Some people are going to hate this one, but it's a different conversation, and deserves to live on the page as much as any other. If you don't like it, stop reading it. If it helps, it not about your philosophy, it's about someone else's.
Thanks to Randi for her gentle, patient editing.
*****
The doorbell rang just as I was settling down with a cold bottle of cider to watch the latest episode of Doctor Who. I gave a sigh of frustration, but I could watch it any time on catch-up, so it wasn't wildly important.
I opened the front door, noting for the umpteenth time that that inner side needed repainting, and was taken aback to see the tall, bearded man who was wiping his feet on the welcome mat. His hair was flattened by the rain, and even his bushy eyebrows β which normally stuck up and out to the side like those of a Macaroni Penguin β had flattened down a little. I'd seen quite a few of those when I was in the Falklands and couldn't help thinking that they and the man in front of me shared more than a few genes.
"Father McBain," I said, my tone neutral β an acknowledgement that I knew who he was, rather than a welcome.
"Geoffrey, my boy," he said heartily, extending his hand. I automatically shook it, putting precisely the same amount of pressure into it that he did. "Can I come in for a few moments?"
Without waiting for my reply, he started removing his coat, slipping one finger inside the white collar beneath his shirt and easing it away from his neck. I'd noted that habit before and put it down to a nervous tic that he developed when he was under pressure.
I was torn between the Doctor and the Pastor. Manners won out. I opened the door wide.
"Come in."
"Thank you, thank you. Terrible weather for this time of year, isn't it? I always forget my brolly, and have to rely on the kindness of my parishioners to get me through the showers."
Strictly speaking, I wasn't one of his parishioners, but didn't feel the immediate need to point that out. In a way, I was actually glad he was there.
"Can I offer you a beer?" I asked as he bustled past me and hung his coat on the hook that graced the passage wall.
"Tea would be better, I think," he said with a smile. "Don't want rumours to start that I'm an alcoholic!"
"It might be, but the milk's off and I've run out of sugar. So it's going to have unsweetened black tea then."
"Ah. Would you happen to have a nip of whisky about the place?"
"That's off as well," I remarked as he settled himself into my armchair. I retrieved my cider and perched on the couch, which for most nights doubled as my bed. He looked a little taken aback at my remark, but I felt no need to give the last few mouthfuls of my '89 Glenfiddich to a man I hadn't invited over. Besides, I wasn't lying. It was off β off the menu.
He looked sad, but I paid that no heed. My house and my supplies were always open to my friends β I just didn't count him amongst them.
"So how can I help you, Father?" I asked, knowing that he didn't like being called that. He wasn't a Catholic, he was an Anglican β who are just as bad in my eyes β in the Church of England. He liked to point out that he considered himself High Church, which in my mind was the same as High Supermarket for all the difference it made in my life.
"Ah, well Geoffrey, you see..." He interrupted himself to pat the pockets of his jacket, withdrew a weathered old pipe and gestured it at me. I shook my head meaningfully and he put it away again β the sad face once more in evidence. I stuck to my guns. I didn't mind the smell of pipe smoke when it wafted around outside a pub in a smoking area, in fact it was quite pleasant. However, I was buggered if I was going to sleep in a room that stank of stale tobacco ash, if I didn't have to.
He started again. "It's about Jane."
Of course it was about Jane. It was always about Jane. We were divorced two months ago, and it's still always about Jane. I swear she's haunting me from this side of the grave!
I sighed. "What about her?"
"Well, I was visiting her the other day and she told me the story of you... your divorce. It got me thinking."
"Oh yes?" I put as much disapproval into those two words as I could possibly manage. I really didn't want to discuss it, but I was my parents' child and to them a pastor was a person of weight who should be treated with charity and goodwill. One or other of them would pop around now and again when I was growing up, and they were always welcomed with tea and biscuits, or coffee and cake, and listened to very seriously. However, even as a child I put together that a visit always ended up with them being asked to give or do something 'for the parish'.
"I was wondering if you might tell me your side of the story," he said. "After all, there are always two sides to a story, wouldn't you say?"
I pursed my lips. If he wanted my side of the story, then he should have it.
"Well, Father," I started.
"Oh please, call me Alan," he said generously. "I'm just a pastor, you know. And even as an official in the High Anglican church and with three children of my own, I can't claim to be a father. That would be a Catholic thing, although I never really understood it, as they're never allowed to be fathers."
He gave a laugh which invited me to join him in the ridicule of the Catholics. It was like listening to a supporter of one team when facing the prospect of a local derby.
"Then, Alan, you should call me Jeff, as that's my name. It says so on my birth certificate."
"Oh, I thought... Jeff, as I said, I was hoping to hear your side."
I didn't see any reason for his need to hear my side at all. I was sure he had all the details readily to hand.
"As you know, we married three years ago," I started.