Read My Oedipus Complex Online
Authors: Frank O'Connor
She seemed to think about that for a moment.
âNo, dear,' she said with a smile. âI don't think he would.'
âWhy wouldn't he, Mummy?'
âBecause there isn't a war any longer, dear.'
âBut, Mummy, couldn't God make another war, if He liked?'
âHe wouldn't like to, dear. It's not God who makes wars, but bad people.'
âOh!' I said.
I was disappointed about that. I began to think that God wasn't quite what he was cracked up to be.
Next morning I woke at my usual hour, feeling like a bottle of champagne. I put out my feet and invented a long conversation in which Mrs Right talked of the trouble she had with her own father till she put him in the Home. I didn't quite know what the Home was but it sounded the right place for Father. Then I got my chair and stuck my head out of the attic window. Dawn was just breaking, with a guilty air that made me feel I had caught it in the act. My head bursting with stories and schemes, I stumbled in next door, and in the half-darkness scrambled into the big bed. There was no room at Mother's side so I had to get between her and Father. For the time being I had forgotten about him, and for several minutes I sat bolt upright, racking my brains to know what I could do with him. He was taking up more than his fair share of the bed, and I couldn't get comfortable, so I gave him several kicks that made him grunt and stretch. He made room all right, though. Mother waked and felt for me. I settled back comfortably in the warmth of the bed with my thumb in my mouth.
âMummy!' I hummed, loudly and contentedly.
âSssh! dear,' she whispered. âDon't wake Daddy!'
This was a new development, which threatened to be even more serious than âtalking to Daddy'. Life without my early-morning conferences was unthinkable.
âWhy?' I asked severely.
âBecause poor Daddy is tired.'
This seemed to me a quite inadequate reason, and I was sickened by the sentimentality of her âpoor Daddy'. I never liked that sort of gush; it always struck me as insincere.
âOh!' I said lightly. Then in my most winning tone: âDo you know where I want to go with you today, Mummy?'
âNo, dear,' she sighed.
âI want to go down the Glen and fish for thornybacks with my new net, and then I want to go out to the Fox and Hounds, and â '
âDon't-wake-Daddy!' she hissed angrily, clapping her hand across my mouth.
But it was too late. He was awake, or nearly so. He grunted and reached for the matches. Then he stared incredulously at his watch.
âLike a cup of tea, dear?' asked Mother in a meek, hushed voice I had never heard her use before. It sounded almost as though she were afraid.
âTea?' he exclaimed indignantly. âDo you know what the time is?'
âAnd after that I want to go up the Rathcooney Road,' I said loudly, afraid I'd forget something in all those interruptions.
âGo to sleep at once, Larry!' she said sharply.
I began to snivel. I couldn't concentrate, the way that pair went on, and smothering my early-morning schemes was like burying a family from the cradle.
Father said nothing, but lit his pipe and sucked it, looking out into the shadows without minding Mother or me. I knew he was mad. Every time I made a remark Mother hushed me irritably. I was mortified. I felt it wasn't fair; there was even something sinister in it. Every time I had pointed out to her the waste of making two beds when we could both sleep in one, she had told me it was healthier like that, and now here was this man, this stranger, sleeping with her without the least regard for her health!
He got up early and made tea, but though he brought Mother a cup he brought none for me.
âMummy,' I shouted, âI want a cup of tea, too.'
âYes, dear,' she said patiently. âYou can drink from Mummy's saucer.'
That settled it. Either Father or I would have to leave the house. I didn't want to drink from Mother's saucer; I wanted to be treated as an equal in my own home, so, just to spite her, I drank it all and left none for her. She took that quietly, too.
But that night when she was putting me to bed she said gently:
âLarry, I want you to promise me something.'
âWhat is it?' I asked.
âNot to come in and disturb poor Daddy in the morning. Promise?'
âPoor Daddy' again! I was becoming suspicious of everything involving that quite impossible man.
âWhy?' I asked.
âBecause poor Daddy is worried and tired and he doesn't sleep well.'
âWhy doesn't he, Mummy?'
âWell, you know, don't you, that while he was at the war Mummy got the pennies from the Post Office?'
