There was only one thing worse than not knowing all the facts of a situation and that, Iris had decided, was discovering the truly unpalatable ones. It had been six weeks since she had received Colm’s early-morning phone call. Six weeks since she had clapped eyes on Tom and devoted herself almost entirely to his care. She had of course gone home to sleep in her house at Grosvenor Gardens. She preferred to sleep in her own bed and take the first available bus to Colm’s apartment in the morning, gleefully receiving her gurgling grandson swaddled in the warmth of his baby blankets. Her work at the church had been scaled back completely. She had managed only one morning mass in three weeks and had temporarily handed her church-cleaning duties to a kind and unquestioning neighbour. She knew Father Hogan would do anything rather than pry and had done her best to dodge him, but he followed her to her car, which she had parked beneath the whitebeam trees that lined the church car park. She rarely drove any more, preferring to get maximum value from her free travel card, but this morning she had gone to the flower market to collect blooms for the altar display.
‘Iris, we are beginning to forget what you look like around here. You haven’t defected to another parish after all these years, have you?’
‘Oh, don’t be daft, Father. Everything is fine but I do hope you will excuse me as I am in a terrible rush.’
‘Certainly, Iris. I merely wanted to say if there was anything at all bothering you that you could certainly confide in Father Michael or myself. We would be only too glad to help.’
There was a list of things bothering her. Where would she start? If she told Father Hogan that Colm had a new son he would, naturally enough, want to see him. He would also want to know why she hadn’t shared the good news of the child’s impending arrival. He might even start planning the christening and expect to officiate at the happy ceremony. Having stood by Iris Lifford through the difficult times of her husband’s disgrace, Father Hogan would no doubt be looking forward to meeting Colm’s new family. A missing mother was going to be a difficult one to explain. Could you even christen a child without its mother being present? Did Colm actually want Tom christened? No, there was no good place to start this story. This can of worms was definitely too fresh a catch to go opening it up to scrutiny it could not bear.
‘Things are absolutely fine, Father,’ Iris said with as much conviction as she could muster. She started her car and when she dared to look in the rear-view mirror she saw Father Hogan’s vestments flapping like oversize bunting in the breeze.
After Leda’s phone call to the apartment Colm had told his mother the scant information he knew about her whereabouts and her intentions. It was a catalogue of grim revelations. Leda, it seemed, had been calm and relaxed in the weeks before Tom’s birth. She seemed glad that Colm had taken such a passionate interest in the baby she was carrying.
‘And you didn’t notice anything strange about her behaviour?’ Iris was perplexed and Colm knew that question time had well and truly begun.
‘If you are asking me if she littered our conversations with clues that she would reluctantly spend a bare week with her baby son and then decide that she never wanted to see him again then I would have to say no she didn’t. She seemed OK while she still had Tom inside her.’
‘All I am saying, Colm, is that it is highly unusual behaviour. Did she seem depressed? Were there any clues? The slightest hint—’
‘No, there were no clues.’ His tone was snappy and silence hung between them awkwardly. Iris was cowed only for a moment.
‘So what exactly happens next? What happens to Tom?’
‘He stays with me, of course. I will do whatever it takes to mind him.’
‘How will you manage?’
‘I will cut back on work or I will work from here at night when he is asleep. I will do whatever I have to do.’
‘It could have consequences for your career.’ The words sounded cold and she regretted them immediately.
‘Mam, he has lost something huge already. He will not lose me. I promise him that.’
A blush rose on Iris’s face. She should not have doubted her son, but her life had served to make her distrustful of intentions and suspicious of motives. Colm had never done anything to damage her pride or belief in him. She felt ashamed that she had not supported him without question.
‘I will help you keep your promise, Colm.’
With her composure cracking a little Iris scurried in response to an imaginary cry from Tom’s room. She did not want her son to see the tears that welled in her eyes. It was time for them all to be resilient and do what needed to be done.
‘Even you, my little man,’ she whispered to the small figure of a soundly sleeping Tom.
