'We have much to suffer in the ministry in this age. Wouldn't you agree?' Darroch nodded. 'We have to explain divinity,' continued the minister, 'to people who are more and more susceptible to the apparent truths of science. Joseph Conrad once called science "the sacrosanct fetish". An interesting juxtaposition, but a wise phrase, and he was talking in the earliest years of the century. A wise phrase. Have you read Conrad?'
Darroch was allowed the chance of speaking. He merely shook his head.
'Nor I. I found that quote in a dictionary of quotations. I love reading through books like that. It makes you seem astonishingly well read when you meet anyone.' Reverend Walker giggled like a child. 'I even read dictionaries, you know, and send the editors lists of words that have been missed out. You'd be surprised at the words some dictionaries omit. I think I have a list somewhere that I've just finished preparing.' He walked with effort to a writing desk in one corner of the room. It was closed, and when he opened the lid sheets of foolscap slid gracefully to the floor. Darroch rushed over to help. The sheets were full of scribbles from a shaky blue fountain pen: notes for a sermon or something similar. There were no paginations, so Darroch shuffled them into a random pile and placed them on top of the bureau. The old minister was still hunting in the desk for his list. He mumbled as he looked, peering closely at scraps of paper before dismissing them. He appeared to have forgotten that Darroch was there, so the young minister, hands behind his back in a suitable pose, examined the glass bookcases which filled one complete wall of the room. The books were old, some with spines faded to obscurity. He saw many theological works, of course, but there were also books of Scottish and English literature and some historical works.
He saw two big books concerning the history of central Fife.
'No, I can't find the blessed thing. What a nuisance.' The Reverend Walker closed the bureau sharply, catching many corners of foolscap in the edges of the desk as he did so.
Darroch smiled. It was like a scene from an Ealing comedy. The old man peered at him. 'A cup of tea? No, something a little stronger I think, in order to celebrate your first parish proper. My goodness, how I remember my first parish, and that wasn't yesterday.' He shuffled over to a large cupboard and opened it, producing two crystal glasses from within. In
another, smaller cupboard he finally found the whisky. Ice and water would not be necessary: he was of the traditional school. 'Nor the day before,' he said, chuckling as he filled the glasses, his hand shaking. He did not spill a drop.
Darroch was still standing by the bookcases, hands behind back, face a blur to the old man. 'Come away and sit down,' he said. 'I can't see you over there. Sit here.'
Iain Darroch sat on the proffered settee. The Reverend Walker handed him a glass before slumping into an armchair, his breath heavy, his tongue glancing around his pale lips.
'Oh dear,' he said. He put his glass to his lips, paused, and toasted his visitor. 'Slainte.'
Tour very good health, sir,' said Darroch, biting on the whisky before it could bite him.
There was a reflective silence. It was a good malt. The aroma of thick peat told Darroch that it came from the west coast, probably one of the Isles, rather than from the Highland glens. There was a good drop still left in his glass, and the old minister did not look particularly mean. Darroch took another sip.
'And how are you enjoying Carsden so far?' asked Reverend Walker. Darroch cleared his throat.
'Very much, sir. Yes, very much. The parishioners seem nice. A bit dour, perhaps, but I think that has a lot to do with economics.' Reverend Walker nodded.
'You are quite right. Economics. This used to be a thriving industrial town. Miners settled here from the Lothians and Lanarkshire when coal was discovered. Villages grew from nothing. The pit-owners built rows of houses which became miners' rows. These streets did not have names, only numbers. There was no room for imagination, you see. I believe some areas of Belfast still operate along the same lines. I was born.in Thirteenth Street.' The old man spoke as a schoolmaster to an intelligent pupil. Tve been coming back ever since, watching the village grow, then crumble. Watching decay set in like sugar on a tooth. It has not been pleasant, and the Church has been pretty powerless throughout. The best we've managed so far is to write a history of the parish. That was done by one of my predecessors at Cardell. I've a copy here somewhere. I must lend it to you. It tells how St Cuthbert settled here for a time and set up his church. It should interest you.'
'I'd like very much to read it, Reverend Walker.'
'Call me Alec. Most people do.'
*Very well. And I'm Iain.'
The old man nodded. Well, Iain,' he said, 'will you have another nip?'
Darroch reached his glass over towards his new friend.
'That's very interesting about St Cuthbert, Alec'
'Indeed it is. But then Fife, including Carsden, is a very interesting region. I have several books on the subject.
Really, it's quite a remarkable county. Were you born here?'
'Crail.'
'Oh, a glorious place, a really beautiful place. Of course, the East Neuk of Fife and central Fife are two different worlds. Industry has scooped the heart out of central Fife.
We are living in an empty, echoing place. You may have noticed that?'
'I've noticed the looks in the eyes of some of my neighbours.
In fact, one reason I wanted to see you was to ask you about one of them.'
'Ah yes,' the old man nodded, 'sadness. This was not a sad place, Iain, oh, maybe twenty years ago. But it does not take long to utterly destroy a sense of community. Oh dear, we're getting maudlin.'
Both men sipped their drinks and smacked their lips appreciatively.
