When Jack woke up in the morning,’” Michael read, “‘he couldn’t believe his eyes—just outside his bedroom window was a giant beanstalk, reaching all the way to the sky.’”
Barry studied the picture, sucking absently on his thumb. Michael remembered Ethan, sweet smelling and pajama-clad, curled up in bed as Michael read, making the same moist rhythmic noise as this boy.
Barry reached out and touched the beanstalk with a small finger. His nails could do with a clip, and a scrub.
“Beanstalk,” Michael said. “It grew from the magic beans the man gave him.”
Barry’s finger trailed the beanstalk’s length.
“It’s very long, isn’t it? Look how it goes right up to the clouds.”
The previous night he’d remembered the fairy-tale collection that Valerie had gotten from someone for her fourth birthday. Shabbier now, of course, but still more or less intact. Six books, nested together in a little cardboard folder at the bottom of Michael’s wardrobe, because they hadn’t fit into the suitcase with the other books.
Not surprisingly, Barry didn’t seem to have come across Jack and the Beanstalk before.
He took his thumb from his mouth. “Where’s his mammy?” Little more than a whisper.
“Still asleep,” Michael said. “She doesn’t know anything about the beanstalk. She’ll get a big surprise when she wakes up, won’t she?”
A nod, thumb slipping back in.
Their fourth morning together in the shop, the child still with far too little to say, but each day inching towards a fraction more communication. Michael imagined the kind of life he’d endured up to this: traipsing the streets with his mother when they weren’t holed up in some hovel, or sitting on the ground beside her as she held out a paper cup. No interaction with other children, no stimulation beyond one tattered book that she couldn’t even read to him.
“‘Jack jumped out of bed and dressed quickly. He ran outside and began to climb the beanstalk.’”
It wasn’t ideal. They had to stop every time a customer came in. There wasn’t much room behind the counter, the light wasn’t great for reading, and they had only a single chair and a step stool for sitting on, but they did the best they could.
“‘Up and up and up he went, all the way to the top.’”
The girl came at lunchtime if it was dry and took Barry away for the afternoon, and Michael didn’t see them again until seven. He wondered again if there was any possibility of someone giving her a job. She was presentable enough now, with regular showers and clean clothes, but she was still illiterate with no qualifications and no experience. If someone like her came looking for work from him he wouldn’t be long sending her packing.
She should still try, though. If she managed to get a few application forms he’d make some attempt to fill them in, and a CV might help if he could somehow magic one up out of thin air. She could hand it in at the job center, and someone might be desperate enough to take her on. Unlikely, but not impossible.
The shop door opened. Michael handed the book to Barry and got to his feet—and saw, with a jolt of surprise, his daughter crossing the floor towards him.
“Hello,” she said. The same wary look on her face that he got now whenever they met, a flick of a smile, gone as quickly as it had come. He couldn’t remember the last time she’d smiled properly at him. She held a white envelope.
“I just dropped by to give—” She spotted Barry and stopped. “Who’s this?” Half smiling at the child.
Michael was completely thrown. It happened so rarely, the possibility of her visiting the shop while Barry was here hadn’t even crossed his mind. He hadn’t worked out what to say, he had nothing ready.
“His name is Barry,” he said, his mind racing, taking a few steps away from the boy. His tone conversational, not wanting to alarm his charge. “I’m looking after him for someone.”
She stared at him. “You’re babysitting? Who for?”
“His mother,” he replied, in the same careful voice. “You don’t know her.”
She shot another glance at the child, whose attention, thankfully, had returned to the book.
“It’s just temporary,” Michael said. “Just for a short while.”
“It’s weird,” she said. “It’s not like you.”
“It’s no big deal,” he replied. “It’s nobody you know.”
But it was a big deal, or it might be. He had to tell her, now that she’d seen the boy. She was Ethan’s sister, she had a right to know.
“What?” she asked, watching his face. “What are you not telling me?”
He stepped away from the counter and beckoned her out of earshot of the boy. She followed him into the aisle, her expression becoming increasingly wary.
“Valerie,” he said quietly, “I’d rather not have this conversation here. It’s complicated, and this isn’t the time or place to go into it. Why don’t I give you a call this evening?”
She didn’t move. “Just tell me now,” she said. “What’s going on?”
Michael glanced back at Barry, whose head was still bent over the book. Her book. He turned to face her again. “It’s complicated,” he repeated.
“I’ve plenty of time,” she said.
He remembered how stubborn she could be. He rubbed his face, hunting for the right words. Just tell her, don’t make a big thing of it.
