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Boycott - a word whose meaning is known the world over. But it once belonged to a man. Two brothers, Owen and Thomas Joyce, barely survive the horror of the great famine that devastated Ireland in the 1840s. But it left a lasting effect on both of them. Three decades later they are thrown together during the Land War, when evictions and landlord cruelty reach an intolerable level. But Thomas places his trust in the gun, while Owen backs the passive resistance advocated by the Land League. Captain Charles Boycott, an English land agent in Mayo, becomes the first to suffer this new form of revolt, when he and his family are ostracised. It is a David versus Goliath situation, with Boycott supported by the military, the police, the press, the British Government. How can peasants stand against an empire? And how will the two brothers reconcile their differences and confront their troubled past? A novel of brotherly love and brotherly conflict.
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DEDICATION This book is dedicated to my great-grandparents, Michael and Mary Kennedy, William and Ellen Slattery, John and Margaret Murphy and Thomas and Helen Tyer, all of whom were born in the years immediately after the Great Famine and who survived through harsher times than I can imagine; but particularly to Michael and William, from Wicklow and Tipperary respectively, who were both tenant farmers during the time of the Land War.
I owe a debt of gratitude to a great number of people for their help in writing this novel. Firstly to the people of Ballinrobe and Neale, who, unaware of the nature of my interest in their locality, very helpfully and patiently answered all my questions about their history and pointed me in the right direction as I tramped about their towns and environs with notebook in hand in search of local landmarks. Particular thanks to Mr Gerard M. Delaney of The South Mayo Family Research Centre, Ballinrobe, and Ms Averil Staunton of the Historical Ballinrobe website for their kind assistance in providing biographical information on Father John O’Malley.
It is impossible to create any book without having the benefit of an objective eye, and in this regard I particularly want to thank my sister, Pauline, for her patience in studying the early drafts of my work, line by line, and offering an unflinchingly critical commentary, which was helpful in the extreme. Several others also agreed to give me a critique, and my appreciation for this knows no bounds, as I am aware how difficult it is to wade though a manuscript of over seven hundred loose-leaf pages! So a huge thanks to my wife Grainne, Brendan O’Reilly, Tom Kelly, Donal O’Dea, my father John Murphy and my daughter’s Leaving Certificate English teacher, Siobhan Reynolds. My gratitude also to Simon Stewart of Mountainviews.ie for his advice on historical maps of Ireland.
I am indebted to my editor, Ide ní Laoghaire, for her professional guidance, endless patience and invaluable suggestions. Also to Michael O’Brien of Brandon/O’Brien Press, for taking my novel on board, I will be eternally grateful. I also want to express my gratitude to Emma Byrne for her cover design, along with all the other staff at the press who contributed.
Lastly, I want to thank the people of nineteenth-century Neale and Ballinrobe for giving the world the ‘boycott’, and for writing a substantial amount of my story for me.
Although this is a work of fiction, all of the press and book excerpts that introduce each chapter are genuine, as are the majority of those included in the body of the text, and while I have edited some of them purely for brevity’s sake, I have done my utmost to ensure that I have not altered their substance. All of the events surrounding the Boycott incident in 1880 are a matter of historical record, along with many of the events described in the famine era. Also, many of the tenants who appear in the narrative bear the names of Charles Boycott’s actual tenants, and most of the British Army officers, local shopkeepers, magistrates, process-servers etc are also based on real people.
There is always a danger when re-creating historical figures of either sullying their character or unjustifiably glorifying them. I have based my interpretations of all of the actual historical figures on the evidence that was available to me, although I confess that these are personal interpretations with which others may choose to differ. Some of the characters, such as that of Boycott’s brother, Arthur, and the picture portrayed of Boycott’s father, are composites of several people, which I have expanded on at the end of the book. I have also taken some small licence with one or two minor dates, such as the year of death of Charles Boycott’s father, purely to assist the narrative, but I have tried to keep any apparent ‘inaccuracies’ such as these to an absolute minimum.
In certain cases the present inhabitants of some parts of Mayo or towns such as Ballinrobe may spot what appear to be discrepancies with the locality as they know it today, however landscapes, towns and place names may change considerably in one hundred and sixty years. Besides having thoroughly explored all of the areas in the book on foot, I also used a series of historical maps from the relevant time periods as references, which in some cases show distinct differences from today.
C.C.M.
June 2012
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Author’s note
Part One: Watershed
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Part Two: Odyssey
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Part Three: BOYCOTT
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Historical Epilogue
Bibliography
About the Author
Copyright
PART ONE
The judgement of God sent the calamity to teach the Irish a lesson, that calamity must not be too much mitigated. The real evil with which we have to contend is not the physical evil of the Famine, but the moral evil of the selfish, perverse and turbulent character of the people.
–Sir Charles Trevelyan, civil servant responsible for the administration of relief during the Great Famine (1845-49)
By the side of the cottage’s western wall is a long, newly-made grave; and near the hole that serves as a doorway is the last resting-place of two or three children; in fact, this hut is surrounded by a rampart of human bones, which have accumulated to such a height that the threshold, which was originally on a level with the ground, is now two feet beneath it. In this horrible den, in the midst of a mass of human putrefaction, six individuals, males and females, labouring under most malignant fever, were huddled together, as closely as were the dead in the graves around.
–The Illustrated London News, 13 February 1847
An inquest was held by Dr Sweetman on three bodies. The first was that of two young children whose mother had already died of starvation. Their father’s death became known only when the two children toddled into the village of Schull. They were crying of hunger and complaining that their father would not speak to them for four days; they told how he was ‘as cold as a flagstone’. The other bodies on which an inquest was held were of a mother and child who had died of starvation. The remains had been gnawed by rats.
–Official report from County Cork, 1847
He had encountered the smell many times during his sixteen years. It was one with which his kind had a casual familiarity, living off the land as they did. Their closeness to the earth’s coarse and cold-blooded ways had hardened them to some degree to dismiss such unpleasantries with a wrinkle of the nose and a fleeting frown before moving on. But the boy had never grown used to it, not like the others.
