

My friend is a very thoughtful individual who reads, writes, and discusses issues of life governance. He has put in a lot of time at this sort of behavior. On his figurative cross at the hospital, he was ripe for the picking by the Divine Gatherer.

The hound of heaven, the poet Francis Thompson called God, but not before having a very rough go of it as an addict.

Better yet is the case of Ignatius Loyola, for whom a cannonball to the leg was a deciding factor. Recuperating, he ran out of tales of soldierly derring-do and read saints’ lives. Impulsive chap, he managed to find a cave where he could live and investigate himself and his future as a Christian. From that came the Spiritual Exercises and later the Jesuits.

My friend of the Green Line conversation has no such plans, for what it’s worth.

When he died a few years after this, he was the subject of heartfelt remembrance by others he had helped.

When the family invaded the biggest city on a junket to see one of the girls and threw in Swarthmore to see another . . .

April of ‘97, my friends, when the city probably never looked better . . .

Neither seashore nor mountains . . . What a piece of work is man! And what a trip to Brooklyn and Swarthmore! Normally shrinking from crass memorializing of daily activities, I am moved nonetheless to tell that most elementary of tales: what I did on my vacation. Listen up.

Round one, Brooklyn . . . First, we got a cab, then we got a plane, then a “car.” A “car” is a reasonably priced cab-like vehicle you call and tell to come and get you at La Guardia from Brooklyn Heights. It’s a “car service” named after that neighborhood’s main street or near-main street, Montague. He dropped us at 37 Schermerhorn — say “Sch” as in skirmish. Time for tired old joke about fighting your way around New York? Sorry, I am in the market for an “I love NY” sticker.

At #37 lives #3 Daughter with four other young women. Our #3 works for the city, helping it develop economically. Later we visited her work place and met others who help that cause, hearing about the price of fish as affected or not by a crackdown on mob involvement at the Fulton market. History!

In short order we were strolling the B. Hts. Promenade overlooking the river. This is old country, remember. There’s something always on the edge of musty and littered about NY, kept in control and giving a weathered look. Lots of bricks in place for a hundred years, etc. From heights is s a view of Manhattan and the Brooklyn Bridge, which our #3 can take on foot on her way to work downtown.

The fun of getting around . . . Our three days were full of subways, as were some of us by half week’s end, but not me. They are frequent, fast, and full or half full, even at off hours. You can’t get nowhere fast on four wheels in that teeming metropolis. So subway’s the way, at $1.50 a token. As keeper of the petty cash, I was doling out the 15-spots right and left, for the ten-token package.

Subways are clean too. Some graffiti but not much. Nearest we saw to skirting legality was Korean peddlers, young man or woman moving briskly through the cars snapping a sort of cricket to (barely) announce her presence. The natives know who they are. Their wares are knick-knacks.

This is Babylon? . . . Saturday night to Union Square, downtown Manhattan, for a tap-dance show out of which I walked after five minutes. Eight or ten Australian men banging away on a wired stage in work shoes, with no music. Ears protesting and mind wondering what a piece of work this stuff was — and with only 50 years to live and not ready to spend 75 minutes of it to find out — your correspondent walked out onto the busy street.

In not too long, he found what could pass for a five-story public library and reading room, high-ceilinged and with a coffee bar, where a paperback “Henry IV, Part 2” and “Henry V” went for $3 each, plus (splurge time) a Loeb Library volume of Horace for $18.95. The first Henry neatly supplemented the Part 1 I had bought off a Waterstone’s shelf at O’Hare. (What a piece of work that Waterstone’s is.)

This Union Square (14th Street) public reading room, by the way, is the Barnes & Noble Temple of Literacy, another nice piece of work. It had people in it reading. True, there was some chatter in the coffee shop and elsewhere. But throughout this store were people wholly absorbed in books. I conceived an image of Union Square as one big campus.

Easter Day in the morning . . . On Sunday at St. Francis Xavier church, in the same general neighborhood, on 16th Street, however, the expected Jesuit influence showed itself mostly in liturgical tone (relaxed and enthusiastic) and music (damn good choir if I do say), not in the sermon. The Jesuit pastor was more Johnny Carson (or J. Leno) than John Courtney Murray (eminent theologian, Vatican II expert on religious liberty), which is I suppose as it should be. It’s a media-driven society, and people eat it up.

However, if those people I’d seen at the Barnes & Noble temple had been there and had been polled about the sermon, they would have coughed and changed the subject, I feel. Anyhow, it was better than Cardinal O’Connor delivering a political speech, as I heard a few years ago at the Cathedral. O’Connor’s OK, and he may have been 99% right in what he said, but I like my sermons reasonably pious. The St. FX preacher was pious enough but dealt too much in slogans. It was one bumper sticker after another, with a lot about “life” and “spirit” and “risen” — all pretty much a blur.

Our kids liked it, however. So I’m through complaining.

Watching your language . . . Each Brooklyn Heights morning, I went out for coffee and muffins. #1 Daughter was with me one day. Her order took a little longer. The fellow called it a “crim chizz” bagel. In the constant talking over and around people that is New York, I told her, puzzled, that her “crim chizz bagel” would be ready in a flash. “Cream cheese,” she explained to me. Of course. I felt sheepish, intending no slight.

Later at an Irish restaurant, the FBI (foreign-born Irish) waitress listed what was on tap, including Bass Ale, which she pronounced “Bahss” but I always say so as to rhyme with “crass.” Quick as wink, I said I’d have a “Bahss,” again intending no mockery. I swear, it just came out.

Immigrants all . . . On Sunday we picnicked at the marvelous park next to the Cloisters, a reinstalled monastery full of medieval art, way up on Manhattan, about 200th Street, again over a broad expanse of river. That was a mere subway ride into never-never land.

Next day we ferried to the Statue of Liberty (great ride, standing on the deck in wind and driving rain) and Ellis Island, which has a top-of-the-line exhibit about the 1890-1922 immigration screening.

