The worst trouble at the moment emanates from the Sisters of the Divine Heart, who run Mount St. Monica’s College and a couple of high schools in the diocese. These girls have really flipped out. They make the Immaculate Hearts in Los Angeles look like docile postulants. (Have the echoes of the I.H. brawl with Cardinal McIntyre penetrated the Biblical Institute’s insulation from our century? Mac got a little upset when the IHM’s announced all sorts of changes, from wearing trig habits to living in apartments and generally behaving like real people. When His Eminence ordered them to return to the Counter-Reformation or else, a wonderful war of words exploded. (At this writing, the nuns seem to have told both the Cardinal and the Vatican to go to hell.) Imitating them, our local Weird Sisters have abandoned our precious parochial schools, bulwarks of our lily-white suburbs, and dispatched half of their nunneries into the ghettos, where they are behaving like the Vietcong in their prime. The Archbishop grew so agitated he betook himself to Washington, D. C., yesterday, to see what sort of whammy he could concoct with the apostolic delegate. These girls are not really under diocesan jurisdiction, which makes them very difficult to control. From the way he’s acted since he got off the plane, I don’t think the A.D. gave him very much satisfaction. So passeth away the light of this world.
Simultaneously, our spiritual leader is also trying to bank a fire glowing in the breast of one Vincent Disalvo, who yearns to imitate Father Groppi of Milwaukee fame. He has been trying to forge an alliance between university students and the blacks in his downtown parish to break the color line in the white sections of the city and in that all-white nirvana known as suburbia. His Exc.’s big worry, of course, is the possibility that Disalvo will turn off a lot of the diocese’s heavy contributors. I gather there isn’t much between us and financial collapse but the annual Archbishop’s Fund Drive and a gimmick called the Diocesan Education Fund which raises money from the upper-crust parishes and doles it out to the parochial schools that are going broke educating the hoi polloi (Slavs, Poles, Italians) and some blacks in the inner city. Only Boston has a higher percentage of kids in parochial schools than this archdiocese. Wouldn’t it be terrible if the parochial school system fell apart and the R.C.s had to join the United States of America at this dubious point in history? You can’t blame them for being uptight, even if they realized they had it coming to them - which of course they don’t.
The Archb. is a kind of symbolic figure in this mess (the parochial school thing, I mean). Practically single-handed during the 1950s, he raised the umpteen million bucks that built an awful lot of the schools that are now going broke. I guess he’s also kind of symbolic in regard to the blacks. During the fifties, he was their biggest advocate, defender, what have you, here in town. Now they’re starting to give him the same kind of headaches they’re giving everyone else. If I had an ounce of human kindness in my crab-apple soul, I’d feel sorry for him. But we intellectuals never permit ourselves such humanoid emotions, do we?
I stopped writing this bit of free nonsense verse to answer a summons from downstairs. I arrived to find the Archbishop being saluted by the Right Reverend Monsignor Terence Malone, our iron chancellor, and Monsignor George Petrie, our suave pseudo-liberal vicar-general, Mons. Thomas Delaney, the string-bean rector of the cathedral, Mons. Robert Quinn, ex-star fullback turned supe of Archd. Education, and sundry other chancery trolls, all with glasses in hand. Even our housekeeper, Mrs. Norton, was tippling. I soon had a Can. Club and ginger ale in my own mitt. The reason for this revelry was swiftly explained to me. Our noble lord and master has landed a red hat. He stood there, exuding his all-American vitality, his face more beatific (I saw more teeth) than ever. As my agent in place in the Imperial City, I hereby order you to find out why and how this happened.
The party was hideously clerical, with the Iron Chancellor (huge, ponderous, with wire-stiff gray hair in a crew cut) making jokes about starting a special fund to pay the cost of hanging His Eminence’s galero from the dome of the cathedral, an expense which the archdiocese would have to meet for the first time. Our jolly vicar-g., who is as smooth, burnished, dapper (small, just a little pudgy in the belly and cheeks, black hair always slicked on the head) as the chancellor is large, crude, and clumsy, proposed a toast. We drank, and the V.G. added, scarcely wasting a breath, “Your Eminence, why don’t you use this good news as an excuse to take it a little easier. I think you’re driving yourself much too hard.”
“Oh, I suppose you’re right, George,” was the reply, accompanied by a somewhat self-congratulatory smile. “But the work is there - it has to be done by someone.”
