‘Yes, he rang last night, he’s got a couple of days off. Grace’s father was very surprised.’
‘When does he arrive?’
‘I think he’s going by Dublin so it won’t be till Saturday.’
‘He never said.’
‘Does he write much to you?’
‘The odd card.’ Dara was deliberately casual.
‘It may have been a last-minute thing.’ Michael was reassuring. ‘He probably didn’t tell any of the other girls either.’
‘What other girls?’
‘Oh, can’t you be sure that Kerry would have girls everywhere?’
Michael looked at Dara’s face and was sorry that he had said that.
Maggie Daly’s mother had sent her in to inspect Loretto Quinn’s and see was it true that the place had smartened up beyond all recognition since the Jewish lady had gone to live upstairs. The Dalys had heard disturbing rumours that it would nearly be a rival for their own place. Loretto of all people! God help her, she used to look like a poor tinker.
Loretto was kind to Maggie and spent ages helping her choose between one kind of sweet and another while poor Maggie did her best to spy on the lie of the land.
‘Wouldn’t you have these sweets for nothing in your own place?’ Loretto asked innocently.
‘Yes, but I’m not meant to be eating too many of them.’ Maggie knew she was hopeless at this kind of subterfuge.
Mrs Fine came down the stairs just then; she had armfuls of materials with her.
‘Heavens, haven’t you the most beautiful auburn hair!’ she said, standing in admiration.
‘Who me?’ Maggie looked around in case someone else had come into the shop.
‘It’s gorgeous, isn’t it, Loretto?’
Privately Loretto thought all the Dalys had terrible heads of frizz, but maybe Mrs Fine was just being kind.
‘Lovely altogether,’ she agreed.
‘It’s Maggie, isn’t that right?’
Maggie was delighted. ‘That’s it, Mrs Fine.’
‘Listen, Maggie, I have something here which will look lovely with that hair.’ She put down her materials and found a length of ribbon. It was in a copper satin.
‘Shall I fix it in your hair for you, would you like that?’
Maggie was thrilled. This woman looked like something out of a magazine herself. She was very old of course, but her style was the talk of the place and here she was playing with ribbons in Maggie’s hair.
‘I’d love it,’ she said.
Rachel took a strand of the hair and half plaited it in with the ribbon. She swept back some of the rest of the hair. Then she took a compact out of her handbag and showed Maggie the mirror.
‘Look, aren’t you lovely!’ she said.
It was true. Maggie did look much nicer. Her face split into a huge smile.
‘You must keep it, you’re like a little Pre-Raphaelite,’ Mrs Fine said.
Neither Loretto nor Maggie knew what it meant but it sounded good. Loretto’s eyes held genuine admiration and Maggie could see it. She went home to abuse from her mother because she couldn’t remember how or in what ways Loretto’s shop had improved.
Liam White told her she wasn’t looking as scraggy as usual, and Michael Ryan stopped on his bicycle for a chat.
‘You look a bit different today,’ he said in approval.
Mary Donnelly said that if they were going to make any kind of a fist of this café they were going to run in the hopes of getting a bit of custom, they should have a plan.
‘We’ll have to get into the minds of Americans, that’s a hard thing to do,’ Kate said.
‘Aren’t you best friends with an American woman, for heaven’s sake?’ Mary said as if she expected Rachel to help them every bit of the way.
And in many ways Rachel did. She told them of places that sold cheap but very authentically Irish pottery and even ordered it for them so that she could get a proper discount for them. She told them that American visitors would love to feel they were somewhere that was really Irish.
‘Do you mean leprechauns and begorras?’
‘No,’ said Rachel, but she didn’t say it with a great deal of conviction.
‘Do you mean a hint of leprechauns and begorras?’ Kate suggested again.
‘That’s exactly what I mean, a hint of it.’
‘Jesus, Mary and Joseph,’ Kate said. ‘It’s worse than I thought.’
Eddie had another breakage. This time it was the side mirror of Judy Byrne’s car. It had been parked outside Ryan’s while Judy was inside doing the exercises with Kate. Eddie had been seeing how far it would turn round. Not as pliable as he had thought.
