Maeve headed back to the B&B as if she were walking on air. She knew she was late but she couldn’t care. She started quietly singing a Bright Eyes song, ‘This is the first day of my life . . .’ People turned to stare at her, but it only made her want to sing louder. Jackson had said she should find her father. Jackson had said he loved her.
Steph was in their room, trying on different items of clothing and flinging the rejected pieces onto the bed. Maeve longed to tell her about Jackson but it was so tied up with the search for her father that she couldn’t think how to explain one without the other. Before she could say anything, Steph spoke.
‘You are going to be in deep trouble. They’ve all left for the theatre tour. McCabe had to stay back to find out what happened to you.’
‘Well, why are you still here?’
‘Ben’s coming to get me. He’s in Dublin and I’m spending the afternoon with him. Just the two of us. He’ll be here any minute!’
‘You don’t need to get so stressed out,’ said Maeve. ‘It’s only your brother.’
‘My brother who nearly died. My brother that I thought was dead,’ said Steph. ‘How’s this look?’
She had on a pink hooded windcheater and black jeans and looked the same as usual, but Maeve could see she needed reassurance. ‘You look nice, Steph.’
Downstairs in the front sitting room, Ben and McCabe were waiting for them. Steph hugged Ben and squealed when he lifted her up in a bear hug.
‘Back by six sharp, please, Ben. We have a show to go to at the Abbey Theatre tonight,’ said McCabe.
‘No worries,’ said Ben.
‘And you and I, Maeve Kwong, we need to have a serious talk. It’s not acceptable for you to go off on your own and you should know that. Everyone on this tour has to co-operate by being on time, every time. You’ve put me in a really awkward position. I had a number of personal commitments this afternoon and now I’m going to have to cancel them so I can take you chasing around Dublin, trying to catch up with the rest of the group.’
‘Maeve could come with us,’ said Ben. ‘We’re doing our own mini-tour of Dublin. It would be nice to have Maeve along as well. As long as that’s okay with you?’
Maeve looked at McCabe beseechingly. She’d much rather spend the afternoon with Steph than have to drag around in pursuit of the rest of the group and get a lecture from Ms Donahue as well. McCabe ran one hand through his hair and sighed.
‘Thank you, Ben,’ he said, looking relieved. He turned to Maeve. ‘But don’t think this lets you off the hook, young lady.’
Out in the street, Ben’s car stood waiting. ‘Bags the front seat!’ said Steph as she skipped towards it, but then she stopped, confused, as a woman got out of the driver’s seat.
‘Margaret,’ said Ben. ‘I’d like you to meet my little sister Stephanie and her friend Maeve. All the way from Oz.’
‘Oh,’ said Steph. ‘I mean, hi.’ She grimaced as she climbed into the back seat with Maeve.
‘Sorry,’ whispered Maeve. ‘For tagging along like this.’ She could see the day wasn’t turning out the way Steph had envisaged.
‘Hey, it’s okay,’ said Steph. ‘I’m glad you’re here,’ she whispered, shooting a look of annoyance at Margaret.
‘I’m going to take you on the “other Dublin” tour. The places your old schoolteacher won’t show you,’ said Ben, turning and flashing a grin.
He drove out of the city along winding, tree-lined roads. At the top of a hill he pointed to a long wall with a tall bronze gate. ‘That’s Bono’s house. You want to hop out and have a look?’
Steph shook her head. ‘No thanks. He’s okay but he’s kind of last century.’
Ben and Margaret laughed. ‘If Bono doesn’t impress you, maybe the tower will,’ said Margaret. ‘You ever heard of James Joyce? The famous Irish writer.’
‘No,’ said Steph flatly.
‘Oh well. You will one day. That’s his tower, where he went to write,’ said Ben, looking to Margaret for affirmation.
Steph scrunched up her face. ‘Ben, you don’t have to impress me with anything. I’m just happy that you’re alive and coming home soon.’
Ben coughed into his hand and then turned the car around. They parked at a beach and bought a packet of fish and chips. Sandy mudflats stretched to a shimmering line where two big boats were moored and the harbour was layered in soft greys, blues and purple. The clouds reached down like smudgy thumbprints against the afternoon sky.
Ben picked up a stone and sent it skipping across the still, silvery water. When he sat down on the low sea wall between his sister and Margaret, he winced.
‘Does it hurt much? Where you got wounded?’ asked Steph. ‘Are you going back to Iraq soon, or do they think you should have a longer rest?’
Ben looked away. ‘I haven’t been able to tell Mum and Dad about it yet. I’m not going back. Ever. I’m finished with the army.’
‘But Dad will go crazy. He was so proud of you. And I’ve had to defend you. When people say you’re fighting a crap war, I’ve stuck up for you.’
‘Look, Steph, all wars are crap.’
‘But Dad—’ began Steph.
‘I can’t live Dad’s dream for him. I can’t live my life worrying about his pride and what he thinks is important. I’ve changed, Steph. I don’t want to be a soldier any more.’
‘He’s a good man, your brother. He’s not taking the soup,’ said Margaret.
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’ asked Steph.
‘It’s an old Irish saying – that you sell out for the sake of the soup. The Protestant churches, during the famine, they offered soup so that the Catholics would give up the faith. So that’s taking the soup. But your brother, he’s a brave man. He’s following his heart. You should respect him for it.’
