A Week in Winter (17 page)

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Authors: Maeve Binchy

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BOOK: A Week in Winter
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A silence.

‘Say something, ask something,’ Lillian begged.

‘How old are you, Lillian?’

‘Fifty-five.’

‘You look a lot less.’

‘Thank you.’

‘Why do you pretend that you and I are the same age? You were twenty-one when I was born.’

‘Because I wanted you to go away, to leave Teddy as he was, with me.’

Another silence.

Eventually Winnie spoke. ‘Well, in the end neither of us got him.’

‘Do you think we’re going to get out of here?’ The voice had aged greatly. This was not Lillian of the Certainties.

Some small amount of compassion seeped through to Winnie’s subconscious. She tried to beat it back but it was there.

‘They say you have to be positive and keep active,’ she said, shifting around on the ledge.

‘Active? Here? What can we do to be positive here?’

‘I know that. We can’t move. I suppose we could sing.’


Sing
, Winnie? Have you lost your marbles?’

‘You
did
ask.’

‘OK, start then.’

Winnie paused to think. Her mother’s favourite song had been ‘Carrickfergus’.

I wish I had you in Carrickfergus,

Only three miles on from Ballygrand.

I would swim over the deepest ocean

Thinking of days there in Ballygrand . . .

She paused. To her astonishment, Lillian joined in.

But the seas are deep and I can’t swim over,

And neither more have I wings to fly.

I wish I could find me a handy boatman,

Would ferry over my love and I.

Then they both stopped to think about the words they had just sung.

‘There might have been a more inappropriate song if I could have thought of it,’ Winnie apologised.

For the first time, she heard a genuine laugh from Lillian. This was not a tinkle, a put-down or a sneer. She actually found it funny.

‘You could have picked “Cool Clear Water”, I suppose,’ she said eventually.

‘Your call,’ Winnie said.

Lillian sang ‘The Way You Look Tonight’. Teddy’s father had sung it to her the night before he was killed on the combine harvester, she said.

Winnie sang ‘Only The Lonely’. She had found the record shortly after her father had married the strange, distant stepmother who made jewellery. Then Lillian sang ‘True Love’, and said that she had always hoped to meet someone again after Teddy’s father had died but never did. She had worked long hours and tried too hard to make them people of importance in Rossmore. There had been no time for love.

Winnie sang ‘St Louis Blues’. She had once won a talent competition by singing it in a pub and the prize had been a leg of lamb.

‘Are we wasting our voices in case we need to call for help?’ Lillian wondered. She asked as if she really wanted to hear what Winnie would say.

‘I don’t think anyone would hear us anyway. Our best hope is to keep positive,’ Winnie suggested. ‘Do you know any Beatles songs?’ So they sang ‘Hey Jude’.

Lillian said that she remembered her mother had said the Beatles were depraved because they had long hair. Winnie said that her stepmother had never known who they were and that even her father was vague about them. It was so hard to have a real conversation with them about anything.

‘Do they know you’re here?’ Lillian asked.

‘Nobody knows we’re here. That’s the problem,’ Winnie sighed.

‘No, I mean in the West of Ireland. Do they know about Teddy?’

‘No. They hardly know any of my friends.’

‘Maybe you should take him to meet them. He said he hadn’t met your folks yet.’

‘Well, you know . . .’ Winnie shrugged as if to make little of it all.

‘He took you to meet me.’

‘Yes, didn’t he?’ The memory of that meeting was still bitter, and Winnie cursed her foolishness trying to take on this mother-in-law from hell, locking horns with her and pretending friendship to win the son. Look where it had ended up. In this cave, waiting for at the worst a slow death by drowning or at the very best rheumatic fever.

‘I wasn’t entirely overjoyed at first,’ Lillian admitted after a pause. ‘Neither were you, but it was you who suggested coming on this holiday.’

‘I did
not
suggest you come on the holiday. I told you about Stone House and that I wanted to come here with Teddy, that was all. You invited yourself.’

‘He invited me. You went along with it.’

‘It doesn’t matter now,’ Winnie said. There was defeat in her tone.

