<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="bold2">THE VALLEY OF THE SQUINTING<br/> WINDOWS</p>
<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p>Mrs. Brennan took her seat again at the sewing-machine by the window.
She sighed as she turned her tired eyes in search of some inducement
to solace down the white road through the valley of Tullahanogue. The
day was already bright above the fields and groups of children were
beginning to pass through the morning on their way to school. Mrs.
Brennan beheld their passage, yet now as always she seemed to miss the
small beauty of the little pageant.</p>
<p>"God help them, the poor little things!" she condoled to herself, "and
may He enlighten the unfortunate parents who send them to that quare,
ould, ignorant pair, Master Donnellan and Mrs. Wyse, the mistress.
Musha, sure they're no teachers!"</p>
<p>From this it might seem that Mrs. Brennan, the dressmaker of the valley
and one well entitled to be giving out an opinion, did not think very
highly of National Education. Yet it was not true that she failed
to regard the lofty fact of education with all a peasant's stupid
reverence, for was she not the mother of John Brennan, who was now
preparing for the priesthood at a grand college in England? A priest,
mind you! That was what you might call something for a woman to be!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The pride of her motherhood struck a high and resounding note in the
life of the valley. Furthermore, it gave her authority to assert
herself as a woman of remarkable standing amongst the people. She
devoted her prerogative to the advancement of the Catholic Church. She
manifested herself as one intensely interested in its welfare. There
was no cheap religious periodical, from <i>The Catholic Times</i> to <i>The
Messenger</i>, that she did not regularly purchase. All these she read to
her husband, Ned Brennan, in the long quiet evenings after the manner
of one discharging a religious duty.</p>
<p>This was a curious side of her. She kept him in comfort and in ease,
and yet when his body had been contented she must needs apply herself
to the welfare of his soul. For, although he spent many a penny of
her money in the village of Garradrimna, was he not the father of
John Brennan, who was going to be a priest of God? She forgave him
everything on this account, even the coarse and blasphemous expressions
he continually let fly from his mouth the while she read for him the
most holy stories by Jesuit Fathers.</p>
<p>Just now she had given him two shillings with which to entertain
himself. He had threatened to strike her in the event of her
refusal.... That was why she had been sighing and why the tears were
now creeping into her great tired eyes as she began to set her machine
in motion for the tasks of the day. Dear, dear, wasn't he the cruel,
hard man?... Yet beyond all this thought of him was her bright dream of
the day when, with the few pounds she had saved so secretly from the
wide grasp of his thirst, she must fit him out in a rich suit of black
and go by his side proudly to attend the ordination of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</SPAN></span> their son John.
It was because she so dearly loved her dream that she bore him with
immense patience.</p>
<p>Also it was because she had been thinking of that grand day and of the
descending splendor of her son that she now commented so strongly upon
the passage of the children to school. She had spoken bitterly to her
own heart, but in that heart of hers she was a bitter woman.</p>
<p>This was such a sunny, lovely morning. It was the day of the June Races
in the town of Mullaghowen, and most of the valley-dwellers had gone
there. The winding, dusty road through Tullahanogue was a long lane of
silence amid the sunlight. It appeared as an avenue to the Palace of
Dreams. So it was not at all strange that Mrs. Brennan was dreaming
forward into the future and filling her mind with fancies of the past.
She was remembering herself as Nan Byrne, the prettiest girl in the
valley. This was no illusion of idle vanity, for was there not an old
daguerreotype in an album on the table behind her at this very moment
to prove that beauty had been hers? And she had been ruined because
of that proud beauty. It was curious to think how her sister and she
had both gone the same way.... The period of a generation had passed
since the calamity had fallen upon them almost simultaneously. It was
the greatest scandal that had ever happened in these parts. The holy
priest, whose bones were now moldering beneath the sanctuary of the
chapel, had said hard words of her. From the altar of God he had spoken
his pity of her father, and said that she was a bad woman.</p>
<p>"May God strengthen him, for this is the bitter <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</SPAN></span>burden to bear. Philip
Byrne is a decent man for all his daughter Nan is a woman of shame. I
pray you avoid her every one who has the trace of God's purity in his
heart. Let you go not into that house which she has made an abode of
lust, nor allow the fair name of your own house to be blemished by the
contamination of her presence within its walls."</p>
<p>Yes, it was true that all this had been said of her by the holy father,
and in the very spot beneath which his bones were now at rest. They
were the hard words surely to have issued from the lips of God's
anointed. Even in the fugitive remembrance of them now they seemed to
have left red marks like whip-lash weals across her soul. The burning
hurt of them drove her deeper into remembrance. She had already come to
the full development of her charms when her ambition had also appeared.