The smell was usually chanced upon in the woods or among the knee-high reeds that grew in wetlands, or in this case in the blossoming heather that dressed and scented the mountainside. If ever one took the trouble to investigate, which wasn’t often, the reward for one’s efforts was to tumble upon some small animal, usually a rabbit or a hare savaged without quarter by a fox or an eagle, its twitching remains then discarded to the mercies of the elements and the maggots. Occasionally the animal was larger, a mountain goat perhaps, although it was years since he’d seen one of those.
A subtle awareness came to him that the smell was somehow different to those he’d encountered before and, although he railed against the notion, he knew his curiosity would inevitably draw him towards its source. He tentatively rounded the small bump that rose from the slope of the mountain and stopped. A barely heard mewl escaped his lips; otherwise he was silent. He just stared.
The youth, by the standards of his peers and elders almost a man, now felt like a small child lost to its mother far from the hearth. The things before him could do him no harm and yet his fear was palpable because somewhere in his jumbling thoughts he could imagine himself coming to a similar end.
He had seen the dead before, of course; by now every Irish man, woman and child surely had witnessed the empty stare of the lifeless, for in some parts of County Mayo they seemed to outnumber the living. Each day or night brought the sound of a keening hag from a hillside or a village, keening that had echoed throughout his own home, and more than once. But death more often now did not involve the normal ritual of wake and funeral. Many had seen the fallen forms of their countrymen and women in the ditches or simply draped across the boreens, left to rot, their sunken eyes pretending to watch one’s approach. Yet his previous experience of the dead had done little to steel him for this sight.
She was perhaps eighteen, not so many years his elder, although it was difficult to tell precisely, but the long black hair that in life would have almost reached her waist suggested a younger woman. God alone knew how long she’d lain here in the heather and the bog water. Her eyes were gone, pecked out by birds, and the obscene hollows in her face held his own gaze transfixed. The condition of her remains was, no doubt, due in part to the elements, but her demise was clearly the result of abject starvation. This had rendered her flesh so thin that it seemed draped on her bones the way a cloth assumes the shape of an object over which it is spread. Her very skeletal structure was defined – cheeks, jaw, ribs, shins. The fine muslin of skin was the colour of a mountain boulder and in places broken, or patchy, revealing dark red matter below. She was clothed in blackened rags that had once purported to be a dress of coarse, dyed wool, but was never more than a peasant’s covering for decency’s sake. Even that decency had now been shed as the gaping holes in the garment exposed her bare, decaying thighs.
But by far the most afflicting aspect of the scene was the child, no more than a withered bag of black wrinkled sacking, its shape barely defining it as human, its tiny form prostrate across its mother’s sagging belly, so recently alive with the promise of new life. The black leathery lips of the baby lay an inch from the shrivelled pouch of its mother’s breast, seeking nourishment that had never come. He couldn’t help but wonder which of them had perished first. He hoped, he prayed to God above that it was the child. The image of the mother dead and the screaming child suckling on her cold and lifeless breast was impossible to bear.
Owen Joyce knew his mind was clinging to reason by a thread and he felt his knees weaken. His thoughts flashed to Sally, his younger sister. He’d often sat by his mother’s side as she had held his sister to her breast and watched with fascination as thread-like jets of mother’s milk had shot out and splashed Sally’s face as she blindly sought to suckle. Sally would gurgle and he would look on in wonder, once squeezing his own nipple to soreness as he tried to create a flow of milk, much to the hilarity of the others.
His mother. Dead now. Like this young mother before him. He finally closed his eyes, swaying on his feet, trying to order his thoughts. Sally. She was why he was here, he remembered, and in the blackness behind his eyelids he saw her, now eleven years old, lying skeletal and incoherent on the straw by the hearth.
He had to find food for her – so he had sworn to his father not an hour ago. His brother, Thomas, had scoffed and been silenced by his father’s glare. But he had set out nonetheless, kissing his sister on her sunken cheek and pushing through the door into the autumn sunlight. And his undertaking had led him here, to a tableau of death at its most execrable. But he needed to hasten to the lough. Sally was alive, this woman and her child were dead. In a year the bog would have consumed them, dust to dust. He turned away and looked at the slope of the hill sweeping down to Tawnyard Lough and Derrintin Lough beyond it. That was his destination. Yet his feet would not obey him. He looked over his shoulder at the girl and child. The truth of it was that he could not leave them here, exposed and naked to the rages of nature without even a holy word to mark their passing. He uttered a miserable sob.
Owen looked around. A few yards beyond the bodies lay a gash in the landscape, a bog hole. It measured maybe four feet long, less than an arm’s length across, and sank no deeper than a man’s thigh. He could see his own gaunt reflection in the mirror-still pool of water at the bottom.
He returned to the bodies and knelt. There was little strength in his limbs, but he suspected the remains had been reduced to near-weightlessness. Wrestling with nausea, he began to lift them both as one. One of the girl’s arms, like a bone wrapped in paper, fell limply on the heather. Her head lolled backwards as he rose and the movement brought what sounded like a sigh from her open mouth, the lifeless breath so rancid it was beyond comprehension. He yelped and stumbled forward, conscious of the movement of her bones beneath the coarse clothing, his revulsion causing him almost to throw the girl’s body into the hole. With an effort of will he pulled stems of heather from the bog and piled the bushy growth over the bodies until they were out of sight. It was a travesty of a burial, he knew, but the best he could fashion. He tried to recall the words he’d heard the priest utter when he’d served as an altar boy, and began to mouth the incantation through the splutters of his sobs.
‘Requiem æternam dona eis Domine. Et lux…et lux…,’ he whispered, but his brain refused to offer up more words and he quickly skipped to the end. ‘Requiescatin pace. Amen.’ He blessed himself. The dead had been cared for as best he could manage; now it was the turn of the living.