‘Don’t get all down about it, please. I’m frightened. I liked it better when you were strong. Can you think of any other songs?’

‘No.’ Winnie was mulish.

‘You
must
know some more songs.’

‘What about “By The Rivers Of Babylon”?’ Winnie offered.

It turned out that Lillian had been at a wedding in St Augustine’s church in Rossmore where the bride and groom had chosen this as one of their wedding hymns, and the Polish priest had thought it must be an old Irish tradition and sang along with it.

Winnie said that one year, when she was working the Christmas shift in a hospital, they had all made a conga line and danced through the wards singing this song to cheer the patients up, and even the sour ward sister had agreed that it worked.

Then Lillian said there was nothing to beat ‘Heartbreak Hotel’, so they sang that. Winnie said she actually preferred Elvis doing ‘Suspicious Minds’, but they only knew one line of that, which was something about being caught in a trap. Still, they sang it over and over until it began to sound hollow.

During an attempt at Otis Redding’s ‘Sitting On The Dock Of The Bay’, they both noticed that the level of the water had gone down. They hardly dared to say it in case yet another huge wave would crash in. But when it was clear that the tide had turned, and their throats were raw from singing and the salt spray, they reached out their hands to each other. Cold, wet and trembling, they just held on for a few seconds. Words would have destroyed the fragile hope and shaky peace they had managed to reach.

Now it was a matter of waiting.

Mrs Starr called Rigger when it was obvious that two of her guests had gone missing. He rounded up a search party, including Chicky’s brothers-in-law.

‘I warned them against the south cliffs, so you can be sure that’s where they went,’ she said in a clipped voice. Rigger asked her if there were any specific places she had told them about and when Chicky thought about it, it was clear what had happened. She had seen the challenge in Lillian Hennessy’s face as she had dismissed the weather warnings the previous night. And she had noticed how Lillian left without any hint of her direction that morning.

The men said they would go towards Majella’s Cave and phone her as soon as they had any news.

Before she heard from them, however, there was a call from Teddy Hennessy, who said he was Lillian’s son and phoning from England. He apologised for interrupting her but said he couldn’t reach his mother or Winnie by mobile phone. They must have switched them off.

Chicky Starr was professional and guarded. No point in alerting him to any possible danger until she had proof that there was a real need to be worried. She took his number carefully.

‘They’ve gone walking over the cliff paths and should be back soon, Mr Hennessy.’

‘And they’re having a good time?’ He sounded anxious to hear it was all going well.

‘Yes; I’m sorry they’re not here to tell you themselves. They’ll be upset to have missed you.’

‘I got a text from Winnie last night. She said the place was wonderful.’

‘I’m pleased they are satisfied with it all.’ Mrs Starr felt a lump in her throat. ‘It’s good to see old friends enjoy themselves . . .’ Please God may she not have to talk to this man in an entirely different way in a few hours’ time.

‘Lillian’s my mother, as I said. This holiday was their way to get to know each other properly, you see. It’s great to know it’s working so well.’

He sounded hopeful and enthusiastic. How could she tell him that his hard, brittle mother had not been getting on at all well with Winnie, who turned out to be his girlfriend? The relationship had not even been acknowledged. How would history have to be rewritten if the worst had happened?

She stood with her hand at her throat until Orla tugged at her sleeve asking whether the meal should be served now or not. She pulled herself together and got the guests seated. They were all anxious to hear news of the missing women and an unsettled air hung over the table.

‘They’re all right, you know,’ said Freda suddenly, ‘they’re fine. You mustn’t worry. They’ll be cold and hungry, but they’ll be all right.’ She said it with great confidence, but it seemed like everything was in slow motion until the telephone rang.

They were safe. The search party were bringing them first to Dr Dai’s house but there seemed to be nothing worse than cold and shock. Without giving any hint of her relief, Chicky Starr told the other guests that Winnie and Lillian had been caught by the tide and would need hot baths but that everyone was to start dinner without them.

When they came in the door, white-faced and wrapped in rugs and blankets, everyone cheered.

Lillian made very light of it all.

‘Now you’ve all seen me without my make-up, I’ll never recover from this!’ she laughed.