“Appoint another vicar. I’m not proud. I’ll be glad to share my enormous prestige and power. Better still, when you’re in Rome, ask for two auxiliaries. I have no interest in becoming either one of them, I hasten to add.”
“I appreciate your concern, George, but I’ve discovered that most things get done the way I like them when I do them myself.”
I saw poorly concealed smiles on several faces. It is common knowledge that Petrie is getting more and more annoyed by the Cardinal’s disinclination to elevate him to the purple. If Big Matt made anyone else an auxiliary, Petrie would probably burn down the chancery office in sheer vexation.
All in all, it was a charming little party, and I was flattered to find myself on the inside of the Big Story. See how readily I succumb to the lure of power and influence? You will have to write me one of your sermons on the Mystical Body as a divine comedy, and set my feet once more upon the straight and narrow. I don’t know whether I’ll be coming to Rome or will be left here to mind the telephones. But I would say we have a fair chance of a reunion on Ye Olde Aurelian Way.
As ever, Mag
Charles Mahan’s waxen face, the one he had worn in his coffin, had been transferred to a statue in a mysterious cathedral. It was not the archdiocese’s white monstrosity nor was it any other cathedral Matthew Mahan had ever visited. It had the cold penetrating smell of the catacombs. The heavy leaded glass of the windows had only crude outlines of the saints and biblical heroes that would have glowed with rainbow life in the sunlight. It was a cathedral of the dead, a gigantic crypt in which the statues bore witness to the failures rather than the triumphs of love. Matthew Mahan knelt before another statue. Its back was turned. Yet, it was maddeningly familiar. A big man, solid shoulders, large head. Who was it?
In the distance, chanting. A procession emerged from the darkness. Monks or nuns, two by two, with cowled heads, a strange wailing hymn. Ahead of them, a cross twice his size and weight fastened to his back, struggled a dog. An Irish setter, the favorite dog of his boyhood, Shane. His wide uncomprehending eyes stared up at Matthew Mahan. A crown of thorns was imbedded in the dog’s skull, beneath the soft silky setter’s ears. One of the cowled figures bent down and patted the dog’s head. He jerked back his hand and shook it angrily. The thorns had cut him. Who was he? Who had always patted Shane’s head in that strong authoritative way? The father, dear God, yes, the father.
Matthew Mahan woke up. The cathedral bell was softly tolling one, two, three, four. He peered at the digital alarm clock beside his bed and saw it was 5:00 a.m. He had missed the first stroke. He thought for a moment about his bizarre dream. The dog, Shane, with a crown of thorns. It was vaguely blasphemous. Yet they had all loved him. Shane had especially loved the father.
Matthew Mahan sighed and told himself that dreams were full of incomprehensible mumbo jumbo. Rolling over on his right side, he shut his eyes and tried to go back to sleep. Impossible. A mixture of words and images churned in his mind. His Eminence. A Prince of the Church. No longer one of 2,500 bishops, but one of a select 120 or 130 Cardinals. Why? Him of all people, the swimmer against the Vatican tide. What did they want from him?
Then he became aware of the pain. It began slowly, and built remorselessly to an explosion that sent slivers of anguish up, down, and around the center of his body. The earlier pain that had vanished after supper was a caress compared to this agony. Again it built, exploded, and regrouped to focus itself like a fiery disk just below his waist. Cancer? Matthew Mahan remembered his father in the hospital, teeth clenched, jaw muscles bunched, refusing to cry out against the probing pincers of the crab. No, cancer did not come and go like this. An ulcer? Absurd. He was born with a cast-iron stomach. Besides, ulcer pains were mild. Or were they? Ruefully, Matthew Mahan reminded himself that medically, he was an ignoramus.
He went into the bathroom and peered into the medicine chest. He saw a bottle of aspirin tablets, shook two into his hand, and gulped them down. Aspirin was supposed to be a pain killer. But the aspirin did not work very well. The pain seemed to grow more intense. Soon it was almost a separate thing with a personality of its own, a small, ferocious animal. Who was that saint who concealed a lion cub under his cloak while hiding from Roman persecutors and let it gnaw him to death without a word of complaint?
