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Authors: William Wharton

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BOOK: Pride
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I go back to my desk and Sister Anastasia tells me to stand up again. “Kettleson, just what was it you were thinking about when you should've been listening to your Catechism?”

Before I can say anything, she starts up again.

“Children, this is a perfect example of the sin of Pride. Kettleson thinks he knows
more
than God's word. Catechism is God's word made easy for young people. If you don't pay attention to God's word then you're guilty of the first capital sin, Pride. Now, what were you thinking about instead of listening to God?”

I don't want to lie. I especially don't want to lie to a nun, even if it is Sister Anastasia.

“I was thinking about what it is to be dead, Sister.”

She stares at me, shining circles in her glasses. Nobody moves in the class.

“Just what do you mean by that, young man?”

“I don't know, Sister. That's what I was thinking: how it must feel being dead.”

“If you'd pay attention to your Catechism you'd know. You'd either be in Heaven with God, in Purgatory working out your salvation or in Hell burning for all eternity.”

She pauses, turning her head to take in all the class.

“And I don't have much doubt as to where you're headed, Kettleson.”

I stand there. What's there to say? I'm wondering if there's much difference between what she's just said and saying “Damn you” to somebody.

“Kettleson, I think for the good of your soul you should come up here, kiss this crucifix and pray for God's forgiveness.”

She motions me to the front of the room again. The rooms have scrubbed wooden floors and they're laid so they lead up and down the room. I walk up toward her with my head down, trying to walk on a single board and trying not to cry. When I get close to her, I smell the smell of a nun, the smell of baby powder and ironed clothes. She pushes me down onto my knees and holds out her large crucifix at the end of the giant-sized rosary wrapped around her waist. All the nuns in this school have rosaries like this around their waists. On the thin ones, it hangs practically to the ground, but with Sister Anastasia it comes to just below her belly, just about where my face is when she's pushed me onto my knees. I kiss the crucifix and wipe my mouth. Then, I spit on the floor.

It's something I do automatically; it isn't meant as an insult or anything. The taste of metal in my mouth always makes me want to spit. When I'm working with Dad he keeps nails in his mouth so they're handy, but when ‘I've tried it, I drool around them and have to keep taking them out of my mouth to spit. It's the same way with toy whistles, anything metal in my mouth makes spit spring up. Also, I'm nervous and not thinking.

Sister Anastasia grabs me by the hair and yanks me to my feet. She's dragging me out of the room and I'm too scared to listen to what she's saying except she's taking me down to Father Lanshee because I've committed a sacrilege, spitting at the crucifix and spitting at a nun. I guess she believes that's what happened. I try not to yell, not to cry, but she's twisting my hair in her hands so it hurts and she's pulling hair out.

We need to go outside the school to get to the rectory and she stands at the door, rings the bell. We don't talk at all while we wait for the housekeeper to open it.

Father Lanshee finally comes himself and tells Sister to let go of my hair. Father Lanshee is young and short with tight curly hair. He's the one you go see when it's even more important than going to see Mother Superior. Sister Anastasia tells him what happened, that is, from the way she sees it.

Father Lanshee looks at me.

“And what do you have to say for yourself? Why have you done a thing like this, one of our youngest and finest altar boys?”

Father Lanshee is from Ireland and has an accent. He's the one who taught me to be an altar boy when I was in fourth grade. I learned the Latin fast enough so during the summer I was the only fourth grader to serve mass.

“I didn't mean it, Father. It was only the metal on my lips.”

“Are you trying to tell me Sister Anastasia is lying to me or maybe she's seeing things? She says you spit on the crucifix and at her. Is that true?”

It's in his voice. He believes her and he's mad.

“I only spit on the floor, Father, I didn't mean it.”

He looks over at Sister Anastasia. Then I look over at her, too. She's standing with her arms folded across her fat stomach so the bib is pushed up almost like a table under her face. Father hits me hard on the side of my head with the back of his hand. It feels as if my ear is burning off and I know this is only the beginning.

“There must be a devil in you to do a thing like that, Kettleson, spit on the crucifix and spit at a nun!”

He has his face down next to mine and it's getting red. He's red all the way up into his curly hair. I can't turn my mind off from seeing things like that even when I'm probably about to be killed.

He grabs me by the other ear with his finger and thumb. He starts dragging me with him through the rectory and out the back door, the one that opens into the church. I'm learning not to say anything; there's nothing to say anyway.

He takes me into the church, leads me down the aisle, opens the gate in the altar rail and pushes me down to my knees again at the foot of the steps to the altar. Sister Anastasia isn't with us. I peek back under my arm and she's kneeling at the altar rail with her hands praying and her eyes watching me behind those shiny glasses, through the silver circles.

Father Lanshee, with his arms folded, is standing between me and the tabernacle. “You stay there and pray to God for your immortal soul. Sister Anastasia, you pray for him, too. I think he must be possessed.”

He goes into the sacristy and comes out with the censer, filling it with incense. He also has the round gold thing with a handle they use to sprinkle holy water. I'm scared and I'm crying but I'm trying to pray. Father Lanshee puts his stole around his neck. This makes him a priest, officially. He kisses it before he slips it over his head. I look up at the altar with the Gospel on one side and the Missal on the other. I almost didn't get to be an altar boy because I couldn't reach up and lift that Gospel high enough to move it to the other side without scraping and making the altar cloth crooked. I needed to strain up on my tiptoes to do it. Then, carrying it down the steps and genuflecting when you can't see past it is another hard thing; and that Gospel's heavy. Besides, you have on a surplice so you can easily trip. I practiced moving the Gospel a lot before I got good enough to say a mass; it's much harder than learning the Latin, by a long shot. Father Lanshee must be reading my mind.

