Authors: Maeve Binchy
'Look at the contract, you'll see there are contingency clauses,' Danny laughed.
'You covered your back, didn't you?' She was admiring.
'No more than you did.'
'I just insured against shoddy workmanship.'
'And I just insured against wet weather, which indeed we had,' he said.
Ria was cutting out pastry shapes at the kitchen table with the children. Brian just wanted them round, Annie liked to shape hers.
'What are they talking about?' Brian asked.
'Business,' Annie explained. 'Daddy and Rosemary are talking business.
'Why are they talking it in the kitchen? The kitchen's for playing in,' Brian said loudly.
'He's right,' said Rosemary. 'Let's take all these papers up to the beautiful room upstairs. If I had a room like that I wouldn't let it grow cold and musty like an old-fashioned parlour, I tell you that for nothing.'
Good-naturedly Danny carried the papers upstairs.
Ria stood with her hands floury and her eyes stinging. How dare Rosemary make her feel like that? In front of everybody! A woman who had let an upstairs parlour get musty. Tomorrow she would make sure that that room was never again allowed to lie idle.
'Are you okay, Mam?' Annie asked.
'Sure I am, of course.'
'Would you like to be in business too?'
For no reason Ria remembered the fortune-teller, Mrs Connor, prophesying that she would run a successful company or something. 'Not really, darling,' Ria said. 'But thanks all the same for asking.'
The next day Gertie came. She looked very tired and had black circles under her eyes.
'Don't start on at me. Please, Ria.'
'I hadn't a notion of it, we all lead our own lives.'
'Well, that's a change in the way the wind blows, I'm very glad to say.'
'Gertie, I want us both to tidy the front room, air it and polish it up properly.'
'Is anyone coming?' Gertie asked innocently.
'No,' Ria answered crisply. Gertie paused and looked at her. 'Sorry,' said Ria.
'Okay, you're kind enough not to ask me my business, I won't ask you yours.'
They worked in silence, Gertie doing the brass on the fender, Ria rubbing beeswax into the chairs. Ria put down her cloth. 'It's just I feel so useless, so wet and stupid.'
'You do?' Gertie was amazed.
'I do. We have this gorgeous room and we never sit in it.' Gertie looked at her thoughtfully. Someone had upset Ria. It wasn't her mother; Nora Johnson's stream of consciousness just washed over her all the time. It was hardly Frances Sullivan, the mother of Annie's friend Kitty; she wouldn't upset anyone. Hilary talked about nothing except the cost of this and the price of that; Ria wasn't going to get put down by her own sister. It had to be Rosemary. Gertie opened her mouth and closed it again. Ria would never hear a word against her friend; there was nothing Gertie could say that would be helpful.
'Well, don't you agree it's idiotic?' Ria asked.
Gertie spoke slowly. 'You know, compared to what I have this whole house is a palace, and everyone respects it. That would be enough for me. But on top of all that you and Danny went out and found all this beautiful furniture. And maybe you're rightGCa you should use this room more. Why not start tonight?'
'I'd be afraid the children would pull it to bits.'
'No they won't. Make it into a sort of a treat for them to come up here. Like a halfway house to bed or something. If they're beautifully behaved here they can stay up a bit longer. Do you think that might work?' Gertie's eyes were enormous in her dark haunted face.
Ria wanted to cry. 'That's a great idea,' she said briskly. 'Right, let's finish this lot in twenty minutes then we'll go downstairs and have hot currant bread.'
'Barney's coming round for a drink before dinner this evening, we'll go to my study,' Danny said.
'Why don't you go to the front room instead, I'll leave coffee for you there. Gertie and I cleaned it up today and it looks terrific. I tidied away a lot of the rubbish. The table's free for you to put your papers.'
Together they went up to examine the room. The six o'clock sunshine was slanting in through the window. There were flowers on the mantelpiece.
'It's almost as if you were psychic. This isn't an easy discussion so it's good to have it in a nice place.'
'Nothing wrong?' She was anxious.
'Not really, just the perpetual Barney McCarthy cash-flow problem. Never lasts long but it would give you ulcers while it's there.'
'Is it best if I just keep the kids downstairs out of the way?'
'That would be terrific, sweetheart.' He looked tired and strained.
Barney came at seven and left at eight.
Ria had the children tidy and ready for bed. When they heard the hall door close they came up the stairs together, all three of them, the children slightly tentative. This room wasn't part of their territory. They sat and played a game of snakes and ladders. And possibly because they were overawed by the room Annie and Brian didn't shout at each other. They played it carefully as if it were a very important game. When the children were going to bed, for once without protest, Danny hugged them both very tight.
'You make everything worth while, all of you,' he said in a slightly choked voice.
Ria said she would be up to see that they had brushed their teeth, 'Was it bad?'
'No, not bad at all. Typical Barney, must have it now. Must have everything this minute. Overextended himself yet again. He's desperate to make Number 32 a real show house, you know. It's going to be his flagship, people will take him seriously with this one. It's just that it's costing a packet.'
'So?'
'So he needed a personal guarantee, you know, putting this house up as collateral.'
'This house?'
'Yes, his own are all in the frame already.'
'And what did you say?' Ria was frightened. Barney was a gambler; they could lose everything if he went down.
'I told him we owned it jointly, that I'd ask you.' . 'Well, you'd better ring him straight away and say that I said it's fine,' she said.
'Do you mean that?'
'Listen, we wouldn't have ever had this place without him; we wouldn't have had anything without him. You should have told me earlier. Ring him on his mobile. So that he'll know we're not debating it.'
