A Reading Life Special Event
"Out of the Blue" by Eddie Stack - A Short Story
Irish Short Story Month Year III
"Out of the Blue" by Eddie Stack - A Short Story
Irish Short Story Month Year III
March 1 to March 31
Eddie Stack
Dublin
In an act of supreme generosity Eddie Stack has sent me 22 short stories to post for Irish Short Story Month. I offer him my great thanks for this. I intend to share all of these short stories with my readers. He is a master story teller with a deep understanding of Ireland.
Press comments on his work
Press comments on his work
Praise for Eddie Stack’s writing
"Mr. Stack's fiction is versatile and engaging...a vivid, compassionate, authentic voice...securing (him) a place in the celebrated tradition of his country's storytelling.”
New York Times Book Review
“This second collection of short stories by Eddie Stack has a wonderful sense of unreality, of weirdness among Irish characters and of downright fun.”
Irish Emigrant
“Eddie Stack’s stories jet back and forth across the Atlantic, contrasting small town Ireland and big city US. Every time they land, the author seems to test the borderline of what might and might not be possible in downtown bars, crumbling dance halls and drizzly farms. The result is a remarkably consistent collection of short stories.
"Out of the
Blue"
by
Eddie Stack
The telegram came to Inisriggle post office,
directed to nobody in particular-
Bridey
Mullet died in Chicago. STOP. Remains arriving at Shannon airport Friday
January 12. STOP.
“The Lord
have mercy on her soul,” sighed Paddy Rodgers the postmaster, block lettering
the news on a telegram form. Bridey Mullet. No addressee. He lit a cigarette
and wondered who he should deliver the blow to.
There were
five families of Mullets on the island and he knew they all had somebody in
America. Start at the top, he thought, first lay it on the most important
Mullet: Mouse Mullet, the headmaster. The ideal man, inhaled Paddy. Plus, in
the absence of priests and police, Mouse was the community overseer, representative
of church and state, he would know what to do. Even if the problem wasn't his,
he might adopt it. Paddy slipped the telegram into an official green envelope
and sealed the shock. Then he waddled to the kitchen and announced to his wife,
“Bridey
Mullet died in Chicago and her remains are arriving at Shannon airport on
Friday.”
“The Lord
have mercy on her,” Biddy blurted, blessed herself and eased into a fireside
chair. She offered up a prayer for the dead while Paddy bit his lower lip and
fanned his face with the telegram.
“Was she a
young woman?” his wife whispered.
“About
sixty-five,” guessed Paddy.
“The heart
I s'pose,” she sighed.
“She was
run over by a train,” he said solemnly.
“Oh Holy
Mother of Jesus!” jolted Biddy.
“The Lord
have mercy on her,” muttered Paddy, buttoning his black oilskin coat. He pulled
a red and blue knitted pixi cap over his head, stepped out into the chilly
January afternoon and headed for the school.
There was
a gale blowing. The weathermen got that part of it right, Paddy thought, Force
Seven at least. His nose ran. Pellets of rain stung his cheeks and battered the
oilskin coat, but he hardly noticed, he was wondering about Bridey Mullet. He
couldn't place any Bridey Mullet at the age he pictured her: sixty-five. About
Biddy's age. That's what came to him as he wrote out the telegram and he was
seldom wrong about these things. Paddy believed he had a Gift, though he
wouldn't go as far as thinking it was Second Sight. He could just pick up
latent signals from the wire.
When he
opened the school door the wind raged into the hall and trashed the place in
one gust, blowing notices and papers into a cockfight. It took him a couple of
charges to shoulder the door shut against the gale. Then a classroom door burst
open and Mouse dashed out.
“Paddy!”
he said with surprise.
“Sorry to
bother you Master Mullet, but a telegram just came from America...and it's
addressed to nobody.”
“A
telegram addressed to nobody...come in Paddy.”
The
classroom was empty and warm with the smell of cigarettes and turf smoke. Paddy
also got the whiff of whiskey and said,
“You let
them home early.”
