DEVLIN
DOWNTOWN
CHICAGO LOOP – Friday, June 13, 1969
The
tall blond young American walked with the cocky
self-assurance of an athlete. Dressed in
a deep blue Hickey Freeman vested pinstripe suit, white shirt with monogram
cufflinks, burgundy tie with a Phi Beta Kappa clasp, his highly polished
Florsheim shoes clicking like happy feet as he strolled down Chicago’s Michigan
Avenue.
The wind off Lake Michigan forced
his head down into his chest. He cut his
way through the midtown shoppers as he once did through the line for Crescent
High as a fullback. He avoided eye
contact, as if someone might recognize him.
Why? He didn’t know. Was it because people believed he could see
through them? It was nonsense, but it
worked for him. His long quick strides
were a force of habit as he had no special place to go.
Earlier in the day, he
was standing by the door of the El waiting to step off at the loop, when two
young toughs came down the aisle rolling their shoulders menacingly. He felt his body tense, a delicious sensation
coursed through him, his steel blue eyes taking measure of the lads like bionic
lasers.
“You got a problem,
pretty boy?” one asked. He waited for
the slightest hint of aggression. The
tough’s accent was from the projects on the lower south side, where his da had
been born in the Irish ghetto. They were
dressed like clones of some wannabe gang, baseball caps on backward, Chicago Cubs’
jackets, cigarettes dangling from thin lips, baggy jeans, US Army surplus
boots, acne complexions, bad teeth, soldiers without a cause. They passed giving him a wide berth.
If that was
intimidation, he smiled, it beat putting them in the hospital. They were too young to understand rage. You have to suffer real pain, real loss to
have a fire in your belly. Theirs was an
imitation brand.
His intensity inward,
his amused expression masking his outward malevolence. Why should he be surprised? He lived an accidental life, here today gone
tomorrow. The young toughs hadn’t a
clue. The fact they act tough to control
their fear differed little with his dressing up to control his. He doubted seriously if they had ever been
east of Evanston.
He had worked
everywhere, seen everything, but was he not equally anxious? They hid their angst in bravado; he hid his
in a well-tailored suit. Life is up for
grabs and nothing works out as you expect.
Most people stay close to home, do nothing, go nowhere, just fester like
boils, then explode and die. Others like
him, do everything, go everywhere, and die just the same. You would think doers would be happier, but
they aren’t. He’s proof. We’re here a little while to fool around and
then die. Happiness is a myth. The toughs seem to sense this. Perhaps that is their real beef.
* *
*
Life was a puzzle to
Seamus “Dirk” Devlin. Its perplexities
found him wandering the streets wherever he was. Tonight it found him at the
door of old St. Patrick’s Catholic Church off Michigan Avenue and Randolph
Street. He pushed open the large wooden
door of the vestibule immediately smelling the incense and age of the
place. His hope was to find some quiet
to placate his demons who had been riled up earlier in the day by the company
brass. Like spiteful children, they took
pleasure in firing colleagues unable to fathom a colleague firing the company
as he had done.
The
Friday Novena was just ending with people lining up
to go to confession. He made his way to
the center aisle genuflected making the Sign
of the Cross. Except for those
going to confession the church quickly emptied.
He moved down the aisle looking at the bas-relief statues of the Stations of the Cross on the side walls
of the clerestory with secondary altars framing the main nave with the Blessed Virgin
Mary’s on the left and St. Joseph’s on the right flanking the main altar. He glanced back at the line of confessors at
the confessional, wondering if any were as lost as he was.
Devlin lit a candle at
the foot of the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary, knelt down at the white
marble altar rail and made a wish instead of saying a prayer, as this was his
first visit to the church, then remained there until the last person left the
confessional.
Before the priest could
leave the confessional, he rushed to the confessor’s door, inhaling the scented
rosemary wood, knelt on the cushioned kneeler, breathing hard waiting for the
priest to slide the lattice window open, separating the priest from the
confessor, feeling a bit frantic and winded after escaping the world that
controlled him only to enter the world that owned him.
