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Backbone >
Frankly Speaking
Answering the Call
by Frank Crocitto; Illustration by Leslie Bender

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When the priest arrived on the
scene the bridge was lit like a night game. Squad cars, their roof lights
flashing maniacally, staved off traffic. Cops with dour faces moved impatiently
among the cars.
The sergeant in charge, pink-jowled, pear-shaped, opened the cab door
like a doorman.
Quite a night, huh, Father?
Thank you, my man, the priest said, slamming the cab door.
He buttoned the top button of his coat and flipped up his collar.
No hat? asked the sergeant.
You want me to wait or not? called the cabbie.
The priest and the policeman looked at each other. Droplets fell from
the brim of the sergeants hat.
I can wait. Ill turn the meter off.
A young cop, sporting a drooping moustache, swaggered over.
Hes climbing up, Sarg.
The sergeant, the priest, and the cabbie looked up at the lonely figure
on the bridge.
With the help of two cops the priest reached a girder below the boy. The
taste of chicken lingered in the priests mouth, his tongue worked
at some strings stuck between his molars. The call came before he could
finish his second bowl of soup, so the ride to the bridge was threaded
with the worry that he hadnt eaten enough and wouldnt sleep
that night.
You gonna be all right up there, Father?
Tightening his grip on a cable the priest smiled bravely down.
Just be careful. The metal gets slick in the wet.
Im careful, answered the priest.
We dont want to lose you, the sergeant joked.
For a moment, as he glanced over the black water and the shadows of the
city, Father Dantine burned with anger at the situation he found himself
in, at his mechanical response to the call, at the stupidity of Irish
cops. Mostly he loathed himself for letting himself get out of shape.
The seminary and five years at Saint Rose of the Saints had done him in.
Go home, came a dark voice from above.
I am perfectly at home, the priest retorted cordially.
The hollow sound of his words made him wince.
Yeah, Ill bet you are. Get outa here, padre.
The priest inched closer so he wouldnt have to shout. His mind and
emotions were in a swirl. To steady himself he focused on the soles of
his shoes and on his hands as they gripped cable after cable. A tremor
took hold of his arms.
Why cant you goody-goods mind your own damn business?! Im
warning you.
Silently, the priest continued to sidle along the girder. What possessed
him to answer this call? There had been many before it he had ignored.
He rummaged through his memory of psychology texts and counseling manuals
he had once read.
Whatre you, deaf?!
The priest looked up at the object of his errand. A trickle broke across
his hairline and wandered across his forehead. It turned at his eyebrow
and rolled into the corner of his eye.
The youth, dark-haired, a thin growth above his lip, wearing a red jacket,
moved away. He clapped and fluttered his hands to the beat of an inaudible
song.
Hold on to something, you idiot! the priest shouted.
You talking to me?! the boy asked hoarsely.
You, stupid, Im talking to you, yeah! Father Dantine could
hardly believe the words leaping from his mouth were his. You stupid idiot!!
How would you like to be kicked off this bridge, padre? Im
not stupid. I wish I was stupid.
Anybody who endangers his life like this is worse than stupid.
Then were both stupid. The youth turned away.
At bottom both mentally and spiritually lazy, Father Bob felt
the soft life hed fallen into at Saint Roses to be heaven,
a God-carved niche. He played the accordion whenever there were parish
events. His freckled, red-haired charm titillated the ladies and amused
the gents.
Youre inconveniencing a lot of folks, son, you know that?
You better watch out. A person can fall off.
I didnt invite you here, padre.
Somebody did, snapped the priest. Come on, son, whats this
all about, huh? You want to make a big show? So youll get on the
10 oclock news? Is that what you want? Huh?
Carelessly the boy swung on a cross-cable. He landed and looked out toward
the Brooklyn docks.
Hey, come on, now. I can tell youre a sharp kid. Lets
talk. Father Bobs voice was warm and coaxing. He was confident he
had hit on the right tone.
Whats your name, son? I know youve got a name, huh?
Why dont you come on down and lets have a cup of coffee?
The youth looked thoughtfully down at the priest and, with fine deliberation,
spit.
Son of a! You got it on my coat! You know that?
Ill do better next time.
Why dont you come downso I can punch your teeth in,
punk?!
The boy smirked.
Is that the way to talk to somebody you want to save?
The sharp air, that salt tang of the river, the mist that was increasing
to a drizzle, and the untrammeled banter with the boy invigorated the
priest.
Father, the sergeant called. You wanna come down? The priest waved
him away.
I hope you got a good reason for being up there, son, the priest
said in a kindly voice. And not because your girlfriend told you she doesnt
love you anymore
The next time you call me son Im gonna piss on
you, padre.
You do and Im going to climb up thereso help meand
throw you off the damned bridge myself! And you wont have to jump!
L ater when the two were sitting in a grimy coffee
shop, Hector unfolded a damp, yellow sheet of paper and slid it across
the table to the priest.
This your chicken scratch? Father Dantine smiled.
Can you read it? Everything isnt a joke, Father.
If I put on my glasses I can, the priest said smiling.
Then, damn it, put them on, your holiness.
Recognizing he was pushing his hispanic friend too far, the priest put
on a serious face and examined the paper.
Whats this supposed to be? If I may ask
Its supposed to be questions. If you cant read Ill
read them to you. You dont take me serious. Youre no different
than the rest. You want me to read them to you?
The rest of who?
Never mind who. Do I need to read you the questions or not? The
priest returned to his reading.
Well? asked the boy.
Ive read your questions.
Well?
Well what?
What are the answers? No professional bunk,
if you please.
The waitress came, poured more coffee.
You a priest? she asked. Father Dantine nodded.
Youre cute, she chirped over her shoulder.
The priest looked back at the paper. Hector watched his eyes shifting
as he read. After a time he looked up and into the boys dark eyes.
Numero Uno: I only know what Ive been told or what I read,
nothing first-handnot directly. Like everybody else. Thats
the fact of it. To question Number Two Id say: Search me.
I dont know what the value is of knowing you exist. Maybe you steer
yourself better. And maybe better things happen. But I dont really
know. Three: I dont have the foggiest idea where ideas come from.
All I know is they pop into my head. And they pop out again. I dont
know to where. Never thought about it before. How am I doing?
Just keep going, Hector grumbled.
This ones a good one: I, truthfully, dont know. Because
I wasnt there when the universe began, and I dont know anybody
else who was. But people believe whatever they want. Number Five and final:
People get away with murderall the time. Thats why we keep
at it. If you can get away with murder you can get away with anything.
Thats what I believe. But its what I see, too. Not only what
I believe. You asked. I answered. And you? What do you think?
The boy had a pimple high on his left cheek, which hed been poking
and scraping at as the priest spoke until it was raw. He took the paper
and tore it and scattered the pieces like snowflakes across the sticky
tabletop.
The question that matters isto meis: If I stretch my
arm out as far as I can, will an arm come out of eternity and take hold
of my hand?
The priest smiled and motioned to the waitress, who was leaning over the
counter, looking his way.
Anybody can get the answer to that one, he said quietly.
Think so?
Not by jumping off bridges, of course. Yeah, I do. I do think so.
When the waitress arrived she put her hand on her hip.
Are you all done, sweetie? she said.
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