A day or so later in Philadelphia, the papers were telling of the court-appointed “master” who ruled that Ellis Island belongs in large part to New Jersey. A revoltin’ development, Jimmy Durante would have said.

Getting to Philly called for a subway ride to Penn Station, where we bought a ticket for (a) a New Jersey line (trains festooned over the Ellis Island victory) and the Southeastern Pa. commuter system known as SEPTA, which I say is too close to septic for comfort.

Falling trees . . . From Philly we entrained to Swarthmore, where spring greeted us foursquare and we might have asked what is so rare as a day in April but didn’t, as far as I recall.

Here we were to visit #2 Daughter, who helps the college stay on good terms with its alumni and alumnae, of which she is herself one.

This was bucolic territory, where a major happening was the falling of a huge tree on two parked cars, which were taken away in briefcases, I believe. (No one was hurt. We returned to Oak Park on time for an empty River Forest house to blow up because of leaked gas. No one hurt there either. Phew.)

Another happening at Swarthmore was a men’s lacrosse game (sock-’em, bust-’em) vs. Western Maryland, clearly the better team. Lots of passing of that little ball, net to net, like the Bulls when they’re on, and open-field running, ball in net, like in football. On a sunny, crisp day.

Yes.

Chapter 12. Sunday afternoon chattery, priest and girl friend. Tribune story at heart of it. Sunday night, priest and priest friend having it out in rectory kitchen: “Was it you in the Trib?”

That afternoon about three, they sat in the place, inside because cold drizzle was washing off the beer-garden slates. Inside it was dark, with a lot of small, heavy-wooden tables and low rafters. Nice imitation of someone’s vague impressions of an English roadside inn. It was comfortable and cozy, and the drink in Devlin’s hand was some good bourbon on ice. And the woman before him was not the object of his pastoral concern.

“Hello there,” she said after they had greeted outside and come in and sat down and ordered and been served. She was sleep-rested. Her eyes were green and big, her hair red and fluffy.

“Hi there,” said Devlin, relaxing and sitting back. Many’s the time he’d sat in a rectory kitchen or in a golf club house after a round, shooting it with his clerical buddies. “I was just thinking how different this is,” he said.

“From what? How?” she said, leaning forward, alert.

“From the way we do it in the priesthood.” He wore an open-necked flannel shirt and a windbreaker. The place had a few other couples at tables and a a pair of guys at the bar. The other conversations were low murmurs like theirs.

She grinned. “How do you do it in the priesthood?” She stopped. “Do what, anyhow? What are we talking about, Patrick?”

He loved to hear her talk to him like that. Just a few words provided an intimacy he had never had. He was a thirsty man drinking it up.

“Sitting and drinking and talking. You, me. Alone together. No guffaws or horseplay. Relaxed.”

“Hmmm. You like it this way?” she said.

“Yep.” He looked around the room. A white guy sat with a stunning black woman. She was fingering his hand. Sunday afternoon, rainy. A place for fugitives.

“Did I tell you how I heard about the column?” he asked her. She’d been watching him.

“No.” She bent forward, resting her chin on her hands.

“Mike the usher. Came up while I was vesting.”

“While you were what?” She screwed up her face in disbelief. “Vesting? For some kind of routine?”

“For mass.” He looked almost startled. “I was getting dressed for mass. Putting on the vestments. So, I was vesting. Get it?” He wasn’t used to explaining such fundamental matters.

She smiled. “Go on,” she said.

“I’m at the vesting table, and up comes Mike.”

“Was he going to vest too?” she asked.

“Ushers don’t vest, Ginny.”

She nodded, easing up on her smile. “0.K., 0.K.”

“’Did you read the Tribune, Father?! Mike asks me. He’s all red and bald and popping out of his white shirt. ‘No, I didn’t, Mike,’ I told him, tying the amice.”: He saw she was about to ask something and said quickly, “The amice is a neckpiece you put over your shoulders and tie around front, like this.” He held his hands in front, chest-high. “See?” He said it with a quizzical look,

eyebrows raised and looking slightly irritated to boot.

Ginny threw back her head and laughed. Tears came to her eyes. “I see, I see,” she said. “Enough, enough. The amice is a neckpiece. I get it. Go on, go on.”

Looking past Ginny, Devlin saw the stunning black woman look up as Ginny laughed, amused, then turn back to her friend.

He continued. “’There’s something in there about an Oak Park priest on Rush Street slugging some guy who made a pass at a girl he was with,’ says Mike. He holds on to my arm as he says it, real intense.”

“Making it hard for you to tie your amice, I bet,” she said.

“It would have been hard in any event, let me tell you.” He sipped his drink. “’I didn’t see the paper yet, Mike,’ I said. ‘Do you know who the priest was, Father?’ he asks me. I said I didn’t.”

“You didn’t say, all bright and bushy-tailed, while vesting before nine o’clock mass on a cheery Sunday morning, ‘Why Mike, it was me. My girl friend Ginny and I were making the rounds, and some drunk looked too long down the front of her low-cut dress, breathing gin and vermouth’?”

He laughed. “Super-priest here, at your service, ma’am.”

“What if he popped in here right now?”

“Who, Mike?”

“Oh I never thought of that. I’ll have to work on that one. No, I mean my friend from Corona, the one with the broken hand.”

“Broken hand?” He almost shouted. A few heads turned.

“Oh, I didn’t tell you? He broke his hand on your jaw.”

“He barely hit me.”

“Whatever it was, it caught something wrong, or right, depending on your point of view, and now he’s got a broken hand. Can’t hit the computer keys like he’s supposed to.”

“He’s one of those?”

“He’s a banker, at Continental.”

“The little bank inside the big bank?”

“What?”

“It was a TV ad they had some years back. Before your time.”

“You are an old-timer, aren’t you?” she said.

“Old enough to know better, as the saying goes.”

“Than to sit with some chippy on a Sunday afternoon, describing esoteric garments. Vestments? Is that what they are?”

“Super-priest does everything,” he said. with a wink.

