Whispers in the Mist (15 page)

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Authors: Lisa Alber

Tags: #mystery novel, #whispers in the mists, #county clare, #county clare mystery, #lisa alber, #whispers in mist, #county claire, #Mystery, #ireland

BOOK: Whispers in the Mist
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Earlier that year, his mother had moved back to her hometown in County Kilkenny, taking Alan’s two younger sisters with her. He’d had no sense of women, of their needs that were too complex for naïve Alan. His mother would have noticed his lovestruck idiocy, would have steered him down a safer path.

Instead, he took to watching Camille from afar when he was supposed to be studying. He’d follow her on his bicycle while she ran errands, as if the act of observing her would allow him to possess her heart. His obsession led him to wear a path through a wall of lavender bushes, back aching, knees muddied, so that he could spy on her in the hothouse.

The hothouse on one particular misted morning had glowed with beckoning warmth. He’d sniffed at the mess of dirt and dew surrounding him and imagined the sweetness that infused the hothouse. The orchids, yes; the begonias, yes; but also intoxicating Camille, who tended the blooms with a tenderness that she never showed him.

Today at the vet, Gemma’s hands stroking Bijou’s ears had reminded him of those moments of longing.

Alan pulled his car onto an embankment. He slid out and inhaled deep, hoping to rid himself of France and the feeling that he was once again stepping into emotional quicksand. This scent was pure Ireland, a land of softer loam and greener greens. Not like France at all, he told himself. But the memories didn’t banish themselves as easily as all that. In fact, they were brighter than reality as Alan continued toward Danny’s house on foot.

He’d dropped Gemma off after the vet appointment, and without thinking about it had turned his car right back around a mile later. Self-loathing was beside the point.

If memory lent the scent of that long-ago pre-dawn the pungency of his undoing, then it also lent Camille a breathtaking beauty. She was all the adolescent clichés: ripe, full-breasted, and flushed, whistling to herself and every once in a while tousling back her hair with dirt-encrusted fingers. He’d known the heady stink of her after the hothouse: fresh dirt and green tea soap and garden chemicals.

He should have heeded her toxicity, those chemicals, but he hadn’t until that last morning when she threw a smile over her shoulder and with a come-get-me thrust of hand through hair, turned toward an unseen someone.

His father.

The shame of it, his inability to walk away from the peep show of his own making. Their frantic jabs at their clothes, their hasty but altogether passionate coming together. A tangle of twisting limbs and then Camille’s blink in Alan’s direction.

No surprise in her gaze. Almost as if she’d planned the peep show to rid herself of her little lap doggy once and for all. His still-married father had only shrugged in response to something she said and pulled her to the ground and out of view.

The worst of it: That he’d crouched there until they rose again, smiled into each other’s eyes, and pulled their clothes back on, as languid as they’d formerly been frenzied. They must have known he still watched. After that morning, autumn seemed like nothing more than the decay of deadened fields and the sham of artificially grown flowers. Alan had moved across the Channel to live with his mother and joined a national hurling team, first with Kilkenny before moving to Clare, letting his bitterness burn out his throwing shoulder over the next six years, yet helping his teams take the Liam McCarthy Cup four times.

Alan stopped walking when he reached Danny’s house. Fists clenched, he stood behind a tall hedgerow just as he’d stood behind bushes to watch Camille. He told himself this was different; he was curious about Gemma, was all.

Alan had planned to stay in France forever, take over the fields and hothouses that his sisters now tended. Strange, that they’d switched countries. He’d vowed never to return, and, so, when their father died, the two daughters returned to oversee the family flower business instead of Alan. He’d sold them his third so he could buy the pub. With that, his ties cut, he’d hoped for liberation that had yet to come.

Mandy’s voice startled him out of his reverie. Then Petey’s. Gemma appeared a moment later. She sat on the porch’s top step and watched the children’s show-offy play-acting. In contrast to her utter stillness, they were a couple of human-sized muscle spasms, jerking all over the place.

