登陆注册
10471400000008

第8章

Keira was ready and waiting outside Orin's B&B bright and early the next morning. The last thing her broken heart needed was an Irish-style breakfast, so she'd made certain that there was no time for one, waking up with just enough time to shower and dress.

She stood on the street corner, her arms wrapped around her middle, feeling wounded by Zach's betrayal. She wasn't sure how she was going to get through today; all she wanted to do was curl up in bed and sleep. But when she saw Shane's car approaching, she felt a sudden sense of relief, as though her loneliness was melting away.

He pulled to a halt, mounting the curb beside the B&B, and Keira got in the passenger side.

"Morning," Shane said, stiffly.

Keira looked over at him, at his drawn expression, and suddenly remembered what he had told her yesterday about how he was going to pay his respects to someone, about how she wasn't the person he wanted to talk about it to. Her instinct was to ask him how he was, check in to see whether he needed anything, but the breakup had knocked her confidence, and Shane's rejection of her support yesterday stung more as a result. So instead of attempting to connect with him, she just stared absentmindedly out the window.

"Morning."

Shane pulled away from the curb and they began the drive. Keira wallowed in her misery, watching the dreary greens and grays that passed by through the window.

She wasn't sure how much time had passed before Shane finally spoke.

"You're quiet," he said.

"So are you," she replied, her gaze still fixed out the window.

"I suppose I am."

They fell into silence again. Keira hated it, the way their free and easy banter had been replaced by a huge, swelling nothingness.

"I spent the evening at a graveside," Shane replied by way of explanation. "What about you?"

"I'm just tired."

"There's something else."

She looked over at him at last. "It's none of your business," she said, echoing his sentiments from yesterday.

She didn't mean to be snappy, but talking about the breakup was the last thing she wanted to do right now. What she really wanted was a long chat with Bryn or her mom. Usually they'd be the first people she turned to when seeking comfort, but Bryn had been jogging when she called, and said she didn't have any time to chat, so she hadn't even had the chance to tell her about Zach. And with her mom there was a high likelihood that she'd use it as an I told you so moment. Keira hadn't been in the mood for that. Now speaking to anyone back in New York City was impossible because it was the middle of the night there. Keira hadn't felt so lonely since coming to Ireland as she did now. She could've done with offloading to Shane, but clearly neither of them was in the right place for that right now.

She turned her attention back to the view through the window and could feel Shane's eyes watching her. He didn't press it, though, and they fell back into their uneasy silence.

Unlike the other two trips, this one was much longer, and it gave Keira ample time to dwell in her misery. She decided that Shane was either respecting her lack of a desire to communicate or was too angry with her to want to try. Though his usual banter was conspicuously absent, he did keep looking over at her with a look of anguish.

Finally he spoke.

"Keira, are you annoyed with me for leaving you to attend the festival alone?" he asked.

She shot him a daggered look. "I'm not a kid, Shane. It's not like I'm giving you the silent treatment for rejecting me." She realized as she said it that that was actually half of the reason why she wasn't speaking to him. The realization took her by surprise. She folded her arms. "Why couldn't you, anyway?"

"I told you," Shane replied. His hands tightened on the steering wheel. "I had to pay my respects to someone. Someones, actually."

Keira couldn't help her curiosity. "Who?"

Shane took a deep inhalation, then let the breath go slowly. "I don't want to burden you with my stuff."

"I don't mind," Keira replied. Then, picking at the hem of her shirt, added, "It would take my mind off my own stuff."

Shane looked over at her. "Let's make a deal. I'll burden you, if you burden me."

Keira folded into herself. She wasn't ready to speak about the breakup. But on the other hand, she did want to know what was going on with Shane. Maybe it was a sacrifice worth making.

"Deal," she said finally.

Shane looked back out the windshield. The road ahead was narrow, but long and empty. It felt like they were the only two people in the world.

His hands still on the steering wheel, Shane briefly glanced over at Keira in the passenger seat. "None of this is going in your piece, okay?"

Keira held her hands in truce position. "Completely off the record," she confirmed, realizing once again as she said it just how much better suited Joshua would have been for this job. Nothing would be off the record for him. "So it must be to do with love, then," she said aloud as it dawned on her.