“There's a
bad gale promised,” said Mouse, stoking up the fireplace under the blackboard.
Sparks showered on the floor and the teacher stamped them out asking,
“Good or
bad news Paddy?”
“Kinda
lonesome news, and there's a Mullet connection,”
he
forewarned, sliding the green envelope from an inside pocket and biting his
lower lip.
Mouse
frowned: Lonesome news addressed to nobody, but it had a Mullet connection.
“Will I
give it to you?” Paddy asked apologetically.
Mouse
nodded. The postmaster handed him the envelope and backed away.
“I hate
telegrams,” muttered Mouse, “I hate fucking telegrams.”
He stared
at the news and Paddy saw his lips move and could hear him whisper,
“Who in
the name of Jesus is Bridey Mullet?”
“What do
you make of it?” ventured the postmaster.
“I don't
know any Bridey Mullet,” he said slowly.
“I s'pose
she must be related to someone here if she coming here to be buried,” Paddy
said.
“Remains
are arriving in Shannon on Friday,” the Mouse muttered.
He dreaded
funerals, hated the darkness, the suspension of all activities and the constant
wailing of the Roche Sisters who roamed the island visiting haunts of the
deceased, mourning and keening like tom cats until the corpse was buried a
week. Wakes and funerals spun him into drunkenness and depression, a
sympathetic death with the departed soul.
“She might
be some relation to Johnny Fox Peter,” Mouse suggested, “he had someone in
Chicago. I'd say he's your best bet.”
He passed
the telegram back to Paddy and offered him a cigarette.
Johnny Fox
Peter Mullet was an island oddball. A lean heron-like man in late middle-age,
strange behavior hit him every now and then like a virus. Soft in the head, was
the islanders' term for his condition. One month he might be Saint Jude, next
month his normal self and the following month he could be John Wayne. They said
the moon influenced him; that and drink. The postmaster raised his eyes to
heaven. Since Christmas Johnny was Manann MacLear, the pagan god who the old
people said controlled the weather. Fox boasted he had turned the elements
against the world and would keep the pressure up until the County Council
sanctioned his grant for a new bathroom.
Johnny Fox
Peter's wife opened the door an inch or two. She freaked when Paddy mentioned
the word 'telegram' and banged the door in his face. He heard her bolt it.
“Shag off
outa here,” she shouted, kicking the door from the inside, “shag off outa here,
yourself and your telegram, going around the island frightening the life outa
people. Shag off outa here.”
“I'm only
doin' my duty,” apologized Paddy, slipping the telegram under the door.
Tuesday evening is dark at five and there's
boiled eggs and brown bread for tea in the posthouse. On the radio a man talks
about worms in cattle and Biddy wonders about Bridey Mullet and the train. She
hears sirens and sees blood on the tracks and swarms of people running and
praying. When the phone rings she snaps from her daydream, leaves the station
in Chicago and chirps,
“Inisriggle
postoffice.”
“Father
Looney please.”
It was
Johnny Fox Peter's son, Brian, ringing from the kiosk outside the post office
door, calling the priest on the mainland. She peeped through the curtains:
Johnny and the wife crushed in the box, Brian stood outside in the wind and
rain, receiver to his ear.
“Insert
ten pence please caller,” Biddy said.
“Put in
the money!” ordered Brian, handing the phone to his father.
Johnny Fox
Peter told the priest that his uncle's daughter had died in Chicago and was
being brought back to Inisriggle for burial. The priest sympathized with him
and asked what the arrangements were. Fox said remains were arriving at Shannon
on Friday and Father Looney suggested Sunday might be a good day to inter her,
when he'd be over to say Mass and hear confessions. Of course it all depended
on the weather, he added. Don't worry about the weather Father, Johnny Fox
Peter said, I'll fix the weather.
“That poor
woman of the Mullet's is being buried after Mass on Sunday,” said Biddy when
she returned to the kitchen, “she's some relation to Johnny Fox Peter.”
“The Lord
have mercy on her,” muttered Paddy, relieved that the telegram found the right
home. He turned up the radio to hear the weather forecast: another gale
warning, Force Six to Seven.
