355 500 произведений, 25 200 авторов.

Электронная библиотека книг » Frederic Lindsay » Brond » Текст книги (страница 6)
Brond
  • Текст добавлен: 4 октября 2016, 22:55

Текст книги "Brond"


Автор книги: Frederic Lindsay


Жанр:

   

Триллеры


сообщить о нарушении

Текущая страница: 6 (всего у книги 14 страниц)






EIGHT

The last time I had been in a taxi had been at my Aunt Netta’s funeral. Don’t upset your Aunt, they’d told me when I was little, she won’t have a breath to draw. I sat watching the dark streets go past, on my way to the Kennedys’ house where I lived, remembering my Aunt’s fat white arms and the noises that knocked in her chest when she got excited.

I had taken a taxi because one came past empty when I was tired. I began to look through my pockets for money. I reached into my breast pocket with two fingers and felt a fold of paper which I drew out between them. It seemed to be a note of some kind and I remembered Brond touching me there. At first I could not read it but when I angled it at the window, brief light caught Margaret Briody’s name. Under it an address had been pencilled.

There was a sliding glass between the driver and passengers. I tapped on it and he pulled it back. I leaned forward until I was almost through it.

‘Do you know this address?’

‘What?’

‘On this paper. If you know it.’

He reached with one hand and like me held it slanted to the street to catch the light.

‘So?’

‘Would you take me there?’

‘You mean after or instead of?’

‘I want to go there now.’

‘You’re paying.’

I wanted to know where Kilpatrick had gone, and why she had given me the parcel, and if she had known what it was. I wanted someone to talk to me. I wanted to see Margaret.

You’re paying, he’d said. A gun had been pointed at me that night, the trigger pulled, and now I was sweating because I might not have the money to pay for a taxi ride. Very cautiously, I started to feel again through each pocket. It was hard to count. I got different totals and then I dropped a coin on the floor and it rolled and got lost though I scrabbled after it.

When I sat up, the driver was watching me in the mirror.

‘What’s up?’

I leaned forward again into the opening.

‘Nothing . . . I was wondering. Is it far?’

The taxi swung into the side and stopped.

‘Are we there?’ I asked.

He got out and opened the door beside me.

‘Are we there?’ I asked again.

‘What’s all this about – money? If you’ve no bloody money you shouldn’t be in the motor.’

‘I’ve got money.’

I named the amount down to the smallest coin and held it out towards him on the palm of my hand.

‘Take me that much.’ I said. ‘Just go on till that’s used up. Then if you tell me where it is I’ll walk the rest.’

He peered at me. He was in his fifties with a scarf across his chest and vanishing round the back to where the ends would be tied. After a moment he shook his head.

‘As far as it’ll go . . .’

I could hear him laughing even over the sound of the motor once we’d started again.

‘Tell you, son.’ I leaned forward to hear. ‘It’s funny game. Young guys getting off their marks without paying. Bad enough this game without being taken for a mug.’

‘Not much chance of me running anywhere.’

‘That right?’

He groped under the dash and held up a big spanner.

‘I’m getting on a bit,’ he said. ‘But I’ve surprised one or two with the speed I can move.’

I sat back. My foot throbbed in pace with the engine. I had banged it again going down those hellish stairs in the dark.

‘It’s a scunner,’ the driver said. ‘You know what they call this time of night in any other job? Unsocial bloody hours.’

The taxi stopped. Looking out, I saw a wall covered with names and threats. All the paint looked black in the light from the sulphur lamps.

‘This it?’

He didn’t answer. I opened the door and then sat back deliberately.

‘What’s up?’ he asked turning to look at me.

‘I didn’t want to worry you.’

‘Eh?’

I climbed out and limped forward to pay him.

‘You have an honest face, pal,’ he said.

Now I wanted him to say the wrong thing. I wanted him to get out of his safe little cabin. I didn’t think his spanner would do him much good.

‘I have a bloody sore foot,’ I said. ‘Is that not more like it?’

