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‘Mrs O’Connor is using that dam hairdryer again’ said my mother as the black and white TV looked like a snow storm yet again. Mrs O’Connor had one of those dryers that involved her sitting with a cap over her hair with a tube attached to a machine and as she was our next door neighbor was routinely blamed every time the TV set had major interrupted service. Grandpa called for a lemon tea and three lumps of sugar which I was too young to make but was allowed to carry into the living room. The weak tea was made in a glass which sat into a holder with a handle and I carried it into him with the sugar lumps on a small tray. He made the familiar slurping sound as he took a lump of sugar in his mouth and sucked the tea through it. ‘How did you get to Ireland Grandpa’ I asked. I came with my family and we traveled in the hold of a big ship’ he said. How long did the journey take and how old were you and what did you eat on the journey’...the questions tumbled out one after another. Grandpa didn’t know how old he had been but we guessed he was about my age when the family made the three week journey from Lithuania to Ireland at the end of the last century. He told me that his mother brought a big barrel of salt herrings and black bread and that is what they ate in the hold of the ship until they arrived into Cork harbor. He also told me that as a little boy in Lithuania it was his job along with the other boys from the village to sit on a hill top and watch for horse’s hooves in the distance. If they spotted them they would have to run fast so the town’s people could barricade themselves into their homes and the women could hide from the soldiers who were coming to make trouble.
At the breakfast table the following day the talk was all about the Bank in Templeogue village that had been robbed. Dad said he was pretty sure it was an IRA job. Later on in the morning I sat in the kitchen and watched Mum load the slack into the big boiler in the kitchen. The slack kept the coal in and made it go further she said as she proceeded with her next job which was she to boil the nappies in a big pot on the cooker
Mrs Mac, our housekeeper came in and changed into her uniform, a black dress with a white apron over it. She wore her hair in a net and I loved those nets. They were interspersed with little colored beads and if I was good, as a special treat she would bring me one as a present. They were wrapped in a little tissue and plastic wrapper and I carefully saved each one in the cupboard under the sink in my bedroom. I don't remember ever wearing them I just marveled at the little beads. As she set the fire in the living room I looked out and noticed a Garda standing right at our front gate. ‘Will I go and offer him a cup of tea’ I asked Mrs Mac. Ah go on then, ask him if he takes sugar and milk with it and I’ll make it for you to take out to him. I hopped and skipped down the drive to the Garda on duty and asked whether he would like a cup of tea. When enough pleasantries had passed between us I got to the important questions. ‘What are you doing here’? ‘There was a robbery last night in Templeogue’ he answered. ‘I heard that’, I said. ‘We’re trying to catch the robbers’, he said. ‘I might be able to help you with that’, I said. ‘My Daddy knows who did it’. As soon as the words were out of my mouth I knew I had made some sort of terrible mistake. The Garda seemed to grow into a giant even as the words slipped out and was now glaring down at me with an inquisitive stare that would cut a stone in two. ‘Does he now’? he said.
I didn’t eat my supper that evening and Mummy said to Mrs Mac that maybe I was coming down with something. When Daddy came home from work later the Garda along with a second one for backup arrived at the door for a little chat. I didn’t get to hear what the conversation was because I ran to Grandpa’s room as soon as I saw the blue uniforms through the frosted front door glass. A little while later I heard Daddy and Mummy laughing as I crept to the top of the stairs and I knew all would be well in the world again.
* Garda are Irish Police
* Templeogue was our local Village in Dublin pronounced Temple oh..g
Comment
Nicky - I just stumbled across this blog - I really enjoyed it. Unfortunately, I was never able to know the full stories behind my grandparents coming to the US. My grandfather drank tea the same way - with the sugar cube between his teeth and drinking the tea through it.
He used to tell us that he came to New York shortly before the 4th of July (Independence Day). When he heard the fireworks he became scared - he thought a war had started!
Nicky, I loved this story. I do hope you keep writing!
Volunteering for Tester job! Since I am totally retired, I get to be in front of F.'s volunteering.
I think you should definitely write a book! We will all enjoy being your audience in the meantime. Thank you, Nicky. ;o)
I'm tester 1.
Thank you for your lovely comments. I have lots and lots of stories to relay and will follow on. My cousin who is a writer who has been nagging me for years to write a book and I have never felt I would be able. Maybe you can be my testers. :) LOL
I think so too.
What a wonderful and fascinating story, Nicky! I agree, it needs to to be continued!
Love the five year old's perspective!! What a profound event that must have been to have such great recall of the details!
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