Art by Alice Frey
Keepers of the
Faith
Short Story
By Margaret Duda
Mary Agnes did not
mean to do what she did. Only seven years old, she was standing on the street corner
like the rest of us. The heat of the pavement burned the soles of my shoes,
reminding me of the fires of Hell.
Most of us were
waiting for the city bus, but Mary Agnes lived only three blocks away, so she was
trying to cross the street. A second grader like me, she had thin, knobby knees
and long braids the colour of the rust on the metal scraps in the empty lot next
to the church. She cried easily and hung around Sister Catherine’s long black
skirt during recess. Sister often reached down to give her a hug or pat her on
the head, and sometimes she even held her hand, but the rest of us didn’t mind,
because Mary Agnes didn’t have a mother. She told us once in her soft, shy
voice that her mother had died when Mary Agnes was born and her grandmother did
all the cooking and cleaning. That information did not make her grandmother
sound like a real mother, so we didn’t mind when Sister held her hand.
Actually,
that afternoon I didn’t even see Mary Agnes. The bodies of the sixth-grade girls,
like the massive tree trunks in the park, blocked my view. I was also daydreaming. Or maybe I was praying. In those days, the two often seemed one and
the same.
Suddenly
I heard the screeching of tires, then the high-pitched screams. I peered through the dangling arms of the
girls in front of me, but all I could see were the dark black skid marks of the
semi that slid to a stop half a block away. All I could hear were the screams
of the sixth-grade girls, one of whom said someone was under the front tire.
We
ran down the street, but by the time we reached the stopped vehicle, the
grownups had surrounded the front of the truck. The only thing I could see was
a single rust colored braid, but I knew whose it was. An adult said she was
dead. Pacing back and forth, the truck driver kept crying out, “I didn’t see
her. Oh my God, I didn’t even see her.”
The
older girls began to cry. I did too. I cried as if I’d lost my one and only
friend, and an older girl put her arm around me and said, “Shhhh, little girl,
it’s going to be all right.”
Then
the policemen came and asked us if we’d seen anything. The older girls said
they’d witnessed the disaster. When I explained that they’d blocked my view,
the policeman sent me back to the bus stop.
As I
waited on the corner, my knees began to knock, and I felt as if the road was
weaving back and forth. The bus finally came, and I didn’t even mind that the
only seat left was next to an old bearded man in torn clothes who smelled like
fruit gone bad.
At
least Mary Agnes was baptized, I thought. At least she wouldn’t have to spend
eternity in Limbo. But what about Purgatory? Even Jesus had to go there for
three days. I took out my rosary and started to pray for the soul of Mary Agnes,
and the old man wrinkled his brow and smirked in disapproval.
When
I got home, I found Mama in the kitchen scrubbing the linoleum floor. She
looked up and pushed the wisps of grey hair off her forehead. I told her what
I’d seen, and she got up off her knees and wiped her hands on her flowered
apron before taking me into her arms.
“Oh, my baby, my poor
baby.”
I
felt safe again and I let the tears come. “But why, Mama, why?”
“The
Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away,” Mama insisted, quoting Father Kushner
and holding me tighter as she kissed my forehead, “and it is not for us to
understand why. Now how about if I tell you some stories from my childhood in
Hungary?”
In
class the next day, everyone was talking about the accident.
“I
was there,” I said to a large group of girls.
They
stopped talking and stared at me. “Was it awful?” one girl said.
“Awful,”
I agreed. I was spared from having to give details because Sister Catherine
suddenly entered the classroom. We all hurried to our desks, but when we were
seated, we could see the gaping hole in our midst. It was like a missing piece
in a jigsaw puzzle, a piece that would never be found.
Trying not to look at
the empty seat, I stared at Sister Catherine. Her clear, blue eyes were swollen,
and her round face appeared stuffed into the stiff white wimple that framed it.
Her small, long-fingered hands were all you could see of Sister beside her
face. I’d always had a secret desire to see her hair, to know what colour it
was, how long it was. Did the nuns really shave their heads, as some of the
older girls insisted. Was she bald beneath the starched crown?
Sister crossed the
room softly, as she always did, her long black habit gliding across the floor, and
put her books on her desk. Only then did she look up and see the empty seat. She
stared at it for several seconds and gave a long sigh.
“Sister
Catherine, is Mary Agnes really dead?” Johnny Farkas asked.
Sister
put a hand over her heart, drawing our attention to her gold ring, the symbol of her marriage to Jesus. She
continued to stare at the empty seat.
“Yes Johnny, Mary Agnes is now in Heaven with her mother and God.”
But
Johnny wasn’t satisfied. He tapped his pencil. He always did that when something wasn’t clear. “So why did God
let Mary Agnes die?”
“Mary
Agnes was too perfect for this world. God wanted her to join him in Heaven
where she belonged.”
Johnny
tapped his pencil harder. “What if she didn’t want to go?”
Sister
sighed again. “We will now offer our morning prayers for the soul of Mary
Agnes.”
