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    Thin Places

    Page 6
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      Seamus simply said

      Brendan

      your son

      needs to see this through.

      And then he took a breath

      and added

      no matter how foolish.

      Down and Out in Ballyconnell

      Two more days of scouring the coast

      and nothing to show for it

      but a sunburnt nose

      and diminished spirit.

      So I decided to enter

      my first Irish public house:

      The Yeats Tavern

      named after the poet

      in Drumcliff.

      The man behind the bar looked me over

      when I asked for a pint of Guinness

      and was about to turn me down

      when a young man of about twenty

      sat down beside me.

      He looked sunburnt too and tired

      and gave me a curious look.

      Tom

      he said to the bartender

      Give this gentleman his pint.

      It’s on me.

      I thanked him and watched the ritual

      of the slow and steady

      pouring of the dark beer.

      Thanks

      I said to both Tom and the sunburnt guy.

      You looked like you needed it

      he said.

      I’m Alfie.

      He held out his hand.

      Declan

      I said, shaking it.

      Declan, I detect in you unhappiness.

      He had that Irish way

      of pronouncing every syllable with precision.

      I took my first sip of Guinness

      and I think I frowned.

      It was bitter.

      I don’t know what I was expecting.

      You detected correctly

      I said

      and this made Alfie laugh.

      He ordered himself a Smithwick’s.

      From away then?

      he asked.

      Yes.

      What brings ya?

      At first I didn’t know what to say

      knowing it would sound silly.

      A quest

      I said finally.

      Ah, yes.

      The plot thickens.

      Is it fame, fortune, or salvation?

      Not really.

      Then it must be a woman

      he asserted.

      I didn’t want to go there so I said

      I’m looking for a beach

      and he laughed.

      Lots of beaches about.

      This one is special.

      Every beach is special.

      Alfie explained that he was a surfer

      and he had given up working for Google in Dublin.

      I moved west, here to the coast

      and never looked back.

      I said

      I’ve been to every beach around

      but I haven’t found the right one

      the one I’ve seen in a vision.

      A vision quest, is it?

      Name the beaches you’ve been to.

      So I pulled the road map out of my back pocket

      and pointed to them one by one.

      Alfie studied the map

      and then pointed to a spot.

      You missed one

      he said.

      Streedagh.

      I was there this morning.

      Waves head high and glassy

      and not a soul around.

      Some of the best waves I ever surfed.

      I wanted to ask more but was afraid

      I’d discover yet another dead end.

      And then Alfie finished his Smithwick’s

      in three long gulps

      shook my hand and was off.

      Let me know if you find

      what you’re looking for.

      End of the rainbow and all that.

      Streedagh

      There were horses grazing in open pasture land

      by the dunes.

      They looked like they had been expecting me.

      I got out of the car

      and breathed in the cool salty air.

      There was a cluster of houses at one end

      but beyond that

      the beach stretched out

      for what looked like several empty miles.

      I put on a jacket and began walking.

      The Sand, the Sea, the Sky

      At first it seemed

      that it was just

      another beach.

      But as I walked

      I felt

      something.

      A presence.

      Three times

      I stopped and turned around

      expecting some thing

      someone

      to be there.

      But it was all in my imagination.

      I was a guy alone on a beach

      with an addled brain

      walking to nowhere.

      The Cove

      I had almost decided

      to turn back

      when I came to a small

      rocky cove.

      In the dunes

      was the ruins of

      an old

      stone building.

      I angled toward it

      and touched a thick lichen-covered stone wall

      or what was left of it

      now only shoulder high.

      A cottage

      someone’s small

      primitive hut really

      long, long since

      abandoned.

      I knelt down

      expecting maybe

      to find some relic

      some scrap or tool

      but nothing.

      And then as I stood up

      and turned around

      looking out onto the cove

      and beyond to the mountains

      and a distant shore

      I recognized the view.

      This had once been

      the home

      of that sad lonely soul

      that fisherman

      and his little boy.

      Night

      Each time I tried to leave the spot

      something tugged me back.

      I had this feeling

      that if I left

      I could never return.

      Or if I did return

      the ruins would be gone.

      So I sat in the chill salt air

      huddled by the stone wall

      my knees to my chest.

      I watched

      as the sun set over the sea

      and the stars came out

      a canopy of a million points of light.

      I felt giddy at first

      in expectation of what I didn’t know.

      Giddy, then a little fearful.

      Wild creatures were about.

      I could hear them

      but I couldn’t see them.

      And then

      cold

      and bored

      and tired

      I fell asleep.

      And while I slept

      I felt a new wave of overwhelming sadness

      a paralyzing sense of loneliness

      beyond what I had known before.

      It felt like some kind of heavy weight

      pressing down on me

      and it would not go away

      until I felt

      the warmth

      of the morning sun

      on my face.

      Morning

      She was the first thing I saw

      when I opened my eyes

     
    ; sitting directly in front of me.

      You found me

      she said.

      I was afraid you wouldn’t.

      Her arms were wrapped around her knees.

      So was I

      I said.

      I knew you were here

      in Ireland

      and I wanted so much

      to come to you

      but I couldn’t.

      I needed to stay close

      to here.

      Why?

      Soon

      she said.

      I’ll explain soon.

      I leaned forward and inched across the sand and stone

      on my hands and knees

      and then

      I touched her face.

      Checking to see if I’m real?

      I felt her cheek with my fingers

      touched her brow

      and then ran my fingers through

      her long dark hair

      as she closed her dark eyes

      and reached out to touch my face.

      And then she leaned forward

      and kissed me.

      I sat upright and then pulled her toward me.

