Fields of Home Read online




  Fields of Home

  Only a few years ago, Eily, Michael and Peggy survived the Great Famine. Now Peggy is in America, hoping for a new life, and finally she heads for the Wild West. Eily and Michael face new challenges at home. Everywhere there is unrest, with evictions, burnings, secret meetings. What will become of them and of Eily’s little girl, Mary-Brigid?

  Praise for Fields of Home:

  ‘Brings to a satisfying conclusion one of the undoubted achievements of contemporary Irish children’s literature’

  Children’s Books in Ireland

  ‘A very rich and appropriate end to the trilogy’

  The Big Guide to Irish Children’s Books

  ‘Three novels which, in my opinion, must be counted among the very highest achievements of contemporary children’s writing – from Ireland or elsewhere’

  Robert Dunbar

  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  1 The Homestead

  2 Castletaggart Stables

  3 Morning Boy

  4 The Visit

  5 Greenbay, Boston

  6 The Wedding

  7 The Widow O’Brien

  8 The Races

  9 Harvest Home

  10 Lonesome Times

  11 The Big House

  12 Partings and Promises

  13 Night Watch

  14 The Secret

  15 The Gift

  16 The Visitor

  17 The Homecoming

  18 Blackberry Picking

  19 Market Day

  20 The Decision

  21 The Rent Collector

  22 Siege

  23 Glengarry

  24 Wagons West

  25 A Sod of Earth

  About the Author

  By the Same Author

  Copyright

  DEDICATION

  For my husband, James, with love

  CHAPTER 1

  The Homestead

  MARY-BRIGID WALKED ACROSS the tufts of springy summer grass, helping her mother, Eily, to carry the heavy washbasket. She loved days like this when the sky was so blue and the grass so green you could almost hear it grow beneath your feet.

  She could see her Daddy, John, down below in the potato field, weeding the drills. This year there would be a grand crop, he’d said, to judge by the healthy green leaves and stalks – and that’s what all the men were saying. Bella, the milking cow, moved slowly through the field beyond the potato patch, chewing constantly and flicking away the annoying flies with her tail.

  ‘Mary-Brigid, will you pass me up that shift and those stockings of Nano’s?’ called Eily.

  Mary-Brigid lifted up the soaking garments to her mother, giggling as water from the clothes dripped down her bare, skinny legs and onto her feet, drenching the bottom of her loose, blue cotton dress. Soon the line of rope that stretched between the young oak tree at the end of the field and the wooden pole near the house was bedecked with an assortment of wet clothing. Finally, Eily spread out a sheet on a bush to dry.

  ‘’Tis done!’ Eily smiled and dried her hands on her apron, then stopped to rest for a few minutes. ‘Isn’t it a grand day, pet!’

  The soft wind that would dry the clothes caught at the strands of Mary-Brigid’s fair hair, tossing it in every direction. ‘Twas a torment how her hair always ended up in tangles and knots, while her mother’s fine hair was so easily patted into place. She watched as her mother’s gaze took in the land and fields all around them.

  ‘See those walls, Mary-Brigid? Your daddy’s daddy, Grandaddy Joshua, and his daddy built those stone walls. They had to dig the rocks and stones from under the earth and lift them, and they got more rocks from the riverbank, then they laid them one by one on top of each other. It took them a long, long time.’

  Mary-Brigid ran her eyes along the low, grey stone walls, each stone balanced perfectly with another, that formed the boundary of their small farm, with its potato field, the rough hilly pasture, and the stony patch where her mother’s vegetables and a square of wheat fought to grow. Her Daddy and Mammy worked so hard, clearing the soil, planting it and weeding it. Mostly Daddy had to work for the landlord, of course, tending to their own land only when he could get a minute free.

  In the distance, Muck, the pig they were fattening for winter, squealed hungrily from the ramshackle pigpen.

  ‘We’d better get him some scraps and peelings soon,’ Eily said, ‘or he’ll scream the place down.’

  They picked up the washbasket, took a handle each, and strolled back towards the neat little homestead, with its pile of dry turf, the curl of smoke from the chimney, and the bright, shining window pane winking and catching the sunlight.