Shane nodded. "You're not going to like this. It goes against everything you stand for."

"Everything I stand for?" Keira said, frowning. "What do you mean by that?"

Shane cleared his throat and stared straight ahead through the windshield. "You made a comment about teenage sweethearts the other day."

"About how it always ends badly? You were offended by that?"

He nodded. "It was more the sound of complete contempt in your voice. The disdain. Like you could never believe it ever working out for two people."

"That's because I don't think it can," Keira replied. "In my experience, anyway. I mean the only people I know who married young divorced young as well. And if they stayed together it was only because their religion frowned upon their separating." She paused then. "Are you about to tell me you're with your teenage sweetheart?"

Keira was struck by how much the thought troubled her. She had never actually asked Shane whether he was in a relationship. She'd just assumed by his behavior that he wasn't. There was no ring on his finger, either, so he wasn't committed in that way, but what if there was some sweet girl waiting for him at home? One he left every year to come to the festival and party? The thought made her stomach roil.

"Sort of," Shane replied.

The sensation Keira felt then was akin to panic. Were all men cheaters? Did they all stray the second their girlfriends were out of eyeshot? How could someone sort of be with someone else, anyway?

Beside her, Shane seemed to deflate.

"She died," he said simply.

Keira felt a wave of guilt crash over her for ever doubting him, for letting her mind go immediately to her own place of hurt and paranoia.

"I'm so sorry," she gasped. "Recently?"

He shook his head. "No. It was a long time ago."

"What happened?"

"We met at school," Shane began. "Fell in love straightaway, although neither of us knew that's what it was when we were twelve." He smiled wistfully to himself. "We got older, started dating. Perfect is the only way I can describe it. I proposed before school was even over. She fell pregnant that night." Another smile, this time accompanied by a blush. "We were married at eighteen. Then one night, when she was eight months pregnant, the baby stopped kicking. We went to hospital. It had died." He gripped the steering wheel even tighter. "As she gave birth to our stillborn son, she died too. I lost them both in one night." He glanced at her sadly. "That's what I mean by sort of. 'Til death do us part. It just came a lot sooner than either of us expected. But she's still here." He touched his heart.

Keira felt cold all over. She'd never heard a story so tragic. "What was her name?" she asked gently. "If you don't mind telling me."

"Deirdre," Shane replied. "And I named the boy John, after her late father. I'm sure it's what she would have wanted."

Keira didn't know what to say anymore. She felt terrible, so filled with grief and empathy it felt like she might burst. What an awful experience to go through at such a young age. No wonder he'd been so annoyed at her high school sweetheart comment.

"That's whose graves you were visiting last night?" she asked, just as gently.

Shane nodded.

"Because it was the anniversary?" Keira asked. The thought that her words had been salt rubbed in the wound horrified her.

"No," he replied. "I only go when the urge takes me. It's usually several times a year, even now. I had that urge yesterday."

"Did something prompt it?"

He looked across at her then. "Guilt."

"Guilt?" Keira repeated. Then she realized what he must mean. His hook-up with Tessa. Being with another woman must have stirred up all kinds of emotions inside of him. At least, she thought that must be what he meant, though there was something else in his eyes that seemed unreadable.

"We're here," Shane said suddenly.

Keira startled. She'd almost completely forgotten they were in the car, driving to another location, so lost had she become in Shane's story.

They pulled up in the parking lot of a beautiful, stately home. It was a gorgeous old red brick building covered in crawling ivy. It hadn't been what she'd been expecting at all, although she realized now she hadn't even bothered to check her itinerary, or ask Shane where he was taking her today. She'd been so wrapped up in Zach she had completely forgotten.

"This is a bit fancy," she said.

"Muckross House," Shane told her. "It has gardens, lakes, and the grounds are now part of the Killarney National Park."

Keira looked out the windshield at the surrounding mountains. They looked blue in the thin daylight, like the backdrop of a watercolor painting.

"Want to go for a stroll?" Shane asked.

