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Authors: Sara Seale

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CHAPTER FOUR
TEE
N

CLODAGH came for the funeral, with Conn and her parents, and in the evening they all sat on the terrace, unfamiliar and ill at ease in their black clothes, listening to Aunt Kate discuss the future with her sister. Kevin, they found, had altered his will after his first heart attack and left three hundred a year in trust for Clancy instead of the original hundred and fifty she was to have had. Other bequests remained the same except that Mark received five hundred pounds for his services, which Aunt Kate openly considered to be both generous and unnecessa
r
y. She was ruffled because her husband and her sister had been appointed joint guardians to the children and expressed her willingness to arrange their lives for them in no uncertain measures.


Nothing will change, Kate,

Aunt Bea said mildly.

You will, of course, be welcome here if you wish to come and stay, and the children may certainly visit you, but we shall carry on here at
Kilmallin
just as we have always done. Brian will be going to school in the autumn, a
n
d Clancy and I will just live here quietly and look after the place for
Brian
until he is old enough to take over his inheritance himself.


Nonsense
!
Now why don

t you—

she turned to Mark,

—give up this ridiculous notion of going back to England, and take on the running of Kilmallin? The trustees would pay you well for it.

Mark looked surprised.


I

ve no qualifications for such a job, Mrs. D
es
mond,

he replied, reflecting that had such an offer come earlier he might have been tempted to accept it.


Nonsense!

said Aunt Kate again.

She began to enlarge on her idea, ignoring her quiet little husband and extracting a pleased but bewildered agreement from her sister. Mark was aware that Clancy was looking at him hungrily, silently begging him to stay, but she did not add to her aunt

s persuasions, and when Mark said he was sorry but such a consideration was impossible, she got up quietly and went into the house.

It was with relief that they all watched the departure of the Desmonds for Dublin the next day. Aunt Kate had proved a difficult and exacting guest and Mark could understand why she and her brother had never got on. Conn and Clodagh were to stay for a few days longer, and Mark suggested that they should take a picnic to Kinross Sands and leave Aunt Bea to answer her letters of condolence in peace.

It was strange, he thought, watching their preparations, strange and a little sad that no one really mourned for Kevin. Only to his daughter had he ever meant very much, and even she now accepted his lack of need for her and her grief was for the father she had never had rather than for Kevin himself.

They discussed him freely, lying on the sands after their bathe, his habits and his weaknesses, and the changes his death might bring to them. Only Clancy, sitting a little apart from them, her back against a rock, took little part in the conversation, and when Clodagh said:

Now, Clancy, you

ll be able to have a horse—you can even buy it yourself out of your income,

she replied sedately:

I don

t think I any longer want a horse.


What will you do with your money?

Clodagh rolled over on her side to look at her cousin.


Nothing. There

s nothing to spend it on here.


But you don

t have to stop here. You could travel and have fun.


Kilmallin told Aunt Bea he was leaving Clancy money so that she wouldn

t be a burden to her husband,

Brian said, scooping a hole in the sand and filling it with shells.


What husband?

demanded
Clodagh
.

Had Kilmallin fixed one up? What a scream! Can you see Clancy with a husband, Conn?

Conn looked at Clancy leaning against the rock, the wind blowing her black hair gently back from her forehead.


Yes,

he said with faint surprise,

I thin
k
I can. You

ve changed, Clancy.


Have I? In what way?


I don

t know. I think you

ve grown up. She has changed, hasn

t she, Mark?


Not really,

said Mark with a smile.

But now you

ve been away from her, you see her, perhaps, with different eyes.


Well,

said Clodagh, observing with interest the way in which Mark was looking at her cousin,

clothes certainly make a difference to anyone, and that new bathing suit is a decided improvement on last year

s awful old striped thing. You

ve got a very nice figure now, Clancy, hasn

t she, Mark?

Clancy went a little pink.


Oh, shut up!

she exclaimed, and stretched herself out on the sand, shaking the hair over her face.

Mark observed them all with lazy interest. Conn and Clodagh, although they had been married three months, were still like a couple of children, bickering find making outrageous statements. At twenty-three, he reflected, they were far less adult than Clancy, and had little of her sensibility.


Why don

t you adopt my mamma

s proposal and stop on at Kilmallin?

asked Clodagh curiously.

You used to say you wanted a change of job when you first came here.


I also said at a later time that I wasn

t sure if one ought to deny one

s calling,

he retorted.