  ‘Shoo! Shoo!’ Mary-Brigid told the hens who ran and pecked in front of her. Maisie, her favourite red hen, tried, as usual, to follow her into the shade of the kitchen. That old hen was far too cute for her own good, Auntie Nano often said. Nano lay dozing now, her rocking chair still, in front of the fire.

  ‘Ssh, Mammy!’ warned Mary-Brigid, ‘she’s asleep!’

  ‘Ssh!’ echoed her little brother Jodie, imitating her. He looked up from where he had been playing quietly in the corner of the room.

  Their great grand-aunt looked so peaceful there, snoring ever so slightly.

  ‘There might be some honey for you two later,’ whispered Eily. ‘Daddy is going to check the beehive for the both of ye.’ The children adored honey – a little bit spread on the fresh bread Eily baked, or spooned into their bowls of porridge, was the best treat possible. They licked their lips at the very thought of it.

  Eily was always thinking of little things to please the children and make them happy. When she was a girl times had been very hard, and Auntie Nano said that she had never forgotten it.

  ‘Now, pet, will you do me a favour and take Jodie out to play in the fresh air!’

  Jodie ran up to Mary-Brigid, his sturdy two-year-old hands grabbing at her skirt as he followed her outside.

  ‘Stay near the house, Mary-Brigid!’ warned Eily. ‘None of your gallivanting or exploring, now.’

  Mary-Brigid sighed. She’d had a mind to go down to the stream to look for pinkeens.

  ‘Come on, Jodie!’ she said. ‘We’ll just have to find something else to do!’

  Jodie nodded his curly brown head. As little brothers went, Mary-Brigid guessed that Jodie wasn’t the worst. He knew how to play chasing, though he was so slow at running, and he was good at playing baby princes that Mary-Brigid had to rescue from all sorts of monsters and evil lords.

  Maisie clucked about and followed them, pecking busily as she went.

  ‘Hen! Hen!’ announced Jodie, pointing a grubby finger at the bird.

  ‘That’s Maisie, Jodie. Say MAAII-SSEE!’

  ‘HEN!’ repeated her brother solemnly.

  ‘But Maisie is much more than just an ordinary old hen,’ said Mary-Brigid dramatically, hunkering down on the grass, as the dusty hen scratched at the ground. ‘Maisie is a magic hen!’ Mary-Brigid’s eyes twinkled.

  Jodie stood in front of his sister, his fingers opening and closing in a futile attempt to clutch at the darting bundle of rich brown-red feathers that jumped and fluttered to escape him.

  ‘She lays golden eggs,’ Mary-Brigid continued, dropping her voice, ‘and she can see the sidhe! ‘But Jodie ignored her. He didn’t know anything about the fairies; he was much more interested in catching the creature.

  Maisie pecked away, keeping just out of range of the two of them.

  ‘Jodie, if we’re good and quiet,’ Mary Brigid went on, ‘Maisie might lead us to one of her eggs, her special golden eggs.’

  A shadow of confusion passed across Jodie’s small face. He liked eggs, though what eggs had t
o do with this clucking creature, he wasn’t sure. But he followed his big sister, as she raced after Maisie, who was now squawking wildly and running madly in all directions.

  * * *

  ‘You’d think the child had been caught in a thorn bush, John! Just look at the state of him!’ Eily was furious. ‘Look at the clothes I washed yesterday!’

  Mary-Brigid kept her eyes on the dripping square of potato cake on her plate. What was all the fuss about? Jodie had only a few scratches and scrapes. She could see that her father was trying not to smile.

  ‘Do you know anything about this, Mary-Brigid?’ John asked solemnly.

  Mary-Brigid shrugged her shoulders and licked the smear of butter from her lips.

  ‘I thought I saw the two of you chasing that yoke of a hen this afternoon,’ he added.

  ‘MAASSEE!’ pronounced Jodie, trying at the same time to flap his arms like the hen. Everyone burst out laughing.

  ‘You two rogues!’ teased their father, tousling Mary-Brigid’s wild mop of hair and sticking the tip of his little finger into one of the dimples on her cheek. ‘My laughing girl!’

