minimal and drab as any of its neighbours in the row. Only the most careful observer would notice the extraordinary thickness of the front door, or how the painted shutters of the windows were steel-reinforced.
Learning that death was imminent, the family gathered like a wagon train drawing up in a circle for defence. Though it was a sparse circle, thought Maddie. One daughter had died of breast cancer two years before, and the one sonâapple of his fatherâs eyeâhad been shot dead fifteen years before trying to evade a British Army roadblock. Now only she and her older sister, Kate, remained.
Maddie had come only because her mother had asked her to. As a little girl, her dislike for her father had been matched by the intensity of love sheâd felt for her mother, though as she grew up even this was corroded by her frustration at her motherâs passivity in the face of her husbandâs domineering ways. Maddie simply couldnât fathom her motherâs willingness to subordinate her own striking qualitiesâthe musicality, the love of books, the Galway-bred country sense of humourâto the demand of her husband Sean that the Struggle should always come first.
Maddie had known that her fatherâs dedication to Irish nationalism brought him admiration of a kind. But this had only increased her dislike of him, her anger at his callous treatment of the family. Yet she was never sure which she felt more contemptibleâthe man or the movement. She had got away from both as soon as she couldâleaving at eighteen to study Law at University College Dublin, then staying on to work there.
There was also the violenceâMaddie had been fleeing that as well, of course. She had never bothered to count the number of people sheâd known who had been injured or killed. Then there were the others, just ordinary people many of them, who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. She came to believe that the counting would never stop. Her father had been obsessively secretive about his âprofessional life,â yet as the Keaney family listened to the news of each IRA âoperationââthat euphemism for bombings, shootings and deathâthe hush that settled over them all was knowing, not innocent. No hush could still the impact of the deaths that studded Maddieâs childhood like a grotesquely crowded dartboard. Especially that of her brother, born and bred a Republican, killed before he had any idea that life might give him other choices.
Now she sat with her mother and sister for hours on end, drinking countless cups of tea in the small sitting room downstairs, while in his bed on the floor above them her father lay, heavily sedated. Word went out, through the vast network of comrades, associates and friends, that Sean Keaney would be glad to have final visits from those who had served with him since the Troubles flared in the late sixties. There was never any question of a priest being called, for although Keaney had been born a Catholic, the only faith he held was a rock-solid allegiance to the Irish Republican Army.
The visitors were all known to the family. Kieran OâDoyle, Jimmy Garrison, Seamus Ryan, even Martin McGuinness made an appearance late one night, coming under cover of darkness so his visit would not be noticedâthe list was a roll call of the Republican movement. To a man they were long-term veterans of the armed struggle.
Many had served prison terms for their part in assassinations or bombings, and were free now only because of the amnesty provisions of the Good Friday Agreement. During his long paramilitary career, Keaney had managed to avoid any criminal conviction, but along with most of his visitors, he had been interned in the seventies for over a year in the cell blocks of the Maze Prison.
The men were shown upstairs by Maddie, since her mother found the constant up and down exhausting. Standing by the bedside, they tried to make
David Sherman & Dan Cragg