Maeve Binchy - Tara Road
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- Название:Tara Road
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Nora Johnson was soon much in demand as a babysitter, a dog walker and an ironer. She had always loved the smell of clean shirts, she said, and why not turn an interest into a little pocket money?
She seemed to know well in advance who was going to sell, who was going to build. Danny said she was invaluable. His eyes and ears on the road. He had managed to get two sales through his mother-in-law. He called her his secret weapon.
He also pretended a far greater interest in film stars than he really felt. Ria loved to watch him struggling for a name or to remember who had played opposite Grace Kelly in this film or who Lana Turner's leading man was in that one.
'You remind me very much of Audrey Hepburn, Mother-in-law,' he said once to her.
'Nonsense, Danny.' She was brisk.
'No, I mean it. You have the same shaped face, honestly, and long neck, doesn't she, Ria?'
'Well, Mam has a grand swan's neck all right. Hilary and I were always jealous of that,' Ria said.
'That's what I mean, like Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's .' Nora was pleased but she wouldn't show it. Danny Lynch was a professional charmer; he wouldn't get round her. No way would she fall for his patter. But he insisted. He showed her a picture of Audrey Hepburn with her hand under her chin. 'Go on, pose like that and I'll take a snap of you and then you'll see what I mean… Put your hand under your chin, come on, Holly…'
'What are you calling me?'
'Holly Golightly, the part Audrey plays in the film, you look just like her.' He called her Holly from that day on.
Nora Johnson who wouldn't fall for that kind of patter was totally under his spell.
Rosemary went to the bank on Friday mornings. The girls there admired her a lot. Always dressed immaculately, and it seemed as if she were wearing a different outfit each time until you looked carefully. She had three very well-cut jackets and a lot of different-coloured blouses and scarves. That's why it looked different. And she was so much on top of her business. The man who ran the print shop left everything to her. It was Rosemary Ryan who arranged the rates for deposit and the loans for new machinery. It was Rosemary who got the statement for the tax returns, and who tendered successfully for the bank calendar.
Young bank officials looked at her enviously. She was only the same age as they were and look at all the power and responsibility she had managed to get for herself. They thought she sort of mildly fancied Colm Barry, but then that couldn't be possible. Colm was the last man someone like Rosemary Ryan would go for. He had no ambition or sense of survival, even in the bank. He never kept from his boss the fact that he didn't really admire the ethics of the bank and that he went to Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. And these kinds of revelations were not the road to promotion. Rosemary would want a much higher achiever than Colm Barry, even if she did always wait until his window was empty and asked for him if he wasn't there.
Rosemary had all her documentation done before she came to the bank each weekend. As she stood in line that Friday she saw to her amazement Orla King in animated conversation with Colm Barry over the desk. Orla had what Rosemary considered cheap and obvious good looks. Too tight a top, too short a skirt, the heels on her shoes too high. Still, men didn't see anything too flashy in it; they appeared to like it. As Oria was leaving she saw Rosemary and her face lit up. 'Well now, it's a small world. I was only talking about you yesterday,' she said.
Rosemary's face was cold and disapproving but she forced her public smile. Orla must know she had been spotted in the private booth of Quentin's. 'All full of praise I hope?' she said lightly.
'Well yes, praise and puzzlement. Why such a beautiful woman like you isn't married. That was one of the strands.'
'What an extraordinary thing to talk about.' Rosemary was very cold.
Orla didn't seem to notice the tone. 'No, you're quite well known now even people who don't know you know of you. They were all interested.'
'What very empty lives they must all live,' Rosemary said.
'You know the way people go on, they didn't mean any harm.'
'Oh, I'm certain that's true, why should they?' Her voice was so disdainful that anyone but Orla would have been put off.
'Well, why is it, Rosemary?'
'Probably like you I haven't found the right person yet.' Rosemary hoped her voice wasn't as glacial as it felt from inside.
'Ah yeah but I'm just a fun girl, you're a serious woman.'
'We're both in our twenties, Orla. Hardly over the hill yet.'
'No, but this man said, and honestly he was out for your good, he wasn't putting you down or anything, he said that you'd want to be looking round soon, the millionaires will be looking for younger models, next year's models, if you don't get in there quick.' Orla laughed happily. She meant no insult. In fact, talking to someone as beautiful as Rosemary you could only assume that saying such a thing was a joke and not to be taken seriously.
But Rosemary's face remained cold. That was exactly what Danny Lynch had said to her jokingly only a few days ago at Sunday lunch in Tara Road. Rosemary hadn't minded then but she minded now. She minded very much that he was saying such things about her to Orla King over lunch the previous day.
Orla was heading off for work without a care in the world. 'Cheers, Colm, see you Tuesday night,' she called.
'I gather that you and the lovely Ms King are going out socially,' Rosemary said to Colm.
'Yes, well that's right, sort of…' He was vague.
Rosemary realised that it must be at an AA meeting. People would tell you of their own involvement but they never told you who else went to the meetings. She was glad in a way that he had not fallen immediately for the tight sweaters and the skirt stretched across the small round bottom. 'Anyway, it's a very small forest, Dublin , isn't it? We all find out about everyone else sooner or later.' She was only making conversation but she saw a wary look come across his face.
'What do you mean?' he asked.
'I only meant if we were in London or New York we'd never know half the queue in the bank, that's all.'
'Sure. By the way, I'm leaving here at the end of the month.'
'Are you, Colm? Where are they sending you?'
'I'm brave as a lion. I'm leaving the bank altogether,' he said.
'Now that is brave. Are there farewell drinks or anything?' She could have bitten off her tongue.
'No, but I'll tell you what there will be. I'm going to open a restaurant in Tara Road. And as soon as I get started I'll send you an invitation to the launch.'
'I’ll tell you what I'll do, I'll print the invites for you as a present,' she said.
'It's a done deal,' he said, and they shook hands warmly. He had a lovely smile. What a pity he was such a loser, Rosemary thought. He would have been a very restful man to have teamed up with. But a restaurant in Tara Road? He must be out of his mind. There was no catchment area there, no passing trade. As an enterprise it was doomed before it began.
Danny and Barney McCarthy were going to look at property very near Danny's old home.
'Will we all go together and take Annie to see her grandparents?' Ria suggested.
'No, love. It's not a good idea this time. I'm going to be flat out looking at places, and making notes, meeting local fellows who are all mad to make a quick killing. There's going to be nothing but meetings and more meetings in the hotel.'
'Well, you will go and see them?'
'I might, I might not. You know the way it's more hurtful to go in somewhere for five minutes than not to go at all.'
Ria didn't know. 'You could drive down a couple of hours earlier.'
'I have to go when Barney goes, sweetheart.'
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