Greg called Marilyn. 'No reason. Just to chat. I miss the e-mails.'
'So do I, but I gather Ria's making great progress on my little laptop. She sent an e-mail to Rosemary Ryan, a woman here—I'm going out to a fashion show with her shortly—and one to her ex-husband's office. They nearly collapsed.'
'Oh I know, she sends them to me too.'
'She does? What about?'
'Oh this and that… arrangements for the alumni weekend… Andy will be coming up too, and her children will be there, so it will be a full house.'
'Yes.' Marilyn couldn't quite explain why this slightly irritated her, but it did.
'Anyway, she seems to be getting on very well, she's cooking in John and Gerry's a couple of hours a day.'
'She's not!’
'Yes. Isn't she amazing? And Henry told me that he and Heidi were at a dinner party round there…'
'Round where?'
'In the house. In Tudor Drive. There were eight of them apparently and…'
'In our house? She had eight people in our house? To dinner?'
'Well, she knows them all pretty well now. Carlotta comes in for a swim every morning, Heidi's round there for coffee after work. It didn't take her long…'
'It did not,' said Marilyn grimly.
Mona McCarthy was on the committee. She sat smiling at the desk and had their tickets ready for them when they went in. People often wondered how much she knew about her husband's activities both in business and in his private life. But they would never learn from Mona's large face. There were no hints there. A big serene woman, dull even, constantly raising money for good causes. It might have been trying to put something back in order to compensate for the many sharp deals where Barney might have taken too much out.
'And a glass of champagne?' she offered.
'I'd love one,' Rosemary said. 'And I have a chauffeur.' She introduced Marilyn.
Marilyn was being unusually silent tonight as if she were thinking about something miles away.
Mona's face lit up. 'And little Ria's out in your house at the moment, isn't she?'
Marilyn nodded with a bright smile. She was wondering what percentage of the population of Westville was now installed in Tudor Drive tonight. Oh no, it was just after lunch back home, maybe a buffet party for thirty at the swimming pool. But she had to say something pleasant. 'Yes, I gather she's having a good time, settling in well.'
Mona was pleased. 'She really needs that, how wonderful you were able to provide it for her.'
'She's even got a job, I hear, in our local gourmet shop.' Marilyn wondered whether there was a tinny note in her voice, and she wondered further why there should be.
'Ria should have got a job years ago,' Rosemary said. 'That's why she lost everything she had.'
'She didn't lose everything,' Mona said quietly. 'She still has the children.'
Rosemary realised it had not been the right remark to make in front of the stay-at-home wife of Barney McCarthy who was in the south of Spain with his mistress. 'Yes, of course. That's right, she has the children, and of course the house.'
'Do you think that Danny Lynch's liaison, for want of a better word, is… permanent?' Marilyn wondered.
'No way,' Rosemary said.
'Not at all,' Mona said at the same time.
'And would Ria have him back when it does end, do you think?' Marilyn couldn't believe that she was asking these personal questions. Marilyn who was legendary about her reserve had changed entirely in this country, she had become a blabbermouth and busybody in a matter of weeks.
'Oh, I think so,' Mona said.
'No question of it,' said Rosemary.
If everyone seemed so sure… if it were all going to end with everyone back in their own boxes as they had been… then what a terrible amount of pain and hurt for the whole summer! And what would happen to the baby that was waiting to be born?
As they drove back through the warm Dublin night Marilyn talked easily to Rosemary. She spoke about Greg out in Hawaii. At no stage did she give any explanation why he was on one side of the earth and she was on the other.
"When Marilyn stopped the car outside Number 32 Rosemary thanked her for the lift. 'It was wonderful, it meant I could have four glasses of champagne. And I loved them. I would ask you in for coffee but I have such an early start… I thought I'd give the plants in the garden a drink of water and then go to bed.'
'Heavens no, and I want to get an early night too.'
Marilyn drove back and parked the car outside Number 16.
