Tears of the Moon (36 page)

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Authors: Nora Roberts

BOOK: Tears of the Moon
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“Oh.” Her initial disappointment in not taking a call from New York vanished in a fresh thrill. “Are you calling from an airplane, then?”

“That's right.”

She wanted to shout for her mother to come quick, but thought it would sound just a little too countrified. “It's kind of you to take time out of your busy schedule.”

“I always make time for what interests me.”

He sounded like he meant it and that the reverse was entirely true as well. “Then perhaps you've had time to look at the package Aidan Gallagher sent you.”

“A good look. You and your father are quite a team.”

Because her hand was throbbing, she pulled some ice out of the freezer. “We are. And I have to add, Mr. Magee, I know Ardmore and what suits it.”

“I can't argue with that, Miss O'Toole.”

She thought she caught a hint of amusement in his tone and braced herself. “Perhaps you could tell me what your thoughts are on my design, then?”

“It interests me. I have to look at it more thoroughly, but it interests me. Gallagher didn't mention where you had studied design.”

She narrowed her eyes, then decided if it was a trap it was best to fall into it now as opposed to later. “On the job, sir. My father has worked in the trade all his life, and I learned at his side. I would imagine you had some of the same sort of experience with your own father.”

“You could say that.”

“Then you know a lot can be learned by the doing of things. Between the two of us, my father and I, we handle most of the building and repairing in Old Parish. And if we don't, we know who does. As that, we'd be some considerable help to you with your project. You'll find no better than the O'Tooles in Old Parish—or all of Waterford, for that matter. You're planning to build in Ardmore, Mr. Magee, and it's good business, I'm sure you'll agree, to use local skill and labor when you're able. We'll be happy to send you references.”

“And I'll be happy to see them. You build a strong case, Miss O'Toole.”

“I can assure you I build better with wood and brick than with words.”

“I'll see that for myself, as I'm hoping to carve out a day or two to visit the site personally before too much longer.”

“If you let us know the particulars, my father and I will be happy to meet you at your convenience.”

“I'll be in touch.”

“Ah . . . I don't mean to worry you, Mr. Magee, but I'm wondering if you had a moment to look at the music I sent along to you.”

“Yes, I did. I'm not sure I understand. Are you representing Shawn Gallagher?”

“No, I'm not, no. It's . . . a bit complicated.”

“Then he doesn't have representation?”

“Ah, no. Not at the present time.” How the devil did this sort of thing work? “You could say I'm acting on his behalf in this particular instance on a personal level.”

“Hmm.”

She winced, thinking there was entirely too much knowledge in that small and casual sound. “Would you mind telling me what you thought of it yourself?”

“Enough to buy it if Gallagher's selling, and to want a chance to negotiate for his other work. I assume he has other work.”

“He does, yes. Scads of it.” She forgot her throbbing hand, dropped her ice in the sink. While her feet danced, she fought to keep her voice cool and professional. “You're saying you'd buy the tune. But for what purpose would that be?”

“For the purpose of recording, eventually.”

“But I was under the impression that you build things.”

“One of the things I've built is a record company. Celtic Records.” He paused, and sounded amused when he spoke again. “Do you want references, Miss O'Toole?”

“Well, now, could I be getting back to you on that? I'll need to discuss this with Shawn.”

“Of course. My New York office knows how to reach me.”

“Thank you for your time and consideration, Mr. Magee. I hope to meet you in person before much longer. I . . .” She simply ran out of words. “Thank you.”

The minute she hung up the phone she let out a shout of triumph, then raced through the house to the front door. “Ma, I've got to go! I'll be back when I can.”

“Go?” Mollie dashed out of the back bedroom to the top of the stairs in time to see her daughter's lorry bullet into the road. “That girl. If it's not the first thing it's the second. Go where, I'd like to know, and is my roof finished or isn't it? I'll give her both sides of my tongue if I have to listen to water plopping into buckets one more night.”

Before she could go back to work, she saw Shawn's car pull in. “All this coming and going around here,” she muttered and started down the steps. “It's making my head spin.”