His tone was far more gentle than Keira had heard from him thus far. She didn't want to admit it, but it soothed her greatly. Maybe it wasn't Bryn's or her mom's comfort she sought to get her through the breakup. Maybe she wasn't looking for the care of a confidant but the touch of someone new and exciting.

She shook the thoughts away immediately. Hadn't she just told Zach about how unclassy it was to jump straight into bed with someone new as soon as a relationship ended? How could she now be having such similar desires? And hadn't Shane just told her about how much anguish and guilt he felt over being with other women? Not to mention he was her tour guide, paid for by her company! It was beyond inappropriate even to entertain the thought of hooking up with him. But there was a pull there, Keira had to admit.

They got out of the car. Keira saw something on the lawns and squinted.

"Is that a duck?" she asked, and a small giggle escaped her throat.

"Looks like it," Shane replied, smiling in response to the smile she'd finally managed to crack. "Must have wandered up here from the lake."

"Oh look, ducklings!" Keira cried, as a row of fluffy yellow chicks followed their mother, winding through the grass.

Keira cooed over the sight, then realized Shane was looking at her. This time his expression wasn't one she'd seen before from him. She saw something there in his eye, a twinkle. No, it was more like a burning. She wondered what William Barry would make of a look like that.

"I wanted to tell you how pretty you looked this morning," Shane said suddenly. "But you seemed so sad."

Keira was shocked to hear such words from him. He thought she was pretty?

"I was sad," she replied. "I still am."

Shane nodded. "I can tell. We made a deal, remember?"

Keira hesitated. It felt too dangerous to talk about romance and relationships, because she knew where her mind would go, what desires would be unleashed once she admitted to herself that she was back on the market. But the other side of her felt pulled toward that place, toward that slightly dangerous admission and the excitement that might result from it.

"Zach," she began. "My boyfriend. He's not my boyfriend anymore."

Shane looked genuinely sad for her. Keira could almost sense the way he wanted to comfort her, touch her and show her kindness. But he held back and she was grateful.

They began to walk again, ambling through the beautiful grounds of the old Victorian mansion.

"He cheated on me," Keira said after a long moment of silence. "I was supposed to go to his sister's wedding but I got put on this assignment. So he slept with one of the bridesmaids."

Shane gave her a sympathetic look. "I'm sorry. That sucks."

Keira pulled her arms tightly about her, as though trying to cradle the pain inside her ribcage.

"If it makes you feel any better," Shane said, "I'm really glad you came on the assignment."

Keira froze then. What was he saying? He'd acted so far like she was the most infuriating person he'd ever met. He'd even gone off with Tessa at the festival. Those weren't the actions of someone who cared!

"It's fun to have some company," he added quickly. Then with a shrug, he said, "I'm away from home as well. I tend to get a bit homesick over the festival, so it's nice to have a friendly face."

Keira realized then that she didn't know anything about Shane as a person. All she knew was his views on romance, and that his general outlook on life seemed to differ so much from hers. They'd jumped right into the debating, discussing the heavy stuff, and had never even had simple chitchat about their homes, their families, their friends, what they cared about.

"I don't know what to say to make it better," Shane said. "But I know it will get better."

She nodded and felt a little choked up. She'd felt a pull toward Shane before, even when he was being an infuriating jerk. Now she felt like a magnet was attracting her to him, making her move closer into his orbit.

"I would suggest a pint," he said with a sheepish grin. "But I have a feeling you won't like that."

She laughed and shook her head. "I'm already getting a beer belly," she laughed, patting her stomach.

"How about brunch then?" Shane said, and he pointed at a sign that told them there were tea rooms on the grounds.

"That sounds nice," Keira said. She hadn't had any breakfast and was quite hungry now.

They strolled along the path, following the sign to the tearooms, and went inside. It was a beautiful little building, probably the old caretaker's cottage now converted into a quaint cafe.

They sat at a small round table, their knees so close they were almost touching. Keira wondered suddenly if having brunch with Shane wasn't the most sensible idea. It was a bit like a date, she realized, only far more confusing.

They both ordered poached eggs on rye bread with coffees and juice. Keira tried to picture Joshua here, in this rustic tea room, with its delicate porcelain crockery. He would have stuck out like a sore thumb! Keira realized that she herself fit in much more here than she would ever have anticipated.

