Dreams Can Come True (26 page)

Read Dreams Can Come True Online

Authors: Vivienne Dockerty

Chapter 14

“I’ve decided I’m going to treat meself to a small holiday in the not too distant future,” Maggie announced to Hannah a few weeks later. They were walking companionably along the promenade together, Hannah proudly pushing the new perambulator before her, a present from Maggie, containing her sleeping son. The air was invigorating as a strong breeze blew in from the estuary and baby Johnny wrapped up well against the elements, was benefiting from the refreshing ozone smell.

“That’s not like you to be thinking of holidays, Mother. You do surprise me, especially as Sheldon may crash about our heads without you at the helm. What’s brought this on? Whatever are you thinking of?”

It was said tongue in cheek, as Hannah had great faith in her husband’s ability to run his side of the business and from what he had told her, he, Richard and Mr. Peel’s protégé were getting on famously.

“Since Eddie became Works Manager, things seem to be going more to plan and with the Christening over I’m feeling a little at a loose end and in need of a change. It was remarkable how everyone got on so well with each other last Sunday, wasn’t it? Though I was glad that the Arlingtons declined the invitation; I would have been more on edge than I was if Alice had decided to come. I think Eddie’s Uncle Johnny must have had a word and put the Dockerty’s on their best behaviour. I was holding me breath for Madeline to start having a go again, but fer once she was quite pleasant and positively glowing when yer let her hold the babe.”

“And the children were little angels, weren’t they?” Hannah agreed. “It was a good idea of Eddie’s to ask his sister to be godmother and of course his uncle was as pleased as punch to be made godfather as well. So, where are you planning to take your short holiday, Mother? Llandudno seemed a pleasant place that time we were passing through.”

“Oh, don’t remind me. Your father said we’d go on holiday there one day, but I rather fancy booking into that big hotel in Liverpool. Do you remember when we were coming home from Ireland, some of our fellow passengers were going to stay at the Adelphi? No, you wouldn’t remember, you were too busy being sick. Oh sorry, I shouldn’t have mentioned that again.”

“Mother, that’s all in the past.” Hannah squeezed Maggie’s hand. “And I don’t know if I’ve ever thanked you enough for the support you gave me when I needed it. You could have disowned me like my father eventually did, but look at us both happily pushing little Johnny out for his constitution. I’m content with the way my life has turned out and grateful for all you’ve done.”

“Go on with yer, Hannah, yer making me feel all weepy. I should be grateful to you for giving me my beautiful grandson. Anyway, enough! Let me tell yer about this plan of mine.”

Maggie fiddled with the ties on the fur tippet she wore around her neck as she thought about what she would say. She felt nervous and a little guilty; this idea she had was so unlike her that Hannah would know straight away she was being lied to. When had Maggie Haines ever taken time off for her own good?

“I’m thinking of staying a week in luxurious splendour and I’ve heard the shops in Liverpool are equal, if not better, to our favourite department store. I can just imagine meself being cossetted and pampered and spending a lot of money on a new wardrobe of clothes. I hear that Bond Street is the place to be, according to Mrs. Peters, who’s on the Hospital Board. She was telling me of a little shop that’s just opened there. Bespoke tailoring would yer believe?”

Maggie waited, blushing, for Hannah’s pronouncement, ready to hear of the girl’s disbelief.

“Well, I have to admit that it will be pleasant to have some time alone with Eddie. Now that the nurse has gone, we can play happy families on our own.”

“Yes, I’ve been thinking along those lines meself, Hannah. It can’t be much fun fer yer both having me hanging around. No, let me finish…”

Maggie put her hand on her stepdaughter’s arm as the girl began to protest.

“Though I adore the little one, I’ve been thinking I might look around fer a country cottage. Something that we could all use for holidays or when we want to get away from it all. I was thinking perhaps in Wales or on the banks of the Mersey. I don’t know yet, it’s only a thought fer the future, but it would give yer time on yer own.”

Hannah looked thoughtful and hesitated over her next words, but things had to be said if they were being honest with each other.