  ‘Thank God for the food on the table,’ Nano broke in, ‘and for the family and children to share it with.’

  ‘Amen,’ answered Eily softly.

  * * *

  Mary-Brigid stared into the flickering flames of the turf-and-wood fire. Sitting hunched on a cushion in her nightclothes, she pushed her bare toes and feet close to the heat, watching the shadows from the flames dance around the room. The regular creak of Nano’s heavy rocking chair was the only sound in the silence of the small cottage.

  Eily was busy putting Jodie to bed, and John had gone out to check the animals.

  Mary-Brigid blew softly on the low fire.

  ‘What are you doing, child?’ asked Nano.

  ‘I’m just giving a bit of life to the fire.’

  ‘You know you must be careful of the fire, dote. Come and sit by me, and let a bit of the heat out to my old bones.’

  Mary-Brigid crouched beside Nano. Her great grand-aunt was the oldest and nicest person she knew.

  ‘Nano,’ said Mary-Brigid, tossing the tumble of blond hair from her face and resting her cheek on the old woman’s lap, ‘Nano, will you tell me a story?’

  The old lady sighed, not an exasperated sigh, but the sigh of one used to such a request from a favourite child.

  ‘Well, what kind of story would you be wanting, then?’ asked Nano, her soft blue eyes shining and the lines around them creasing. ‘Is it ghosts or goblins you want?’

  Mary-Brigid considered. ‘No! Not that kind of story tonight, Nano. The story of long ago.’

  ‘Ah!’ said Nano, ‘of high kings and warriors and great deeds!’

  ‘No!’ frowned Mary-Brigid. ‘The story of Mammy and Michael and Peggy.’

  ‘Ah!’ sighed Nano, shifting herself in the chair, ‘that story.’ The child was always pestering her for that story.

  ‘’Tis a story of courage,’ began Nano softly. Mary-Brigid nodded, her dark eyes shining. ‘A story of a sister and a brother and a wee slip of a girl about your own age. The times were hard then, so hard. You see, the potato crop had failed. The people dug their crop only to discover that everything had turned to slime. Now everyone knew that as sure as night follows day the hunger would come. From cabin to cabin, cottage to cottage, across the fields and farms of Ireland, they knew. And they waited.’

  Eily slipped back into the room. Leaning against the door she listened, as Nano’s hushed voice went on, ‘Your Mammy and Uncle Michael and Auntie Peggy didn’t want to go to the workhouse with the rest, so Eily decided that they would run away, across the countryside, and try to find Lena and myself.’

  Eily closed her eyes as she heard again the story of her youth …

  CHAPTER 2

  Castletaggart Stables

  MICHAEL O’DRISCOLL TURNED IN HIS SLEEP, trying to get comfortable on the hard, wooden pallet bed.

  ‘Michael! Wake up! Do ye hear me! Will ya get up!’

  Michael groaned, pulling the blanket up around his shoulders.

  ‘Get up, Michael, get up quick! It’s Ragusa, she’s having her foal. Toss said I was to come and get you.’

  Michael rubbed the sleep from his eyes and began to pull himself out of bed. He fumbled around, searching for his boots and his jacket in the near-pitch dark of the stable lads’ quarters over the coach-house. Why did mares always give birth in the dead of night!

  Young Brendan Foley, at thirteen the youngest and greenest of the stable lads, stood impatiently in front of Michael, holding the paraffin lamp, its aura of yellow light swinging backwards and forwards, catching a startled mouse as it scampered away.

  ‘She’s bad, Michael, Toss is …’

  ‘Hold the lamp still!’ ordered Michael, searching for his second boot.

  ‘He’s real worried about her!’

  ‘It’s too soon and she’s getting too old,’ muttered Michael tersely. Anger bubbled inside him. Ragusa was one of the finest mares in the stable. She deserved better than this. They crept in silence along the narrow upstairs room, trying not to disturb the other lads. Then they climbed down the steep wooden stairs that led out into the yard. The horses were quiet, but one or two whinnied as they passed. It was still deep night outside, with a good while to go till dawn. A heavy swag of dark cloud masked the moon.

