The Sparrow - Mary Doria Russell [134]
"No kick so far."
"Well, it just seems to me that there is some pretty powerful theology on the side of love and sex and families. It seems to me that a fairly authoritative Personage once commented that it is not good for man to be alone. Rome, along with all closets," Anne pointed out archly, "is very far away. We have been gone almost two decades. Maybe priests can marry now! And in any case, I fail to see how Emilio would be cheating God out of anything by loving Sofia."
"Annie, you are troddin’ a path that’s worn to bedrock." D.W. reached behind himself and scooped up another handful of pebbles. A spasm of pain crossed his face, but Anne put it down to the topic. "Oh, hell, I don’t know. Maybe it wouldn’t make a dime’s worth of difference. Maybe they’d just be happy and have a fine bunch of kids an’ God would love ’em all ..."
They sat for a time listening to the sounds of the river and staring at the western sky, blazing now with the colors of first sundown. D.W. seemed to be working something out, so Anne just waited until he spoke again.
"Bear with me here, ’cause I’m just stirrin’ this around some with a stick. But, Anne," he said softly, "it seems to me that sainthood, like genius, is rooted in a sort of inspired persistence. It’s a consistent willing of one thing. It’s that kind of consistency and focus I see at work in Emilio."
"D.W., are you serious?" Anne sat still, eyes wide open. "You think Emilio is a s—"
"I didn’t say that! I’m talkin’ in the abstract here. But Marc and me, we been hashin’ it out and, yes, I see the potential for it, and it’s my job to protect that, Anne." He hesitated a moment before confessing, "Maybe I shouldn’t have but I did in fact use the S-word in one report back to Rome. I tole ’em I think we got us a gen-u-wine big-time mystic on our hands. ’Wedded to God and at certain moments, in full communion with divine love,’ is how I put it." He dumped the last few rocks, brushed the dirt off his hands and leaned over to watch the pebbles clatter downward, elbows on his knees, the big-knuckled hands loose between his legs. "Hell of a management problem," he said after a time. "They don’t cover this one back home at the Famous Father Superiors School."
Anne found there was nothing she could say. She stared at the clouds in the western sky, piled like whipping cream tinted by strawberries and raspberries, blueberries and mangos. She never got tired of the colors here.
"And, Anne," D.W. continued thoughtfully, "I’m real concerned about Mendes in all this, too. I am awful fond of that girl and I don’t want to see her hurt. She’s all guts and brains on the outside, God love her, but there’s broken glass inside that child. If he’s gotta choose, Milio’s gonna choose God, and I hate to think how Sofia would take that. So don’t you go encouragin’ her to take the initiative, unnerstan’?" D.W. got to his feet. Anne noticed that he seemed a little pale, but his next remark startled her out of any inquiry. "Too bad Sofia didn’t take a shine to the Quinn boy or Robichaux."
Anne stood up as well and frowned, confused. "Well, Jimmy, of course! But Marc? I thought he was—well, you know. I thought—"
"You thought Robichaux was gay?" D.W. roared, and half a dozen coronaries rocketed into the air. He put a bony arm around Anne’s shoulders, obviously tickled by the notion. "Oh, my. No-o-o. Not by a wondrous long shot. Marc Robichaux," he informed her as they strolled along, "is in love with capital-N Nature and women are nature at its finest for ole Marc! He loves the ladies. Marc, in his own way, is a kind of mystic, too. God’s reality is everywhere for him. It’s almost an Islamic theology. Robichaux don’t separate the natural and the supernatural. It’s all one thing for him, and he adores it all. Specially if it’s female." He looked down at Anne, still gawping at him, and laughed at her. "Now, you talk about