“Everything?” she asked, then, quickly: “Forget that.” She gave a wry smirk. “If you can, please. Use your storied self-control.”

“Storied self-control?”

“Don’t priests all have it? Or do they take something?” she said.

“Pills? Sex-control pills? That’s it. Birth control no, sex-control yes. No pill the one, pill for the other. Priests give ‘em out, taking large doses themselves ‘tween times.”

“Between what times, for God’s sake? You don’t mean . . . ?” She stopped, showing mock horror.

“Lapses,” he said. “Storied lapses. Come on. There are more stories about the lapses, aren’t there. Fallen sparrows and all that.”

“No,” she said. “Women are sparrows, priests are, say, eagles. Fallen eagles. Rolling along in the dust by the wayside of life.”

“’Spoiled’ is the word, like food gone bad on a shelf, full of cobwebby crap. ‘Optima-pessima’ that sort of thing.”

“Now you’re talking,” she said. “Latin, right? Talk some Latin to me. I love it. Had it in high school. ‘Optima’ is optimal, right? Optimist? Optical?”

“No. Not optical. That’s Greek. Refers to eyes. ‘Optima!’ is Latin for best. ‘Pessima’ is ‘worst.’ ‘Corruptio’ is the other word in the

saying. ‘’Corruptio optimi pessima.’ ‘Corruption of the best is worst. Or . . . .”

He paused, surveying the darkened pub and returning his eyes to Ginny, sitting with a contented smile. “’The bigger they are, the harder they fall’” he said. “Clever, eh?”

She laughed and looked at him, then let her eyes wander, holding her glass with her fingertips, then sipped the cold bourbon..

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Terry Dolan was on the phone to Devlin as soon as the last mass was over, but Devlin was reported out for the day. He tried again about three and again about five, with no luck. He ate alone at the rectory, letting the associate go his way, and by eight was on the phone again. Devlin finally called back about nine.

“Old sock, how are you?” he greeted Dolan.

“Where the hell you been?” asked Old Sock.

“To London to visit the queen. Where else does an Irishman go on a rainy Sunday afternoon? God save the queen.”

“Bullshit. What are you doing now?”

“Preparing my morning meditation. What else?” said Devlin. “It takes a long time to prepare a good meditation, right? But you’re looking for some spiritual guidance, I can tell. And souls come first, before meditation, even the souls of priests. Come visit me, my son, and unburden yourself.”

Dolan promised he would do just that, in no more than fifteen minutes.

In fourteen minutes he was at St. Denis’s back door. Devlin let him in, got a beer from the fridge, and sat down with him at the kitchen table.

“Shoot if you must, my old gray friend, but spare the country’s flag, he said,” said Devlin.

“Was that you in the Trib column?” Dolan asked.

“Terry, there are, let’s see, a dozen resident parish priests in Oak Park, right? Plus assorted order priests. Dozens more of them — Dominicans, Jesuits, Viatorians, not to mention Episcopals and Orthodox. The column didn’t say it was a Roman, did it? And not to mention the ex-priests, at least half of whom consider themselves priests, married though they be. There must be twenty-five of them, Oak Park being the liberal community it is. And what else? Let me see.”

Dolan took a drink of his beer and otherwise just sat and looked.

“But all that being the case,” Denvir continued, “nonetheless you come to me your old gray friend and put to me that leading question.” He paused. “How’d you know it was me?”

Dolan rolled his eyes, throwing back his head, then sat staring past Devlin.

“I’m calming down,” said Dolan, breathing deeply.

“Do you always look like a zombie when you’re calming down?”

“Sometimes. As a matter of fact, sometimes I do. I go into a trance, and it makes me look funny.”

He took some deep breaths and sat back, his hands in his lap. It was quiet in the house. Devlin didn’t say anything.

in his lap. It was quiet in the house. Devlin didn’t say anything.

“Wasn’t it in this kitchen?” Dolan asked.

“What?”

“Wasn’t it here we were sitting the night the special delivery letter came from Bolan? With word you were suspended?”

“It was here,” said Devlin.

“And then we prayed, with Jerry Skelton leading it? You, Jerry and I?”

“Right,” said Devlin. “I was glad you two were here, and the prayer part fit in. I was glad we prayed.”

Dolan leaned forward. “Well look, Terry. I’d like to think there’s some connection between something like that and my wondering what’s what with the Trib business. Now if I’m off base, tell me.”

“Terry, you’re not off base. Not in anything you’ve said. I’m with you all the way. You have not lost me. I’m with you, old buddy. O.K.?”

“O.K.” Dolan sipped the beer. Devlin sat there without any, waiting. “You want me to put my question again?” asked Dolan.

“Yes. Put your question.”

“Was it you in the Trib?”

“Yes,”

“Out of excruciating curiosity if nothing else, what the hell happened?”

“I was eating at the Corona with the Williamses, from the parish, and Ginny Morgan.”

“Who’s Ginny Morgan?”

“Newspaper reporter, friend of mine.”

“Oh.”

“On our way out, we ran into this bozo who knew Ginny. He pressed his attentions, I took his arm, he swung on me, I got hot and grappled with him. Somebody finally pulled us apart.”

He paused.

“Pulled me off him. And then we all left the place. Oh yeah, a Trib character came along as we were leaving. He knew Ginny and apparently put together his story. Which my fans and I greatly appreciated, by the way.”

Dolan sat shaking his head. “Baby, you’ve come a long way from ordination day, that’s all I’ve got to say. Shit, brawling on Rush street over a woman. I don’t think that’s what the bishop had in mind when he called you forth.”

“Have I betrayed my vocation, Terry?”

“You’ve strained the hell out of it, at least. Who’s Ginny Morgan?”

“Friend of mine, a newspaper reporter, I told you,” said Devlin.

“I know you told me, and I still don’t know.” Dolan looked at him.

“You want to know if she’s my girl friend. In the usual meaning of the phrase.”

