Resonance (7 page)

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Authors: Celine Kiernan

BOOK: Resonance
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Vincent leapt to his feet, cutting him off in mid-sentence. He vacillated for a moment, ready to stalk away. Then, without warning, he found himself roaring towards the stage. ‘Ahoy there! Simmons! Are we to wait all day and night on your damned pleasure?’

The stage manager came into the light, shielding his eyes to try to see who had shouted. Uncertain, he called, ‘A … another thirty minutes, Lord Wolcroft? Will another thirty minutes be acceptable?’

Vincent did not reply. Instead, he arranged the tails of his jacket behind him and expressionlessly resumed his seat. Not looking at Cornelius, he lifted another pastry and took a large bite.

Onstage, the manager continued to squint into the lights, his whiskers bristling in anxiety. ‘Lord Wolcroft?’ he ventured.


Yes
,’ snapped Cornelius, his attention on Vincent’s grim consuming of cake. ‘Yes. Thirty minutes. Just hurry it up, you swab, or I’ll gut you myself.’

T
INA WHISPERED
IN
his mind,
Did you not trust me, Joe?
and Joe answered, amazed,
Tina? You said you weren’t meant to speak to me like this anymore
. She fell silent, and Joe woke confused and achey, not sure if it had been a dream.

She was standing at the foot of Miss Ursula’s little sofa, looking down at him where he lay. She had a strange, wary expression on her face. For a moment Joe thought he must still be asleep, it was so odd. Then he saw the bundle she held and he recognised his spare shirt, his razor, his blanket, his book and his pencil. He struggled to his feet at the realisation that everything he owned in the world was held in Tina’s arms.

‘Have you been to my gaff?’ he cried.

At that moment, Harry rushed through the
dressing-room
door, calling out in a hushed backstage shout, ‘Tina! They told me you were back! Did you get his—’ He halted at the realisation that Joe was awake. ‘Oh,’ he said. ‘Joe … uh, hey there.’

Joe ignored him. At first he was simply filled with horror that Tina had been
there
. She’d gone
there
. Then the
implication of what she had in her arms hit him, and panic set in. Oh God. What had she done?

She held the things out to him, and he snatched them from her arms. Rooting quickly through the meagre pile, relief flooded him. It wasn’t there. Thank God. She hadn’t found it. ‘Did Mickey see you take these?’ he said.

Tina shook her head, her face grim and watchful.

‘I’m bringing these home, Tina. I’ll be there and back before they get in from the morning shift. No one need know—’

‘The whole street saw me. There’s no keeping it a secret.’

He looked her up and down, suddenly aware of the mud spattering her coat, the mess of her hair. ‘What happened?’

‘Never mind that. The women just threw some dirt.’

‘Jesus, Tina,’ he whispered. ‘I can’t believe you went to that place.’

‘Don’t go back, Joe.’

He groaned. ‘You don’t understand.’

She stepped close, that strange, hard expression on her face. She gripped his arm. ‘Don’t go back,’ she said. ‘Do as I’m asking you, for once in your damned life, and don’t go back.’

She was so earnest, so set-looking, he almost lifted his hand to touch her. ‘I have to,’ he said softly. ‘I … Tina, I have a plan.’

‘I’ve never heard of any plan. You’d think you’d have told me there was a plan.’

‘I’ll tell you in a little while,’ he said, his eyes searching hers. ‘I just … I just want everything to be certain first.’

In an unexpected gesture, Tina laid her cold hand on his heated cheek. He shut his eyes, his lips parting in pleasure,
and she shifted her palm to his forehead. ‘You’re awful warm,’ she whispered. ‘I think you’re very sick.’

‘I’ll be all right.’

And he would, too. So long as his secret was safe, and his plan was on track, everything would be all right.

The blood froze in him at Tina’s next words.

‘I found something under the floorboards in your gaff, Joe. In the corner where you sleep. Hidden under your blanket. I dislodged the board when I was taking down your shirt, and I saw it.’