“Tell me to mind my own business if you want to Mother, but do you ever think of going over to Ireland to be with Father? I know he let you down, he let us all down, but I wonder if you still have any feelings for him? I know… That’s what you’re doing, isn’t it?!” Hannah stopped walking and turned quickly to face her stepmother, her eyes wide open in surprise. “Going to meet Papa in Liverpool! You’d never leave the business behind if it wasn’t so important…”

“No, Hannah, that’s not it at all. Your father and I are finished and I am amazed that you could even be thinking of it, but I suppose now that you’re a married woman I can speak frankly to yer. You’re a bit of a romantic, perhaps seeing us living happily in our old age together, but no, that will never happen. You know the story of our early years together, how I took him back when he came home from America, but I’ll not do that again. I’ve too much pride to let that happen and, who knows, he might even have a new love in Wicklow. So he wouldn’t want me turning up and messing his life up for him.”

“But you must have loved him once, Mother,” Hannah insisted. “Before all the misery he caused you. Would it be too difficult to try again?”

“Let it rest, Hannah. Just thinking of your father aggravates me. Besides it’s too nice a day to be dwelling on him.”

Maggie stood for a moment at the bottom of the marble steps that led up to Liverpool’s grandest hotel. She had turned down the cab driver’s offer of carrying up her two heavy valises to Reception, tipping him well as he shook his head disbelievingly. Her heart was hammering as she realised the enormity of what she was doing. But this had been planned for weeks now and she was going to see it through. Why shouldn’t she and Johnny be together at last?

He had told her it was what he had wanted since he’d first met her, though she’d taken it all with a pinch of the proverbial salt. How could he have loved that raggedy, wild-looking, tattered girl?

That night when he had come back to speak to her had been a revelation for the both of them. So many years had passed since their time in Killala. Was it really the truth that Maggie was hearing from him?

“Why do you think I never married?” Johnny had asked her. “Because you were there in me mind, whatever I did. When I left you at the “Giant’s Tub” I worried for your future. I told me mother the next morning that I’d visit where you lived.”

“But yer didn’t, did yer?” Maggie had replied, quite unable to believe that the pair of them were sitting with a glass of sherry each at midnight in front of the drawing room fire. “Nor did yer want to take me back to Ireland with yer, when I met yer that day by the pier.”

“Oh, Maggie, how could I have done that? You had just married Jack. What if there had been a baby on the way?”

“I’m still married to Jack,” Maggie had said flatly. “So it doesn’t change the situation, though it does me heart good to hear that you care for me.”

“And what about you? I know you have some feeling for me. Every time we meet we’re drawn to each other. Remember that time when we danced on the bowling green?”

“Aye and remember all those hurtful things that were said at Hannah’s wedding? Not words I should hear from a man who professes to care.”

“I know, Maggie and I’m sorry. I was jealous that I wasn’t in your life and you’d changed so much from the girl I loved. You were confident, poised, none of the things I remembered about you. And with Jack as your husband, I didn’t have a chance.”

They had talked until the milk churns rattled, as the farm cart passed by on its way to the village, eager to hear of life’s journey that each of them had made.

“And here I am,” Maggie said to herself. “About to start the next stage.”

“Let me help you with your bags, Madam.”

Maggie turned to see the concierge of the building, a tall man dressed in a blue and silver uniform, gazing at her with some concern.

“Surely the cabbie didn’t leave you to carry these up on your own?” He tutted disapprovingly and began to climb up the steps to the hotel with her valises.

Maggie watched him go, suddenly unwilling to follow. Once up those steps she’d have committed herself to a man she was unsure of, even if he did have a handsome face. That was what it was, she thought. She was attracted by his looks and stature, left over dreams from her girlhood, when she imagined the man she’d marry one day. It was still there in her memory, still feeling cheated that she had been whisked away by Jack and his mother. Had there been a glimmer of hope that last night in Ireland that Johnny would come to rescue her?

What harm would it do? A few nights of passion. To feel the heat from another man’s body, when for too long she had slept alone. She was hurting no one, except perhaps herself in the future, if Johnny was playing a duplicitous game.

“Madam, are you waiting for somebody?” A voice from above broke into Maggie’s daunting fears.

She walked slowly upwards, her head tilted bravely, unsure if she could cope with the challenge that lay ahead.

“So,” said Eddie after Hannah had come down from settling their baby. “Did Maggie get away alright? What time train was she catching?”