      She seemed to melt into my arms

      into me

      as we lay on the ground inside the ruins of that house

      alone in our perfect little world

      where language seemed obsolete.

      Rebecca

      This place?

      I asked.

      Why here?

      This is my home

      my history.

      I came ashore

      there.

      She pointed to the cove

      the water sparkling in the morning sunlight

      with perfectly sculpted waves rolling shoreward.

      Where did you come from?

      She pointed again to the sea.

      These ruins

      I said.

      This was the stone hut

      where that man stood

      with his son?

      She nodded.

      You planted that image in my head, right?

      She nodded again.

      Why?

      So you’d find me.

      The Past

      Part of me wanted to stop asking questions.

      I had found her.

      We were together.

      What else mattered?

      But my mind was filled with the need to know more

      to know everything.

      I went to the mountain

      I said.

      Knocknarea

      just like you showed me.

      Why didn’t you meet me there?

      I couldn’t.

      I needed to stay here.

      Who was the man I saw in the dream?

      He was my husband.

      Your husband?

      A wave like some kind of

      cruel electric shock

      passed through my brain.

      This made no sense.

      I couldn’t believe what she had just told me.

      And the boy?

      He’s your son?

      No. Not mine. His.

      I don’t understand.

      That was all a very long time ago.

      I still don’t understand.

      How long?

      Three hundred years.

      Time

      Are you some kind of time traveller?

      I asked.

      We all travel through time, Declan.

      But no. Not like that.

      Does this have something to do

      with the bridge you told me about?

      It was the connection I made

      with you.

      You were the one

      I was waiting for.

      Why me?

      It’s what I sensed in you

      what I felt.

      You were somehow

      not of this time.

      And you were searching for something.

      What was I searching for?

      You didn’t know what it was.

      And then I found

      you.

      There were several seconds of silence

      and then she smiled and said

      The truth is

      I found you.

      But how can you …

      How can I be so old?

      She looked to be sixteen, maybe seventeen.

      I nodded.

      Time is a strange thing, Declan.

      I’ll try to explain.

      Rebecca’s Tale

      I came from the sea.

      I was not the first.

      There were many like me.

      The man I introduced you to in your dream

      was Liam

      a fisherman

      whom I had seen at sea many times.

      He was a good man

      a kind man

      and then his wife died.

      I felt his pain

      so intensely

      that I chose to come ashore

      to change my form.

      He needed me.

      His son needed me.

      Belief

      This was three hundred years ago?

      I asked.

      Yes.

      And you were

      not human?

      I became human

      when

      I felt the tug

      an overwhelming need

      to save this man and his son

      from their loneliness and pain.

      In my world

      the world I came from

      such things are possible.

      What were you before you became human?

      You will not understand if I tell you.

      I don’t understand any of this

      but I do know I am here with you now

      and don’t want to lose you.

      And I do want to understand.

      I was a roane

      she said in that beautiful odd way of hers

      a selchidh.

      I lived in the Domnu

      the deep ocean

      with my kind.

      I was a seal.

      When we go through the change

      and come ashore

      they call us selkies

      Belief

      This was three hundred years ago?

      I asked.

      Yes.

      And you were

      not human?

      I became human

      when

      I felt the tug

      an overwhelming need

      to save this man and his son

      from their loneliness and pain.

      In my world

      the world I came from

      such things are possible.

      What were you before you became human?

      You will not understand if I tell you.

      I don’t understand any of this

      but I do know I am here with you now

      and don’t want to lose you.

      And I do want to understand.

      I was a roane

      she said in that beautiful odd way of hers

      a selchidh.

      I lived in the Domnu

      the deep ocean

      with my kind.

      I was a seal.

      When we go through the change

      and come ashore

      they call us selkies.

      Liam

      She told me of Liam

      truly a good man if ever there was one

      and how he accepted her as a gift from the sea

      how she adapted to his rough life ashore

      and helped rais
    e his son, Fergus.

      But Liam grew older

      and Rebecca did not.

      Liam accepted this and loved her with all his heart

      but

      as Fergus got older

      he grew to fear her

      and thought she was a witch.

      Fergus moved away when he was twenty-one

      and never spoke to his father

      again.

      I watched as Liam aged

      Rebecca said

      and the sadness grew within me.

      I watched as he suffered

      from the hard work of hauling nets

      and dragging his currach ashore.

      I loved him very much

      and the pain I felt as he grew old and sick

      was the price I paid for saving him from

      his loneliness.

      Life at Streedagh

      They had lived very much alone at Streedagh

      and Rebecca was happy to live close to the shore

      by the sea where she had come from.

      If anyone passed by

      they would just see a figure in an old woman’s clothing

      bent over or with her face covered.

      Few cared about Liam after his son moved on

      and if anyone spoke of “his woman”

      they would say she was crazy

      and all were glad

      she kept to herself

      out of the way of society.

      When Liam died

      she buried him in the dunes.

      One day

      Fergus returned

      and blamed Rebecca for Liam’s death.

      He saw that still she had not aged

      and he spit on her

      then left

      and began spreading the rumours

      that she was a witch.

      Rebecca Speaks

      I had to leave.

      I had no choice.

      I could not go back to the sea

      even though

      I longed for the comfort of the deep.

      But I was in human form

      and could not change back

      until I found someone with whom

      I could create

      a strong enough emotional bond

      to save me from what I’d become.

      A wandering lost soul

      hiding from the world

      a world

      where I did not belong.

      I searched for a very long time.

      With my thoughts

      I spoke to some who

      I thought could help.

      But none could.

      And then you came to me.

      I saw you first in a dream.

      And then I found you

      and spoke to you.

      I believed that creating the bridge

     


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