Once twice three times a.., p.17

Once, Twice, Three Times an Aisling, page 17

 

Once, Twice, Three Times an Aisling
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  ‘There’ll be other girls. You should see the style around these days. The new beauty salon has done wonders for the village.’

  ‘I’m not interested in meeting someone new.’

  ‘Well, neither was I, and then James came along.’

  ‘And let me guess, this is the happiest you’ve ever been?’ His tone is bitter and accusatory. I can’t tell if he thinks I’m smug or full of it.

  ‘Something like that.’

  He rolls his eyes. ‘Can we go home, Ais? My feet are getting soaked.’

  ****

  I’m flying on the thirtieth and Majella and Sharon come over the night before to ‘help me pack’, which is a thinly veiled excuse to finish off the last of the Christmas chocolates.

  ‘Was that John I just heard coming in the back door?’ Majella inquires on her way back from the bathroom. I heard him coming in too and had to stop myself from getting annoyed. He and Paul are pals, but it’s still deeply awkward to have my ex-boyfriend walking around the house.

  ‘Yeah. I think Paul mentioned going for a pint.’

  ‘Any luck with the dress yet, Majella?’ Sharon asks.

  ‘Oh yeah, I found the perfect one but it costs about the same as second-hand car,’ Majella wails. ‘I’m so sickened.’

  ‘Remember what Sadhbh said?’ I say. Then I turn to Sharon. ‘The designer does great reductions but you have to jump on them.’

  ‘Your mother actually showed me how to set up Google Alerts, Ais,’ Maj says. ‘So say a prayer.’

  Just then there’s a blast of ‘Livin’ on a Prayer’ from downstairs so loud that Sharon falls off the bed and knocks several of my carefully rolled pairs of knickers onto the floor. Rolling is the only way to go when you’re packing. Sadhbh sent me a YouTube video about it and the girl in it was like Mary Poppins the amount she got into the case. My heart was broken earlier trying to roll up my footies. They can be very fiddly.

  There’s a roar from Mammy. ‘Alexa! Stop playing!’

  The music stops abruptly.

  ‘Jesus, that thing is very sensitive,’ Majella whispers. ‘Do you think it can hear us from up here?’

  There’s another roar from Mammy. ‘Alexa! What are the opening times for Mc. Daids. Hard. Ware?’

  Without missing a beat, Alexa blasts out ‘Livin’ on a Prayer’ again. Poor Mammy. The music stops again and I hear John laughing, that deep belly laugh of his I haven’t heard in so long. Mammy must have him cornered about putting goalposts in the Far Field. She wants them there for when school tours come and said John would be just the man to help her source them. I really wish she’d come to James for things, but I suppose in this instance John is something of an expert, what with his GAA connections.

  ‘I got Mammy and Daddy one of those speaker yokes for Christmas as well,’ says Majella as she paws absentmindedly through my wardrobe. ‘They’ve been shouting at it and getting disappointed at everything it can’t do for days. Feels like my teenage years all over again. And Shane came in steaming the other night barefoot and kept swearing blind at the top of his voice that he’d left the house with “two shoes” on and, well, long story short, there’s a year’s supply of tissues arriving on New Year’s Day.’

  ‘They’ll be handy for Pablo come wedding time, to be fair.’

  Majella bites into a Coffee Escape. ‘True that, Ais. True that.’

  ‘Okay, how many nights are you staying, hun?’ Sharon says, gently pushing Majella out of the way and standing in front of my wardrobe.

  ‘Only two. But I feel like I need “outfits”. I want to be prepared.’

  Sharon sifts through the rail – my purple Savida dress, my good interview suit, my fleecy dressing gown. It doesn’t look like much, I have to admit. I feel a stab of anxiety in my belly. I’ve nothing at all that’s suitable. Downstairs John laughs again and for a split second I feel something close to jealousy and wish that I was downstairs laughing with them, nothing to worry about except Alexa and goalposts.

  ‘You need something savage for New Year’s Eve anyway – who cares if the party’s in the house,’ Majella says, swishing her not-quite-there-yet Rosie Huntington-Whiteley highlights over her shoulder.

  ‘I don’t have anything savage,’ I reply, my voice going up an octave. Maybe I could buy something in the airport in the morning? I rack my brains trying to remember what shops are in Terminal One. House of Ireland? Could I dress up an Aran jumper? Fashion some kind of toga out of a Foxford wool blanket and a belt? I’m sure I’ve seen Sadhbh do it.