It was, in short, to effect the "catch" of one of the strong farmers of
the valley. She entered into conspiracy with her sister and, together,
they laid their plans. Henry Shannon was the one upon whom she had set
her eye and Loughlin Mulvey the one her sister Bridget had begun to
desire. They were both men of family and substance, and hard drinkers
after the fashion of the fields. They often called at the house to
see the sisters. Philip Byrne, whose occupation as head-groom at the
stables of the Moores of Garradrimna often took him away from Ireland,
would always be absent during those visitations. But their mother would
be there, Mrs. Abigail Byrne, ambitious for her daughters, in great
style. It was never known to happen that either of the strong farmers
called to the house without a bottle of whiskey. Mrs. Byrne always
looked <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</SPAN></span>favorably upon them for their high decency, and the whiskey was
good whiskey.</p>
<p>Here in this very room where she now sat remembering it all there
had been such scenes! Her hair had been so thick and brown and there
had been a rare bloom upon her skin as she had sat here alone with
Henry Shannon, talking with him of queer things and kissing his dark,
handsome face. And all through those far, bygone times she used to be
thinking of his grand house and of his broad fields and the way she
would one day assert herself in the joy of such possessions over her
less fortunate sisters of the valley. Yet, ever mixed with her bright
pieces of imagination, there had been such torturing doubts.... Her
sister Bridget had always been so certain of her prey.</p>
<p>There had been times when Henry Shannon spent the night in the house.
In those nights had been laid the foundations of her shame.... Very,
very clearly did she remember the sickening, dreadful morning she had
come to her mother with the story that she was going to have a child.
How angry the elder woman had been, so lit within her all the wild
instincts of the female against the betrayer of her sex? Why had she
gone so far? Why had she not played her cards like her sister? There
was no fear of her yet although she had got a proper hold of Loughlin
Mulvey.... What was she to do at all? She who had had great ambitions
was to become lower than the lowest in the valley.</p>
<p>Yet the three of them had conferred together, for all the others were
so angry with her because of her disastrous condition into which she
had allowed herself to slip without having first made certain of Henry
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</SPAN></span>Shannon. The only course left now was to "make a show" of him if he
could not see his way to marry her.</p>
<p>She could now remember every line of the angry, misspelled letter she
had sent to her whilom lover, and how it had brought him to the house
in a mood of drunken repentance. He presented her with material for a
new dress on the very same night, and, as she laughed and cried over
it in turn, she thought how very curious it was that he should wish to
see her figure richly adorned when already it had begun to put on those
signs of disfigurement which announce the coming of a child. But he was
very, very kind, and all suspicion fell away from her. Before he went
he whispered an invitation to spend a few days with him in Dublin....
What did it matter now, and it was so kind of him to ask her? It showed
what was in his mind, and therefore no talk of marriage passed between
them. It did not seem necessary.</p>
<p>Then had followed quickly those lovely days in Dublin, she stopping
with him as "Mrs. Henry Shannon" at a grand hotel. He had given her a
wedding-ring, but while it remained upon her finger it was ever the
little accusing symbol, filling her with an intense conviction of her
sin.</p>
<p>This great adventure had marked the beginning of her acquaintance with
the world beyond the valley, and, even now, through the gloom of her
mood, she could remember it with a certain amount of gladness coming
back to her mind. But it was queer that the brightest moment of her
life should also have been the moment of darkest disaster.... She
re-created the slight incidents of their quarrel. It was so strange
of him after all the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span> grand kindness he had just been showing her....