Not far below he could distinguish the narrow boreen that skirted Tawnyard Hill. As he neared it he glanced over his shoulder and took in the collection of crudely assembled homes that pimpled the mountain’s face. Among the highest was his own, where his father now wept as he watched the light fade from his only surviving daughter’s eyes. Smoke rose from the hole punched in the rough thatch of heather twigs. None of the other dwellings showed any sign of life. The homes of unworked stone or rough-hewn lumps of turf were mostly empty shells now, the former inhabitants the victims of starvation or violent eviction.
He reached the lowland of the valley and looked out across the fields where the cottage, the place of his birth, had once nestled by the Owenduff River, before they’d been forced to depart to the near-barren higher ground. The original cottage had two rooms, a luxury unheard of, and a window! How bleak a place the world had become since those distant days, he thought, as he felt a shift of wind and stab of pain within his hollow gut.
He began to steer a path around Tawnyard Lough. A mile in length from west to east and once teeming with fish – he had a clear memory as a small boy of spotting an immense brown trout not a few feet from the shore, so close he could almost reach in and scoop it out with his bare hand. His father had taught him how to fish and he had taken to it effortlessly. He’d brought home fat, ambrosial trout occasionally, welcome company for the incessant lumper potato, or sometimes an eel or a coarse, oily fish, unpleasant yet eagerly devoured by all. Thomas, at eighteen his elder brother by two years, would on occasion look with some resentment at the food Owen brought to the table. Within a week Thomas would hunt down a rabbit and exchange it for the family’s adulation, a glint of triumph in his eyes, his status as the first-born restored. Thomas was good at poaching rabbits and hares, even now when they’d almost disappeared. When they’d played together as children, he could always approach Owen from behind and leap on him, forcing him to the ground where they would laugh and roll in the dust. His brother had always been good at sneaking up on him.
Once, though, for his trouble, Thomas had earned a musket ball through his leg, luckily in the fleshy part below his arse – in one side and straight out the other, fired by the gamekeeper, Geraghty, a brute of a Galwayman in the employ of the land agent, Harris. Fortunately, Thomas had managed to flee unrecognised. After he’d fallen through the doorway in blood-soaked britches, been stripped of them and had the ragged hole in his leg scoured and bandaged, their mother had forbidden the two of them to poach game on land or water. The musket ball might just have easily have gone through his head. Owen, then aged ten, had asked his father why a man such as Harris or the landlord who paid him, Lord Lucan, would deny them the meagre extra bite of wild meat or fish when they themselves already possessed wealth beyond Owen’s imagination. His father had sighed and looked into the orange flames dancing in the ingle. ‘Because, Owen, to the likes of them, we’re little more than wild meat ourselves.’ He hadn’t understood, and when he began to press, his mother had shushed him and ushered him to the straw bed across the smoky room. He had lain there alongside Thomas, Bridget and Sally and stared across the gloom at his silent mother and father, the flickering light betraying the fear on their features. In that moment he had a foreboding that some repugnant shadow would soon engulf them.
Owen rounded the sharp, easterly point of Tawnyard Lough, now all but barren of fish, its cold, deep waters exhausted of life by the numberless starving who had plucked its fruits so abundantly that no seed remained to replenish it. The tiny Derrintin Lough beyond it offered more hope, its relative remoteness from the roads a disincentive to the weak. Despite this, even its waters had been fished near to futility. Yet he had hope.
He reached the Owenduff River, which laboured to drain the two loughs of their water against the constant replenishment of the West of Ireland’s rains. He waded in, the water shallow in late August but the cold still biting through his britches. His balls and pócar (his ‘poker’, as Thomas called it) shrivelled to aching tightness as the leathery soles of his feet carried him across the stony riverbed. He clambered out on the bank and rested a moment, allowing himself to be soothed by the whispers of the lazy waters.
He looked again along the valley where his home had once stood. The land hadn’t always been in the ownership of Lord Lucan. He’d acquired it from another of his peers, Lord Faulks, Earl of Somethingshire in England, he couldn’t recall exactly. A place of plenty, he imagined, where people dwelled in splendid homes of granite and glass, where the wood of the tables couldn’t be seen for the abundance of food. At least that was the picture his father and Thomas had painted for him in recent times, their visions inspired by burgeoning bitterness.
Lord Faulks hadn’t been the worst, although word had it the nobleman had never set foot in Ireland, inheriting the estate of two thousand acres from his father. It was a small estate by the standards of many of his kind. Lord Lucan had sixty thousand acres, it was rumoured. Faulks, a young man of education, was said to have been more interested in botany or biology or one of the new fields of science that were now the subject of much study in England. Life as a tenant of his had been no fairytale, but his rents were fair and any improvements to a tenant’s lot brought about by his own efforts remained his own property. They had ten acres then, sufficient to exist beyond subsistence. After rent obligations had been fulfilled and mouths fed, the surplus lumpers could be sold for grain or even to buy a chicken or a pig. They’d had five or six chickens running about the house at one time, he remembered, although the taste of an egg was by now lost to his memory. Then Faulks decided to sell and Lord Lucan had emerged as the buyer. They were exchanging one preposterously moneyed lord for another. Unlikely ever to set eyes on him either. Their just-bearable lives would progress unperturbed, no better, no worse.
Then Harris had arrived, Lucan’s land agent and the estate’s overseer. Most of Lucan’s vast holdings at that time were in the north of Mayo, around Castlebar. When the tenants met in the secret hollows of the mountain to sip their poteen, words were uttered of Lucan’s ruthlessness. Around Castlebar they called him ‘The Exterminator’. He’d put thousands on the roadside, left them to rot without batting an eyelid. Likely he would do the same here. The men shivered as they pulled their coats against the wind – and the fear that the whispers about Lucan spoke the truth.
At that time over twenty homes stood in the valley. All gone now, no sign even of a single stone atop another to mark the fact that people had once lived here: farmers had toiled, children had run about, families had eaten, songs were occasionally sung. Then the eviction crews had come, constables accompanied by hired thugs, bringing their machines of destruction, descending on the people, burning the thatch from over their heads, levelling the walls to the sound of screaming women and crying children, impotent looks on the faces of the men, shamed before their womenfolk.
