and pull him down into that place he had glimpsed all those years ago . . . The place where there was a wild lonely coastline with black jagged cliffs and the ancient watchtower.
The place where the devil walked . . .
Ireland, 1890s
Declan Doyle and Colm Rourke had never entirely forgotten their vow that they would one day go up to the devilâs watchtower and beard the mysterious, sinister Nicholas Sheehan in his lair. At odd intervals over the years they reminded one another of it. Wouldnât it be a fine thing to do, they said, and wouldnât it impress all the girls in Kilglenn and Kilderry too, and maybe even beyond.
But it was not until they were both nearly nineteen that they actually made good their boast, although as Declan said, it was not for the lack of wanting that they put it off so long. Colm said if truth were to be told, they did not actually put it off, rather it put them off. There were always so many other things they had to be doing. There were tasks in each of their homes â Colmâs father had died a few years earlier, so he had to help with carrying and fetching and daily errands. Declan, who had a full complement of parents, was server at Mass each Sunday, which meant attending extra religious classes. They were both in the church choir which meant a practice every Thursday so they could whoop out the
Kyrie
at High Mass while the rest of the congregation was surreptitiously sleeping off the poteen taken in Fintan Reillyâs bar the night before or laying bets on how long Father OâBrianâs sermon would last.
And there was school every day in Kilderry so they would not grow up like tinkersâ children without a scrap of book-learning to their name. They went there on the back of Fintanâs cart, which he took to Kilderry every morning to replenish his bar after the exigencies of the previous night, apart from Mondays since not even Fintan dared open his bar on Sundays. Declanâs father had promised to look out for a couple of bicycles for next spring so the two boys could cycle to school and back home, because Declanâs mother did not like him to be riding on a cart that stank of last nightâs poteen and the gin Fintan kept for the hussies who enjoyed drinking it.
But no matter how they got there, both families were agreed that Declan and Colm must know how to read and write and to know a bit about history and geography. They had to learn some Latin as well, said the monks who ran the little school, and never mind about Latin being a dead language. It was not dead as far as the Church was concerned; in fact it was the universal language of Catholics. Imagine if they were to find themselves in a foreign country some day, and not know its language? How would they go on about confession in that situation? But if they could speak Latin, they could confess their sins in Latin and the priest â and never mind if he was French or German or Italian or anything else â would understand them.
âBe damned to confessing sins in a foreign country, Iâd be too busy committing the sins to care,â said Colm, and Declan grinned and agreed itâd be great altogether to see a bit of the world.
Colm was good at mathematics and understanding about mechanical things. Declan shone in the classes for reading and writing. He was a dreamer, Colm sometimes said, to which Declan always retorted that didnât the world need a few dreamers, and it a wicked place.
âIâd like to be wicked,â said Colm, his eyes glowing. âIâd like to create scandals and outrages, and Iâd like to be talked about from here to â to England and America.â
But of the three children, growing up in Kilglenn, it was neither Colm nor Declan who created the scandal. It was Colmâs cousin Romilly.
The evening was one of the silent scented evenings that sometimes came to Kilglenn at that time of the year. Everywhere was drenched in soft violet