She began chattering and giggling for a
reason she could not at first discover, but soon her nerves propelled her
more and more surely into a pattern of behaviour; she felt the kind of
unspeakable terror she sometimes felt on the stage, but which she could
always with an effort control, and which sometimes seemed to help rather than
hinder her performance; and this too, she decided, must be a performance. So
she fell into a rather broad and bawdy impersonation of a girl who had had
too many drinks and was not particularly distressed at being kidnapped in the
middle of the night by a forceful and handsome male. The man made no
response. After a few miles there was a stretch of lonely country, and here
he gave the order to stop; he then changed places with Ursula and took the
wheel. Carey, sitting now beside him, kept her eyes on his stern profile and
prayed that somehow, during the short interval of the drive to wherever they
were bound for, she could talk herself and Ursula out of being raped, or even
into being raped as a substitute for being murdered; maybe if she played up
to him with all she had she could win him over. So she played. Actually the
man was an exceptionally high-minded member of the Republican Army, burning
with political zeal and puritanical to the point of primness. He had never
even had a woman, much less raped one, and his only murders had been
cold-blooded ones of men; on this occasion all he wanted was the car. Amidst
empty moorland, where the climb began towards the Sally Gap, he brusquely
ordered the two girls into the road, gave them a receipt for the commandeered
vehicle (correct I.R.A. procedure), and drove off with scarcely concealed
contempt for a couple of prostitutes.
Carey, indeed, had proved herself an effective actress, but her judgment
had not been shrewd in her choice of the play. It was a combination that was
to happen again in her life. The more immediate result, however, was a near
collapse from the strain of the whole incident, for the two girls had to walk
miles in the rain before they were picked up; they both caught bad chills.
Furthermore, the theft of the car meant that from then on the problem of
getting home from the theatre would be much more burdensome. “It’s Ursula I’m
really sorry for,” Carey told her stepfather. “The car wasn’t insured and she
hadn’t finished paying for it.”
“She should keep the receipt,” he answered judicially. “A truly
independent Ireland has a responsibility in all such cases—I’m sure
eventually it will realize that.”
During her next non-acting spell Carey visited her great-uncle in
Kingstown. He had been her childhood hero, and as he lived in a district
where there had never been any ‘trouble’ she could expect to relax more
easily than at home. Captain Halloran (retired from the British Navy after a
somewhat eccentric career) lived in a hillside house overlooking the harbour;
he was seventy-odd, keen-eyed, loganberry red in countenance, with endearing
qualities; he liked youngsters and animals, gave generously to the
undeserving, and was a cheerful loser at Leopardstown races. Comfortably off,
he kept a couple of horses which he galloped over the local countryside, or
else hitched to a variety of two-wheeled vehicles that might well have been
in a museum. Carey was driving one of these things on an August afternoon
when she met Paul Saffron.
* * * * *
Paul was then twenty-nine, attractive in a slightly
mannered way that
sometimes suggested the feminine but never the effeminate; a little plump,
with wavy black hair, intense blue-grey eyes, and a long strong nose, he was
striking enough to be noticed in a crowd, and much more so on a quiet Irish
road. Carey stared at him from some way off, and with growing apprehension,
for he was hatless and wore a raincoat whose pockets bulged.
In truth the bulge on one side was from cigars, the other was from a
rather conspicuous copy of the New York Times. The reason for this was that
he wanted to be taken for an American before anyone could shoot him, and the
reason he thought such a thing possible was that, being the kind of
journalist as well as the kind of person he was, he thought anything
possible. He had, in fact, just lately stepped down the gangway on to Irish
soil with an almost conditioned reflex of naďveté, for he knew his job was to
write something about Ireland that would be readable by those who were not
really interested in Ireland at all. Somewhat to his carefully nurtured
surprise there had been no ambush on the pier as the boat from Holyhead put
in, so he had ignored the waiting train to Dublin and strolled inland through
the first Irish streets he came to. It was often his luck to find things to
write about thus casually—a dog or a child or a shop window or anything
that met his eye. (One of his most successful pieces had been about a cat
playing with a skein of wool in the ruins of an earthquake.) This time it was
a girl, a girl driving a horse and some sort of a buggy along the road
towards him, and he first noticed her because she was sitting on one leg in a
way that looked uncomfortable. Now why? Or WAS it uncomfortable? Good enough
for a start… Then he glanced at her face, which did not seem to him
beautiful so much as appealing and piquant; it had a look that somehow
complemented the question-mark of the posture. Maybe a talk with such a
chance-met native would save him the effort of walking further, for he
disliked walking; so he stepped to the middle of the road in front of the
cantering horse.
“Well?” she said, before he could speak a word, and he caught then a
quality in her voice that stirred him far more than anything in her looks. He
did not guess that it was fear, and that she had not yet noticed his
Times.
“Can you tell me where this road leads to?” he asked.
“Just up in the hills.”
“Ah, then I’ve lost my way. Are you driving into town? Could you give me a
lift back?”
“Sure. Jump up.”
She had been too scared not to invite him, and he took her readiness for
affability.
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