  As he pushed in the stable door, Michael could hear Toss’s voice murmuring softly to the mare. The pregnant mare lay on the straw and, by the look of her, she was already exhausted.

  Michael leant down and patted her neck. ‘Good girl! ‘Tis all right, girl, you’ll be fine.’

  From her eyes he could tell she was scared. The mare herself could sense that all was not well. Michael grabbed some straw and wiped her down a bit.

  ‘She hasn’t much push left in her, Michael,’ said Toss anxiously. ‘She’s not trying. The foal needs more help.’

  Michael nodded.

  ‘Brendan, get us some water!’ ordered Toss.

  The young lad was back in a minute or two with a heavy tin bucket full of water.

  Toss was walking around the mare, looking at her closely, and Michael could sense his concern. Toss was the best horseman that Michael had ever met. Anything Michael knew about horses so far he had learnt from the sixty-year-old man.

  Toss had spent all his life with horses. He had worked all over – in Cork, in Wicklow, in England. It didn’t matter where, once there were good horses there and a good owner or manager. For the past fifteen years, Toss had worked at Castletaggart House. Michael felt sure that Toss had helped him get the position of stable lad, then assistant with the horses and occasional jockey.

  After so many years working together, there was no need for words between them. They both knew the danger the ageing mare was in as she struggled to give life to yet another foal.

  ‘I told him! You heard me, Michael! I told him it was too soon after the last foal. That she was getting on.’ Michael could sense the deep anger in Toss’s voice when he talked about the estate manager, George Darker. ‘He should have listened to me.’

  Ragusa whinnied. Her whole body was taut with pain. Michael washed his hands and arms in the cold water, and then knelt down to examine her gently. He could feel the foal – the strong curve of its spine, the long, thin bones of its legs and the slant of its head. The muzzle was down. The small foal badly needed help.

  ‘Toss, if you and Brendan steady Ragusa, I’ll try and pull the foal,’ Michael said.

  He caught the thin legs between the knees and fetlocks and eased the foal gently outwards. He listened carefully to Toss, who was guiding him in time with the mare’s spasms. Michael held firmly onto the cannon bones. After a long time the brown legs were out.

  The mare tried to roll, but Toss and young Brendan held her as Michael firmly drew the head and neck of the foal out. Seconds later, the skinny colt foal lay steaming hot and new and quivering on the straw.


  Ragusa, lifeless now, raised her head and neck momentarily to look at her newest foal, her gentle brown eyes searching for him. Then she lay back, her whole body overcome with trauma. It took only a few seconds for the old mare to die, as Michael and Toss and Brendan watched helplessly. The foal lay on the straw, bewildered, sniffing at his mother’s legs, waiting for her to clean and nuzzle him.

  Toss stood up, his grey hair standing on end, his chin and cheeks covered in a grey stubble. ‘Well, she’s done for! One of the best mares that ever ran! As for the colt, it won’t survive without her. It’s too small, born too early. Ragusa and her foal – that’s some night’s work!’

  Toss couldn’t contain his grief any longer. His eyes filled with tears. ‘Let me out of here!’ he shouted angrily, stepping over the mare’s body and across the straw. ‘You two see to things,’ he ordered gruffly as he strode into the yard, and went off in the direction of his small lodgings on the far side of the stable buildings.

  Michael knew what would happen. Toss would get wildly drunk and not be seen for a day or two. He was blaming himself.

  ‘What should we do?’ Michael was brought back to the present dilemma by Brendan. The colt was trying to put one long, scrawny leg in front of another, making every effort to stand and get closer to his mother. ‘Ah Michael! What are we supposed to do?’ sniffed Brendan.

  Michael considered. Ragusa was dead. He had to stifle his feelings of sadness and think of the foal, the orphan foal he’d helped to deliver. There was not much two young fellas like themselves could do, and yet the thought of watching the young foal lie there on the straw and weaken and die was too much to take. He couldn’t stomach it. There must be something they could try.

  ‘Brendan, have we any other mares in foal at the moment?’

  The young lad pondered, mentally running through the different stables he mucked out each day.