The priest mumbled his greeting
in a few automatic Latin words, then paused for the confessor to fill the
void. Devlin cleared his throat, then in
a distinct stentorian voice said, “Bless me Father for I am bored. I am sorry for this and all my past
boredom. It has been about a week since
my last Confession.”
“Pardon me, my
son? What did you say?”
“I said, ‘I am bored’,
Father,” his voice rising to a shrill.
“You don’t need to
shout, my son. Do you understand this is
a confessional and that I’m a Catholic priest?”
“Yes, Father.”
“Are you a
Catholic?"
“Yes, Father, of the
worst kind, Irish Roman Catholic.”
Silence.
“It has been a week since my last Confession.”
“You’ve already said
that, my son, but I don’t understand.”
“Father, you mean
you’ve never heard a person confess to being bored to death; that life is
meaningless, empty; and that that person feels utterly useless, robotic,
disengaged?”
“Well, yes, I suppose I
have. But what are your sins, my son?”
“What are my sins?”
Devlin laughed nervously. “Pardon me for
that, Father, but first of all, I am not your son, and secondly, you are not my
father; you are my confessor, my priest.”
“Yes. I hear anger in your voice.”
“It is not anger,
Father, it is boredom! My sins, Father,
are that of being bored. I feel powerless
to go forward or to be able to do anything about it.”
“Why are you bored?”
Devlin sighed. “Why am I bored? Well, now that is a story.”
“Well, this is not the
place to tell stories, my son, you should know that. This is the place to expiate your guilt,
confess your sins, and ask for absolution.”
“Those are good but
meaningless words, Father, especially expiation
and absolution. You’re going to expiate my boredom and grant
me absolution?”
Before the priest could
answer, he continued. “May I be
candid?” Devlin didn’t wait for a
reply.
“I’m weary, just turned 31, what
you might call an educated man with a degree in chemical engineering, a
master’s in industrial chemistry, earning $60,000 this past year not counting
perks and privileges and paying no American income taxes.” He took a deep breath surprised at his candor
but muddled on. “I have everything and
nothing at all. I am reduced to a
dichotomy.”
“You earn what?”
“$60,000, and as I
said, and paid no taxes. I am what you
call an ex-patriot doing my bidding for an American company abroad.”
“Are
you speaking in American dollars?”
“Indeed I am. If it were in Kruger Rand, it would be R84,000.”
“You must be very successful.”
“Not anymore. I’ve retired.”
“You’ve
retired? But you said you were only 31.”
“Yes.”
Silence. “What is your explanation for this?”
“Absolute, unequivocal,
unmitigated boredom.”
Silence.
Devlin
filled the void. “That is why I’m here,
Father.”
Pause. “You mentioned the Kruger Rand. You work in South Africa?”
“Worked, Father, past
tense. I no longer work there. Yes, the Rand is the monetary currency
equivalent to 1.4 American dollars.”
“I see. I still do not see what sins are troubling
you, my son.”
“Cannot boredom be a
sin, Father? I am drowning in
boredom. I am unable to shake it, I have
no idea what the next chapter of my life will be.”
Father Anthony Dressler
sighed deeply. It had been a long day:
two masses in the morning, light breakfast, off to Cook County Hospital for
sick call, no lunch, quick drink at O’Hara’s on Halsted with a priest friend
from St. Mark’s, back to St. Patrick’s for dinner with Monsignor Donovan,
Novena at 7 p.m., then confessions, knowing he still had to say his
Office. He craved a cigarette and
three-fingers of scotch. How to get rid
of this impertinent young man? The seven
deadly sins came to mind. He took a deep
breath, and asked, “Have you committed adultery, my son?”
“Have I committed
adultery?” Devlin laughed heartily
causing his confessor to involuntarily wince.
“Oh, yes, Father, adultery and I are old friends.”
“But that’s a mortal
sin, my son.”
“Yes, indeed, it is.”
“Have you committed
adultery recently?”
“Indeed, I have.”
“Are you sorry for that sin?”
“Well,
yes and no.”
“You cannot be
ambivalent about mortal sin, my son, surely you know that.”