She had returned to the valley alone and with her disgrace already
beginning to be heavy upon her.... She never saw Henry Shannon or spoke
with him again. When she wrote referring distantly to their approaching
marriage and making mention of the wedding-ring, the reply came back
from Mr. Robinson, the solicitor in Garradrimna, who was his cousin and
sporting companion. She knew how they had already begun to talk of her
in the valley for having gone off to Dublin with Henry Shannon, and
now, when an ugly word to describe her appeared there black and plain
in the solicitor's letter, she felt, in blind shame, that the visit
to Dublin had been planned to ruin her. The air of the valley seemed
full of whispers to tell her that she had done a monstrous thing. Maybe
they could give her jail for having done a thing like that, and she
knew well that Henry Shannon's people would stop at nothing to destroy
her, for they were a dark, spiteful crew. They were rich and powerful,
with lawyers in the family, and what chance would she have in law now
that every one was turned against her. So that night she went out when
it was very dark and threw away the wedding-ring. The small, sad act
appeared as the renunciation of her great ambition.</p>
<p>She remembered with a surpassing clearness the wide desolation of
the time that followed. Loughlin Mulvey had been compelled to marry
her sister Bridget because he had not been clever enough to effect a
loophole of escape like Henry Shannon. Already three months after the
marriage (bit by bit was she now living the past again) the child had
been born to Bridget, and now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span> she herself was waiting for the birth of
her child.... Indeed Bridget need not have been so angry.</p>
<p>She had been delirious and upon the brink of death, and when, at last,
she had recovered sufficiently to realize the sharpness of her mother's
tongue once more the child had disappeared. She had escaped to England
with all that was left of her beauty. There she had met Ned Brennan,
and there had her son John Brennan been born. For a short while she had
known happiness. Ned was rough, but in his very strength there was a
sense of security and protection which made him bearable. And there was
little John. He was not a bit like her short, wild impression of the
other little child. Her disgrace had been the means of bringing Philip
Byrne to his grave; and, after six or seven years, her mother had died,
and she had returned to the valley of Tullahanogue. It was queer that,
with all her early knowledge of the people of the valley, she had never
thought it possible that some of them would one day impart to him the
terrible secret she had concealed so well while acting the ingenuous
maiden before his eyes.</p>
<p>Yet they were not settled a month at the cottage in the valley when Ned
came from Garradrimna one night a changed man. Larry Cully, a loafer
of the village, had attacked him with the whole story.... Was this the
kind of people among whom she had brought him to live, and was this
a fact about her? She confessed her share, but, illtreat her how he
would, she could not tell him what had been done with the child.</p>
<p>Henceforth he was so different, settling gradually into his present
condition. He could not go about making inquiries as to the past of his
wife, and the people<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span> of the valley, gloating over his condition, took
no pains to ease his mind. It was more interesting to see him torture
himself with suspicion. They hardly fancied she had told him all. It
was grand to see him drinking in his endeavors to forget the things he
must needs be thinking of.</p>
<p>Thus had Mrs. Brennan lived with her husband for eighteen years, and no
other child had been born to them. His original occupation of plumber's
laborer found no opportunity for its exercise in the valley, but he
sometimes lime-washed stables and mended roofs and gutters. For the
most part, however, she kept him through her labor at the machine.</p>
<p>Her story was not without its turn of pathos, for it was strange to
think of her reading the holy books to him in the long, quiet evenings
all the while he despised her for what she had been with a hatred that
all the magnanimous examples of religion could not remove.</p>
<p>She was thinking over it all now, and so keenly, for he had just
threatened to strike her again. Eighteen years had not removed from
his mind the full and bitter realization of her sin.... They were both
beginning to grow gray, and her living atonement for what she had been,
her son John who was going on for the Church, was in his twentieth
year. Would her husband forgive her when he saw John in the garb of a
priest? She wondered and wondered.</p>
<p>So deep was she in this thought that she did not notice the entrance
of old Marse Prendergast, who lived in a cabin just across the road.
Marse was a superannuated shuiler and a terror in the valley. The tears
had been summoned to her eyes by the still <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>unchanging quality of Ned's
tone. They were at once detected by the old woman.</p>
<p>"Still crying, are ye, Nan Byrne, for Henry Shannon that's dead and
gone?"</p>
<p>This was a sore cut, but it was because of its severity that it had
been given. Marse Prendergast's method was to attack the person from
whom she desired an alms instead of making an approach in fear and
trembling.</p>
<p>"Well, what's the use in regretting now that he didn't marry ye after
all?... Maybe you could give me a bit of Ned's tobacco for me little
pipe, or a few coppers to buy some."</p>
<p>"I will in troth," she said, searching her apron pocket, only to
discover that Ned had taken all her spare coppers. She communicated her
regrets to the old woman, but her words fell upon ears that doubted.</p>
<p>"Ah-ha, the lie is on your lip yet, Nan Byrne, just as it was there
for your poor husband the day he married you, God save us all from
harm—you who were what you were before you went away to England.
And now the cheek you have to go refuse me the few coppers. Ye think
ye're a great one, don't you, with your son at college, and he going
on to be a priest. Well, let me tell you that a priest he'll never be,
your grand son, John. Ye have the quare nerve to imagine it indeed if
you ever think of what happened to your other little son.... Maybe
'tis what ye don't remember that, Nan Bryne.... The poor little thing
screeching in the night-time, and some one carrying a box out into the
garden in the moonlight, and them digging the hole.... Ah, 'tis well I
know all that, Nan Byrne, although you may think yourself very clever
and mysterious. And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span> 'tis maybe I'll see you swing for it yet with
your refusals and the great annoyance you put me to for the means of
a smoke, and I a real ould woman and all. But listen here to me, Nan
Byrne! 'Tis maybe to your grand son, John Brennan, I'll be telling the
whole story some day!"</p>
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