Heart and Soul (44 page)

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Authors: Maeve Binchy

BOOK: Heart and Soul
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The party was in full swing.

There would be no speeches and no cake. Rosemary had read that such things were vulgar and nouveau riche. Bobby had wanted to tell everyone how happy they had been, but she had won that battle. Much more sophisticated to let people
see
their happiness rather than braying about it.

Fiona looked around for Ania and couldn't see her. She must have gone to the ladies’ room or maybe she had found Carl. But no, Carl was there chatting away to a group. He came to greet Fiona.

“Where's Ania?” he asked.

“I left her out on the balcony,” Fiona said, and they went back out together to look. But there was no sign of her.

“She's looking terrific. She could be a model,” Fiona said.

“She's very beautiful, yes.” Carl was straining to see where she could be. Suddenly Fiona saw the small unopened gift on a side table.

“This is where she must have been standing after I left her. I'll take the parcel in case she wasn't able to deliver it properly. Let's find Declan and go and see if we can find her.” But Ania was nowhere to be found.

Eventually Carl and Fiona went into the kitchen.

“Can I help you?” Cathy had quite liked the young man at first, but now she felt only scorn for him.

“I was just looking for a friend,” he said.

“Ania?”

“Yes, yes,” he answered quickly. “Is she all right?”

“I think so. Yes.”

“But where is she? I've been looking for her all over.”

“She's gone home,” Tom said.

“But was she sick? Is she okay?”

Cathy shrugged. “Not particularly now. She ruined her dress doing the washing-up.”

“What the hell was she doing the washing-up for?” His face was very angry.

“Your mother asked her to help us. It wasn't necessary, but then a taxi came with more ice and we sent her home in that.”

“No,
no. She can't have gone home. My mother surely never asked her …”

“Oh, she did, Mr. Walsh,” Cathy said. “And Ania didn't want us to call you,” she added.

“I am going to go into that room and punch Rosemary's lights out!” Fiona said. “Okay, Carl, so she
is
your mother, but this really is going too far.”

His face was like stone. “No need. I'll do it myself,” he said.

“Carl?” Fiona was nervous now.

“Not physically. Relax.”

“There are still people there. Maybe you should sort of wait.”

“Go home now, Fiona. Take Declan with you. Make a big fuss about how late it is. That's what would help.”

“Don't forget that your father—”

“I won't forget that. Please, Fiona, go.”

She and Declan stood in the hall shouting good-bye to people until finally the remaining guests realized that the party was over.

The Scarlet Feather vans had been stacked and were revving up
to leave. Maud and Simon waved excitedly from the front seat. Declan's taxi was waiting.

“Was it a good night?” the taxi driver asked.

“No, it was shitty, actually,” Fiona said.

“Oh, well, you can't win them all,” the driver said, shrugging.

This smartly dressed young couple, going to a party at a house that was worth at least three million and they
still
couldn't enjoy themselves. That was life in modern Ireland for you.

Ania was so grateful to the kind catering people who had got her out the back door so quickly and without fuss. Apparently there had been some misunderstanding, where
they
thought the Walshes were arranging the ice and the Walshes thought that Scarlet Feather was doing it. Cathy had cut through any problems by ordering a taxi to deliver four bags of it.

It hadn't been the only misunderstanding that night.

How
could
I have been so foolish? A
ni
a.
wondered, as she sat in the back of the taxi. Carl was just being nice giving her an invitation. They had always meant for her to come and help. Her face burned with the shame of it all.

The taxi pulled up in her street and she got out. “Are you sure I don't have to pay you?” she asked fearfully.

“No, they pay by the month. You're all right.”

Please, may there be no one around,
Ania prayed. Everyone in the restaurant knew she was going to this party. She had shown them her outfit only a few hours ago. She managed to slip through the door and up the stairs without catching anyone's eye. The flat was dark and quiet. Ania lay down on her bed and let the tears come. She sobbed until her ribs ached. Then she stood up and took off her new dress. She put it on a hanger, the sleeves, of course, totally ruined. When she felt strong enough she would take them out, but now she had other things to do.

She dressed in her jeans, sweater and anorak, then took out a big
plastic wallet of money from under her mattress. She looked through the bundles of euros with unseeing eyes.

The last guest had gone. Carl helped his father get up from his armchair. Carl looked at the long, curving staircase. It would be a challenge.

“Would you like to sleep downstairs, Dad, rather than facing that journey up?”

“You know, I would, son.” Bobby Walsh had a sofa bed in his small study, near the kitchen. It seemed very tempting.

“I'll run up for your pajamas and dressing gown.”

Rosemary Walsh was touring the house, peering behind objects in case glasses or cutlery had been overlooked. She examined the kitchen carefully. They had been true to their word, these caterers—everything was left in pristine condition. The unused food had been wrapped, labeled and installed in either fridge or freezer. She jumped when Carl spoke right beside her.

“Mother, can you come into the front room, please. I want to talk to you.”

“Can't we talk here?”

“No. Dad is sleeping in the study and I don't want to disturb him.”

“You shouldn't encourage him to take the easy option. He'll never get better if he doesn't make an effort.”

“The other room, Mother.”

Rosemary shrugged.

Carl sat on a tall chair.

“That's not very comfortable.”

“I don't feel very comfortable,” he said.

“What
is
it, Carl? We're all tired. Can't it wait until tomorrow? The party went well, didn't it?”

He said nothing.

“I mean, they were expensive, those Scarlet Feather people, but they did deliver. And I suppose they were polite to the
guests, even if a little lacking in charm to those who actually pay them.”

“They brought enough staff, then?”