She pushed open the door and waited while Shawn made his way to her. “Good morning to you, Shawn. I'm afraid you've just missed Brenna. She went tearing out of here not a minute ago like her trousers were afire.”

“Ah, well.” He cleared his throat. “I wasn't actually coming by to see Brenna.”

“Weren't you now?” She gave him a considering look, but knew better than to wait for him to explain himself. That, she knew from experience, could take half the day, and she'd as soon be sitting down for part of it. “Well, then, I'm all that's left. Come inside, why don't you, and we'll have a cup.”

“I'd be grateful.” He ducked inside behind her and trailed her into the kitchen. “I don't want to take much of your time.”

“Lad, you've been in and out of this house since you could toddle. No one's ever booted you out the door before, and I'm not after starting now.” She waved a hand toward the table and went about the business of making tea. “Brenna's a heart and mind of her own. As I'm sure you know.”

“That I do. I thought I should come 'round to see if . . . to make certain you . . .”

She had to take pity on him. “Are you afraid I don't love you anymore, my handsome lad?” The worry in his eyes faded away as she reached over and scrubbed a hand over his hair, as she'd done as long as he could remember. “There's no danger of that changing. Now if you'd taken up with my Katie, I'd have boxed your ears to the back of your head.”

“I never meant to give Mary Kate any . . .”

“ ‘ncouragement' might be the word you're after. Your tongue's tied today, boy, and that's not the usual case, for you've a slick one. Here now, I've a cinnamon bun left from breakfast. I'll warm it for you and you'll tell me what's the matter.”

“You make me miss my mother, Mrs. O'Toole.”

“I'll stand in her stead, as she would in mine.” She bustled around the kitchen, knowing it would put him at ease. “Is Brenna giving you headaches, then?”

“I'm used to that—I don't mind it so much. I think I give them back to her in fair measure. I, ah, I'm thinking Mr. O'Toole told you of our discussion a couple weeks back.”

She sent him a look designed to wither a man. “If you're meaning on the day he came home drunk, that he didn't. I gathered well enough he'd got the whiskey from you, as he hasn't a world of choices where he could walk off, drink his belly full, and walk back again in so short a time.”

“He didn't speak to you of it.”

“Closed up like a clam.”

“Well, you see, he was angry, and rightfully so, until I told him how things were.”

“And how are things, Shawn?” Mollie set down the pot, waited.

“I'm in love with Brenna, Mrs. O'Toole, and I want to marry her.”

She stood still a moment, then laid her cheek on top of his head. “Of course you are, and of course you do. Don't mind me. I've got to sniffle a bit.”

“I'll be good to her.”

“Oh, there's no doubt in my mind of that.” Dabbing at her eyes, she turned to get out the warmed bun. “You'll be good for her, too, and she for you.”

“The other part of it is, I've been working her around, so to speak, so she'd come to the idea herself. You know how she is when she's got her teeth into a notion.”

“Clamps down until she gets what she's after or it isn't worth having anymore. I always said you were a bright lad, Shawn.”

“Thousands wouldn't,” he said easily. “I thought I could wait, you see. I'm not one who needs to hurry as a rule. But it seems I can't wait for this. I bought land today.”

She wasn't half as surprised as he thought she was, and nearly twice as pleased. “Goodness, boy, you can move fast enough when you've a mind to.”

“She'll have her house as she wants it. I'm not fussy about such matters.”

Mollie opened her mouth, closed it again. Men, she knew very well, always said such things and believed them as well. Then they drove a woman to distraction picking at the details. But that was for Shawn and Brenna to find out for themselves. “She's always had a mind to build her own,” she said at length.

“I know it, and why shouldn't she? She's a talent for such things, and a liking for the work. Myself, I've no driving urge to pick up a hammer or saw. But I make a good living, and I'll have a better one yet when the theater goes in. There won't be a worry about putting a roof overhead, or keeping one there.”

“Shawn, are you asking for my permission to ask Brenna to marry you?”

“For your blessing. It matters to me as much as it will to her.”