âFrom Miss MacCarthy?'
âThat's right. But now, you see, Miss MacCarthy hasn't any more pennies, so Daddy must go out and find us some. You know what would happen if he couldn't?'
âNo,' I said, âtell us.'
âWell, I think we might have to go out and beg for them like the poor old woman on Fridays. We wouldn't like that, would we?'
âNo,' I agreed. âWe wouldn't.'
âSo you'll promise not to come in and wake him?'
âPromise.'
Mind you, I meant that. I knew pennies were a serious matter, and I was all against having to go out and beg like the old woman on Fridays. Mother laid out all my toys in a complete ring round the bed so that, whatever way I got out, I was bound to fall over one of them.
When I woke I remembered my promise all right. I got up and sat on the floor and played â for hours, it seemed to me. Then I got my chair and looked out the attic window for more hours. I wished it was time for Father to wake; I wished someone would make me a cup of tea. I didn't
feel in the least like the sun; instead, I was bored and so very, very cold! I simply longed for the warmth and depth of the big featherbed.
At last I could stand it no longer. I went into the next room. As there was still no room at Mother's side I climbed over her and she woke with a start.
âLarry,' she whispered, gripping my arm very tightly, âwhat did you promise?'
âBut I did, Mummy,' I wailed, caught in the very act. âI was quiet for ever so long.'
âOh, dear, and you're perished!' she said sadly, feeling me all over. âNow, if I let you stay will you promise not to talk?'
âBut I want to talk, Mummy,' I wailed.
âThat has nothing to do with it,' she said with a firmness that was new to me. âDaddy wants to sleep. Now, do you understand that?'
I understood it only too well. I wanted to talk, he wanted to sleep â whose house was it, anyway?
âMummy,' I said with equal firmness, âI think it would be healthier for Daddy to sleep in his own bed.'
That seemed to stagger her, because she said nothing for a while.
âNow, once for all,' she went on, âyou're to be perfectly quiet or go back to your own bed. Which is it to be?'
The injustice of it got me down. I had convicted her out of her own mouth of inconsistency and unreasonableness, and she hadn't even attempted to reply. Full of spite, I gave Father a kick, which she didn't notice but which made him grunt and open his eyes in alarm.
âWhat time is it?' he asked in a panic-stricken voice, not looking at Mother but at the door, as if he saw someone there.
âIt's early yet,' she replied soothingly. âIt's only the child. Go to sleep again.⦠Now, Larry,' she added, getting out of bed, âyou've wakened Daddy and you must go back.'
This time, for all her quiet air, I knew she meant it, and knew that my principal rights and privileges were as good as lost unless I asserted them at once. As she lifted me, I gave a screech, enough to wake the dead, not to mind Father. He groaned.
âThat damn child! Doesn't he ever sleep?'
âIt's only a habit, dear,' she said quietly, though I could see she was vexed.
âWell, it's time he got out of it,' shouted Father, beginning to heave in the bed. He suddenly gathered all the bedclothes about him, turned to the wall, and then looked back over his shoulder with nothing showing only two small, spiteful, dark eyes. The man looked very wicked.
To open the bedroom door, Mother had to let me down, and I broke free and dashed for the farthest corner, screeching. Father sat bolt upright in bed.
âShut up, you little puppy!' he said in a choking voice.
I was so astonished that I stopped screeching. Never, never had anyone spoken to me in that tone before. I looked at him incredulously and saw his face convulsed with rage. It was only then that I fully realized how God had codded me, listening to my prayers for the safe return of this monster.
âShut up, you!' I bawled, beside myself.
âWhat's that you said?' shouted Father, making a wild leap out of the bed.
âMick, Mick!' cried Mother. âDon't you see the child isn't used to you?'
âI see he's better fed than taught,' snarled Father, waving his arms wildly. âHe wants his bottom smacked.'
All his previous shouting was as nothing to these obscene words referring to my person. They really made my blood boil.
âSmack your own!' I screamed hysterically. âSmack your own! Shut up! Shut up!'
