This must be Hell. Sun smothered him through the grimy bus windows, as the driver rattled them over potholes and rubbish on shot suspension.
The woman turned to him, releasing the meaty smell of her dehydrated mouth. “You must be having a lovely time, Father,” she said. The question mark got lost in the clatter of the bus. His forehead was damp. “You don’t get to go out much.”
Again, it was not a question. He smiled a response, unwilling to open his mouth in case the smell of her breath seeped into it, God forgive him.
“You’re not making the most of things, you eat hardly anything. Not worried about gluttony, are you?” She laughed, her smell sprayed all over his face. He’d have to wash before he could eat. Of all his parishioners, why did she have to sit close to him, carve out these little moments to chat?
He wanted to enjoy the sun. Visiting the Vatican City had been special, returning the long way to England had been the wrong decision. His parishioners were getting rowdy as they sampled wine and food.
The bus pulled up outside a rundown white cottage. The windows were narrow and dark, rusted equipment guarded the open door. A horse nodded its head, its skin shivered on its flanks. Father Michael took a breath of air when he got off the bus. Manure from the farm, hot diesel. It was better than the decay on Mrs Hellingway’s breath.
A man came out of the house and surveyed them. They filed in, the last stop before the boat. The tiny cottage had a large kitchen with a single table taking up most of the room. Two benches, one on either side, used up the remaining space. The cottage floor was packed earth. Father Michael wanted to make sure he was near the door. The man came in and left with an extension cable, one end plugged in.
He should have been paying attention to the seating order. He was with Mrs Hellingway again.
“Father! Jeanie tells me you’re a vegetarian.” She pronounced it “veget-hair-ian.” Was she sick? Father Michael held his breath and nodded. His secret was out. Everyone turned towards him.
“Ah no, Father!” said Mrs Joyce.
“My grandson is one of those,” said Mrs Bently.
“He sure is,” said Mr Joyce, to a slap on the arm from his wife.
“But Father, no wonder you look so pale,” said Mrs Hellingway.
Outside, the shadow of the horse was getting jittery. It kicked at the ground. The man said something. It sounded like a threat, but Father Michael didn’t understand Italian. The language sounded vicious at the best of times. Could no one else smell Mrs Hellingway?
“What about the Eucharist?” said Mary Fellowes, one of the younger parishioners. She looked worried. Father Michael leaned towards her to put himself outside the miasma surrounding Mrs Hellingway. “It’s not literally the body of Christ,“ he said. “Only symbolic.” She looked worried still. Perhaps she had missed the last part; outside, a saw was screeching.
“Surely the Good Lord put the animals here for us to use?” said Mrs Hellingway. “You’re the expert, of course!”
“That doesn’t mean we have to eat them.”
The Italian woman who was to cook for them stood listening.
Her husband came in with a metal tub. Father Michael smelled the blood and his stomach flipped. He stopped talking.
“They are tasty, though,” said Mrs Hellingway. Her breath wrapped itself around him, mixed with the smell of blood. He blacked out.
When he woke only the Italian couple and Mrs Hellingway were still there.
“The others have gone on,” she said. “You feel better.” It wasn’t a question.
He did. On the oven, pots bubbled, but Father Michael wasn’t hungry. He must have been out for some time, if everyone else had eaten and left. There was blood everywhere. Sun warmed him through the cosy windows. Flies buzzed. The earthen floor was soft, though he should get up soon. He stood, patting dust off his clothes. There was blood spattered all over him too. Perhaps the man had spilled the tub on seeing the priest fall over? Outside, the air was fresh. There was a puddle of blood where the horse had been, a belt floating in the middle of it. He looked closer. Not a belt, a tail.
“You didn’t have to eat them, you know,” said Mrs Hellingway.
“They were so tasty,” said Father Michael, without thinking. In the deep end of the puddle were rings, earrings, bracelets and necklaces.