“Yes, they had two odd young people who were apparently trainees. We didn't have to pay for them, and do you know, they turned out to be relations of the Mitchells, the law family.”

“So there were plenty of hands on deck?”

“Yes. I think it worked fine. Don't you think so?”

“So there was no need for anyone else to help?”

Rosemary hadn't got the drift. “No. Why?”

“I was just wondering why you asked Ania to go into the kitchen and help with the washing-up?”

“Oh, dear, is she bleating about that? I just asked her to give them a little hand.”

“Why did you ask her to do that?”

“Because she would have felt more at ease in the kitchen, darling. Carl, I know you're very much for all people everywhere being equal, but she's a little Polish maid. She's here for a couple of years to make a few euros, then go back. That's what she is, she
knows
that's what she is. She was perfectly happy to lend a hand with the washing-up.”

“But you didn't ask any of your other guests to help in the kitchen?”

“Carl, please, be sensible.”

“I am being sensible. She was a guest.
My
guest. I never got to see her because
you
had her out there working for you when you admit that you had plenty of people working there already.”

“Listen, she was out of place.”

“She was
not
out of place. She had a beautiful dress. She had a new hairstyle. She had spent over a week's wages getting you a present…”

“Oh, God, she
did
give me a package. Where is it? I don't know where it ended up.”

“And your thanks for all this was to send her out to the kitchen because she would feel more at home there.”

“Come
on,
Carl. I was being kind to her.”

“No, Mother, you were never kind to anyone. You were never kind to Dad or to me, and particularly never kind to anyone that you thought you might conceivably be able to boss around.”

“I know you have kindly feelings towards her, Carl, but this cannot be. She's from a different world. They work very hard, I know, but they're not like us.”

“Please stop, right now!”

“I mean it. You have so many friends, you could have so many more. This girl is nothing to you.”

“I am very fond of her. In fact, I believe I love her.”

“You believe!” his mother scoffed.

“Yes, I believe, because
I'm
not sure. I'm not at all sure about love. Father loves you deeply. I don't know why. So I've learned nothing about love from him. You only love possessions. You don't love people, so what could I have learned from you?”

Rosemary looked alarmed. “You can't
love
this girl, Carl. You're sorry for her. You must know that. She would hold you back totally.”

“From what?”

“From a normal social life like tonight. She wouldn't be able to cope, learn our ways.”

“And your way to help her cope with what you call ‘our ways’ was to order her out of your party, to which she had been
invited.
Would you just listen to yourself for once?”

“I just didn't want anyone being embarrassed. That's all.” Rosemary was mutinous.

“I am very embarrassed, Mother, more so than I have ever been in my life.”

“Carl, this is all nonsense. Let's go to bed.”

“I am never sleeping another night in this house,” he said.

“Look, it's just the drink talking.”

“I didn't
have
any drink. I was too busy being polite to your friends. People who are old enough to remember going to England when there were signs in the windows saying ‘No Blacks, No Irish.’ I
was talking to a man whose mother was a maid in Boston and she was sent away from the family where she worked because she wasn't humble enough. She married a bank official and helped him climb to run a bank of his own.”

“That's a totally different—”

“It's exactly the same, except it's worse for us. We have plenty. We have so bloody much in this country and we should be delighted to see all these new people coming in to join us. But no, it's a pecking order, isn't it? Even for us, who were at the bottom of the pecking order until not so long ago.”

Rosemary blazed with anger. “It's easy for you to have such high ideals living in a house like this. You've had everything!”

“Not anymore, I won't.”

“Oh,
stop
being so petulant, Carl. If you go now you'll just be back here tomorrow. Let's not go through the whole silly process.”

“I will not be back, Mother.”

“Come on, where will you live? You earn practically nothing at that school. How will you make a living, for God's sake?”

“I earn a teacher's wage. I pay a quarter of it into a bank account for you and Dad. I have done that since I began work. I won't do it anymore when I don't live here. I'll survive.”

Rosemary looked at him. He seemed to mean it.

“What do you think your father and I are
doing
all this for?” She waved her hands around the elegant house. “It's all for
you,
Carl. Don't throw it back at us! What more do you want?”

“I could have asked you not to throw my friends out of this home, had I ever known that it would even cross your mind to do so,” he said.

“Carl, please …”

“I'm sorry for you, Mother. I really am.”

He moved to leave the room.

“That's right. Go to bed. We'll all go to bed. It will feel different in the morning.”

“I don't know how it will feel for you in the morning and I couldn't care less,” Carl said. He took his car keys from the drawer in the hall table and ran down the steps.

As Rosemary looked out into the dark she saw him get into the car he had insisted on buying for himself. She shook her head. He could be very tiresome, but by this time tomorrow it would all be over and forgotten.

It was a noisy part of Dublin where Ania lived, and even though it was late at night, there were still cafés and clubs open. People spoke in many different languages.

Carl didn't even plan what he would say when he found Ania. There was no need to rehearse how he would apologize for his appalling mother and explain that he had left home. Maybe she might even let him stay with her. The important thing was to find her and to hold her and to stroke her lovely face and hair.

He knew the address. He hadn't been to her flat, but he had eaten a couple of meals in the restaurant. She had told him about the different kinds of sausage and they insisted he have a selection on his plate so that he could choose which he liked best.

He went into the restaurant and asked, “Is Ania at home, do you think?”

“No, she has gone to such a fancy party. She was dressed like a film star,” said one of the brothers who ran the place.

“She left. I was wondering if perhaps …”

“There's Lidia. She will know.”

Lidia was on her mobile phone. She seemed very agitated.

“But of course I'm worried, Tim. She just left a note saying not to fuss. She would be in touch. But the bad thing is that she has taken her passport.”

Chapter Eleven

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