Read Sophie Morgan (Book 1): Relative Strangers (A Modern Vampire Story) Online
Authors: Helen Treharne
Tags: #vampires
Kieran asked Sean if he could keep their drinks topped up and instructed him to deduct the tab from his money for the gig. After that, Tracy had no need to come to the bar at all and I didn’t see her for the rest of the evening. I hoped he wasn’t trying to get her too drunk, but I was confident I could keep an eye on her from the safety of my stool.
I should have been annoyed at my friend ditching me, but it was pleasant talking to Mickey and I happily snatched moments of conversation with him as he worked. We shared ideas on places to visit during my trip and discussed our respective hometowns, which we discovered sounded very similar. Now and again we replaced chit chat with singing along to the music. By this time, I had learned that the singer was also Irish, but from Dublin, and that this was a regular venue for him on his local circuit. He generally played over the weekend so he would be there the following night too. By the way, that Tracy was figuratively hanging on every word, and literally hanging off him whenever he took a break, she’d be pleased to hear that.
"So, do you think you’ll be back again tomorrow?" Mickey ventured.
I looked over my shoulder at Tracy, pointing to a notice on the wall which read ‘Live Irish music tonight and Saturday’. She gestured back with a thumbs up.
"Looks like it," I replied.
His face lit up, which I could tell made him feel a little embarrassed. Heat crept across my cheeks at the unimaginable notion that maybe this guy actually liked me,
me!
I quickly gulped a swig from my pint glass, hoping that the floor would open up and swallow me whole so I wouldn’t have to think about what to say next.
Instead of being eaten up by the floor, a woman with a cloud of white hair, dolloped in a loose bun on the top of her head, lunged at me and waved a Polaroid camera in my face. The flash went off before I had time to react and I was certain that all she’d have ended up with was my extremely startled grimace.
Mickey laughed. "Looks like you’ll be on the wall of fame."
"Huh?" I snorted.
"That’s Maggie", he explained. "She owns the place. She does that sometimes, you know, takes snaps of some of the customers. She sticks them on that notice board." He gestured to a glass covered display board at the end of the bar. "She thinks it brings in customers if it looks like people have a good time in here. Right enough, I’ve seen people come in here every weekend trying to get on that wall."
"I guess I should be flattered then."
Maggie, evidently pleased with herself flashed an enormous grin at me and then at Mickey, the latter accompanied by an extremely conspicuous wink and a nod in my direction. Her skin crinkled at the corners of her mouth and coupled with the white hair, I had difficulty guessing her age.
Before I knew it, the evening had come to an end. We stayed until the last customer left, chatting about nothing in particular with Mickey and Sean. Tracy was occupied, firmly latched on to the guitarist’s face.
I was conscious that we were the only ones who actually needed to leave the premises, as the lads and Maggie all lived above the bar. The guitarist was also staying, Maggie proposing that he stay on the sofa rather than catch a taxi or try to arrange a lift. I was relieved, I didn’t want there to be any suggestion of him coming back to our hotel with us.
"C’mon Trace," I instructed as I hooked my arm under hers and lifted her up off her bar stool. "The nice guitarist will be here tomorrow, and if you behave, I’ll bring you back then".
Tracy was well and truly "under the influence’, both of the beer and good old-fashioned lust. I gently pulled her away from Kieran and steered her through the doors and out onto the street. As I looked at Maggie and the three Irishmen left remaining in the bar, I quietly muttered that I was sorry about the state she was in. I had no objection to her having a drink or a good time with lover boy, but it was a bit on the embarrassing side to have to prop her up when I was barely tipsy. You’d think that I was the older one of the two of us, not five years her junior.
As the saloon style doors swung shut behind me and the balmy evening air hit us, I could hear a man call after us.
"See you tomorrow?" he asked.
I smiled to myself. I recognised the voice instantly. It was Mickey’s.
I kept smiling for most of the following morning, due in large part to the hangover which Tracy was failing miserably to cover. Smugly, I watched her battle with breakfast, moving her selection of cold cuts and cheese on her plate and wincing when I proposed that she tried a nice runny egg with them. It was impossible to resist recommending that she follow the savouries up with the strawberry waffles, syrup and lashings of cream. Unsurprisingly, she didn’t find it as amusing as I did.
"What the heck I did I drink last night?" She asked, consoling herself with a third cup of black coffee. "Oh, no don’t tell me, I know – a lot!"
"Judging by the empty shot glasses and the six empty pint glasses, I’d be inclined to agree with you," I replied.