‘Don’t be that way, son.’

‘Here. Take the money. That’s my lot. Call it a tip for your conversation.’

It was awkward for him. I dropped the money a little at a time into his hand.

‘You’re okay, son,’ he said. ‘It’s just that you’re a big fellow and I wasn’t sure of that stick. All the best.’

‘Thanks and fuck you too,’ I said but he had pulled away.

I went into the close that had the right number and climbed the first stairs. With the effort of favouring the bad foot, the muscle of the calf cramped. I crouched kneading it until the knots came out. At every door I hoped to see her name so that I could rest. I got to the top and then I came down again checking all the way. She might be a lodger. She might not have her name on any of the doors. My name was not on the door of the Kennedys’ house. I could knock at a door and ask. I thought how pleased someone would be to have me knocking at his door in the middle of the night.

I sat on the bottom step. I had no money and no idea what district this was. At the back of the entry there was a scurrying like the light tapping of fingernails. Even respectable tenements drew rats. There was a door beside me, one of the two on the ground floor. I pressed the bell. In the stillness I heard the dull burring from inside. I leaned on the tiny dull square of light three times; nobody came and I limped past the second door into the street.

The name of the street was on a plate on the tenement wall. It was the right name, but it was a ‘Street’. I checked the piece of paper and the name was right, only it was not ‘Street’ but ‘Gardens’. I went round the corner and there was another plate and it had what I wanted. I was back in business.

The Gardens began with one block of tenements. After that there were hedges with neat bungalows tucked behind them. I searched for some clue about the numbering until I was frustrated, exhausted and ready to give up if there had been anywhere else to go. When I got the right house, I found in the middle of the gate the number trickily worked in iron.

It was a house like the others; if you were absent-minded, or hungry enough, you might have rushed by mistake into either of its neighbours and sat down to someone else’s dinner. No lights showed, but then it was late. Nothing but the inertia of all the little decisions since I had fished out the fold of paper in the taxi made me open the gate.

There was a bell and it had a little light so that you could find it in the dark. I could not bring myself to ring it. Maybe if I went round the house I would come on Margaret standing at a window. We would get into bed and every time the springs creaked a woman’s voice, her mother’s, would call out: ‘Are you all right dear?’

I tucked the stick under my arm and leaned on the roughcast wall for support as I went round the house. The side window was open. There was no sound from inside and nothing to make out but shapes. I hesitated with my hands on the ledge for what felt like hours then turned back to the front door.

I made a pointless little rapping, too quiet to waken anybody. I rang the bell. I banged with my fist; I rattled the box. At the height of the din, an insomniac stopped at the gate. I turned to look at him. He went away. Under a lamp, he emerged as a fat little man with a white dog at heel. If he was a good neighbour, he had changed his mind.

With a soft rub of wood on wood the window rose. I reached in with the stick and swept it in an arc without touching anything. Please God, I thought, don’t make it her parents’ room. At least there was no sound of creaking springs. I bent in over the ledge till my hands touched the floor, gathered the good foot under me and hit the floor crouching. Silence.

I had got to my feet and started to edge forward when the door opened. A pencil beam of light crept forward just ahead of the new arrival. If the torch beam had swung about it would have caught me playing statues. The light crept across the surface of the table. There was a vase with white papery discs of honesty standing up out of it and a piece of paper propped against it. The paper was held so it could be read then was taken behind the beam out of sight. The light moved and there was a bump.

‘Bloody hell!’ a man’s voice said. I knew the voice. No name came with it, but I had heard that voice before.

A man’s shape spread cruciform against the lighter dark of the window and vanished as the curtains were drawn. The beam wound back across the carpet, a switch clicked and there was a dazzling brightness from overhead.

‘Muldoon!’ I said. ‘I didn’t know you knew Margaret.’

His foxy mask gaped in shock, the torch still lit and waving in his hand. His mouth opened and closed a couple of times before he could speak.

