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16 October 2014
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Debra Lilley
Mark Shields

Mark Shields, 32, loitering with intent to teach English and Drama in St. Patrick's Academy, Dungannon. Schooled in aforementioned, well, school, and University College, Dublin. Live in Coalisland with wife and three daughters and Minnie the dog. Am an infinitely more interesting person than this bio suggests. I swear. Want everyone to come and see our school play; we are doing An Ideal Husband from November 12 onwards.

On the Road Back from Toome by Mark Shields

It was a Monday night early in March when I had my 鈥淩obert Frost Moment.鈥 I had to meet an A-Level Drama Moderator, (though the title rendered him a bit Starship Enterprise, he was actually the best of fellows), to give him samples of my students鈥 coursework. We had a brief chat in a hotel car-park outside Toome, a little village which hugs the North-west shoulder of Lough Neagh. We departed, after each passing comment on how busy life was between work and home, each eager to be out of the bitter cold, away back to that busy life. Toome, I remember as a child, before ever having travelled there, thinking that 鈥淭oome鈥 sounded strange, a fearsome place all dark and haunted, or maybe a deserted cowboy town complete with tumbleweed and solemn bell tolling.

I laughed at these early Gothic reminisces and, having negotiated a couple of roundabouts, I headed in the direction of Ballyronan, thinking of my never-ending list of 鈥淭hings to be Done鈥 and feeling no inclination to do any of it. As I drove I became vaguely aware of a presence over my left shoulder, something demanding to be looked at. It was nothing more mysterious than the moon, though not the usual pale, silver, distant disc, but deep-orange to blood-red, and incredibly close. I drove on, endeavouring to keep my mind on the road ahead and life ahead, (things to do and all that), but found myself turning the radio off, and taking occasional glances offered tantalisingly through breaks in hedges.

I almost laughed again when my hands rotated the steering wheel left in automatic response to the 鈥淢arina鈥 sign on entering Ballyronan village; heard the car crunch over gravel and killed the twitching, unsure engine. Now that I had succumbed to the temptation to stop, I was not sure what to do. Questions beginning with 鈥淲hat kind of eejit..?鈥 tumbled into my head. It was a cold night. All seemed quiet. The Marina was, surprise, surprise, deserted. Uncertainly, I got out of the car, which would surely have been giving the old harness bells what for had there been any. I felt a slight sense of shame. Would this not look a tad iffy? A drug dealer? A midnight rendezvous with a married woman? Then, shame at my shame. A memory of former stints on soap box about the all-important, all-consuming need for things to look 鈥渞ight鈥 in front of others.

Debate over, I looked around. I was face to face with the moon, beautifully, ridiculously huge. A calm presence just above me, not peeping coyly through, and withdrawing again, behind screening hedges as it had been. It was just the moon, (or so I told myself), yet the fantastic, orangey bridal train it trailed across the surface of the still waters of the lough made me think again. Already dominating the night sky, the reflection magnified the moon鈥檚 radiance to a liquid gold. I looked now at the boat masts nestling together. But for the cold this could be the harbour of some little island in the Aegean.

I did not want to go. I tilted my head upwards. The stars seemed to ignite spontaneously, tiny forget-me-nots in the purple-dark sky. Magic. Beauty. Stillness. I am lost in all this. Time, and life, and self are suspended. I am caught somewhere between blissful self-forgetfulness and being totally tuned in. Off radar. No beeps. You will never forget this. You were right to stop. Drink it all in. Peace. Standing slapbang in the watery heart of Ulster, and not a one to see you.

Reluctant realisation creeps in. Got to move on, though it takes a surprisingly genuine effort of will to do so. I resist for a few minutes, half in, half out of the reverie, but even when I force myself back into the car, things are not as they were before, not so immediate. They would have to wait. I was still aglow with what I had seen and felt.

I leave the village, but the moon is now travelling with me, trusts me, golden light spills in sporadically, I am not to forget her. I slow down where hedges break off, unashamedly now, this is a reluctant parting. The road veers eventually inland from the lough, as loath to leave as I. I drive home in moonlight through town-lands who huddle close under her, laughing once more at how I will find words to explain all this to my wife.


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