"Oh well", she sighed, "as long as we all had a good time, that’s the main thing." I smiled, saying nothing. "Right, I’ve had a word with myself and pulled myself together, so what’s on the agenda for today? The day is all yours; I guess I wasn’t much company for you last night".
I shrugged my shoulders. Aside from her highly amusing antics and cavorting with Kieran, I’d had some pleasant company from the bar staff and the owner. I was careful not to single out Mickey and launch her furtive imagination.
"I’m quite easy going," I added," but it might be nice to check out some of the museums. We could have a look at some of the smaller shops and see if we can pick up some souvenirs. It was a rather late one last night, and, to be honest, I’m pretty tired myself. It may be a good idea to get an early dinner and then head back here for a quick siesta before tonight".
Tracy, looked up from her coffee, grinning. "Tonight?" she asked. If it was possible to make a word sound lascivious, she had just accomplished it.
"Yep," I tried to look nonchalant, "I thought we would check out that bar again. Your favourite musician is on again tonight."
Tracy didn’t reply. She just kept smiling.
The day turned out to be more productive than we had expected, largely helped by periodic caffeine refuelling stops. The morning was quite low key, taking in some of Rubens’ work at the Cathedral of Our Lady, and then visiting his tomb at the surprisingly more ornate St James Church. The art and architecture were both breath-taking, although Tracy was more enamoured with the level of quiet each location offered. She continued to nurse a pounding headache, but felt a little better after a large lunch.
The afternoon was spent shopping in some of the smaller boutiques and stores in the streets off the Grote Market. I purchased a few small gifts, some for myself, some for my Mum, and Tracy got a great deal on an oversized leather handbag. I thought it was a bit gaudy, but she liked it, which was the main thing.
We wrapped up our shopping expedition close to four o’clock. We decided that it would be a good idea to go back to the hotel for a catnap and head back out a few hours later for food and drinks.
I’m not a great one for napping during the day; even when I haven’t had much sleep at night, but I surprised myself by dozing off on my single bed for a whole two hours. Even more surprising, when I did open my eyes, I discovered that Tracy was up and showered. She kindly offered to make us both a cup of tea from the complimentary hospitality tray on the side table while I got my bearings, an offer that I took full advantage of.
"It’s just sickening" Tracy sighed, massaging hair mousse into her mane; "some people should just be shot."
At this point, I would normally have let rip about my unease with the death penalty. I used to think that killing for the pleasure of revenge doesn’t elevate us above the criminal, but minimizes us. As I looked at the pictures of those two young children and their seemingly happy parents, it was hard to argue with Tracy's position.
"Is that here?" I asked her.
"Not too far, I think. I popped down to the bar earlier, to pick up a bottle of water and it was on the TV down there. The waiter told me that it’s about thirty minutes away by car, maybe less. It’s been on the news for
the past
hour; the bodies were found this morning."
It was hard to keep watching it, so I turned the TV off and tried to direct the conversation to more pleasant things. The evening was still early, but I recognise a hunger pang when I feel one, so I proposed that we go out and forage for food. After a brief debate with Tracy on where we should eat, I put down my teacup and headed for the shower.
Within twenty minutes, I was ready to go, wearing a crisp white shirt, jeans and the only pair of boots I’d thought to bring with me. Unlike Tracy, my holiday clothing was usually based on what would require the least amount of luggage.
Tracy was applying the finishing touches to her makeup when I noticed that she’d taken the tags off her new tote bag. She’d been busy filling it with the usual set of night out sundries – purse, camera, hairbrush, lipstick and so on. But as it lay open on the bed, I could see that she had also slung in her toothbrush and a pair of clean knickers.
"You planning on going somewhere, are you?" I blurted out, simultaneously annoyed by her brazen shirking of friendly responsibility and embarrassed by my own prudishness. This was meant to be a break for me to get over the loss of my man, not an excuse for her to find a new one. I tried to sound like I was teasing her, but I don’t think I did a particularly effective job of hiding the annoyance in my voice. As much as I enjoyed the company I’d found in the bar staff, if I had wanted to go on holiday on my own, I would have done. I had not planned on being her wingman.
I raised my eyebrows at her in disbelief.
"I promise," she pleaded, "I’m really not planning anything. Please believe me, pretty please".
She was trying to use a cutesy baby voice, but she was appalling at accents at the best of times and with her visible discomfort at confrontation, it was utterly ridiculous. I struggled to keep a straight face. Spotting an opportunity to defuse the situation further, she grabbed the bag and lifted it up to her head.
"See", she exclaimed, "It’s not much bigger than my big fat head".
We both exploded into laughter.