“Well, I’ll tell you, Pat, if you’ve decided to have a girl friend at this stage in your life, yes, to be perfectly frank with you, I would like to know. It might affect your availability for golf or late-night drinking or saying an early — or late — mass. Who knows? It might even interfere slightly with your functioning as a priest in the Roman Catholic church as we know it.

As one who might call on you. to fill in on a funeral, in a pinch, I mean, I think I would like to know whether you have a girl friend or not. I also would like to know when I might be reading about you in the Tribune, so I can alert my flock, as it were. You know, that sort of thing. Nothing personal, of course.

Dolan widened his eyes and sat back and took a short drink of beer.

“Feel better now?” said Devlin. “Look, Terry, I don’t expect you to give three cheers about all this . . . .”

“I hope you don’t,” Dolan interrupted.

“I don’t,” said Devlin, unperturbed. “And frankly, one part of me says you are out of bounds. Wait,” he said, seeing Dolan start to react. “Wait. Hear me out.”

He stopped for a few seconds, continued, “One part of me says you’re off base, that this is me personally involved in this, and there’s no discussing it with you. But I’m rejecting that idea. It’s a bad idea. I want to be able to discuss this business with you the way I’ve discussed other things. It’s not good for man to be alone, the saying goes.”

“That’s Scripture, Pat.”

“I know it is, Terry. Calm down, will you?”

Dolan sat still, fuming.

“It’s not good for me to start some wholesale cutting off process. I know I’m a big boy now, and big boys have girl friends, but big boys also have other responsibilities. You know I’m not a romantic, Terry. The last thing I am is a romantic. Right?”

“You know I’m not, and you’re saying that just to butter me up.”

“Now if I were as mad as you about this, I’d end the conversation right there,” said Devlin. “But I’m not. You’re the one who’s mad, and I’m not. So it’s my job to stay cool.”

“You’re up to it, I’m sure. You got some coffee?”

Devlin made him some instant and put it in front of him, shoving the cream and sugar towards him.

Meanwhile, Dolan took some deep breaths and held himself in, standing up and looking out the window at the floodlit parking lot. He drank some of the coffee. “Look, Pat,” he began. “I’m glad to hear you’re not a romantic. I know you’re not. But you ought to decide a few things. Are you in passage, or what?”

“I’m in some kind of passage, yes. I’m glad you said that. I’m on my way to something new. Hell, maybe it’s a monastery. I don’t know.”

Dolan laughed. “Well, somehow I don’t think it’s a monastery. Jesus, a monastery.” He said the last part almost under his breath, looking into the distance. He sighed and took some more coffee. “I think I’ll become a coffee fiend,” he said absently. “Good stuff.” He held the cup up as if in salute.

“Do you want to hear some more?” asked Devlin.

“Yes, I want to hear some more,” said Dolan. “Shoot.”

(End of Chapter 12)

When I’m down and out, I lift up my head and shout, there’s gonna be a great day . . .

Gabriel will warn me . . .

Often enough through the consoling elements of liturgical and other elements of Catholic prayers and sacramental functions of faith, hope and charity, especially hope, aka trust!

Indeed trust, you miserable sinner you. How else, you fool? You are in the midst of an eternal understanding, even if a puny part, but treated by the Great Facilitator as the only part that matters.

Go for it, you fool. Not stand in line for it. What line? Right, there isn’t any. Speak to your Maker, and you are listened to as if He had nothing else to do.

He loves you, wants the best for you.

Believe Him, trust Him, respect Him, Father, Son, Holy Spirit.

Depend on Him (Them) for everything, what you ask for and strength to hang on and carry on if He does not give you what you had in mind when you talked to Him.

Yours not to reason why, yours but to do and when all is said and done, die.

Chapter 11. Good time had by all becomes a worrisome thing. In spades. Devlin makes a headline. Preaches his heart out.

It was nine o’clock or so when Devlin, Ginny and the Williamses finished their coffee and prepared to leave.

“Same time tomorrow?” said Devlin, enjoying a well-fed glow and relaxed from all the laughter and runaway wit.

“We can meet for breakfast. How’s that?” said Ginny, smiling and nudging him.

“After running in Columbus Park,” said Arthur. “How about a run in Columbus Park in the morning? Run with the brothers, O.K.?”

“I got my own brother right here,” said Melissa, squeezing Arthur’s arm.

“You love him like a brother, right?” said Ginny.

“Not quite,” said Melissa, with a stage grimace.

Arthur paid for his wife and himself. Devlin and Ginny went dutch. They pushed their chairs back, got up and headed for the door, where the smiling host hoped they had enjoyed themselves and was further wishing them a “nice evening” when the big guy whom Devlin had seen in the men’s room came around the corner from the bar, heading downstairs to the men’s room again.

He started to push his way through the four friends and the host, bunched up near the door, and then spotted Ginny and stopped.

“Well,” he said with a humor-free chuckle. “Well, well.” He stood blocking the door, looking at Ginny. “My friend the drink-spiller. I been waitin’ at Ric’s all night and you never showed. What’s the matter, Baby, don’t you like me any more?”

He looked around and spotted the Williamses and Dev. “Which one’s the boy friend?” he asked. “Him?” He nodded toward Arthur. “No, I don’t think so. He probably goes with her.” He nodded toward Melissa. “This the guy?” He looked at Devlin, a few inches shorter than he.

The rest stood, stunned.

The big guy moved toward Ginny and started to put an arm around her. “Come on, Baby, let’s you and me talk,” he said. Ginny moved away, slipping his arm off her. He advanced some more. “Hey, come on, what’s the problem?”

Devlin, recovering, put his arm out and took the big guy by his shoulder.

“Hey.” The guy turned to Devlin. “Hey. Get your fuckin’ arm off me. Get your God-damned arm off me.” His tone went from cajoling Ginny to threatening. He took on the look of the abused.

“Get away from here,” said Devlin. “Go away. You’re not wanted.”

“The fuck I’m not wanted. Who the fuck are you, anyway?” he said, and swung on Devlin.