"This is excellent whisky, Alec,' said Darroch, embarrassed by his own ingratiating tone. The Reverend Walker nodded.
'The water of life,' he said in all seriousness. 'The Church here, you know, is not what it was. I hope that you may be able to reverse the trend, but I quite doubt it, to be honest.
The congregation of St Cuthbert's was once over three hundred when the population was considerably lower than it is now. My own church has suffered also. We both know that it is a general trend, but it is still appalling. I begin to wonder if this is truly a Godless age. If it is, then we are fools, are we not?'
Darroch reflected upon this. It was an old story, a story that came with the Ark. The Church was in decay, or at the very least relapse. Yet the coffers were full enough in some quarters. Churchmen never went hungry. They were satisfied with their lot. Perhaps there lay the root of the problem.
What if ministers were paid by the number of people they converted per year? The churches would fill, or at least the ministry would try to perform its duties rather than sluggishly conforming to a lazy imitation of them. Darroch quite relished the thought of his reverie turning into reality.
He was guilty of apathy himself, he realised. But now his host was speaking again.
'St Serf turned most of Fife into a Christian area. Prior to that Fifers had been picts, heathens. Much later, Fife was the home of the Seceders, a movement influenced by the teachings of Knox. There was much religious zeal and arguing in Fife at that time. More so than in any other county in Scotland. Coal-mining, it seems, went hand in hand with Christianity. The monks at Newbattle were Fife's first miners. And then Pope Pius the Second visited Scotland in the reign of Jamie the Saxt and was amazed to find beggars at the various churches receiving pieces of black stone as alms. This was coal, of course. According to records, Bowhill Colliery used to employ more men than any other Fife colliery. That was at the beginning of the 1900s, I believe. Bowhill Colliery used to lie towards Cardell. You've probably passed by it. It is still used for coal-washing, when there is not a strike on, but much of the original pit has been demolished. It was a big pit, and the population at that time must have been proud of it. They are still proud people, Iain, but they have lost anything to have a pride in. That's the crux of what's happenin
g here. In some ways, however, I'm glad that we don't depend on mining as much as we used to.
Goodness, how this last strike would have hit us. I can remember the first soup kitchens, back in the days of the General Strike. I was little more than a lad, but it was devastating, and it has left its indelible mark. There are modern soup kitchens now in places like Glenrothes and Cowdenbeath. If we do not realise the full force of modern disputes, then it is because we were in many ways the forerunner of it. Children here run around in gangs and vandalise the shops and paint slogans on the walls. The adults beat each other up on Saturday night and drink too much and have bad marriages. It's a ghost town at nights because there are no amenities.' He sighed and shrugged his shoulders. 'There are social problems here that the Church cannot solve on its own. That's the truth. I apologise for my dejected tone, but it is better not to dream in a place like this.'
Darroch nodded thoughtfully. He sat with his hands folded in an imitation of prayer. 'Would you say then, Alec, that the people here are good in their hearts but have been let down by outside forces such as politics?'
The old man nodded, glass to his lips.
'Then,' continued Darroch, 'could you tell me about the attitude of these good people towards a woman called Mary Miller?'
The old man looked at him, and his gaze forced Darroch to lower his eyes into his own lap. There was a silence so powerful that for the first time Darroch could hear the grandfather clock ticking slowly in the hallway. The old minister sighed.
"That's a long and complex story, Iain. Should I tell it to you?'
'She is a member of my congregation, Alec'
'Then shouldn't she be the one to tell you?'
'But would she tell me? Would you rather I got the story from some biased source?' Darroch had won the point. Alec Walker shrugged his crouched body and settled deep into his armchair.
"Very well,' he said, reaching for the bottle. 'Another refill is needed, I believe. I hope you are a good listener, Iain. This is not the most pleasant of stories.'
2
The dissolution was evident in and around Robbie's eyes.
Sandy could hardly bear to look into those watery, red rimmed pools. It was like gazing into a forbidden bedroom at the terminal patient within. He found a spot on Robbie's shirt collar where the material was fraying and concentrated his eyes there instead.
Robbie was wondering why Sandy had not been up to the mansion recently. The boy shrugged his shoulders and grunted. Robbie nodded his head but still looked at Sandy for an answer. Sandy shrugged again.
'The pressure of life,' he said finally.
'A fucking lot you would know about that, Alexander. A fucking lot.'
Sandy could not get things straight in his mind. This slouching youth was supposed to be evil, the ogre in the fairy story. The princess was being forced to slave for him. Yet Robbie still wore the guise of an innocent. He looked like his sister's keeper, yes, but not her pimp. Sandy was bursting to ask him outright about Rian's accusations. He blushed.
'What pressures of life have you got?' continued Robbie.
'Fuck off, Robbie. Stop talking about it.' This was man's talk; Rian was not present. Swearing was common speech among the men in the town. Some were known to communicate through swear-words alone. There were few words that Sandy did not know.
He had been reading American crime novels for several years. Even serious literature in America used bad language. He was sure he knew words that no one else in Carsden knew. In the coming term, his last useless term at school, he was determined to use bad language in his essays for Andy Wallace. He was determined to register a protest about everything.
