pleasure of it. âWhereâs he going then?â
âHome. I want him close, so heâll fly home and stay tonight.â
âI envy that,â Meara said as she took out her phone. âThe way you talk to the hawks, Iona to the horses, Branna to the houndsâand Fin to all three when he wants to. If I had any magic, I think that would be what Iâd want.â
âYou have it. Iâve seen you with the horses, the hawks, the hounds.â
âThatâs training, and an affinity. But itâs not what you have.â She sent the text, tucked the phone away. âBut Iâd just want it with the animals. Iâd go mad if I could read people, hear their thoughts and feelings as you can. Iâd forever be fighting to listen, then likely be pissed at what Iâd heard.â
âItâs best to resist the eavesdropping.â
She gave him an elbow poke and a knowing look out of dark chocolate eyes. âI know good and well youâve had a listen when youâre wondering if a girl might be willing if you bought her a pint and walked her home.â
âThat may have been the case before I reached my maturity.â
She laughed her wonderful laugh. âYouâve not hooked fingers around your maturity as yet.â
âIâm within centimeters now. Ah, and hereâs Boyle answering already. Ionaâs at the cottage practicing with Branna. Heâll drag Fin with him shortlyâand see if Iona will do the same with Branna.â
âI like when itâs all of us together. Itâs family.â
He heard the wistfulness, swung an arm over her shoulders. âItâs family,â he agreed, âright and true.â
âDo you miss your parents since theyâve settled down in Kerry?â
âI do sometimes, yes, but theyâre so bleeding happy there on the lake, running their B and B, and with Maâs sisters all chirping about. And theyâre mad about the FaceTime. Whoâdâve thought it? So we see them, and know whatâs what.â
He gave her shoulder a rub as they walked the winding road to Cong. âAnd truth be told, Iâm glad enough theyâre tucked away south for now.â
âAnd here Iâd be more than glad to have my mother tucked away most anywhere, and not for unselfish reasons such as your own.â
âYouâll get through it. Itâs but another phase.â
âAnother phase thatâs lasted near fifteen years. But youâre right.â She wiggled her shoulders as if shaking off a small weight. âYouâre right. I put a bug in her ear today about how she might enjoy a long visit with my sister and the grandchildren. And thatâs shoving the same bug straight up Maureenâs arse, which she well deserves. If that doesnât stick, Iâm planning to bounce her from brother to sister to brother in hopes she lands somewhere that contents her.
âIâm not giving up my flat.â
âYouâd go stark raving if you moved back in with your ma, and what good would that do either of you? Donalâs done well by her, no question of it, but so have you. You give her your time, your ear, help with her marketing. You pay her rent.â
He only lifted his eyebrows when she jerked away, narrowed her eyes.
âBe sane, Meara. Finâs her landlord, how would I not know? Iâm saying youâre a good daughter, and have nothing to feel selfish over.â
âWishing her elsewhere seems selfish, but I canât stop wishing it. And Fin doesnât charge half what that little cottage is worth.â
âItâs family,â he said, and she sighed.
âHow many times can you be right on one walk to the pub?â She shoved her hands in the pockets of her work jacket. âAnd thatâs enough bitching and carping from me for the same amount of time. Iâm spoiling my own good day at work, and the extra fifty in my