He came in; a handsome man who resolved himself into her brother as soon as he opened his mouth to say, ‘I thought it was you!’ His voice had an American inflection that Hanna remembered from the last time they met, some time before the baby, when she and Hugh took a week in Manhattan and Dan brought them to the Met and to an exhibition by Bill Viola, and they had a fantastic time: Hugh talking stage sets with Dan — a field of sunflowers, that is what Dan wanted, a lake, an expanse, and Hugh said, ‘Put it on the vertical, turn it into the back wall.’
‘Hiya,’ she said.
They did not kiss, not in the kitchen, though they would have kissed were they up in Dublin or in any other town. Instead Dan pulled out a chair, and Hanna got up to fill the kettle again. She knew, as the water hit the crusted element, that this was the only place in the world where Dan would sit, requiring tea. In any other kitchen he would serve and smooth and tend.
‘Tea?’ she said.
‘Perfect,’ he said.
‘You right?’ said Emmet. And Dan nodded to his little brother as though they had seen each other quite recently, when the truth was, neither of them could remember the date, nor did they try.
Rosaleen, meanwhile, was smiling. Her face seemed almost translucent. She was happy to see them all. She was happy because Dan was home.
Or she was happy for no reason, Emmet thought. Her face was a kind of cartoon. It had always been like this. There was something out of kilter with his mother’s happiness, as though a light had been switched on by a passing stranger, and left to illuminate an empty room.
He wondered about her brain. Rosaleen found it hard to keep still, in her old age. She was always out in the garden, out on the road, she was always walking; rendered ecstatic by some view. She was hopped up, now, and out of the chair.
‘I could give you salad and some chicken,’ she said to Dan. ‘I have a bag of salad.’
‘Oh, no,’ said Dan.
‘They’re so easy.’
‘They are easy,’ he said. ‘But, you know, you load up with healthy groceries, I find, and they go off as soon as you reach for the ice cream. Not that this is off.’
He was beside her at the fridge door, they leaned into the interior light together and he had the bag of salad in his hand. Hanna knew it was the first bag of pre-washed salad Rosaleen had bought in her life.
‘It’s very light,’ said Rosaleen.
And Dan said, ‘You know that looks sort of perfect, I just might.’
After which there was a kerfuffle about dressing; what vinegar Rosaleen had, or did not have, and would he settle for lemon juice. Emmet, during all of this, read the paper in a stolid sort of way, but Hanna did not mind. She sat at the table with an unlit cigarette between her fingers and she could not get enough of Dan, the way he had grown into himself, and grown also into some version of a gay man that she might recognise. Her knowledge of him came from two directions and met in the human being sitting at the table, who was saying, ‘You know what I miss? Bread and jam.’ Grown up, Dan was so inevitable, and yet so unforeseen.
He sat in their father’s chair, the prodigal returned. He looked around him as though tranced by every small thing.
‘This!’ he said. He went to touch the little jug for milk and paused, his finger a millimetre away from the china. ‘I haven’t seen it in.’
‘Oh you’ll find us very,’ said Rosaleen.
‘No!’ he said.
‘Rustic,’ she said.
‘No,’ said Dan. ‘That’s what I mean. It’s perfect. It’s fine.’
‘I like to use things,’ said Rosaleen. ‘Even if nothing matches. Not any more.’
‘Absolutely,’ said Dan, thinking how much Ludo would like his mother’s table — how much Ludo would like his mother, perhaps, wondering if everything was going to be all right, after all.
Hanna saw Dan’s small smile. They all saw it. The shadow of someone else was in the room. Rosaleen looked to the window, where her reflection was forming on the pane.
‘Remember that Christmas,’ she said to Hanna, ‘you broke the Belleek?’
‘I didn’t break the Belleek,’ said Hanna.
‘The little Belleek jug,’ said Rosaleen, ‘Like a shell.’
‘It was Constance,’ said Hanna.
‘Oh,’ said Rosaleen, unconvinced. ‘Remember that little jug?’ she said to Dan. ‘It was like a shell, what do you call that glaze, what it does to the light?’
‘Lustre,’ he said. ‘Yes.’
‘It was Constance,’ said Hanna.
‘I thought it was you,’ said Rosaleen, mildly.
‘Well you were wrong.’
‘Oh it doesn’t matter,’ said Rosaleen, as though it was Hanna who had brought the subject up.
‘I Did. Not. Break. ThefuckingBelleek!’
‘You can get it all on eBay now,’ said Dan. ‘And, you know, it doesn’t price well.’
‘God, the way you went on about it,’ said Emmet. ‘Mind the Belleek!’
‘The Belleek!! The Belleek!!’ said Hanna.
‘How much is it, anyway?’ said Emmet to Dan.
‘Not much,’ said Dan.
‘We’ll get you a new one, all right, Ma?’
And Rosaleen, stilled by the word Ma, decided to say nothing, except perhaps for one last, small thing.
‘It was my father’s,’ she said.
Hanna went out to smoke her cigarette then, checking the rooms on the way through to the front door. But there wasn’t a drink to be had in the house, she knew that already, apart from the bottles of wine lined up on the sideboard in the dining room for the Christmas dinner, and those could not be breached.
Back in the kitchen Dan was still romancing their mother, feeding her anecdotes about some woman who was too wonderful to be famous.
‘She lives with just a housekeeper now, and someone to look after the dogs.’
‘And he never came back?’
‘He never came back.’
Hanna cleared some cups into the sink and signalled to Emmet, who was still stuck in the newspaper.
‘Will you walk out the road,’ she said. ‘It’s Christmas Eve.’
‘Oh right.’
‘They’ll all be below in Mackey’s.’
‘I suppose.’
And in three minutes flat they were out the door, over the humpy bridge, and passing the bright forecourt of the Statoil garage, where there was, Hanna realised, cheap wine on sale in the shop, if she needed to get some on the way home.
‘Jesus God,’ said Hanna.
The wind was against them, and flecked with rain.
‘I told her,’ she said. ‘I told her Hugh was taking the baby for the day.’
‘I told her,’ said Emmet.
‘You think she’s losing her grip?’
‘What?’ said Emmet.
‘Just.’
‘She’s sharp as a tack,’ said Emmet, because he could not countenance it.
The eaves of the houses on Curtin Street were draped with icicles that rained blue light on them as they walked beneath and the decorations continued tastefully into the main street where Christmas Eve was in full swing. It was taking your life in your hands, said Emmet, but it was more like passing your life on the road; some drunken geezer slapping you on the shoulder only to find — my God — Seán O’Brien from national school, who Emmet ran with and loved with the frank and unrepeatable love you have for another boy, when you are eight years old.
‘Seán O’Brien, how are you?’
‘Emmet, you langer.’
His eyes as blue and ironic as ever, in a scalded, red face.
Hanna, meanwhile, crouched low and flung her arms out, as a woman stumbled towards her — on to her, indeed — wearing gold sandals on bare feet, a golden cardigan, her hair gold blonde and leaping, fountaining, out of her head.