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TWNS-2-6-Kindle Master

Page 26

by Alexander, Nick


  “And what about this time? If they refuse, are you going to carry on haggling or is that it?”

  “I was just debating that,” Sean says, watching a robin eyeing his crumbs from the far corner of the bench. “And I think I’ve decided to stop. To sort of leave it in the hands of the Gods. I could go higher, but things would start to get tight. And I’m a bit too old, I think, to start worrying about how to pay the electricity bill.”

  “Sounds fair,” April says. “But I hope you get it.”

  “Do you really?”

  “Yes. I think it would be great.”

  “Well, good. Let’s cross everything. And how’s the baby?”

  “Oh, kicking like crazy. He’s all elbows and knees at the moment. I think he’s practising to be a gymnast.”

  “It was basketball last time.”

  “Maybe he’ll do both,” April says. “Simultaneously. Gym-ball or basket-nast or something. A whole new sport.”

  “I’d like to see that,” Sean says distractedly. His phone has begun to vibrate again, so he pulls it away from his ear to check the screen. “Sorry, I’ve got another call. Hold on a second, will you?”

  “Is it them? Is it the estate agent’s?” April asks.

  “Yes,” Sean says. “Won’t be long.”

  Two minutes later, when Sean attempts to recover the call, it’s not April he finds on the end of the line but Maggie.

  “How did that happen?” he says.

  “I’m sorry?”

  “I was talking to April. I didn’t phone you.”

  “Ooh,” Maggie says, with mock distaste. “Don’t sound so keen, Sean. Just tell it like it is, won’t you?”

  Sean laughs. “It’s not that I don’t love talking to you Maggie. It’s just I was on the phone to April. I put her on hold and suddenly I’m talking to you. I don’t see how that happened.”

  “I phoned you Sean,” Maggie says. “Do you want me to bugger off?”

  “No, you’re OK,” Sean says, glaring briefly at the screen of the phone. The call with April seems to have been dropped. “Was it for something specific?”

  “Not really. I just wanted to know what the news was. About the flat out at C.R.”

  “Did April call you?” Sean asks.

  “No. Not at all. Why?”

  “It’s just… that’s weird, that’s all. You both calling me.”

  “Why, is there news?”

  “I just found out. Literally ten seconds ago.”

  “You found out what?”

  “They said yes. The sellers, that is. They just accepted my offer.”

  “Oh, gosh!” Maggie exclaims. “Gosh, that’s brilliant news, Sean.”

  “Is it?”

  “Yes. You’re not having doubts, are you?”

  “I’m not sure,” Sean says. “I’m just a bit shocked, I suppose. Look… it’s… lovely chatting, Mags, but would you mind terribly if I phoned you back this evening? I was on the line to April and I lost her. She’ll be wondering what happened.”

  “Of course,” Maggie says. “Kids come first. How about a pint somewhere? To celebrate? This evening?”

  “Maybe at the weekend,” Sean offers. “I need, I don’t know, time to digest it all, I think.”

  When Sean tells her the news, April shrieks. “I’m so excited!” she says.

  “Are you?”

  “Yes! Of course. Aren’t you?”

  Sean swallows with difficulty. “I don’t know,” he says. “That’s the truth. It suddenly feels very… I don’t know… symbolic. Final. Do you know what I mean?”

  “Sure…” April says, doubtfully. “Well, it isn’t final though, is it? Not until you sign on the dotted line.”

  “No.”

  “When’s that supposed to be happening, by the way?”

  “Saturday morning. If I go through with it.”

  “Why the sudden doubts, Dad? Is it the hassle of moving? We could help with that. Or the money? Or is it … it’s not because of Mum, is it?”

  “We lived there for nearly twenty years,” Sean says. “We chose every bit of furniture together. Every roll of wallpaper. Your mother hung most of it.”

  “I know. But isn’t that why?”

  “Why what?”

  “Well, why this is necessary.”

  “I thought so,” Sean says. “But now that it’s real, I’m not sure.”

  “Do you want me to come up, Dad? So we can talk it through? I could come this weekend – maybe even drag Ronan along. He’s very sensible about things like this. Very logical. Very detached. That’s helpful. Well, sometimes it is. Sometimes it’s really bloody annoying.”