‘Was that you hammering at the door?’ he asked.

‘Nobody else, but why didn’t you open the door? Is Margaret here?’

But at the first question his tiny eyes scuttled to the drawn curtains and I remembered the window opened behind it. I turned my back on him and went over to pull back the curtains. The glass underneath the catch had been cut out in a half circle. I put my fist up beside it as a measure.

‘I don’t think you came in by the front door either,’ I said. The neat hole was just larger than my fist. ‘That’s professional. I couldn’t have done it. Was that one of the optional extras in the seminary?’

‘Never mind me,’ Muldoon said. ‘Is burglary a new course at the University?’

‘I’m a friend of Margaret.’ I leered at him like a bad comedian. ‘She’s expecting me.’

As he didn’t answer, my own words put another thought in my head.

‘Are you breaking your vows with her?’

He put the torch out at last.

‘I don’t know what you’re on about.’

‘You and Margaret. Nothing sinful. Only trying to make little Muldoons together.’

He didn’t rise to the bait. There are people who ask to be needled; Muldoon had taken me that way since the day I met him. Sometimes I had the feeling that I did not really care for him. With remarks like that, I could usually drive him into a miniature puritan frenzy.

‘You’d better sit down,’ he said. ‘Before you fall down.’

‘You first.’

He shook his head as if he was patronising me – it was very strange – and sat down himself beside the table with the flowers. When he was down, I let myself sit. Every muscle in my body sighed. For the first time I took in the room – a sofa, chairs, a gas fire set into the hearth with a fuss of ornaments on the shelf above it.

‘There’s nobody else in the house. Is there?’

‘Just you and me,’ he said.

‘Cosy.’

I knew I should be questioning, getting things out of him. My mind was foundering in pillows of weariness. When I tried to get him in sharp focus, bolsters of flesh pressed from below and above to close my eyes.

‘The question is,’ Muldoon said, ‘how you found this house? I was told you’d no idea where the girl lived.’

I tried to think who could have told Muldoon anything like that, but I was too tired. Who had I told? Whose business would it be?

‘But you did,’ I said, out of simplicity not cunning. ‘You knew her house all right.’

‘Cut out the dirty talk!’ When I meant nothing he decided to have his outburst of temper. ‘I’ve never liked you and that’s the truth. That come as a shaker to you? You’re one of those fellows think they’re great. Everybody has to like them. Not me, friend. Not one little bit – and if you’ve got it coming, I’ll be there to cheer.’

I had been amazed before by someone telling me what I was like – and they never came anywhere near being right.

‘If you’re ever there when I get something coming, Muldoon, don’t cheer. Not unless you want your jaw broken.’

‘You’re a right bastard!’

He moved as if to go for me, and changed his mind.

‘Come and give us a kiss!’ I said.

The minutes in the chair or the surge of adrenalin unthawed me.

‘Better still,’ I said, ‘tell me why you’re here. Did big Peter Kilpatrick send you?’

Muldoon went quiet in his seat.

‘Well Peter’s a good friend of mine,’ he said. ‘It would be possible he sent me. He might be wanting something back.’

‘He might be wanting something back,’ I mimicked him.

He made an ugly face and leaned forward.

‘Peter’s sorry he gave the girl the parcel. He wants it back.’

‘So?’

‘So let me have it and I’ll give it back to him.’

‘Did you think it was here?’ I needed some leverage to make him explain. ‘You haven’t told me why you came here.’

‘That’s got nothing to do with anything.’

‘I think it does. You tell me why you’re here and then we can talk about the parcel.’

He sat back like a man deliberately relaxing.

‘If it’ll make you happy. I thought Peter would be here.’

‘What would he be doing here?’

‘What would he not?’ Muldoon said. ‘Isn’t he thick with the girl?’

I thought about that. I had to be stupid to have taken it for granted Margaret would be running errands for someone she knew only casually. He might be a friend of hers; because you did someone a favour it did not mean you went to bed with him.

