<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
<p>Whenever a person from the valley went abroad now to fair or market the
question was always asked:</p>
<p>"Is it a fact that Ulick Shannon was expelled from the University in
Dublin and is at home? And is it a fact that John Brennan is at home
from the college he was at too, the grand college in England whose
story his mother spread far and wide?"</p>
<p>"That's quite so, ma'am. It's a double fact!"</p>
<p>"Well, well!"</p>
<p>"And is it a fact that they do be always together, going by back ways
into the seven publichouses of Garradrimna?"</p>
<p>"Oh, indeed, that's true, ma'am, and now you have the whole of it. Sure
it was in the same seven publichouses that the pair of them laid the
foundations of their ruination last summer. Sure, do ye know what I'm
going to tell you? They couldn't be kept out of them, and that's as
sure as you're there!"</p>
<p>Now it was true that if Ulick had gone at all towards Garradrimna it
was through very excess of spirits, and it was for the very same reason
that he had enticed John Brennan to go with him.... That time they were
full of hope and their minds were held by their thoughts of Rebecca.
But now, somehow, she seemed to have slipped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span> out of the lives of both
of them. And because both had chosen. The feeling had entered into
Ulick's heart. But in the case of John Brennan it was not so certain.
What had brought him out upon the first morning of his homecoming to
take a look at her? It would seem that, through the sudden quickening
of his mind towards study just before the break-up of the college,
he should have forgotten her.... His life now seemed to hang in the
balance shudderingly; a breath might direct it anyway.</p>
<p>He felt that he should have liked to make some suggestions of his own
concerning his future, but there was always that tired look of love in
his mother's eyes to frustrate his intention.... Often he would go into
the sewing-room of a morning and she would say so sadly as she bent
over her machine—"I'm contriving, John; I'm contriving!" He had come
to the years of manhood and yet he must needs leave every initiative in
her hands since she would have it so.... Thus was he driven from the
house at many a time of the day.</p>
<p>He went to morning Mass as usual, but the day was long and dreary after
that, for the weather was wet and the coldness of winter still lay
heavy over the fields. The evenings were the dreariest as he sat over
his books in his room and listened to the hum of his mother's machine.
Later this would give place to the tumultuous business of his father's
home-coming from Garradrimna. Sometimes things were broken, and the
noise would destroy his power of application. Thus it was that, for the
most part, he avoided the house in the evenings. At the fall of dark he
would go slipping along the wet road on his way to Garradrimna. Where
the way from Scarden joined the way from Tullahanogue he generally met<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span>
Ulick Shannon, comfortably top-coated, bound for the same place.</p>
<p>It seemed as if the surrounding power of the talk their presence in the
valley had created was driving them towards those scenes in which that
talk had pictured them. Through the dusk people would smirk at them as
they were seen going the road.... They would slip into McDermott's by
the same back way that Ned Brennan had often gone to Brannagan's. Many
a time did they pass the place in the woods where John had beheld the
adventure of his father and the porter last summer.... In the bottling
room of McDermott's they would fancy they were unseen, but Shamesy
Golliher or Padna Padna or Thomas James would be always cropping up
most unaccountably to tell the tale when they went out into the bar
again after what would appear the most accidental glance into the
bottling-room.... John would take port wine and Ulick whatever drink he
preferred. But even the entertainment of themselves after this fashion
did not evoke the subtle spell of last summer. There was no laughter,
no stories, even of a questionable kind, when Josie Guinan came to
answer their call. Every evening she would ask the question:</p>
<p>"Well, how is Rebecca, Ulick?"</p>
<p>This gross familiarity irritated him greatly, for his decent breeding
made him desire that she should keep her distance. Besides he did not
want any one to remind him of Rebecca just now. He never answered this
question, nor the other by which it was always followed:</p>
<p>"You don't see her very often now, do ye? But of course the woods bees
wet these times."</p>
<p>The mere mention of Rebecca's name in this filthy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</SPAN></span> place annoyed John
Brennan, who thought of her continuously as some one far beyond all
aspects of Garradrimna.</p>
<p>Yet they would be forever coming here to invite this persecution. Ulick
would ever and again retreat into long silences that were painful for
his companion. But John found some solace come to him through the
port wine. So much was this the case that he began to have a certain
hankering after spending the evening in this way. When the night
had fallen thick and dark over Garradrimna they would come out of
McDermott's and spend long hours walking up and down the valley road.
Ulick would occasionally give vent to outbursts of talk upon impersonal
subjects—the war and politics, the tragic trend of modern literature.
John always listened with interest. He never wished to return early to
the house, for he dreaded the afflicted drone of his mother reading the
holy books to his father by the kitchen fire.</p>
<p>During those brief spells, when the weather brightened for a day or
two, he often took walks down by the school and towards the lake....
Always he felt, through power of an oppressive realization, that
the eyes of Master Donnellan were upon him as he slipped past the
school.... So he began to go by a lane which did not take him before
the disappointed eyes of the old man.</p>
<p>Going this way one day he came upon a battered school-reader of an
advanced standard, looking so pathetic in its final desertion by its
owner, for there is nothing so lonely as the things a schoolboy leaves
behind him.... He began to remember the days when he, too, had gone
to the valley school and there instituted the great promise which, so
far, had not come to fulfilment. He was <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</SPAN></span>turning over the leaves when
he came on a selection from Carlyle's <i>French Revolution</i>—"Thy foot
to light on softness, thy eye on splendor." He pondered it as he stood
by the water's edge and until it connected itself with his thought of
Rebecca. <i>Thy foot to light on softness, thy eye on splendor.</i></p>
<p>It would be nearing three o'clock now, he thought, and Rebecca must
soon be going from school. He might see her passing along between the
muddy puddles on The Road of the Dead.</p>
<p>He had fallen down before her again.</p>
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