Read Light A Penny Candle Online

Authors: Maeve Binchy

Light A Penny Candle (30 page)

BOOK: Light A Penny Candle
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Mrs Ellis, the dreadful woman who has designs on Father, is really doing her best. It’s Father’s fiftieth birthday and she keeps saying that she’d like to organise a little party for ‘your papa’s half century’. In order to put her off, I said that I was organising a quiet family dinner at home and she had to be satisfied with that. Is Uncle Sean fifty? Did you have any do for that? A family dinner isn’t much fun if Father and I are the only family, but maybe when he knows I’ve chased Mrs Ellis away from him he’ll cheer up.

I see a lot of Johnny. It’s hard to tell you about it really. I did try but I tore up the page, it sounded a bit like the pages of a mushy love story … when it’s not like that in real life. I just like him a lot and he me … but we don’t say I love you or anything. I could explain it more clearly if we met. You asked what he looks like: I think he looks a bit like Clark Gable but thinner and without the moustache. That sounds ridiculous but what I’m trying to say is that he’s dark and very handsome, and people look at him a lot, but
he
doesn’t seem to notice them. I’ll tell you what happens about the party for Father. Love to everyone. I write to Aunt Eileen sometimes as you know, not secrets just ordinary letters … but I haven’t for a while, everything’s been so busy and complicated here. I hope she understands.

Love, Elizabeth

Dear Elizabeth,

Like Clark Gable, I don’t believe it! No wonder you’re being quiet about him, you don’t want to share him. I don’t know why it’s hard to tell what it’s like. I know we’re not good at writing, but now I’ll change all that. I’ll try to tell you what Tony is like. He’s very old, he’s thirty and he’ll be thirty-one soon. He’s been at university but he didn’t do his degree. He’s been in Limerick learning the business and now he runs Murray’s here. He seems very keen on me. I don’t know why. He puts his hand on the back of my neck and squeezes it, which is awful and he kisses me in the car and tries to put his tongue between my teeth but I don’t encourage it. I let it happen by accident a bit. I don’t like it much anyway.

He tells me I’m beautiful which I like to hear, and he comes and talks to Mam and Dad a lot too, so now everyone knows that he’s Interested as they say. Dad doesn’t know what to do, he’s out of his depth. It wasn’t like this with Brendan Daly because Brendan and all the Dalys are all old eejits as everyone knows.
Tony
Murray is what they call a catch here. Mam is very tight-lipped. She thinks I’m playing with his affections. Me! Aisling O’Connor playing with the affections of a catch who is as old as the hills. Anyway I don’t feel much about him one way or the other. I’d like him better if he didn’t look so silly, and pant and huff and puff so much in the car.

He certainly doesn’t look like Clark Gable. He’s fatter for a start. He’s got black curly hair and he’s sort of square-built. He’s not bad-looking but he’s certainly not like Clark Gable. Now I’ve told you everything, can’t you sit down and tell me everything? I didn’t tear up pages even though that bit about kissing looks a bit yucky.

Love, Aisling

Dear Aisling,

I will, I promise. In about two weeks’ time. I’ll write everything. It’s just that there’s so much happening here. I’m very taken up. Two weeks. Everything. Gory details, nothing spared.

Watch out for it.

Love Elizabeth

P.S. Do you love Tony Murray in any sort of way?

Father said that he didn’t really want any celebrations for his half century. Nothing much to celebrate, he said. This annoyed Elizabeth greatly.

‘You’re the only father I’ve got and you’re going to be
half
a hundred. I think we should make a little fuss. Now here are the options: I can take you out to a hotel and buy a bottle of wine. I have a tiny savings account. I would be very glad to do that, Father. Or we can have all your bridge people here and make a party with some people from the bank too and one or two neighbours. …’

‘No, no, the bridge people wouldn’t enjoy a party if we didn’t play bridge,’ said Father.

‘Right, it’s just us,’ said Elizabeth.

‘But a hotel is very dear,’ complained Father.

‘Right, it’s Saturday week. I’ll ask Johnny to dinner here, and we’ll have wine and high-class food.’

‘That would be very nice,’ said Father, relieved that there would be no need for him to do anything now except accept what was put in front of him. He was mightily pleased that he had managed to escape anything too festive.

‘He’s a nice chap, that Johnny Stone. He’s good company. I’d enjoy him coming to dinner,’ he said.

