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CHAPTER ONE
I can remember trying to get free of her and follow my Uncle. But the nun held me firmly by the ear lobe and warned me to stop, otherwise I would receive a "good flaking". Three weeks had taught me the meaning of that phrase. I rose cautiously from my bed, rubbed my eyes and cheeks with my knuckles and went towards the window. I stood back, frightened that I might be seen from the yard below. I moved as close to it as I felt it was safe to do. The wall glistened in the sunlight like a million jewels. I pressed my face against the window and watched the approaching train. The sun shone onto its black rounded front like a spotlight. The shiny, black funnel belched out a mixture of smoke and steam that hung above the tender in a large plume of grey and white, and when the colours merged to black and soared into the sky the cloud cast a dark shadow across the grey concrete of the school yard. Behind the glossy tender, the wagons laden with sugar beet rattled along, zig-zagging awkwardly in contrast to the graceful, steady movement of the engine. A screeching of the wheels on the tracks and a loud prolonged hissing brought the engine to a halt. I noticed the sparks made by the wheels as they skidded along, igniting in the dark shadow of the underframe. A final banging of the wagons as each one buffetted into the one ahead of it, then silence. Total silence. Two men in blackened boiler suits jumped cautiously from the tender, stood briefly in the hot sunshine and rubbed their foreheads with a sleeve. Before leaving the train each in turn slapped the great tender on it's belly as a farmer would a cow, or a jockey a horse, a sign of affection, the beast had done her job well.CHAPTER TWO
The children in St. Michaels were divided into two groups, those between six and ten and children under six years of age. I was just over six and so I was regarded as one of the "big boys". As such, I was given charge of a younger child. My "charge" was a small curly headed blonde boy I knew only as Eugene. The day he was put into my "care" Mother Paul told me that I must take good care of him, see that he went to the toilet when he wanted to and ensure that he was kept clean, especially before and after meals. Eugene latched onto me. He annoyed me by following me constantly but if I said anything to him he would start crying. I did everything I could to stop him, he was cute enough to know that I wouldn't want any of the nuns to hear him cry. One day while we were all out in the yard I left Eugene alone to play with a group of boys of my own age. I liked to play priests and altar boys and I treated the game as though it werea an actual religious ceremony. I always regarded it as good training for the day I would become a priest. Halfway through the game Eugene's voice rang in my ears. So did Mother Paul's. I ran to where the child stood. A circle of children had gathered around him. I broke through and saw Eugene standing in a mound of his own excrement and urine. Tears ran in torrents from his pale blue eyes. He was dirty from the tops of his legs to the heels of his boots. Mother Paul screamed at me to clean him up, but before doing that I was to clean the yard. I stood looking at the child, my hand tightly pressed across my mouth to prevent myself from vomiting. My stomach heaving, I ran off to get a bucket of sawdust and a shovel. When I returned Eugene was still standing like a statue, yelling. I dug the shovel into the galvanized bucket of sawdust and scattered it at his feet. Then holding my breath, I told him to move, and when he was out of the way I scooped up the excrement and dumped it into the bucket. Then I took the child by the hand and brought him to the toilet. I had to take off his boots and socks, his jumper and shirt and finally his trousers. As he stood naked with much of his body covered in his own excrement, I vomited onto the cement floor. He became hysterical and to stop him being overheard I slapped my hand across his mouth and begged him not to scream. I cleaned him with some old papers that had been left in the toilet for that purpose. I held my nose with the fingers of one hand and rubbed off as much excrement as I could with the dry newspaper. "Why are you holding your nose?" Eugene asked me.CHAPTER FIVE
In May, 1958 most of the older boys in the school were told to write to a relative. Many of us had never met the people we were being asked to write to, and even if we did, couldn't remember them. The letter writing was pervised by Mother Michael, the nun responsible for our schooling, and their purpose was to ask for a two week holiday away from St. Michael's. All the letters were written under her close supervision. She told me to write to my aunt Mary. I looked at her, surprised. "Don't look so stunned," she said "You do have an Aunt as well as an Uncle." It was three years since I had arrived in the school and though I remembered my uncle, I had never heard of any aunt. Mother Michael wrote a standard letter on the blackboard which she instructed us to copy. The address was in the top right hand corner and the date underneath. "Dear________" she had written, telling us that "the blank line is for you to fill the name of the person to whom you are writing." "Dear Aunt Mary," I wrote, before looking at the blackboard to copy what was written on it. "I hope you are well as I am myself, thank Dog. I would like to come and spend a fortnight with you if you would not mind. I will be good, and do everything I am told. Mother Michael and Mother Paul send you their good wishes. I am very happy here, the Nuns are very good to me. I pray for you every night. I look forward to hearing from you soon, I remain, Your nephew, Patrick. Mother Michael went around checking the letters. She slapped her wooden ruler down on the desk of one of the boys near me. It made a sharp crack which startled the other boys. "Always a capital G for God," she shouted. She picked up my letter, and asked me to spell God . "G.O.D." I answered confidently. She walked to the top of the classroom with my letter in her hand. "This is more of this fellow's clowning," she said. "Not only does he tell lies and bring the school into disrepute, now he has taken to making fun of God Himself." I watched her face redden as she rushed towards my desk. Thinking she was going to hit me, I cowered. She banged her clenched fist on the desk. "Spell God." she demanded again. "G.O.D." I said. She handed me the letter and asked me to read the first sentence. As soon as I looked at it I realized my mistake. I reached for my pen to correct it. "Read," she shouted. "Dear Aunt Mary, I hope you are well as I am myself, thank Dog." Some of the boys laughed, but stopped suddenly when she said there was nothing to laugh about. She referred to what I had written as blasphemy, one of the most serious of all sins. Kneeling at the top of the classroom, I was forced to say an "Act of Contrition" before being given six slaps, three on each hand. Then I collected all the letters and left them on her table.CHAPTER SEVEN
Wait here," Mother Paul ordered, putting her head out the front door to see if the convent car had arrived. Mr. O'Rourke was driving. He opened the door and Pushed the seat forward to allow me in followed by Mother Paul. The drive was only about two or three minutes and when we got to the house the nun asked the driver to wait. When she wasn't looking the old man winked at me through the open window of the car. In the doctor's waiting room a man was contentedly puffing his pipe, sending great clouds of smoke towards the low ceiling. When he saw the nun he took off his hat and saluted her, suggesting that she should see the doctor before he did. She accepted the offer and thanked him, before sitting upright in her chair and crossing her hands on her lap. The old man took a newspaper from his coat pocket and unfolded it.