‘I can’t imagine Margaret’s parents having Kilpatrick here as a house guest,’ I said.

Muldoon put his hand in his side pocket and drew out a piece of paper. I remembered the paper he’d lifted from the table.

‘Her folks are away on holiday. She’s left this note for them – they’re due back, but they’ve been away.’

‘Let me see.’

He folded it in his hand. I considered getting up fast but, whatever he saw in my eyes, he eased to the front of his chair. I didn’t think I was in condition to catch him before he made it out of the door.

‘Why has she left them a note? Has she gone away with Kilpatrick?’

‘With Peter?’ He looked as if he hadn’t thought of that. ‘It’s possible. He’d want out of here when she—’

‘What – when she what?’ My brain was too tired; I let the possibilities spill out. ‘When she gave me the parcel? Or when she came back and told him she’d given it to me? Why would that upset him? He told her to give it to me – that’s what she said. And I was to keep it for Brond.’

‘For who?’ I had never pictured what they meant when they said a man’s jaw dropped – that’s what happened, like a box lid on a hinge his jaw fell open. ‘For Brond?’

‘All I know is I was asked to give him the parcel – and now he’s got it.’

Muldoon stood up.

‘You’ve given it to Brond,’ he said colourlessly.

I straightened in the chair and took a grip on the stick. It had never occurred to me that there might be something in Muldoon to be afraid of – not till now.

‘I gave him a box,’ I said slowly, ‘and it was wrapped in brown paper tied with string – the hairy kind of string—’

‘Are you working for Brond?’

I ignored the question.

‘And there was tape, lots of tape. And we took off the tape and the string and the box opened. And there were two things inside.’ This was the moment when his face should tell me if he knew what had been in the parcel. He looked worried, tired suddenly – as always, red foxy. I could not tell. ‘A cloth and a gun. The cloth had stains on it – maybe ketchup off a fish supper. Somebody had fired the gun.’

Muldoon’s face was closed and secret.

‘I’ve been thinking Kilpatrick must have been the one who fired it and that was why he wanted to get rid of it. But now you say he wants it back and I’ve been wondering why he would change his mind. Has Kilpatrick killed someone?’

Muldoon grinned at me.

‘You want to give your head a rest,’ he said. ‘You’re too old for fairy stories.’

I got the stick under both hands and lurched to my feet. Muldoon came back into proportion. He was a little weed of a fellow.

‘How would you like me to rest the back of my hand across your mouth?’

‘There’s no need for that,’ he said. ‘Listen, Peter’ll explain. He’s the man that’s worrying you – let him do the explaining. I didn’t want to tell you he was here until I was sure everything was all right.’

‘Here? He is? Is Margaret here too?’

‘Of course, in the bedroom. I’ll get them.’

And he turned as naturally as that and went out. Even before I heard the outside door close, I knew he had fooled me. Margaret and Kilpatrick were not in this house. I listened to the stillness. The house was empty except for me and I had no right to be here and had to get out. I fell into a chair and tiredness rose over me like a small death. I wondered if Margaret Briody had really gone away . . . If that had been a note Muldoon had folded in his hand . . . If . . .

I woke in a fright. My arm had folded under me in the chair. Out in the hall red light came through the glass door from a street lamp. I took the first likely door and was lucky for there was a bed. My jacket and tie came off easily, then my trousers dragged and tugged with twin bundles of socks tangled in the cuffs.

Under the borrowed blankets, I couldn’t stop shivering.







NINE

Kilpatrick’s friend? Kilpatrick’s friend. Who was Kilpatrick’s friend? Muldoon, I remembered, and remembering came awake.

The room was full of light. A white ceiling and net curtains with sunlight behind them. On the other side, a dressing table covered with glass animals. The nearest was an elephant with ears like bright drops of water.

I felt alive and full of energy. I yawned and thought about getting up.