  “You don’t want to be driving all the way to Cambridge,” Sean says unconvincingly.

  “Hum,” April says. “OK. I’ll see you Saturday morning, then.”

  “I’m signing Saturday morning,” Sean reminds her. “Well, I’m supposed to be signing.”

  “OK. Then I’ll see you Friday night.”

  • • •

  Sean is just pulling three curries from the freezer when the doorbell rings.

  He dumps them on the counter and walks to the front door. “Hello,” he says as he opens it. “You’re early.”

  “Hi Dad,” April says. “I got off earlier than usual, so…”

  “But mainly it’s because she drives like a maniac,” Ronan jibes.

  “That’s not very reassuring. Perhaps you should let Ronan drive?”

  “Fast but careful,” April tells Sean. “That’s me. Whereas Ronan is slow and distracted. He’s always looking at the clouds or the cows in the fields or something. Believe me, you don’t want him doing the driving.”

  “I do tend to look around a bit,” Ronan admits.

  April follows Sean into the kitchen and Ronan dumps their bag at the base of the stairs before joining them.

  “How do you feel about curry?” Sean asks.

  “Ooh,” April says. “Your curry?” As an aside to Ronan, she adds, “Dad’s curries are the best.”

  “No, these are Sainsbury’s, I’m afraid,” Sean explains, moving to the counter and gesturing at the frosty packaging. “But they’re all right. I’ve got Rogan Josh and…”

  “Can we get pizza?” April asks. “Those aren’t defrosted yet, are they?”

  Ronan laughs heartily.

  “Pizza?” Sean asks, then, “What’s the joke, Ronan?”

  “Oh, he’s just taking the piss out of me because all I want to eat is pizza,” April explains. “It’s a kind of craving, I suppose.”

  “Kind of, you say? No, that’s exactly what it is,” Ronan says. “We’ve had to have pizza five times this week. And then she eats the remainders for breakfast and lunch.”

  “Four times,” April says.

  “Five. Saturday – in the restaurant – and then Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and again yesterday at home.”

  “Monday was leftovers,” April says. “That doesn’t count.”

  “It was pizza leftovers though, was it?” Ronan asks, grinning broadly. “Or was it not?”

  “Oh, whatever,” April says, batting away his words with the back of one hand. “Can we though, Dad? Have pizza?”

  Sean laughs and shrugs. “Sure, whatever. Ronan you can still have curry if you want.”

  Ronan shakes his head. “Nah,” he says. “Pizza’ll be grand.”

  “Are you sure that’s a balanced diet, though?” Sean asks, as he returns the packages to the freezer.

  “Oh, don’t you start,” April says.

  Ronan wide eyes Sean and nods exaggeratedly. “It’s what I keep telling her,” he says. “But Princess Pizza will not be told.”

  “Just stop, both of you,” April says. “I can’t stand it when you gang up on me. Plus I always get the one with all the veggies on it, so it’s fine. It’s what the baby wants. He’s asking for it.”

  “He’s Italian, not Irish, apparently,” Ronan says.

  April puts one hand on her hip and looks at Ronan
with exaggerated disdain. “Well, maybe he is,” she says. “Maybe I had a secret fling with the guy at Domino’s.”

  Ronan pulls a face. “You remember what your man at Domino’s looked like, do you?” he says. “Good luck to you there, girl.”

  Ronan returns to the car for two six-packs of beer he has in the boot.

  “I’m not sure we need twelve bottles, do we?” Sean comments. “Especially with April not drinking.”

  “It’s all part of Ronan’s theory,” April says.

  “I call it the beer oracle,” Ronan explains, removing the cap from a bottle and handing it to Sean. “If you can’t make a major decision you just have to spend a night talking about it and getting blathered. By the morning, you’ll know.”

  “Is that an Irish thing?” Sean asks.

  “Nope. It’s a Ronan thing,” April says. “Be afraid. Be very afraid.”

  Ronan raises his bottle to tap it against Sean’s. “Cheers,” he says.

  After much discussion about who does the best pizza, Sean gives in to his daughter’s wishes and orders them from Pizza Express via Deliveroo.

