“Nothing,” Max said, fully engaged now that they were quarreling and because he’d been driving through the Dublin streets with Garry Randolph’s ghost fighting for possession of the left passenger seat. He faced Kathleen square on for an instant. “I’m curious to see how she turned out.”
“You seem to share that abnormal curiosity about other people with the Cinderella-footed Temple Barr, she of the whole wardrobe of tiny glass slippers. God, she wears a size five! Even I need a six. Was that what drew you to her?”
“How do you know her shoe size?”
“The Circle Ritz is easy to break into. Poor little Cinderella. I made a contribution to your rival’s mother’s wedding at that attached chapel weeks ago. You know the drill. Brides require something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue. ‘Something stolen’ was an amusing addition to the list. I “borrowed” the mate to one of tiny Miss Temple’s intended wedding shoes.”
“I heard about the wedding, but really, Kathleen. Petite shoe-size envy? Women compete over the most trivial things.”
“Like you?” She slid him a knowing glance. “No. I just let her know I’d been the culprit and gave that shoe back. I wasn’t as stupid as the wicked stepsisters, to maim myself over her shoes, or her. You haven’t answered what the attraction was.”
“These things aren’t programmable, Kathleen. That’s why they’re natural wonders, unless we ruin it by too much analysis. Maybe, mostly her…energy and honesty.”
“I’m energetic.”
He laughed. “Yes, you are. Tireless, I’d say.”
“I was born amid lies.”
“Yes, you were.”
“Do you think I can become honest, an ‘honest woman’?”
“Only if you become honest with yourself.”
“Bollocks!”
“Then don’t ask me. I will note you’re wearing aqua today. That hardly matches the ‘honest’ color of your eyes, blue.”
“Your color as well. A magician is the most dishonest creature on the planet.”
“More of a juggler of the truth.”
“You used colored contact lenses in your performances and posters. ‘The Mystifying Max’, green-eyed huckster selling illusion for more than a hundred dollars a ticket. Where were your blue eyes then?”
“I was on the run too.” He pursed his lips. “If I gave you a hundred thousand dollars as a delayed donation to the IRA, would it be used for victim reparations?”
“This victim would keep it as reparation. Besides, you never paid for our rendezvous in Sir Thomas and Lady Dixon Park.”
His look was chiding. “You never asked. But I think I’ve paid plenty.”
Driving on the left was an easy switch for Max. His brain had retained automatic reflexes, he noticed, better than memory of emotions.
“We’re parking here?” Kathleen sounded a bit panicky. “What’s here?”
He went around to the left side to let her out. “Tourist overload. We walk from here.” He took her arm, firmly, and guided her over the rough cobblestones until she jerked her arm away.
And spied a bright red façade labeled in bold gold letters, crammed with patrons.
“‘Temple Bar,’” she sneered. “You are so predictable. You fly in the face of irony. That’s where your local spy got the photos of Iris. It’s a tourist trap.”
“She’s currently visiting Dublin.”
“And drinks there like a tourist?”
“It’s a world-famous pub. Your daughter takes advantage of the local watering holes.”
“She’s a drunk.”
He shook his head, laughing. “Come and see.”
He took her arm in custody again, but she resisted. “She’s a barmaid.”
He shook his head again. “Come see and then speculate.”
They had to fight a constant flow of people coming and going. Soon Max, with his unusual height and a bit of maneuvering, had them standing by a just vacated table, being swabbed down for new customers.
“Two Belfast Blonde pints,” Max ordered before the girl could whisk away. She nodded.
“You didn’t consult me,” Kathleen complained.
“All craft beers here are superb, and Belfast is where we’re headed.”
“It’s back to the beginning, I see. Meanwhile, this place is so crowded, so noisy on the inside, so luridly red on the outside,” Kathleen groused.
She looked prim and proper among the overwhelmingly young and casual crowd. And annoyed.
“Your resemblance to your occasionally visiting daughter is less likely to be remarked on in a crowd,” Max pointed out. “Unless you want a public outing.”
“Lord, no.”
Their pint glasses landed like UFOs in their midst, and Max handed over a generous ransom to make for a quick exit, if necessary.
“Thank you, sir.” The serving girl flashed a smile with a brightness that made up for its brevity.
“I hate ale.” Kathleen stared at the honey-dark brew with knitted eyebrows.
“You’re here to look, not drink. So look.” He nodded to the stand-up bar.
The girl’s blue-black hair among mostly ruddy and brown heads was hard to miss.
Iris provided plenty of side and three-quarter glimpses of her face. She was standing sandwiched between two men also in their mid-twenties. Obviously just good mates, to Max’s trained eye. This was a post-work meet. Likely more men and women would join the party. Crumpled bills lay on the bartop, ready for a second round.
Meanwhile, Iris tossed her head and hair and cracked jokes and smiled, delivering what the Irish call “good craick”—bar talk that creates fellowship and jolly exchanges…and alcoholics. In a green land under a gray sky and veils of rain and mist, indoor warmth of any kind was a necessary boon.
“I hate ale,” Kathleen repeated, “and the little bitch may look like me, but I see traces of the bastard who fathered her.”
Max wasn’t surprised. Remnants of paternal genes were bound to show in Iris’s face and body, even in a gesture or a certain angle of the head. Yet, to him or someone’s casual glance, she was a remarkable “twin” to Kathleen. Anyone who saw them together would think them sisters, rather than mother and daughter.
He was surprised to realize that Kathleen’s right hand was curled into his forearm like a claw.
“Who are those men with her?” she asked. “They are going nowhere. She’s not even flirting with them. She has nothing to gain there.”
“I hope not,” Max said. “My sources say she’s seriously seeing a law student at Trinity College. She works as a copy editor for a small publishing house that specializes in poetry.”
“Poetry!”
“It’s a famous Irish export,” he said mildly. “Like politics.”
“Not married at twenty-six,” she muttered.
“Smart, no doubt,” he said.
“I presume you researched her foster parents, spy that you are.”
He nodded. “They are still ‘free-thinkers’ and still firmly atheist. Iris went through a rebellious stage when she investigated the Catholic Church because of a boyfriend—”
“What—?”
“The parents were upset, but Iris became more interested in hot yoga instead. Sensible child. Useful exercise, if hard to find in a chill climate like Ireland.”
“She’ll marry this Trinity man?”
“Looks like it. I can’t say if she’s contemplating having children.”
“At least your intelligence gathering has limits.”
“But…she’s filed an inquiry with her adopted parents for permission to find her Magdalene birth mother.”
The nails of Kathleen’s hand cut through his tweed jacket like Freddy Kreuger’s razor gloves in a horror movie. “I’ll kill you if that succeeds.”
“Fair warning,” he said, eyeing her untouched glass. “Drink up anyway. You wanted to leave. We’ve got a long way to go and a short time to get there.”
Oddly, she did just as he said.
The car CD player happened to hit a classic Irish folk song from ugly olden 18th-century times, that Max had played on both recent trips to Ireland, a favorite of his, and hadn’t songs like this heard young inflamed his and Sean’s desire to visit Northern Ireland?