Divided Loyalties (43 page)

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Authors: Patricia Scanlan

BOOK: Divided Loyalties
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‘A couple of months,’ Carrie said sourly. Raging. They’d been having fun, in a rare light-hearted family gathering, for the first time in years and now the Freeloaders had
invaded
yet
again. Shauna was going to have to do something about them, otherwise they’d be dropping in morning, noon and night. She’d noticed Della taking it all in.
She’d known her long enough now to guess that the other woman was planning on spending a lot of time in Whiteshells Bay. Shauna was just going to have to put her foot down once and for all.
And that wouldn’t be easy with a selfish and manipulative woman like Della. The fact that she was Greg’s sister made it much more difficult.

‘And how many does your mobile sleep, Shauna?’ Della strolled into the lounge area and gazed round.

‘Six,’ Shauna said shortly.

‘Four beds, then, for guests, when you and Chloe are here by yourselves. We must come and stay a night or two,’ Della challenged.

‘That would be nice,’ Noel contributed cheerfully. ‘It’s good for families to spend time together.’


Exactly
,’ Della agreed from inside the mobile. Shauna could have throttled him. Who was he to talk about what was good for families? For years he’d made his own
family’s lives miserable, she thought with a surge of the old, familiar resentment.

Della opened press doors and poked around the neat fitted kitchen before wandering into the bedrooms and bathroom. Carrie and Shauna stared at each other in silent dismay. Kathryn was pulling
Chloe’s dolls out of the toy press in the sitting room and Ashley was throwing twigs onto the barbecue until Bobby got him by the scruff of the neck and dumped him over the veranda rail onto
the grass, much to his outrage.

‘It’s fabulous.’ Della emerged onto the veranda moments later. ‘It’s really modern. How much did it cost?’ she asked bluntly.

Shauna ignored the question and took the plate of food Bobby proffered. She’d completely lost her appetite.

‘I’m starving,’ whined Kathryn, coming out onto the veranda with two of Chloe’s dolls. ‘Can I have something to eat?’

‘Mom, she’s got my dolls and she never asked me,’ Chloe protested.

‘Now don’t be mean. It’s good to share, Chloe,’ Della intervened briskly. ‘Isn’t that right, Shauna?’

Shauna wanted to slap her. How could she not agree that sharing was good without seeming churlish? But she wanted to stand up for her daughter too. Della had her backed into a corner and she
knew it. She could see the triumphant glint in her sister-in-law’s eye. Chloe looked at her anxiously.

‘It’s good to share but it’s manners to ask first, Kathryn. It’s rude to go through people’s cupboards,’ she retorted. ‘Isn’t that right,
Della?’ She knew she was being childish but she didn’t care.
Ha!
she thought, as Della’s lips tightened in annoyance.

‘Want some, want some.’ Ashley interrupted the tit-for-tatting as he tried to grab the Ribena drink Chloe was sipping.

‘Stop that, Ashley,’ Carrie ordered.

‘Won’t! Want some.’ The little boy stamped his foot.

‘Any spare grub there, Bobby?’ Eddie queried.

‘’Fraid not. If you want to go to the supermarket and get a few burgers and sausages I’ll toss them on the barbecue for you,’ Bobby offered grudgingly.
‘Didn’t know you were coming.’

Well done, Bobby
, Shauna thought approvingly. She tried to take some control of the situation.

‘Della, why don’t you go for a walk on the beach? We’ll be finished here in an hour and I’ll make a nice cup of tea for you when you come back.’

Della’s eyes narrowed. ‘I don’t feel like a walk at the moment. We’ll just sit here and relax. Do you have any more chairs?’

‘No. I’ll get a rug and you can spread it on the grass, if you like,’ Carrie said shortly.

‘Grand.’ Della was defiant.

‘I’ll go and get it.’ Carrie put her plate on the table and stalked off the veranda to go up to the office and get a rug.

‘What are you eating?’ Kathryn asked Chloe.

‘Ribs,’ Chloe declared, chomping on a spare rib with gusto.

‘Can I have a bite?’ her cousin asked hope-fully.

Chloe looked at Shauna, uncertain.

‘Here, have one of mine.’ Bobby stepped in and slapped a rib on a plate and handed it to the little girl.

‘Yummy,’ Kathryn said triumphantly.

‘Want some,’ screeched Ashley.

‘Give your brother a bite,’ Bobby ordered.

‘Give me a bite too,’ Eddie demanded.

Shauna couldn’t believe her ears.

‘Have one of mine,’ Noel offered kindly. ‘I’ve more than enough food here.’

‘Ta.’ Eddie didn’t need to be asked twice.

