Authors: Gillian Galbraith
The next morning, the Monsignor, having told Maureen to emphasise on the phone that it was a favour, agreed to see Father Vincent. Already, he was regretting his generosity in cutting short his lunch to accommodate the meeting.
âI need to go back to Kinross,' Father Vincent repeated.
âNo one's stopping you, Vincent.'
âNot as a visitor, as its priest. To do my job.'
Monsignor Drew, as before, was sitting opposite him, his arms hugging his plump little belly, his thumbs twirling in slow motion. His face was pale, but around his lips, like smudged orange lipstick, was a stain of tomato soup which made him look like a slightly cantankerous pantomime dame. Picking up on his subordinate's tone and considering it disrespectful, he leaned back in his chair and said, as if to a difficult child, âAnd what, exactly, has brought this on?'
âYou don't know? You haven't heard?' Vincent was incredulous.
âHaven't heard what?'
âAbout yesterday's article in the
Record
.'
âShould I have?'
âI would have thought so, yes,' Father Vincent said hotly. âAfter all, it concerns the reputation of the Church too, albeit indirectly. In it I am portrayed â exposed might be a better word â as a “predatory” priest. You know the sort â the sort that has it away with half the female members of the congregation ⦠no, of the town.'
âI'm so sorry, Vincent,' Monsignor Drew replied, shaking his head. âNobody told me. How horrible for you. How very distressing for you. I'm sorry that I haven't been a greater support to you in your time of trial. It's difficult with James still off â I'm often at sixes and sevens. Run off my feet. Surely the media office has been advising you, handling things for you? They certainly should have been. But, in any event, I fail to see, to be quite frank, why
the publication of this sort of nonsense means that you should return to your job. Quite the reverse I would have thought. You've sprung this on me. Surely you're best away from it until all the smoke clears?'
âDominic,' Vincent replied, trying to restrain the anger he could feel burning inside him, âperhaps I should remind you that I have not broken my vow of celibacy. I did tell you that before â but, perhaps, its full import did not strike you then. Most of the people of Kinross know me, trust me, but my continued absence, unexplained to date, may be taken even by them as an admission of guilt. I'm prepared to face the Houstons and their thugs, I am prepared to face anyone, everyone. Currently I have nothing to do, no one to see, no tasks to accomplish, no services to take. Nothing! All I do, obsessively, is run over the events leading up to this ⦠this debacle. I need my work.'
âCome, come, Vincent, you sound very sorry for yourself. It's not as bad as all that is it? Anyway, the inquiry is not yet complete â¦' The Monsignor sounded genuinely puzzled.
âInquiry?' Father Vincent said, rising to his feet in his emotion. âWhat inquiry? Four weeks have passed â a whole month! I am, obviously, central to any inquiry. My alleged misconduct lies at the very heart of it. So, a good starting-point for any inquiry, I would have thought, would be to speak to me. But nobody has. I remain, to the best of my knowledge, a priest in good standing. So why can't I return to my job?'
âVincent,' the Monsignor replied, âit is, as I've explained, out of my hands. You know what lawyers are like, they â¦'
âYes,' Father Vincent replied, cutting him off mid-sentence, unwilling even to pretend to be conciliatory any longer, âI do, only too well. I was one once, remember? What I know is that they are acting as your servants, on your instructions. A deadline, if it was imposed, would no doubt be met by any remotely competent member of the profession. The Church is, as we all know, big business. We are, to our shame, a plentiful source of litigation, aren't we? Our account is one that any prudent firm of lawyers would take trouble not to lose. I was foolish in my dealings with Laura Houston, I've acknowledged that and expressed my deep sorrow for it, but that is all. I shouldn't be deprived of ⦠of everything, because of a false, I repeat, false accusation made against me.'
âIndeed, indeed,' the Monsignor replied, twiddling his thumbs faster now and looking uneasy. He did not entirely recognise the Father Vincent of old in the angry man confronting him. Nor, since he had assured the Church solicitors only that morning that âtime was not of the essence' in the inquiry, did he know what to do. However, he must take back control of the situation, otherwise the tail really would be wagging the dog.
