The Good Left Undone(50)
“I know the story.”
“Then why did you ask?”
“Knowing the history, the last place a good Protestant would want to be is in a Catholic chapel. So I thought maybe you were Catholic.”
“Am I allowed to laugh in here?”
“You’re the captain. You can do whatever you want.”
“Who is that fellow?” McVicars pointed to a statue.
“That’s Saint Bernard of Clairvaux. The saint I told you about.”
“Right. That one. He looks ill.”
“He’s French. Saint Bernard was known as the doctor of the church.”
“Seems to me a saint should have vigor so that the devout have something to aspire to, something to emulate. Makes a better statue too, don’t you think? The Catholic church should go to Scotland and find a champion pole tosser with thick legs to pose for their statues. Saint Bernard was not worth the bronze. I wouldn’t trust my soul to a puny bloke with sloped shoulders and a weak chin, would you?”
“Too late. I have prayed to him.”
“You have exactly seven freckles on your nose.”
“And you have a slight chip on your front tooth. The left one,” Domenica countered.
“I fell off a horse.”
“How’s the horse?”
“Long gone, I’m afraid. I was ten.”
“The Sisters invited you to breakfast. When I didn’t find you in the bed you were assigned to, I assumed you left the hospital. You must be starving. I can take you to the dining room on my way out.”
“If those holy women kept a biscuit in the drawer, I wouldn’t be hungry.”
“I should have served you your tea and a macaron.”
“Falling down on the job, Cabrelli. That’s all right. Truth be told, I had a macaron with a lovely blonde.”
“So you figured your way around the hospital after all.”
“I did. And then I had a bicarbonate with Sister Marie Honoré. Are you a nun?”
“No.”
“Good. They scare me.”
“They shouldn’t.”
“But they do. They run in packs. They move in formation like a swarm of bees.”
“You’re the second man in a month to ask me if I’m a nun. Should I take that as a sign to become one?”
“That depends. How do you feel about bees?”
* * *
The nuns’ dining room was bright and cheerful. A deep stone fireplace on the far wall crackled with orange flames over an open grill that held three teakettles. A large mirror over the fireplace reflected the Sisters at breakfast at one long table in the center of the room.
“The Mother Superior would like to meet you,” Domenica whispered. “You go.”
“Which one is she?”
“The one wearing the biggest cross. At the head of the table.”
Domenica watched as McVicars, in his pajamas and robe, gingerly approached the Mother Superior. Domenica tried to hide her amusement.
“Thank you, Mother Mum, for your attention and care for my men.” McVicars motioned to Cabrelli to join him. “Nurse, forgive me, what’s your name?”
“Cabrelli.”
He snapped his fingers. “Nurse, what’s your first name again?”
“Domenica.”
“Nurse Domenica Cabrelli did a wonderful job.”
“She’s one of our talented novices.”
“A novice lacks experience. Miss Cabrelli ran the ward like a general last night.”
“Novice in her case means that she is in the first phase of becoming a Sister of Saint Joseph of the Apparition.”
McVicars looked at Domenica. “You said you weren’t a nun.”
“I’m not. I’m praying about it.”
Mother Superior looked the captain up and down. “Captain, may I see your hands?”
McVicars’s hands were ruddy and had mild surface burns from the fire.
“Captain, I insist you have Nurse Cabrelli dress those wounds. You don’t want an infection. Your blood would turn.” The Mother Superior turned to Domenica. “Bring him back for breakfast when you’ve taken care of him.”
* * *
The examining room was pristine. The tile floor was as spotless as the windows, which were washed so clear and clean, they appeared to have no glass in the frames.
McVicars refused to look as Domenica gently swabbed the burned surface of the skin on his hands to cleanse the abrasions. She placed his hands in a pan filled with ice and fresh water. “I’m sorry, but if I bandage your burns without cleansing them thoroughly, you’ll scar. You have beautiful hands—that wouldn’t be right.”
“I’m not going to thank you for the pain. But I will thank you for the compliment. You speak English quite well, Miss Cabrelli.”
“It’s better than my French. I’m on shifts with Mary Gay Mahoney a lot. She’s one of the nurses. She’s from Scotland, too. She has the most exquisite wool blanket on her bed. She said it was made there.”
“How are you going to give up nice things when you take your vows?”
“A nun doesn’t have to give up beauty. That’s one of God’s greatest gifts to the world, isn’t it? Here’s your wedding ring.” Domenica placed it safely in the hospital shirt. She buttoned the flap.