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The Healer: a dark family drama
The Healer: a dark family drama Read online
The Healer
Sharon Thompson
Contents
Also by Sharon Thompson
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Epilogue
A Note from Bloodhound Books
Acknowledgments
Copyright © 2018 Sharon Thompson
The right of Sharon Thompson to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
First published in 2018 by Bloodhound Books
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publisher or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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Also by Sharon Thompson
The Abandoned
For our Angel
1
‘What do you mean the bleeding has stopped?’
‘Your Molly put her hand on me there now and muttered the prayers in Irish and that was that. You saw it yourself.’
I like this lady in the fancy coat with the fur collar. No-one other than Daddy thinks I’m much of anything. I’m supposed to look people in the eye and listen to their nonsense. But sure, all that just makes me tired.
‘Does it take it out of you, Molly?’ the tall lady asks me in her nice accent, as she moves to leave our kitchen. She stops in the doorway. ‘You look exhausted now, child. I cannot thank you enough. You’ll have to take something for helping me?’
‘Are you sure it’s stopped your bleeding?’ Mammy asks the lady with the hair curls. Mammy’s taking the wad of notes off her anyway saying, ‘You didn’t check? Are you sure now that it’s all away?’
I peek at the lady as the whisper out of her is loud. ‘Aren’t ya a woman yourself? I know when it has all stopped. You shouldn’t ask me those things with men present.’
Daddy slicks a hand over his remaining hair, leans back on the stool and thrusts his long legs out by the open fire and puffs on his pipe. I know that’s the way he is when he’s pleased with me. After the woman leaves in her big car, and Mammy isn’t looking, he’ll give me some sweets from the tin on the mantlepiece, that his eldest brother Vincent brought him from Dublin.
I don’t notice the woman leaving as I’m away ‘with the fairies’, as Mammy calls it. There are no fairies like Mammy thinks. But, I suppose, I do go away into the shadows of my mind and listen to the dark shapes that I can see out of the corner of my eyes.
‘I’ve told you time and time again, Nancy. Our Molly has the gift. And that educated woman left a grand stash of money.’ Daddy fills his pipe with new tobacco and I sit on the floor, pulling the last of the stuffing from my straw doll’s stomach. I roll it into little clumps. They are scratchy against my cheek. ‘When God takes away something, he gives something in its place. Molly there is pretty and has the healing. They say as long as the child doesn’t take money herself, she’ll keep the gifts. We’ll see over time how much of the healing she has. She could be one of the best around about here.’
Mammy pulls her dark curls back into the red ribbon she likes, and slops in the basin on the table, washing the best cups the lady drank from. ‘I’d far rather that she’d be like the other children.’
‘You should be grateful to the Lord himself, Nancy. Our Molly is a handsome child with thick red hair as anyone would be proud of. You can’t have it all. I’m telling ya, we must be grateful for what we have. That doctor’s wife there now said it herself: there’s no point in us wanting what’s not going to happen.’
‘It’s the 1940s! We should be moving away from all the old codswallop of cures and magic. My sister says the priest will not like to hear of it at all. You know Father Sorley is as mad as a bull when he gets the notion.’
‘Molly needs to do this. ’Tis what they call her destiny.’ Daddy puffs on, scratching the dark stubble on his neck and I smell the socks he’s rubbing together in front of the fire. ‘She has got to do it. ’Tis God’s will.’
‘Once the priests hear that she’s performing miracles, you can explain it to them!’ Mammy spits a bit when she’s talking and her beautiful face crunches up the words.
‘Are ya jealous of your own flesh and blood?’
Mammy opens the back door and flings the water into the backyard scaring the two scrawny hens that will die soon enough.
‘Don’t tell me that you’re jealous of your own eight-year-old daughter? A child that isn’t the full shillin’?’ He is annoying her so she’ll not miss him when he’s out drinking porter later. ‘She’ll need something for a livin’, as no man will take her on, despite the pale skin and angelic face. She’ll need to be able to fend for herself because she’s got nothing between her little ears.’
Mammy wipes her eye with the back of her hand and sniffs a bit. I can tell then that in the silence, she’s staring at me. They both are.
‘This next one better be all right,’ Mammy mutters rubbing her big belly. ‘Took long enough to get this far again. This next one better come out fine and talk to us properly and not be as odd as two left feet, like that yoke over there.’ She’s pointing at me.