Oh, that

s all nonsense,

she said, sounding very like her mother.

Conn changed his job and he doesn

t regret it, do you, darling?


Not yet,

said Conn with a grin, and she threw a piece of seaweed at him.


Do you really feel teaching is your calling, then?


I think so. It

s the thing I do best.


Staying here would be much easier.


Yes, it probably would, but at the risk of sounding pompous, I must remind you that the easiest way is not always the right one.

She made a face.


Oh dear! You do sound schoolmasterish! Have you asked him to stay, Clancy?


No.

Clancy

s voice was muffled under her hair.


Why not? I thought you liked him now.

Clancy rolled over on to her back and stared up at the sky.


If Mark wanted to stay he would,

she said.

I wouldn

t want to persuade anyone to go against their conscience.

Clodagh gave a little sq
u
eal.


What on earth

s the matter with you both? You talk like books,

she exclaimed.

Well, I

m going to bathe again.


Do you think you should?

asked Conn.


Of course I should—don

t start fussing at this early stage.

She jumped up, pushing the sand from her legs, then added conversationally:

I

m going to have a baby in January, so Conn

s a bit silly at times. Mother doesn

t know yet. She

ll be an awful grandmother.

Clancy sprang to her feet and hurled herself upon her cousin.


Oh, Clodagh,
no
!”
she cried, embracing her warmly.

How exciting! I

ll be an aunt — or is it only another cousin? Oh, darling, I

m so pleased for you, and for Conn.

Their arms entwined, they wandered off towards the sea, laughing and chattering with mutual delight.

When they were all ready to start home again, Conn suggested that they stop at Slievaun and call upon the new owners.


I

d like to see what they

ve made of the old place,

he said.


Oh no,

said Clancy quickly, then gave a little sigh.

All right, if you like.

They went trooping off to the car, and Mark, left for a moment with Clancy, said:


I can drop you at the crossroads if you

d rather.


No,

she replied,

I don

t suppose it matters now. Mark—I haven

t asked you, but I—I suppose you wouldn

t consider staying on as bailiff?

He picked up the lunch-basket and a couple of rugs.

You haven

t asked me,

he said gravely,

because you alone understand such things as integrity.


By that you mean

to thine own self be true

like Othello, or was it Hamlet?


Neither—Polonius. Yes, that

s what I mean. But thank you for wanting me, Clancy.


I shall always want you,

she said with a small sigh, and he replied slowly and with an odd little smile:


Yes, I really believe you will.

The others were calling from the car, and he slipped
a
hand round her waist and took her to join them.

I
t was not a successful visit. The new owners, taken by surprise and rather shocked by a social call so soon after a bereavement in the family, were uncomfortable and prone to talk in hushed voices. Bridie, with her old ideas of hospitality,
imme
diately brought in refreshments and they sat in the living room, now converted into something which resembled an arts and crafts shop, drinking inferior sherry and trying not to catch each others

eyes.

They left as soon as they decently could and when they were barely out of earshot, collapsed into hysterical laughter.


Did you see the cushion covers—tassels on everything!


And the wallpaper!


And all those green china animals!


They were very shocked,

said Clancy,

—all going for a picnic only a few days after the funeral and Clodagh in that backless green play-suit!


Whoever would have thought Slievaun could have been turned into something quite so dreadful?

marvelled Clodagh.


And who would have thought Bridie would have stayed? They

d even dolled her up in a frilly apron,

said Conn.


Poor Bridie,

Clancy said.

Perhaps she would come to us. Did you hear the woman say they thought of turning the stables into a tea-house next summer and doing shilling teas for the village?

Mark drove in silence, listening to their comments. They were all a little overstrung after the strain of the past few days and their laughter grew noisier and noisier as they invented stories about Slievaun

s new owners, and put imaginary speeches into their mouths.

Aunt Bea glanced at their flushed faces a little disapprovingly when they got in, but she said nothing, only after dinner when Conn, Clodagh and Clancy had gone up to the schoolroom to play rummy, she observed to Mark that young things were very resilient.


It

s only reaction, really,

Mark told her gently.

They don

t mean to be unfeeling.

He told her about the visit to Slievaun, but Aunt Bea had called herself and saw nothing hilariously funny about her new neighbours.


Not the sort of people one would want to be on close terms with, perhaps,

she said,

but very harmless and inoffensive. I hope the children weren

t rude.

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