Just then she remembered that she had left the signed programmes she had got for Annie in Rosemary's purse. Annie and her friend Kitty were mad about two of the models. Marilyn had gone to the trouble to get the right ones, now she had stupidly left them in Rosemary's elegant black leather bag. She looked at her watch. Rosemary wouldn't be in bed yet. She had only left her two minutes ago, she would be watering the garden. Marilyn would just run up the lane, it would be quicker. They didn't lock their back gate in Number 32.
It was such a pleasant neighbourhood, this, in ways; she had been very lucky to find it. She looked up at the sky, slightly rosy from the lights of the city, a big moon hidden from time to time by racing black clouds that looked like chariots hastening across.
She wished that she didn't feel so mean-spirited about Ria's antics in Westville, but it was really most unfair of her. She was setting up precedents, establishing patterns which could now not be broken. Marilyn didn't want Carlotta's voluptuous figure diving into her swimming pool, she didn't need Heidi coming for coffee every day. And she felt absurdly jealous of what Ria would do for everyone at the alumni picnic.
She was at the back gate of Number 32 now and she pushed it open. She expected to see Rosemary in her bare feet, having taken off her expensive shoes, directing the hose towards the beautifully planted herbaceous border.
But there was nobody there. She walked quietly across the grass and then she heard two people talking in the summerhouse. Not so much talking, she realised as she got nearer, more kissing. Rosemary had indeed taken off her expensive shoes and also her expensive rose silk dress, the one she had got from Polly Callaghan in exchange for a printing job. She lay in a coffee-coloured silk slip across Danny Lynch and she had his face in her hands.
She was speaking to him urgently. 'Never, never again as long as you live, leave me with five phone calls unreturned.'
'Sweetheart, I told you…' he was stroking her thigh and raising the lacy edge of the slip.
Marilyn stood there frozen. This was the second time she had watched Danny Lynch without him seeing her. She seemed to be condemned to spy on this man. She was utterly unsure of which way to move.
Rosemary was angry. 'Don't, Danny. Don't play with me. There's too much history here. I've put up with too much, saved you, warned you too often.'
'You and I are special, we've always agreed that what we have is something that's outside everything else,' he said.
'Yes, I put up with your housey-housey marriage, with your affairs, I even put up with you getting that child pregnant and moving away from this road. God knows why.'
'You know why, Rosemary,' Danny said.
And Marilyn fled. Back to the safety of her garden where she watered Colm's vegetables and everything else in sight with a ferocity that they had never known and might not indeed have needed.
Clement came and watched her gravely, sitting at a safe distance. She was using that hose like a weapon. She was astounded at how shocked and revolted she felt. This was the falsest friend she had ever known. Poor, poor Ria, so unlucky in her man, which could happen to anyone. But so doubly unlucky to be advised and betrayed by her best friend as well. It was beyond understanding.
In a fit of generosity Marilyn decided she didn't care if Ria was entertaining whole coachloads of people in 1024 Tudor Drive, serving them platefuls of home-made delicacies. She deserved it. She deserved whatever bit of pleasure she could get.
Ria was in fact on h
er own in Tudor Drive bent over Marilyn's laptop.
Hubie Green had given her a computer game. She was going to master it and be able to show it to them when they got here. Sheila Maine's children had lots of these and both Annie and Brian did of course work on computers at school, but Ria had known nothing about them and had never been interested. Still this game was defeating her.
She sent Hubie an e-mail. 'Hubie, it would only take you thirty minutes to explain this game to me. It's worth ten dollars of my time to learn it. Do you think you could come by at some stage? A seriously confused Ria Lynch.'
The kid must live beside his screen: he answered immediately. 'It's a done deal. Can you call me on the telephone at this number and tell me where you live?’
She called him and gave the address.
There was a silence. 'But that's Dale's house. Dale Vine.'
'That's right.' She was solemn now. She had somehow thought he would have known. But then why should he know?
'Oh I couldn't go there, Mrs Lynch.'
'But why not?'
'Mr and Mrs Vine wouldn't like it.'
