Sad Song. Vincent Banville

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charge two-hundred-and-fifty a day. Plus expenses.”

      “See Sylvia on the way out. She’ll give you a cheque for five days’ work. That should be enough for a simple job like this.”

      “What if Sam doesn’t want to come home?”

      “Persuade her. Put a rope around her and drag her back if you have to. A daughter’s place is by her father’s side. Not living the life of a down-and-out.”

      Carey pressed a button – it was a great place for button pressing. The same girl who had shown Blaine in now appeared to show him out. She didn’t speak to him. Just marched ahead, while he followed along behind, admiring the sway of her bottom. It was worth watching.

      Chapter Three

      Blaine got in his car, an old Renault that used diesel and sounded like a tank. He drove to Cabra. He was looking for Number Thirteen, Feltrim Road. A girl with orange hair and vampire eyes gave him directions, which turned out to be wrong.

      He started again, asking directions from an old man pushing a bicycle. This time he was put right. The road had two rows of neat houses with postage-stamp lawns. Number Thirteen had an uncared-for look about it, like a bad tooth in a set of shining dentures.

      He locked his car, pushed open a rusty gate and walked up to the front door. He knocked and, after some time went by, the door was opened. An eye like a blood sunset appeared in the crack.

      “Sam Carey, sometimes known as Assumpta?” Blaine inquired somewhat doubtfully.

      The door opened more fully, to reveal a thin young man in a vest and dirty jeans. He had a large hooped earring in his right ear, yellow hair and a sneer on his face.

      “Yarahhh,” he said in a voice that sounded as if he needed to spit. Blaine sighed, said a silent prayer, then moved forward into the hallway. The young man went backwards, surprised.

      “I’m looking for a girl named Sam Carey,” Blaine explained patiently. “I was told she lived here. If she’s on the premises, I’d like to talk to her. If she has moved on, I’d be grateful if you’d give me her address.”

      “Moved on,” Yellow Hair said. “What you want her for?”

      “She bought a ticket in a draw. She’s won a Barbie doll and I’m here to deliver.”

      “Where is it then?”

      “She’s got no clothes on, so I left her in the car.”

      “Yarahhh,” Yellow Hair said again, and this time he did spit, just missing Blaine’s shoe.

      Blaine lost patience, reached out and stuck his right index finger through Yellow Hair’s earring. With his other hand he caught the guy by the throat. Pulling firmly on the earring, he said, “Just give me the girl’s present whereabouts, and you’ll have two ears to listen with for the rest of your life.”

      The guy opened and shut his mouth like a fish out of water. His eyes bulged as Blaine pulled a little harder on the earring. “She’s doing up an old warehouse in Ringsend,” he gasped. “Her and a crowd of students.”

      “There now, that wasn’t too hard, was it?” Blaine said. He released his hold on Yellow Hair’s throat and gave the earring one more tug for luck.

      “Hey, what you want to do that for?” the guy protested.

      “Pain is good for the soul,” Blaine told him. “Maybe you’ll be more polite the next time.”

      “There isn’t going to be a next time, I’m out of here.”

      “Me too,” Blaine said, and he turned, walked back down the path, got in his car and drove away.

      Chapter Four

      The sun was high in the sky as Blaine drove along the quays in the direction of Ringsend. June 16th, the day in 1904 that a Jew named Bloom walked around Dublin and became famous. Blaine glanced in his rear-view mirror. He didn’t see Bloom, but he did spy a bright red van that appeared to be following him since he left Cabra. Then again, maybe he was just imagining it. He visited a number of empty warehouses before he finally found the one he was looking for. It stood by itself, right on the edge of the quayside. If you walked out the back door, you’d find yourself swimming in Dublin Bay.

      Scaffolding had been set up against the front of the building, and a fellow and a girl were painting the frontage black. Blaine parked his car and walked in under them. A sign on the door explained that the place was being prepared as a centre for refugees. The inside was huge and had an echo. An Abba tape was playing. The girls were singing about “Money, money, money in a rich man’s world.” A number of young people were doing various things: painting, hammering, drilling holes in walls. Blaine was deafened by the noise. He went back outside, where he leaned against the side of the building and lit a cigarette. The river flowed full and smooth. A tugboat honked. Seagulls screamed. The sky was a pale blue, with just a rinse of white cloud. He smoked for a while, then he turned and glanced back down the quays. The red van was parked some distance away. A bright flash of sunlight glanced off the windscreen, but he was pretty sure there were two people in the front seats. He finished the cigarette, threw it away and went back inside the warehouse. The crowd of workers was taking a break. The tape had been switched off. He went across to the nearest group. They stared at him curiously. The girl he was looking for was not among them.

      “Sam Carey?” he inquired.

      “Who’s asking?” Blaine gazed at the fat young man with glasses who answered him.

      “I’m a friend of the family,” he said. “Just calling in to say hello.”

      “As I hear it, Sam doesn’t get on with her family.”

      “Surely she has a favourite uncle?”

      “And you’re him?”

      “I might be.”

      The guy looked at the girl sitting beside him. She shrugged her shoulders, then said, “Sam’s in the office. Up the stairs. Door facing you.”

      Blaine nodded his thanks and followed her directions. Some of the steps on the stairs were loose and creaked under his weight. He walked along the short corridor at the top and knocked on the closed door. A voice told him to come in. He did so. There were two people inside. A girl and a boy. Blaine did not have to take out the photo to see that the girl was Sam Carey. She was wearing a bright orange bandanna around her hair, a striped T-shirt and paint-streaked cream overalls. Her eyes smiled. The guy with her was big and strong, with muscles that bulged through his singlet. He was wearing cut-off denim shorts that showed his muscular legs. He was also wearing a look on his face that told Blaine to watch his step. Otherwise he might be going back down the stairs head-first.

      Chapter Five

      “Yes?” Sam Carey said, the smile beginning to fade from her eyes. “You wanted something?”

      Blaine leaned a shoulder against the door jamb and tried to look pleasant. He said, “My name’s John Blaine. I’ve been hired by your father to find you. And to ask you politely if you’ll come home.”

      “How

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