The food arrived and they began eating quietly. Keira noticed that Shane's expression was downcast, and it suddenly occurred to her that she'd been moaning on about her breakup when he had become a widower at the age of eighteen. He knew about love and loss far more than she did, had been through far worse than she now was. He must be thinking she was such a brat.

"I'm sorry for being so mopey," Keira blurted.

Shane shook his head. "No need. You're going through something rubbish."

Keira shifted in her seat. "But it must seem so juvenile to you. After everything you've been through."

"You mean because of Deirdre?" he said. There was a small smile on his lips. "You can say her name, you know. I wouldn't have told you about it if I didn't want to ever talk about it out loud."

Keira nodded, feeling suddenly privileged, like he'd let her in on one of his darkest secrets and she hadn't even realized the significance of it. "Yes. I mean after Deirdre."

"You might have noticed that after Deirdre I wasn't exactly a hermit," Shane said. "It's not like she's the only woman I've been with. I've had other girlfriends, some long term, some short. Caroline was my next big love."

"Oh God, what happened to her?" Keira asked, fearing the worst. Tuberculosis or the like.

"She cheated on me," Shane replied.

It wasn't the response Keira was expecting. That Shane had been through the same thing as her felt like another thing to pull them together. "Even though she knew about what you'd been through with Deirdre?"

Shane nodded. "Some people really can't see how their actions will affect others."

"That's remarkably diplomatic of you," Keira replied.

Shane just shrugged. "Well, I just think we're all a bit guilty of that."

Keira didn't think Shane's words were pointed, but it certainly applied to her situation. Zach had undermined their entire relationship by sleeping with Julia but she hadn't been exactly guilt free, either. She'd found it impossible to see his point of view about her work commitments, about the way she was always running off and prioritizing other things ahead of him. His actions had ended their relationship, but hers had shaken it in the first place.

"You said you missed your family earlier," Keira said. "How come you don't see them?"

"They just live quite far away from Lisdoonvarna," Shane replied. "Actually, they live kind of near here."

"You should take the day off," Keira suggested. "Go and see them!"

Shane shook his head. "I don't think I'd get hired again next year if anyone found out I'd shirked on my responsibilities. And I really need the money."

Keira felt bad for him. To miss people and be so close was the worst. She felt that in many ways with Bryn, with the way she was just on the other end of the phone and yet the time difference meant they couldn't talk.

"I have an idea," Keira said suddenly, her eyebrows rising. "Your job is to show me the real Irish life, right? Well, why don't you show me your hometown. Your family."

Shane almost spit his mouthful of coffee out. "I don't know if I'm quite ready to introduce you to my parents," he joked.

Keira rolled her eyes. "Shane, come on. I'm giving you a chance here. Using a loophole."

He didn't look convinced. "It's another hour drive from here. I don't know if we'd be able to get back in time for the festival this evening."

Keira thought about the woefully inadequate amount of interviews in her notebook, and the draft she had yet to send to Nina, of the pages of words she'd screwed up and thrown away because she no longer wanted to rip apart the people she'd interviewed. Missing a night of the festival would be pretty reckless. Unless…

"Are your parents still married?" she asked.

"Forty years going strong," Shane replied, smiling.

"Do you think they'd let me interview them?"

Shane looked surprised. "Well, they both love talking so I suppose so."

"There," Keira said triumphantly. "Your parents can be my interviewees for the evening. I have enough material to describe the festival and Ireland as a whole, it's the interviews I'm lacking on."

Shane seemed to suddenly brighten at the realization that she was serious, that this was really happening.

"Okay. Great! I'll call them now and let them know we're coming."

Keira smiled as he got up from the table and went outside to make the call. The only problem with this plan was that she was supposed to be tearing the myth of love and romance apart. But something had started changing in her. Her walls were beginning to come down. She was softening to Ireland, to the people, to the romance of it all. Especially now that Zach had broken up with her.

A thought hit her then. Elliot had wanted the piece to be firsthand, narrative driven, but what if she pursued a new direction, of the cynical New Yorker who suffers a breakup in the middle of a festival of love? What if she put her personal life, rather than just her views, front and center of the piece?