He only grazed Devlin’s chin, but the move enraged the priest, who grabbed the man with both arms and began to wrestle him. The two banged against the stand with the reservation listings and rolled into a dessert tray, falling to the floor after knocking several custard puddings to the floor.

Devlin held on to the guy as the two rolled to the floor amid screams from several women and breaking of glassware. He felt the guy reach down for his face to pull him away, but the guy didn’t gouge or poke, as he could have.

Hands grappled at him and the other guy. Shouts and curses filled the air. Finally, Devlin felt himself pulled off and held by someone very strong and saw the other guy held by somebody else. Waiters scurried around.

Devlin was heaving with anger. The other guy looked more hurt than anything else. Devlin was pushed out the door into the night air. Arthur and another man got him outside.

“Take it easy,” said Arthur. Devlin heaved with exertion and emotion. His coat was torn. “Your coat’s torn,” said Arthur.

“Cheap coat,” said Devlin, engaging in the trivial as people do sometimes, when the main event is something they’d rather not think about.

Devlin felt awful, though somewhat cleansed. Ginny and Melissa joined them right away outside. The big guy was kept inside, though apparently he was not fighting to get at Devlin — or Ginny either, for that matter.

The host came out, calm as hell for the circumstances, Devlin thought. He apologized profusely and asked if he could do anything. They were telling him no, when a friend of Ginny’s came by, a reporter for the Tribune.

“What’s the matter, Al, wouldn’t they pay? You have to chase ‘em on to the sidewalk?” he asked, grinning, then stopped when he saw Devlin’s torn jacket and general disarray. “What’s up, Ginny, a rumble?” he asked.

“Hi, Ken,” she said. “Oh, nothing. Forget it.”

“Forget what? Gimme somethin’ to forget?”

“Let’s go,” said Ginny, heading them down Rush Street. Ken stood in front of the restaurant. Al went back in. Ken followed him to see what was going on.

“Nosy guy,” said Arthur as they headed for their cars.

“It’s his business to be nosy,” said Ginny. “Let’s hope he gets nothing for his trouble. You all right?” She turned to Devlin.

“Yeah, I guess so,” said Devlin, stopping to test a few muscles.

“Everything seems to be working. My mind is scrambled a bit. But the rest seems to be O.K. How you doin’?”

“Terrible,” she said. They walked along, silent. “At least you got to meet my old flame.”

Devlin stopped again and felt his chin. He tapped away at it gingerly, with two fingers held together, looking in the distance as if measuring some reaction. Then he very carefully moved his jaw around, increasing the movement until he did it rapidly and in its full circle.

“There,” he said. “That’s all right. I couldn’t stand a broken jaw. You have to eat with a straw and worst of all, you can hardly talk. All you can do is mumble. I’d hate that.”

“Where’s you car, Ginny?” asked Arthur. “How you gettin’ home?”

“Down the block, in a lot,” she said, pointing. “I’ll get home same way I came. No problem.”

“Now wait a minute. With that madman back there, you don’t want to just go off by yourself. Do you?” asked Arthur.

“He’s through for the night.”

“You don’t think he’ll follow you?”

“No. He didn’t before.”

“Before?” Devlin asked.

“When I . . .” she paused. “. . . treated him badly once before.”

“We should go with you,” said Devlin. “Let us follow you. Let me come with you in your car, and Arthur and Melissa can follow us to your place, and we’ll take it from there. Tuck you in, or whatever.”

“O.K.,” she said. She liked the idea of Devlin coming with her. Wanted to thank him, for one thing.

They found Ginny’s car. Then Arthur and Melissa got theirs and came up behind them, and the two cars took off for Ginny’s place, whose address the Williamses had too.

Devlin sat back in the front seat while Ginny headed to Grand Avenue, then turned to La Salle Street and then headed north.

“You all right?” she asked him.

“Yep.” He sighed.

“I’m really sorry,” she said. “You didn’t need that, running into some of my past that way.”

“Old flame?”

“Of sorts,” she said. “We had something going for a very little while, not long ago. Finally, he got to me very badly, and one night . . .”

“You threw a drink at him.”

She looked at him quickly. “How’d you know?”

He smiled. “I heard him complaining in the men’s room. You wounded the hell out of him. When did it happen?”

“Week or so ago. It was the night you called me about your friends the columnists. Night of the fire across the street from you. That you didn’t even know about, resting in your back bedroom as you were.”

“I don’t feel so good about all this,” he said.

“Well if you wouldn’t wear that turtleneck, things like this wouldn’t happen to you,” she said, stopping at North Avenue at a light.

“You mean if I dressed like a priest, I wouldn’t get into fights with wounded, unrequited lovers.”

“Right. Unrequited lovers would leave you alone because they would know you weren’t one yourself. Or would assume you weren’t.” She looked ahead.

“On the other hand, my position is not entirely clear in the matter, is it?” he asked.

“No, it isn’t,” she said quickly, looking ahead.

He sat there with 20 years of his life, no, really, his whole life, weighing him down. He reached out, holding his hand between them. She saw it out of the corner of her eye, left it there for a minute, then took it with her right hand, holding the wheel with her left. Later, she was to describe the touch to Devlin as electric. To him at the moment, it was more explosive than anything. It blew up a lifetime of carefully nurtured restraint. He didn’t know what to make of it. He didn’t know if he liked it or not.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Three days later, on Sunday, the Tribune’s gossip column featured an item about Devlin and Ginny. “Pardon us for asking,” the column said, “but was that a Sun-Times reporter (female) on Rush Street the other night with a priest (male)? And didn’t that priest have to deck an obstreperous admirer of the good-looking reporter when the admirer pressed his attentions a bit too hard? We thought you were supposed to call a priest in case of accident, not have one with you to keep the wolves at bay. This could be the start of something: Have collar, will deck obstreperous admirers. But the gallant cleric, from Oak Park, we hear, was in turtleneck for the evening. So it goes. . . . . ”

Devlin heard about it when he came into the sacristy to vest for mass. One of the ushers, a bald, red-faced fellow who looked like he was about to burst out of his starched white collar, asked him, “Father Devlin, did you read the Tribune? There was something there about an Oak Park priest with a woman on Rush Street, coming to her aid or something? Crazy story. Did you read it, Father?”

