THE AUTHOR’S FIRST CONFESSION from “THE SHADOW
IN THE COURTHOUSE: MEMOIR OF THE 1940’s WRITTEN AS A NOVEL” (2003) –
© June 21, 2020
Sister Mary Martina prepared me well. I knew my
lines. "Bless me Father for I have
sinned. This is my first Holy Confession. I am sorry for these and all my
sins."
I was not quite seven and sin was a vague
construction. I knew it was terrible. Sister said so. I knew I could spend
eternity in Hell for my sins. Father Sunbrueller said so. Hell was scary. At
Sunday Mass Father made my ears hurt shouting how I could burn forever in Hell
with mortal sin on my soul. I wasn't sure what mortal sin was. Nor did I know
what this thing called soul was. Sister explained sin but must have assumed I
knew about soul. Venial sin is not as bad as mortal sin that much I knew, but
this didn't make things any clearer.
With confusion, I was off to confession standing
in line with other first graders waiting my turn. I looked about the church,
all those haunting statues on the pillars, Blessed
Virgin Mary on the left, Saint Joseph
on the right, Saint Michael the Archangel
on the main altar with his legion of angels looking down on Jesus on the Cross,
and below that the Sacred Host in the
golden monstrance in the tabernacle. Candles flickered at the side altars. A
red light flickered in a glass near the main altar. Sister said this informs
the visitor that Jesus is present in
the Blessed Sacrament. I was taught
to genuflect and make the sign of the cross when the red light flickers on the
main altar.
My eyes move about the church taking in the Stations of the Cross. Each shows Jesus
as he moved through his final agony and death. He looks so beautiful, yet so
much in pain. I like to come here when the church is empty and study the Stations of the Cross. I don't know the Stations. I just know that I feel safe here
looking at them. When I pause to study the face of Jesus at the various
stations I don't feel alone. I feel He understands my confusion. Finally, I am
next. The confessional is foreboding. It looks like a cage. The wood is dark
and contorted into haunting patterns around sculptured doors. The priest's box
is in the middle of the confessional with an embroidered door with the letters
THS at the top. I have no idea what the letters mean, but I wonder nonetheless.
Confessionals are on either side of the priest's box. Wooden lattice screens
separate the priest from confessors on either side. The priest sits but we
confessors have to kneel on hard kneelers. Sister showed us all this last week
so that we wouldn't be afraid. I am still afraid anyway. The wood has a
sickening smell, like sweet perfume, which makes me gag. I wonder why it smells
so terrible.
The confessor's door opens and my cousin,
Francis Martin Dean, comes out with a big grin. Perhaps it isn't all that bad.
I enter. I hear the hum of Father in stern voice as he hears the confession of
a girl on the other side. I strain to hear what she says, but I can't make out
her words. Then I hear Father mumbling some in Latin, then saying, "Say five Our Fathers and five Hail
Marys for your First Holy Penance. Now make a good Act of Contrition."
The girl responds in a high pitch muffled voice as Father continues to mumble
in Latin. Then bang, bang! Abruptly, her shutter is slammed closed, and mine is
opened. The bang-bang throws a shock wave through me. Sweating, tense, I smell
Father's cologne, his tobacco breathe, and think of my da. I can see Father
vaguely through the wooden lattice. I think of Lamont Cranston, The Shadow on the radio, "Who knows what
evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows." The Shadow's
eerie laugh trailing. I am terrified. Suffocating. I want to leave, but my legs
won't move. Father is mumbling again in Latin. I wait. My lips tremble.
"Come, come, my
child," he nearly shouts. I put my hands over my eyes
as if fending off a blow.
"Well!" he continues. "We don't have all day!"
Finally, after taking a deep breath, then I begin in a stutter. "Blessss
meee, blesss meee, bless me Father, forrr, forrr, forrr I have
sinned." I stop. My voice
abandons me. I can't speak. If I could, I don't know what I'd say.