Yes, thought Elizabeth, everyone enjoys Johnny Stone’s company. Now the hard part – asking him to dinner.

‘You won’t think I’m trying to cast a matrimonial net over you if I ask you to do me a favour?’

They lay wrapped in sheets on the floor of Johnny’s flat, reading the Sunday papers and drinking milk with straws.

‘Mm what… making noises like a woman trying to pin me down?’ he asked, still reading the paper.

‘No, far from it, it’s just that one night Father’s going to
be
fifty, and there’s nobody he really likes … so I thought I’d cook a special dinner … a White special… and would you come to keep the conversation going?’

Johnny looked up. ‘Aw, no love, I’d be butting in. It’s a family thing, a birthday.’

‘Hell, you know how family Father and I are… very little traditional family love in our house. And we’d look silly the two of us. No, we need an outsider to make it festive. Do come sweetheart. Please.’

Johnny shook his head. ‘No, honestly, I’d only be in the way. I’m no good on the formal sentimental thing … you know that I even hate going home for Christmas with the Old Lady because she wants ceremonies and everything.’

‘But you were super with Mother and Harry.’

‘But that’s different, honeybunch. That was just a nice evening that developed. Not being asked formally or anything, you know, making a big thing.’

‘Please Johnny. Please.’

He was reading the paper again. ‘No, heart. I’d be out of place. I wouldn’t like it.’

‘Do you never do things you don’t like?’ Her voice sounded rather sharp.

He looked up, surprised, ‘No, not often. Why?’

‘I do, a lot of the time, so do most people. Please Johnny, just one night to please me, and to make Father happy.’

‘No, dearest, ask another of your friends. Ask someone else.’

It was settled. He was not coming. He would not do her
the
favour, he wouldn’t even consider it or discuss it. He assumed she had other friends, people as close as he was. He assumed that Kate and Edward and Lionel were on visiting terms.

She had to accept this in Johnny or demand more. But she had just been shown the door had been closed. There was no more being offered. If she asked for more, she would get nothing, and what she had already would be withdrawn. She had seen Lily, a one-time girlfriend, come into the shop. She still liked Johnny, and Johnny was unfailingly charming but Lily had failed the examination at an earlier time and could not take it again. Lily had made scenes when Johnny refused to come to her end-of-term dance in college … let Elizabeth be warned.

‘Right ho,’ she said cheerfully. ‘Selfish bastard. Well, you’ll miss a good dinner, that’s for sure.’

She looked sunny and uncaring. There was no way he would know the hurt and rejection she felt. No way he could see from her laughing face that she had come to a depressing conclusion about her love for him. She knew now that it would have to be one-sided and full of pretence if it were to continue. Johnny wasn’t going to meet anyone half-way or even a quarter of the way. You played the game in his territory and according to his rules.

She forced herself to read the paper with a smile fixed on her face. She knew he was looking at her.

‘Come here, gorgeous,’ he said, unwrapping the sheet. ‘You’re much too attractive a girl to be reading papers.
You
should be giving pleasure to a passing gentleman, so you should.’

She lay there happily and looked at the ceiling as his head lay peacefully on her bosom. He was dozing in the morning sun coming in the window. Soon they would get dressed and wander off to a pub on the river where he would get her a glass of shandy and they would eat their sandwiches.

She had passed the examination. She could have flounced off in tears, she could have begged still more and annoyed him, and she could have sulked, but he would have taken no notice and eventually he would have wandered off to lunch alone.

But no. Elizabeth had done none of these things and she had her reward here in her arms. He still loved her and wanted her. It was worth a few little sacrifices.

Tony Murray told Aisling that he would like her to think seriously about him one summer night when the car had steamed up with passion and pushing and advances and rejections and squirmings.

‘I want you to know that I haven’t ever met anyone else who attracts me as much as you do.’

‘That’s nice Tony, but I’m still not going to take off my bra,’ said Aisling.

‘I’m glad you’re not. I know you aren’t the kind of girl who would go with anyone, and I respect you for it,’ he said, red-faced with exertion.

‘Well, that’s the way I am.’

She was puzzled because she had let him go much further than what she considered wise. Surely there had been times when she had gone far beyond the level that someone should go before marriage. After all, it was quite obvious even to someone as inexperienced as Aisling sadly agreed that she was that Tony was satisfying his base desires in all these grapplings … and the nuns had said that to be the instrument of that was leading a man into mortal sin.

