Blood Ties
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Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Part One
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Part Two
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Part Three
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Part Four
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Also by Ralph McInerny
Copyright
For Tom and Bonnie Cavanaugh
Part One
1
“Talk to him, Henry. He’ll know what to do.”
“Vivian, there isn’t anything to do.”
“Oh, isn’t there? Then why are you brooding about it?”
“I’m not brooding.”
Vivian was behind the wheel, so her remarks were addressed to the windshield, but they struck him like carom shots in billiards. Henry smiled, despite himself. Ever since a billiard table had been installed at the St. Hilary’s senior center, he no longer considered their almost daily visits there just something he did for his wife. As often as not, she dragged him along to the pastor’s noon Mass as well, ignoring his mild protests.
“I am not going to become a pious old man.”
“Bah.”
“Martin Sisk.”
“You are not likely to turn into a sanctimonious ass, Henry Dolan. Besides, at our age, well, why not?”
“Insurance?”
“Don’t be cynical.”
She pulled into the parking lot behind the former parish school and parked. As she dropped the keys into her purse, she turned to him. “I mean it, Henry. Talk to Father Dowling.”
“We’ll see.”
“And don’t treat me like a child.”
She was out of the car and waiting for him before he came around to help her. Viv liked to be handed out of the car, even when she drove. Gallantry had become more than a habit over the course of the fifty years of their marriage, a habit born of love. Now it was such small things that best expressed his affection for her. In recent years, their marriage had entered a new phase. They did everything together. She put her arm through his, and they started for the door. Henry hummed the wedding march, and she looked up at him, radiant. Time had not dimmed the memory of the day they had pledged their love to one another. He glanced at the church.
“The scene of the crime,” he murmured.
She pressed his arm closer to her. “Think about it?”
“I’ll think about it.”
Inside, Viv went off to play bridge, and Henry headed for the billiard table, where Martin Sisk was already chalking his cue in anticipation. Henry managed to smile. Not even Martin could spoil a game of billiards. Besides, Henry invariably beat the beaming little seventy-year-old altar boy. Martin still had the cherubic look with which he had pranced around the altar all those years ago, when they were students in St. Hilary’s school, Martin the delight of the nuns. He had looked like a little priest as he scampered about the sanctuary, lighting the candles, rattling off the Latin prayers, lugging the huge missal from one side of the altar to the other. All these years later, he had offered to serve Father Dowling’s Mass, but priests got along without such help nowadays. Martin had been crushed, pouting like a Fra Angelico seraph.
“You should have become a priest, Martin.”
“I know!”
“Why didn’t you?”
“It is the regret of my life, Henry.” His voice dropped. “After Deirdre died, I talked with the bishop.”
“A retarded vocation?”
“It happens all the time now.” Martin carried around in his wallet a news clipping. GRANDFATHER ORDAINED. There was a photograph of the new old priest giving a first blessing to his children and grandchildren.
“What did the bishop say?”
“He laughed.” Henry said this in a shocked whisper. “Then I suggested maybe a permanent deacon.”
“And?”
“The man is pre–Vatican II. I should have gone to the cardinal. I think Bishop Gronski may have spoken to Father Dowling. That’s why he refused me.”
“Oh, I doubt that.”
“You always were charitable, Henry.”
Such praise from Martin was unsettling. The fact was that Henry, too, had been an altar boy, a reluctant one. In those days, when his turn came, it entailed getting up at the crack of dawn and hurrying to church, putting on a cassock and surplice and trying to keep awake during the 6:45 Mass. He had always made a point of not being teamed with Martin. He didn’t want the nuns to think he might go to Quigley, the minor seminary of the archdiocese of Chicago.
“Father Dowling has an odd sense of humor,” Martin said, trying to be charitable, too. Father Dowling kept the enthusiastic Martin at arm’s length.
Their daughter, Sheila, and her family were the great consolation of Henry and Vivian Dolans’ life. Maurice, their son, had been a crushing disappointment until he relocated to California, where his immaturity was not a handicap. Father Dowling’s handling of Martin Sisk almost seemed a reason for taking Vivian’s advice and talking with the pastor about his granddaughter, Martha. His granddaughter. In his own mind, he put an asterisk before her name, as if to show that, like a recently broken record in baseball, it really didn’t count. It was difficult to hope that Maurice would ever father a son to carry on the Dolan name.
