Authors: Léan Cullinan
âWhat about the flag? What flag?' Dad asked.
Mum smirked in a way that would have made me feel murderous if I'd been in MÃcheál's place. âIt's his tricolour,' she explained. âApparently it got dirty after the match yesterday.'
âPJ threw his boot at me!' MÃcheál burst out. âIt hit me on the arm, and then my bag was open and it fell in. And now my tricolour's got mud on it, and it's dishonoured, and we have to burn it! We have to!' His eyes were wide, and his cheeks had turned a deep plummy pink.
âDon't be so ridiculous, MÃcheál, we do not!' Mum lifted her hands in conciliation. âWe'll handwash it â we'll show it every care and respect â it'll be as good as new.'
âIt won't be, Mam, it's dishonoured. We have to burn it. They told us at Irish college.' MÃcheál finished triumphant â he had played his best card.
Ah, Irish college. Three weeks of cultural re-education in a rural idyll. Lustful teens chewing sausages and playing endless card games, all through the medium of the melodious Irish language
â not a word of English allowed, or you were sent home.
Mum drew herself up and said, âThe rule, as I recall, is that the flag must not drag on the ground.'
âIt has a muddy bootmark on it!'
âWell.' Mum pursed her lips.
âMam!' MÃcheál appealed to Uncle Fintan. âI'm right, amn't I?'
I was aware of Auntie Rosemary taking a deep breath beside me. All eyes turned to Uncle Fintan.
âWell, I.' His voice wobbled.
âWe have to burn it!'
Uncle Fintan's glance flicked between MÃcheál and Auntie Rosemary, then settled on his sister. âWell, Nora, we wouldn't have, now. It wouldn't have been considered fitting for the flag to be muddied, when I was.' He breathed out, and looked for a moment as though he wanted to say more, but instead slumped back in his chair.
Auntie Rosemary delivered a disgusted snort.
âThere'll be no
burning
of any
flag
in my
house
.' Dad pronounced his verdict. No appeal. âAnd, MÃcheál, you'll know another time not to leave it lying around. All right?'
MÃcheál glared briefly at him.
Dad put one big hand on the table and leaned slightly towards MÃcheál. âAll right?'
âYeah.' MÃcheál nodded, dropped his eyes. The spotlight turned on me.
âWell, now, and I hear you're working for a publisher. Is that
right?' Auntie Rosemary's elbow grazed my rib; her perfume colonized the space between us.
âOh!' Mum put on her stricken face.
Where did we go wrong
, it said,
that you tell us so little about your life?
Out loud, she asked, with a hint of sourness, âWhat's this, another temp thing?'
I was used to her game. I wasn't giving in. âYeah, kind of.' I took a drink. âBut it might lead to something a bit more long-term.'
âWho is it you're working for?' Dad avoided being cast in Mum's drama when he could.
âIt's a guy calledâ' I began, then caught Uncle Fintan's frightened eye.
No trouble, please
, I read. He didn't want me to mention George Sweeney. When he'd put us in touch he'd asked me to keep his involvement under my hat. âIt's called Bell Books,' I mumbled. I wanted to keep talking, to cover up the glitch and to avoid being asked how I'd heard about the job. âIt's a contact from a temp job I had last year,' I said, not looking at Uncle Fintan, hoping I wouldn't get caught in the lie. âI think my old boss's cousin used to work for them, or something.'
âWell, you'll enjoy that, I'd say,' Auntie Rosemary said, after a pause. âPublishing's an exciting business.'
âSeems interesting enough, all right,' I said. I had to steer us into safer waters. I asked Dad how his back was, and Mum took the bait. She and Auntie Rosemary began dissecting the question of men who won't go to the doctor, and I was finally able to relax.
âI think I'd better go home, actually,' I said as we stood up from the table. âI'm not feeling brilliant.'
Mum pursed her lips. âAre you coming down with something?' she asked â
you don't look after yourself properly
clearly audible in her tone. âYou're very pale-looking.'
âNo, it's just a headache.' I remembered the broken-down car. âHave you a bus timetable handy?'
âI'll run you up,' said Uncle Fintan, sounding slightly breathless at his own audacity.