“His mother came to me out of the blue, a couple of weeks ago,” he said quietly. “She told me that she’d been…with Ethan, and that the boy was his.”
Valerie stared at him, her mouth dropping open. “He’s Ethan’s?” Her head swung back towards the boy.
“He might be, I don’t know,” Michael said quickly. “It’s only her word I have.”
“But why is he here now?” she demanded. “Where’s his mother?”
“She’s…looking for work,” he said. “She can’t do that with a child in tow.”
“Looking for work?” Valerie’s frown deepened. “How long has this been going on?”
“Not long,” he said, “I told you, a week or two.”
“Where are they living? How did she find you? Why did she wait till now to make herself known?”
“They’re staying with me,” he told her shortly. “She came because they were being evicted from—”
“They’re staying with you? They’re living with you?” Her voice rose in disbelief, and Michael glanced again in Barry’s direction, but the boy didn’t react. “You took them in, without even checking out their story?”
“I am checking it out,” Michael told her, his impatience beginning to rise. “We’ve done a paternity test, and I’m—”
“You’ve done a paternity test,” she repeated incredulously. “You’ve taken in two strangers to live with you, and you’ve done a paternity test. Had you any intention of telling me about all of this?”
Keep calm, he told himself, nothing to be gained by losing your cool. “Of course I would have told you, but I thought I should wait until the test results came through, in case it wasn’t true. I’m doing the best I can here. I couldn’t leave them on—”
“Doing the best you can?” She shook her head angrily. “You’re giving bed and board to two people you don’t know from Adam, after throwing your only son onto the street at sixteen—”
“For God’s sake,” Michael said impatiently, “not this again. I had no—”
“You’re showing a boy you didn’t know existed up to a few weeks ago more attention than Ethan or I ever got from you. You failed as a father so you thought you’d try your hand at being a grandfather, is that it?”
“Valerie,” Michael said tightly, “please, you need to understand—”
“Jesus,” she breathed, “you didn’t even try to contradict me.”
“Oh, for God’s sake—of course I gave you attention, I did as much as any father could do.”
“Until our mother died maybe—and then you switched off, and dumped us on Pauline.” Her face hard as she flung the words at him. “No wonder Ethan went astray.”
Michael felt the anger hot inside him. “You can’t possibly blame me for that—I had this shop to run, I had to get help. What was I expected to do, send you to an orphanage?”
“Maybe you should have, maybe we’d have been better off.” She tossed the envelope she held onto the counter and turned abruptly and strode towards the door.
“Valerie,” Michael called, “don’t leave like this, please—”
The door banged behind her. He stood immobile, shoulders hunched, chest tight. He took a breath and then another. He returned to the counter and picked up the envelope.
The front was blank. He slid a finger under the flap and pulled out the card. Happy birthday, he read, above a painting of a sailboat.
Best wishes, she’d written inside, from Valerie.
His birthday. He’d completely forgotten it.
—————
After turning on the oven she typed the text.
Bringing Eoin to the park at 4 on Sunday—we’ll be in the playground if you and Charlie want to join us.
He’d see they weren’t making any special arrangement, that there was no dinner on offer this time. Let him take it or leave it. Jackie pressed send and off it went.
She took flour and castor sugar from the press, eggs and margarine from the fridge. She brought a mixing bowl to the table and switched on the radio. She loved having Thursdays off, when most people were working. She usually made a batch of buns on Thursday, and topped them with the coconut icing that Eoin liked. She weighed flour and tipped it into the bowl, and let her mind wander.
Three life drawing classes down, three to go. She wouldn’t be sorry when they were over. Whatever Audrey might say about all bodies being beautiful, Jackie was still very conscious of her less beautiful parts. And holding a pose for longer than three or four minutes wasn’t as easy as it looked—if it wasn’t an itch it was pins and needles, or a muscle spasm, waiting to torture her.
She added sugar to the bowl and stirred it through the flour. The money would come in handy, though; she’d already put a deposit on the Wii console in the toy shop. Eoin would be thrilled.
She cracked eggs into the mixture, and cut the margarine into cubes. She plugged in the electric beater and worked it through the ingredients, watching as they came together into a creamy, gloopy mix.
Shame about James being attached, but she’d get over it. She filled a bun tray with paper cases and dolloped spoonfuls of the mixture into them. Nothing to distract her now, though, from the tedium of sitting still for as long as Audrey dictated.
Zarek didn’t interest her, too much of a pretty boy. She’d never gone for the Colin Farrells or Brad Pitts, preferred more rugged features on a man. Give her Harvey Keitel any day. And anyway, she didn’t think she could handle the language barrier that would go along with dating Zarek, always having to think of the easiest way to say something.