  ‘Oh my god, you have to wear the suit – it’s perfect,’ Sharon says, taking it out and hanging it on the door.

  ‘But it’s only for interviews. Would the dress not be better?’

  ‘The suit is lucky, though, Ais. It got me my job, remember?’ Majella says, digging through the Roses looking for a Caramel Barrel. On 29 December? Good luck.

  ‘But it’s a party. I can’t wear a suit to a party. I want to look glam, not like a receptionist!’

  ‘Oh, you will look glam, hun,’ Sharon says confidently. ‘Suits are very hot right now. Did you not see Emilia Coburn in the pink one at the BAFTAs? And I’ll loan you these to finish it off.’ She holds up one of her sparkly gold sandals. I balk at the height of them. Why she continues to shun kitten heels is beyond me. So much easier to walk in and there was definitely something in Grazia about them being ‘back’. Were they ever gone?

  ‘And what’ll I wear under it?’ I ask, coming around to the idea. ‘I’ve a few decent shirts in the drawer there or I’ve my red vest top but that’s at James’s.’

  ‘Oh, hun, you don’t wear anything under it except a bra, and you could definitely pull it off,’ Sharon says enviously.

  Majella takes another look at the suit and starts nodding emphatically. ‘Yes!’ she goes. ‘Classy but sexy too.’

  ‘Ah, girls,’ I say. ‘I’m not Emilia Coburn. She’s tiny for starters. I heard she lives on lemon juice and maple syrup. I ate a block of cheese last night. I’m still trying to lose that stone from 2012, you know.’

  Sharon rolls her eyes and folds her arms. ‘Would you ever give over. You’ll be stunning.’

  ‘I don’t know about this. I can’t meet James’s parents with no top on, can I?’

  But Majella is already rummaging in her handbag for tit tape.

  It’s decided that the suit, the purple dress, my good jeans, my red shumper and the pair of fancy yoga leggings Elaine and Ruby got me for Christmas will cover all bases. Elaine spent an hour talking to Constance at my thirtieth about plans to do yoga classes at the farm, and she’s convinced I’m going to be converted. After my Pilates hell? I don’t think so. But the leggings and my good fleece will be a decent outfit if they spring any country walks on me. I’m only raging I won’t be able to fit the Hunter wellies I won three years ago at the Ploughing in my carry-on suitcase. I feel like they’d be very Buckleton.

  ‘Aisling. Will you tell Paul John’s here?’

  Mammy’s stage whisper up the stairs interrupts a debate about shoes and how many pairs is acceptable for two and a half days away. Two (me). Four (Sharon). Just book another bag (Majella). I step out onto the landing and peer down the stairs, relieved to see he’s not in the hall with her.

  ‘What are you doing, Mammy? Why are you whispering?’ I feel a bit annoyed with her now and her buddy-buddy carry-on with John. But I know she’s worried about Paul and desperate to get him out of the house to see if it will help with his mood.

  ‘I don’t want Alexa to hear me. God only knows what she’ll be at next. Will you give his door a knock there? I think he’s listening to music.’

  I thud on Paul’s door. No response. I bang harder and hear his bed squeak and the door opens. His eyes are red.

  ‘John’s here for you.’

  ‘Okay, I’ll be down in a minute.’

  ‘Are you alright?’

  ‘I’m grand.’

  ‘He’ll be down in a minute,’ I call dutifully to Mammy, who’s still posted at the bottom of the stairs. Paul emerges from his room with his coat on and gives me a gruff ‘bye’, jogging down the stairs as John emerges from the kitchen, shrugging his own coat up onto his shoulders.

  ‘Hiya.’

  ‘Hi.’

  Is this us? Destined to awkward greetings for the rest of our lives?

  What tiny moment of silence that follows is broken by Majella. ‘Found the tit tape!’

  Chapter 23

  ‘Are you in the bathroom, Ais? Why are you whispering?’

