CHAPTER 7

Deirdre was working double shifts at Carey’s Diner quite a bit lately, after which she hurried off to play practice. Sean occasionally saw her late at night, physically limp with exhaustion, but her mind still buzzing from the intensity of rehearsal.

“How’d it go?” he asked her one night when they crossed paths in the kitchen.

“Super.” She drew a kitchen chair over so she could reach deep into the top shelf of one of the cabinets. “The hack who landed Mrs. Potiphar? She sucks.” Her arm came out holding a bottle of Smirnoff Twist Green Apple Vodka. She hopped down off the chair, got herself a glass and filled it with ice. “And I’m watching the director? And he can totally see it. He’s trying to hide the fact that he now ­realizes he made a mistake, but it’s all over his face. It’s awesome.” She poured the vodka, took a sip. “Oh,” she said focusing on him briefly. “Want some?”

“No thanks.” He got a beer from the fridge and joined her at the table. With Deirdre gone so much and Aunt Vivvy rarely leaving the house, he’d taken to doing the grocery shopping as well, and had picked up a six-pack of Sam Adams.

There was a strange clicking noise coming quickly down the stairs. It approached the kitchen door and then stopped. Sean looked at Deirdre, and she rolled her eyes. “Damn dog thinks she’s the man of the house.” There was a low growling noise, and Deirdre said, “It’s just us, for chrissake! We live here.” The growling stopped. The clicking of the dog’s toenails receded slowly back up the stairs.

They sipped their drinks, the quiet disturbed only by the sound of night insects and the occasional rustle of dead leaves out in the woods. A light breeze puffed at the ruffled curtains.

“I went to that Clap Out the other day for Kevin,” Sean ­mentioned.

“Yeah?” Deirdre said. “Wish he’d go to camp—he just wanders around in the woods.”

“By the way, old Mrs. Lindquist retired. Kevin’s teacher was her daughter.”

Deirdre put her sock-clad feet up on the table and let her head rest on the back of the chair. “No wonder he never complained.”

“He seemed to really like her.”

“She left messages a couple of times. I think maybe Viv talked to her.”

“What were the messages?”

“I don’t know.” She sipped her drink.

Sean put his beer down. “Did Viv say what she wanted?”

“Nope.”

“Do you know for a fact that she returned the call?”

Deirdre gave him an irritated look. “What’s your point?”

“My point is, the kid’s teacher called several times, Dee. Did anyone bother to call back?”

“Well, that’s Viv’s job, isn’t it? She’s his legal guardian.”

“And Viv’s pushing eighty and won’t leave the house. You’re the one who said she’s losing it. You couldn’t have checked to see if she closed the loop?”

Deirdre took her feet off the table and leaned toward him. “You know what, Sean? You’re right. I should have checked. I should have done that instead of all the time I spent with the kid because he has no friends. In fact, I should’ve quit my job and my acting career and every other fucking thing I care about and become this family’s goddamned handmaid. But I didn’t. And neither, by the way, did you. In fact, you’ve been all about you. You haven’t given a shit about anyone else your whole life, Sean. So don’t come after me for a few phone calls Viv may or may not have answered.” She stood, put her glass on the counter, and left.

Sean sat there at the kitchen table, stunned. How could anyone think he’d been all about himself, least of all his sister? He’d spent his entire adult life tending to other people’s gaping, gangrenous wounds. He’d had dysentery more times than he could remember and had never owned anything he couldn’t carry in a backpack. People commented on his selflessness so often it had almost gotten boring.

He rose slowly, rattled by her attack. He dumped the rest of his beer in the sink and loaded her glass into the dishwasher. Then he went upstairs and got into bed. He tried to pray for her, which was what he always did—after praying for the attacked, he’d send up a prayer for their attackers to turn their hearts. But it didn’t work. He couldn’t quiet his indignation enough to open the window of prayer in his mind, couldn’t make the connection, couldn’t feel the sense of peace and oneness. All he could feel was the buzz of resentment in his head and the throbbing angry pain in his back.

* * *

A few days later, Cormac called to say Barb had a class on Tuesday nights—did Sean want to go to The Palace for dinner? Cormac already knew the answer. It was what they always did when Sean was in town—hit The Pal, ate greasy bar food, had a beer or two beyond their usual limit, laughed their heads off, got philosophical, laughed some more, then walked home.

The Palace had been built as a fishing lodge on the shore of Lake Pequot, slowly morphing into a bar sometime during Prohibition (because what better time to start serving alcohol?). Rustic and perennially damp, it still felt a little like a fishing hut to which beer taps and bar stools had been added on a whim. The kitchen came later and was of unknown vintage, but certainly not recent.

