âYou be away to your bed now,' he said. âFather Abbot and the rest of us will see to this bit of badness, and tomorrow you can forget all about it.'
She sent a frightened look at N.S. âEithne,' he said, softly. âDidn't I say I'd be back for those devil figures? And so I am, for I'm a man of my word.'
âSay your prayers devoutly tonight, and tomorrow you'll be safe,' I said.
âYes. Thank you,' she said, bobbed a half-curtsey, and scurried away.
The Earl of Kilderry's library was large and high-ceilinged, and it might have been impressive if it had not been in such a disgraceful condition. The sections of walls not covered by books were discoloured and damp-stained, and mirrors and old portraits hung on the walls â most of them crazily askew. The portraits were so smoke-blackened it was impossible to make out any features, and the mirrors so dim with years of wood smoke and candle grease I'd defy anyone to see a reflection in them. There was a not unpleasant scent of peat and cigars.
The chess set stood on a small round table near the fire, and small as it was, it dominated the whole of the room. I said, with as much authority as I could muster, âWe'll throw the lot in the fire and burn them to ashes. You'll both join me in prayer while we do it.'
âAnd then we'll be off,' said Fintan, who was setting light to the wall candles, using a taper thrust into the embers of the dying fire. As the candles flickered into life, I had the strong impression that the figures moved â that they flinched from the light. And then â and this is God's own truth â as the fire and the candles burned up more strongly, the shadows seemed to swell and to link hands and prance round us in macabre symmetry.
I began intoning the powerful and beautiful Ninety-First Psalm and there was instant reassurance and comfort from the familiar phrases, and in hearing N.S. join his voice with mine. Still chanting the prayer, I began to walk towards the table.
Twice, intoning the prayer, I had to raise my voice because it seemed as if something was pressing down on it and smothering it, but I managed to continue.
â
Whosoever dwelleth under the defence of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty . . . I will say unto the Lord, Thou art my hope and my stronghold: my God in Him I will trust
.
. .'
I had reached the part that promises,
He shall deliver thee from the snare of the hunters and from the noisome pestilence
, and N.S. and I were both reaching for the chess pieces, when something very strange happened to me. From wanting â intending â to burn the chess pieces, I suddenly knew I could not. They were so beautiful, so intricate. I thought: someone must have spent many, many hours fashioning these pieces. How cruel to cast them into the flames.
At my side, N.S. said, very softly, âFather Abbot.'
âWhat is it?' I said, whipping round.
âLook at the mirror,' he said.
âWhat? I see nothing.'
âThe reflections of the chess figures are alive. And they're watching us.'
This was impossible, of course. And yet it was true. In the room the chess figures were still and inanimate. In the mirror there was movement. A horse, ridden by a knight, tossed its carven mane, the head of a bishop half turned, and one of the kings tightened a hand around a sword. And the eyes of all of them gleamed with unmistakable life.
I began to shake so violently I dropped the crucifix I had been holding. N.S. retrieved it, but I had the dreadful thought that it would be of no protection.
For it's only two sticks of wood nailed together, after all . . .
âGo on with the prayer,' urged Fintan, but I was struggling to breathe and something was tightening painfully around my chest. It was with deep gratitude that I heard N.S. resume the prayer. â
He shall defend thee under his wings and thou shalt be safe under his feathers: his faithfulness and truth shall be thy shield and buckler . . .
'
He broke off and said, in a low urgent voice, âFather Abbot, don't look at their reflections. Just throw them on the flames. Do it
now
.'
âI can't,' I said. âGod help me, I can't.'
âYou must.' But he, too, seemed unable to touch the figures. Then he said, âTip up the table. Slide them into the bag. But don't look at their eyes.'
But when we tried this, the table felt as if it was made of lead or as if some invisible giant held it down. We struggled and sweated, but to no avail, and I became aware that the shadows had stopped moving, and they were standing in a line, as if preparing to face an attack. Then at last â I think it was N.S.'s younger strength that did it â we managed to tilt the table just enough and the figures tumbled into the deep bag. I threw the small crucifix in with them, and Fintan snapped the hasp shut. Clutching the bag, we ran from the Earl of Kilderry's library.
