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Chapter Six

Dublin city blurred outside the windows: clusters of shops, then houses, then roads passed by. Evie was in a taxi, and the driver was turning corners, making her lurch to the sides in her seat. She was rummaging in the bottom of her bag: the new handbag was huge and her few possessions were hiding in undiscovered corners. Her fingers touched the folded envelope in which her winning cheque was hidden. It was empty now that she had deposited the fifty thousand euros at her bank. She could feel the thudding of her heart, pulsing in her throat, beneath the folds of the new coat.

She rummaged again and found the mobile phone that Brendan had given her. It was unblemished and filled her hand. She would phone Brendan and tell him her plans. She would tell him it was only for a few days. She would phone Sheldon Lodge, apologise for any trouble. She squinted at the phone, touching the screen, and pushed the buttons on the side. The screen stayed blank. Evie squeezed the sides again more firmly. Nothing happened. She banged the phone on her handbag twice, and then pressed the square thing on the back above the word Samsung. The taxi slowed down. The screen remained blank.

‘Smart phone, my arse.’ She cursed to herself.

As the taxi-driver turned round and asked for the fare, Evie stared up at a modern building with glass windows looming in front of her. She read the words ‘Dublin Airport’ and felt a shiver clutch at her body.

Brendan was in a queue. Three people were in front of him. He could hear Maura’s voice at the reception desk, the familiar tone of chirpy flirtation she used with all her clients, as she called them, and he gave a little cough. He leaned to one side of the queue, waving for her attention. In front was a little man in a mac, bent over, a cap squashed down on his head between pink ears. Over his head Brendan saw a woman’s bony back, her pale hair pulled in a knot. As she turned slightly, he could see the huge swell of her belly and the small child she held to her chest. At the front of the queue there was a young man, a skinhead with tattooed arms. He was arguing at the desk. Brendan rocked forwards and backwards on his heels.

‘Dr Palmer can’t see you today, Mr Lawn. Not even with your bowels being so critical, as you say. Not without an appointment.’

‘But I have to see the doctor today, Missus. It has come on bad, and I need something to calm the guts. It’s urgent.’

‘There are no appointments with Dr Palmer today. He’s away on his holidays.’

‘But I need—’

‘Why don’t you pop to the chemist over the road and buy something to sort it out for the time being? Will I make you an appointment with another doctor for tomorrow morning?’ She dropped her voice conspiratorially. ‘Dr Singh. She’ll sort your diarrhoea out for you, sure enough. Nine sharp. Will that do?’ Maura smiled prettily, all teeth.

The young man’s shoulders slumped. He moved away from the counter and the pregnant girl with the child started to whisper something about painful piles. He saw Maura flash a warm smile and he couldn’t remember when she had last turned the same smile on him. Brendan strained up on his toes and wiggled his hand.

‘Maura?’

She was writing something down. He shifted from one foot to another and looked behind him. He was the last in the queue. Almost two o’clock. The old man in the mac took his place at the front of the queue. Maura raised an eyebrow at him.

‘Yes? How can I help you today?’

Brendan marvelled at how she dealt with the public with such genuine warmth. The man took off his cap and leaned against the reception desk.

‘Good afternoon to you, my lovely. I have an appointment with the nurse. Ten to two.’

Maura’s tone brightened. ‘You’re looking a million dollars yourself, but you’re still late, Mr O’Malley. The nurse is ready for you. Will you go to the top of the stairs, turn right, and wait?’

Suddenly it was Brendan’s turn, and he wanted to tell her his news so that she could sort out the problem. Maura met his eyes and her brows crossed. Her hair was pulled tight to the top of her head; she had combed it smooth and the strands separated into tramlines, the curls pinned and sprayed like a brittle golden crown. Her suit was blue and firmly buttoned across the chest, and the blouse collar stuck over her jacket like twin rasping tongues.

Brendan drew his breath to speak but she was there first.

‘Brendan, why in heaven’s name are you—?’

‘It’s my mother, she’s gone!’

‘God rest her soul.’ Maura did not seem unhappy; her face did not move.

‘No, Maura, she’s not dead, she’s run away. Left the home.’

At first, Maura did not speak. Her mouth was open; red lips, the beginnings of wrinkles around the corners. ‘Well, she’s really lost the plot this time.’

‘Jenny Marshall at Sheldon Lodge rang the Guards. They are keeping an eye out for her.’

‘And there’s a good thing.’

‘I’ve the afternoon off. I’m going to fetch her back. Come on.’

Maura stared at Brendan as if all this was his fault. ‘I don’t finish till four.’

‘The car’s outside.’

A loud beeping came from Brendan’s pocket and he pulled out his mobile.

Maura frowned. ‘The Garda, maybe? Perhaps she’s been on the brandy again and they’ve found her drunk in a ditch.’ She smiled at her own joke but Brendan was absorbed with his mobile.

‘Hello? Yes, this is Brendan Gallagher … Yes, she’s my mother. What?’

Brendan listened. His fingers fumbled as he put the phone away in his pocket.

Maura rolled her eyes. ‘Well?’

‘That was the Guards. They’ve found Mammy’s coat and handbag. In a bin.’

A Grand Old Time: The laugh-out-loud and feel-good romantic comedy with a difference you must read in 2018

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