By the time his alarm went off at 6:00 a.m., the pain was almost unbearable. But he managed to shave and dress and walk downstairs to his private chapel. He nodded to Dennis McLaughlin, who was just finishing his mass and knelt for a moment on one of the prie-dieu before the altar. He studied the writhing Christ on the crucifix above the tabernacle. Baroque ecstasy, blending pain and beauty. He offered up his pain for Bill Fogarty and his brother Charlie, one in Purgatory, the other in this world’s version of that place of suffering.
Dennis helped him vest and then served his mass for him. The sacred Host, the wine that was transmuted into Christ’s body and blood, seemed to have a soothing effect on his malevolent internal visitor. Breakfast was even more helpful. By the time he finished his bacon, eggs, and home-fried potatoes and drank his coffee, the pain had vanished again.
Dennis McLaughlin had his usual thimbleful of orange juice and a cup of black coffee. “I don’t know how you can get through the morning on that, Dennis,” he said, realizing as he spoke that it was not the first time he had made this remark.
“My mother says the same thing.”
Matthew Mahan got the implied comparison. “You’d better call Monsignor Cohane over at the paper and tell him the news,” he said briskly. “Let him set up the press conference. See how many copies of my standard biography we have in the files over here. We’ll probably need a couple of dozen pictures, too.”
Dennis McLaughlin nodded and reminded him, “We’re scheduled to be at Mount St. Monica’s at ten forty-five.”
“I know,” said Matthew Mahan. “We’ll skip the mail today. I’ll catch up on my committee reports.”
Upstairs the Cardinal-designate spent the next half hour stretched out in his Barcalounger reading his breviary. He found the opening lines of the morning prayer particularly suitable.
O
Lord, open my lips
And my mouth shall declare your praise.
After completing half the day’s reading, Matthew Mahan opened a door at the rear of his bedroom and entered his office. On his long table-desk, in small gold frames, were three pictures. On the right were his father and mother. Bart Mahan was on the beach, the ocean visible behind him. He wore white pants and an open-necked shirt. The barest hint of a smile was on his tough, handsome face. Beside him was a much earlier picture of Teresa Mahan, taken in a city garden. She was a pretty, vivaciously smiling young woman in a below-the-knee print dress. A mass of dark hair fell to her shoulders à la Mary Pickford. On the left, was a family portrait of Charles Mahan and his wife and their seven children, taken four years ago. They looked marvelously happy as if they had just been named Catholic family of the year.
Around the walls of the office were many more pictures, almost all of them commemorating a sports event. A smiling Matthew Mahan was presenting a trophy to the winning baseball team, basketball team, football team, track team. Everything, he had once remarked looking at all the pictures, except a winning horse.
Above the door hung the Archbishop’s coat of arms. On the right side of a green shield was a golden griffin, a mythological animal, half eagle, half lion, the heraldic symbol of the Mahans. He was on his hind legs, all but embracing a golden halberd, symbol of the martyrdom of St. Matthew. On the left side of the shield was the symbol of the archdiocese, a lamb feeding before a church spire. Beneath these images was Matthew Mahan’s motto,
Dominus in corde –
“May the Lord be in my heart.” It was taken from the gospel prayer of the old Latin mass. Above the shield was a gold Maltese cross, symbol of the beatitudes from the Gospel of St. Matthew. Surmounting this was a green broad-brimmed pontifical hat with five gold tassels running down each side of the shield.
All these things - the coat of arms, the pictures - were the everyday furniture of Matthew Mahan’s life, and he seldom paid much attention to them. By now, it was eight o’clock. He spent the next hour reading reports from the committees of the National Conference of Bishops. The one on diocesan financial reporting was the most important - and the most incomprehensible to him. As far as he could figure it out, every other diocese, and often every other parish, religious order, and institution within a diocese, used different accounting methods to keep track of their money - with the result a haphazard jumble that drove businessmen and bankers berserk. It made him grateful for Chancellor Malone, who was considered a financial genius.
Malone was one of the few chancery officials he had held over from the old regime. The chancellor’s right-wing politics created a separate problem, however. Matthew Mahan spent another half hour brooding over the report of the Malone-dominated Building Committee, recommending the creation of three new parishes and the construction of three new churches and church schools in the city’s ever-growing suburbs. During the past year, the local chapter of the ultra-liberal National Association of Laymen had fiercely criticized the archdiocese for spending too much of its money in the suburbs and ignoring the needs of the decaying inner city. Chancellor Malone was inclined to discount protests from such “agitators” as left-wing propaganda.