“I didn’t, Mike,” Devlin said quickly, doing what he could to hide his utter surprise.

Mike asked in what was a combination of curiosity and devilment. He had to know it was a provocative question to ask an Oak Park priest, but he didn’t necessarily know anything at all. But priests to him were one solid mass of anointed humanity, distinguished by their various idiosyncrasies if they had any, otherwise all wonderful fellows.

Devlin excused himself, pretending the need to pray before mass. He fumbled with the various strings and over-the-head lace-bordered garments he had put on hundreds of times, stunned with the news. |

Sweet Jesus, in the Tribune, he groaned inwardly. It wasn’t a prayer — or was it? Jesus, he said to himself. Shit.

It wasn’t a prayer. What did he have to pray about? It was past time for prayer. The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God. Nay further, he thought, pulling the chasuble over his head, the fool hath said in his heart, I can have dinner out with a lady friend and not read about it in the Tribune. Geez.

He said mass as well as he could, looking out at the sea of upraised faces and wondering morosely which had read the paper already, before nine o’clock mass. He preached about charity, the greatest of all virtues, the rock-bottom, unassailable Christian preachment.

Who could knock charity? Who could take exception to his tried-and-true observations? No one could, which is what made the sermon insipid and ineffective — as if the two didn’t go together and furthermore as if anyone knew what made a sermon effective in the first place.

Still, as he laid out the Christian truisms — “observed in the breach by all of us every day,” he said — every last unassailable observation seemed to him mired in double meaning and telling all those faces that he was the Oak Park priest in question.

He was a man obsessed. Every look from the congregation, whom he normally ignored as much as he could, every hesitation by the servers as they brought and handed him the book, every glance from the leader of song, checking for a cue — everything told him, “You’re the one. You’re the one. At best you’re nuts. At worst you’re a scandal.”

He was in agony.

After mass he called Ginny, who was asleep. She hadn’t seen the Tribune. He read her the passage from his room.

“That bastard,” she said.

“Bastards. It’s a jointly written column,” he said.

“I mean Kenny Cooper, the guy we met in front of the place, from the Trib. Crap. Anything for an item.”

“How’d he know I was a priest?”

“Geez, I don’t know, Pat. But you do get up in front of hundreds of people every week, and all it took was one of them there that night, blowing your cover.” She laughed. “’Have collar, will travel.’ Where do they get that stuff? You’d think you were my bodyguard. At least they didn’t make you for a playboy.”

“But ‘priest with woman on Rush Street’ says a lot, wouldn’t you say?” Devlin said.

“Rush Street,” she said. “We ate at the quietest place practically in Cook County, which happens to be on Chicago’s hot street. Well, what you gonna do?”

“I don’t know. But let’s do something today.”

“Good.” She brightened.

“Quiet drink somewhere,” he said.

“You and me.”

“Me and you, right.” They set a time, early afternoon. He was to come by her place. She knew a beer garden pub on Clark Street. They would go there and rest up and regroup. Devlin hung up, the Tribune item out of his head completely.

(end of chapter 11)

CHAPTER TEN Story goes to market, nasty guy makes a call, Devlin and friends go to dinner, have a great time. Nasty man shows up.

CHAPTER NINE of the Father Devlin story: His “woman friend” the reporter. The coming night out.”Call me Pat.” Getting things straight on the Eisenhower on the way downtown.

Ginny’s day went well. Downtown, she picked up with a photographer and drove with him south to the mills where the steelworkers were on strike. She milled among the strikers herself, making easy interviews. Nobody wants to be interviewed more than a striker, who is dying for an outlet for his beef, while the photog got candids.

The two ate lunch together after phoning in. The photog was a black guy, John Brown, with a sweet, easy manner. Ginny asked about his kids. He took out pictures, taken by him and very good, of three smiling, happy ones. They headed back, she to write up her next-day story, he to develop.

Luckily, the radio remained silent on the way down the Dan Ryan, and they didn’t have to leave it for a fire, kidnapping, or other unscheduled event. “Thing about newspapering is all the unscheduled events,” Ginny said as they tooled along.

He smiled. “They do interfere with your day, don’t they?”

“I mean, I could be back at the office looking words up in the dictionary, and the damn editor wants me out asking people how they feel about it.”

“That’s what they do, tell you to see how people feel about it?”

“Not first off. They want to know what happened. Then they want to know how people feel about it.”

“How did you like the play, Mrs. Lincoln? That sort of thing?”

“Yeah, or how does that bullet feel in your head, Mr. Jones? Does it hurt more or less than your worst toothache?”

“Or just the same,” added Brown. They both laughed.

Back in the city room, she bent over her notes and began to pick and choose, counting on impulse and first impression to decide the best interviews. What she had to do was supposed to be doable in an eight-hour day. She knew this because she would be expected in at nine o’clock the next morning, ready to do it again.

Another sure indicator was that she was working for a daily newspaper, not a weekly or monthly. Another was the 4 p.m. deadline. Another was her date that night with Father Devlin.

She answered her phone. “Ginny?” It was him.

“Yes,” she said breathily.

“You got a cold?” he asked.

“No, I just sound that way.”

“Oh. Listen, we still on for tonight?”

“Sure.”

“Good. How’s your day going?”

For some reason she was stunned by the question. It seemed ages since anyone asked her that. “Oh, it’s going, uh, O.K.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, I’m sure,” she said.

They settled on where they’d meet and when, and she hung up, just slightly rattled. He’d caught her at her most vulnerable time, when she had opened herself to the breezes of creation. The interview story would not be fine art, but it would be the best she could do, and it would be the result of as much concentration she could bring to bear in the next hour or so.