Tracy and I found a table at a place close to the hotel, something that was midway between a restaurant and a tavern. As soon as I realised that it been seven hours since I had last eaten, my hunger pangs seemed to develop a whole new level of virulence. There was no way I was going to spend time wandering around trying to find somewhere else to eat. Tracy was equally hungry, now that the headache had gone and she felt more like her usual self. A couple of plates of breaded pork with potatoes and beets placated our hunger and gave us a much-needed boost in energy levels. We stayed there for about an hour after eating, watching the passers-by on the street and enjoying a post-dinner coffee.
I learned more about Tracy and the inner workings of her mind in that short hour, than I probably had during the months I’d actually known her. Tracy was not entirely honest in the way she presented herself to the world. Despite all her bravado and devil may care attitude, there was, deep down, someone who had been really hurt. It turned out that she had spent six months travelling around Europe a few years ago, eventually meeting a fella and coming back to the UK with him. She was in between brewery contracts and eventually got one with him as the second licensee. I’m not sure what went on exactly, but it had not ended well. Tracy had been left with a lot of debts and needed to earn more money than she could in the pubs. She got out as soon as she could, building a new life for herself and buying a small home of her own.
Her vocabulary and the tears welling up in her eyes hinted at an even darker side to the story, which she didn’t want to reveal. I let it go; it was evident though that Tracy had carefully crafted this public persona and talking about what had happened would undoubtedly make her uncomfortable. I just nodded in agreement, as if I understood what it meant to be in a complicated relationship. But what did I know? I’d only had one real relationship and I had been unceremoniously dumped at that. Perhaps I should cut her some slack, I thought, she needed a bit of fun too.
We arrived about an hour earlier than we had on the previous night, and the place was nowhere near as busy. Kieran was on stage but in the processes of getting everything set up. As he twiddled with various leads and buttons on his amplifier, he caught sight of Tracy and enthusiastically waved her over. Her face lit up.
"Do you mind?" she asked.
"Go right ahead, I’ll get the drinks."
Apparently that also meant I was extending an invitation to carry her bag too, as she dumped it on the floor and made a beeline for the stage. I kept my frustration in check, clinging on to the fact that this was her minibreak too. We still had another whole day and night there – surely he couldn’t keep her attention for that long? Despite his vocal performance and good looks, I hadn’t seen much that could pass for a conversation yet.
Reconciling myself to being the handbags and drinks monitor, I made my way to the bar and selected an empty stool to sit on. As I took my seat, Micky appeared from the stairs tucked behind the large display of optics and low-level fridges. He was wiping his hands off with a towel and looked like he had been doing something vaguely manual.
"Well, well, nice to see you here again, Miss Morgan," Mickey said in faux politeness.
"Why thank you very much," I politely replied. "You look like you’ve just been at the gym or something."
He wiped a faint veneer of perspiration from his forehead.
"I wish, no time for that here. Maggie had a leak in the sink in her kitchen; I was just up there taking a look at it for her. She’s on her own since her husband passed. I try to do what I can for her".
From our limited conversation, I knew the bar was Maggie's home as well as her livelihood. I’d been told that the pub had two storeys above it. The top housed a large apartment where Maggie lived. The middle story was separated into a small flat and office space; from what I could gather Sean and Mickey currently lived there. I hadn’t wanted to pry too much on the first night, especially as it involved talking about potential bed space. That could have got into a territory that I was generally uncomfortable with. Nice, gentle flirting is one thing. Discussions on sleeping arrangements could lead to double or even single engenders, both of which would lead to the embarrassing problem of stammering and blushing.
"The sparkly-ness did give it away," he beamed.
I had to admit he was right; the patchwork of multicoloured leather wasn’t my thing at all and don’t get me started on the glass gems which adorned it. My plain black leather bag, slung loosely across my body, looked dramatically different. Nevertheless, I clutched her purse without any consideration of my personal appearance. I didn’t want to risk someone knocking it over and her knickers falling out. That could definitely give people the wrong idea, especially about me as I had been dumped with the bloody thing.
I looked over my shoulder to search for Tracy, hoping that she would be ready to take custody of her handbag. She wasn’t hard to find as the bar wasn’t that crowded. Most of its patrons happily occupied seats. Kieran was adding the final adjustments to his tuning while Tracy sat on the edge of the stage watching him in a trance-like state.
Sean was kind enough to offer to take her drink over to her, which was fine with me. I suspected that Sean fancied her a little and I thought it would give him an excuse to go up and talk to her. She had ten years on him, but who was I to judge? His face lit up when she thanked him, although she quickly snapped her attention back to Kieran.