by Robert Ferguson
pepper sauce
He
had not frightened me at first: one of those older priests, with the young face
of a man who has enjoyed a placid life, not uncommon among those of his calling
who had spent their lives in quiet rural parishes of the Church of England. But
a firmness of faith and purpose was evident in the penetration of his glance,
and in the occasional crystal hardness of his eyes. He was a tall man, imposing
in the clerical collar and full-length black cassock that he always wore around
the village. “What does he wear on holiday?” my classroom assistant Jane asked
in a giggling whisper, when he came over to the primary school to take assembly
every Friday. “Does he have a light-weight one to sleep
in?”
But
the children soon came to love and trust him, and he them, apparently. His
assemblies were not formal. He simply took a chair from the side of the hall,
placed it in the centre, and called the children to sit on the floor around him
while he told them stories. Often it was a story of something Jesus had said or
done, the meaning of which he explained to them with unfailing clarity, in
language they could understand. Sometimes, on or near a Saint’s Day, he would
tell them about the Saint, and why what he or she had done was an important
example for their own lives. And they loved it. My colleague Jane, not a
church-person, found his faith irritating, and would never call him Father, as
he encouraged – gradually successfully – the village to call him whenever they
met him in the streets and shops, and even in the pub on Thursday evenings, when
he always popped in about eight o’clock, “To make sure you’re all still here and
well,” as he said to the assembled company of regulars.
He
was a very thoughtful man. He had thought long and hard about the issues with
which people characteristically have difficulty with the Church and its
teachings, and it showed in his refusal to judge or to preach outside the
pulpit. But he wasn’t soft. Oh, my goodness no! In any village, there are always
things going on, things the participants believe no-one else has noticed and
everyone knows, but no-one mentions other than behind their hands. Ours was just
the same, of course, and it soon became known that you could go to Father for
guidance if you couldn’t handle life on your own. “Love your neighbour” was very
much at the centre of his belief, and he demonstrated very effectively to those
who needed it that the important thing about sin was how it hurt someone else.
“How would you feel if they did that to you?” he’d ask the children, and
presumably their parents when necessary. “Would you want them to be so deeply
hurt in that way?”
He
made changes in the church, of course. Every new parish priest does that. They
make it “home”, which it is for them, they spend so much time there, so often on
their own because, as he said, “Other people have to earn their living in their
own ways.” Just as we hang a picture, or cover the sofa, in our own way to make
the house our home, so he hardened the inside of our little parish
church, taking out the carpets to expose the ancient stone floors, and
introducing more candles beside tiny statues of his beloved exemplar saints.
“Life is hard,” he’d say, when diehard ‘change is blasphemy’ people complained;
“we need always to be reminded of that; and, as for the candles, remember that
fire is the great cleanser, the one ultimate cleanser.” That was more difficult
to understand, until the day of the Dreadful Event.
Despite
there always being gossip in a village, there are some things which go on that
remain secret for years and years. Ours was black magic. Our witches and
warlocks had been pilfering candles from the church for ever, it seems, and
Father knew about them and was watching them, but one day they went too
far
and
stole the Cross from the altar, and that was too much for him. The following
week, he spent a lot of time and energy, not just encouraging but begging,
pleading, more or less threatening, the whole village to come to Sunday’s
service, which wasn’t a service so much as his denunciation of a dozen of our
neighbours by name as occultists. “Do you not realise what you are doing to your
souls?” he thundered out, “Do you have no fear of God’s
judgement?”
But
they didn’t, apparently. Within the few days it took them to get over their
outing, they had begun to minimise their activities as no more than a hobby, and
to gather support in the village against him. Protests were made to the Bishop,
and the village turned against their vicar, or rather away from him. Few
continued to speak to him. Few trusted him not to out them in their little scams
and affairs. He was effectively ostracized, as the village went to Hell. So he
went there for them.
The
postman saw the flames first, glowing in the windows of the church, and called
the fire brigade. The rest of us were woken by the sirens on the fire engines
and police cars as they tore through the village to the church. The building was
saved, and in fact not that much damaged. But none of the experts could explain
how the fire had started in the centre of the stone floor of the Sanctuary which
Father had extended, far away from any candlestick or stand. Or what had started
it. No sign of accelerant, let alone matches, lighters, discarded candle-ends.
Just that terribly consumed body, kneeling in the middle of the bare, bare
floor, because his people would no longer
kneel.
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