Later, at the noon Mass, Henry found himself paying special attention to Father Dowling. The priest said Mass reverently but swiftly, and his five-minute homily was pithy and to the point. Witty, too, without making a show of it. Henry began to believe that he could talk to Father Dowling about his granddaughter, whose sudden interest in her birth parents threatened the tranquility of his daughter’s marriage.
2
Whenever Martha Lynch thought of her twenty-two years of life, something she did more frequently nowadays, it seemed an even line that had seldom been disturbed by blips of insecurity. Was it always like that with only children? In childhood she seemed to bask in a sea of love, her mother, Sheila, almost a big sister to her, her father, less demonstrative, an inarticulate rock of stability. Yet she
did not think she had been spoiled. There was discipline and order in their suburban home, and when she went off to school it was brought home to her that she must do well. Sheila had a master’s in education and had taught until Martha came, but then she had decided to devote herself to a class of one. George Lynch was the premier pathologist of Fox River, Illinois.
“Most of my patients are already dead.”
It was his only joke, but every time he told it he seemed to surprise himself by his levity. He left the talking to his wife. It wasn’t that Sheila dominated her husband. That would have been impossible, or so it seemed. She was two heads shorter than George, and he folded her into his arms as if she were a child. Sometimes Martha thought that she had grown up like that, herself gathered into one of her father’s arms, her mother in the other, the three of them against the world. Not that the world seemed a menacing place. She might have been wholly unaware of the world outside the suburbs if her parents hadn’t been given to unobtrusive good works. They volunteered at the center for the homeless on weekends and took their daughter with them on Saturday mornings, when George would heap the plates high at the hot table while Sheila devoted herself to the wary children. Only later, when Martha grew critical, did she think of those Saturdays at the homeless center as visits to the zoo. The unstated lesson was plain: They had been fortunate, and they had an obligation to those life had treated differently. The great earthquake of Martha’s life came when she was nine and learned that she had been adopted.
When she tried to remember it, she could never recall exactly what her parents had said, the event was so submerged in her own reaction to it. Already she had learned the reticence of her father and her mother’s habit of concern for others. It seemed important that she not let them know how the revelation had affected her. Once, in the car, her father and grandfather in the front seat, Martha sleepy between her mother and grandmother in back, she became drowsily aware of the adult conversation going on over her head, coded, oblique. But she knew what they were talking about. Her grandmother had asked if Martha had ever been told.
“Of course.”
“And.”
“It ran off her like water.”
It sounded like a baptism that hadn’t taken. Martha had sensed the concern in the two women, and she felt good about the fact that she had protected her mother from anxiety. Her own anxiety remained silent.
What had been her parents’ secret became her own. Several times, in later years, her mother tried to talk of it, but Martha headed her off. Perhaps she was still trying to believe that she had imagined it. After all, it was incredible. How could her mother not be her real mother and her father her real father? It was like being told that the axioms in geometry might be false, parallels meet, two things equal to a third turn out unequal. Her protection was to transform her life into a story she told only to herself.
Other kids dreamed they weren’t the children of their parents—it was a cliché—but now Martha, knowing she wasn’t, was free to imagine where she had come from, how her parents had acquired her, all the things she might have been if they had not adopted her. But she could not imagine a life better than the one she had. The story became one of being rescued from some terrible fate, a fate she really didn’t want to know about. She might have been one of those sad little children at the homeless center who stared at her as if she were from some other planet.
Only her uncle Maurice spoke of her adopted status without embarrassment. “We’re really not related, my dear. Be careful.” And he had kissed her cheek again. Of course, Maurice was the black sheep who had never grown up. How could she talk about herself seriously with an older man who seemed younger than she was?
In time, Martha graduated from Barat with a degree in history and then enrolled in a course for paralegals at Roosevelt University. She had lived in an apartment near the university, feeling that she was once more visiting the world of the homeless. Like those visits, though, that time was soon over, and she was hired by Foley, Farnum, and Casey in the Loop. That was where she met Bernard Casey, the son of a senior partner. He was very bright and witty and the most attractive man she had ever seen, so attractive she could not imagine why every other woman in the firm was not in love with him. Even more surprising was his immediate and unmistakable interest in her.
“Barat?” he asked.
“And where did you go?”
“Notre Dame.”
“I’ve heard of it.”
She had told a joke. His laughter filled the room, and others turned to look. It was like a public announcement.
“I never heard him laugh before,” Willa Lonum said. “No one laughs in the office.” Willa was over thirty and more or less in charge of the paralegals. She had been with the firm forever, or so thought the younger women.
“Tell him a joke.”