They’d all been given a choice. They could each have plots on the mountainside, four acres apiece, rent the same as they currently paid for ten of fertile land. Or else they could have nothing. Some chose the latter, especially those with many mouths to feed. Four acres of soggy turf couldn’t grow food for ten people. They’d taken the boat to faraway places, America mostly. God alone knows what became of them. A handful of the farmers had elected to stay, too long a part of the place to imagine a life beyond. Since then their four acres had become three, then two, as Lucan sought to subdivide the holdings, increase his tenantry and still extort his rents. A single Scot, Buchanan by name, was leased the land where twenty families once lived. Then the land was given over to pasture; it was more profitable.
Rested, Owen shook the memory away and moved on. He soon reached Derrintin Lough, two jagged-edged ponds of water joined in the middle by a narrow channel, near the centre of which sat a tiny elongated island, which was more a lump of rock with a dusting of earth and a canopy of stunted trees and shrubs. The tiredness in his legs gave him pause as he looked into the peaty brown water. His limbs had been feeding upon themselves for months now, their fat burned away, languid muscle over bone all that remained. A frog croaked, masquerading somewhere nearby as grass or moss. He looked about, seized a stick and studied the reedy grass. It sat immobile, barely visible against the lush growth, alert for predators. A hind leg moved almost imperceptibly, ready to spring. The rotting stick came down on its head even as it rose into the air towards the water and it fell twitching onto the ground. He sank to his knees, grabbed it by the hind legs and held it up before his eyes. A tiny nodule of blood clung to the creature’s shattered head. He shoved in into his mouth whole, bit, crunched, closed his eyes. No taste, just texture, liquid and solid, sinew and slime. It filled his mouth, spilled from his lips. He pawed at his jaw to shove the escaping tissue back in. A lump went down his throat, painfully, as his gullet had narrowed through lack of use, and he coughed, scrambling forward to the water on his knees. Cupped hands impulsively splashed the water towards his mouth, dousing the sudden awareness of his own revulsion. He hunkered back, panting and staring into space as his stomach got to work consuming the unfamiliar meat.
It was only fifty feet, maybe less, to the island. As a boy he could have swum there and back ten times over. Not now. But to fish from the shore would prove worthless and dangerous as fishing and hunting on Lucan’s property was strictly forbidden. Nearby, a large lump of driftwood knocked gently against a boulder. He looked about for other people but the landscape was devoid of human life. He pulled the small pouch of rabbit hide from his pocket and tied it around his neck, stripped naked and threw his threadbare shirt, jacket and pants away towards drier ground. He pushed the log out with his toe and plunged into the water. He gasped and spluttered, clinging to the log with a stick-like arm, his nerves rebelling against the outrageous cold. He had to get moving, warm himself from the inside out. His free arm reached and pulled, reached and pulled, his legs kicking, propelling him sluggishly outward. It took him ten minutes. He scrambled up and beat his arms about him in the warm August sun, then hurried through the trees and the shrubs towards the eastern tip of the islet.
Owen emerged and looked into the black depths of the water. For months in this spot he’d baited the fish, a trick his father had taught him: maggots were frequently cast into this dark pool at the isle’s tip, giving the fish a taste for them, drawing them to the spot. He retrieved the long straight wooden pole he’d secreted behind a rock. It was wrapped about with his mother’s strongest thread; a bent pin was his hook. From the pouch around his neck, he spilled a handful of maggots. As he busied himself with the line he imagined his family back in their tiny cottage, his father, brother, sister, the only ones left now, probably cursing that he hadn’t returned with food. In so many ways he felt he’d been a disappointment to his father. Couldn’t dig a potato pit for all his worth. Cut the turf too thickly. Thatching not tight enough. Too weak to lift a rock. Run home to your mother. Hide your face inside a book. It’s all you’re good for.
His father had never said any of these things to him but Owen could hear him saying the words behind his furrowed brow. And then his father would turn to Thomas. Give your brother a hand, Thomas, he would say. Thomas wearing a crooked grin as he sauntered across the hillside. ‘Made an arse of it again, spalpeen?’ And he would ruffle his younger brother’s hair, Owen shrugging him off. Yet he loved Thomas deeply.
He set aside the plumpest half-dozen maggots and cast the rest into the water, watching as they twirled and faded one after another into the darkness, then skewered one of the others on to the hook and exhaled some warm breath on the tiny doomed thing. It immediately began to wriggle furiously, as though brought to life again by his breath. He quickly cast the line while the maggot convulsed; its death dance would hopefully prove irresistible to the prey. He sat and studied the water, his naked legs dangling over the edge of the rock, and prayed that God would look kindly on his endeavour.
Until the moment when Owen’s mother, Honor, died early in ’46, he’d never seen his father weep. Weakened by childbirth and hunger, Honor faded before their eyes into a tattered rag. Patrick, the infant, had somehow survived, but only briefly. Barely nine weeks passed before they had laid him too in the earth, his father questioning God’s reasoning for bringing the child into being at all.
But their father had eschewed bitterness, remained stoical. He refused to entertain any rebellious inclination towards their British rulers or resentment at their landlord or his minions. It was the early days of the famine then and many persevered in the hope that the next potato crop would bring an end to their misery. Battling with his pride, he reluctantly accepted so-called ‘outdoor relief’, nourishment provided mostly by the Quakers in the form of soup kitchens. Then the Poor Law known as the ‘Gregory Clause’ (the ‘Gregory Curse’ to the peasantry) had dictated that this relief would be denied to any cottier holding more than a quarter of an acre of land. The Government had effectively given them a choice: give up your land or starve. It was believed far and wide that this clause was simply a means of facilitating the eviction of tenants so landlords could grow more profitable cash crops or turn land to pasture. Michael Joyce refused to surrender his land, clinging to the hope that they would turn a corner. And despite their misery he had resisted recourse to hatred. The British hadn’t brought the potato blight. Some malevolent twist of nature had thrust it upon their heads. And their treatment at the hands of the landlords was simply the lot of their kind the world over. Thomas became increasingly deaf to his father’s pronouncements. And the truth was that Owen couldn’t suppress his own resentment at their predicament.