The most immediate problem came from an unexpected source. Polly’s concerns on Leda’s hospital notes had made their inevitable progress to the public health nurse’s office. Colm and Iris had covered their tracks well, making sure that Tom was taken for his appointed weigh-ins and check-ups at the public health dispensary and he had his initial weigh-in and the BCG vaccination right on time. Sometimes Colm took the morning off from Reilly & Maitland or manufactured an out-of-office appointment with a client that would give him just enough time to bring Tom and his mother to the health centre. Afterwards Iris would unfurl the buggy and walk back to the apartment with Tom snugly wrapped while Colm returned to work, doing his level best not to be spotted by either of the senior partners when he turned up late. This was relatively easy most days, because their work, and one could only lightly apply the term work to what the senior partners actually spent their time doing, was conducted on the golf course or in the fine restaurants that lined the streets around the offices.
It would be easier to let Iris do the job from beginning to end, but Colm had his lines about Leda and her absence rehearsed as he would the facts of any case he was delivering to a barrister, and he was terrified that Iris would blurt something out to the nurse that would alert suspicion about Leda’s whereabouts. She promised she wouldn’t, but it was something Colm did not wish to put to the test.
It seemed that fathers of newborn babies were a rarity in the health centre as it was predominantly mothers on maternity leave who brought their babies for vaccinations. His peculiarity made Colm a target for sympathetic glances and lots of ‘Aren’t you great?’ comments. The attention made him uncomfortable and he was terrified of getting engaged in conversation and forgetting to tell the requisite lies. When pushed he said he was giving his wife a rest as she had been up a lot of the night and she needed the extra sleep more than he did. That was usually enough for most women to fall silent as they contemplated their own plight, exhausted, up all night too but still expected to cope the following day with no one to share the load. They slipped into a reverie that Colm guessed involved a comfortable bed, a dark room and complete silence. It was much like the daydream he himself had become prone to over the last few weeks. He had never guessed the torturous consequences of continually interrupted sleep, how a night could last as long as a week but an hour’s sleep only ever felt like a scant five minutes.
Colm was always relieved when he got from the confines of the too-small waiting room into the relatively spacious and calm nurse’s office. His relief turned to dismay one morning when Tom was just seven weeks old. After introducing herself, Nurse Brid Halloran expressed her disappointment that it was Colm again and not Leda who had brought Tom for his weigh-in and check-up.
‘Is there a problem with me bringing him?’ Colm asked as lightly as he could.
‘No, not at all, Mr Lifford, absolutely not. We love to see dads in here. Sure, you are as rare as hens’ teeth. No, it’s not that, it’s just that Leda’s file has come through from the Rotunda and some cause for concern about Leda’s behaviour and mood have been noted by the midwifery team in the postnatal ward. We like to follow these cases up, just because some new mothers need more emotional support than others, and it would seem Leda might be one of those that need a helping hand.’
Colm knew he should be saying something to refute the suggestion or reassure the nurse that while Leda had had initial problems everything was fine now, but he was caught off balance. That annoyed him because for the last few weeks he had been rehearsing in his head the moment the subject would be broached. Maybe he should have left his mother to handle this situation after all. Iris Lifford would have wiped the floor with this woman – in the politest of ways, naturally.
Brid Halloran continued to enter Tom’s details into the computer. Colm looked at the Post-its that framed her monitor filled with names, dates and phone numbers. Little sketches of other lives which meant nothing to him, but reading them gave him something to do in this long and awkward silence.
When Brid had completed Tom’s data entry she turned to look at his father for some form of response. He was the thoughtful type, she decided, one who considered everything, someone whom she just didn’t really have the time for today. She cleared her throat to break the silence, which was enough to spur Colm into opening his mouth.
‘Well, Leda did have a hard time in the Rotunda. The labour was long and she was exhausted and then the breastfeeding didn’t go smoothly. She just got over-whelmed, but she is well on her way now. That’s why I do these appointments, because it’s the least I can do when she is up several times a night with Tom. If I look after Tom for a few hours she gets to catch up on a bit of sleep.’ Colm didn’t want to overcook his explanation so he stopped to see if Nurse Halloran was buying his story.