'They're not here, Hubie, I'm living in the house. Marilyn's in my house in Ireland, Greg's in Hawaii.'
'Did they split up?' He sounded concerned.
'I don't know,' she said truthfully.
'You must know.'
'I don't as it happens, they don't tell me. I think after Dale's death they needed to get away.'
'Yeah, sure.'
'But of course I understand, Hubie, if you don't want to come round here, if it has bad memories for you. I'm sorry, I should really have thought.'
She heard him take a breath. 'Hey, it's only a house, they're not there to get upset. Your kids have to play this game and ten dollars is ten dollars. Sure I'll come, Mrs Lynch.'
It was so simple once he explained it, and also quite exciting. They played on and on.
'That was much more than half an hour, I'd better give you twenty.'
'No, we agreed ten. I stayed because I enjoyed it.'
'Would you like some supper?' She brought him into the kitchen and opened the fridge.
'Hey, you've got one of those lovely Irish flag quiches they sell at John and Gerry's.'
'I make them,' she said, pleased.
'You make them? Fantastic,' he said. 'My mother bought two of them for a party.'
'Good, well I'll give you some Irish soda bread with currants in it to take home to her when you leave, then I don't feel too bad keeping you out for so long.'
He walked around the kitchen, restless, uneasy maybe to be in this home again. Ria said nothing about the past. Instead she busied herself talking about the visit of Annie and Brian. Hubie picked up a picture of the children. Ria kept it out where she could see it.
'Is this her? Your daughter? She's real cute,' he said.
'Yes, she's lovely but then I would think so, and that's Brian.' She looked proudly at the son who would be here soon. Hubie showed no interest at all. They sat and talked companionably over the meal. Hubie used to come here a lot, he said. Great swimming pool and always a welcome. Not food like this, mind you, but cookies from the store and this was the house where the kids came. In fact his parents were quite friendly with Mr and Mrs Vine before everything.
'And now?' Ria was gentle.
'Well you see how she is, Mrs Lynch. You know what she's like now.'
'No, the funny thing is I don't know what she's like, I've never met her and I've only seen one photograph of her.'
'You don't know her? You're not a friend?'
'No, it was a home exchange, that's all, she's in my house you see, digging up my garden, buying my daughter pink jeans.'
'You don't want her to do that? Why don't you tell her?' To Hubie it was simple.
'Because we're old and complicated, that's why. Anyway to be fair I'm doing something now that she mightn't like, having you to supper.'
'She wouldn't like this, believe me, Mrs Lynch.'
'It wasn't your fault.'
'Not the way she sees it.'
'I don't know all about it, people don't talk and I don't like to ask. I just heard it was your birthday.'
'Yeah it was.'
'But why is she upset with you?'
'You really don't know her?' He wanted to be reassured. 'You're not a friend of theirs?'
'No, I promise you, we just got in touch by accident. I had problems of my own, you see.'
'Did someone die?'
'No, but my husband left me and I felt bad and upset over there.'
'Oh.'
'And Dale's mother obviously couldn't come to terms with what had happened around here so…'
'Yes, that's true. She went insane, I think.'
'People do for a while, but a lot of them get better.' Ria tried to be encouraging.
'She hates me.'
'Why should she hate you?'
'Because I'm alive, I guess.' He looked very young and sad as he sat there trying to make sense of what had happened. And the lights went on in the garden as the darkness came down, as it did so quickly here in America, unlike at home where everything seemed to move much more slowly.
'But surely if she were to hate anyone it would be the other boy, the one who died?'
'Johnny?'
'Yes, Johnny. I mean he was the one driving. He was the one who killed her son.'
He said nothing, just looked out at the garden lights and the sprinklers beginning to play on the lawn.
'She can't hate Johnny. Johnny is dead, there's no point in hating him. We're alive, David and I. She can hate us, it gives her life some purpose.'
'You sound very, very bitter about her.'
'I do, yes.'