The three of us, together with Brother Cuthbert, sat together in my study. I had produced a bottle of brandy and we had all had a goodly measure.
It was N.S. who said, âFather Abbot, you can't keep those things here.' He glanced to the corner of the room, where the bag lay quiet and lumpen, but still somehow imbued with malevolence. âI'll take them,' he said. âIt's my responsibility. My family's responsibility.'
âYou're a Kilderry?' I said, but I think I already knew he was.
âI am. Not openly recognized or acknowledged as such, but I grew up knowing the legend of the chess pieces. I came to hate and fear them, and I was determined to destroy them. That's why, earlier this year, I tried to win them from Gerald Kilderry. And I believe,' he said, his expression intent, âthat those figures need to be imprisoned in some very remote place where the evil has nothing on which it can feed. Nothing at all â not prayer nor ritual. Not even people. Because evil needs to be fed in order to grow, Father Abbot.'
âWe'll burn them,' I said. I did not like N.S.'s words about evil being fed, although there were â and are â several reputable sources to support that concept.
âThey'll fight you,' said N.S. at once. âAnd they'll probably win. They're so old, they've overpowered stronger adversaries than us down the centuries. And it wouldn't necessarily be a . . . a physical fight, Father Abbot. They would trickle their poison into your mind and corrode your soul and you wouldn't even realize it was happening.'
âHe's right,' said Fintan. âThey almost overpowered us in that library.'
âI couldn't destroy them,' I said, half to myself. âWhen it came to it, I couldn't do it. I could only think it would be a wanton cruel waste of someone's intricate work.'
âI felt that,' said Fintan.
âBut,' said N.S. âif the evil can be weakened â starved â then it might be possible to destroy them.'
âThat could take years.'
âI'd wait years,' said N.S. âI'd seal them up and keep watch over them.'
âBut where would you go?' This was Cuthbert.
âThere's an old watchtower on the Moher Cliffs. It's a lonely, remote place â hardly anyone goes near. I'd seal up the figures inside that tower. And I'd be their guardian.'
âYou'd leave your Galway Parish?'
âI would.'
âBut you can't simply withdraw from the world for an unknown time,' I said. âNo, if they're to be sealed up, it must be here. This is one of God's houses â steeped in layers of prayer and goodness, and if anything can cause an evil to wither, it's surely that.'
âI believe they can invert prayer to their own means,' said N.S. âI don't understand it, but I think it's like turning a white bag inside out, so that you only see the black lining.'
The black lining . . . It was remarkable what images that conjured up. After a moment Cuthbert said, in a determinedly practical voice, âHow would you live?'
âThat rather depends on you,' said N.S. âIn this monastery are a number of small, easily carried objects of considerable value. Mass vessels, gold and silver cups and chalices, candlesticks, silk wall hangings and altar cloths. Things I could sell in some large anonymous place, such as Galway.'
âThen,' I said, standing up, âwe'd better start deciding what you can take.'
For the first time since entering the Church, that night I ended up so drunk I couldn't walk. Fintan had to help me to my bed.
âIt's a shocking thing,' he said, âwhen a dissolute tinker like myself has to assist a venerable abbot of the Irish Church to his room.'
âYou'll be in my prayers every night.'
âBe damned to the prayers, put me in your Will,' said the irrepressible Fintan. âAnd I'll open a great little bar somewhere hereabouts and live a dissolute life so that everyone for miles will enjoy themselves disapproving of me.'
âAnd Eithne?'
âAh, Eithne. There's a girl, now. There's a grand bit of comfort to be got from a night with her. I dare say I oughtn't to say that to a monk.'
âI've known the odd bit of comfort myself as a young man,' I said.
âI dare say. What about your man who came with us tonight? He'll have known more than the odd bit of comfort,' said Fintan. âI'd say he'll struggle to follow the path of celibacy.'