He opened his eyes.
Oh no, Tina. No
.

‘Margaret Reynolds’ kids had followed me up to the room. They saw me lift it out; they saw me open it up. They thought it was treasure.’

‘Oh Jesus, Tina. Tell me no.’

Tina reached into her pocket and withdrew his mother’s purse. She held it out to him. ‘I’m really hoping this is yours, Joe. I really am. Otherwise I’ve just robbed your cousins of nearly eighty pounds, and I don’t fancy our chances of surviving when they find out.’

Harry came to peer over her shoulder. He glanced at Joe, then back to the money, and Joe knew what he was thinking: how had a raggedy-arsed street-rat like him got his hands on so much treasure? Without taking his eyes from Harry’s face, Joe took the cracked leather purse and shoved it into the inside pocket of his jacket. He sat back down on the sofa, folding his arms.

Harry continued to stare at him, his gaze as piercing as a hypnotist’s. ‘I’ve never seen so much cash in my life,’ he said. ‘Where did you steal it?’

Before Joe could answer, Tina stepped between them,
her burgundy skirts filling his view. There was a sharp slap. When she came to sit by Joe’s side, Harry was clutching his cheek and glaring. ‘Say!’ he cried.

‘Tina,’ gasped Joe, ‘there was no need for—’

‘You can shut up and all, Joe Gosling. The only reason I haven’t slapped
you
is because you’re sick.’

She sat rigidly staring at nothing for a moment, her cheeks pink, her expression furious. Then she reached and grabbed Joe’s hand. He flinched in anticipation of more unaccountable female violence. But Tina just dragged his hand onto her lap and held it there, clutched between her own. It was the first time she had done this since they were children, and Joe marvelled at how small her hand was within his big chapped paw. He chanced gently closing his fingers on hers.

‘All these years I’ve been worrying over you and crying over you, and thinking you were starving. All these years I thought them bloody gougers were stealing half your money every week and leaving you without.’ Tina compressed her lips and shook her head, seemingly too angry to go on – but still she held on to Joe’s hand.

‘They
are
stealing half me money,’ he said softly. ‘But only from the wages they know about.’

She looked sideways at him, and he smiled. ‘I’ve had three jobs since I was seven years old, Tina Kelly. I don’t get drunk. I never smoked—’

‘You eat less than a cat,’ she whispered. ‘You never wear a coat.’

‘Mickey sold me coat,’ he reminded her.

‘Jesus, Joe,’ she whispered. ‘
Jesus
.’ She closed her eyes and held his hand to her mouth, squeezing it tight. He felt the
heat of her breath on his fingers as she gritted her teeth against some strong emotion. A desire to hit him, maybe – or hug him? He hoped the latter.

‘You could have been having a lovely time all these years!’ she cried suddenly.

‘I want more than that.’

‘You could have been in a
nice
lodging. With a
nice
landlady.’

‘Pissing away me money on rent and frivolities, with nowhere to stash me savings without some busybody snuffling around when I’m in work. What the lads don’t know has never hurt me, Tina. They’d never a bloody clue there was anything more than fleas and mouse shit under me blankets. Until today, that is.’ There was a moment of silence between them. Then he said, without much hope, ‘Maybe the kids won’t say anything?’

‘They ran off up the street screaming for Mickey.’

Joe grimaced at her, but he wasn’t angry. Not really. He was just tired suddenly, bone-tired and weary to his soul. He’d been careful such a long time. Mickey had never considered him much worth pissing on – but now? Tina had just shoved him straight into the spotlight, stark and vulnerable, with a fistful of money in each hand. He sighed. ‘What am I going to do?’

‘Eighty pounds is a lot of money to have saved,’ said Harry. ‘Three jobs or not.’ He was still staring at Joe with that fixed intensity, demanding an explanation.

Joe was tempted to cut him dead with a sneer. To hell with Harry if he thought Joe was a thief. But Tina was squinting sideways at him now, doing the figures in her head, and Joe knew she deserved more than a gutter-boy’s guff and bluster.