  Sadhbh’s face fills the screen as she squints and positions herself properly in front of the camera, showing me glimpses of the city skyline behind her. I really must go to Thailand sometime, although Sinéad McGrath went for three weeks last year and, God forgive me, but her face was like a beetroot in every photo she posted on Facebook. The humidity would kill me. Sadhbh isn’t a bit sweaty now as I’m looking at her, but then she’s probably never sweated in her whole life. Her shorn silver crop means there isn’t even any hair to scrape back off her face. I’d be puce and firing up my mini fan.

  ‘Sadhbh,’ I repeat furtively. ‘How does tit tape work? I can’t get it to stick.’

  I am in the bathroom. It’s the en suite off James’s room in his parents’ house in Buckleton and everywhere I turn there’s a towel – on every surface and hanging off multiple hooks and rings. If competitive towel hanging was a sport then the Matthewses would be world champions. It’s the same in the other three bathrooms in the house, and my nerves are gone knowing which one to dry my hands on. James is downstairs and I’m up here ‘checking in with Mammy’, which is my personal code for practising my outfit for tonight’s party and trying on the bra Sharon told me to buy in Victoria’s Secret in the airport. I’ve also relieved my very nervous belly ahead of tonight’s party and meeting Mrs Matthews, who has proven to be something of an enigma.

  ‘Get one with a real plunge. You’ve lovely boobs,’ Sharon said somewhat wistfully and, of course, I had to tell her that I have a terrible arse and child-bearing hips to make up for them. I’m thrilled to have a bit of me called lovely, but I’ve never met a compliment I didn’t instantly deflect. I was going to ask her what colour I should get the bra in, but she actually went into a bit of a mood, so I had to go with my instinct in the end and went with purple and black, but unless I can sellotape the suit to my chest everyone will be able to see it so I’ve entered crisis mode. I have the purple dress as a back-up, of course, but I met James’s twin cousins, Bryony and Georgia, last night and they seemed super glamorous so I feel like it will have to be the suit. Why didn’t I bring the nice red vest top?

  ‘Are you sweating, Ais? You look like you’re sweating. You need to be dry as a bone for it to stick.’ This feels like an attack from Sadhbh, to be honest. She knows how I get. Meanwhile, she’s leaning back on her lounger looking like she might even be a bit cold. I’d be wiping the Nile off my top lip.

  ‘Okay, feck it, I’ll worry about it later.’ Maybe I’ll go and stand outside for an hour and get really cold and apply the tit tape while I’m still a bit blue.

  ‘So how’s it going? Tell me everything!’

  James picked me up from the airport in a Land Rover and we drove through flurries of snow and miles of countryside into the so-called village, which is almost aggressively picturesque with its cobblestone streets, quaint stone cottages and pastel shopfronts. I’d call it a town myself. The place was buzzing with people wearing wax jackets and expensive fleeces and generally looking posh, although I did spot one random lad outside a pub called the Drunken Sailor in a dressing gown and a pair of flip-flops holding a box of kittens. I suppose even Buckleton has its Mad Tom.

  As we drove over a cute little hump-back bridge, James pointed out the Pig and Poddle and the village green, where the local fête is held every year, and the little gift shop where I can pick up something small to bring home to Mammy. To be honest, ATM or no ATM, Buckleton puts BGB to shame. There was the huge Christmas tree outside the post office, for starters, and then the truly alarming number of galleries and antique shops on every corner. I once got very into Cash in the Attic when I was off work for a week with the flu and became convinced we were sitting on a fortune, but it turns out Great-Uncle Brendan had been a terrible spoofer and his spoon collection was actually from Roches Stores.

  James also pointed out the local school and revealed that he hadn’t gone there because he started boarding school at the age of eight. I was momentarily floored by the thought of tiny little James being sent off on his own so young, but he already seemed a bit on edge, so instead I grilled him about whether it was like Mallory Towers and St Clare’s. To my disgust, he didn’t even mention one midnight feast, which was my absolute dream as a child. Me and Maj and Sinéad McGrath once stole a packet of Rich Teas and two litres of Rock Shandy from Mrs Moran’s press at a sleepover but we were caught eating them at ten o’clock. Didn’t even make it to midnight and not a ginger cake or potted-meat sandwich in sight.

  The Matthews have a driveway long and windy enough to be a pain in the hole for the postman – Pat Curran wouldn’t stand for it at all – and enough ivy covering the house for me to be worried about its structural integrity. And while it’s definitely big and rambling, it’s not the castle Majella had me convinced I’d be arriving at. It’s teeming with such high-end notions, though, that I’m afraid to put my hand anywhere in case I break a china pheasant or brush up against some family-heirloom tapestry.