That night after they had made love Ria couldn't sleep. Suppose the cash-flow problem was serious this time. Suppose they lost their beautiful home. Danny lay beside her in an untroubled sleep. Several times she looked at his face and by the time dawn came she knew that even if they did lose the house it wouldn't matter just as long as she didn't lose Danny.
'Come on, Mam, we'll have our tea in the front room,' Ria said to her mother.
'It's far from a place like this you were reared.' Nora Johnson looked around the room which Ria had now resolved to use properly. She still smarted slightly from Rosemary's remark, yet in a way her friend had done her a favour. Danny didn't fall asleep when he sat here, he looked around him with pleasure at the treasures they had managed to gather. The children were quieter and kept their games neatly in one of the sideboard drawers rather than leaving them strewn around the place. Gertie enjoyed cleaning the place, she said it was like stepping into the cover of a magazine. Hilary went through the cost of every item of furniture and pronounced that they had made a killing.
Even Ria's mother seemed happy to sit there, although she would never admit it. She compared it to rooms in other houses where she ironed and said it was much more elegant. She wouldn't allow the dog to come into this territory and so Pliers slept glumly in a basket in the kitchen. When Rosemary called she always admired the room. She had probably forgotten her cruel words saying it had been kept like a musty front parlour that no one used. Instead she saw virtue in its high ceiling, its two tall windows, its lovely warm colours. It was a real gem, she said several times over.
Ria realised that there was great satisfaction in having lovely possessions. If you couldn't have a streamlined figure, flawless make-up and exquisite clothes, then having a perfect room was a substitute. For the first time she knew why people bought books on style and decoration and period furniture.
It was interesting however to see that Rosemary's own design plans were as different from the room she admired so much in Number 16 Tara Road as could possibly be. Number 32 had been gutted entirely and the long top-floor apartment had a wraparound roof garden with a view stretching out towards the Dublin mountains. At night it would look magnificent with all the city lights in between. The interiors were cool and spare, a lot of empty wall space, pale wooden floors, kitchen fittings that were uncluttered and minimalist.
It was about as unlike Ria's house as anyone could imagine. Ria fought to like the clean lines seen in the artist's impressions, and as the project proceeded she visited the site often and forced out words of praise for a place that seemed to her like a modern art gallery.
Danny spent a lot of time on Number 32. Sometimes, Ria felt, too much time. There were other properties out there, this was only one of them.
'I told you, if we get the right kind of tenants in here Barney's home and dry. He's into the prestige end of things not the Mickey Mouse conversion. We need a good write-up in the property pages, and Rosemary can organise that. We need a politician, a showbiz person, a sports star or something to buy up the other flats.'
'Can you pick and choose?'
'Not really, but we want the word to get about. I asked Colm to tell the nobs who come into his restaurant.'
'And has he?
'Yes, but sadly his ignoramus brother-in-law Monto Mackey is the only one who came enquiring.'
'Monto and Caroline want to live in a flat in Tara Road?'
'I didn't think he'd have the cash but he does. And cash is what he offered, you know, suitcases of it.'
'No!' Ria was astounded. Colm's beautiful but withdrawn sister was married to an unattractive car dealer, a large florid man interested more in going to race meetings than in his wife or his business. He seemed the last kind of person to buy a property like this.
'Barney was delighted, of course, always a man for the suitcase of money, but I convinced him to watch it, that it was quality we wanted here, not dross like Monto Mackey.'
'And did he listen? Are things all right with him these days?' Ria never actually said aloud that she was anxious about the guarantee they had given to Barney, but it was always there.
'Don't worry, sweetheart, the bailiffs aren't at the door. Barney's fine, just has to be steered away from quick money without the small annoyance of tax.' Danny seemed amused and quite unimpressed by his boss. They had a very relaxed relationship.
When Rosemary spoke in front of Barney about getting some garden furniture he offered an introduction to a friend. 'No need to trouble the VAT man at all, pay cash and everyone's happy,' Barney had said.
'Not everyone.' Rosemary had been cool. 'Not the government, not the people who have to pay VAT, not my accountant.'
'Oh pardon me,' Barney had said. But nobody had been embarrassed. You met all sorts in this world. That's what business was about.
'Is Lady Ryan having a housewarming party? She might like me to take the coats for her.' Nora wanted to know every last detail of it all.
'Don't stir up trouble, Holly.' Danny was affectionate to his mother-in-law. 'You only call her Lady Ryan to get a rise out of Ria. No, I didn't hear of any party. She didn't say anything to you, did she, sweetheart?'
'She's going to wait until she has a proper roof garden apparently,' Ria explained. 'She says the place will look nothing until she has lighting and tubs of this and trellises of that. She's such a perfectionist.'
'How long will that take her? It took me three years to get anything to grow in my place,' Nora Johnson said.
'Oh Holly, we're just not in Rosemary Ryan's world. The garden will be ready in three weeks, that's part of the schedule.'
'It can't be,' Nora gasped.
'Yes it can if you hire good nurseries and have everything in containers.'
'I wonder could I clean for Rosemary do you think?' Gertie asked Ria.
'Gertie, you run a business, you haven't time to go out cleaning for people. You don't have to either.'
'I do.' Gertie was short.
'But who's looking after the launderette?'
'I told you it looks after itself; your mother's dog Pliers could run it. I have kids in there doing it for me, I make much more per hour cleaning than I pay them.'
'That's ludicrous.'
'Has she got anyone already to clean?'
'Ask her, Gertie.'
'No, Ria, you ask her for me, will you? As a friend?' said Gertie.
'Of course I won't have Gertie cleaning for me. She should be managing that run-down washeteria of hers for a start, and minding her own children for another thing.'
'She'd like the hours.'