‘I’ll have a bit of the salad there, that will keep me going,’ Della piped up. ‘Pass me over a plate, Bobby.’

Bobby handed her a plate, gobsmacked. And watched as she helped herself to a large portion of Caesar salad and some tomatoes in basil.

‘Is that potato going a-begging?’ Eddie motioned to a baked potato wrapped in tinfoil.

‘That’s Carrie’s,’ Shauna snapped.

‘Ah I’m sure she won’t mind giving me a chunk of it.’ Eddie stood up and cut the potato in half, helped himself to a spare plate and ladled on some coleslaw.

‘Eating outside just adds to the flavour, doesn’t it?’ Della remarked airily, leaning across Eddie and helping herself to a portion of feta cheese and olives.

‘Indeed it does,’ Noel agreed. ‘I’ve never eaten at a barbecue before. It’s very, very tasty. Thank you for doing the cooking, Bobby,’ he said to his son.
‘You should have been a chef.’

‘No thanks, Dad, I think the hotel chef is the most stressed man in the building.’ Bobby shook his head.

By the time Carrie got back with the rug, Della, Eddie, Kathryn and Ashley were eating all round them, Della sitting in the chair Carrie had vacated, Eddie seated in Shauna’s.

‘Mam, I’ll sit on the rug,’ Davey offered, as Carrie shook it out.

‘Good idea. You kids go and sit on the rug and let us grown-ups have the chairs,’ Della approved. ‘Let Shauna sit on your chair, Olivia, and go down on the rug,’ she
added bossily.

Olivia threw her a filthy look and sat where she was.

‘Stay where you are, Olivia, I’ll sit on the step.’ Shauna hunkered down on the step of the veranda and Chloe came and sat beside her. Carrie sat in Davey’s chair.

‘So, tell us all the news,’ Della said gaily. ‘How’s Greg? When’s he coming home? When can I collect my silk?’ She settled back, ready to be entertained.

Shauna could hardly eat she was so angry. ‘He’s fine, he’ll be home in August,’ she muttered, thoroughly pissed off. Couldn’t Della see how unwelcome she was? The
only one of the family who was being any way nice to her was Noel. How could she sit there, brazen-faced, pretending everything was hunky-dory? What did it take? Did Shauna have to stand up and
tell her bluntly to get lost? Was that what it was going to take to get some respite from the in-laws from hell? They made Shauna feel so
helpless
. It was infuriating.

It was many hours later before the Keegans finally left. Carrie had eventually excused herself and gone back to the office. Noel had been quite happy to sit and chat to Della. Eddie had snored
his head off; the children had gone up to the playground accompanied by Shauna, who had slipped her paperback into her bag. She was damned if she was going to sit entertaining Della for the
afternoon.

‘How will we get rid of them? Can you believe how cheeky they are?’ Carrie asked irritably as she joined her sister on the bench at the side of the playground.

‘Could we say we were going over to Sadie’s for tea?’ Shauna suggested.

‘I could give her a ring and tell her what’s going on,’ Carrie agreed.

‘Don’t. There’s no point. Della would probably say they’d come too. Or else she’ll tell us to go and they’ll stay at the mobile. And when we get back
she’ll have Ashley in bed or something and tell us that they’re all staying the night,’ Shauna said despondently.

‘True. Nix that.’ Carrie gave a sigh that came from her toes.

Shauna chewed her lip. ‘This is the pits, Carrie. She’s never going to leave us alone now. I can see her plotting and planning already. Did you hear her going on about the four beds
for guests? She’ll be down for weekends and then, when the kids are off school in July, she’ll be here for a week at least. It’s not fucking fair.’

‘You’ll just have to have it out with her. Lay down your boundaries, Shauna, and nip it in the bud now or you’ll be stuck with her.
Don’t
let her ruin your
summer,’ Carrie warned.

‘I know, I know,’ Shauna groaned. The phone in the office rang.

‘I’d better go and answer that. I’ll come down with you in a little while and we’ll see if we can put the skids under them.’ Carrie stood up to go.

‘Thanks,’ Shauna said distractedly, picking up her book. It was pointless trying to read. She could feel her tension levels rising. She saw Ashley pulling Chloe off the swing. She
jumped up. ‘Ashley Keegan, you stop that right now or I’ll send you back to your mother,’ she warned. Ashley stuck his tongue out at her. ‘You little brat. Go down to your
mother this minute,’ she ordered.

‘Will not.’ He ran round to the slide.

‘He never does what he’s told,’ Kathryn informed Shauna matter-of-factly.

‘Well, you go down and tell your mother that he’s being a very bold boy,’ Shauna clipped.

‘Do I have to?’ her niece pouted.