Willa did not quite laugh, but it seemed to take an effort. She needed no prompting to tell Martha all about the scion of the Casey family.
“The what?”
“Heir apparent. Prince of Wales. Golden boy.”
“I suppose he’s engaged.”
“You suppose wrong. No one has yet passed the test.”
“What test?”
“Casey senior’s. Bernard is his only son.”
“Are there sisters?”
Willa leaned toward her, eyes wide, and whispered, “Five. All older. They were trying for a son, and when they got him, that was that.”
Martha never quizzed Willa about the Caseys; she didn’t have to. Family lore poured from Willa as if she had no family of her own and lived vicariously through the families of the senior members of the firm. Willa already had the look of a maiden aunt, one of those women who devote themselves to their work and their nephews and nieces and might just as well be nuns. Willa went to Mass every morning at St. Peter’s on Madison before coming to the office and was given to special devotions.
“I started a novena for you,” she confided to Martha.
“It sounds like skin cream.”
“Don’t.” Just that. Don’t. Willa never made light of her religious beliefs. One morning Martha stopped by St. Peter’s. Willa was in a front pew. Masses were said on the hour, and in the confessionals along the side of the nave penitents came and went. Martha took a bulletin when she left. Confessions were heard all day long at St. Peter’s, every day but Sunday. Most of the people Sheila had seen in the pews reminded her of the homeless center. The thought that religion was largely a comfort for the unfortunate was not one she would have expressed to Willa.
Her first date with Bernard was hardly that. They went to the Art Institute one lunch hour, impromptu. He stopped by her desk. Well, not quite. He was passing and then stopped and came back.
“Where do you have lunch?”
She opened a drawer and showed him her apple. She felt like Eve.
“That’s lunch?”
“I’m on a diet.”
She might have been inviting his appraisal. She got it. “I’ll bet you exercise, too.”
“Doesn’t everyone?”
“I don’t know everyone. Have you seen the Degas exhibit?”
She had seen it the previous weekend, she said. “Is that where you’re going?”
“We can get some lunch there.”
“I could bring my apple.”
“Don’t you dare.”
They walked around the exhibit, but it was very crowded, worse than on the weekend.
“You’ve already seen it?”
She nodded, wishing she hadn’t mentioned it.
“Then we can have lunch.”
But the cafeteria in the museum was swarming with people. He turned to her.
“This wasn’t a very good idea.”
“Come back on Saturday.”
“Is that an invitation?”
“A suggestion.”
“Would you come with me?”
“Sure.”
That easily, she dismissed from her mind a half promise
to golf with her parents. Martha was beginning to feel that the hand of destiny was on her shoulder.
“We better go somewhere else for lunch.”
“I don’t have time.”
“Sure you do.”
“Could I tempt you with my apple?”
“You already have.”
Back at her desk, he pulled up a chair and split the apple in two with his bare hands while Sheila was contemplating using her letter opener to cut it.
“One of my skills,” he said, offering her half.
“I thought you didn’t exercise.”
“Did I say that?”
Half the fun of the coming weeks was remembering what he had said when they were together. The Saturday visit was a great success. Afterward, they had lunch in a pub and drank beer and talked, each giving the other an oral CV. At four o’clock, they were still talking.
“I’m glad you were free today.”
“But I wasn’t. I was supposed to golf with my parents.”
“Tell me about them.”
“I already have.”
“All I know is that your father is a doctor and your mother … well, is a mother.”
Suddenly she realized that they weren’t really her parents. Her tales about Uncle Maurice, which had delighted him, seemed equally irrelevant. Nothing she could say of her supposed relatives explained her being in the world. Her mind seemed to fill with silence as she listened for some clue to who she really was. She felt like an impostor.
“I have to go.”
“My car is nearby.”
“I can walk.”
“Walk?”
She told him where her apartment was.
“But that’s miles away.”
“I walk it every morning.”
“In gym shoes?”
“Of course.”
“I’ll walk you there.”
“No you won’t.” She hesitated. “You don’t have gym shoes.”
“I’ll buy some.”
They parted outside. She walked home—in street shoes, not a good idea—and then sat looking out the window toward the lake while evening enveloped the apartment in a pensive twilight. She realized she loved Bernard. He seemed to love her. So what did that mean? Someday, and soon, she would have to tell him the truth about herself. But the truth was she didn’t know the truth. It was in the darkening apartment that she resolved to discover who she really was. When the phone rang, she went to it. Caller ID told her it was her mother. She did not pick up the phone. If it had been Maurice, she would have answered, but he was now in California, half a continent away.