"Every word. But the change is that I also believe a great many other things that aren't in the Creed. It's shorthand, you know. Just what's necessary. But I don't live merely by what is necessary. If you are determined on the religious life, you have to toughen up your mind. You have to let it be a thoroughfare for all thoughts, and among them you must make choices. You remember what Goethe said – that he'd never heard of a crime he could not imagine himself committing? If you cling frantically to the good, how are you to find out what the good really is?"
"I see. – Do you know anything about a girl called Theotoky?"
"She's a student of mine. Yes."
"I see something of her. She's Hollier's
"I know nothing about that."
"But Hollier does, I think."
"Meaning what?"
"I thought you might have heard something."
"Not a word."
"Well, I must go. Sorry you've become such a bad priest, Sim."
"Remember what I said about the habit."
"Oh, come on – just now and then. I like to lecture my mature students in it."
"Be careful. I could make things difficult for you."
"With the bishop? He wouldn't care."
"Not with the bishop. With the R.C.M.P. You've got a record, remember."
"I bloody well have not!"
"Not official. Just a few notes in a file, perhaps. But if I catch you in that fancy-dress again, I'll grass on you, Brother John."
He opened his mouth, then shut it. He had learned something after all; he had learned not to have an answer for everything.
He finished his drink, and after a longing look at the bottle, which I ignored, he went. But there was a pathetic appeal at the door which cost me fifty dollars. And he took his monk's robe, bundled up and tied with its own girdle.
Second Paradise IV
1
"Poshrat!"
Mamusia struck me as hard as she could on the cheek with the flat of her hand. It was a rough blow, but perhaps I staggered a little more than was fully justified, and whimpered and appeared to be about to fall to the floor. She rushed towards me and pushed her face as near as possible to mine, hissing fury and garlic.
"To tell him that! To chatter to your
On and on she raved, enjoying herself immensely; I knew that in the end she would rave herself into a good temper, and then there would be endearments, and a cold wet poultice of mint for my burning face, and a snort of Yerko's fierce plum brandy, and she would play the
Nobody could say my life lacked variety. At the University I was Miss Theotoky, a valued graduate student somewhat above the rest because I was one of the select group of Research Assistants, a girl with friends and a quiet, secure place in the academic hierarchy, with professors who had marked me as one who might some day join their own Druid circle. At home I was Maria, one of the Kalderash, the Lovari, but not quite, because my Father had not been of this ancient and proud strain, but a