"Pleasssse," he says in a solicitous manner. I know that
"please."
My da says please that way when he is angry. I
am afraid of my da. Still, I can say
nothing.
"Well, in that case, you
answer me," Father says peevishly. "Have you lied?"
"Lied?"
"Yes,
my dear child, have you lied? Have you not always told the
truth? You do know what telling the truth is don't you?" I don't answer. He continues. "Do you lie to your
mother? Father?"
"Sommmmetimmes."
"How
many times?"
"How
many times?"
“Yes, my
dear child, five, ten, fifteen times, how many?"
"I
don't knowwww, Father."
"You
don't know?"
"N0000,
Father."
I can hear him breathing. My da breathes that way, especially when he is about to
explode. Father resumes more evenly.
"Have
you disobeyed your parents?" he says emphasizing each syllable as if I am slow witted. I tremble but I am angry, too. My lips move but no sound comes out.
"My
dear child, I am losing my patience. Do you know that?" He takes another deep breath. "Again,
have you disobeyed your parents?"
"Illll
donn't knnnow, Father."
"Have
you had bad thoughts?"
"Illll
donn't knnnow, Father."
"Have
you said bad words?"
"Illll
donn't knnnow, Father."
"Have
you done bad things?"
"Baddd things, Father?"
"Yes,
bad things."
IIII donn't
knnnow, Father."
"Have you pulled your sister's hair? Hit
your little brother?"
He knows who I am! He's not supposed to. Sister
said that the confessional is sacred, private, between God and me. Father has
the power to forgive my sins. But is he supposed to know me? Can he see me? I
feel ill. Will he tell my da? Near panic, I manage, "Yessss, Father."
"Have
you touched your sister?"
Toucchhhed my sister, Father?
Touccchhhed heerrrr where, Father?"
"On
her private parts."
"Prrrrivvvate
pppartts?"
"Parts of her body
covered with her clothing. You do understand the question?"
"Nnnn000,
Father."
"No, you don't
understand the question, or no you don't touch your sister where you shouldn't
touch her?"
"Bbbb000tttth,
Father."
"No,
to both?"
"Yeessss,
Father, IIIIII, whhhyy wouuulld I dooo that?"
A terrible thought races
through my head. I am in trouble. Oh, am I ever in trouble! Have I lied? To a
priest? What am I to do? I help my mother change my cousin's baby diapers when
she takes care of her, and gives her a bath in the kitchen sink. She is six
months old. Did I ever touch her ... there? Did I do wrong?
"My child, pleassse,"
he says, ignoring my growing distress. "Have
you stolen anything?"
"Noooo, Father."
Why would I do that? I don't understand the
question. Why is he tormenting me? Why is he so mad? I can hear it in his
voice, like I can in my mommy's voice when she is disappointed in me.
"A
pencil, someone's milk money, something that doesn't belong to you." His German accent is now much more pronounced.
Next he will be speaking in German like at Sunday Mass when he explodes into
rapturous Germanic rage.
IIII
dddonn't kkknnow, Father."
"You don't know? You don't know if you
stole an eraser, a pencil, lunch money? You don't know? Or you don't want to
confess?"
"NNNNoooo,
Father, yyyyouuu'rree confusing me."
"I'm
confusing you? I'm confusing you?"
My head hurts. I am angry, confused. I start to cry. My sobs grow
louder. He ignores them.
"For
heaven's sakes child," he says
in a more soothing voice. "Let's say
you steal but don't remember. Is that possible?"
I can't stop crying. The harder I try to stop
the more the tears flow. I am sobbing now loudly. I pound my fists into my thighs.
"My dear child that is enough! Do you hear
me? Enough!"
His voice rises like it does
at Sunday Mass. I put my hands over my ears, and say mechanically,
"Yesssss, Father." I am still hiccupping
and sobbing.
"Now
that is quite enough! Do you understand?"
"Yesssss,
Father."
"You
have made a bad confession."
"Yesssss,
Father."