Still, it would appear that Tony respected her.

‘I’m finding it very hard to go on with these kind of … outings,’ Tony said.

‘Oh, I like going out with you,’ Aisling said, deliberately misunderstanding him.

‘No, I don’t mean that. You know what I mean. I mean I like you so much I want to have you all to myself all the time. …’

Aisling decided that this was very near to a proposal of marriage. She looked at Tony’s face for a moment, as if she and he were strangers.

He was attractive enough looking, she supposed. He had this thick-set neck, and nice dark eyes. Other girls had told her that he was handsome, she heard people refer to him as a fine man. She knew that Daddy would approve. … ‘You’d be doing well if you married into the Murrays, girl,’ he used to say half-jokingly, but she thought he meant it. Mam had her reservations, but only because she thought Aisling was too giddy.

Well I am too giddy, Aisling thought to herself with
sudden
conviction. And I’m not going to be railroaded into something I’m not sure about. I’m not going to let him ask me and have to say yes or no. I’m going to put it off, I’m going to be clever for once in my life.

She kissed him lightly on the forehead.

‘You’re a very attractive man, Tony Murray, and you say such nice things you nearly sweep me off my feet. But you’re a grown-up, you know what you’re doing. I don’t, I’m only silly and young and I’ve never been anywhere.’

He began to speak but she interrupted him.

‘I’m going to see a bit more of the world before I let myself fall for you … otherwise it would be pathetic. Look, you’ve been to university, you’ve lived away from home in Limerick and Dublin. You’ve been to France and to Rome. The furthest I’ve been is Dublin and spent a night in Dunlaoghaire … and that was with the whole family.

‘No, if I want you to think anything of me, I’ll have to grow up a bit, not just be the silly provincial Kilgarret girl. Then you’ll be mad about me.’

‘I fancy you now,’ mumbled Tony.

Aisling had manoeuvred them to a sitting position as if by accident. This would mean that the fumbling and grappling could be considered at an end. …

‘Yes, but wait until I’m sophisticated, then I’ll be a magnificent prize,’ she tinkled.

‘I don’t want you sophisticated.’ He sounded mulish.

‘You want me with a bit more sense and a bit more polish don’t you? Come on. You’d love to have me a bit smart, not just plain ignorant like I am.’

‘Where are you going to learn all this sophistication and to be smart and polished?’ Tony grumbled.

And indeed Aisling wasn’t sure how to answer that even though her brain was working feverishly on an answer that would satisfy him.

‘Well, I haven’t it all settled yet, but I’m thinking of doing a little travelling. Not going away permanently or anything, just broadening my mind, and seeing a bit of the world. I’m not even twenty yet, Tony. I may seem all right now but I could turn into one of those awful dreary women you see up at the church with nothing on their minds except what the priest said to them and what Mrs So and So was wearing.’

‘You’d never …’

‘Oh but I might, I can see the signs of it in me already.’

Aisling had warmed to her cause now and felt she had the upper hand. It was time to leave the subject.

‘But listen, I’ll tell you next week where and when I’ll be going off to see the world.’

He agreed with a grunt, and reluctantly drove her back to the house in the square.

Mother was up as usual.

‘You’re a bit late,’ she said mildly and without much sense of disapproval.

‘I know. We went for a drive after the pictures and he spent a lot of time talking.’

Aisling looked at herself hastily in the mirror to make sure her lipstick wasn’t all over her face and that her blouse was buttoned correctly.

But Mam didn’t seem to be inspecting her. ‘I just waited till you came in,’ she said, folding her knitting and starting to turn off lights.

‘Well Mam, there’s no need. You know I’m all right, and that nothing … that I wouldn’t … that I’d always come home.’

‘Of course I do, child, but in a way you’re my oldest, aren’t you? Maureen was away in Dublin at your age, and well, boys are different. It would never matter what time Sean or Eamonn came in.’

‘I’m no trouble to you now am I? Nice, reliable assistant in the shop, walking out decorously with the town’s best catch … and Mam honestly, I’m not such an eejit. I told him tonight that I was too young to be serious about anything. That I’d have to see the world first.’

BOOK: Light A Penny Candle
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