His call came as that concentration was building up, when she was half asleep with it. That’s what the concentration was: focus on one thing to the exclusion of others. Wonderful experience, wonderful — she was careful of the word — therapy.

She brushed aside thoughts of her priest friend and attended to the words on the paper in front of her and her memory of the men and women who had spoken to her in all earnestness just hours before.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

“You don’t feel just a little bit uncomfortable about tonight?” Melissa Williams was quizzing her husband Arthur in their living room. She sat on the couch with one arm stretched across its back. He was in a chair. “I mean, when was the last time we double-dated with a priest?”

“Not recently, that’s for sure.”

“Arthur, I know it’s not recently. What I want to know is how you feel about it.”

“I don’t feel uncomfortable.”

Melissa sighed and looked out the window, then turned back. “Well don’t you wonder what’s going on?”

“Yes. Now that you mention it, I do,” said Arthur. “But that’s partly Father Devlin. It seems half the time I’m wondering what’s going on with him. He is not your normal, predictable, upward-mobile priest. He’s different. Frankly, I feel sorry for him.”

“Well he’s a grown man living with his choices. Same as the rest of us. What’s there to feel sorry for?”

“I don’t know. Just something about him. Like he’s going through something he should have a gone through a long time ago.”

“Puberty? I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said that,” she said, but her half-meant apology was lost in her laughter and Arthur’s too.

“Oh Melissa,” he said. “You are so mean and vicious. Ugly. Evil. He got up and sat next to her on the couch. “C’mere,” he said.

“What? ‘C’mere’? What you mean, ‘C’mere!”

Arthur reached over and pulled her to him by her arm and nuzzled her. She closed her eyes as he did it. The front door flew open. It was Artie, eight, looking for supper. He plowed through the front hall past the living room where his parents sat and headed for the fridge.

“C’mon,” said Melissa. “Let’s go. Later. He’ll be full of peanut putter before you know it if I don’t get them supper. Later.”

“But I’ve reached puberty,” said Arthur, a woeful look on his face. His wife fled, laughing, to the kitchen to peel Artie away from the fridge and begin ladling out the soup.

Arthur called the other two from upstairs, and in a few minutes the three of them were seated around the kitchen table.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Arthur and Malissa were to get Devlin at the rectory. The three of then were to meet Ginny at a restaurant on Rush Street, near the river. It was convenient for Ginny and not bad for the Oak Parkers, who would take the Eisenhower downtown, which at that hour in that direction was a twenty-minute run.

For a week night dinner out, the evening had developed somewhat beyond Arthur’s original intentions, which had been to enjoy a quiet dinner in the neighborhood. At first it was to be just he and Melissa. They would hold hands and rub knees under the table, eat and drink delicately and return to their Humphrey Avenue house with son Harold in charge, probably sleeping next to the telephone, to enjoy one another’s company in the tenderest fashion.

Then Arthur decided to add Father Devlin, the veteran celibate whom they both enjoyed and who would add a piquant sauce to their social intercourse. Then Father Devlin added Ginny, who would add God knew what to an evening now past all bounds originally set for it.

Melissa knew Ginny from some years back, when they and the times were different. She knew her well enough to have some memories to share worth about five minutes conversations From then it would be a hopeful probing of and by each other, looking for common ground. It had been there once, and there was reason to think it would be there now, but you never knew.

Still, that was life in a big city, and both husband and wife were relaxed about the evening as it concerned them. Melissa was worried about Father Devlin. So was Arthur in his way. Neither was prurient about the possibilities. Nor did they gleefully await an outcome that would put the priest beyond the priestly pale. They knew and liked him wholly as a priest. Chances were, as in the Melissa-Ginny relationship, they would like him also as something else. But the possibility of major change was still unsettling.

The feeding of the children went apace, followed by the washing of the dishes and the dressing of adults and children — the latter for bed, the former for Dining Out.

This dining out had gone from an upper-middle-level North Avenue west of Harlem (suburban-elegant) to Rush Street near the river (Downtown). Nobody noted the difference. There was an unexpressed awareness of slipping past the boundaries of one sphere into the wider boundaries of the next, which surrounded the smaller. A nice little excitement attended the shift. It had something to do with choice of shirt and tie, dress, shoes.

In the middle of dressing, between bra and slip, Arthur embraced his inside smooth-skinned wife, slipping his hands below waist level and panty elastic for a soft squeeze.

Melissa was distracted by preparations. “Please,” she said.

“But you’re mine,” said Arthur, “Yes and no,” she said, moving away after a tongue-rattling kiss.

“Oh?” he said, buttoning his shirt. “There’s someone else?”

“Me,” she said.

“Oh my,” he said. “Her own woman. I married a woman who’s her own woman.” He stood, distracted himself, picking over his tie rack. It was the idlest of chatter, by two people who knew each other’s moves from long exposure to them.

“You didn’t buy me,” she said, stepping into a dress.

“Rented you?”

She laughed. “No, you didn’t rent me either.”

“That’s because you’re a person not a commodity, right?”

“Right.” She checked a dress hem. “You know what I’m tired of hearing, actually?”

“Me complain? The kids fight? Dickie play the violin?” Dickie was the boy next door, who practiced in front of an open window.

“The word ‘person.’”

“Why ‘person’?” He stood tying his tie.

“We don’t say ‘woman’ or ‘man’. Have you realized how people have shied away from ‘woman’ and ‘man’? It’s as if those words have to be sanitized. Instead, we say ‘person.’ It’s become a convention, like ‘water closet’ for bathroom or ‘limbs’ for legs. It’s our new prudery. We shrink from ‘womanhood’ and ‘manhood.’ It’s silly.”

Arthur stopped in the middle of a knot to look at her. She had the hem right and was turning in front of a mirror. In a few seconds she noticed he was watching. “What you lookin’ at?” she asked, smiling.

He just smiled back and returned to his knot. She finished her examination and went to check the kids, who were finishing a desert of sliced oranges. They had groaned when she announced oranges but as usual had eaten the slices with both hands, reveling in their juice and sweetness.

