Brother Thomas
He lay prostrate on the floor of the church with his arms stretched out on either side in the shape of the cross, punishment for the things he’d written in a small, leather-bound notebook. Father Sebastian, the prior at the monastery, had found it on the counter inside the abbey gift shop, where he’d left it for a few moments while he pointed a tourist to the restrooms at the rear of the store, then answered questions from another about the cast nets that were for sale in the shop. How long had the monks been making them? Had they learned the art from the islanders or had they brought it with them from Cornwall? Did they really sell enough of them to support the monastery? He wished now he hadn’t taken so much time with the man.
It was February, Ash Wednesday, and the floor felt cold, even a little damp, through his black robe. He lay in the aisle between the choir stalls, which stood on either side of the nave facing each other, and listened as the monks sang evening prayer. Brother Timothy was crooning like a lounge singer, “O loving, O sweet Virgin Mary.”
When they finished the Salve Regina, he heard the hinged seats built into each stall squeak as they were lifted, then a tired shuffling of feet as the monks lined up to be sprinkled with holy water by the abbot. Finally the lights went out, except for the one near the abbot’s stall, and Brother Thomas was left in the near dark, in a luxuriant silence.
He was the youngest monk at forty-four, and also the newest, a so-called junior monk with temporary vows. His solemn vows—usque ad mortem, until death—were only four months away. What had he been thinking—giving a lecture to the man in the gift shop as if he’d been here half his life? He’d gone on and on about the cast nets.
He lay there and cursed himself. It had given Father Sebastian, who really should have been a marine and not a monk, an opportunity to thumb through his notebook and grow alarmed for the state of his soul. He’d taken it to the abbot, who was very old school about things and thoroughly Irish. Thomas had been summoned to his office, into the dreaded papal enclosure, as he sometimes thought of it. Now here he was on the floor.
He’d been lectured by the abbot a dozen times at least, but this was the first time he’d been punished, and it didn’t seem so bad really, lying here. He would stay until the abbot felt he’d meditated long enough on the perils of doubt and sent someone to release him. He’d been here like this an hour, perhaps longer.
The floor of the church smelled of Murphy’s oil soap and something else sour and slightly manure-ish that he realized was a mixture of pluff mud from the marsh and fertilizer from the garden. It was clogged and hardened into microscopic crevices in the wooden boards, having been tracked in on the monks’ shoes for the last fifty years.
Here in this rarefied place—where they all imagined themselves marinating in holiness through their ceaseless rounds of chanting and prayer—was all this hidden mud and cow shit. It was hard to overestimate how much this pleased him. Brother Thomas had dreamed once about Christ’s feet—not his crucifixion or his resurrection or his sacred heart but his feet.
The scent emanating from the church floor, even God’s feet in his dream, made him think more highly of religion somehow. The other monks, Sebastian for instance, would have impugned the buildup in the floor crevices as profane, but Thomas lay there knowing suddenly that what he smelled was a fine patina of the most inviolate beauty, and shockingly holy. He was smelling the earth.
He’d been at St. Senara abbey on the small South Carolina island for nearly five years, each one of those years a bone of darkness that he’d gnawed. And still no marrow of light, he thought, though now and then he felt an occasional beam of it dart out of nowhere and hit him. Just as it had a moment ago when he’d caught that scent.
After his other life had ended, the one with his wife and his unborn child, he’d been incurably driven. Sometimes his quest seemed impossible, like an eye trying to look back and see its own self. All he’d discerned so far was that God seemed surreptitiously about and wrenchingly ordinary. That was all.
His real name was Whit O’Conner. Before, in that other life, he’d been an attorney in Raleigh thwarting developers and industrial polluters on behalf of various conservation and environmental groups. There had been a brick house with a landscaped yard, and his wife, Linda, seven and a half months pregnant. She’d worked as an office manager in an orthodontist’s practice, but she’d wanted to stay home and raise their child, even though that wasn’t fashionable. He’d liked that about her—that she wasn’t fashionable. They’d met at Duke, gotten married the Sunday afternoon following her graduation in her family’s tiny Methodist church near Flat Rock, North Carolina, and they’d never been apart until the tire came off the truck in front of her car on I-77. The medic who’d responded to the accident told him over and over that she had gone quickly, as if her leaving sooner would console him.
His sense of abandonment had been bottomless—not just by Linda and the promise of family but by God, whom he’d actually believed in. The kind of believing one does before immense suffering.
Linda had called him from work the day she died to tell him she was sure they were having a girl. Up until then she’d had no feeling either way, though he personally had believed all along it was a boy. The impression had come over her while standing in the shower that morning. She’d touched her abdomen and simply known. He smiled now, remembering this, and his lips brushed against the floor. After the funeral he’d learned from the coroner that she’d been right.
