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Louise Philips
Louise Phillips lives in Dublin. Having raised her family, she started
back writing a couple of years ago and was chosen as part of a small group of emerging new
talent for a series of workshops given by Dermot Bolger, then Writer in Residence for South
County Dublin.
A number of her short stories and poems have since been published and she has
had the pleasure of reading a selection of her poetry at the Annual Reader’s Day in the
Plaza, Dublin
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Two of her short stories are contained in anthologies, ‘A Place in Time’ which formed
part of ‘Caught in Amber’ an anthology of poetry, prose and fiction edited by Eileen Casey and
‘Another Road’ which formed part of the ‘County Lines’ anthology published by New
Island.
While attending the National Writers Week in Longford last year she met Sarah Webb who referred her
to Inkwell. She says, ‘Inkwell is a very positive and learning environment and is a great source of
encouragement for new writers. Being part of a group gives the somewhat solitary life of the writer well
needed support along the way.’
This year her short, short story ‘The Beads’ was published as one of the winning
entries in the National Group Writers Award 2008 (Petals on a Bough) and her short story ‘A Part of Me’ was shortlisted for the Molly Keane Memorial Award
Now that two of her three children have flown the nest she aims to move on with zealous enthusiasm.
She is currently working on her first novel ‘Red Ribbons’.
A Part of Me by Louise Phillips
© Louise Phillips 2009
I stood wearing black, the grieving widow, wondering why that day of all the days, the day of
Matthew’s funeral that I found myself returning so vividly to that place. I had thought it was so far locked
away, hidden behind the closed corridors of my life that it was no longer part of me.
Was it the sadness that dredged up the memory or was it the feeling of being alone again? I
shuddered when I saw that young girl, I barely recognised her, the girl that once was me.
* * *
Twenty crucifixes hung in that room. Each in an identical spot, centre above an iron
bed. There were ten beds on either side and at the end two long windows that allowed the outside
in. Below us, hard shiny floors, around us pale pink walls with Jesus Christ dying over and
over. The room smelt of chlorine, clinical, uncaring. I remember thinking it strange that the wails
of young women and the first cries of life coming into the world were linked with Jesus leaving
it.
He looked sad up there, long curly manes of hair hung loosely around his shoulders. Each of
his faces drooped inwards, allowing twenty chins to rest on twenty muscular chests. When the contractions
came, I stared up at him, the Jesus, the one above Nora’s bed with the chip missing from his
elbow. Apart from that they were all the same. The one with the chip looked more humane, kinder
than the others. Part of me was glad he looked down at his nailed feet. At least it was away from
me. I bit down hard on my lips, so hard they bled. The blood tasted warm, sickening.
‘One born every minute,’ that was what my father used to say. ‘No daughter of mine would ever get
that way’. ‘In trouble,’ was how folks described it. A tart, a whore, a scrubber. The child
not a baby but an ‘it’, outside wedlock, outside law, illegitimate. No place for ‘it’ in
‘Good Old Catholic Ireland’.
She came not long after dawn. Moments before I twisted and moaned animal like. I had heard my
own cries; cries from so deep down, I no longer felt they belonged to me. The hands of the clock cut
it’s face in two, the large arrow pointing to the twelve, the small arrow downwards to the six. Light
from the windows reached the end of my bed and I could hear the clang of metal and tiny wheels scratching
polished floors. Armies of trolleys going in every direction and I thought ‘Dear God, please let me
die.’
The nuns too must have worried death was near. They spoke to each other in the silent language of
the eyes. Soon the priest stood above my bed mumbling prayers for my forgiveness. He no more than a
child himself. I can still see the holes that adolescence left in his pimpled skin. His disposition
awkward, afraid even. I must have looked quite mad to him, the white gown I wore covered in blood and
sweat and devoid of any shape other than the large protruding bump. It was after he left they put my
feet in stirrups, then the desire to push became so strong that I screamed from the very core of my
existence. Sister Bernadette, the one with the moustache gave me a look that said I disgusted her. She
rammed the gag into my mouth. I no longer cared if Jesus stared.
* * *
I never told Matthew, never told my husband. Not when I met him, nor later. Standing at the
graveside, forty years on, I wondered why the moment never seemed right. Why the reasons kept changing even
though the truth remained the same. As I watched Matthew’s coffin being lowered into the ground I could
feel the claw of the mid January day eat my skin. I watched the breaths of mourners rise like smoke
signals into the dusky pink sky. Four men, strangers to me dressed in mud clad boots and dirty clothes griped
tight the two thick straps that suspended Matthew’s last remains. Matthew’s old work friends and our
neighbours stood with collars raised and shoulders stooped as my eyes followed the lines of gravestones
marching along the gravelled paths.
There were tombstones in the shapes of Celtic crosses, heavenly angels, others with shiny marbled
slabs. Some tombstones sunk sideways into the earth, no longer cared for by anyone of this world. My
body felt old, tired. Matthew had deserved more. He had deserved the truth. It was my own shame
that kept me from telling him and I suppose the fear of losing him. Later when no children came, I
couldn’t hurt him with the truth.