‘Were you trapped by the tide?’ Freda was anxious to know what had happened.

‘Yes, but we knew the tide would have to go out again,’ Winnie said. She was trembling but there was going to be no drama.

‘Weren’t you very frightened?’ The English doctor and his wife were concerned.

‘No, not really. Winnie was great. She sang all the time to keep our spirits up. She does a very mean “St Louis Blues”, by the way. She might give us a recital one night.’

‘Only if
you
do “Heartbreak Hotel”,’ Winnie said.

Mrs Starr interrupted. ‘Your son rang, Lillian, from England. I said you’d call him when you got back.’

‘Let’s have a bath first,’ Lillian said.

‘Did you actually tell him that—’ Winnie began.

‘I told him you’d been delayed, that’s all.’

They looked at her gratefully.

Lillian looked thoughtful. ‘Winnie, why don’t
you
call him? He’s your fellow. It’s
you
that he wanted to talk to anyway. Tell him I’ll talk another time.’ And she headed towards her bath.

Only Chicky Starr and Freda O’Donovan saw any significance in that remark. They both realised that some great shift had taken place during the long hours waiting for a high Atlantic tide to change. It wouldn’t all be sunshine or an easy road ahead, but it wasn’t only the weather that looked a lot calmer and less troubled than it had that morning.

John

J
ohn had to remember that they were talking to him when they called out his name. It had been so long since anyone had called him John, which was in fact his real name, or at least the name he had been given in the orphanage all those years ago.

Everyone else knew him as Corry.

There was a character called Corry in a children’s book which the nuns used to read at bedtime. A little cherub of a toddler that everyone loved. So John thought this was a good name, and the nuns humoured him.

There was a gardener in the orphanage; an old man who came from a place called Salinas. He was always telling them that this was a great part of the world and one day, when he had enough money, he would go back there and buy himself a little place.

Corry used to say the name Salinas over and over. He liked it.

He had no name. This would be his name.

He was Corry Salinas and when he was sixteen he got his first job working in a sandwich bar.

They had a contract to do lunches for film crews, and Corry soon caught everyone’s eye. It wasn’t just his dark eyes above the aquiline nose, his hair which curled slightly at the temples, his intelligent eyes which always seemed to smile conspiratorially – it was the way he remembered who liked peanut butter and who liked low-fat cheese. Nothing was too much trouble; even the most tiresome and self-obsessed starlets, who changed their minds and said that he had delivered the wrong sandwich, were impressed.

‘I don’t know where you get your patience.’ Monica, who worked with him, had a shorter fuse.

‘There are other sandwich bars. We want them to choose ours so it needs a bit of extra effort at the start.’ Corry was cheerful. He was not afraid of hard work. He lived in a room over a laundromat and cleaned the place each morning instead of paying rent.

He didn’t have to spend any money on food since there was always something to eat in a sandwich business. His savings account grew, and every cent was earmarked for acting lessons. No way could you live in Los Angeles and not want to be a part of the industry.

He and Monica were now an item.

Corry’s good looks meant that being an extra would have been easy. But that wasn’t really an option. It would mean hanging around all day for what was considerably less money than he earned through the lunch trade. He would hold out until he got a speaking part, and maybe an agent.

It was all part of the dream.

Monica’s dream was different. She thought they should move into a place of their own and set up their own fast-food business. Why work all the hours God sent just to make the employer even more wealthy?

But Corry was firm. His dream was to be an actor. He could not commit full-time to a catering business.

Monica was upset by this. She had seen too many people waste a lifetime chasing after a Hollywood dream. Her own father was one of them. But Corry was the love of her life, this handsome boy with the mobile face and the confidence that he would make it in the movies. She didn’t want to push him and risk losing him.

And then Monica was pregnant. She didn’t know how to tell Corry. She feared so much that he would say he couldn’t get involved. Contraception had been her responsibility. And Monica had not deliberately forgotten to take the pill. She spent days wondering how to tell him in the way that would least upset him. In the end she didn’t have to; he guessed.

‘Why didn’t you tell me sooner?’ he seemed full of love.

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