We
all knelt on the hard wooden floor beside our desks and folded our hands, right
thumbs over left, Heaven over Hell, but I knew Sister Catherine didn’t think Mary
Agnes was in Heaven or we wouldn’t be praying for her soul. When we were finished, Sister announced, “There
will be a special service for Mary Agnes tomorrow, and the whole school will
attend.”
“Will
the body be there?”
“I
believe the coffin will be there. Now, please turn to page seventy-eight in
your spelling books.”
Although
we were not allowed to talk to each other in class, we made up for it on the
playground at recess.
“Do
you think there will be much blood?”
“I
heard the truck ran over her head.”
“I
bet her guts were squeezed out of her.”
I ate
little that night and slept even less as nightmare after nightmare attacked me.
I would wake up screaming, and Mama would rush to my side and try to comfort
me.
“I
don’t think she should go to school,” Mama told Papa the next morning.
“She
was in my class, Mama,” I insisted. “I want to go.”
Solemnly,
everybody—children and nuns and school administrators—climbed the steps and
entered the church. The smell of incense filled the vestibule as we dipped our
fingers into the Holy water and crossed ourselves. As we passed into the nave, the candlelight cast
flickering shadows on the fourteen carved wooden plaques of the Stations of the
Cross, which vividly dramatized the gruesome sacrifices Jesus had made for our
sins. We filed past a life-sized statue of Saint Lucia, patron of the blind,
who held a pair of eyeballs on a plate, and a tall wooden sculpture captioned the
Sacred Heart of Jesus, with Our Lord
pointing to his open heart dripping with blood.
“I
bet Mary Agnes sits up as I go by,” said the girl behind me.
“If
she does, I’ll faint,” someone else said.
“I’ll just faint.”
I stayed
in line, but as I neared the open casket, I closed my eyes. I’d told myself I
wouldn’t look, but now I realized I couldn’t not look. I just had to see how a person appeared when she
had been run over by a truck. I opened my eyes just as I got to the coffin. I
was disappointed.
Mary
Agnes seemed to be asleep. There wasn’t a scratch on her. No blood. No bruises.
She had on the same good dress she wore to Mass every Sunday. It was as if she
had tricked us. For a moment, I didn’t even think she was dead.
“Move
on now, Margaret,” Sister Catherine said, and a girl behind me pushed me into a
hard wooden pew.
We always had to kneel
precisely, hands folded, our bodies touching neither the back of the pew in
front of us, nor our seat behind us.
“That
was just her body,” Sister Catherine told us after Mass. “The soul of Mary
Agnes left her body and went to Heaven as soon as she died. The body you saw
today was an empty shell.”
I
thought of an egg and pictured the soul of Mary Agnes as the yellow yolk.
“Margaret,
why don’t you move down and sit in Mary Agnes’s seat?” Sister Catherine
said.
“Me,
Sister?” I didn’t want to leave my desk.
I loved the familiar gouges and grooves in the wooden top, the persistent
squeak of the seat.
“Yes,
I never liked having you in the back like that.”
I
knew then that her invitation wasn’t a question, but an order.
“Yes,
Sister,” I said softly.
I gathered my books and
pencil case and shuffled down the aisle. What if Mary Agnes’s ghost occupied
the vacant seat? What if whoever sat in
that desk became marked to join God in Heaven?
I slid into the seat, but it was too tight for me, the tallest girl in
the class. Mary Agnes had been the shortest. Sister didn’t seem to notice.
“Splendid,”
Sister said.
The
whole school prayed for Mary Agnes every day, and I began to feel better. Even if she was in Purgatory, all those Hail
Marys and Our Fathers and Glory Be’s had to be helping her move on. And like
the rest of us, she must have stocked up on indulgences for just this occasion.
A Glory Be could save you an hour of suffering, a Hail Mary an hour, and an Our
Father a whole day. Of course those
intervals were nothing compared to eternity, but I still donated half of my
indulgences to Mary Agnes, hoping that I would have enough time left to rebuild
my stores. Who kept track? I wondered. Did Saint Peter have a list at the Gate
with all the Purgatory-free hours you had accumulated? Well, as Mama said, we
weren’t meant to understand.
By
the end of the week, I was proud of how useful I’d become to my dead classmate.
Suddenly
Sister Catherine gazed intently at me. “Mary Agnes, come to the board, dear, and tell
us how much is fourteen minus eleven.”
The
class turned to stare, and I wriggled in my seat.
“Mary
Agnes?” Sister repeated.
“I’m
Margaret, Sister Catherine. Margaret
Kovacs.”
Sister
stared at me, wrinkling her brow as if trying to add numbers in her head, but
then she nodded her head and said, “Oh, of course. I’m so sorry, Margaret. Will
you come to the board and take eleven from fourteen?”
I
breathed a sigh of relief. Sister had just forgotten.
But
several days later, she forgot again. I
was standing on the sidelines watching the others playing kickball on the
playground when Sister suddenly appeared beside me. Her cloaked arm, like the
wing of a giant black bird, enveloped me. The pressure of her arm held me fast.
I tried to wriggle free, but she tightened her grip.
“Stay,
Mary Agnes,” she said in a monotone. “Stay and watch with me.”
Wasn’t
that similar to what Jesus said to the apostles in the Garden of Gethsemane?