Hunger and a full bladder bobbed me gently to the surface again. Sitting up, I saw a yellow dressing-gown lying on the floor. The pillow beside me showed an edge of yellow and when I tugged on it a nightdress of yellow nylon slipped into my hand. It smelled of Margaret Briody.

There were eggs in the fridge in the kitchen. I put a pan on the hot ring and dropped a knob of butter in it, but by the time I had broken three eggs into a dish the butter was giving off black smoke. It was a fine morning and a strange house. Breakfast should be done properly. I found a dishcloth and wiped the pan clean; put their Cona on with coffee; added black pepper and stirred my three eggs with a fork; put a plate under the grill to warm; threw in butter again and as it spat and sizzled across the pan poured in the eggs. The mix spread and I shook the pan, folded, turned out the golden half moon on a plate. Perfect.

Naturally, I had forgotten to make toast.

Eat or make toast while the omelette deflates: it was like a question from the old professor in Moral Philosophy. I ate the omelette. Later out of hunger, I searched and found half a shop loaf in its wrapper and chewed down slices of it. The butter was good even with that – salt butter from the Orkneys.

It was a well-doing family. In the parents’ room, I found a drawer crammed tidily with documents and bills. I lay on the bed and read through them. On one demand note, her father had put a date and quoted as a reminder to himself part of his reply: ‘never welshed on a bill in my life’. He had underlined ‘never’ with three heavy slashes of a pen. From the kinds of stuff he bought, I thought he must be a builder, a slater perhaps, and imagined him as being on his own and wondered how much he made: enough anyway to let Margaret be at university and holiday abroad and have that shiny gloss on her skin. Even in the photograph on the wall, she glowed. I wondered if the proud father noticed how highlights and shadows conspired around those incredible breasts. The photograph beside it was of a little girl dressed for first communion. She looked bridal but familiar. I guessed Margaret must be an only child. Her mother would say to her in a few years: ‘We sacrificed but never grudged it – to give you a chance.’ I thought she might grudge it ahead of schedule if they found who she was with at the moment. I took it for granted now that Kilpatrick was hiding for some reason and that she was with him. I remembered what I had said to Muldoon. People did kill – it happened all the time. A friend of mine in the first term had been stabbed to death one Friday night outside a pub. A fifteen-year-old had stabbed him with a sharpened screwdriver and it had forced a way between two ribs into his lung so that he drowned in blood.

Margaret in the photograph on the wall glowed and smiled. I thought if I was her father I would keep her locked up. I would buy a machine gun – no problem for a man who settled his bills – and mow down all the men who lusted after her.

In their hearts, I thought, and scratched myself.

A bang echoed round the house and quivering into the middle of the floor I translated it as a front door closing. From the hall came the sound of a woman’s voice and the deeper mutter of a man in reply. In a silent frenzy I straightened the spread on the sheets and gathered up bills and letters to lay them back in the drawer. Two fat envelopes spilled on to the floor. I scuffed them under the bed. It had gone quiet. I considered escaping out of the window; and had a vivid picture of being arrested half over the sill.

The door eased open under my hand more slowly than I would ever have imagined. Through the crack I studied the empty hall, suspecting shadows. There was no reason why they should go into Margaret’s bedroom. They would be in the kitchen. Hungry after travelling.

In the bedroom I wasted no time. I found my socks in different places and crammed on my shoes barefoot. Stick in one hand, socks in the other, my jacket over my arm – the tie had vanished, a casualty of the night – I recrossed the hall. I was going to be lucky. With one finger I hooked the handle and the front door opened – it wasn’t properly shut.

A squat bullet-headed man, old enough to be my father, was reaching up to push the door. He had a case in his other hand and a holdall tucked under the same arm. He blinked at me and then put the hand that had been reaching for the door on to my chest and propelled me back into the hall.

‘Now don’t let’s be hasty, Mr Briody,’ I said. He wasn’t big, six inches less than me, but he was broad and with my shoelaces undone and holding one jacket and two socks I wasn’t feeling at my best.