Then his sister Bridget had taken ill the previous September, in the third year of the blight. The fever. Typhus, they called it. Too weak to do battle with the sickness, she had lain on the straw, by turns wailing in a tortured screech, shivering, sweating, shielding her eyes from the dim light. Each of them had cried at her side as they had listened and clasped her hand. Thomas had become enraged and dared to charge his father with finding some help. But his father hadn’t rebuked him or struck him, he’d simply stared back across the smoky space for some minutes before departing into the fading evening light.
He returned some hours later and, with unmasked impertinence, Thomas asked where the hell he’d been. His father struck him with the back of his hand and then immediately sought to comfort his eldest born, a gesture shunned by Thomas.
Owen knelt over Bridget’s prone form and spoke through tears. ‘She’s weak, Father. The pox has spread everywhere. Look at her legs. And she can’t breathe.’
Michael Joyce stared at them and spoke with rage bitten down in his words. ‘I went to see Harris, to plead for help. When he learned that Bridget had the fever he drew a pistol and threatened me. Geraghty escorted me beyond the gates. He told me not to return. And he said to make sure “I burned the bitch’s body.”’
A snarl forming on Thomas’s face withered before it could rise, as Owen, conscious of a stirring in his sister’s body, uttered her name aloud. Bridget whimpered and turned her head. She opened her eyes and smiled at Owen, then drew another tortured breath, the last of her twelve years of life.
The two boys sensed a shift within their father, deprived now of his wife, his infant son and his eldest daughter, a re-ordering of the rules that defined his world. He would mumble to himself that God had tested his faith beyond endurance. In those lightless days after they laid Bridget into the earth, it seemed that in his father’s mind a more basic law superseded even those of God, that of survival.
It was October and winter was approaching. Once again the blight had turned their crop of potatoes to a fetid mush and the unfamiliar turnips had been ignorantly sown, their yield a fraction of that expected. Their meagre rations would hold out a month if they were lucky. Owen had been fishing from that same favourite spot in Derrintin Lough when his father had appeared from nowhere, a hundred yards away on the northern shore. He’d been on the point of calling out, but something checked him. Owen recognised that, like a timorous animal, his father was skulking. Crouching and watching, he saw Michael Joyce pull an object from beneath his jacket, grip it with both hands, pivot and swing, sending whatever it was twirling skyward, defining an arc towards the lough’s glassy surface, the crisp hiss of the splashing water reaching his ears a moment after the event, the object lost to man’s knowledge in the inky blackness of the lough.
His father fell to his knees as he pulled off his coarse woollen jacket and plunged it into the water, then his shirt, every action punctuated by a glance over his shoulder. He washed his face and splashed water on his bony chest. Owen puzzled most at the washing of his hands. If he did it once he did it six times, each time studying his palms as though for some unyielding stain. His father finally wrapped his face in his palms and across the stillness of the water, Owen shivered as the sound of sobbing reached him. He knew then that whatever malign stain troubled his father, it was not to be found on his hands.
For days after, his father was withdrawn, residing in some dark recess of human existence. And unexpectedly there was meat on the table. Boiled in the pot, a thin, flavourless broth, but greeted with jubilance. The broth was produced first on the very evening that Owen had seen him by the lough. He’d been to Drummin, he’d said, three miles to the north, a fair hike on matchstick legs and a hollow stomach. He’d bartered some venison from a traveller in exchange for an old ring. Owen thought better of questioning the implausibility of this. It seemed inconsequential when set next to the feeling of food in one’s belly. Michael Joyce warned them that the subject of the meat was not to be discussed with their neighbours; desperate people, he’d muttered, were capable of anything, violence even. Owen remembered his father’s eyes seeking those of Thomas as he said this, the pair sharing a brief conspiracy of thought.
A local found the gamekeeper Geraghty a week later, his body dumped beneath Tullynafola Bridge over the Glenlaur River, not a mile away. Word was about the hillside that Harris’s lackey had been beaten to death with his own musket.
Four constables turned up the next day in their flat caps and dark green uniforms. The landowners harboured fears of a surge in agrarian attacks and the return of the scourge of the Ribbonmen. The Irish Constabulary had been charged with ferreting out any so-called secret agrarian societies and stringing them from on high as an example. The policemen dismounted as Michael Joyce met their eyes, then answered their questions. They searched their home, Sally looking up at them with vacant eyes as the men overturned the family’s meagre possessions and held lanterns into every crevice. Michael Joyce stood stock-still and watched. The boys waited outside. The constables had been looking for the musket, Owen learned later. Find it and they find their man. But their search proved fruitless and they moved on to the next dwelling along the hill.
They subsequently learned from neighbours that the constabulary believed Geraghty had stumbled upon a poacher, had fired and missed, and the murderer had overcome him before he could reload. The attack had been frenzied. Some said Harris’s gamekeeper had been struck twenty times. An unhinged mind moved among their community. A lunatic. A savage.
The subject of Geraghty was never spoken of again. To the land agent, Harris, his gamekeeper’s death had been an inconvenience, nothing more. An Englishman, Burrell, had taken Geraghty’s place. No one was arrested, although the constabulary did question a man by the name of Pádraig Walsh from up the valley, a suspected Ribbonmen sympathiser. But he had an alibi and no other evidence had revealed itself.
It had been a bitterly cold winter, but somehow they’d all survived. It was during this baleful period, a week shy of Christmas, that a pair of kindly Quakers appeared at their door on horseback. Owen had heard that the Quakers and others like them were often willing to provide food to the hungry for the price of their religious beliefs – to fill their bellies they must first empty their hearts of the Catholic faith and embrace Protestantism. The priest, Fr Lally, had recently warned them to resist all such temptation; it was better in the eyes of God to endure the pangs of hunger than to renounce one’s faith for a bowl of soup. When the priest departed, his father spat on the floor behind the clergyman, to Owen’s shock.