Hannah snuggled down beside him on the big sofa that had just been delivered. They had complained that the chaise longue was uncomfortable, so Maggie had ordered this one and banished the chair to the little-used sitting room.

“Oh, don’t remind me. She was in a real snappy mood before she left. Said she was going on the eleven o’ clock, but was still here at half past. Interfering with my plans for this evening’s meal, telling Joan that she might be here for it anyway. I kept saying, “Leave it, you’ll be at the Adelphi eating from an A’ la Carte menu,” but she kept muttering, “That’s if I go.”

“I thought she was looking forward to getting away for a while. Spending some of her millions on new gowns and fripperies, or whatever you women do.”

“I just don’t know what got into her,” Hannah yawned and stretched her body beside him.

“She deserves a break from all these decisions she’s been making, especially now she’s got you overseeing the developments and from what you say, Richard seems to have got everything else in hand. But I heard her talking to herself in her bedroom while she was doing her packing, saying why on earth had she agreed to leave her beautiful view?”

“She’ll enjoy herself once she gets there. A week spent in the lap of luxury and all those shops to wander through. She’ll come back feeling pleased that she made the effort… Meantime, what about you and I making another baby together?”

Eddie drew Hannah into the circle of his arms and began to nuzzle her.

“Let’s forget Maggie for the moment and concentrate on you and me.”

Maggie anxiously paced the floor of the sitting room in the suite she had reserved for her and Captain Dockerty. It had all seemed so easy when she had written her letter to the hotel all those weeks ago: “The Captain and Mrs Dockerty would be staying in Liverpool for a short holiday and would they be so kind as to reserve them a suite?” Or something like that, she couldn’t remember her wording. This day had crept up on her so quickly and now she was waiting for her “ husband” to appear. Johnny had said his ship would tie up at the docks around five-ish and now here it was; six o’clock and there was no sign of him. How long did it take to walk from the docks to the Adelphi Hotel?

She still had on her travelling coat, round saucer hat and wrist-length gloves. They all matched in colour, a blueish grey in an attractive brushed velvet. The maid had hung her clothing in a vast wardrobe in the large bedroom adjacent to the sitting room, but on two occasions Maggie had thought of repacking them and taking flight. What was she doing there, she kept asking herself? She knew nothing about Johnny, other then he was the son of her old friend, Kathleen Dockerty. Yes, he was Eddie’s uncle, her grandchild’s godfather, but that didn’t mean she knew a lot about the man.

What had he been doing since they had parted all those years ago? Oh, she knew when he had finished running cattle across from Ireland that he had captained anybody’s vessel who would have him, that now he sailed a steamboat to Dublin every other day, but what about the man? What had he been up to? Had there been a girl in every port, as was said about sailors, or had it been true what he had said to her? She had always got in his way. Did she really believe there had been no other woman he had called his beloved, no girl he had slept with or lived with? An attractive man such as Johnny, charming and dashing, still good to look at almost fifty.

Maggie groaned at the thought of him; he was everything she had dreamed of as a young girl. But she was a married woman, wasn’t she? About to start something with another man, when Jack was only a short sail across the Irish Sea. And Johnny would expect that thing that she had disliked when she had shared a bed with her husband; the mauling, the sweating, the messing about with her private bits and the worry of finding herself expecting. She was forty now for heaven’s sake; she was too old to get in the family way.

She stopped her pacing and started for the bedroom. If she was quick it would only take her minutes to get her clothes back into the valises. They would be surprised to see her back in Selwyn Lodge, but she still had time before Hannah and Eddie retired to bed. Her breath came in little gasps as she flung open the tall doors of the wardrobe, pulling down her evening gown, her warm wrap, her two elegant walking dresses, throwing them haphazardly into her bag. Next the drawer with her underclothes in. Don’t forget your nightie and your shoes, her mind said. Finished! All she needed now was a porter and a cabbie. She’d leave a message to say she’d been called away!

Too late. A knock came at the door of the sitting room. Maggie trembled from head to foot for a moment. What was she going to tell him? He’d be angry, she’d seen him in action at Hannah’s wedding. What could he be capable of? He seemed a strong man, would he strike her for messing him around?

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