“Fox said
he's going to fix the weather,” Biddy chuckled.
“If he's
not careful,” drawled Paddy, “the weather might fix him.”
By noon
next day, everyone on the island knew about the Mullet woman who had died in America.
Johnny Fox Peter was drowning his sorrow in the pub and men slipped in and out
to shake his hand and have a drink with him. She was only thirty-nine, he told
them, and she had a big job in the government and owned three houses in
Chicago. She had neither kith nor kin, nobody in the world but the Fox Peters
on Inisriggle. Bridey Mullet had contracted a fatal disease, he said, and her
dying wish was to be buried in Inisriggle beside her grandfather and
grandmother.
Mouse
Mullet helped with the funeral arrangements and organized an undertaker on the
mainland to pick up the remains at the airport and take them to the harbor in
Ballyline. Johnny tried to settle the weather so the mail boat would ferry
Father Looney and the coffin across on Sunday morning. Not a chance. On that
morning the island was hurricane whipped and people wouldn't go outside the
door for fear of being blown away. It was noon before Johnny Fox Peter ventured
out. Lugging a kite and a battery, he set off for the top of the island to work
Ben Franklin's experiment in reverse: fly the kite and charge the sky via the
battery. This energy would neutralize the storm, he calculated. But the wind
was so strong it whipped kite and battery from his grip and blew them away
towards America.
Mouse was
sitting by the fire in Harney's pub, sipping a whiskey when Johnny Fox was
blown through the door like a sheet of newspaper. The bereaved man was pale as
a ghost, God told me to fuck off, he muttered. Mouse bought him a drink and
tried to comfort him.
Paddy
Rodgers answered in the telephone exchange when Mouse called from Harney's pub.
“How're
you Paddy, could you get me Senator Tot McDuil in Castletown. I think the
number is four-five.”
Tot McDuil
listened to Mouse's tale of woe: corpse arrived from America, family distraught
because it can't be brought the final leg of the journey, from the mainland to
the island. Was there any chance Senator McDuil could arrange for the
coastguard helicopter to ferry a coffin the six miles off shore, as soon as there
was a break in the weather. It would be seen as a government-friendly gesture
to an ignored island and a moving way to bury a lost daughter of the homeland.
Mouse suggested Tot come over as well, the priest could also travel over with
them. Kill a flock of birds with the one stone. The politician thought it was a
great idea. He loved funerals and said he'd see what could be done.
“Tot
McDuil is coming over for the funeral of that Mullet woman as soon as the
weather settles. They're coming by helicopter,” Paddy told his wife that
evening over a tea of beans and toast.
“She must
be a big shot,” Biddy said, “the Lord have mercy on her.”
On Tuesday
morning early, there was a call from the mainland to say the coastguard
helicopter was on standby. Winds were expected to abate around noon and the
pilot would make a dash across the six miles of grey water. Tot McDuil and
Father Looney would be travelling too. Mouse got word around the island like
wild fire: remains arriving by helicopter at noon.
Johnny Fox
Peter looked the pallor of death. A scarecrow in black suit, crooked mourning
tie and dark tweed cap, he hadn't eaten for a week and his stomach wriggled
like a bag of ferrets. He swore he'd never drink again once this funeral was
over. His wife wore a black shawl and clutched a pair of Rosary beads as she
sniffled around the house, glancing out the window at the sky every couple of
minutes. Their son Brian, in blue dancing suit, sat by the fire, his back to
both parents. He smoked an untipped cigarette and wondered how much did the
dead Yank leave them: at least enough for a motor bike and a color television.
Maybe she even left them the houses in Chicago and he'd have to go over there
and keep an eye on the property. He might get a wife, a tall blonde. A six-foot
Madonna.
Knock on
the door. Mouse Mullet dashes in to say it's time to go to the strand where the
flying hearse would land. Mrs. Fox Peter began wailing like a banshee, the
dreaded moment had arrived: their show, their dead. All eyes and attention, sympathy
and pity would be with them. The bereaved Fox Peters. Time for anesthetics.