What was the truth? I remember wanting so much to see my baby, to hold her? I had needed to
know the colour of her hair, her eyes. It seemed important to be sure that she had ten little fingers
and ten little toes. They should have let me say hello. They should have let me say
goodbye.
As the funeral party left the graveside, they followed me, the grieving widow.
‘Come back to the house for a cup of tea, won’t you?’ I heard myself saying.
‘Sally, he’s in a good place now,’ someone said.
‘He’s in our prayers.’
They meant well, but I was glad they could not see inside of me.
As the breeze around us gained pace, my heart quickened and I thought about how many times I had
tried to feel my baby touch me in the breeze or hear her cry when all was silent other than the sleeping
night. She used to skip behind shadows, but she was there, always part of me.
When we reached the black iron cemetery gates the promise of snow from early morn
arrived. Secret flakes barely visible at first multiplied and cascaded in each direction. I thought
of the snow globe I once had as a child. One moment the little town square had the clearest of skies,
then with the lightest shake, it became a wondrous place.
* * *
The day I told my father, it had snowed. I could still see the anger in his eyes, fierce, bubbling,
boiling anger. He ran at me, grabbed my arms and flung me right across the front room. I remember
flying in the air. Huddled in the corner I watched my Mother try to speak.
‘No more of it,’ he roared. His body growing larger in size, swinging at the door as he
turned, slamming it so hard, it bounced back upon itself. After time, my mother whispered, ‘go talk to
him’.
I climbed the narrow stairs, my knees shaking with fear when I reached the top. It was then I
heard the sobbing. I had never heard a grown man cry, least not my father. I walked out past my
mother, past the sadness in her eyes. Opening the front door I saw the snow, just like my snow
globe.
* * *
The mourners back at the house clasped their shoulders and stumped their feet leaving large slushy
puddles in the porch. Most congregated in the front room. Those helping with the tea and sandwiches set
up a factory line in the side kitchen. I could hear the click of cups on saucers, spoons in cups. I
smiled that grateful thanking smile of a recent widow before I snuck away upstairs.
From my bedroom window, I looked out at the snow. I heard a lone dog barking in the distance,
the bedroom dark, the white outside almost dazzling in reply. The snow created such purity of form, the
rooftops, the trees even the dirty old back yards took on a beauty far greater than themselves. My
eyelids flickered open and closed each time adjusting better to the changing scene. I thought about my little
girl. I thought of her as a baby covered in pink and smelling of talc. I thought of her going to
school for the first time, laughing on a swing in the park. I saw her, a teenager, running through the
house looking for her gym shoes. I thought of all the years that I had let the snow drift on the memory.
Somehow, I had built so many layers, too many layers.
Before I went downstairs, I switched on the amber bedside light. Reaching into my sewing
basket, I found underneath the thimbles, spools of tread and pins, the leaflet I had hidden. It arrived
months before. ‘The Irish Adoption Society’, inviting adoptive people and natural parents to
register. They sent them to every household in Ireland. I had put it carefully away, but I had kept
it.
Months later the reply came. I knew what it was before I looked inside, the envelope, large,
brown and sent by registered post. It took some time for me to open it. When I did, I read and reread
the typed contents, not believing my daughter had registered too. ‘Daughter,’ I repeated the word
out loud as if by saying it, it would become more real.
And now today has arrived, the day of our supervised meet. I walk past Trinity College and
look up at the almost cloudless blue sky. The streets feel alive, energised on this vibrant June
day. I pass two young men, strumming guitars. One of them has a mouth organ attached around his
neck. They both look so engrossed in what they do; it gives them a protection of sorts.
I manoeuvre my way forward through endless buggies and bags. I see people in a hurry, people
taking their time. Where the women sell flowers at the top of Grafton Street, a baby is crying. A mother
reaches down. I stop then and look at the flowers, they remind me of things. The blue iris, brings me
back to my parent’s front garden, sunflowers, a holiday myself and Matthew had in France. I see white
lilies, the chosen flower these days for homes and apartments with exquisite dining room tables. I catch
my reflection in a shop window, a middle aged woman, well dressed, looking lost amongst the crowd. Part
of me wants to go back home, to catch the Luas which is parked on Stephen’s Green. To come up with an
excuse for not being able to be there. Then I get angry with myself and mutter definitely beneath my
breath ‘Sally, no more excuses.’ I turn the corner and walk past the Shelbourne. One of the Nubians
princesses looks down on me. Her hands reach up to the sky and I gain strength from her and carry on. It is
not far.
The hum of the city is silenced as the red Georgian front door closes behind me. I climb the
stairway hearing the creaking sound of wood beneath my feet. The backs of my knees feel weak, just like
that day all those years before. My breath is short and I can hear my heart thump. I pause before I
knock. I stand staring at the panelled door as if beyond it, I might just fall off the very edge of
eternity. I am more afraid than I thought possible. Like a small child learning to walk, I stretch
out unsure at first but then somehow I clench my fist and knock down hard. I remind myself, that today, today
at least I will get to say ‘hello.’
* * *
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