Tou started it,' Robbie was saying.
'That's hardly fair.' Sandy managed to sound scoffing.
Robbie shrugged his shoulders. He gazed at his companion, his eyes milky but keen.
'Not long now,' he said, to keep the conversation turning.
In his life, Robbie talked to very few people, and fewer listened. He enjoyed Sandy's company more than he could say, and regarded him as a friend. He could not quite understand the change that had taken place in Sandy recently, but he knew that it had something to do with Rian.
He knew that as well as he knew himself. Sandy seemed determined not to talk about it for the moment, but something in the boy's attitude told Robbie that he would talk about it soon enough, and that the conversation then would not be happy.
They walked quickly, but were held back by the steepness of The Brae. They were walking to Craigie Hill, just beyond Cardell, behind which a quarry was in operation. Craigie Hill was sheer at one side and sloping at the other. The tinkers' encampment was at the base of the sheer side.
Sandy expected that one day a bulldozer would push the whole hillside down on top of the gypsies and their small modern caravans.
He had met Robbie near the school; a chance meeting.
Previously, he had been wary of being seen with him, but the long summer had instilled a sense of carelessness in him, or rather recklessness, and so he walked with Robbie along the town's outskirts. Robbie was going to visit his Aunt Kitty. From her, Sandy hoped he would learn some truth.
Robbie coughed into his cupped hands, than spat noisily into the road.
'Do you feel it getting cooler these days?' he asked Sandy.
The boy shook his head.
'Well,' said Sandy, 'the summer's not over yet. It's a long time since there was any rain. I can't say that I've noticed it cold. Are you feeling all right?'
'Fine, fine. Just a wee summer chill, that's all.' Sandy examined Robbie while he coughed again.
'Are you eating enough, Robbie?' he asked, embarrassed by the sympathy which was evident in his question.
'Oh aye, we eat well enough. We can't really eat hot food though, unless it's from the chip shop. My Aunt Kitty gives me a square meal whenever I visit. Rian's a decent enough cook, but there isn't the - what-do-you-call-thems? the facilities -- in the mansion.'
'Aye.' Sandy nodded his head. He had never known hunger or malnutrition. Hunger to him was the half-hour before lunch, soon appeased. Malnutrition was when his mother forgot the bacon for Sunday breakfast. He was like a fattened chick in a warm nest. Robbie, though, was a scavenger-hunter. He had to make kills if he was to eat, and had to make double the kills in order to feed his young sister. Was that the truth? Sandy could not see truth anywhere. He could see nothing but appearances. Things might or might not be what they seemed. He had written a poem about this problem, based upon a record by a rock group. He hoped to buy the group's new album with the money he would be given on his birthday. His sixteenth birthday was only two weeks away, a week after school restarted. Sixteen. Some things became legal. He could marry. That seemed absurd. He still could not go into pubs.
He had promised himself that on his birthday he would go to Edinburgh by himself on the train. He would spend his money there. It would be an adventure. He had been there with his mother on childhood sightseeing trips, but this would be quite different. He would be sixteen.
It seemed the perfect age. He did not think that he would like to be any older than sixteen, so long as he were still served in pubs.
Finally, at the top of the hill, they came to the encampment - four caravans and a couple of cars set on a patch of derelict ground in the shadow of the sheer rock face. Sandy knew the spot well. He could see it from the playing fields of his school. He knew that the locals had been trying to evict the gypsies ever since they had arrived there some ten months before. He did not know why they had not succeeded, but he knew that the bad feeling towards these people had shifted the balance of intolerance away from his mother, who might well be a witch in the eyes of the town but was still local born and bred and of decent parents.
Sandy felt a pang of sadness. His mother's life had been one of peripheral contact, of balancing on a slender edge between acceptance and outright rejection, never knowing when the scales might perilously tip. It was horrible. She had
no real friends. It was worse than having enemies. He felt his own resentment towards Andy Wallace lifting. It flew into the fine wind that curled around the field. It was scooped up over Craigie Hill itself and deposited in the growling quarry.
The odds, Sandy knew, were against Andy Wallace as surely as they were against his mother. He prayed silently, to a God he was slowly recognising, that they might endure.
'That's my Aunt Kitty,' Robbie said. He was pointing a long arm towards a small, solid woman who emerged from one of the caravans and went behind it. Robbie shouted towards her, into the wind.
Her head appeared round the caravan. She waved, then the head disappeared again. She looked a bit like a rag-doll to Sandy. Her arm seemed a bag of stockings. When she came from behind the caravan, tugging at her patterned dress, Sandy saw that one sleeve of the dress was folded back and, presumably, tied behind her. The arm she had raised in welcome was her only arm. She chuckled now, displaying some black and crooked teeth. Her hair was tight with curlers and pins.
'You beast, Robbie, why haven't you been to see your old auntie before this? I was of a mind to come and see you meself.' There was no kissing, no handshakes. They stood a foot or two apart and smiled. Then she ushered them both towards the caravan. Sandy was having second thoughts. He recalled fairy stories his grandmother had told him. Her fairy stories could not be found in books. They came from her head, as if it were some great repository of knowledge.