Yet these two Quakers made no such demands. They urged Michael Joyce to hasten to Westport workhouse or his children would surely perish. He responded that he would rather see them perish than watch their last grain of dignity stolen in such a place, begging for scraps of mercy thrown on the ground by an institution of the British Crown. The two Quakers shook their heads and handed his father a small sack of oats, not charity of the British Crown they hastened to mention, but a gift from their society on the occasion of their mutual Saviour’s birth. Michael Joyce had looked at Thomas, Owen and Sally, standing shivering outside their dwelling in the crisp December air, then nodded and gratefully accepted the oats.
As the months had passed his father became more and more withdrawn. Their financial debt to Harris had long since passed beyond their means ever to repay it. This year’s payment was almost due and there was no potato crop to meet it, let alone to feed them. Bridget’s death had finally broken his father. Whatever last sparks of forbearance and restraint he had within him had been stamped out. His bitterness smothered his grief. The English race were bastards all, rich and poor alike, commoner and king. The Irish, their subjects, were mere chaff in their realm. Each day tons of grain were transported from Ireland’s shores while her people starved or were driven onto emigrant ships. As Ireland’s people had known for centuries, Michael Joyce spouted, the English only understood one language when it came to Ireland, that of the pike and the sword and the pistol. And Thomas had listened with eager ears as each spit of venom had spewed from his father’s lips. Owen had felt only fear.
When Geraghty had died, Owen’s fears seemed to be realised. Michael Joyce’s vitriol had finally taken form. From the moment Owen learned of the manner of the man’s death, he suspected that what he’d witnessed that day at the lough was his father disposing of the murder weapon – and a new sense of dread overtook him. His father, and by association his family, had crossed a line – on one side of which they were victims, on the other transgressors, sinners, murderers even. As he recalled the twirling musket fracture the glazed serenity of the lough’s surface, his own innocence was shattered. The water had settled and regained its placid form, but he feared the disquiet in his own heart would ripple on to the end of his days.
The water rippled again now and he awoke from his reverie. The air had chilled and the sun was low in the valley behind him. The fishing line twitched and darted to and fro. He played out some slack and allowed the fish a momentary illusion of freedom before he began to ease the creature towards the surface. Gently he gathered the line, looping it about his hand until finally he caught sight of the fish’s frenetic struggling. As it broke the surface he heaved upwards. The fish arced through the air and landed, flapping, a few feet away on a boulder. He’d landed a bream, barely a pound in weight. He quickly unhooked the line, re-baited it and cast, hopeful the fish had been one of a school. The sun was dipping and he still had to make his way back up the hillside, but one fish would not suffice.
An hour later and twilight had coloured the valley red. He had just crossed the boreen with his paltry catch of the bream and a small, glistening eel concealed under his jacket, when the distant sound of a scream pricked his ears. His gaze was drawn to the sight, up the valley, of black smoke creeping skywards and lingering in a brooding cloud. He understood immediately what it meant. Evictions. Harris, Burrell and their men were throwing the cottiers onto the mercies of the world. He was pondering with dread how many weeks it might be before they themselves were evicted when a voice startled him.
‘Please sir. Please, in the name o’ God help me.’
The frail female voice froze him to the spot. His first fleeting thought was that no one had ever addressed him as ‘sir’ before. He looked back to the track where a woman had risen from behind a rock. For a moment he believed God or Satan had again given life to the pitiful wretch he’d buried on the hillside earlier that day and felt a trickle of piss gliding down the inside of his leg. She was about thirty and wore the familiar mask of the wasted, along with a black scarf and a ragged dress of dark blue. In her bare arms she clutched a child of maybe six. The woman moved towards him with a pitiful gait, each step steeped in pain. He stood still.
‘They’ve thrun us out…everyone…me home. This little one is all I have left. Me babies are dead. Me husband, he went te England te work. Please have mercy,’ she wept.
‘I can’t help you, I’ve nothing.’
‘Please, sir, please, I beg ye. Tim went te England. Their harvest is near done now. He’ll be home with money and I’ll repay any kindness.’
‘I haven’t anything.’ He turned to leave.
The woman’s wail pitched higher, panic hastening her words. ‘Please, if we can only get te Westport. He’ll come. She’ll die soon if I don’t feed her. Me name is Maebh Connor. Maebh Connor. From Glenummera, up yonder. Maebh Connor.’
Owen tried to compel himself to flee but couldn’t manage it.
‘Maebh Connor,’ she whispered again, her voice losing hope. She sank to her knees and with horror he believed she was about to grovel for his charity, but instead she simply sat back on her heels and rested her head against her daughter’s.
Owen realised he could hear his own breathing. He glanced over his shoulder up towards his home and then pulled the tiny eel from its hiding place.
‘This is all I have.’
She looked up at the proffered food, reached out and snatched it. Owen watched as she bit directly into the raw flesh. She chewed and spat the mush into her hand, then began to push the half-chewed fish between the child’s lips. The girl moaned and coughed, parted her lips and allowed her mother press the morsels onto her tongue.
‘I have to go.’
He turned away and set off up the hill as quickly as his bony legs would permit. He thought he heard the woman call something out to him, but it was carried away on the cool evening breeze that accompanied him up the hillside.
As he approached the cottage through the deepening gloom, he could spy the flickering of a candle between the cracks in the half-rotted wooden door. With pride, he pulled the fish from beneath his jacket and held it aloft as he stepped through.
Thomas sat by the far wall, Sally cradled in his arms. His father sat on their sole three-legged stool, staring blankly into the empty hearth. Owen felt an instant chill as he stepped into the space, his arm slowly drooping as though the weight of the fish was too much to bear.
‘She’s gone,’ Thomas said.
‘But I’ve brought food,’ Owen said pathetically, as if that could right anything. His father never stirred.
‘She died an hour ago.’ Thomas hugged his sister tighter as though afraid someone would steal her from him.
The string slipped unknowingly through Owen’s fingers, the fish making a slapping sound against the hardened earth of the floor.
