Annabea Catalano, All Hallow’s Eve, 1949
Distant thunder
reached into her dreams and she struggled to wake up, wondering why it was so
important that she did. She’d been so comfortable, sunk deep in sleep for the
first time in months. A breeze gusted over the divan on the back porch where
she lay, and her apron flipped up over her face and she woke with a start even
before the next and more ominous rumble.
The sky was coming on dark
in the wrong direction for night, and she struggled to her feet, the puffs of
wind laden with ozone. Out in the yard, the clotheslines were lifting and
straining, the sheets and pillowcases belling out, starting to pop. She’d save
what she could, moving out across the yard at the best pace she could muster.
The real problem would be carrying the basket inside. Her belly so much in the
way now that she couldn’t get her arms around anything enough to lift it.
She’d carried the wet sheets from the porch two at a time, slung dripping over
her shoulders. The cooling dampness had been welcome then; she was always hot.
Now she was chilled and stiff with it.
The sheets shoved and
slapped her as she fought to pull the wooden pins and keep the cloth from
touching the ground at the same time. A second rinse in the rain was one thing,
but she’d be damned if she was going to wash any of these over again. As she
freed the third sheet and draped it doubled over her left shoulder, another
gust of wind almost knocked her down, and a bolt of lightning struck in the
field across the road. She couldn’t even hear herself shriek, the thunder was
so deafening. Only three? Shit.
A fat bullet of rain struck
her between her shoulder blades and another on the nape of her neck as she
reached the porch. Counting on the depth of the overhang to keep her dry, she
backed up to the divan and sat heavily. The starkly white sheets over both her
shoulders and across her enormous stomach made her look like a Roman senator.
“Did they wear white?” Hera wondered aloud as she looked out across the wild
laundry being subdued by the rain. A fresh but further away peal of thunder
startled her and a cramp in her leg brought her thoughts back to her body and
its alien occupation.
She pointed her toes
skyward to relieve the cramp and wrapped her arms around her belly for leverage
before the tension and pain spread up to her thigh and butt. That’s when she
realized that, for the first time in six or seven months, the plucking and
churning inside her had ceased. Complete and blessed stillness. Before she had
time to be concerned, she leaned back, closed her eyes, and waited for the
internal assault to start back up. She slid into a sleep that fell off the
edge into unconsciousness so profound that she was absent for the labor
and delivery of the child. A soul vacation.
“Well, well. Look who’s
back from the dead,” Brownie said as he held a cup with a straw to her lips.
Hera struggled to swallow a mouthful of stale water. She couldn’t speak to ask
the question and tried unsuccessfully to sit up. The strange bed was too soft,
and she was tucked in like a tick. He made no move to help her and sat back in
the chair beside the bed. “Looks like you screwed this up too, woman.” He paused
long enough to take a pull from a flask he’d hidden in his greasy jacket. “It’s
a girl. Eight pounds of beaver. I’ll never hear the end of it down at the
bar.”
There was a stained and
crumpled paper sack at her feet on the coverlet. In it, one of his old
handkerchiefs over which he’d poured a healthy squirt of gas while he was
filling up the bike. All during the pregnancy, she’d craved the smell of
gasoline the way other women went for ice cream and pickles. The fumes from the
bag reached her, and she threw up what little there was loose inside her,
sending Brownie retching and scrambling for a nurse.
She didn’t see him again
until they kicked her and the baby out a week later, and he was slightly drunk
when he got there. The orderly wheeled her through the last doors out into the
parking lot, where she saw the Indian with a borrowed sidecar parked in the NO
PARKING zone, Brownie leaning against the sign casually, having a smoke like he
was waiting for the bus. She looked down at the swaddled baby sleeping in her
arms.
Baby Girl Brown looked like
an oversized grub with a red face. Did babies know what kind of world they’d
come into? What sort of people were they in the care of? She wanted to say to
the orderly, “Wait. Take her back inside with you,” but what kind of people
did that? What kind of mother? As things turned out, no kind.