‘Yes, this minute.’ Shauna felt she was losing control of the situation fast. What would she do if Kathryn refused? She could hardly manhandle the pair of them off the play area.

‘OK,’ the young girl said sulkily. She marched off in high dudgeon. Shauna waited for Della to appear . . . and waited.

Kathryn arrived back. Eventually. ‘She’ll be up in a minute,’ she said. ‘And she wants to know if I can have a pair of Chloe’s togs to go swimming in? Except
she’ll have to tie the straps in a knot ’cos Chloe’s so fat and I’m not,’ Kathryn said artlessly.

Chloe burst into tears. ‘I’m not fat. Sure I’m not, Mom.’

‘No, darling, you’re not.’ Shauna was horrified as she hugged her daughter. ‘That’s a very unkind thing to say, Kathryn.’

‘Well that’s what Mommy said.’ Kathryn shrugged.

I’ll swing for that bitch
, Shauna swore silently as she dried her daughter’s tears. Kathryn was a skinny little stick because she wasn’t half fed. She and Chloe were
completely different builds. She felt a frisson of inadequacy. If Chloe
was
a little chunky it was her fault for letting Filomena take her to the Pizza Hut so often. She was going to have
to start watching what Chloe ate and take more of an interest in her nutrition, she acknowledged guiltily. This only deepened her resentment of Della and co. Carrie was right. She was going to have
to put her foot down or else the summer was going to be ruined.

Bobby slipped home after the lunch on the pretext of collecting his iPod. He phoned Anton and acted out the whole scenario over the phone, much to his partner’s
amusement.

‘They can’t be that bad.’ He chuckled.

‘They are and worse. The Simpsons aren’t even in the race when the Keegans are around,’ Bobby assured him.

‘Poor Shauna,’ Anton murmured. ‘She’s never going to get rid of them.’

‘I know. It’s a real problem.’

‘How’s it going otherwise?’

‘Not bad at all, surprisingly,’ Bobby informed him. ‘The few days went very fast. Dad’s making a big effort. I think he likes it that I’m cooking for him and
fussing over him and cleaning the house. I whitewashed the yard this morning. He’s content to sit and read his paper and potter in his glasshouse. I suppose it’s lonely for him living
on his own. He seems to like it that I’m around. How’s your mum?’

‘Coming on well but in a lot of pain. Dad’s really missing her. Just as well I stayed. He’s not great at looking after himself.’ Anton sighed. ‘Something else we
have in common, elderly parents.’

‘Yeah. I guess we just have to muddle along and do the best we can for them. I’m glad I came home. All in all it’s been a good trip, but I’m longing to see you,’
Bobby confessed.

‘Me, too,’ Anton assured him. ‘I’ll have a meal ready for you when you get home.’

‘Great. Any chance of your beef stir-fry with noodles?’ Bobby asked hopefully.

‘If beef stir-fry with noodles is what your little heart desires, that’s what you’ll have,’ Anton assured him. ‘Now go and rescue your sisters.’

‘I suppose I’d better,’ Bobby agreed. ‘That lot are heading for trouble, though. I think this time they’ve pushed Shauna too far,’ he predicted cheerfully.
‘I’d like to be there when they get their comeuppance.’

‘It would be nice to stay the night,’ Della remarked casually as the sun began to set behind them in the west and the sea turned from blue grey to pearly.

‘Not tonight, if you don’t mind, Della,’ Shauna said curtly. ‘It’s Bobby’s last night and we wanted to spend time together as a family. It’s a long time
since he’s been home.’

‘But we
are
family.’ Della was not to be put off.

‘Not tonight. The kids have planned a sleepover and there won’t be enough room.’ Shauna was adamant and her face was like thunder. Even Della knew she’d pushed too
far.

‘OK, some other time then,’ she said sulkily.

‘Actually, Della, would you mind heading off now? I’d like to start getting Chloe to bed and she won’t go when her cousins are here. It’s long past her bedtime.’
Shauna stood up briskly and began to clear away teacups and saucers.

‘Good thinking, Shauna. I’d want to get my lot ready for bed too. Hannah’s wall falling. She’ll be like a bag of cats tomorrow if I don’t put her to bed
soon.’ Carrie jumped up to help her.

Della made no move to go. Carrie eyeballed her. ‘I’ll call the kids so you can get them ready,’ she said firmly. She marched off the veranda and headed for the playground,
fuming. That woman wouldn’t even take a blatant hint. She was the absolute pits.

‘Ashley, Kathryn, it’s time to go. Say goodbye to your cousins,’ she instructed crisply from the edge of the playground. ‘And you guys,’ she turned to the others,
‘come on down to Shauna’s and get into your pyjamas. It’s getting late.’

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