Alan rubbed at his tattoo while watching Mandy pull Gemma to her feet with the order that Gemma play tag with them. “You’re Grey Man, and you have to catch us.”

Petey appeared uncertain, glancing this way and that along the hedge. “He’s already here,” he said in a spooky voice. “I can
feel
him watching us.”

“No!” Mandy mock-screeched. “Come get me, Gemma. You’re Grey Man’s sister! Hide and seek!”

They disappeared around the house in a hail of high-pitched screaming laughter. Gemma stood. She faced him, head cocked. As ever, his gaze wandered to the most expressive part of her: her hands. As she approached the hedge, they moved as if they had brains of their own, signing in doggy sign language. His DSL, as taught to her while driving to the vet clinic.

Imbécile
. If he could see her then she could see him.

Her hands were delicate yet robust as bird’s wings. She repeated two gestures. The first: a pacifying signal, as if Gemma patted an invisible dog’s head. The second: a stop palm.
It’s okay,
Gemma signaled, stay.
It’s okay, stay. It’s okay, stay.

Over and over. Still frozen, Alan watched Gemma’s small hands fill his tunnel vision until she was standing three feet from him on the other side of the hedge. He turned away, unable for the living hell of himself to meet her eye through the branches. So this is what it’s like to be her, he thought. This petrified feeling. Shame engulfed him, that green-scented shame and disgrace all around him.

Gemma’s palm lifted in a quick
away
gesture, which was his off-leash signal for Bijou: go on then, but stay close. She retreated in a leafy mosaic of maroon tights and black dress, leaving Alan breathless.

TWENTY
-
THREE

G
EMMA PRESSED HER HANDS
against her stomach as she walked around the Aherns’ house. She hadn’t spoken aloud, but she felt as if she’d tried. Sweat trickled down her ribs, and she shook so hard she felt it clear into her heart. But she’d done it. She’d approached Alan. Of her own volition, she’d spoken to him in his language.

Catching sight of him from inside the house before he stepped behind the hedgerow, she’d been struck by his bewildered expression. That had been the real Alan, the private Alan, the Alan who needed his safe place also. Now, as she chased Mandy and Petey over a rock wall and into the adjacent sheep field, it occurred to her that Alan might be selectively mute too. People can be mute to many things. To their needs and desires. To their potential for happiness. To their delusions. To their prejudices.

She’d thought about muteness a lot—too much perhaps. Perhaps she saw selective mutism in others as a way to feel better about herself. She thought this was, in fact, the truth, but she didn’t care. Sometimes she was right.

Gemma clapped her hands, one, two, three, and beckoned the children to follow her back to the house. The abandoned cottage that Ellen called their folly looked down on them. It longed for inhabitants. Everything and everyone longed for something. The kittens, for protection and food. These wee children, for a sense of security. Ellen, thrashed by her own internal winds, for love. Everyone stuffed something away.

No, she admonished herself, not
everyone
stuffed. This was about her own self, not to be confused with anyone else. This was about what
she
stuffed away. Not just the tragedy of her mom’s death, but that other thing she also avoided but saw in every abandoned pet at the animal shelter where she worked, deep within their eyes, like deep within Alan’s—a longing for a safe and secure connection.

The children tumbled into the house ahead of Gemma. That week’s
Clare Challenger
rested on a pile of unread circulars and catalogs. She grabbed it up and headed toward Ellen’s closet. When she opened the door, the kittens blinked up at her sleepily. Their disconsolate cries had lessened. Now they trusted their warm and well-fed existence, and had started to explore the bedroom.

Gemma eased them aside and checked the new litter box. The kittens were using it, so that was good, but now they were getting litter everywhere. She spread a sheet of newspaper on the floor, and as she did so, she caught the headline from a few days ago. Her skin prickled at the sight of the drawing, and too soon she’d shrunken into herself so small that nothing existed except the comforting sound of tiny kitten breaths.

Toby, oh Toby.