‘Don’t tell me,’ he said. ‘I can guess. Where’s Margaret?’

I shook my head.

‘Through there.’ He pointed to the room Muldoon and I had been in the previous night. I found myself sitting in the same chair.

‘Stay there!’ he said and went back into the hall.

I put my socks on and got my shoelaces tied. I buttoned my jacket and then unbuttoned it, thinking Mr Briody might get over-excited. My tie remained among absent friends.

He came back and shut the door quietly. The other chair was too far away apparently, for he pulled it up close to me and when he sat down leaned forward.

‘She’s not in the house,’ he said. ‘But I can see her bed’s been slept in. Is this yours?’

My tie had turned up again.

I put my hand up to my neck, not claiming the tie but as if to indicate the benefits of an open collar in summer, while, under the circumstances, avoiding any suggestions that the practice might be associated with virility.

‘Where’s she got to? I want a word before,’ he jerked his chin in the direction of the kitchen, ‘the wife realises what’s been going on.’

A set of responses clattered through my head like lemons in a fruit machine.

‘Look now,’ he said. ‘Let’s be straight. I know these things happen. There aren’t many young saints around. But I don’t want needless hurt. You tell me where Margaret’s got to – and then we’ll get you out of here before the wife has a chance to see you.’

He was so reasonable I wondered what Margaret got up to usually. I had been too timorous perhaps about delving into that cornucopia.

‘Ah,’ I said wittily, ‘she’s not here.’

‘I told you that,’ he said.

The accent was not just Irish but southern Irish. He was a man from Eire, and one who signalled to a lad born at the sharny end of a country lane that he was a bloody peasant like my father, uncles and so forth.

‘You did,’ I said. ‘You did surely,’ I heard myself say with just the fatal hint of an inadvertent brogue.

‘So?’

‘Yes. Well, I was . . . at a party. At a party here. Very nice – well behaved. No nonsense. A party – with records and . . . soft drinks. Yes, well. My foot – I injured it—’

‘At the party.’

‘No–no, to be honest with you, shifting a wardrobe. A while ago. But someone stood on it last night. And Margaret said, you’re in no state to go home. My parents are away. You sleep in their bed – my bed. You sleep in my bed, she said, and I’ll sleep in their bed,’ I finished hopefully.

‘She’s not in their bed,’ he said.

‘No, she wouldn’t be. She’s at work.’

‘Where? Work?’

‘A summer job. She got it yesterday. That’s what she held the party for – to celebrate getting the job.’

‘And she’ll have made up the bed before she left.’ He nodded seriously. ‘She was always a tidy girl.’

He stood up and I took a grip on the stick.

‘You won’t mind going before the wife comes.’

Nodding enthusiastically, I levered myself up.

Softly, at the front door, still with that serious look, he said, ‘It’s best that you’re away before the wife comes through. You wouldn’t want to go through all that stuff again about the job and the party – not to speak of the wardrobe on your foot. That’s a cruel thing – a wardrobe.’ I edged away from him down the steps. ‘It must,’ he said solemnly, ‘have leaped like lightening.’

As a father, he struck me as being on the eerie side.

In daylight, being lost and without money presented no problems. After a sleep I could walk from now till tomorrow even if I had to hop the last hours one-legged. If I kept going I might spot a taxi and he could wait at the Kennedys’ while I fetched the fare. Three notes were tucked in the toe of a shoe under my bed so I wasn’t flat yet. There was a bye-law too, someone had told me, to the effect that you could ride a bus as long as you gave your name and address so the fare could be collected later. Or was that only children? Anyway the chances were that nobody would ever have told the hard-faced bus conductress.

‘Who’s boss!’