“Your Eminence,” Dennis McLaughlin said from the doorway, “the car is here. I’ve talked to Monsignor Cohane at the paper. The wire services have the story. The papers, the radio and TV people, have called him. He wants to know if two o’clock would be a good time for a press conference.”
“Perfect,” Matthew Mahan said. “Get on your hat and coat. I want you to come with me and take notes on what’s said - and not said - out there. Nuns only hear what they want to hear, and they sometimes think they’ve said something when they’ve only meditated on it.”
The Saturday morning traffic on Kennedy Parkway was light. Without warning, the pain began stirring again beneath Matthew Mahan’s belt buckle. At first, he tried to regard it objectively, with no more interest in it than a computer has in the electrical impulses that dart down its intricate circuits. But within a few minutes, it had resumed its explosive role, hurling long slivers of agony upward along his nerves to end sometimes in his throat like stifled cries.
Picking up the white molded phone on his side of the back seat, Matthew Mahan gave the operator a number and waited for it to ring, his eyes wandering along the sidewalks of Kennedy Parkway, collecting bits and pieces of familiar images. The same bored teenagers staring woodenly at each other before the doors of La Parisienne, the city’s most expensive ice cream parlor. Clumps of shouting, wrestling grammar school boys on the way to Washington Park to play baseball. A cop on a corner gabbing with a friend.
Still the same, nothing has changed really,
the images whispered to the Cardinal-designate.
A feminine voice spoke brightly into his ear. “Mr. Furia’s office.”
“My goodness, Doris, has he got you working on Saturday, too?”
“Oh, I don’t mind, I really don’t, Your Excellency. I charge him for it.”
“Good.”
In seconds, Mike Furia’s ragged, rugged voice was on the line.
“Padre,” he said, “how goes it?”
“Fine,” he said. “How’s everything?”
“Okay, except for the wandering boy.”
“He’ll come around. Just be patient, Mike.”
“The hell with patience. You’ve been telling me that for a year.”
“It may take another year. Look, Mike, I’m calling from the car. It’s not the place to discuss anything seriously. I just wanted you to know a piece of news. I’d rather you heard it from me than from a newspaper or TV reporter.”
“What’s happened? Has Father Disalvo decided to improve the liturgy by saying mass in the nude?”
Matthew Mahan laughed briefly, politely. “No, Mike, nothing that important. Somebody in Rome has gone crazy. They’re making me a Cardinal.”
“Well, I’ll be damned,” roared Furia, almost shattering Matthew Mahan’s eardrum. “When I knocked out that German tank only twenty feet from your foxhole at Falaise, I never thought I was saving a Prince of the Church.”
“You didn’t sound like you were saving a chaplain, either,” Matthew Mahan said with a reminiscent smile. “I’ve tried to forget them, but I can still remember three or four of those names you called me for being out there in the first place.”
“Yeah,” Furia roared at the same decibel level, “but you gave me absolution on the spot.”
“It was all I had to give,” Matthew Mahan said. “Besides, you probably needed it.”
“The hell I did. That was the one time in my life when I said more prayers than you. Listen, is this one of those deals where you go to Rome and throw yourself at Il Papa’s feet?”
“More or less.”
“We’ll charter a plane and I’ll go with you. We’ll sell the seats for a thousand bucks apiece.”
“That sounds a little steep, Mike, but you’re a better judge of those things -”
“Listen, if it goes the way I think it’ll go, we’ll probably need two planes.”
“Let’s think about it for twenty-four hours, Mike.”
“Okay. But listen, congratulations. It’s about time they recognized the best damn Archbishop in the country.”
Matthew Mahan slipped the phone back into its white cradle and cast a slightly uneasy sidelong glance at Dennis McLaughlin. Why, he asked himself irritably, was he worried about what Dennis would think of that conversation? There was nothing unusual about organizing a group to go to Europe with a new Cardinal. They were undoubtedly talking about the same thing in New York and Philadelphia and Pittsburgh at this very moment. Maybe frankness was the best way to face it. These young people had to accept the fact that in the modern Church, money and the sacred, if that was not too grandiose a word for his elevation, were inextricably mixed. “Mike wants to charter a plane and organize a cheering section for our trip to Europe. He says he can get $1,000 a seat.”