I know they’ve waited a long time on this baby to come into Mammy. She used to say, ‘’Tis his fault. That thing between his legs is good for nothing. My Michael’s not someone I should’ve married, but my family was in a hurry to be rid of the eldest, with another five daughters to sort out. I married beneath myself and I’m paying the price now. Don’t be in a hurry to find a man. He needs to have working parts and not give ya a halfwit to rear, like this one!’
That’s why Daddy asked me to rub his bits for him. Mammy and Daddy both wanted a normal boy and he asked me to heal between his legs. It all seemed to work fine, though, and I told him so. But he liked me to do it for him, and sure, I couldn’t say no to Daddy.
‘It’s our secret,’ he says.
> I know it must be an unspoken thing, as it would make Mammy even more cross than she is already. Even I know that if she heard I healed Daddy’s private place, she’d be livid. Daddy said his brother Vincent needed ‘the healing’ on his mickey too. I know Vincent’s not married, so I would only do it the once for him, and he got angry.
‘Them's for babies,’ I told him as I heard the midwife talking to Mammy near the butcher’s about making sure Daddy didn’t wear his trousers too tight, or sit too long in the hot baths. And that she might get a boy if she walked around some big stones down in Carrowmore. ‘You don’t need the babies yet,’ I whispered at Uncle Vincent and him at me to be his special girl too. ‘You don’t need the healing.’
He got wild angry and his mickey didn’t work near me after that. I’m glad, though, he’s off in Dublin now, as I don’t like the air about him at all. Healing Daddy is different. I’m his blood and his favourite, special girl. I like it when he whispers how I helped him have another normal boy in Mammy’s tummy. Even I know that the air about Daddy can be wrong sometimes.
‘It’s a gift you have.’ Daddy’s blue eyes are proud. ‘Make me better, Molly.’
He is lots better since the baby is coming. Mammy’s happier too – apart from when she is with me, of course.
‘Mammy hates me,’ I tell Daddy when Mammy puts on her good scarf and scuttles off to the bus, to go to her nearest sister’s house. ‘Mammy doesn’t like me. I even taste the hate off her. She breathes it out at me.’
‘She doesn’t hate you,’ Daddy says. I can always tell when people are telling me wrong things. Out of the corner of my eyes I can see the darkness around their heads.
‘Do you see angels?’ Daddy asked me last year when I was doing the healing on his mickey. Someone told him that the best healers could see angels. I know the nuns think that angels have wings and halos and sit in clouds or on our shoulders. They believe it, God love ’em. But, it’s not right. I tried to tell them they were wrong about the angels, but they just took to beating me. So, I gave up.
People do have a sort of halo but there’s no angels on their shoulders – there’s just air. Maybe it’s the angels making colours of the people’s breathing? I call it good and bad air. People surround themselves in it and smell of it.
I always look around people and find out how their air feels. That tells me all I need to know and sometimes the shapes in the shadows tell me things too. They don’t use words nor nothing. It’s hard for me to explain. I know from the thumping Mammy did on me, that it is better now just to let it be and not talk about it too much.
It is best, for a lass like me, not to talk much at all – about anything.
‘I see air, Daddy,’ I told the only person who listens. ‘But now that Mammy has a baby in her, you won’t need the healing any more. I’ll just heal your air by saying my prayers. I don’t need to go near your mickey again. I’ll sing to the air around ya, and make you better.’
‘I’m a bad man,’ he said as I held his head in my arms and touched his bald head and greasy hair.
‘I know, Daddy…’ I breathed on him and kissed his cheek.
‘Heal me, Molly. Make me better inside.’
He was pale then, even Mammy said it. For days he was white as the sheets she made me fold with her. I know sometimes Daddy’s air still goes bad but I hold his arm and breathe into his pipe and turn him good again. Mammy’s air is always tight though. I don’t seem to be able to cure her from anything, or make her love me at all. The creatures in the shadows tell me to leave her be. I try not to care about her insides or the heart of her.
I know most babies bring beauty into the world. All the women say it outside Mass when they touch Mammy’s belly for luck. The thoughts of the baby make me so happy. The shadows have told me there’s good things to come for me. Molly McCarthy will have better times… maybe the baby will bring them good things with him?
2
‘Take that pillow out from up your dress and stop that singing!’ Mammy is shouting up the rickety stairs at me. ‘I know you’ve got that pillow up your dress again when you’re singing that fucking song! Do something useful for a change. Young girls shouldn’t want big bellies and I tell you now, missy, DO NOT come home here with a belly to me or it will be off up the road with you!’