It was funny that Audrey kept trying to match them up, but she was completely wasting her time—and Zarek showed as little interest in her as Jackie felt for him.
But just three more nights and it would all be over. And who knew—maybe Charlie’s father would turn out to be a pleasant surprise.
She opened the oven door and slid the tray inside. Talk about clutching at straws.
—————
“You’re good at cookin’,” she said. “I’m useless.”
Michael poured white sauce onto his chicken. “Did your mother never teach you?”
Her face immediately closed. “No.” She cut up Barry’s chicken. “She never cooked nothin’, she hadn’t a clue.”
“Or any of your family? What about your father?”
As soon as the question was out, he recalled her insinuations about her father. He willed his words unsaid, but of course it was too late.
Her mouth twisted. “Him? He couldn’t hot up a tin of beans. He was a waste of space.” She reached for the salt, and added far too much to both their plates. Michael held his tongue.
They ate in silence for a few minutes. A mother who didn’t cook, a father who might have interfered with her. Was it so surprising that she’d turned to drugs?
“My granny cooked,” she said then in a different voice.
“Did she live with you?”
“Yeah, but she died.” She bent her head over her plate, not looking at him.
A week ago they’d come to him, seven nights already spent under his roof. He couldn’t truly say he was unhappy with the arrangement. They were easy, a lot easier than he’d been expecting. He made no allowances when he cooked dinner, and they ate whatever he put in front of them, more or less. Barry balked at some of the vegetables—presumably, Michael assumed, because he’d never come across them before—but the girl generally persuaded him to give them a go.
She cleaned up after each meal. She washed the dishes, she swept the kitchen floor, she wiped down the table. And the bathroom was always tidy—towels hanging on the rail, no puddles, no hairs in the plughole. Somewhere along the way she’d learned how to do things right. Maybe that had been down to the grandmother.
And much to his relief, they hadn’t attempted to come into the sitting room after dinner since the night he’d invited them in himself. Once she’d tidied up they went straight upstairs, and he didn’t see them again until breakfast time.
Not that he’d mind too much, he supposed. They hadn’t unduly bothered him, that one time.
They ate in silence for a few minutes,
“My daughter called into the shop this morning,” Michael told her then. “She wasn’t too pleased to find the boy there.”
Her fork stilled on the way to her mouth. “Did you tell her about us stayin’ here?”
“I did.”
“Does she want you to put us out?”
“It’s not up to her,” he said shortly. “You’ll leave when I say so, and not before.”
She laid her fork down, the food on it uneaten. “When the test comes back,” she said, “you’ll see that I wasn’t tellin’ no lies.”
Michael regarded her pinched face, hair held off her face with a cheap plastic band. “Maybe so.”
She made no attempt to resume eating. “But what’ll you do if the test says that Ethan is the dad? Will you still kick us out an’ send us back on the streets?”
Michael glared at her. “Will you stop going on about it? I’m not going to decide something that hasn’t happened yet.”
Silence. She looked away.
“Right?”
“Yeah.” Quietly.
After a minute she picked up a fork and began eating again. He felt the room full of all the things that had been left unsaid.
—————
Post a photo, the website urged. Clients who post a photo are far more likely to receive attention.
“Clients” sounded so official. And “receive attention”—how horribly clinical. When had looking for romance become such a business? When you resorted to the Internet, Audrey supposed, and paid €100 a year to become a member of a site that just might help you to find what you were looking for.
She regarded her almost-completed membership form on the screen. All that remained was to input her credit card details, and off she could go in search of love. She’d decided against a photo, knowing that her size could put off a lot of possible suitors. Better that they get to know her first, better that they connect mentally, and then it mightn’t matter that she didn’t have the perfect figure.
She took her credit card from her wallet and began entering the numbers in the box on the screen. Halfway through, she stopped.
What if nobody made contact, and what if any messages she sent were ignored? Did she really want to pay €100 to discover, maybe, that nobody at all was interested in getting to know her?
And was this really the way she wanted to find him, by filling in a form that asked for her hobbies and interests, by ticking a box to indicate her age group, and another for her gender preferences, by doing her best to sound normal, and desirable, and not a bit desperate? Had it really come to this?
No. She closed the screen and shut down her computer. Internet dating might suit others, but it wasn’t for her; she wasn’t comfortable in cyberspace.
“I’ll stick to more old-fashioned methods,” she told Dolly. “He’s out there somewhere and I’ll find him, or he’ll find me. It’s not too late.”
She picked up the TV remote control and switched on the news, and turned her attention to the latest banking crisis.