  ‘I swear to God, when we arrived inside his father was standing beside the roaring fireplace with a brandy like something out of an ad for aftershave.’

  ‘No way!’ Sadhbh leans forward, loving the detail. ‘What’s he like?’

  ‘He’s nice, although he’s a bit scary – sort of booming rather than talking. He checked twice that he was pronouncing my name right, though.’ It was a tonic after enduring two ‘Ayes-leengs’ and an ‘Eileen’ in the pub last night, to be honest. ‘He asked me was I the girl keeping James across the Irish Sea, which was a bit mortifying, so I had to use up my Irish granny material straight away,’ I whisper to Sadhbh, exiting the bathroom and sweeping the phone around James’s bedroom to give her a quick look.

  James’s mother’s mother was born in Dublin, so I made him tell me everything about her on the drive from the airport so I could have the chat with his parents. I pride myself on being a hit with them. Even Fran couldn’t resist my top-tier specialist Mammy topics: interesting supplements in the newspaper and the subsequent hoarding of them in case someone might find them useful, poor dead Eva Cassidy, draught excluders, evening primrose oil and its many uses. James’s granny sounds like no granny I’ve ever met, though. She was from a wealthy Dublin family who he doesn’t really know much about, but she lived a lot of her life in their holiday home in the west of Ireland. He didn’t exactly say the word ‘banished’ but that was the vibe I got. I was agog in the Land Rover beside him. It’s the most he’s ever talked about his family and I got the feeling some of it was a bit of a warning. He said he was only ever in his granny’s Connemara house twice as a child and it was a bit like a commune. Lots of candles and scarves and artists and bottles of wine and port. His mother grew up there but came to England for school and never really went back, which sounds a bit sad.

  ‘And what about the mum?’ Sadhbh is eager for more details.

  ‘I haven’t met her yet.’

  ‘What? Where is she? That’s a bit weird.’

  It is a bit weird. When we arrived, James asked, ‘Where’s Celine?’ which threw me completely because the only other person I’ve known to call their parents by their first names was a girl called Esther who was in college with John. She was an only child and said she smoked weed with her dad and went on clubbing holidays with her mam. I got stuck talking to her at a party once and ended up making up something about Mammy and Daddy going to Woodstock. She got really interested and I had to make my excuses and hide in the bathroom.

  ‘Do you not call her “Mum”?’ I whispered as his dad turned around to stoke the fire.

  ‘No, she never wanted that,’ he whispered back. ‘Said it made her feel old.’

  Anyway, George told James that Celine was ‘away with the gang’ and that she’d be back this afternoon. I did meet Marie the housekeeper, though, who came out of the kitchen to give James a bear hug, and I could see instantly that my time spent weeding the herbaceous borders with Daddy over the years was going to come in handy. Over her mauve skirt and high-necked silk blouse she was wearing an apron that read ‘gardeners spend all day in their beds’. It looked new. A Christmas present, no doubt. She gave me a hug too, which was a surprise. James had warned me that the Matthewses aren’t really an affectionate family – which I can sort of relate to, having never really hugged anyone until I was about nineteen. It’s just not the country way. I suppose Marie isn’t a Matthews, though.

  ‘Okay, show me more of the house,’ Sadhbh encourages and I give her another go around James’s room. ‘It’s very … floral. And frilly.’

  Sadhbh is right. James’s room is teeming with rose patterns. He swears blind he had posters when he was a teenager, but Marie likes to keep the house looking its best so she had the paint testers and the fabric samples out the second he left for university, and from the looks of things, she just had the entire room upholstered. Mammy has never touched my sacred Forever Friends wall-hangings and I know she never would. I gently asked James if his parents didn’t mind Marie doing the decorating and he just shrugged and said his mother isn’t into it and his father would barely notice. The house belonged to his father’s parents and hadn’t changed too much since they lived there. We were lying in bed last night when I asked him, and I noticed how flat and cold his voice was talking about it. I didn’t really know what to say so I just gave him a massive squeeze and gently ran my fingers through his hair until his breathing got slow and steady. I lay awake for hours after that, listening to the sounds of the big posh house and thinking about little eight-year-old James in the far-away school with no midnight feasts.

 

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