“I'll give you my blessing.” She took his hands in hers. “And for all I love her, my sympathy as well. She'll run you ragged.”
“I need a favor.” Brenna burst into the pub through the back just as Aidan was taking the chairs down. Timing was everything here, she thought as she fought to catch her breath. Shawn would be coming in any minute.

“Well, now, you look full of surprise and secrets.” He tucked a chair under a table. “What's the favor?”

“First off, I can't tell you the secret.” Automatically she began to tip down chairs herself. “I have to ask you to do the favor blind.”

He got a good look at her then—the flushed face, the wildly glowing eyes, the foolish smile. He recalled a very similar look on his wife's face at a certain moment. “Oh, Lord, Brenna, never say you're breeding.”

“Breeding?” The chair nearly slipped out of her hands. “No, no!” And though she laughed it off, she found it interesting to discover she wouldn't have minded it. “It's nothing like that. Aidan, is there any way you could arrange for Shawn to have the evening off?”

“The whole of it?”

She heard the pain in his tone, sympathized. “I know it's a lot to be asking, and at the last instant as well. But it's important. I'll work this weekend for no pay to make up for it. I'll go down and talk to Mrs. Duffy myself to see that she'll fill in.”

“Why the devil doesn't Shawn ask for time himself instead of sending you in to look at me with those big eyes?”

“He doesn't know.” She moved closer, running a hand down his arm. “Another part of the favor is that you don't tell him I asked. Could you just send him home somehow at the beginning of shift?”

“He'll certainly wonder why, won't he?”

“I haven't had time to think it all out.” She whirled away, paced, but couldn't clear her head. “Oh, you'll think of something, Aidan. Please.”

“It's a matter of the heart, I suppose. And you're using mine against my good business sense.” He let out a windy sigh. “I'll work it out for you.”

“Oh, you're the best and the finest.” She leaped into his arms to plant a hard, noisy kiss on his mouth.

“Look at this, will you? If she's not after one brother she's after another.” With a lazy yawn, Darcy sauntered in. “That's a married man, I'll have you know, you sneaky slut.”

“I've got one for you as well.” Before Darcy could evade, Brenna rushed over and gave her the same treatment.

“Sweet Mary, now she's after the girls, too.” But Darcy's sleepy chuckle faded away. She gripped Brenna's arms. “Brenna, are you pregnant?”

“Oh, for heaven's sake. No. Can't a body be happy without a baby in the belly? I've got to go, he'll be coming in. You don't tell him I was here. Please. I'm grabbing a bottle of the French bubbly you keep in the back. Put it on my account, would you?”

She dashed out the way she'd dashed in and left Darcy rubbing her mouth. “And what was all that about?”

“I haven't a clue. But she's something up her sleeve, and Shawn's not to know.”

“Secrets. I could get it out of her in five minutes.”

“No doubt you could,” Aidan agreed. “But let's let her have her surprise.”

“I've already had mine.” Darcy went behind the bar for her change apron. “She's in love with him.”

“Does that trouble you?”

“No, but for the fact that the Gallaghers are tumbling like ripe fruit from a tree.”

Aidan moved behind the bar with her to check the till. “Afraid it's catching, darling?”

“I would be, was I not immune to such weaknesses.” She heard the back door open again. “And speaking of clueless, there's himself now.” Filled with affection and sentiment, Darcy headed for the kitchen to torment her brother.

“What do you mean I can go?” Up to his elbows in potatoes, Shawn turned his head to stare at Aidan. “Go where?”

“On your way. Kathy Duffy'll be right along.”

“Well . . . why?”

“To cover for you.” Aidan had thought of a way, and saw no reason not to have a little fun at his brother's expense while he was about it. “You have the evening off as you asked. Though it's damned inconvenient.”

Shawn shoved peelings into the garbage. “I never asked for the evening off.”

“Well, it must've been your evil twin, then, or I've just had a brainstorm.” Fixing a scowl on his face, Aidan pulled open the refrigerator and plucked out a bottle of water. “I told you two days past when you asked that I'd work it out.”

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