Thomas sniffed, stroking Sally’s matted hair. ‘You should have been here.’
‘I went to get food.’
Thomas looked up and Owen saw rage in his brother’s eyes. ‘She liked you the best. And ye ran away.’
Owen fell to his knees and reached out to touch his dead sister. ‘I went to find food,’ he pleaded, tears spilling freely down his face.
‘Ye left her dyin’ te us,’ his brother muttered bitterly.
‘I didn’t. I–’
‘No food could have saved her. Ye knew she’d be dead when ye came back.’
‘Why are you saying that? I wouldn’t have gone if–’
‘She was callin’ for ye.’
Owen wept bitterly. ‘Sally…’
Michael Joyce spoke then without turning his head or raising his eyes. He continued to stare into the blackened ashes of the hearth.
‘We’ll bury her in the morning,’ he said.
Achill Island is a treeless place. There are mountains beyond mountains lying against the sky, heather clad or mossgrown; there are small lakes lying at the foot of mountains or between mountains; there are dreary expanses of bog stretching for miles on each side of the road between us and the mountains, and rising out of the bog are wee bits of fields and most horrible habitations.
–The Letters of ‘Norah’ on Her Tour Through Ireland, Margaret McDougall, 1882
I may mention that Mr Boycott is a Norfolk man, the son of a clergyman, and was formerly an officer in the 39th Regiment. On his marriage he settled on the Island of Achill, and farmed there until he was offered some land agencies. After some twenty years’ residence in Achill, he elected to take a farm on the mainland.
–Bernard H Becker, special correspondent of The Daily News, October 1880
Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott dismounted his bay thoroughbred and landed on the Achill earth with a jubilant bounce, turning to observe as his brother, Arthur, galloped to a sliding stop ten yards away.
‘Major Boycott, I believe I was twelve the last time you defeated me,’ he laughed, face bright with the flush of victory.
Arthur, effulgent in his uniform of scarlet tails adorned with golden epaulets, shared the lightness of the moment and chuckled as he dismounted.
‘You truly are a scoundrel, Charles. You knew full well when you challenged me that my Hanoverian was no match for your beast. This is an army horse, not a racehorse.’
Annie Boycott watched from the window as her husband Charles, Arthur’s younger brother by two years, became incensed, the grin rushing from his face, shoulders sitting back as though an affront had been done to him. In the two years since their marriage she’d witnessed his abrupt mood swings and bouts of temper only too often.
‘Are you suggesting I cheated?’
Annie was pleased to observe that Arthur’s ebullient good humour doused the spark of Charles’s emotion, as he slapped him on the shoulder and bellowed a hearty laugh.
‘Charles, you really do take these things too seriously.’
A young stable hand approached and loitered, his cap clutched in front of his waist, eyes to the ground, clothing threadbare and filthy. Eventually Charles became aware of his presence and handed him the reins, barking something at the youth that was unintelligible to Annie, although she did notice a grimace flit across Arthur’s face. They turned and approached the house and, anxious not to be observed peeking, Annie retreated, as quickly as her heavily pregnant form would permit, towards an armchair. She gathered her crochet things and looked up in feigned surprise as they entered the room.
‘Annie!’ Arthur roared, never a man to observe strict formalities. He held his arms wide as he strode across the room, Annie requiring both hands to push herself up as she rose to greet him. Her brother-in-law was a broad-shouldered, tall man, quite unlike her husband, yet his embrace was gentle and considerate of her condition. She laughed at his jollity and the refreshing air of honesty with which he could fill a room. She had been so looking forward to his visit. Even the limited social contact she’d had on Achill had been curtailed as her pregnancy advanced, and the brightness of Arthur’s character would provide a pleasant contrast to Charles’s reserve.
‘My, oh my, Arthur. A major, no less.’
‘Oh never mind me, look at you! As beautiful as ever you were. I believe that the Atlantic air has made you sixteen again.’
Annie sat, blushing despite herself. ‘Sixteen indeed. More like a basking shark.’
Charles tapped his cane against the floor. ‘Enough of this nonsense, Arthur. You and your smooth tongue. It caused you no end of trouble with Father.’
‘I know it only too well, Charles.’
Charles yanked the cord to summon the housemaid, Deirdre, who appeared promptly.
‘Bring tea for Mrs Boycott and a decanter of brandy, girl.’
Deirdre curtsied and fled without a word, and Arthur raised his eyebrows at the sharpness in his brother’s voice. Annie dropped her gaze from his and pretended to straighten the folds of her dress over her knee.
Both men took armchairs, Charles sitting forward, his cane clutched upright between his feet. His face was suddenly alive with anticipation.
‘So, Arthur. How was it? The Crimea, I mean?’
Arthur’s boyish grin vanished. ‘Really Charles, I don’t wish to be rude, but if you don’t mind I’d rather not discuss the war. Perhaps another time.’
Charles looked at Annie in search of support for his mild indignation but she quickly turned away and regarded Arthur from the edge of her vision. She was aware that twenty thousand young British men had perished in that terrible war, many through tactical blundering. She rushed to move the conversation along.
‘How is Emily? She must be a young lady by now?’ Annie asked of the men’s sister.
Arthur’s smile returned. ‘Sixteen and very pretty. Quite the book reader. I believe she wishes to pursue a profession.’
‘How wonderful.’
‘Absolute rot. Father would have no time with such nonsense. I hope you’ve done your level best to dissuade her, Arthur.’
‘Charles. I’ve been away for two years. And Father has gone to his heavenly reward. So I’m afraid if Emily, or William or Frances for that matter, decide on a thing there’s little to be done. Anyway, it’s not so rare these days, women taking a profession.’
Charles grunted dismissively. ‘Where is that maid?’
‘I’m afraid Charles doesn’t like change. He believes in “the constancy of order”, as he calls it,’ Annie remarked.
‘And I’m right!’