At this he lost his patience and let fly at me. He did it with the lack of conviction you'd expect of a man under Mother's horrified eyes, and it ended up as a mere tap, but the sheer indignity of being struck at all by a stranger, a total stranger who had cajoled his way back from the war into our big bed as a result of my innocent intercession, made me completely dotty. I shrieked and shrieked, and danced in my bare feet, and Father, looking awkward and hairy in nothing but a short grey army shirt, glared down at me like a mountain out for murder. I think it must have been then that I realized he was jealous too. And there stood Mother in her nightdress, looking as if her heart was broken between us. I hoped she felt as she looked. It seemed to me that she deserved it all.
From that morning out my life was a hell. Father and I were enemies, open and avowed. We conducted a series of skirmishes against one another, he trying to steal my time with Mother and I his. When she was sitting on
my bed, telling me a story, he took to looking for some pair of old boots which he alleged he had left behind him at the beginning of the war. While he talked to Mother I played loudly with my toys to show my total lack of concern. He created a terrible scene one evening when he came in from work and found me at his box, playing with his regimental badges, Gurkha knives, and button-sticks. Mother got up and took the box from me.
âYou mustn't play with Daddy's toys unless he lets you, Larry,' she said severely. âDaddy doesn't play with yours.'
For some reason Father looked at her as if she had struck him and then turned away with a scowl.
âThose are not toys,' he growled, taking down the box again to see had I lifted anything. âSome of those curios are very rare and valuable.'
But as time went on I saw more and more how he managed to alienate Mother and me. What made it worse was that I couldn't grasp his method or see what attraction he had for Mother. In every possible way he was less winning than I. He had a common accent and made noises at his tea. I thought for a while that it might be the newspapers she was interested in, so I made up bits of news of my own to read to her. Then I thought it might be the smoking, which I personally thought attractive, and took his pipes and went round the house dribbling into them till he caught me. I even made noises at my tea, but Mother only told me I was disgusting. It all seemed to hinge round that unhealthy habit of sleeping together, so I made a point of dropping into their bedroom and nosing round, talking to myself, so that they wouldn't know I was watching them, but they were never up to anything that I could see. In the end it beat me. It seemed to depend on being grown-up and giving people rings, and I realized I'd have to wait.
But at the same time I wanted him to see that I was only waiting, not giving up the fight. One evening when he was being particularly obnoxious, chattering away well above my head, I let him have it.
âMummy,' I said, âdo you know what I'm going to do when I grow up?'
âNo, dear,' she replied. âWhat?'
âI'm going to marry you,' I said quietly.
Father gave a great guffaw out of him, but he didn't take me in. I knew it must only be pretence. And Mother, in spite of everything, was pleased. I felt she was probably relieved to know that one day Father's hold on her would be broken.
âWon't that be nice?' she said with a smile.
âIt'll be very nice,' I said confidently. âBecause we're going to have lots and lots of babies.'
âThat's right, dear,' she said placidly. âI think we'll have one soon, and then you'll have plenty of company.'
I was no end pleased about that because it showed that in spite of the way she gave in to Father she still considered my wishes. Besides, it would put the Geneys in their place.
It didn't turn out like that, though. To begin with, she was very preoccupied â I supposed about where she would get the seventeen and six â and though Father took to staying out late in the evenings it did me no particular good. She stopped taking me for walks, became as touchy as blazes, and smacked me for nothing at all. Sometimes I wished I'd never mentioned the confounded baby â I seemed to have a genius for bringing calamity on myself.
And calamity it was! Sonny arrived in the most appalling hullabaloo â even that much he couldn't do without a fuss â and from the first moment I disliked him. He was a difficult child â so far as I was concerned he was always difficult â and demanded far too much attention. Mother was simply silly about him, and couldn't see when he was only showing off. As company he was worse than useless. He slept all day, and I had to go round the house on tiptoe to avoid waking him. It wasn't any longer a question of not waking Father. The slogan now was âDon't-wake-Sonny!' I couldn't understand why the child wouldn't sleep at the proper time, so whenever Mother's back was turned I woke him. Sometimes to keep him awake I pinched him as well. Mother caught me at it one day and gave me a most unmerciful flaking.