'But it must have been so terrible for her, Hubie. So hard to forgive. If Johnny hadn't been drunk…'
'Johnny wasn't driving. Dale was driving.' She looked at him in horror. 'Dale stole the bikes, Dale set it up. It was Dale who killed Johnny.'
Ria felt her heart turn over. 'That can't be true.'
He nodded sadly. 'It's true.'
'But why? Why did nobody… how did they not know?'
'You don't want to think what that wreck looked like, you don't want to think about it. I saw it and David saw it so we have to think about it for the rest of our lives.'
'But why didn't you…?'
'Everyone assumed it was Johnny driving and at that time we thought Dale was going to get better. They said he might survive; they had him on this machine. I went in once to see him before she had orders issued that I wasn't to be let near. I told him in case he could hear me that we'd let people go on thinking it was Johnny. He was under-age, you see, and also he had these parents that worshipped him. Johnny had nobody.'
'Oh God,' said Ria.
'Yes, I know, and now I don't think what we did was right but we did it for the best. We did it to help goddamn Mrs Vine and then she wouldn't even let me come to Dale's funeral.'
'Oh God Almighty,' Ria said.
'You won't tell her, will you?' he asked.
Ria thought of the room along the corridor, the shrine to the dead son. 'No, Hubie, whatever else I may do in my life I won't tell her,' Ria said.
CHAPTER SEVEN
'Marilyn, this is Ria. Sorry to miss you. Nothing really. Just to say that the Dublin Horse Show will be on next month, you might enjoy it. And Rosemary can get you tickets for the show-jumping which is very spectacular. She's terrific about things like that, she'd do anything to help. She sent me an e-mail on your laptop and she's dead impressed that I know how to do it. Then maybe you might hate the Horse Show. I don't know why I'm burbling on, I think it's just I want to make sure you're having a good time. I hear from Gertie that you've done wonders in the garden, thank you so much. Okay. 'Bye now.'
Marilyn listened to the message. She felt such a surge of rage against Rosemary Ryan that she was glad she wasn't holding her coffee mug in her hand. She would surely have crushed it into her palm. She would not return the call yet
because she didn't trust herself to speak about Ria's friend who was so terrific about things that she would do anything to help.
'Ria, this is Marilyn, sorry I missed you. Our machines are playing tag as they say. No, I won't ask Rosemary for any tickets to the show-jumping but I may well go to the Horse Show when it's on. I see a lot of advertisements for it already. You must tell me more about your Internet lessons. They seem to have worked very well for you, it took me ages to get familiar with it all. Glad to hear that you are getting to know people in Westville. Annie and Brian are coming to supper here tomorrow. I was terrified of cooking for them but Colm said he'd leave something suitable. The children are really looking forward to seeing you again. 'Bye for now.'
Ria listened to the message. For the first time she didn't feel excluded and annoyed that the children were going to supper with Marilyn. That woman needed any bit of consolation she could get. And she couldn't return the call because she had to work out with Heidi what they would say about Hubie Green.
'What did you and Dad fall out about, Finola?' Brian asked.
'Brian!'
'No, Annie, it's a reasonable question. And the answer is money.'
'Oh,' said Brian.
'People often do fall out about that.' Finola was brisk and matter-of-fact. 'I asked your father to tell me how his company was doing. I wanted to know whether he had enough funds to look after you both, your mother and Bernadette as well.'
'And has he?' Brain asked fearfully.
'I don't know, he asked me to mind my own business, which was fair enough in a way. It's actually not my business, but that's why we fell out.'
'Will you ever make it up?' Annie asked.
'Oh yes, I'm sure we will.' Finola was bright. 'And anyway I want to thank you both very much indeed for coming to say goodbye, I really appreciate that.'
'You were very good to us, with the swimming lessons and everything,’ Annie said.
'And with talking to us when Dad and Bernadette were being all sentimental and soppy on the boat.' Brian remembered it all with some distaste.
'I was going to give you a little present for the trip but I thought I'd give you twenty dollars each instead.' Finola Dunne said.