A Priest in the Family 
Colm Tóibín
She watched the sky darken, threatening rain. ‘There’s no light at all these days,’ she said. ‘It’s been the darkest winter. I hate the rain or the cold, but I don’t mind it at all when there’s no light.’
Father Greenwood sighed and glanced at the window. ‘Most people hate the winter,’ he said.
She could think of nothing more to say and hoped that he might go now. Instead, he reached down and pulled up one of his grey socks, then waited for a moment before he inspected the other and then pulled that up too. ‘Have you seen Frank lately?’ he asked.
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Colm Tóibín is a visiting writer at Princeton. His novels include The South, The Heather Blazing, The Master and Brooklyn, which has just been published.
Other articles by this contributor:
Roaming the Greenwood · A History of Gay Literature: The Male Tradition by Gregory Woods
Issues of Truth and Invention · Francis Stuart’s wartime broadcasts
How to be a wife · The Discretion of Jackie Kennedy
Don’t abandon me · Borges and the Maids
My Darlings · Drinking with Samuel Beckett
I Could Sleep with All of Them · the Mann Family
A Man with My Trouble · Henry James leaves home
Urning · The revolutionary Edward Carpenter