‘There are things I need to do here in Dublin, Steph.’
‘But what about coming home?’
‘Home’s with Margaret now,’ said Ben.
‘With Margaret?’ echoed Steph.
Ben looked at Margaret and raised an eyebrow, then he took Steph by the arm and walked off with her along the beach. Maeve and Margaret waited by the sea wall while Steph and Ben stood arguing on the shoreline.
‘Families! God love ’em. Can’t live with them, can’t live without them,’ said Margaret, trying to make light of it, though Maeve could tell she was upset. They sat in silence for a while, picking at the chips and waiting for Ben and Steph.
‘Ben said you work in a gallery,’ said Maeve, trying to make conversation.
‘Just a small one. We represent local artists mostly. Though we’ve got an exhibition of work from a fabulous Japanese artist at the moment. You should come by and have a look.’
Maeve was annoyed. ‘I’m not Japanese,’ she said. ‘I’m half-Irish.’
‘I’m sorry, Maeve, I didn’t mean it like that. I can’t seem to say the right thing this afternoon. Steph must think I’m a right pain in the arse,’ said Margaret, her voice full of misery. Suddenly, Maeve felt sorry for her.
‘It’s not you,’ said Maeve. ‘It’s my fault too. Steph thought she was going to have Ben all to herself, that’s all. He’s her favourite brother.’
‘He’s pretty special,’ said Margaret, smiling shyly. ‘He came into the gallery one day and I thought he was lost. You don’t get many soldiers wandering into our gallery, taking the art seriously. But Ben was different.’
Maeve pulled her knees up against her chest. ‘I like looking at art too. Working in a gallery would be way cool.’
She looked over at Margaret and felt a sudden impulse to confide in her. ‘My mum was kind of arty. She was a fabric designer.’ She fished around in her bag, pulled out the silky green notebook and opened it carefully on the first few pages that showed the pictures of Weaving Girl intertwining threads of cloud to make patterns in the sky.
‘This is one of her pictures, from when she was a student,’ said Maeve, offering it to Margaret.
Margaret took the book and studied the design. ‘It’s lovely, Maeve. I like the way she’s made parts of the cloud into a pattern of Irish knotwork.’
Maeve took the book back and stared hard. ‘I didn’t know that’s what it was. She had a friend who was Irish. I wish I could meet him. You don’t know anyone called Davy Lee, do you?’
Margaret laughed and Maeve wished she hadn’t asked.
‘Oh, probably about half a dozen,’ said Margaret. ‘Lee is a very common name.’
Maeve flipped to the page that held the photo of her father. Covering all the writing with her hand, she showed the photograph to Margaret. ‘This is what he looked like. But it was a long time ago.’
Margaret glanced at the photo and then did a double take. She leant closer and laid her fingers over the thick mane of dreadlocks so only the face was exposed.
‘Sure, but it’s a small world. You wouldn’t believe it, but I do know your Mr Lee. What a devil he looked back then, with all that hair! He always was a bit of a chameleon but there’s no mistaking those eyes. Your Davy goes by the name Diarmait Lee these days and he lives over in the west of Ireland. I went to an exhibition of his paintings last summer. Fancy your mother knowing him! Do they keep in touch?’
Maeve had shut the green notebook and was holding it against her chest. She felt as if all the blood was draining out of her into the cold sand at her feet. It took her a moment to find her voice and even then she spoke with difficulty.
‘My mum, she died in a car accident last year. Maybe he doesn’t know. I wanted to tell him in case he hadn’t heard,’ said Maeve, hanging her head to hide her confusion. She hadn’t really expected Margaret to know him.
Margaret reached into her handbag and pulled out a business card.
‘I’m not meant to give out clients’ numbers. But if you call me at the gallery tomorrow, I’ll see what I can do.’
Bianca was the only one who was talkative on the way to the theatre that night. They walked through the dark streets back to the north side of the river where they were to attend a production of a classical Greek play. The rest of the group had toured the backstage of the Abbey Theatre and she was keen to give Maeve and Steph a blow-by-blow account of everything they had missed.
‘Iphigenia at Aulis,’ read Bianca from the theatre notes ‘is a story of sacrifice.’ She stopped as she scanned the outline. ‘Euuww. This is so depressing. This dude, Agamemnon, he sacrifices his daughter so that gods will help him win the Trojan War. Gross. She’s only thirteen.’
In the darkened theatre, Maeve watched uneasily as Iphigenia ran to greet her father. They’d been parted for a long time, and as soon as she saw him, she threw her arms around him, full of loving excitement. But her father was planning her death, welcoming her yet all the while plotting how to trick her mother into abandoning her so that no one would try to stop his evil plan.
After the show, the girls gathered in the foyer. Ms Donahue handed out some more program notes and asked the girls about the play.
‘I hoped you noted the set design and the lighting, girls. They were brilliant. Any thoughts on the performances?’
‘The guy who played Achilles didn’t work for me,’ said Steph. ‘But Agamemnon was amazing. So scary. It would be really disturbing playing opposite him. He looked so deranged. That scene where Iphigenia was weeping, begging him to spare her life, it really cut me up. Imagine having a psycho for a father.’
Maeve thought of the picture of her father, those pale eyes, the craggy, sharp features. Margaret had said he was a chameleon, but did that mean he was a bit nuts? She couldn’t believe Sue would have fallen for someone evil, but what if he was just plain crazy?