~O~
Jackson Jude Bell, April 20, 1954
Wishing it away hadn’t worked. She’d
had no plan for months, only the driving need to keep it all a secret. She had
long given up hope that the child’s father would make good on his promise to
come for her on his next leave and now that she thought the baby was coming,
she made the irrational decision that it would be a good idea to go to
confession before going to the hospital.
Why were those friggin’ Dago boys so damned attractive? she
wondered bitterly, and this one hardly speaking English. He was Angie’s
cousin, here on leave from the Italian Navy, of all damned things. Who knew
they had a navy?
“My name is Joey,” was about the
longest string of English words he could put together, but what she clung to
was the memory of how he had bent down from his six-foot and kissed her and
touched her body so boldly. His black hair, wide brown eyes, and full lips made
her weak-kneed and soft, but with that memory came a pain in her belly that
expanded like the fireworks at Orchard Beach, forcing her to lean against the
brick wall with her hands spread and her knees locked or she would crumple to
the dirty pavement.
They’d all gone dancing, and he’d
said, “Ti amerò per sempre.”
Angie laughed. “He says that to all
the girls.”
Still, she let him have his way and,
even as another pain took hold of her body right on the heels of the last one,
she didn't regret a minute of it.
Joey was long gone. There had been
one postcard in hen-scratched Italian that Angie read aloud, doing her best to
interpret. “Wish you were here with me and your pink titties?” Bridget had
snatched the postcard from her fingers and ran.
A passing shower floated back off
the pavement as steam, and she was soaked through as she pulled the door of Holy
Spirit open wide enough to allow her and her belly inside for some shelter,
rest, and confession where no one knew her. Her plan was to go to the hospital,
have the baby, play the idiot, and slip away when no one was looking, leaving
the baby behind. Girls did it all the time.
Her water broke as she closed the
massive wooden door of the church with her body weight, and the pain that came
with the action brought her to her knees. She crawled to an inner door and
pulled herself up by the wrought iron door handle, then crouched in the
darkness of the coat closet. Under a row of old wooden hangers, she slumped on
the floor with the corner of a worn cassock clenched in her teeth as she pushed
the baby out onto the cool slate. He didn’t cry, and it was all she could do to
scoop the slimy, bloody body into the hem of her dress before she passed out,
blood pooling under her.
Sister Ag arrived to see to
preparations for early Mass. She slipped in the puddle of fluid on the floor
and fell flat on her back, cracking her head on the slate floor. Father McLeod
found her minutes later and helped her to her feet. Together, they followed the
trail of liquid to the closet and made the discovery.
The boy child silent, but alive,
still linked to his young mother who was warm, but unresponsive. There was too
much blood on the floor. The priest cut the cord with his pocket knife while he
murmured the last rites. Sister Ag wrapped the baby in a worn altar cloth and
took him through the sanctuary to the convent kitchen next door. The priest
finished the ritual, then called the police. The girl was dead long before they
arrived.
“Father McLeod, the EMT tells me
that she’d just given birth. Where’s the baby, Father?” The officer was a
parishioner at St.Ignatius. He was well aware that Holy Spirit had a
long-standing reputation with hookers and street people as a safe haven for
unwanted infants.
“Now Michael, you know very well
that the child is safe and in good hands.”
The officer shrugged. “Just doing my
paperwork, Father. You know how it is.”
Normally, abandoned infants were
placed in foster homes and the authorities contacted. This time it was
different. The church and city networks of foster homes were stretched to
breaking. There was no one to take on an infant at a moment’s notice. The baby
could languish for weeks in a hospital nursery even though the child had
appeared healthy.
Father McLeod and Sister Ag made an
unspoken pact when they took the baby from the dead girl’s lap and the nun tied
off the cord with a bit of yarn pulled from the girl’s sweater. The boy was
born in sanctuary and in sanctuary, he would stay. The convent’s cook had four
at home, one still nursing. What was one more here?
Love this "how it all started" epilogue. Is this the start of the next series? Got my reading glasses on...
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