Emerald Germs of Ireland - By Patrick McCabe Page 0,4

and have one and then go off about my business.”

Pat winced—imperceptibly to Mrs. Tubridy—as he felt her gloved hand touch the sleeve of his coat.

“But sure Sullivan’s,” she proceeded, “everybody knows … Pat, what would take you in there?”

Pat shook his head and began to laugh as he said to Mrs. Tubridy: “Do you hear me, Mrs. Tubridy—Sullivan’s! Sure I’m not going there at all!”

Mrs. Tubridy nodded as if she had known this all along.

“Don’t I know you’re not, Pat!” she said, adding. “For your mother’d go mad if she thought you went anywhere near that place. Wouldn’t she, Pat?”

Pat’s grin—for he was grinning now—broadened.

“Oh she would!” he cried. “Her and Timmy the barman! Sure they don’t get on at all!”

Mrs. Tubridy pulled at one of the fingers of her glove.

“I know,” she said. “Didn’t she tell me all about it. How is she, anyway, Pat? I don’t remark her at the bingo this past couple of months.”

Pat looked away momentarily. There was a sheep eating a leaf not far from the five-barred gate which was direcctly behind Mrs. Tubridy.

“No,” he said. “She says it’s a waste of money.”

Mrs. Tubridy frowned for a second. Then she looked at Pat and said, “What? And her after scooping all before her only last Christmas?”

“Pshaw! Do you hear me!” interjected Pat. “No, Mrs. Tubridy! She’ll be there next week. It’s that bloody phlebitis. It’s started to play up again.”

“Oh I declare to God!” exclaimed Mrs. Tubridy. “Why didn’t you say so, Pat! Sure I have the liniment in my handbag! I’ll go up this very second and give her a rub down! God love the poor craythur and her up there all on her own! I had it myself, you know! Look! Do you see these veins? Swollen up the size of that, Pat!”

Mrs. Tubridy balled her fist, then continued, “Only for Dr. Horan’s liniment, I was finished! Wait till you see! You won’t know your mother tomorrow when you see her! Good luck now, Pat—I’m away off to administer my own private medicine to her!”

Pat’s voice appeared to ring off a nearby milk churn, partly obscured in the ditch by some whitethorn bushes.

“No!” he cried, his hand curling about Mrs. Tubridy’s arm.

“Pat!” she declared, endeavoring to move backward a little.

Pat, she noted, had turned quite pale.

“You can’t do that!” he cried aloud. ‘You can’t go up there, Mrs. Tubridy! Wasn’t she asleep in the bed when I left and not so much as a peep out of her! You can’t go ringing bells and waking her out of her sound sleep! Not now, Mrs. Tubridy!”

Mrs. Tubridy chucked her sleeve—quite firmly—extricating it from Pat’s grasp.

“Jesus Mary and Joseph!” she curtly responded. “You didn’t have to take the face off me! Amn’t I only saying that I’ll go up and show her the medicine, medicine she’ll thank me for, you can be sure of—”

At an angle, Pat’s voice recoiled off the polished metal of the obscured churn. There was a painted number on it. It was number 22.

“Can’t you give it to her another time? Can’t you give it to her some other day? Why can’t you do that?”

“Of course I can, Pat,” went on Mrs. Tubridy, lowering her head ever so slightly, “Sure I can give it to her any time you like. You don’t have to act like the Antichrist to tell me that!”

Pat’s response was as a dart thudding into the bark of a nearby sycamore tree.

“I have to go to Sullivan’s!” he snapped.

The flesh above the bridge of Mrs. Tubridy’s nose gathered itself into the shape of a small arrowhead.

“I thought you said you weren’t going to Sullivan’s?” she enquired quizzically.

Pat coughed and said, “I’m not!”

Mrs. Tubridy’s expression darkened and a whiteness appeared upon the knuckles of the fingers which clasped themselves about the handle of her bag.

“What goes on in the dim corners of that place you would be hard-pressed to witness in the back alleys of hell!” she said.

Pat raised his voice and replied, “I said—I’m not going to it, Mrs. Tubridy!”

Mrs. Tubridy shook her head.

“I know you’re not, Pat,” she went on, “for your mother has you better reared. She knows better than to let you go gallivanting about the streets of Gullytown. Myself and her know the likes of Timmy Sullivan and those people! Your mother told you all about him, didn’t she, Pat? Sullivan, I mean?”

Now it was Pat’s turn to lower his head.

“Yes, Mrs. Tubridy,” he said.

“Alcoholics!” she cried suddenly. “Alcoholics, whoremasters, and fornicators!