He couldn’t remember precisely when it had first occurred to him to come here, but it had been around a year after her death. He’d sent his baptism and confirmation records, recommendations from two priests, and a long, carefully constructed letter. And still everyone, including the abbot, had said he was running away from his grief. They’d had no idea what they were talking about. He’d cradled his grief almost to the point of loving it. For so long he’d refused to give it up, because leaving it behind was like leaving her.
Sometimes he couldn’t fathom why he’d thrown in his lot with these aging men. Some were grumpy to the point he went out of his way to avoid them, and at least four inched about with walkers and lived permanently in the infirmary. There was one monk, Brother Fabian, who was always writing letters of complaint to the pope about things the rest of them did, and posting copies in the corridors. Brother Basil had a bizarre tic, shouting out “Meep!” during choir or other odd, sacrosanct moments. Meep. What did it mean? It had driven Thomas nuts at first. But Basil was at least kind, unlike Sebastian.
Thomas had not been one of those people who romanticized monasteries, and if he had, that illusion would have evaporated the first week.
Simply, his grieving had opened into a larger abyss.
“I have come here not to find answers,” he’d written in his notebook that first year, “but to find a way to live in a world without any.”
To be honest, he’d been turned away three times over the course of three years before the abbot, Dom Anthony, finally accepted him. Thomas was sure it was not because the abbot had changed his mind, but because he’d finally worn him down. Because, too, they’d needed a younger man, someone who could climb the ladder into the timber buttresses of the church and change the lightbulbs, who knew about computers—that the word “reboot” did not necessarily mean putting on your shoes again, as several monks seemed to think. Mostly they’d needed someone who could take their small boat into the creeks and measure egret eggs, count hatchlings, and test the water for salinity—work the monastery had been contracted to do for the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources to bring in extra income. Thomas was happy to do it. He loved disappearing into the rookery.
His arms had begun to ache a little around the elbows. He changed position and turned his head in the other direction. He saw the church as a mouse would see it. As a beetle. He rolled his eyes toward the ceiling without moving his head and felt he was lying at the bottom of the world, looking up. The place where all ladders start—wasn’t that what Yeats had said? He had spent a lot of his time here reading—especially the poets, systematically going through the volumes in the library. He loved Yeats best.
He felt less consequential down here on the floor, and it struck him that all self-important people—the ones in Congress, in the Vatican, at AT&T perhaps—should lie down here for a while. They should lie here and look up, and see how different everything seemed.
He’d had an overly important sense of himself before coming here, he admitted it. The cases he’d tried—so many of them high profile—had often put him on the front page of state newspapers, and sometimes he still thought about that life with nostalgia. He remembered the time he’d prevented a big landfill company from trucking in sewage sludge from New York City, how it’d landed him in the New York Times, and then all the television interviews he’d given. He’d basked in that.
On the boat, the day he’d come here to stay, he’d thought of the river Styx, of the ferryman ushering him across the last threshold. He’d imagined he was dying to his old life and coming ashore to a new one, one hidden out here in the water, hidden from the world. It was silly and overly dramatic, but he’d liked the analogy. Then it had turned out that it wasn’t so much the water but the trees that had impressed him, how the branches were warped and curled in extravagant spirals from the ocean winds. The moment he’d seen them, he’d known that it was a place of harshness. Of enduring.
Of course he’d taken the name Brother Thomas because he was the resident doubter, and it was practically a cliché, but he took it anyway. He doubted God. Perhaps he would find there had never been a God. Or he would lose one God and find another. He didn’t know. Despite this, he felt God the same way the arthritic monks felt rain coming in their joints. He felt only the hint of him.
On the first page of the notebook, he’d written “Disputed Questions” in honor of Thomas Merton, the monk who’d written a book by that title. He’d pointed this out to Dom Anthony as some sort of defense, but it had not saved him. If you were going to be heretical and get away with it, you needed to be dead long enough for people to get over the heresy and rediscover you.
He tried to recall the most damning parts of the notebook. Probably the questions that woke him in the night. He’d sat with his window open, listening to the buoys out on Bull’s Bay make their sonorous music, and he’d written them all down. Questions about evil and whether it could exist without God’s collusion, about Nietzsche’s claim that God is dead, even theories that God is not a being in heaven but merely some guiding aspect in the human personality.
He felt a rush of dismay at the thought of the abbot’s reading this. He wanted to get up and find him, to explain. But what would he say?
The wind rose outside, sweeping in from the bay, flapping over the roof. He imagined it tearing the surface of the water. The monastery bell clanged, calling the monks to sleep, telling them the Great Silence was beginning, and he wondered if the abbot had forgotten about him.
The church had filled up with shadows, the long slits of pale glass in the windows completely dark. He thought of the chapel behind the chancel, where the mermaid chair sat on a carpeted dais. He liked to go and sit in the chair sometimes, when no tourists were around. He always wondered why Senara, their famous little saint, had been carved on the chair in her mermaid form, a half-nude mermaid at that. He didn’t object to the portrayal; he rather appreciated it. It was just so unlike the Benedictines to highlight her breasts.