“What are you doing for money these days?” asked Cormac as he studied the stained and very brief menu.

“I still have that trust account Aunt Viv set up when my mom got sick. I just pull the interest off that. Don’t worry, you don’t have to foot the bill.”

“Hey, I’m honored to buy brews for a guy who’s done so much good in the world.” And Cormac meant it, Sean knew. But Deirdre’s accusation still rattled in the back of his mind, and the comment made him squirm.

“So, how’s business?” he asked.

“Pretty damn good, actually,” Cormac admitted. “You’d think strong coffee and fresh muffins were the only known antidote to some disease everybody has.” He put the menu down. “Hey, um. If you ever wanted to pick up some extra cash while you’re home, I could use the help. I mean, I don’t know how long you’re staying . . .”

“Yeah, I’m not really clear on that, either. I was hoping a little time off would clear up this back thing.”

“Which you won’t get looked at.”

Sean shrugged.

“Okay, well, just to warn you? Barb got a massage yesterday, and she knows you haven’t made an appointment. She’ll definitely bug you about it the next time you come over.” He said this unapologetically, as if his wife’s pestering were something Sean would have to endure without Cormac’s intercession or sympathy. It was a change for which Sean wasn’t prepared: Cormac, a forty-something bachelor, suddenly committing himself so entirely to another person that he wouldn’t intervene or even commiserate about her unwanted assistance. “Just go once,” he said. “And if it doesn’t work, you can tell her you tried.”

They ordered a plate of nachos and some beers and chatted amiably about one thing and another. Cormac’s cousin Janie was in minor freak-out mode because she was worried the guy she was with was about to propose.

“This is a problem?” Sean remembered Janie well. Her freak-outs were not pretty.

“Nah, the guy’s perfect for her. But you know, she really loved her husband who died, and to her it feels like saying, ‘I’m so over you, I’m marrying someone else.’ That’s what she says. But I also think it’s a housing issue. She grew up in the house she and her kids live in, and Tug—that’s the guy she’s going to marry, or so help me I’ll kill her—he’s a contractor and she met him when he came to build a porch her husband commissioned before he died. So she’s attached to it. And Tug lives in the house his grandfather built with his own hands right across the lake over there.” Cormac flicked his thumb toward the window. “So he’s attached to that.”

Sean laughed. “See, I’m telling you—life is so much easier when you’re attached to nothing!”

Cormac smiled and nodded absently. “I don’t know . . .” He took a sip of his beer. “I have to admit, I’m getting pretty attached to being attached.”

Sean’s smile faded a little. But he clinked Cormac’s beer bottle with his own and said, “Herman, you big sap.”

Several beers later, the subject of Dougie Shaw came up.

“There is nothing you can say that’ll make me believe Dougie Shaw should be allowed to carry a concealed weapon,” said Sean, licking Buffalo-wing sauce off his fingers. “We’re talking about a guy who loved whipping balloons full of ketchup at passing cars.”

“He only did that twice, and nobody got hurt.”

“You’re defending him? The guy was insane. How about when he went to the homecoming game in his mother’s wedding gown and asked Ricky Cavicchio to marry him at halftime?”

Cormac burst out laughing. “Jesus! Remember that? He looked pretty good in that dress, too—fit him perfectly!”

“Mrs. Shaw was no ballerina, if I recall. And Cavicchio went so mental it took the whole offensive line to keep him from beating the crap out of Dougie right there on the field. What was the point of that, anyway?”

“Come on, you remember,” said Cormac. “Cavicchio had been calling him a faggot and slamming him into lockers since junior high. It was the perfect revenge—the guy was so rattled afterward he threw a bunch of interceptions and lost the game.”

Sean laughed. “Okay, so Dougie deserves a medal—not a police cruiser.”

The subject of unusual childhood behavior eventually turned to Kevin. “I’m a little worried about him,” said Sean. “He doesn’t seem to have any friends. And he’s so quiet. You can barely get the kid to talk under klieg lights.”

“He used to come into the Confectionary every once in a while with your aunt,” Cormac said, dipping the last celery stick in blue cheese sauce. “But I haven’t seen either of them in a while. Bring him around sometime. Get him a piece of pie.”

“Pie,” Sean smirked. “That’s your solution to everything.”

“Solved every problem I ever had. Hunger, employment . . .” He raised his eyebrows. “Female companionship.”

“Pie slut.”

“Fruit, sugar, and a nice flaky crust.” Cormac raised his beer. “Makes the world a sweeter place, my friend.”