Mouse slipped a bottle from his overcoat pocket and asked for four mugs.
Potcheen, the hoi poli of moonshine. Big measures to warm their stomachs and
soothe the nerves. Down the hatch. Herself protested, but Johnny and Mouse had
another swig and left the house with a shuffle in their step. The son followed
behind linking his distraught mother down the sand-blown road to the shore.
It was a
grey day and the wind had blown itself out, apart from short gusts that spat
cold rain showers every ten minutes or so. On the strand it was ice cold and
the crowd huddled closer for warmth while they waited for the helicopter.
Johnny Fox Peter and family were in the front row, flanked on either side by
Mouse Mullet and Harney the publican. It was a miserable wait and they strained
their ears for the chopper.
Half an
hour passed and the crowd began to murmur: the wind was picking up again. The
moonshine was wearing thin and Johnny Fox Peter was getting grumpy and edgy.
Then his wife came up trumps by announcing they should say a decade of the
Rosary and led the islanders into a high-pitched mantra. Eerie prayer blown by
the wind through holes in stone walls.
When they
heard the chopper, prayers became more zealous. God was on their side. The
white machine grew bigger and bigger; they could see the coffin dangling
underneath and blessed themselves at the sight because no corpse had ever come
home like this before.
But the
closer the chopper came, the more they noticed the coffin wasn't just dangling:
it was swinging, really swinging, like a mad pendulum. Something's wrong,
jolted Paddy the postmaster. The wind charged in rapid gusts and the helicopter
began jerking and lurching, pulled this way and that by the flying coffin and
the elements. On board, Father Looney felt the tug of God and fingered his Holy
Water bottle. Senator McDuil was already waving at the crowd on the beach, even
though they were at least a thousand strokes away. The pilot apologized for the
rocky ride and said they were almost there.
Father
Looney muttered Jesus, when the helicopter lost control, spun around suddenly
and spiraled downwards. He heard the engine scream and splutter, saw the white
wave-tops stream past the windscreen like suds in a washing machine. His head
got dizzy,
“Our
Father,” he cried, “who art in Heaven...”
The pilot
was shouting Mayday, Tot McDuil ordered him to do something, do anything.
The crowd
on the beach dropped to their knees in screaming prayer. Death in slow motion.
Johnny Fox Peter couldn't handle it and ran towards the water, yelling in the
old language, waving his hands at the impending doom. He became Moses. Tears
streamed down his face and he curled in two and hurled a most primeval scream
at whoever was in control of this mess. The island electrified and for a split
second, heaven and hell collided.
Afterwards
some said they saw lightening strike the coffin before it exploded feet above
the water and the helicopter shot to heaven in a ball of flame and was never
seen again. More say lightening hit the helicopter first and that Father
Looney, Tot McDuil and the pilot were nuked to cinders. Anyway, they were never
seen again.
But
everyone saw the coffin burst apart and saw a body tumble into the water. The
island screamed at the horror. Johnny Fox Peter cried No! No! No! His wife
screeched. The son was stunned and looked at the waves. The Roche Sisters
keened their deadliest laments and Mouse wet his pants.
Like a
sigh from God, rain came and showered pellets of hard water on the islanders.
They dispersed, ran helter-skelter to the shelter of their homes, shouting,
screaming, wailing. Paddy Rodgers sprinted to his phone, he'd have to notify
the mainland about the tragedy. More lightening. Hard rain falling by the
bucket. Distant peals of thunder darkened the sky and the sea. It looked like
the end of the world.
Mouse
linked Johnny Fox Peter and his wife and rushed them home. The son stood on the
strand, soaking in the rain, staring at the spot in space where it all
happened. He could see debris bobbing around. Jesus Christ, there was a body
somewhere out there, maybe three or four bodies. His family would be blamed for
the whole tragedy, branded for ever after, as if life on this God forsaken fucking
island wasn't bad enough, with his father's fits of madness.
He
crouched on the sand and cuddled his head in his arms. He prayed out of
frustration, and pleaded with God, admitting that though he was no saint, and
all the family were screwed-up in one way or another, they deserved better than
this.