From the moment he’d seen the mermaid chair, he’d loved Senara, not just for her mythic life in the sea but for how supposedly she’d heard the prayers of Egret Islanders and saved them, not only from hurricanes but from golf courses.
In the beginning he’d sat in the mermaid chair and thought of his wife, of making love to her. Now he could go weeks and not think of her. Sometimes when he thought of making love, it was simply with a woman, a generic woman, not Linda at all.
Back when he’d arrived as a postulant, it had not been hard to give up sex. He did not see then how he could make love to anyone but Linda. Her hair spread across the pillow, the smell of her—that was gone. Sex was gone. He’d let it go.
He felt a tightening at his groin. How ridiculous to think sex would stay away. Things would hide out in an underground place for a while, they would sink like the little weights the monks tied on their cast nets, but they wouldn’t stay down there forever. Everything that goes down comes up. And then he almost laughed at the pun he’d made without intending to.
The past few months, he’d thought of sex too much. Doing without had become an actual sacrifice, but it didn’t make him feel holy, only denied, more of a normal monk chafing at celibacy. In June he would take his last vows. And that would be that.
When the footsteps came at last, he closed his eyes, then opened them again when the sound stopped. He saw the toes of a pair of shoes, Reeboks, and the hem of a robe brushing against them.
The abbot spoke in his Irish brogue, not one bit of it flaked away after all these years. “I hope it was productive time.”
“Yes, Reverend Father.”
“Not too harsh, then?”
“No, Reverend Father.”
Thomas didn’t know how old Dom Anthony was, but he looked ancient gazing down, the skin of his face drooping from his chin and cheeks almost like ruffles. Sometimes the things he said sprang from such a timeless old world. Once, during a Sunday-morning chapter meeting, sitting on his thronelike chair holding his crosier, he’d said, “The same time St. Patrick drove the snakes from Ireland, he changed all the old pagan women into mermaids.” Thomas had thought that quaint—and a little bizarre. Could the abbot really believe that?
“Go to bed now,” Dom Anthony said.
Thomas lifted himself from the floor and walked out of the church into a night that was heaving about in the wind. He flipped his cowl over his head and crossed the central cloister, headed toward the duplex cottages scattered under the whorled oaks near the marsh.
He followed the path toward the cottage he shared with Father Dominic. Dominic was the abbey librarian and also the monastery prankster (“Every court has its jester,” Dominic liked to say). He had aspirations of being a writer and kept Thomas up nights with his typing. Thomas had no idea what Dominic was working on, on the other side of the cottage, but he had a feeling it might be a murder mystery—an Irish abbot who turns up dead in the refectory, strangled with his own rosary. Something like that.
The path was lined with cement plaques announcing the stations of the cross, and Thomas moved past them through spiky bits of fog that had blown in from the ocean, thinking now of Dominic, who’d once drawn smiley faces on several of them. Of course Dom Anthony had made him scrub the plaques and then the choir stalls, while the rest of them got to watch The Sound of Music on television. Why couldn’t he get into trouble the way Dominic did, for something droll and comic? Why did it have to be for the existential bullshit he wrote in his notebook?
He’d thought for a while he might get into trouble over the baseball card that he used to mark pages in his prayer book, but apparently no one, including the abbot, seemed to care. It surprised Thomas how much he missed simple things like baseball. Once in a while he got to watch a game on television, but it wasn’t the same. Dale Murphy had hit forty-four home runs last year, and he’d seen only one of them.
Linda had given him the baseball card their last Christmas together. Eddie Matthews, 1953—there was no telling what she’d paid for it.
He envied Dominic, who had to be eighty at least and went about in a tattered straw hat everywhere except choir. He’d been the one who’d convinced the abbot to put a television in the music-listening room. Once Dominic had tapped on Thomas’s door after the Great Silence and tried to convince him to sneak over and watch a special program about shooting the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue. Thomas had not gone. He regretted it to this day.
He was nearly at his cottage when he stopped abruptly, thinking he heard a voice, a woman’s voice calling in the distance. He looked east toward the rookery, his robe beating around his legs.
A whip-poor-will sang out. The Gullah woman on the island, Hepzibah Postell, the one who kept up the slave cemetery, had told him once that whip-poor-wills were the departed spirits of loved ones. Of course he didn’t believe this, and he was pretty sure she didn’t either, but he liked to think it was Linda out there singing. That it was her voice calling in the distance.
Thomas pictured his wife—or was it merely the generic woman?—posing in a swimsuit. He imagined the place inside her thigh, just above her knees, the softness there. He thought about kissing that place.
He stood beneath a bent tree in the Great Silence, and he thought about falling into life and then about flying far above it. Then he heard it again—a woman’s voice calling out. Not a bird singing or the wind moaning but a woman.