Just then Shane reappeared at the door. "You ready? My family are so excited to meet you."

"They are?" she asked, standing up and grabbing her purse.

She went to the door and followed Shane out.

"They're always happy when there's another woman in the house," he said over his shoulder as they walked back to the car.

"What do you mean another woman?" Keira asked, curious.

Shane grinned. "Oh, you'll find out soon enough."

同类推荐
  • She, Myself, and I

    She, Myself, and I

    Ever since Rosa's nerve disease rendered her quadriplegic, she's depended on her handsome, confident older brother to be her rock and her mirror. But when a doctor from Boston chooses her to be a candidate for an experimental brain transplant, she and her family move from London in search of a miracle. Sylvia—a girl from a small town in Massachusetts —is brain dead, and her parents have agreed to donate her body to give Rosa a new life. But when Rosa wakes from surgery, she can' t help but wonder, with increasing obsession, who Sylvia was and what her life was like. Her fascination with her new body and her desire to understand Sylvia prompt a road trip based on self-discovery… and a surprising new romance. But will Rosa be able to solve the dilemma of her identity?
  • Endgame

    Endgame

    Originally written in French and translated into English by Beckett, Endgame was given its first London performance at the Royal Court Theatre in 1957. HAMM: Clov! CLOV: Yes. HAMM: Nature has forgotten us. CLOV: There's no more nature. HAMM: No more nature! You exaggerate. CLOV: In the vicinity. HAMM: But we breathe, we change! We lose our hair our teeth! Our bloom! Our ideals! CLOV: Then she hasn't forgotten us.
  • Madame Chiang Kai-shek
  • 100 Strokes of the Brush Before Bed
  • Seeing Things

    Seeing Things

    This collection of Seamus Heaney's work, especially in the vivid and surprising twelve-line poems entitled "e;Squarings"e;, shows he is ready to re-imagine experience and "e;to credit marvels"e;. The title poem, "e;Seeing Things"e;, is typical of the whole book. It begins with memories of an actual event, then moves towards the visionary while never relinquishing its feel for the textures and sensations of the world. Translations of Virgil and Homer provide a prelude and a coda where motifs implicit in the earlier lyrics are given direct expression in extended narratives. Journeys to underworlds and otherworlds correspond to the journeys made by poetic language itself. From the author of "e;The Haw Lantern"e;, "e;Wintering Out"e;, "e;Station Island"e; and "e;North"e;.
热门推荐
  • 汉雄

    汉雄

    他建立了一个国家前所未有的尊严。他给了一个族群挺立千年的自信。他的国号成为一个民族永远的名字。马刀下的冤魂和马鞍上的得意,没有丝毫区别,所有的生命,都是平等的,任何人都没有无故剥夺的权力。没人可以随便欺辱大汉的子民,没人可以在大汉的国土上任意的抢掠杀戮。无论我们的敌人有多么的强大,汉家的血脉终将激励着我们拿起刀剑,争取属于自己的尊严和荣誉。要让这帮草原鞑子领教汉家儿郎的勇武,用他们的尸山血河铸就大汉民族的辉煌。云啸向天怒吼,大汉雄起。龙王书友QQ群:282022096,欢迎各位朋友共同讨论篡秦的发展。
  • 重生之美丽系统

    重生之美丽系统

    温言很郁闷自己为什么综合了爸爸妈妈的缺点,爸爸的黑皮肤,妈妈的小眼睛,再加上扁平偏矮的身材和干黄稀疏的头发。之前上学的时候还好啦,工作了之后,才发现怎么保养也没办法,天生底子差。这样子,就是重生回到小时候也改善不了吧。
  • 带着异能去种田