“There's got to be a devil in you, boy. That's what really did it and we're going to pull him right on out. What have you been doing lately which could let a devil take hold of you?”

He's waiting for me to answer. I think of all the things I've done that might be devil's work but the only thing that comes out is about Mr. Harding.

“Father, this summer there was a dead man, a dead man who killed himself in his garage. I was the one who found him. I was thinking about that when I was supposed to be studying my Catechism.”

Father Lanshee looks at me. He has the censer lit now and it's smoking. He has the holy-water shaker in his other hand.

“Yes, I heard about that. He wasn't Catholic, was he?”

“No, Father. He was just Mr. Harding; I think he was a Protestant.”

“There could easily have been devils around a place where a man knew such despair so as to take his own life. That could be it.”

He comes to the step just over me. I put down my head. The smell of incense makes me sneeze but I'm holding it in.

“You pray hard, Kettleson. I'm going to chase that devil straight on out of you. You'll feel better after you've been exorcised.”

He's praying loud now and swinging the censer over one of my shoulders then the other. He does this while I say eight Our Fathers, three Hail Marys, and make an Act of Contrition. I'm just starting with a “Glory be” when he begins sprinkling me with holy water and praying louder. I'm so scared, black clouds keep coming down over my eyes. I'm expecting a devil to float in smoke out of my mouth or split its way out of my chest or my back the way it is in holy pictures. But nothing happens.

Father Lanshee stops. He puts the censer and the holy water on the altar. Then he comes down, tucks his hand under my chin and lifts me up.

“Let's pray that did it. But first you must apologize to Sister Anastasia.”

He turns my head with his hand. She's still kneeling at the altar rail, shining-eyed.

“Do you think the devil's been exorcised, Father?”

“We can't be sure, Sister. But he should apologize to you first.”

He leads me back down to the altar rail, where Sister Anastasia's still kneeling. He pushes me down on my knees. She looks at me, glinting, her lips all pulled together, almost as if she's trying to keep from smiling.

“Well, what do you have to say for yourself, Kettleson?”

“I'm sorry, Sister. I didn't mean it. I don't know what got into me.”

“I think it must be the devil himself made you do a thing like that, Kettleson. If I were you I'd stay here in church and pray for the rest of the morning.”

Father Lanshee is standing slightly behind me.

“That's a fine idea, Sister. Also, I don't think he should serve mass again until we're certain he's himself. What do you think of that, boy?”

“Yes, Father.”

I'm supposed to serve at nine-o'clock mass that next Sunday. It's the mass all the kids go to; they sit in the center aisles, girls on the left side, boys on the right, with the little kids up front and the eighth grade in back. My parents know I'm serving this mass and will be there. How can I ever tell them that? I don't know how I can tell them how I've been exercised either. The trouble is, I don't even feel tired; that devil's got to be in there still.

Father Lanshee and Sister Anastasia leave me alone in the church all morning. I'm supposed to say five rosaries with all the mysteries, and when I'm finished, keep saying the ejaculation “My Jesus mercy—my Jesus mercy.” Father Lanshee lends me his rosary. It's small, black, wooden beads, and he kisses the crucifix on it before he gives it to me. When the lunch bell rings, I can go home.

Sister Anastasia doesn't tell anybody, at least any of the kids, about my being exercised and I don't tell anybody either, not even Laurel. She's too little to understand. I keep hoping God knows I didn't mean it; that's all that counts. He must know about how I am with metal in my mouth; the sisters tell us God knows everything, even some things we don't know ourselves. After school I give Father Lanshee back his rosary. I hope maybe he'll let me back in the altar boys, at least let me serve that nine-o'clock mass, but he doesn't say anything.

Sunday when I'm supposed to be serving, I sneak off to Mr. Harding's garage and that's where I find the kittens.

There are all kinds of alley cats in our alleys and packs of dogs, too. The kids around our way are awful mean to the cats. They don't do much against dogs because some of them bite. But the cats mostly only run away. I used to think alley cats had shorter legs than most cats but they only look short because they're always crouched ready to spring away if you come near. They have little hollow places behind their heads and between the tops of their legs on the back when they're hunched down like that. When a cat's all set to spring there's almost no way you can catch it.

But Billy O'Connell showed me how you can always catch a cat if you just keep running long enough. They're fast but they get tired out soon. Maybe they don't get enough to eat from eating only garbage. Sure enough, though, he'd keep running after a cat in the alley where they had no place to go and he'd run them down finally. Usually, at the end, the cat would run into an empty garage, where Billy'd shut the door and corner them.

What Billy O'Connell likes to do with cats is climb up on somebody's porch, one of the old ones with the steps still on them, and throw the cat through the air. He throws them any which way, and they spin right around and land with their legs spread out, then run off. He tells me he threw one out his bedroom window and it was the same thing. He wants to throw one from a roof someday. O'Connell has the idea cats can practically fly. He'd like to throw one out from an airplane sometime to see what happens.

You have to be careful with these cats because they all have fleas. It's the fleas Mom worries about more than the cats, it's the same with frogs and warts.

Sometimes the kids'd catch two cats and tie them together by the tails. Those cats would swing around in circles yowling, pulling against each other. I never did anything like that myself but I've watched. There are some mean kids around our way, all right, but probably they're the same everywhere.

One of the worst things they do is pour gasoline on a cat's tail and then light it. A kid up on Radbourne Road was doing that and burned himself so bad he had to go to the hospital; he almost died and now he has shiny wrinkled scars on his arm so he can't open his elbow all the way.

BOOK: Pride
12.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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