  They then move to the lounge and, while they wait, Ronan keeps them supplied with beers from the refrigerator. April, for her part, drinks the best part of a litre of apple juice.

  They discuss April’s job. She’s in the process of handing over to a guy who will be replacing her during her maternity leave, but it’s not, she says, going smoothly.

  Sean asks her what the problem is and she laughs. “Basically, the problem is that he’s an idiot.”

  “Then again,” Ronan interjects, “she’s always telling me that I’m an idiot, so…”

  April pulls a face at her father. “He pretty often is,” she says.

  They discuss the baby for a while, with a repeat detour via the subject of April’s pizza diet. “You’ve never had a craving,” April says, “So you wouldn’t understand.”

  “Did April’s ma go through the whole pizza thing?” Ronan asks.

  There follows a momentary pause; a stolen, awkward glance from April to her partner, and an involuntary wince, just visible around Ronan’s eyes, before Sean says, “It’s fine, Ronan, really. And no, not really. She ate quite a few bacon sandwiches. So maybe that was her craving. Oh, and cheese. Lots of cheddar cheese.”

  April raises her palms to the ceiling. “Cheeeese,” she says, exaggeratedly. “Cheese? Pizza? Any connection there? I rest my case.”

  “So, on names,” Ronan says, clearly trying to change the subject. “April says you don’t like ‘Giles’. So we were thinking about–”

  “Hang on,” April interrupts. “I’m the one who doesn’t like ‘Giles’. It’s a wanker, banker sort of name, that’s all.”

  “Is it?” Ronan asks.

  “It’s quite posh,” Sean comments. “But I quite like it actually. Giles. Yes, I had a friend at school called Giles. Giles Anderton. He was quite posh. But very nice.”

  “He’s not being called Giles,” April says, rolling her eyes. “No, we’re almost settled on Jack, actually.”

  Sean purses his lips and nods thoughtfully. “Yes,” he says. “Jack’s a good name.”

  “It’s nice, isn’t it? Sort of unpretentious?”

  “Jack Nicholson,” Sean says. “Jack Dempsey. Jack the Ripper…”

  “Ooh, they’re all pretty butch, aren’t they?” April says, doubtfully.

  “Especially Jack the Ripper,” Ronan says, laughing. “He was as butch as butch can be.”

  “Jack Twist,” Sean offers.

  “Who’s Jack Twist?”

  “He was one of the gay guys in whatsit Mountain, wasn’t he? In Brokeback…”

  “Ah, all right,” April says. “Well, as long as my son has the possibility to explore his feminine side too, then that’s OK.”

  “You boys sure found a way to explore your feminine sides up there on Brokeback Mountain,” Ronan says, mockingly.

  “And there’s always Jack Kerouac,” April offers, ignoring him.

  “And Jack Dee.”

  “So, Jack Patrick?” Sean asks. “Or will it be Jack Connolly?”

  “We haven’t decided yet,” April says. “It might end up being Connolly-Patrick. Or Patrick-Connolly. Would you mind?”

  Sean shrugs. “Not at all,” he says. “But no second name, then?”

  “Oh, don’t get us started on that,” April says. “It’s taken us a month to settle on bloody Jack.”

  Once the Deliveroo guy has been and gone, Ronan heads to the kitchen for more beer.

  “I’m not sure I want another one,” Sean says, when he returns.

  “Just trust the process,” Ronan instructs.

  “The thing is, I think I’ve decided, really,” Sean tells him. “So, I’m not sure I need to spend the weekend with a hangover after all.”

  “Hangover, shlangover,” Ronan says, pushing the bottle forcefully into Sean’s hand.

  They eat in the lounge, the three pizza boxes open on the coffee table.

  “Oh, God, I’d forgotten how good these are,” April says, tipping back her head and lowering a slice of her Romana Padana into her mouth.

  “So, you’ve decided, you say?” Ronan says. “That sounds positive.”

  “I think so,” Sean replies, between mouthfuls. “Gosh, these are good, aren’t they? Yes, I’ve tried to be logical about it all. I even wrote out a list of pros and cons.”

  “That’s good. That’s my kind of thinking,” Ronan says.

  “And?” April asks. She rubs her belly and adds, “Umm… See, happy baby! Baby like pizza. He says it’s molto bene. What are your pros and cons, then, Dad?”