    带着异能去种田

    “怎么又是你们这对夫妻,一而再再二三的坏我好事,啊…”千年血魔,看着每每在他快要得逞的时候,就出来坏他大业的夫妻,最终被活活逼疯了。“唉,夫君你看啊,就这点承受能力还想一统天下,这血魔未免也太不禁打击了吧?”“咳咳…”某男望了自家那腹黑的娘子,她还真好意思说,那是一点打击吗?那可是…精彩片段二:“枫儿,你是我们林家的骄傲,我们林家以有你这样的子嗣为荣,快让你娘子把那些仙丹拿出来救一救你婶婶吧,她快不行了,只有你娘子手中的仙丹才能救她一名!”京城第一世家林家的家主向一名戴着半面银制面具身穿白衣的男子低声下气请求道。“林家的家主果然是贵人多忘事啊,难道忘记了当初因为测试我夫君灵力为零,未免丢林家的脸,您和夫人可是派人亲自将他活活致死,却还要假装夭折的事难道都忘记了吗?现在您知道失去爱人之痛了,那么当时夫君的父母一心一意的辅佐你,最后却只能眼睁睁的看着他们刚出生的孩子被你害死,难道他们的心就不痛了吗?所以你以夫君为荣,夫君和我却以你林家为耻,今日我便要亲眼看着你最爱的人死在你的面前,以慰含恨九泉的夫君的父母!”一袭红衣的女子紧紧的挽着一袭白衣的男子,她可以感受到他的夫君此时心中有多恨面前这对曾经害死他与他父母的林家家主与家主夫人,她要为他的夫君报仇。没错大家猜对了,本文就是一个现代女神医穿越古代,与老公一起修仙种田,打怪升级,复仇,扬名千里的故事,喜欢的请收藏,不喜欢的请按关闭按钮,亲们请见谅,千言需鼓励,所以如遇不好留言,一概删无赦。
  • 孽世牡丹

    孽世牡丹

    以花之贵,当属牡丹。以花为喻,她是牡丹。覆山河,覆社稷,覆尽天下只为一人真心。是复仇,还是自惩?当她登上高高的帝王台,越过重重殿阁远眺。眼中,是他曾看过的风景;手中,是他曾握有的天下。山河埋骨,天地血色,孽世牡丹在淬炼中重生,带着酴醾的绝艳炫目绽放,究竟是缘?是债?是情?还是罪?!
  • Gone With The Wind

    Gone With The Wind

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 千年穿越:撩妻撩上瘾

    千年穿越:撩妻撩上瘾

    他千年不死之身引来多方势力垂涎,她是妖娆军火女当家,为他隐居丛林却遭遇冷眼,她心如死灰。危难之时,她为他纵身跳入陷阱,枯骨无存。错过一世本以为再不相见,好在佛祖垂怜,将她带去了他的时代,这一世轩辕忌歌宠她、怜他、护她、为她建造最坚固的壁垒!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 吕贝卡的救赎

    吕贝卡的救赎

    没有人天生就是骗子,却与生俱来皆有情感。80后纯情剩女与70后魅力熟男的爱情,婚姻到底是坟墓,还是出路?一段被庞氏骗局绑架了的啼笑姻缘。5年前,他给她设了一个庞氏局,骗光了她的所有。5年后,乾坤颠倒,他终究没能逃出她的恢恢情网。
  • 堀辰雄短篇集

    堀辰雄短篇集

    本书收集堀辰雄四部中短篇作品:《笨拙的天使》《神圣家族》《鲁本斯的伪画》《旷野》。
  • 武当虹少年3:水仙传说

    武当虹少年3:水仙传说

    武当山被黑暗的影山势力不断侵犯,甚至太极学园内部也有了敌人的可怕卧底。尘封的传说逐渐被揭开面纱,神秘的千年谜底终于得到解答。希望水仙的盛开,短暂地给予大家庇护,然而穷凶极恶的影山势力很快卷土重来,在危急的时刻,校长静虚真人站出来,与敌人正面交锋。三件威力强大的上古神器,打开了一个敌对双方都没预料到的局面……做种,金阳和伙伴们迅速地成长起来,成为击退黑暗,挽救世界的那道充满的光芒
  • 妖王的宠妃

    妖王的宠妃

    他绝美,温柔,却又神秘,身上总有淡淡的花香。她清秀可爱,外表看似坚强,内心却有无人知晓的脆弱,除了他之外……命运为何如此安排?为何让她知道,她与他本是错误?残酷的现实,她该如何面对?他们之间的感情又该如何收场??