Page 77 of Firefly Summer


  ‘I beg you, Costello.’ Kerry was grabbing wildly at Jim’s coat. ‘They’re in the conservatory.’

  Jim remembered the boxes. The boxes and crates.

  ‘They’re whiskey, you madman,’ he said.

  ‘The top ones are. The others are ammunition.’

  At the pub they couldn’t understand it. Why everyone had started to run down to the river?

  At first people protested, what was it about, they were winning, the fire was beaten. When they heard what it was about they ran too, helping others, and looking over their shoulders in the panic of disbelief.

  Grace had been looking for Michael when the cry went up that everyone was to abandon the fire fighting. There was something in the hotel that was about to explode.

  She looked round wildly for Michael but there was no sign of him.

  ‘Get Grace back over the river,’ Patrick shouted to Jim Costello as he rounded others towards the footbridge.

  ‘Come on, Grace.’ Jim ran with her for a few yards, then he left her at the laurels. ‘Go on!’ he shouted as she paused.

  ‘I don’t want to be on my own . . .’

  ‘You’re not on your own, stupid. Look, there are all your friends up by the pub.’

  ‘Did Michael go without me?’ Grace’s lip trembled.

  ‘Go on, please, Grace. That’s my job, to get you over the river. Please, just go.’

  ‘And you?’

  ‘I’ll see you later on. I’ll come and look for you.’

  ‘Promise?’

  ‘I promise,’ he shouted over his shoulder and ran back to the crowd trying to hold Kerry O’Neill back from the flames.

  The boy’s face was wild.

  ‘I put it there, I have to take it out.’

  Jim Costello felt Patrick O’Neill standing beside him.

  ‘What’s in it, Kerry?’ Patrick asked.

  ‘I don’t know. Guns, ammunition of some kind.’

  ‘Of what kind?’

  ‘I don’t know, I tell you.’

  ‘Was it set to explode?’ Jim looked at Patrick with new respect.

  ‘No, Father, it wasn’t meant to be here, it was McCann’s friends.’

  ‘What were they trying to do with it?’

  ‘I was storing it for them in the tunnel until they collected it.’

  Seamus Sheehan was beside them, and Dr White.

  The sergeant spoke. ‘Is it gelignite?’

  ‘I don’t know, I tell you. How do I know what gelignite looks like?’

  ‘Were there detonators with it?’ The sergeant was quiet.

  No tempers, no lack of control, and here they were, five men standing beside a possible inferno.

  ‘What do they look like?’ Kerry was piteous now.

  ‘Were there separate containers, boxes?’

  ‘Yes. Yes, I think so.’

  ‘And you’ve put them all together. In there?’ The sergeant indicated the burning building.

  ‘Yes, I didn’t look, I didn’t have the time.’

  ‘We’d better not risk it,’ said Sergeant Sheehan, and they turned to leave.

  ‘I’ll go down the driveway to tell the fire brigade.’ Jim Costello was a quick thinker.

  ‘Get any drivers, anyone in the buses far away down the drive,’ Patrick called.

  He looked at neither his son nor the doctor, neither his hotel manager nor the local sergeant as he began to walk away towards the footbridge.

  ‘Father . . . Father, they’re in the conservatory, the fire hasn’t got there yet, we could get them out,’ Kerry cried.

  Seamus Sheehan shook his head. ‘It’s too hot, they could go any minute, flames or no flames.’

  Kerry broke away and ran towards the house.

  The sergeant made a move to run after him. Jim Costello was already halfway down the drive towards the main garages of the hotel.

  ‘Don’t die saving him, Sheehan,’ called Martin White. ‘Let him go, he put the stuff there, let him go up with it.’

  They heard the sound of the fire engines about five seconds before the explosion.

  It wasn’t as huge as they had thought it would be. But it was huge enough to blow the back out of Fernscourt, and the fire now raged so that they knew it would never stop even if the fire engines dared come near it.

  Nobody knew if there would be another explosion. To go anywhere nearer than they were would be suicide. And as it was they weren’t sure what had happened to Kerry.

  It seemed like slow motion as they watched it from the bridge. Hands to their mouths, stifling cries, and the sound of Mrs Daly’s prayers as a low drone in the background.

  Then they saw the figure of Patrick O’Neill walk slowly up the steps of Fernscourt.

  It could only have been seconds, but time stood still before he came out dragging Kerry with him.

  Kerry was walking, his face was in his hands.

  The crowd saw Martin White take off his jacket and put it around Kerry’s shoulders. They couldn’t see what had happened when the doctor took Kerry’s hands away from his face but they did see Patrick and Sergeant Sheehan turn away in pain from Kerry O’Neill’s burns.

  They had to let some of it burn itself out. It looked stark and terrifying, the Thatch Bar naked apart from a scattering of scratchy burned straw.

  Patrick had been handed a brandy of a size that nobody had ever drunk and survived. He stood in the very spot where the entrance to his hotel might have been.

  If things had been different.

  If Kate Ryan had not had her accident that day.

  If things had all been quite different.

  The son who had been sharp enough to see where the entrance to their hotel should be had not been sharp enough for anything else. He was heading into the hospital in the big town in the back of an ambulance.

  All around him Patrick heard the consolations and the encouragements. It would rise again.

  The insurance would pay for everything, wasn’t it a miracle that nobody got killed or seriously injured?

  They clutched at his arm, he even felt himself being hugged by people too full of emotion to trust themselves to speak.

  All around him he saw people finding each other, exclaiming they thought the other was lost.

  He saw Jimbo wiping big tears out of Carrie’s eyes with a green table napkin that said ‘Ryan’s Shamrock Café’.