  “Well, the apartment is perfect,” Sean tells them.

  “Right…”

  “And I do have to move at some point. Because it’s crazy staying in such a big house.”

  “That makes sense, too,” Ronan says.

  “And I hate gardening. That really was your mother’s thing.”

  “Yes, I noticed that it wasn’t looking its best,” April says.

  Sean takes a deep breath and then, speaking more rapidly than usual, says, “But I don’t think I’m ready. That’s the main thing I’ve realised.”

  April’s mouth falls open. Realising it’s full of pizza, she quickly hides behind her hand. “Oh!” she says, swallowing and then licking her teeth.

  “I might be ready soon. Perhaps even in a few months. But I’m not quite ready now, I don’t think.”

  “Not ready,” Ronan repeats, sounding unconvinced.

  “No. So that’s where I’m at.”

  “But the place you’ve seen might be gone in a couple of months,” Ronan points out, concernedly.

  “That’s true. It almost certainly will be gone. Especially at the price they’re asking.”

  “So, what would it take for you to be ready?” Ronan asks.

  Sean shrugs. “I don’t know. Time, perhaps?”

  “Don’t push him, Ro,” April says.

  “I’m just saying that there might be a way for Sean to feel ready. If he wants to.”

  “I said don’t push him, sweetie,” April says. Then addressing Sean, she continues, “I think you should wait until you’re good and ready, Dad. And I know that’s what Mum would have said, too.”

  Ronan clears his throat. “Can I?” he asks.

  “Can you what?” April asks, shortly.

  “Can I say something without you biting my head off?”

  “Of course you can, Ronan,” Sean says. “Say anything you want.”

  April sighs. “Just don’t try to–”

  “No, let him speak,” Sean insists. “It’s fine.”

  Ronan puts his half-eaten slice of pizza down and presses his fingertips together. “So, at the risk of being called Mister Spock,” he says.

  “Mister Spock?”

  “It’s what I call him when he gets all logical on me,” April explains.

  “At the risk of being called Mister Spock,” Ron
an repeats, “I’ve never been much of a believer in being led by your mind.”

  “I’m sorry?” Sean says.

  “It’s your mind,” Ronan says. “It’s your organ, and waiting for it to be ready for something is a bit like waiting for your own hand to pass you a cup of tea instead of telling it to just do it.” He reaches, theatrically, for his beer to demonstrate this. “Or a bottle of beer,” he adds.

  “I’m not sure I’m following you,” Sean says.

  April, who catches his regard, rolls her eyes again.

  “If it makes sense for you to do it. Because, a) it’s the perfect place for you – your words not mine, Sean – and b) you need to move, because this place is too big, and, c) it’s at a good price, then change your mind. Tell it you’re ready. Don’t let some nebulous biochemical process in your head make the decision for you. Your brain is a tool. And you’re the one in control, Sean. Or at least, you should be.”

  “Now, that, you see,” April says through laughter, “is one hundred percent Ronan. I told you he’d be irritatingly logical. But in the end it comes down to what it always comes down to. Do you want to decide with your head or with your heart?”

  Sean nods. “Yes,” he says. “Yes, I suppose that is what it boils down to. My head says move, but my heart says I’m not ready.”

  Ronan laughs genuinely. “Your head or your heart?” he repeats.

  April pulls a face. “Yes, Mister Spock. His head or his heart.”

  “Well, as far as I’m aware,” Ronan says, swigging at his beer bottle and looking vaguely smug, “One of those two things is a biochemical computer, the most powerful computer on the bleeding planet and designed specifically for thinking. And the other one’s a pump. So I know which one I’d favour for making decisions.”

  “A pump,” Sean repeats, grinning and nodding. “That’s good. I like it.”

  Sean sleeps badly that night. He dreams tortured dreams of heavy limbs which refuse to respond to his orders, arms that won’t lift bottles of beer or cups of tea, legs that won’t walk… He dreams of queues of people that never seem to advance and forms that for one reason or another cannot be filled. And because of all the beer, he has to get up four times to pee.

  But when he wakes up in the morning light, the decision, despite his tiredness and despite the hangover, is clear. Perhaps Ronan’s beer oracle works after all.

 

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