It was there in his hand when Judy came out.
‘I’ll fix it.’
‘You won’t,’ said Judy. ‘You’ll pay for it.’
Mary suggested a source of money to him. ‘Your mam will pay you piece work for hemming the green napkins for the café.’
‘Me hem table napkins? You must be mad,’ Eddie stormed.
‘Look at it this way: there aren’t many jobs open to you, and you’ve done the Protestant graveyard already, so what else is there? You’ve a fine hand with a needle, I’m always telling you that.’
‘Just as long as you don’t tell anyone else . . .’ Eddie warned.
‘Do a dozen a night, up in your room if you don’t want anyone to see you, or you can come out to my house if you like, and sit there with Leopold and the wireless.’
It wasn’t the life Eddie Ryan had planned for himself. Sitting in a converted outhouse hemming green linen serviettes with a mad dog and Radio Eireann for company. Mary’s wireless didn’t seem to get Radio Luxembourg.
Still, it paid for Miss Byrne’s old mirror, and Mam was very nice to him and sometimes said that he was an old dote despite everything.
Dara and Michael waited for Grace to collect them on Saturday to go to the pictures. They met Tommy and the Whites just outside – it was going to be very crowded. Declan Morrissey rubbed his hands happily. If he had his way he’d show musicals all the year round. This was the third or fourth time he had Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and it was always the same, you got the old and the young alike to come to it.
Michael was pleased to see the queue, it meant that they might all get separated. Then he and Grace could go to the back somewhere. There couldn’t be any touching Grace if the others were all there.
Maggie was late. ‘Sorry,’ she apologised, even though it didn’t matter, they were still in the line waiting to get in.
‘Sorry, Kitty rang from Dublin, she wanted me to think up some story about why she’s not coming home for the weekend.’
‘She picked a poor one to invent a story for her,’ Tommy Leonard said affectionately.
‘I know, I get so flustered,’ Maggie said.
‘Why can’t she tell them herself?’ Dara said.
‘She didn’t want to talk to Mam, because Mam would worm it out of her, so she rang when Mam was at benediction.’
‘Worm what?’ Dara said.
‘She’s meeting Kerry in Dublin, that’s why she’s not coming home,’ said Maggie excitedly, and looked around at the faces of her friends.
Kerry arrived on Sunday evening. He called into Ryan’s at a slack time. Kate was behind the counter in her wheel-chair.
‘What can I serve you?’ Her smile was pleasant.
‘I don’t drink alcohol at all, Mrs Ryan.’
‘Very sensible of you, but then that’s a little hypocritical of me. If everyone was to feel like you do where would our business be, I wonder?’
‘Your business going okay, is it?’ He looked pointedly around the almost empty pub.
‘Usually a little more lively than this.’ Kate felt annoyed somehow that this young fellow hadn’t come in when they were doing a really good business. She wondered why she was trying to impress him.
‘I just came to know if I could take your lovely daughter for a walk by the river on this beautifu
l evening,’ he asked.
‘My lovely daughter has homework to do.’ Kate smiled.
‘I’m sure she’ll be able to do it later.’ Kerry smiled.
‘At just fifteen she’s a little young to let walks with young men get between her and her studies.’ Kate was still smiling a smile she didn’t feel.
‘Oh now, Mrs Ryan, she’s not just fifteen. I had the pleasure of being at her fifteenth birthday, a long, long time ago. Way back last September, if I remember rightly.’
‘You remember rightly, Kerry.’
‘So you are saying she can’t come out with me. Is this what I hear?’
‘No it is not what you hear, you must go and ask her herself.’
‘Oh well, that’s all right then. May I go into the house?’
‘No, I’ll call her.’
Dara had seen him coming from the window seat. She had combed her hair and rubbed a little lipstick on and off again.
‘Hi,’ she said.
‘Lovely to see you again,’ he said warmly. ‘I was trying to persuade your mother here to let us go for a walk.’