âDon't be daft, Fintan!' Mum exclaimed. âIt's miles away!'
âIf she's not feeling well, I think,' Uncle Fintan said, standing up and sidling towards the door. âAnd I've one or two things to check in the. Stay where you are, Rosemary â I'll be back before you know it.'
I hurried to get my coat before the combined forces would change his mind.
A Corelli concerto grosso sprang to life as Uncle Fintan started the car, and we conversed gently about styles of Baroque performance. I loved that he and I shared this interest â my musical tastes were so far from those of my parents and brother. I'd grown up with gravelly Dubliners and Wolfe Tones ringing in my ears.
âCaitlÃn â or â it's Cate I should be.' Uncle Fintan looked straight ahead at the road. âI wanted to thank you, earlier, for.'
âThat's OK,' I said. âHow did Auntie Rosemary hear about my job, then? Did you not tell her?'
âNo, I didn't at all â I was as surprised as you when she.'
âShe has spies everywhere!'
He laughed. âShe sees your neighbour Sheila at the Simon
Community soup runs â maybe she mentioned.'
We fell silent. I shifted in my seat, steeling myself.
âListen, Uncle F, there's something I need to ask you.'
âOh?'
âMum's worrying about the rent. My rent. She thinks it's too low. Are we ⦠are we still â¦?'
âOh, lord bless us and save us, what's she? I wouldn't dream! Ah, sure, listen, love, don't be worrying about it at all.'
âThanks â I really appreciate it.'
We were silent again, then I heard him take in breath. âCome here to me, I was going to ask you a.'
I waited. He said nothing. âOh?' I ventured.
âThere's something I have, for. It's a package for George Sweeney, I've had it in the car for a little while, looking for the chance to, and I wonder, could you?'
âGive it to him? Sure, no problem.'
âOh, marvellous, that'll save me.'
The traffic was light, and we reached Terenure in a little over an hour. Uncle Fintan got out of the car and opened the boot. I couldn't help staring as he pulled up the felt that covered the boot's floor and extracted from under it a large white envelope swaddled in shiny brown tape.
âThis is what I was,' he said, âfor George.' He replaced the felt carefully and closed the boot. He held the package out to me, but he didn't meet my eye.
I took the envelope. It was heavy, and it had âSEOIRSE MAC
SUIBHNE' handwritten on it in green ink. It took me a second or two to parse this as the Irish version of George's name. There were no stamps. âRight you are, Uncle F,' I said. âI'll give it to him tomorrow.'
âGive it straight into his hand, now, won't you?'
âI'll do that.'
âAnd tell him ⦠tell him I was asking for him.' Uncle Fintan looked suddenly straight at me; a gleam of enthusiasm â almost of mischief â passed across his face.
âI will, of course. Will you have a cup of tea before you go?'
âAh, no, I'd better get. Rosemary will be.' He was already edging towards the driver's door.
As I carried the package up the stairs to my flat I tried to imagine George and Uncle Fintan's friendship, how it might have worked. When I thought about it, actually, it made a strange kind of sense. George would be the star, of course, with Uncle Fintan as his soft-spoken sidekick.
I
GAVE
G
EORGE THE
envelope first thing on Monday. He thanked me, then turned and brandished it at Paula. âLookit here, now! Oh ye of little faith!'
âI never said anything!' she returned.
âHere we go,' said George as he ripped open the envelope. He took out a thick sheaf of paper and gripped it with one hand so he could flip through it. âOne revised manuscript, all present and correct. Thank you very much, young Cate.'
I moved to my desk.
âDid you know it was coming today?' Paula asked George.
âI had my suspicions,' said George.
âI had a postcard last week, hinting it was on its way.'
âDid he say Cate would be bringing it?'
âHe did not. Need to know basis, Paula, need to know.'
âAnd did he give you any way of contacting him? Is it even worth asking?'
âAh, he has to be careful, still.'
Paula pointed a finger at me. âAnd how did you get hold of it?' Her curiosity seemed coloured with irritation.
âEm ⦠my uncle gave it to me.'
âOh, right,' she said. âOf course. Fintan “The Gentleman” Sullivan. Well,' â she turned back to George â âenjoy.'
