I learned through a mutual acquaintance that O’Cinnéide, that great
embryologist, had died, so I attended his funeral mass at St. Vincent
DePaul’s in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood. He had recently turned
sixty, and had died according to the note I got from O’Neill “in
distressing circumstances.” O’Neill added that he would appreciate
advice on a matter of O’Cinnéide’s legacy. Along with a few of the
regular morning mass-goers and some heavily aromatic homeless men
sleeping in the pews at the back of the church, there were no more than a
handful of us there that remembered him. These were mainly his former
university colleagues. O’Cinnéide took an early retirement after which
he severed contact with most of us. After condolences had been offered
to his wife, a handsome, doleful
and seemingly capable woman who had, in fact, seen little of him in his
last months as he had been under the constant care of his doctors, a
few of us retreated to the Local Option a block away on Webster Avenue.
It was a crisp April morning, certainly not so warm that a person would
have overcome his resentment at harsh treatment from another miserable
Chicago winter; certainly not so warm that one had yet forgotten, as a
Chicagoan typically does during the summer months, one’s resolve to
flee. We settled into the back of the bar, ordered our pints and
toasted the dead man. “A great Irish genius”, one of us said. And the
rest of us mumbled into our pints, “Aye; that he was.” Read on here
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