âWe all have our struggles. But he's promised to make sure those evil things are safely sealed up.'
âWill they stay sealed up, d'you think?'
âI don't see why not. They seem to have been harmless inside Kilderry Castle all those years.'
âThey're evil,' said Fintan. âThey're leaking evil like â like a dripping gutter. What if someone were to take them out into the world one day?'
âNo one will,' said I, and I climbed into bed and sank into a drunken sleep for which I did heavy penance next morning in the form of a mind-splitting headache.
And so N.S., that slightly arrogant young priest, probable scion of the Kilderry line, took the chessmen away.
We had a final word before he left St Patrick's.
âLast night,' I said, âyou mentioned starving the chessmen of everything â even of prayer. Does that mean . . . ?'
âIt means I will have to cut myself off from God,' he said, and, without saying anything more, he turned on his heel and walked away.
It pained me then and it still pains me to think of him living in that hermit-like seclusion in the old watchtower on the Cliffs of Moher, not daring to open up that channel in his mind through which comes God's blessed love and understanding.
I shall pray for him every day. And I shall pray that the power of the devil's chessmen will quietly wither and die.
But will it . . . ?
The story ended there, although the book itself went on for another page and a half, with Fergal McMahon adding a conscientious homily about divine and man-made retribution and atoning for sin.
Michael had been so deeply immersed in Fergal's world that when the phone rang it startled him so much he dropped the book on Wilberforce, who let out an indignant yowl.
The phone call was from Nell. She wondered if Michael would like to have supper at her flat the following evening.
âIt's tomorrow I'm in London, sorting out the inventory at Holly Lodge,' she said.
âI know it is. What train are you catching?'
âWell, actually,' said Nell, âI thought I might as well go up tonight. I can get the seven forty-five or the six past eight train and Nina says I can stay with her. It would mean I could make an early start. That might even allow time for me to get that chess piece valued.'
âGood idea. Shall I pick up a takeaway tomorrow so you don't have to cook when you get back?'
âThat would be nice.'
âChinese? Indian? Fish and chips?'
âChinese, please.' She appeared to hesitate, then in a slightly too-casual voice said, âMichael, would it be possible for you to meet me off the train tomorrow? I'll probably get the one that gets in at quarter to seven. We could pick up the food on the way to Quire Court.'
âI think I can,' said Michael, reaching for his diary. âYes. I've got a couple of tutorials in the morning, but that's all.' It was not like Nell to ask for a lift from the station; she hated being dependent on anyone else and on the few occasions Michael had offered to meet her from a train journey she had always said she was perfectly capable of hopping in a taxi or walking across to the bus station. He did not want to ask outright if anything was wrong, so to give her a let-out he said, âI expect you might have a lot of stuff to lug back.'
She did not take the let-out. She said, âIt's not that. It's just that I don't want to go into the court on my own in the dark. I thought someone was prowling around a few nights ago.'
âOh God, was there?' Michael's thoughts switched from the spectral threat of the chess piece to the more temporal one of burglars and muggers. âHave you reported it?
There was a perceptible hesitation, then she said, âYes, but it was such a vague sighting they weren't inclined to send out the cavalry. The on-duty sergeant logged it and said they would ask the duty patrol car to drive round during the evening, but that's all.'
âWould you like to bring your things over here and stay for a few nights?'
âAnd shock your students?' The familiar note of irony was back in her voice.
âYou could creep out at dawn,' said Michael, smiling. âLike a Feydeau farce. But how about if I stay with you for a few nights? As a security guard, I mean.'
âWould you wear a uniform?'
âWould you like me to?'
âIt depends on the uniform,' she said, and chuckled.
âNo, but seriously, I could sleep in Beth's room if you'd prefer, and I could be the one to do the sneaking out at dawn. I should think Quire Court's seen its fair share of furtive lovers over the centuries anyway. Tiptoeing over the cobblestones among the flowerpots.'