âI would remind you, Vincent, that until the investigation is over, I ⦠we, are unable to reach a conclusion in this matter. A
very
serious allegation has been made against you. I'm with you on the timing issue, of course I am, but ⦠nonetheless, you must remember what caused all of this in the first place.'
Before Father Vincent could reply, his mobile rang, and without thinking he answered it.
âYou are a disgrace, Father. Just couldn't keep your hands to yourself, could you? If I â¦'
âShut up!' Father Vincent replied, looking the Monsignor directly in the eye as he did so, and ending the call.
âVincent ⦠Vincent, really! Have you been drinking?'
âNo. Why? Have you?'
âFor your sake, I'll ignore that remark. I can see you're overwrought. Now, don't you worry yourself. I'll be in touch with Borthwicks first thing in the morning. Fergus's been away. I'll tell them to treat the inquiry as top priority from now on, OK?'
âOK. Good. Thanks.'
âBut are you all right, Vincent?' the Monsignor asked, coming across to slip a paternal arm round his shoulders and gazing at him with concern. âSleeping well and so on? Are you under the doctor?'
âThe doctor, Dominic,' Vincent answered, aware from his superior's manner that he was now regarded as, at best, âunstable', âwill not get me my job, my home, my cat, my life back. And that's what I need â not a doctor.'
CHAPTER TEN
Callum Taylor's lunch party for his elderly neighbours was not going as well as he had hoped. Setting the table had exhausted him and preparing the meal had seemed, to his septuagenarian, age-dimmed mind, of secondary importance. He had forgotten, yet again, that Marion was a vegetarian, and had had to offer false reassurance about the stock for the leek and potato soup. It could easily have been made with a vegetable base, after all. But could anyone tell the difference? Of course, not!
Now, a fork hovering above them, she was homing in again on the pork sausages. Her raised eyebrows queried their provenance. A half-eaten one lay in a scrape of French mustard on her plate.
âOh, they're all right â tofu or Quorn,' Callum said blithely and then, unable to resist garnishing one untruth with another, he added, âyou know, made by that photographer woman, poor old John Lennon's wife.'
âJolly good,' Marion replied, attempting to manoeuvre a couple more onto her plate and succeeding only in knocking one onto his candy-striped tablecloth.
âI'm so sorry, Callum,' she said, picking it up between finger and thumb and sounding genuinely penitent.
âIt'll come off ⦠the fat ⦠the stain, I mean. With a detergent, I expect,' he said, looking mournfully at the greasy mark on the previously immaculate cloth. They were all actually using their decorative napkins too.
Shona, his dead wife, would have had more sense than to put them out. Paper, she used to say, was good enough for all bar royalty.
âPaul's wife, not John's, I think you'll find. And it's no use. I'll have to go again,' George said, throwing his napkin on to the floor and shuffling noisily out of the room, once more in search of the toilet.
âEastman?' Bridget said.
âNo, prostate,' Marion whispered.
âThe sausage woman â Eastman?' Bridget repeated, pointing a trembling finger at a sausage on her plate.
âEastman? The photo people?' Marion inquired, her head shaking slightly as she tried for the second time to spear her remaining half-potato with her fork.
âLinda Eastman was her name. You remember, the Wings woman? American.'
âRight,' Callum replied, âI'm with you now. Marion, have you heard from Irene lately? Somebody said that her cataract had been unsuccessful. Usually they are a piece of cake, aren't they? Like getting a brand new eye, Shona said. She had both done, after her hip.'
âNope,' Marion replied, still chasing a potato around her plate.
âYou haven't heard from her?'
âNope. Not since she turned into a Jew. I expect she has only Jewish friends nowadays like herself.'
âSo long, farewell, adieu, Auf Wiedersehen, goodbye!' George sang, returning to the table and giving his wife an almost imperceptible shake of the head indicating that his attempt to urinate had been unsuccessful. He was
certainly ready to say goodbye. But they would have to return home via the hospital.
âNo. A Jew. A
Jew
. Not “adieu” â “a Jew”,' Marion clarified. âShe has turned herself into a Jew. It's all something to do with Madonna and the Cabal. She's always been, as she puts it, “A seeker after truth”, hasn't she?'