“I’m
ambivalent about everything, Father, which is the reason I’m here if that is at
all helpful.”
The priest crossed
himself to hide his exasperation. “Do
you have a family?”
“Yes,
Father, a wife and four children.”
“Can’t you see where you’ve compromised them?”
“Yes.”
“Are you sorry?”
“Yes and no.”
“I
don’t understand, my son.”
“Yes,
Father, I’m sorry for the pain I’ve caused my children. They are innocent in this affair, but no, I’m
not sorry for the pain I’ve caused my wife.
You see I have no sense of guilt or remorse, only anxiety and
boredom.”
“This is a most unusual Confession.”
“Well, it’s a most unusual situation. I just came back from South Africa and . . .”
“You’ve already told me that.”
Devlin
ignored the interruption. “I was imagining while I was waiting for you, what if
apartheid was practiced here in
Chicago; what if Mayor Richard Daley was its architect. What would the policy of Cardinal John Cody
of the Archdiocese of Chicago be towards this racial betrayal? Would the good Cardinal fight it? Or would the diocese collapse to the whim of
the mayor’s authority and be a puppet to the government? That is the case of the Roman Catholic Church
of South Africa: blind, deaf and dumb to the basic freedoms denied the Bantu
peoples.”
“That is a libelous
view, my son, I think on reflection you would see that. The church is puppet to no one except the
Mystical Body of Christ and Holy Mother Church.”
The silence was like a
heavy syrup suffocating the breathing on both sides of the confessional. After nearly a minute, the priest said,
“Well?”
“Father, it may sound
dubious,” Devlin uttered in a somewhat more conciliatory voice, not wanting the
priest to bolt, “but my pastor in South Africa, a missionary from Ireland, was
as much a tool of the Afrikaner Government’s apartheid policy as any man could be.”
“Don’t you think that’s
a bit harsh?”
“I only wish that it
were. I kept a notebook of the number of times I attempted to have a
conversation with my pastor about this practice without success. I was rebuked, ignored, cut off at the pass
by an assistant priest, and finally threatened with deportation.”
“Perhaps that could be
traced to your ill-mannered hostility.”
“Not
at first, Father, but yes, that is a fair assumption. I became increasingly angry the more I
witnessed abuses to the Bantu peoples. I
needed to talk to someone; attempted the subject in confession only to have my
pastor shut the window on me without granting me absolution, can you believe
that?
“Corporate people such
as myself have a vested interest in apartheid. I thought my pastor the exception. I was wrong.
I think it hostile when people are murdered and nothing is done about
it; when land is taken without redress to its owners; when families are split
up as a matter of State and not of the will of the people; when people are
forced to live in the most deplorable conditions; when the 20 percent white
minority have the vote, and the 80 percent black majority do not; when the rule
of law and order stops at color. Yes, I think hostility is an accurate
assessment of my angst.”
“This is all very
interesting, my son, but of course subjective, possibly irrational. It is what you assume to be the case, am I
correct?”
“Father,
my gardener was murdered on my estate.
When I attempted to find out why and by whom, the police treated the
matter as if a dog had been killed. He
was my friend, a good man, an honorable man, and he was twenty-seven-years-old. That is concrete, not speculative. When events keep crashing against your
values, your frustration blunted by disgust, what other purchase can there be?
“Was the murder the
cause of your depression?”
“Father, now you’re
being patronizing.”
“I don’t mean to be but
I sense you’re feeling helpless.”
Devlin gave a deep
sigh, “You have no idea.”
“I’m listening.” Father saw fire in the eyes of the young man
through the lattice curtain that separated them. He had seen it before. He forgot about his cigarette and drink.
“My
anchors” Devlin made a sweep of the confessional with his hands in its narrow
confines, “have been my company, country, government and church, and they now
are all gone. They have been swept out
to sea. I have been treading water,
Father, in a foreign land buttressed by disturbing news about the United States
from secondary sources, and I’m drowning.
Do you understand what I’m saying?
America is coming apart at the seams.
