— You just don’t want to get up early, said Maggie.
Jimmy Sr ignored this; he wasn’t finished.
— Sure, Jaysis, he said. — No yuppie’d be caught dead eatin’ a rasher sandwich on his way to work. Think about it.
— You could give it a try, Maggie said to both of them, but especially Bimbo.
— Hang on, said Jimmy Sr.
He wasn’t dead yet; and he wasn’t getting up at half-six in the morning.
— How far is it from Malahide to town? he asked them. — Abou’?
— Five miles, said Bimbo.
— Abou’?
— Yeah.
Jimmy Sr looked to Maggie to give her a chance; she agreed with Bimbo.
— Five miles so, said Jimmy Sr. — A bit more maybe. It’s not very far, is it now? You’re not goin’ to get hungry travellin’ five miles only. Unless you’re goin’ on your hands an’ knees.
— The airport road then, said Maggie. — That’d be better. They’d be comin’ from much further on tha’ one. Drogheda, and Dundalk — and—
— Belfast, said Bimbo.
— That’s righ’, said Maggie. — Well—?
— I’m on, said Bimbo. — Jim?
He’d no choice.
— Okay. — Just promise us one thing, he said. — If it works, don’t make us go ou’ later an’ make their fuckin’ tea for them as well.
It didn’t work. Jimmy Sr made sure it didn’t.
— Come here, he said to Bimbo.
They were on the new airport road. It was seven o’clock.
— D‘you want to do this every mornin’?
— Wha’? said Bimbo.
— Don’t start, said Jimmy Sr. — Do yeh?
— Wha’?
— Want to get up before the fuckin’ seagulls every mornin’. Do yeh?
— No.
— Righ’; park over there then.
— Where?
— There.
— Under the bridge?
— Yeah.
They stayed there on the motorway, under the flyover, for an hour and a half. They opened the hatch and all; they didn’t cheat. They made three rasher sandwiches, and Jimmy Sr ate two of them and Bimbo ate the other one, and a Twix each as well. They shouldn’t have been there but the guards never came near them. They leaned out over the hatch and watched the cars and the trucks blemming past. Then they shut the hatch and went home.
— Not a word, Jimmy Sr warned Bimbo.
— No, said Bimbo. — No.
Jimmy Sr enjoyed getting back to the fort that morning. He let Bimbo do the talking.
— Where did yis park it? she asked him.
— Just there, in Whitehall, said Bimbo. — At the church; where yeh said.
— And no one stopped at all?
— That’s righ’, said Bimbo.
— No one even slowed down, said Jimmy Sr.
— Ah well—, said Maggie.
That was all; it was grand. Maggie wasn’t pushy or a Hitler or anything; she was just a bit too fuckin’ enthusiastic.
Bimbo and his kids ate nothing except rashers for two weeks after that, and Maggie brought Wayne and Glenn and Jessica and the other two kids into Stephen’s Green in town and they fed seventeen large sliced pans to the ducks.
Bimbo and Maggie were the ones in charge; Jimmy Sr couldn’t help thinking that sometimes. Not just Maggie; the both of them.
It wasn’t that they ordered him about or anything like that — they’d want to have fuckin’ tried. It was just, he was sure they talked about business in bed every night, and he wasn’t in bed with them. There was nothing wrong with that; it was only natural, he supposed. He’d have been the same if it’d been Veronica. But sometimes he felt that they’d their minds made up, they’d the day’s tactics all worked out, before he rang their bell.
He felt a bit left out; he couldn’t help it.
When Maggie’d announced the dinners for two with wine and candles Bimbo didn’t say anything but Jimmy Sr could tell that he knew about it already. He didn’t stand beside Maggie and nod like he’d heard it all before, but he didn’t ask her any questions either: he didn’t have to. He might even have come up with the candles bit himself. It was the type of romantic shite that Bimbo always fell for.
But, again, there was nothing wrong with it; it was a good idea. It wasn’t any less of an idea just cos he hadn’t thought of it himself, or because he hadn’t been around when Maggie’d thought of it. And anyway, even if he didn’t like it, there was nothing he could do about it. He could stay downstairs and watch the telly in Bimbo’s till they were finished riding each other or whatever the two of them did when they went to bed and then go up and get in between them and have a chat for a couple of hours, but he couldn’t see them agreeing to that.
There was another day; Jimmy Sr was going to play pitch and putt, against Sinbad McCabe. It was the Hon Sec’s Prize he was playing him in, and Sinbad McCabe was the Hon Sec himself, and Jimmy Sr hated the cunt. So he really wanted to win it, to beat the bollix in his own cup. He was getting a few sandwiches into him — not rasher ones, mind you — and a bowl of soup, and psyching himself up at the same time. There were two things Jimmy Sr hated about Sinbad McCabe, two main things: the way he always waited till the Hikers was full before he filled in the results on the fixtures board, like it was the Eurovision fuckin’ Song Contest he was in charge of, and the way you could see the mark of his underpants through his trousers. There were other things as well but they were the big two. Jimmy Sr was going to look at Sinbad’s underpants lines before he took a shot; it would help him concentrate. He wouldn’t talk to him either, not a word, and he’d stand right up behind him when Sinbad was putting, as close behind as he could get without actually climbing into his trousers. He was telling Veronica and Sharon this when Bimbo came in.
— What’s keepin’ yeh? said Bimbo.
— Are yeh comin’ to watch me? said Jimmy Sr.
He wasn’t sure he wanted Bimbo along with him for this one. Bimbo was too nice to everyone. He’d be chatting away to McCabe and all Jimmy Sr’s work would be wasted.
— Wha’? said Bimbo.
He’d come down to hurry Jimmy Sr up; they were bringing the van to Dollier. Maggie and himself had looked out the window, seen all the blue in the sky, and stocked up the van. Only Jimmy Sr hadn’t been with them, so he didn’t know anything about it. They just expected him to hop. It wasn’t fair. It wasn’t right.
It upset him. He still beat Sinbad McCabe though.
Another thing he’d thought about a few times, and he couldn’t make up his mind about it, if it was important or not: Bimbo had bought the van. Jimmy Sr’d been there beside him when he did it, but Bimbo’d paid for it. He hadn’t paid much for it; he didn’t think it mattered — he wasn’t sure. He didn’t feel guilty about it. Maybe he should have given Bimbo his half of the cost of the van. He had the money now. He was welcome to it. What would happen if he did that though? Probably nothing; he didn’t know. He’d think about it, maybe talk to Veronica about it. He didn’t want to do anything that would mess everything up. At the same time, he was no one’s skivvy. Partners was the word Bimbo’d used at the very start, in the Hikers the day they’d pushed the van to Bimbo’s. Maybe it was time to remind him of that. He didn’t want to hurt Bimbo’s feelings though, or even Maggie’s. He didn’t know.
He’d think about it.
It was great knowing there’d be money there when he put his hand in his pocket; not that he’d much time to spend it. He could go up to the Hikers whenever he wanted, if he wanted to. He sometimes got the paper in the mornings and brought it into the pub and had a quiet pint by himself but it always smelt of last night and polish and the smell that old hoovers left behind them. Except on Saturdays and Sundays; they were better.