âMore sausages anyone?' Callum asked, but nobody appeared to hear him.
âMore sausages?' he repeated more loudly, trying to catch any of his guests' eyes. But they were all looking down, their attention focused exclusively on their plates.
âPaul McCartney's wife doesn't make sausages,' Nora said, mouth full of potato, âshe's involved in mine clearance. She's only got one leg left.'
âNo,' Callum said, making a resolution that this would be his last party, âshe's got two legs now. Remember, she's called Nancy Cleaver ⦠Nancy Lever, something like that.'
âDid he marry the
Strictly Come Dancing
woman then? The one that lived with the football manager, then Trevor ⦠Trevor ⦠that theatre man?' Marion asked.
âFrances isn't a Jew,' Bridget said brightly, as if at a sudden revelation. âShe's a Buddhist. She goes to a temple somewhere near the soap shop in Bo'ness.'
Once the party had broken up and he had stacked the plates in the dishwasher, Callum went to see the girls and take them some hay. The second he entered their shed, Heidi, the herd queen, came trotting over to greet him, nudging him and helping herself from the bundle to a few
stalks before he had a chance to dump the armload into their communal manger. Watching her as she munched away noisily, he was struck by her resemblance to a small camel. With her caramel-coloured pelt, splayed feet and long eyelashes, she looked far more like a species of camel than a goat. The fact that she had won first prize at the Highland Show that year only proved that the three judges had known precisely nothing. Beano, on the other hand, would have been a worthy winner. She had classic Anglo-Nubian looks, with her long, heavily veined ears, Roman nose and fine antelope-like limbs. But there had only been a yellow rosette for her from the ignoramuses. And, as a past president of the British Goat Society, he should know.
The sweet smell and the warmth of the goat shed soothed him. He kicked the straw on the floor about the place, trying to even it out and make sure that they all had a comfortable place to lie for the night. He was relieved to see that the water bucket was still half full, and that none of the girls had deposited their cherries in it. That was one less task to do tomorrow. Minstrel, Shona's favourite and the only Alpine in his herd, sidled up to him and as usual he fished a carrot from his pocket and gave her it to chew on. By all rights she should have died, one of three kids and trodden on by her own mother before she was even free of the afterbirth. That one was a miracle goat.
Unexpectedly, he caught the smell of the Billy in the nearby enclosure and, at that moment, and as if to attract his attention, it let out a brutish, whinnying bellow. Sniffing his own sleeve, the old man wondered whether he stank of goat. All his senses seemed to have
dimmed. Just as well George had promised to tell him if he did smell. He would do it too, and take pleasure in it. All very well, except that George's faculties seemed to be fading even faster than his own. Nero's frightful musky scent clung to everything and didn't seem to be eliminated by soap and water. Of course, in his youth he could have drowned it out with Old Spice, Brut or something, but then in those days he would have run a mile from a goat. Or a goatherd like himself, come to that! No one who knew him in those days would recognise him now; sans teeth, sans hair, sans eyes and as fat as butter. He no more resembled himself in his prime than he did his photograph, swaddled tight as baby Jesus, on the occasion of his christening.
Carla's shrill bark woke him from his nap and he realised that the phone was ringing.
âYes,' he said, trying to enunciate clearly, ashamed that he had fallen asleep in the early evening and determined not to betray the fact.
âCallum?'
âYes,' he repeated, still unable to recognise who was calling and frustrated by his failure to do so. âTo whom am I speaking?' The caller should have introduced himself, it was his call.
âDon't you recognise my voice?' The tone of the other man suggested that he ought to be able to do so. Rattled, he played the man's few words again in his head.
âNo,' he replied, âI'm afraid I don't.'
âIt's me. David.'
âDavid â¦' His voice tailed off as if in wonderment, as he tried to take in the news. No one should have been more recognisable to him. They had, after all, been lovers for over eight years, even though they had not seen each other for three or more decades. It had happened in another life, in another world. And, if such beings existed, he had been The One. But, on a single fateful night, after too much champagne and with too little self-control he had blown everything. A charming nobody had beckoned and he had succumbed. And with David, there had been no second chance.