George emitted a satisfied chuckle and disappeared into his office with the manuscript.
I was stung by Paula's tone. âI didn't know you knew Uncle Fintan.'
âOh, yeah,' she said, nodding slowly and catching the side of her lip between her teeth. âOne time, I did know him. Quite well. Haven't seen him in years.' She'd been gazing at the air above my head, but now she looked straight at me. âIs he well, anyway, this weather?'
âYeah, he's fine,' I said, and dropped it.
The atmosphere at work intensified by several notches after the arrival of that manuscript. On many days, I barely spoke a
word. George and Paula were glued to their desks, and communal tea breaks became a rarity. I busied myself with the new database, which I'd almost finished populating.
George called me into his office one day and asked, with a careless gesture that belied the fervour in his eyes, if I'd be interested in trying my hand at some copyediting. There were a couple of big jobs coming in, he said, and Paula could do with the help. I had a degree in English, didn't I? Knew my spellings? Cared about grammar? I assented, and Paula gave me some basic training that afternoon, running cleanup macros on a set of conference proceedings. She was spiky and distracted â clearly up to her elbows in
The Irish Horse
â and my beginner's errors did nothing to improve matters. After a few days I decided I'd had enough spoonfeeding and would work it out for myself.
One afternoon the phone rang, and a woman's bored voice said, âI have a reverse-charge call for George Sweeney from Ernie McDevil in Spain. Will you accept the charges?'
Flustered, I put her on hold. âPaula? Can we accept reverse charges?'
Paula looked up. âWho is it?'
âI think she said ⦠Ernie McDevil? That's obviouslyâ'
âSpain?' Paula asked sharply. She sprang from her chair and made for George's door. âPut it through,' she said to me as she rapped twice on the door and opened it.
I took the operator off hold. âYes, we'll accept the charges, thank you.' I heard George whoop in the inner office.
A man's voice said, âSeoirse?'
âPutting you through.'
Paula came back to her desk and resumed her chair without looking at me.
I said, âThat was Eddie MacDevitt, wasn't it? Bit cheeky to reverse the charges.'
She hesitated visibly before saying, âCate, do you
know
Eddie MacDevitt?'
âWhat? No, of course I don't know him. Why would you think that?'
She shook her head and looked at the floor. âI dunno. I thought maybe ⦠you might.' After another pause, she said, âLookit, trust me, Cate, you should count yourself lucky if you're not involved with that mess. Stick to your fisheries conference, is my advice to you.'
The afternoon slid by, unpunctuated by any further phone calls from the underworld.
I
CAME INTO TOWN
after work to meet Denise in the Stag's Head, but went first to get fish and chips from Burdock's, the tiny chipper round the corner from Christ Church Cathedral. I joined the queue and studied the backlit wall menu, weighing the attractions of cod and sole.
Someone else came in as I was paying. I picked up my food, opened the packet a little to let my cod cool, and turned to encounter the pleasing shape of Matthew Taylor.
âHello!' he exclaimed, with that swooping English inflection that made him sound so much more surprised than he could possibly be.
âHi.' I stood there, wreathed in fishy steam, letting the little flurry of pleasure subside. He was grinning at me, his teeth slightly uneven, crowding at the front of his mouth.
He bought chips, and we made small talk as we walked together towards Dame Street. The moon was visible above the buildings, a pale sliver like a clipped fingernail in the airy sky.
âBell Books has quite an interesting backlist, hasn't it?' said Matthew.
âHave you been looking at our website?'
âI had a bit of a snoop around.'
âReally? Why?'
That shy dimple I'd seen before. âWell, it's my period, you see â recent Irish history, the Republican movement and so forth. You actually published quite a few of the sources I used for my MPhil research.'
I bit off the end of a chip. âWell,' I said, ânot me â I only started working there this summer.'
âIs that right? What's George Sweeney like to work for?'
âHe's OK,' I said. This was the first time we'd really spoken since the evening he'd arrived at choir. Why did I feel, again, as though I were messing it up? Fantasy-Matthew never asked me this kind of question. I was already anxious about how I'd extricate myself from our conversation in time to meet Denise. What
on earth could I say about George? âHe's a bit of a workaholic, maybe?'