She still is as mad as a bag of cats. Daddy left whistling this morning and walked across the fields, to work at the Collooney train station, but I know she had words with him about money again. Then, I’d gone and made it all worse.
The girls in the village school where I have to go think that although I’m from out the country a few miles, I’m not that poor, cause we have a stairs that’s just ours and my Daddy works for the train.
‘We’ll put up with you, if you keep telling us the secrets about the nuns and about the folk that pass in the street,’ Treasa Byrne says as she flicks her nose pickings at me.
I know I shouldn’t tell them anything and sometimes the shadows get cross with me for using my gifts, but it takes something for the other girls to play with me.
‘Sister Augusta thinks the postman is handsome,’ I laughed with the rest of them, ‘and Father Sorely drinks.’
‘We all know that!’ Treasa shouted. ‘You should go back to that small school where the one teacher thought you were the devil’s child.’
‘My mammy is going to have a boy,’ I told them all this morning when things weren’t looking good for me being included in the hopscotch. ‘A boy.’
‘You’ve been right about all the mammies and the babies,’ Treasa said and came in close. I could smell the cream she says she puts on night, noon and morning, to stay good-looking. She needs that cream but it pongs something shocking. ‘How do you know these things? Are you really a witch?’ she asked and cackled an awful old laugh at me.
I know to stay quiet about the shadows telling me things, but I am no witch and so I whispered, ‘No, I’m a healer.’
‘Sweet Jesus?’ She fell back a bit in her new shoes and looked scared.
‘A healer is a great person,’ Ellie McGrath said. ‘You’re nothing great!’
‘Maybe I am. Cause like I know that… you stole Treasa’s pencil.’
That’s when all hell broke loose. We were thrown up before the Mother Superior. All for the sake of a few clumps of hair and a scrape of a nail on skin.
Mammy had been sent for there and then to explain why I was calling myself a healer again.
‘Her father encourages her,’ Mammy spat, and her looking all red in the face and grasping at her handbag. ‘We all know she’s an odd creature and you can all see that I’m doing me best with her. This school has to have her. No-one else will and I’m bet out with this baby coming and she just knows it. I can say nothing only… I’ll have her father deal with this. I’m doing me best.’
There had been mutters of ‘I know you are Mrs McCarthy’, as I looked at the cold tiles and the nuns’ shoes and the tear in Mammy’s socks. She had her best clobber on, so things were bad and the air around her was seeping the hate out at me.
I had my hair wigged all the way to the gate and down the street for the benefit of everyone. ‘I’m a good Mammy to you, you… you… Little bitch!’ Her lips were almost closed but she said it into my ear. I saw the eyes red in her head and I was so afraid. ‘I know what you get up to. You’re not the only one who can tell things. Healer, me hole! You are more like a she-devil that should be locked up or, I dunno, thrown in a ditch some place.’ She wigged on at my hair. Her fingers tangled in it and she dragged me until her arm got tired and some clumps gave way.
She had to get the bus because she waddles with baby inside her. Then she had to pay. And, she had to sit quiet on the bus! This sent the air around her the darkest I’ve ever seen it.
I sobbed when we got down the big steps, knowing I was in the pit of hell. She had me all to herself on the quiet road and an empty home. She kicked me in the door and it hurt the small of my back. My heart was heavy in my ch
est, and my eyes pleaded with her to listen to me as she ranted on and on about her being a good, fertile mother and me being a bad bitch that must’ve been changed in the crib by the bad fairies. The shadows weren’t with me and the loneliness was fierce, like Mammy’s eyes. All was lost to me, until I thought of the baby that I helped put into her belly.
It was almost as if he talked to me through her stomach. He spoke without words, telling me to be still and calm and all would be right again. Mammy’s voice was far away and she battered me with her fists a few times screaming at me, ‘to listen.’ Somewhere in the middle of her madness, I smiled at the baby.
That’s when she lifted the twig-brush with the large handle and clobbered me about the shoulders. I fell over the chair and thumped my hip and elbow off the flagstones. The wood of the handle was hard but she couldn’t use it well with her belly and the temper, so I escaped up the stairs.
This is where I sit now and listen to her yelling at me through the floorboards.
Daddy is due home soon enough and for once I pray he stops off for a pint (or four), so she doesn’t make him hit me too. The anger isn’t easing much downstairs as I can hear her banging the pots and the dresser’s doors. The poor baby must be in a queer state inside her with all that badness, so then I start to pray that Daddy comes home sooner rather than later and we all get it over and done with.