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Tom Finnigan
Tom was born in 1948 and lived in England until 2001 when he came to Donegal with his wife. He belongs to the Derry Playhouse Writers and started to write three years ago. His stories are set in Inishowen, London and Rome, where he lived as a student.
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Burial in Spring by Tom
Finnigan
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Sue had dressed in black and walked into the bay. The tide
took her but kept her near the shore. We discovered her
trapped by rocks, head down in a pool. Sea wrack covered
her face. Like Ophelia, she drowned in flowers.
On the day she killed herself, her son arrived from England
to introduce his fiancée. Seeing a crowd about the
house, he expected a party. Unexpectedly, he joined a wake.
Her former husband came for the funeral. A mild man, who
dealt in watercolours, he sipped whiskey and told us how
she tried to jump from a window on their honeymoon. Warmed
by a turf fire, he gazed at Trawbreaga where she had died.
Smoke clung to the cold sky – dark like her spirit.
Sue painted pictures and taught children. Etching was her
love – rocks, the sea in spate, wild sky, a cottage
isolated at Malin Head. Blues and greys filled her pictures
– shadows, shadows.
On the morning we buried her, there were crows – dozens
of black crows – cawing in the elm trees. There was
a church with a tower – a Planters’ church with
Planters’ names inscribed on gravestones: Harvey,
Young, Colquhoun. There was a green – diamond shaped
– and houses with red and blue doors. There was a
ten-arched bridge and a heron standing in the water that
streamed beneath. There was the bay where she died. Beyond
it roared the ocean whose embrace she was denied. There
were hills, an endless strand, the grey clouded sky.
About the town was a reek of burning turf, smoke blowing.
There was a smell of new baked bread and bacon frying. A
pennant flew from the castellated church. Inside, on cushioned
pews, her friends pushed for space. You could smell damp
tweed and leather boots; catch a whiff of last night’s
whiskey.
A bronze eagle, wings spread, supported a bible laced with
ribbons. Our prayer was short – simple sounds of English,
redolent of King James; the Lord is my shepherd; a collect
for the dead.
A bell tolled. The Vicar bowed. We lifted her and carried
her out past a column of school girls shivering in skirts
and blazers. Some wept, others stared. Snow drops had withered.
Daffodils stretched. Yellow whins danced in a breeze that
tasted of ice.
We put her in the ground amidst a scattering of crows. We
chanted the Lord’s Prayer and threw earth on her.
Our feet dented the gravel, our hands steadied the creaking
gate. We blew our noses. Sue, oblivious to convention, rose
and followed the wind along Trawbreaga.
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