“I…I
have to pee,” I lied.
“Oh
well, of course,” Sister conceded, loosening her hold. “Of course.”
I
sprang free and ran for the lavatory, hiding in the cubicle until I heard the bell
clanging to signal the end of recess.
“Are
you all right, Margaret?” Sister asked me as I returned to my seat.
“Yes,
Sister, I’m fine,” I said, relieved that she remembered who I was.
The next day I joined
in the game of kickball, getting kicked myself each time I got in the way of a
better player, but that was preferable to sitting bored on the sidelines or
held tight by Sister Catherine.
Several
days later, our class stopped praying for the soul of Mary Agnes. The rest of the school continued easing her
into Heaven, but Sister said we did not have to anymore. I wondered if she’d
had a vision the way that the saints and martyrs often did, and God had told
her that Mary Agnes was with God now and no longer needed our prayers. I was
hoping she would tell us about her revelation, but Sister never raised the
subject and no one had the courage to ask, not even Johnny Farkas. There were
dark circles under her eyes now, her black habit was wrinkled, and she wore her
wimple askew.
After
school, I slipped into the church and knelt before the statue of Saint Lucia,
who still offered me eyeballs on a plate. I put a dime in the metal box and lit
a candle in the rack at her feet, sending shadows dancing across her robes.
Kneeling, I stared up into her sympathetic eyes.
“Please,
please help Sister Catherine understand I’m not Mary Agnes,” I pleaded.
But
the next day was no better. When I won the spelling bee, Sister Catherine said,
“I’m so proud of you, Mary Agnes,” and gave me a holy medal tied to a small
doily by a pink ribbon.
I
decided it took the saints awhile to answer prayers.
Because
we were second graders, our First Confession was imminent, and the big day
finally arrived. After entering the church, we waited in line beneath stained-glass
windows depicting famous saints. I concentrated on my sins, trying to remember
how many times I’d committed each one. We were all anxious to get it over with
before we forgot what to say, and we were impatient with anyone who took too
long in the confessional.
When
my turn came, I swept aside the blue velvet curtain and knelt on the wooden
kneeler in the murky darkness before the small square covered by a mesh screen.
After the second grader on the far side had finished their confession, the
wooden door behind my screen slid open. Father Kushner, with his black robe and
heavy breathing, leaned toward the grating and said, “Yes, my child.”
I
told him how I’d disobeyed my parents three times, how I’d lied twice, and how once
I’d failed to say my prayers before falling asleep. Then, I confessed my worst sin. “And I was
angry with Sister Catherine, Father,” I said quickly, hoping he wouldn’t make
me elaborate.
“Why
were you angry, my child?” he prodded.
It
seemed to me that if Father Kushner was really filling in for Jesus, he should
know this since Jesus knew everything, but maybe my penance included supplying
the details. “Because she won’t remember I’m not Mary Agnes, Father.” And then
I told him everything, going on and on, forgetting about the other second
graders waiting in line.
“I
see,” said Father Kushner. Then he paused and I thought he might not give me
absolution because my attitude was unforgivable, but finally he said, “You must
not be angry with Sister, my child, and try to listen to everything your parents
tell you. For your penance, say two Our Fathers and make a good Act of
Contrition.”
Father Kushner gave me
absolution after I recited the Act of Contrition, and when I left the confessional,
I realized a huge weight had been lifted from my shoulders. In the pew, I
prayed with all my heart, forcing myself to be sorry that I’d caused Jesus so
much pain as I said my penance.
The
following day, Sister Catherine still had dark circles under her eyes, which
seemed to look through us instead of at us. I also noticed a wisp of a curl had
escaped the confines of her wimple. She had red hair just like Mary Agnes, so
the nuns obviously didn’t have to shave their heads. When Sister called the
roll, she included Mary Agnes’s name and looked at me for a reply.
“Mary
Agnes O’Reilly,” she repeated, staring right at me. “Please answer when your name is called.”
The
class turned to look at me, waiting.
I
felt as if I was wearing a sweater much too small for me.
“Mary
Agnes!” Sister repeated.
My
heart was throbbing, and I imagined it might explode.
“I’m not Mary Agnes, Sister,” I finally
blurted out. “I’m Margaret. Margaret Kovacs. Mary Agnes is dead. She’s in
Heaven with God.”
“No,
no, not dead,” Sister stammered. “Not dead. You mustn’t say...”
“Sister
Catherine,” a voice said, and everyone turned to see Mother Superior in the
doorway. “You’re wanted in the office.”
“But
Mary Agnes…” Sister Catherine murmured, staring at me.
“Mary
Agnes is waiting for you in Monsignor’s office,” Mother Superior continued. “Now
come, my dear.” She took Sister Catherine by the arm. “Sister Cecile will take
over the class until you return.”
But
Sister Catherine never returned, and Sister Cecile was our teacher for the rest
of the year. She always remembered who I was, let me sit at a larger desk, and
had us pray for the soul of Mary Agnes O’Reilly every day.
Lovely story! Really well told from the child's perspective. I enjoyed it, thank you, Margaret.
ReplyDeleteI am so happy it pleased you.
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