Dara looked at him levelly. ‘I’d love to, Kerry, but I have all this homework to do,’ she said.
He was surprised. ‘Can’t you leave it till later?’ He was sure he would convince her.
‘No, at this stage there’s so much to be done. I wish I’d worked harder earlier in the year but you know how it is, I’m afraid I’ve left it all to the end.’
‘You’re not doing your Leaving this year.’ There was an edge to his voice.
‘You’ve obviously never met Sister Laura, she thinks this is the most important year in our lives. We have exams nearly every week.’
Kerry was furious. ‘Another time then,’ he said, and walked out.
Kate looked at her stricken daughter.
Round One to Dara, she thought with a mixture of pride and anxiety.
Miss Hayes had never known a prayer to St Anthony to fail, but this time it had. Nowhere could she find the two silver salvers that had stood on the sideboard.
Marian had admired them often and said that they were magnificent silver. She had been startled to discover that Mrs Fine had bought them for Patrick at an auction, at his request.
Mrs Fine often bought old Irish silverware, and had said that the O’Neills should have the pleasure of looking at it before it went to the hotel eventually.
Every two weeks Olive Hayes cleaned the little collection. Mrs Fine had called once and praised her highly for the wonderful way it had been cared for. Now Miss Hayes was worried – what could have happened to them? It was unlikely that they had been robbed. There had been no break-in, and anyway there was always someone in the house.
Marian Johnson did drop in from time to time but she would never . . . of course not. And those little Ryan twins and Maggie Daly from the dairy. No, it was out of the question.
She would have to think again – was it possible that she had placed them somewhere else? Or perhaps Mr O’Neill had already taken them to the hotel, or to have them valued.
Olive Hayes was very troubled.
Americans would want entertainment. Kate knew that. But what kind? It couldn’t be amateurish in their café when it was professional and well organised across the river.
What would they expect in an Irish café? If it was to be truly authentic then of course there wouldn’t be singing and dancing, nobody would be doing anything except getting stuck into their tea and scones. But this plan was for something that wasn’t quite authentic but looked as if it might be.
What a pity that none of them played the harp, and that they didn’t have a big tuneful harp handy in one of their outhouses.
Carrie asked Jimbo would they get married some time.
‘Sure, we’ll get married some time,’ Jimbo said.
Carrie felt vaguely dissatisfied with this reply.
Jack Coyne asked Loretto did the great O’Neill spend the night above in the rooms with your woman.
Loretto said certainly he did not.
Jack said Loretto was right to keep her mouth shut. He would do the same in her place. Loretto was annoyed about that, since she was not being diplomatic. It was the truth. Patrick O’Neill came to call sometimes but he never stayed the night.
Dennis Hill rang to know whether Kerry’s father had recovered from his illness.
Olive Hayes told him that there had been no illness.
‘There has to have been an illness, why else did he go home?’ Mr Hill wanted to know.
Miss Hayes decided to rescue the situation. ‘There was a bit of trouble all right, it wasn’t exactly an illness,’ she said.
Mr Hill never pried. He had just been ringing out of courtesy, he said. When would he expect Kerry back?
‘I’ll ask him to ring you himself,’ said Miss Hayes.
She told Kerry that he should call Donegal. She told him that Mr Hill was now under the impression that what he had thought was an illness was in fact a little trouble.
Kerry smiled a great charming smile at her. ‘You are a great ally, Miss Hayes,’ he said.
‘I wouldn’t rely on it, Kerry,’ she said.
‘I get the picture,’ Kerry said.
Dara and Maggie were on the footbridge, when Kerry came along.
‘Maggie, could you do something for me? Please.’ His eyes were a piercing blue. They looked straight at little Maggie.
‘Sure,’ she said good-naturedly.
‘Could you go up to the hotel and see is my father about? I want to go up and talk to Brian Doyle about something, but my father thinks I’ve gone back to Donegal so I want to make sure he isn’t there. Can you look and see if his car is there? Do you mind?’
‘Not at all, but am I the right one . . .? I often get things wrong.’