Not just me. Meanwhile, South Africa
is lock stepping to apartheid that I
see every day. It leaves me
disconnected. I have had no other option
than to sink into boredom.”
“You’re a most
disturbed young man.”
“I think that is an
accurate if patronizing assessment. Yes,
I am disturbed, but from my perspective, with reason. But words hide resolve,
Father. I know. I am good with words.
“If I’m disturbed, Father, and I think I am,
what does that make of my rational ordering society to which I have
returned? If I’m disturbed, what does
that say about Roman Catholicism and Christian morality? No one is more Christian than
Afrikaners. If I’m disturbed, what does
that say about my country, which appears at war with itself? Am I to take it I’m disturbed and everything
else is under control? I find that
ironic. Pathetic.”
“If you insist.”
“Father, I’m not trying
to win debating points. Can’t you see
the bases of my boredom?”
“Again, if you insist.”
“I do, Father, for
everything has lapsed into contradiction: everything real is not acknowledged
as such, while everything that is not real is celebrated as real.”
The priest smiled, but
not unkindly. “So, now you’re a
psychologist.”
“No. Nor am I a philosopher, Father. This has been my experience in a pivotal year
for me, but it seems a pivotal year for my country as well. If I live a long life I’m certain I will look
back on this as a defining moment.”
He laughed
self-consciously wondering if the priest was still listening. He could feel him breathing.
“If I’m having a nervous breakdown, Father,
it seems so is my country. 1968 was a
traumatic year for us both. Our
country’s leadership is in shambles; our infrastructure is in chaos; our institutions
a mockery of ineptitude; our value systems as porous as a sieve. I have no anchor, Father, nor apparently does
my country. We are both seemingly
detached from reality. We wander off
into space or explore the ocean’s depths; we make fancy new things, but our
crumbling spirit is ignored which is the engine of everything.
“You mentioned
psychology and philosophy. We have them
both in spades, but what good are they?
These disciplines play word games only to blight our spirits. Obviously, I’m disturbed. Why wouldn’t I be, having seen what I’ve
seen, done what I’ve done? Am I wearing
the mask of sanity in an insane world, or insanity’s mask in a sane one? Father, which is it?”
The
priest furrowed his brow cupped his hands under his chin and bowed his head in
prayer. Was this why I became a priest,
or was it to escape this? This young man
is disturbed, quite so, but what he says, had I not thought it as well? For the first time, the priest felt some
empathy for the young man.
Confused? Angry? Yes, but what to do?
The priest said
finally, “It is clear you are in pain, my son, however, I wonder if this is the
place to continue this.”
“Father, I am the last
one in this church. I am the last one
having my confession heard. I have
traveled more than 12,000 miles in the last 36 hours. I’ve been drilled all day by a bunch of
pompous asses who sit on mahogany row mesmerized by numbers oblivious to the
real world. They have no idea what I am
about. Each time I see them, I marvel. They never change; they stay the same; they
miss the changes; and wonder why the future is always such a surprise to
them. I would like you to indulge me a
bit longer. I’d like to tell you a
story. Then perhaps you can advise me
whether it is I or my world that is mad.”
“A
story?”
“Yes, it is a story
about sins of omission and commission; about the multinational corporation and
how it views indigenous peoples as disposable symbols of profit and loss; about
a church more interested in its survival than its mission; about a time
obsessed with the products of the mind at the expense of those of the heart;
about not being able to truly love a woman or hate a man. It’s about the present panic of now; about
the greatest sin of all, which is waste; and about not being able to live a
useful life. In the absence of love in a
universe of hate and betrayal, everything is reduced to the common denominator
of boredom.”
“Is it a true story?”
“I only wish it
wasn’t.”
“Then, my son, please continue.” Devlin does.
Note
This is the introduction to Devlin, A Psychological Novel, available at Amazon.com, Kindle Library
I remember playing ball against the Courthouse Tigers. I was born in 41 and was a little younger than you but I remember you. I will always be thankful for growing up in Clinton during that period. Hollywood High was in California but Clinton during our time was right out of Disney. Little League and Legion ball were the best times of my life and I too have had a life of scholarship.
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