‘Well, sharing the load is the only way to get through these first weeks. It’s too much for any one person on their own, dealing with demanding little mites like you, Tom Lifford.’ She took Tom from Colm and gave him a nose rub. Tom made a contented gurgle and resigned himself happily to the measuring and weighing process.
Colm was relieved, but he would not really relax until he had Tom dressed and back outside in the world, where he could protect them both from the prods and the questions of well-meaning people who had not got a clue. He dressed Tom quickly. Nearly two months of practice had made him efficient and calm in the way he went about the task. Of all mornings he prayed that Tom would not wriggle too much and they could get out of the health centre and back to Iris as quickly as possible. His escape was nearly complete and his panicked breathing was returning to normal as he listened to the nurse tap more details into the computer. Tom had put on a suitable amount of weight and his progress was totally in line with other babies of his age. His son was gurgling as if he knew he had done well. Colm lifted him up and cradled him against his neck for a hug, soothing himself by rubbing his son’s back.
‘Any particular afternoon suit Leda for a home visit?’
Colm thought he might choke. ‘A home visit? You do home visits?’
‘Yes. The team here spend mornings in the centre and then afternoons visiting new parents. It’s all part of our community service. The only reason Leda has slipped through the net is that we had two nurses out on sick leave the week Tom here was born so we had to postpone the visits to some of that week’s babies rather than create an ongoing backlog. We are fitting in everybody now as best we can. So what day would suit? I’m afraid Wednesday is difficult for me because I have a meeting at two and, going on previous experience, it tends to run late.’
‘What about this day week?’ Colm asked with as much assurance as he could muster. He knew there was no point in trying to dodge the issue because that would alert more suspicion. He had no idea how he was going to persuade Leda to be present for the public health nurse’s visit, but one of the most basic tenets of his legal training was never to reveal that you were unsure of your next move, so he ploughed on as if he knew what he was doing.
‘Will we say Monday at two? Just let me check the address and get directions from you. Twenty-one, The Malt Store, Claddagh Road: is that correct?’
‘That’s us. Our building is in the grounds of the old distillery that runs along by Velvet Lane.’
‘Oh, I know – the place with the huge wrought-iron gates. I thought that would be strictly a child-free zone, way too exclusive for a buggy and a swing. Then again I’ve only seen it when I’m whizzing by on the bus. Shows you how wrong first impressions can be.’
‘I think Tom is the first baby all right, but nobody has reported us for night-time disturbance – yet anyway.’ Colm attempted a smile. He hoped it didn’t look as mangled as he felt inside.
He picked up Tom’s changing bag and coat, which he had put on a side table when he came in. ‘See you this day week so at two.’
‘Looking forward to it, and tell Leda we are not the secret police. We are here to help if we are needed.’
‘I’ll tell her that. She will be glad of the visit.’
Iris was not impressed. ‘How on earth do you think you are going to magic Leda out of thin air in time for this nurse’s visit? She hasn’t made contact in almost two months, you don’t even know if she is still in the country, Colm!’
‘What would you suggest I said? If I tell them the truth about Leda I could have social services and all sorts down my back. We’re not married so I don’t have as many rights as I should have. I bought myself as much time as I could so I could sort something out. God knows what though.’
‘That girl has a lot to answer for. Off she goes without a care in the world and no idea of the trail of trouble in her wake.’
‘Nothing except for the fact that she has abandoned her son and that must bother her.’
‘I wouldn’t bank on it,’ Iris said waspishly.
Colm watched as his mother pushed Tom’s buggy in the direction of home. She would complete the journey in a brisk thirty minutes and her pace would never flag. She prided herself on her fitness and triumph over old age’s attempts to undo the benefits of a lifetime of healthy living. He was putting off getting into the car and driving back to work because he knew that concentrating on any case today was going to be an impossible task. Going home and spending the day with Tom was what he really wanted to do, but another day’s absence from Reilly & Maitland was not going to solve anything. He would go to work and bury himself in some case and drink as much coffee as would see him through the day. He waited until his mother turned the corner on to Hayden Row and disappeared from view. He would find Leda and persuade her to come back and act motherly for an afternoon. She owed them both that.