A gentle rapping on the door preceded Deirdre’s entry. After a sharp reprimand from Charles for her slowness, she skittered away, tears near to the surface. Annie closed her eyes, fearful they would lose Deirdre, not least because she might need the girl’s help as the day of the child’s birth drew near, but also because they’d gone through four maids since their marriage.
‘Do you know, Annie, I still cannot quite believe that my scoundrel of a brother persuaded a girl of your beauty to marry him. How on earth did he accomplish it?’ Arthur said, handing Annie a cup of tea.
Annie laughed unconvincingly and dropped her gaze. She’d had occasion herself to wonder how he’d accomplished it. The truth of it was that while she had found some degree of contentment in her marriage, it was far from the fulfilling relationship of which she’d dreamt. His regiment had been posted to Queen’s County, where she had then lived with her parents, and she had been first attracted to his uniform, his gentlemanly ways and his ambition. Her parents had thought him a fine prospect from a respectable background and so their influence had hastened her up the aisle at the age of nineteen, quite before she’d known where she was.
She forced herself to enthusiasm. ‘Oh, you’d be surprised how charming he was. And he promised me that one day we’d be like a lord and lady of our very own manor. What girl could resist?’
The talk turned to the intervening years since Arthur had last seen them on their wedding day. Arthur’s good spirits were infectious and Annie became effusive in telling humorous tales of their honeymoon in France and Italy. Her enthusiasm betrayed the remembered excitement of young lovers first granted the freedom to indulge their passions and she reddened a little when she glimpsed the smile on Arthur’s lips. Yet the memory of those very early days was precious to her, when Charles had for once surrendered his innate reserve and opened his heart, at least a little, and in that respect the honeymoon was wonderful, new experiences of the mind and body tripping over themselves to delight, terrify and educate her.
Through all of this Charles sat with a vaguely embarrassed expression, yet Annie could tell that there was a hint of pride in his occasional dismissive grunts, a satisfaction taken that he, the younger and less handsome sibling, was capable of impressing a woman so. Such was the nature of men, of boys, certainly of brothers.
‘And how did you find things when you returned to, well, to this remote outpost of the empire?’ Arthur smiled, unfastening the top buttons on his tunic.
‘Well, I have to say that I was startled at the energy with which Charles set about the business of managing this estate, such a passion to succeed. Isn’t that right, Charles?’
She was keen to entice him into the conversation, as she was fearful of being too open, he being of such a private nature. But on this occasion he seemed keen to impress.
‘Well, I’ve always believed that if one wishes to succeed in an enterprise one must devote oneself to it with discipline and single-mindedness. Two thousand acres and sixty tenants demands a great degree of dedication.’
‘Sounds like the Charles I’ve always known,’ Arthur chuckled.
Charles rose with a decisive tap of the cane. He pulled his watch chain free of his jacket. ‘And on that subject it’s almost six o’clock and I still have work to do. If you’ll forgive me, brother, I’ll leave you in the good hands of my wife.’
Arthur rose and Charles snapped a military salute as though still a captain, a position he’d vacated three full years ago. Arthur returned the gesture and his brother spun on his heels and exited without further exchange.
‘Charles still pines for his days in the army, I’m afraid.’
‘Still wants to play at soldiers,’ Arthur said reflectively as he watched his brother through the window, marching with purpose down the path. He turned to Annie, his expression abruptly serious. ‘It can’t have been easy for you, these last few years.’
Annie stiffened a little, then shrugged away his concern. ‘Achill? Oh I know it’s remote, but it’s very beautiful. Just wait until you see the cliffs at Croaghaun. They truly are spectacular, highest in Europe some say. And Moyteoge Head is …’
‘I’m not just referring to the island, Annie. I do hope Charles has been…’ he stumbled over his words and Annie guessed he was about to drift into a well-meaning, but ill-judged heart-to-heart about their marriage and feared she might find herself in a position of acute embarrassment. She struggled to rise before Arthur could continue.
‘Arthur, if you don’t mind, I need to lie down for a time. If you would call Deirdre for me and perhaps assist me towards my room, she’ll see to your needs.’
‘Of course. You’re worn out trying to entertain a fool soldier.’
‘On the contrary, Arthur, I’m so pleased you’re here. Charles is away from the house so frequently that when he returns I think for a moment a stranger has entered my home,’ Annie said jokingly.
‘Yes. I can understand that,’ Arthur replied, but the smile, she noted, was absent from his tone.
Deirdre helped her to undress and she lay on the bed in her chemise, relieved to be free of the constrictions of her clothes; though they were designed for maternity wear, fashion and decorum still demanded a certain rigidity. The maid then arranged a jug of water and a bowl on the dresser and checked that the bourdaloue was conveniently placed beside the bed. Annie observed the girl as she fussed about without comment, gaze perpetually fixed in a downward slant. She was a timid, homely girl with a coarse complexion, and was missing several teeth. And despite being relatively well fed in her capacity as housemaid, she remained as thin as a rake, a legacy of a childhood lived during the famine.
‘Thank you, Deirdre. That will be fine. Please go and inquire if our guest needs anything before preparing dinner.’
Deirdre curtsied silently and turned to leave.
‘Deirdre…’
The girl stopped in the doorway.
‘Deirdre…please don’t become too upset when Mr Boycott raises his voice.
He doesn’t mean any harm. It’s his army training, you see…he…’ she was at a loss where to go, unsure even that she should make excuses for Charles with a servant, yet she was keen to retain Deirdre’s services. The maid gave an uncomfortable nod, then withdrew.
Annie heaved a sigh and closed her eyes, opening them an instant later in response to a kick from within. She pulled up her chemise, exposing her drawers and the taut curve of her pregnant form. Her hand felt cool against the warm skin as she searched for contact with the unborn child. And there it was again. A gentle tap beneath her palm. Her own flesh and blood, not yet born to the world yet reaching out to her. Annie’s smile turned to an audible laugh and then almost as quickly to a sob, yet she was at a loss to tell if she felt happiness or sadness. Her emotions had been chaotic these past months, but the doctor had assured her that during pregnancy a woman’s mood was apt to shift with the frequency of the Achill winds.