I glanced up and there was an old lady before a gate smiling complacently at a woman lugging a howling child up the steps. What I’d heard was the splash of the old lady shoving her oar in: Show him who’s boss: don’t let him dominate you. Him looked about three years old. As they struck a tableau on the top step, you could see her underskirt was grubby, and her legs just legs with the usual taut strings behind the knees, but still it never failed to be interesting how far up they went. Bent over, she let her irritation get the better of her and smacked the boy’s face. The howl shrilled up from assertion to outrage. And at that second he writhed round and saw my grinning face. It was the kind of straw that might help set a character for life. How could I explain to him that I wasn’t joining in the female conspiracy against him but only looking up his mother’s skirt?

‘Hey! you there!’ A remembered brogue turned me in my tracks.

A car had pulled up beside me. Mr Briody was leaning across the passenger seat. The door clicked open and he beckoned to me. ‘Get in!’

I had a conviction this was the pay off. Like most Irish, he would have been in America. He had been a slater in Chicago and learned from some Sicilian how to avenge the family honour by taking you for a ride.

Since my foot hurt, I got in.

‘Where to?’ he asked.

‘I’m going back to my digs, but anywhere—’

‘Would they be near the University?’

‘Two or three streets away.’

‘Right then. I can find my way to the University. I’ve given Margaret a run there. You can guide me from that. Right?’

‘Great. Thanks a lot.’

He put the car in gear and pulled away.

‘It occurred to me you might really have a bad foot and since I’m on holiday with nothing to hurry for I came after you.’

‘That was decent of you.’

After a time, I recognised a corner, then some shops. My neck was stiff with not looking in Briody’s direction.

‘Nearly there,’ he said, and added casually, ‘I wouldn’t have been surprised to see you running up the road like a two-year-old.’

‘Mr Briody,’ I said with a world of sincerity, ‘believe me – I mean Margaret and I haven’t – I’m trying to say that I’ve nothing but respect for your daughter.’

‘Margaret? Daughter?’ He twisted round to look at me while the car took care of itself. ‘You must think I’m a boy from the bogs or the greatest Christian since Matt Talbot gave up the drink. If it had been my daughter, I’d have degutted you.’

‘You’re not Margaret’s father.’

No slouch, I had worked it out.

‘Not an unwashed glass or a crumpled crisp bag the length and breadth of the house. But there, I suppose as well as making her bed she tidied up this morning before she went to work. It must have been a hell of a party.’ He made a creaking noise and I realised he was laughing. ‘Hand it to you for a quick tongue and the devil’s cheek. It beats Flaherty running bare-arsed up the lane from the widow’s.’

The moment for explaining how shamefully innocent I was seemed to have gone.

‘I’m Danny Briody’s cousin. Liam. He and Mary are over staying at the farm and we’ll be at their house a day or two. Then on to London and home again.’ He grinned. ‘And it’s nice to meet you too since you’re a friend of the family, as you might say . . . Don’t misunderstand me, mind. Danny’s a good skin. It’s not the first time Danny’s helped with the farm rent in a bad year. And there’s never a Christmas but I send over the plump birds that make a holiday a feast . . . It’s just that Mary and him go on about that girl of theirs until you’d have thought she was another Alfred Einstein.’

I didn’t correct him, reckoning that I’d drawn heavily enough for one day on my good luck account. Anyway for all I knew he might be thinking of another Einstein: Alfred the shyster lawyer or one-armed sheep-gelding champion of County Clare. Something like that.

‘Mind you,’ he went on, ‘I’m fond of Margaret. It’s just that I’ve wondered if she was as quick on the uptake as they say . . . You’ll be at the University yourself?’

‘Yes.’

‘And you’ll be in the same class as Margaret?’

‘In the same year. We share a couple of subjects.’

‘Do you tell me that?’ He paused, cleared his throat and then asked in a rush, ‘Now, would you say she was doing well? I mean that she was doing well? young pretty girl Was she able for it, would you say?’

‘We’re only in first year,’ I said. ‘I’m not sure how she got on in the degree exams.’

He nodded satisfied as if, without quite realising how, I had answered his questions. Then we were at the University and for the next five minutes we were busy as I called the turns.


    Ваша оценка произведения:

Популярные книги за неделю