She got them out of the kitchen with rinsed hands and faces, stacked the dishes and sponged the table. She gave Harold some last-minute instructions, including the number of Dickie’s mother next door in case of emergency. Nothing ever happened to warrant calling Dickie’s mother, but you never knew.

Meanwhile, she stood at the ready, as she did when she and her husband went out. When both couples went out and left their kids, neither gave a backup number. The system simply broke down. There were always the Skeltons, some blocks away, or 911.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Arthur rang the rectory door and came back to the car in a few minutes with Devlin, who greeted Melissa with a kiss on the cheek and sat in the back. Melissa turned in the front. Arthur pulled away, down Austin Boulevard, eyeing traffic. He caught a light at Madison Street, a half block away. It was a warming night, dry and spring-like.

Devlin wore a maroon turtleneck under a slightly wrinkled tweed jacket and gray flannel slacks. The return of the turtleneck had solved a nice problem for priests relaxing in public without benefit of collar: they needn’t don tie and go all the way to layman’s status, but they could be more or less dressed up and non-clerical all the same. He was admittedly a cut below his friends in dressiness, but not enough to make him a sore thumb. Eccentric maybe.

“You’re lookin’ good,” he told Melissa, turned toward him, nodding to Arthur to include him in the comment.

“Thanks, my friend,” said Melissa. “When you go downtown, you try harder.”

“I don’t fit,” Devlin said, looking down at himself and grimacing.

“Yes you do,” said Melissa.

He shrugged and sat back.

Arthur got them to the Eisenhower, where they turned left and headed for the Loop.

“It’s a nice night,” said Melissa.

Devlin looked at her. “Did you get me here to tell me it’s a nice night?” |

“No, but it is a nice night, isn’t it?” she said.

“Melissa.” He stopped. “Arthur. Is this the same wife you had a week ago? The one full of bon mots and insights, the scorner of small, meaningless tidbits, telling me it’s a nice night?”

“Same wife, Father,” said Arthur, looking straight ahead.

“Pat.”

“Hm?” Arthur turned around, then turned quickly back to the road.

Melissa gaped. Her worst fears.

“Pat,” Devlin said. “Not Father.”

Arthur turned quickly and looked at Melissa, then looked ahead again.

Melissa turned and faced the front.

“Is there a problem?” asked Devlin. “What’s the problem?”

“No,” said Melissa.

“No what?” Devlin said.

“No Pat,” she said.

“Why not?” asked Devlin.

“Because it’s not you and it’s not me,” she said, still looking ahead. “I still call priests Father. Sorry.”

Silence.

Devlin finally said something. “With or without collar, having dinner downtown?”

“With or without a wedding ring, I’m still Mrs. Williams. And Arthur is —” She stopped.

“Mister Williams,” said Devlin. They all laughed. “Now really, Melissa, it’s the age of ‘Ms.’ and all that, and I have news for you: I will not be the first padre to get along without the title.”

“Can we? That’s the question,” said Arthur.

“Get along without calling me ‘Father’? Well if that’s the question, I don’t know the answer,” said Devlin.

More silence. They rode along the expressway in the last light of the spring day.

“O.K.,” said Devlin. “Call me Father.” He paused. “Where were we?” he asked, “I think this evening is not off to a good start. Arthur, can you explain me a few things?”

“Yes, I was about to, in fact. You’re right. Not a good start,” said Arthur, watching the road. Melissa turned around, the beginning of a sheepish look on her brown, angular face.

“We’re adjusting, but we don’t know to what,” Arthur said.

“Me and my friend and so forth?” asked Devlin.

“Yes,” said Melissa.

“Well look,” said Devlin. “She’s a friend who happens to be a girl, O.K.? I’m still a priest, even if I prefer being good ol’ Pat for the evening. Take it for a quirk, O.K.? And take my friend for a friend, O.K.?”

Melissa gave a sigh. “We’re not going to hear an announcement or anything drastic?” She smiled.

“You are not. You are going to hear wit and wisdom. I have no announcement. I am betraying some of the accepted behavior of a priest, but chalk it up to eccentricity. I*m eccentric. And looking forward to a fun-filled evening with Art and Melissa.”

“And Ginny,” said Melissa.

“And Ginny,” Devlin said. He smiled. “O.K.?”

“Is Ginny going to become a nun?” asked Arthur, grinning.

“Ginny is going to become a nun, yes. She is joining the Sisters of the Holy Typewriter and is going to be Mother Superior of a bunch of reporters. To prove you can be a reporter and still be a moral person, yes.”

“A moral woman,” said Melissa.

“No, person,” said Devlin. “Being a moral woman means you aren’t fallen. If you ‘fall’ as a woman, we know what that means, You have embraced a fate worse than death and have lost your virtue. And a woman without her virtue is a rudderless ship.”

“Stop, stop,” said Arthur.

“I can’t,” said Devlin. “To be a moral person, on the other hand, covers the whole range of morality, but with special attention to honesty and justice. Ask me how I know this.”

“How?” asked Melissa.

He put on a long, serious face. “I know,” he said, and let his eyeballs wander in their sockets in a weak imitation of Groucho Marx.

“That’s just the point I was making with Arthur earlier,” said Melissa as they approached the bridge over the river.

“You were?” said Arthur.

“Yes. People shrink from ‘man’ and ‘woman’ and instead say ‘person’ because they shrink from the varying implications,” she said.

“Well what Father said explains why they do use ‘person’ and not the other. They aren’t the same thing,” said Arthur.

“Bigotry explains it all,” said Melissa. “Sexist bigotry. Women as sex objects and all that. That business about women’s morality being one thing and a man’s another.”

“Well look at Eve,” began Devlin.

“The one that came out of Adam’s rib?” interrupted Arthur, turning the car into the Wacker Drive lower level, where a green light suffused everything.

“The same,” said Devlin.

“Rampant sexist bigotry,”’ said Melissa, “At the heart of the Judaeo-Christian tradition. Can you imagine.”

(end of chapter nine)