TWENTY
-
FOUR

E
LLEN LAY ON HER
bed with the kittens on her stomach. She buried her fingers into the kittens’ thickening fur over rounding bellies. They purred more with each passing day, and she tried to take comfort from their cozy warmth against her palms.

Mandy appeared at her door. “Can we eat now? I checked and there’s sausage and leftover fried potatoes. That will be easy, won’t it, Mam? Not hard to cook, right?” She turned away without looking at Ellen. “We don’t mind refried potatoes.”

Ellen rolled onto her side, shifting the kittens onto the bed. “All right then. Take over the kittens, will you? I just fed them.”

With adult-like relief that saddened Ellen, her daughter bustled over and retrieved the kittens. In a chirpy voice she explained that the tabbies now had names. “Petey’s kitten is the grey one called
Ashe
with an ‘e’ on the end. And mine’s the orange one, and he’s called
Flame
. That word already has an ‘e’ on the end.” She stooped to settle Ashe and Flame in the closet but didn’t close the door all the way. “Do you like their names?”

“Lovely, pet, lovely.” Ellen heaved herself into a sitting position. “I’ll be right there, sweet pea. Why don’t you and Petey gather the food onto the counter for me?”

Ellen closed her eyes against an image of ashes and flames that became a phoenix rising out of the embers of loss, betrayal—a living death. The gall of it, to hope that last night she could have risen renewed and whole again like some mythological creature. Instead, she’d arrived home from the village feeling worse than before the outing. And to find Danny here too. She’d all but confessed her sins right there and then.

Ellen shifted to the end of the bed, where the opened jewelry box sat upon its plain of dusty dresser, its lid still upright in a mock salute. The sign of Danny’s passage through territory that she’d assumed no longer interested him. Feet leaden beneath her, she stood and set aside the top tray to once again peruse the lower one. He’d dropped his wedding band into the wrong compartment, and the gift box—the infernal box with the earrings she should have flushed down the bloody toilet—sat askew in its slot.

She slammed down the jewelry box’s lid and heard an echo of it from beyond her bedroom. The front door. Mandy called out—now truly relieved and not bothering to hide it—that Gemma had returned. Earlier in the afternoon, Ellen had arrived home to find Gemma in the closet, rocking like a disturbed person. Her alarm had turned to surprise when Gemma roused herself and bolted out of the house.

Now, Gemma knocked and entered the bedroom. Her eyes were red-rimmed and puffy, and she held herself tight as if afraid she’d shatter any second. She held out a note.

I’m all right now. I needed to get out of the house and walk it off.

“You don’t look all right.” Ellen continued when Gemma didn’t respond. “Well then, why don’t you lie down awhile. I’ll call you when dinner’s ready.”

Gemma pulled out her pad and pen. After writing, she held out a new note, her expression shuttered.

Dermot hasn’t been here?
I haven’t seen him since this morning when he dropped me off at Alan’s pub.

“My husband called earlier. He wanted you to know that Dermot’s in the proper langers and is sleeping it off on our deacon’s sofa. You won’t see him until tomorrow.”

Gemma switched her gaze to the ground. Something flickered there, like she wasn’t surprised. She continued writing.

Poor Bijou. Someone kicked her in the ribs last night.

“Ohh,” Ellen groaned. “Bijou, yes.”

She’d heard a yelp, hadn’t she, as she’d stood there on the street, hidden by fog? The noise ricocheting out of the silence like that, hushed yet too loud, had startled her into scuttling back to her car.

Ellen opened the jewelry box again, unable to stop herself from picking at the wound she’d dealt to no one but herself. She pulled out the gift box. Smashing the earrings with a meat mallet might do the trick, but no, the earrings could give pleasure elsewhere. She wouldn’t begrudge anyone their beauty. She could at least show this much maturity. “You might like these.”

Gemma pointed in the direction of the children’s bedrooms, where Mandy’s voice could be heard ordering Petey to pass the orange crayon. Ellen convulsed at the thought of passing these earrings on to her daughter. “I have plenty of time to collect for Mandy,” she said. “Take them, please.”

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