‘Me da saved most of it,’ he said. ‘He spent his whole life saving, it seems. After he died, and me ma moved us in with
them
, she taught me how to hide the money from them and how to keep secretly adding to the purse. And after she was dead … I just kept doing it.’

‘But why, Joe?’ asked Tina. ‘
Why?

Joe saw it in her face, the horror at all the things his mam had endured, all the hardships she’d made him endure in that squalid room in the care of those brutes, when the two of them could at least have had their own place. He shook his head.

‘I don’t know what Ma and Da were saving for. Sometimes I wonder if
they
even knew. Maybe they’d have just kept on saving until they died of old age. Year after year, shoving money into that purse under the floorboards. It getting fatter and them getting thinner. I wonder if they’d have died having never done anything at all …’

‘They
did
,’ said Tina. ‘They died with all that money, and never did anything. And now you—’

‘No,
not me
,’ cried Joe. ‘I
know
what I’m doing with it. For a long time I didn’t. I just kept squirrelling it away week after week like me ma had shown me, and I didn’t know what the hell I was doing it for – but I know now, Tina.’ He gently squeezed her hand. ‘I’ve known for ages what all them years of shite were for.’

‘A future,’ breathed Harry, his face illuminated with fervent understanding.

Joe nodded. ‘Not just tuppence-worth of comfort that’s pissed away in an hour. A
proper
future; one worth sacrificing for. I have a plan.’

Harry leapt to his feet. ‘So do I!’ he cried. ‘And it’s not
to be a darned carpenter. What the heck was I thinking? I hope I’m not too late.’

‘Where are you going?’

‘To get my place in those auditions. I won’t get to be a magician sitting on my ass dreaming about it!’ He dived for the door.

‘Break a leg!’ called Tina.

Harry paused, then ran back. He grabbed Joe’s hand and shook it. ‘Don’t go back to that cesspool, Joe. There’s more than one way to skin a cat, and there are plenty of places to sleep in this theatre until you get yourself sorted.’

‘I can’t do that!’

‘Why, of course you can. Free rent? No bedbugs? Come on, Gosling.’ He winked. ‘You wouldn’t believe how easy it is to get past a locked door.’

Joe had to smile, so earnest were those fierce blue eyes and that handshake. He lost the smile pretty damned quick when Harry leaned across the table and kissed Tina on her mouth.

‘Just for luck!’ he cried, already running out the door.

Tina put her fingers to her lips, her cheeks cherry-red.

‘Hey,’ said Joe. ‘You needn’t look so delighted!’

She turned to him with smiling eyes. She opened her mouth to say something.

Mr Sheridan’s scandalised voice cut her off. ‘God preserve us!’ His massive bulk filled the dressing-room door, his horrified eyes fixed on their joined hands. ‘
Miss Kelly
! This is
not
your own private
courting parlour!’

They leapt up and apart like scalded cats. Sheridan crowded Joe out into the back corridor, pushed him out into the alley, and slammed the door on his face.

Unbalanced and empty after the warm company of the dressing-room, Joe dithered, uncertain of what to do. He looked down at his hand, which Tina had, only moments before, held clutched in her own. Snowflakes drifted from the gloomy sky and fell like small kisses onto his palm. Joe closed his fingers over them.

The door slammed open behind him, and he turned to find Tina leaning out into the cold.

Her breath streamed out when she hissed his name. ‘Joe!’

He stood like an idiot, grinning at her, his fingers still closed over the feel of her palm on his.

She thrust out her arm. ‘Give it to me!’ Then again, impatiently: ‘Give it to me, you eejit! Unless you want them nicking it!’

It took him a moment to understand. Then he dug the purse from his pocket and handed it over.

‘I’ll keep it safe for you,’ she whispered, and then, incredibly, she kissed him – her lips soft and surprisingly cool, her breath a warm cloud around them in the snowy air – before ducking inside and slamming the door.

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