  He saw the lawyer Slattery who had always hated him and the O’Neills taking off his coat to put it around the shivering Grace. The coat looked enormous on her and it hid her silly pink and white dress.

  Slattery had got her a cup of coffee, and was speaking to her soothingly.

  Sheila Whelan was of course beside Patrick. Knowing that he wanted to say something rather than platitudes.

  ‘My God, Sheila, look at the misery I brought to people,’ he said. ‘Look at the sheer waste and misery.’

  ‘You didn’t bring it, Patrick. It came all on its own.’

  ‘Jesus, who brought it if I didn’t bring it?’

  ‘You could say I did. I told Seamus Sheehan about the tunnel.’

  ‘What in the name of God took him in with that gang?’ Patrick asked.

  ‘Seamus heard it was because he owed them money.’ Sheila spoke gently.

  ‘Yes. I wouldn’t give it to him.’ Patrick’s heart lurched and he looked at his ruined hotel. ‘I expect he had to get it somewhere. My God, if I had known the price we’d have to pay.’

  ‘You’d have had to call a halt somewhere,’ she consoled him. ‘You couldn’t have gone on paying for everything all his life, that would have been worse than your father paying for nothing all of his.’

  ‘Oh God, how am I going to tell Rachel?’

  The sun shone down as mockery on the smouldering ruins of Ireland’s finest hotel. Its light played on the remains of what had been described as the dream of international cooperation come true.

  In groups they stood and ran it over in their minds, the causes and the possible outcom
es.

  As usual, because it was Mountfern there were as many theories as there were people speaking.

  The electricity was faulty, the chimneys had never been right. It was a cigarette, it was an attempt to assassinate some of the VIPs. It was a bottled-gas cooker, it was a bonfire to get rid of the rubbish.

  They said that he would rebuild it right away, it would open in the spring. That he would take over the Grange and put his guests there, that he would walk out tonight and never come back. And then the roof went in.

  It went with a series of cracks and groans as the timber fell and knocked down further stonework, and the shower of slates fell on top.

  There was something very final about the way it fell.

  The people of Mountfern raised a great roar as it went in. It was a startling sound. A roar went up from all the throats at the same time.

  It was neither a shout of triumph nor a great wail of regret.

  It was just a roar.

  Patrick’s eyes suddenly filled with tears. He didn’t understand these people at all.

  He saw Jack Leonard and Tom Daly, who had cheered when they had burned this house down in 1922; they had cheered as the ruins fell, Brian Doyle had told him. Today they cheered again.

  How had he thought that this was his place and these were his people? He didn’t even begin to understand why they had made that sound.

  The twins stood together. Very close.

  They weren’t exactly touching but you could hardly have put a piece of paper between them. Tommy Leonard envied them their closeness. He had nobody like that. Nobody who would always be there no matter what.

  For as long as he could remember they had been like that. Not so much this summer perhaps, but way, way back. When they were both his best friends. Before he started to love Dara. He was right beside them but he couldn’t think of anything to say that wouldn’t sound appalling. He really was getting more and more like Eddie Ryan, he thought to himself grimly. It was an awful fate.

  If he had been Kerry O’Neill he would have known the right thing to say. The word or the gesture that would have been what they needed.

  He said, ‘At least we have each other. Everything else has changed and gone, but we’ll always be together in one way or another, won’t we?’

  Dara’s eyes filled with tears.

  ‘I don’t mean love or anything, but as great friends. Won’t we?’

  Tommy looked from one to the other, anxious that there should be no misunderstanding. Anxious that he wasn’t being seen to presume.

  Dara laid her hand against his face. She didn’t even try to wipe away her tears.

  ‘I don’t know what I’d do without you, Tommy Leonard,’ she said.

  Although he could hardly believe it, Tommy knew, when he went over it again in his mind, that Dara meant it.

  Mary served, and Sheila had gone behind the bar to help her.

  Carrie, face aglow with Jimbo’s delight and pride, ran back and forth with sandwiches and soda bread that they would never be serving now to American visitors.

  Brian Doyle said he was glad that Peggy had got on her high horse and not come to the opening in the end, because a) she was highly strung and b) she might get very put out by all these weddings in the air – Jimbo Doyle’s and Jack Coyne’s, two of nature’s bachelors.

  Brian said that it would be like a sacrilege to discuss who’d get the job of building the place up again, but he wanted it known that it was a heart scald and an agony from day one and he wouldn’t wish it on his worst enemy.

  Kate sat with John in the side yard.

  There were no words between them.

  She had told him the news in the most natural way.

  John had sat with his head in his hands, bemoaning all that had happened.

  ‘I’m weary, Kate, weary and sad. There has been nothing but destruction and death since that place was begun. There’s never any hope, no beginnings.’

  ‘I’ll tell you something about new life and new hope that you’ll hardly believe,’ Kate said.

  They sat together in the yard that was filled with flowers. He held her very close, he pressed her to him.

  He would take such care of her, he would make sure that it would all be all right.

  A new life. Another person. Another Ryan.

  They called Patrick to the phone. Again. He had taken so many calls that Jim Costello had eventually monitored them, standing in Kate’s green room and dealing with whoever called.

  But this time he called Patrick. It was long distance. From New York.

  ‘Rachel, Rachel.’ His voice choked and he couldn’t speak.

  But at last he found the words. The words to tell her about the end of the dream. Then he put down the receiver and walked through the glass doors into the yard filled with flowers where Kate and John sat in a world of their own.

  They looked up at him as he stood there, a big man always filling their place, dominating their lives.

  ‘I came to tell you. I’ll be going home,’ he said.

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