‘No, you’re perfect, you look so innocent no one would know you were my spy.’
Maggie scampered up the path by the laurel bushes.
‘Well,’ Kerry said to Dara.
‘Well what?’
‘Well what was all this performance, you had homework to do? I came straight out and put myself on the line and asked your mother. . . and you turn me down. What was all that about?’ He looked very angry. Dara’s heart began to pound. It had been a very risky thing. She had wondered afterwards had she been mad.
‘No reason,’ she said, shrugging.
‘Don’t do that, it’s so silly, it makes you so cheap, so common. I came to see you. I thought you liked me. Why are you playing silly games?’ His handsome face looked hurt.
‘Well . . .’ She didn’t know what to say.
‘Because if you don’t want to see me, that’s fine, just say it straight out. But if you do, let’s go up to Coyne’s wood.’
‘When?’
‘What’s wrong with now?’
‘You can’t mean now. You’ve just sent Maggie on a message.’
‘That was so that I could talk to you. My father’s in Shannon today.’
‘You told her a lie . . . !’
‘It was so that I could ask you what was wrong.’
‘And you met Kitty in Dublin too!’
‘Silly little Maggie, getting everything wrong. I saw Kitty in Dublin and she clung and clung. Kitty the clam I call her.’
‘We can’t go off and leave Maggie to come back and find us not here.’
‘Yes we can if you want to.’
It was the longest moment of Dara’s life.
‘No, I’ll wait for Maggie. You sent her on a fool’s errand,’ she said.
If Kate Ryan had been watching she would have said, ‘Round Two, Dara.’
‘John, will you read me some poetry?’
‘Aren’t you too tired, love?’
Kate sat in her green room, her eyes too bright, her face drawn.
‘No, I have the feeling I’m not going to sleep.’
‘Let me get you into bed first then I’ll go and find something you might like. I haven’t written anything for so
long.’
‘How could you?’ She touched his hand in sympathy. ‘But tonight I want you to read to me other people’s poetry, not just your own, and no, I won’t go to bed yet.’
‘Other people’s poetry?’ He was disappointed.
She was deliberately light and joky. ‘Yes, isn’t it very presumptuous of them, but other people did write poetry, like Yeats, or Oscar Wilde or James Clarence Mangan.’
‘Will I read you the Lays of Ancient Rome? I love that . . .’
‘No, something Irish.’
‘Or Hiawatha . . . I’ve never read the whole of Hiawatha aloud. That will send you off to sleep all right.’
‘No.’ She gripped the sides of the wheelchair in impatience.
‘All right, all right . . .’ He went to the bookshelves, and ran his finger along the backs of books for what seemed a long time. Eventually he took out a book and began:
‘Oh my dark Rosaleen
Do not sigh do not weep . . .’
‘Stand up over there so that I can see you,’ Kate said. ‘Now start again.’
He read the poem with gestures, putting a lot of emphasis into it and giving the repetition a fine sonorous sound.
‘That was very good,’ Kate said approvingly.
John’s face was empty. ‘That wasn’t me reading poetry to you, that was an audition, wasn’t it?’
‘Yes,’ Kate said in a small voice.
‘Well?’
‘It was very good. Could you bear it?’
‘Of course, if we have to.’
‘We have to.’
Rachel was adamant about not letting him stay the night. If Patrick wanted to preserve the fiction that he and Rachel were just good friends, then preserve it. She did not even countenance making love in her rooms. She was a respectable woman staying in Loretto’s, she didn’t want any reputation, thank you very much. And Patrick always had to leave early.
Once or twice they had managed it in Coyne’s wood, and in the back of the car and in a far distant corner of the river bank on a rug. It had been exciting and uncomfortable at the same time.
‘I may have to go back to New York for a week, come with me,’ Patrick said suddenly one May evening, in Loretto’s.
‘What for?’
‘Well, we could make love properly for one thing without risk of half the town discovering us or getting curvature of the spine.’ He was grinning at her in the way she loved and hadn’t seen a lot recently.