“Even dogs
have their day,” he told God, “why not us? Why had you to ruin the whole
fucking funeral on us and make a right show of us in front of the whole island?
Why? Can you answer me that?”
For the first
time in his life Brian had a one-to-one chat with God and laid it out straight.
He wasn't going to work on Yahwee's farm no more. If the supreme being didn't
come up with some retribution for the funeral fiasco, he was quitting. He gave
it hot and heavy to God, hinting about the houses in Chicago, the color
television and the motorbike. And while He was on their case, God might check
on that grant application for a new bathroom that they had submitted months ago
to the County Council. Then he went silent while God digested what he had said.
Suddenly a
sheet of lightening bounced off the waves with a loud crackle and sizzle and
lit the sky like a flash bulb. Brian looked up and a peal of thunder slapped
him in the face and fused his mind.
It was
dark when the storm passed and Brian sat on the sand, head zinging. He could
see the mainland lights twinkling, beckoning. The sea was calmer and the waves
were quieter, almost laid back. Debris from the coffin and the body would
probably be washed up by morning. There would be cops coming to the island,
maybe television people, newspaper reporters. The place would be crawling with
questions. His father and mother would make absolute asses of themselves. Maybe
they'd be taken away, blamed for the whole disaster and locked up for all time
in some asylum.
He walked
to the water's edge, thinking he saw something floating close to shore,
something pale against the black sea. He looked at the surf, saw a hand rise
from the water and his heart thumped at the sight of the dead. He blessed
himself. Then he saw a face and heard a woman's voice, calling from the waves.
Bridey Mullet. Jesus Christ, he gulped, and ran like hell.
When he
had gone sixty feet or so, Brian slowed down and looked back.
“Help me
you fool!” he heard and saw a woman threshing out of the tide and falling face
down on the damp sand. Cautiously he walked towards her, thinking she might be
a mermaid. But no, she was an American, about his own age, thirty or there
abouts. Disorientated. Distraught.
“Do you
know what it's like spending eternity in a coffin?” she panted as he wrapped
his wet coat around her shivering body.
“I do, I
do,” he said, helping her home to his father's house.
And that's
the way Brandy Shotwell arrived on Inisriggle Island and became Brenda Mullet,
wife of Brian Johnny Fox Peter. She laid low for a few months, never venturing
outside the door while all the investigation to the Bridey Mullet affair was
going on. Not even Mouse Mullet or Paddy Rodgers the postmaster knew she was on
the island.
And then
one Friday night, she went up to the pub with Brian and shocked the premises
into silence. She was the finest lady they had ever seen and knew immediately
that a woman like her could only arrive Out of the Blue.
Author Bio
Eddie Stack has received several accolades for his fiction, including an American Small Press of the Year Award, and a Top 100 Irish American Award. Recognized as an outstanding short story writer, he is the author of four books —The West; Out of the Blue; HEADS and Simple Twist of Fate.
A natural storyteller, Eddie has recorded spoken word versions of his work, with music by Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill. In 2010, he integrated spoken word and printed work with art, music and song to produce an iPhone app of The West; this was the first iPhone app of Irish fiction.
This story is protected under international copyright laws and cannot be published or posted online with out the permission of Eddie Stack.
I offer Eddie Stack my greatest thanks for allowing me toi share with story.
Mel u
His work has appeared in literary reviews and anthologies worldwide, including Fiction, Confrontation, Whispers & Shouts, Southwords and Criterion; State of the Art: Stories from New Irish Writers; Irish Christmas Stories, The Clare Anthology and Fiction in the Classroom.
A natural storyteller, Eddie has recorded spoken word versions of his work, with music by Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill. In 2010, he integrated spoken word and printed work with art, music and song to produce an iPhone app of The West; this was the first iPhone app of Irish fiction.
This story is protected under international copyright laws and cannot be published or posted online with out the permission of Eddie Stack.
I offer Eddie Stack my greatest thanks for allowing me toi share with story.
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