"A
very bad confession."
"Yesssss,
Father."
"The worst first
confession in all my years as a priest. Do you understand what I am saying, my
child?"
"Yessss,
Father."
"You are a disgrace to
your parents, to Sister Mary ..." He starts to say
her name, and decides otherwise.
"Yesssss,
Father."
A seemingly interminable pause follows. I
fidget. I can hear his breathing. Smell him. It is a bad smell. "Do your parents say the Rosary?"
"Nooooo, Father, IIIII mmmmean mmmy mmmommmy does.” My da never went to Mass, but my brother and sister did with our mother every Sunday.
"Have your mother teach you the Rosary."
"Yesssss, Father."
"The Sorrowful
Mysteries. Can you remember that, the Sorrowful Mysteries?"
"Yesssss, Father."
"Say the complete
Sorrowful Mysteries with your mother, and now make a good Act of
Contrition."
Yesssss, Father."
I wait.
"Now! I mean now!" he hisses through his teeth.
And so I began, "0 my God, I am heartily sorry
for having offended Thee, and I detest all my sins, because I dread the loss of
heaven and the pains of hell, but most of all because they offend Thee, my God,
Who ..."
When I leave the confessional with my head
down, I can hear my classmates in line sniggering. I know that no matter how
long I live I will never forget this moment. And I will never forgive this
priest. The rest of the day was a fog. I couldn't wait to rush home and glue
myself to the radio to listen to The
Shadow, Terry and the Pirates, Jack
Armstrong the All-American Boy, and Superman.
My da was more comfortable with me so indulged than in reading my classic
comics. I wouldn’t tell him I couldn't wait to read the real classics, which
mother told me were beyond me now.
My da was a non-reader, and would only shake
his head. Yet, every Friday he would trek off to the Lyons Public Library at Main Avenue and Roosevelt Street to bring
back an armload of books for her, picking the books out he said by the color of
the cover. My mother didn't care what he brought home. She would read them all,
and he would return them the following week, bringing back another armload
home. Mother would sit in the kitchen, a cup of coffee in one hand and a
cigarette in the other, an ashtray full of cigarette butts, and a beautiful
smile on her face, as she read.
This is the image of her frozen in my memory as
we bounced through the door after school. She
would have milk and cookies out for us. Patsy and Jackie would go out to play,
and I would go into the parlor, turn on the radio and listen to my radio
adventures. My mother was hard of hearing and the radio never bothered her. Later,
if my da wasn’t home, she would stop reading and tell me about the current book
she was reading. "One day, Jimmy,
you will be writing better stories than these. You are a handsome boy but have
a more beautiful mind. It is that mind that we must not ignore."
I would ask her when I could read books like
hers. "Soon," she would
say, taking a deep drag on her cigarette, before lighting it with another. "I fear only too soon. You hardly look
like a little boy anymore." My reverie was broken as my dying father
concluded his assessment of me, most of which I failed to hear. "It is for that reason I am more
worried about you than your brother and sisters. Now, go and let me get some
rest."
Where was Bobby Witt when I needed him? I
suppose he was light years away crafting his own life. Bobby always knew I
wanted to write.
Were he around now, he would say, "Rube, you are a thinker who could
never hit a curve ball. Your dad is talking curve balls. That's all. He has
scouted your weakness and is now reminding you of it. He sees people throwing
curves and you striking out again and again. He's got a point. If you want to
make the majors, you have to learn how to hit the curve ball.
“Readers
are your curve ball. That's the curve ball your dad sees you missing. You love
big words, big ideas. People don't. People want to be entertained, to forget,
not be reminded. Not sure you understand that.
“Anyway,
what I do know is you've got to cut down your swing, speed up your bat, not sit
on your back leg, and bail out on the curve. Rube, you don't get it. Readers
want to escape thinking. They want to feel smart without being smart. Big
thoughts will tank you every time."
St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Rectory & School, Clinton, Iowa
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