send you postal orders.â
Cat gave him a sceptical look. âTo where? Cat Gallagher, no fixed abode?â
âItâs dead simple. I used to do it all the time when I was travelling. You set up a poste restante in the local post office, and pick up your mail there.â
Cat made a face. âMaybe I should get a job.â
âMaybe you should.â
âHa! Letâs face it, Raoul â Iâm unemployable.â
âDonât be defeatist, sweetheart. And, hang on . . . I think . . . I think . . .â
âShare. I hate enigmatic pauses.â Cat took a hit of her wine.
âI think I might be having a very good idea.â Raoul gave her a speculative look. âHow would you feel about living on a houseboat, Kitty Cat?â
âA houseboat! Wicked! Tell me about it.â
âI have a friend who has one in Coolnamara. He could do with someone to caretake it for him.â
âAre you serious?â
âYes. His wifeâs in a wheelchair, and they canât live on a boat any more. Canât sell it, either. And he doesnât want it to rot away on the water.â
âWhere is it?â
âItâs on a stretch of canal near Lissamore, the one that goes from nowhere to nowhere.â
âNowhere to nowhere?â
âIt was one of those pointless famine relief projects, designed to give the starving locals the wherewithal to buy a few grains of Indian corn back in the 1840s. As far as I know, it was never used for anything. But my mate Aidan had his houseboat transported and plonked down in a safe berth. He hasnât visited it for over a year now, and heâd love it to be given some TLC. He couldnât pay you, but Iâm pretty sure heâd let you live there rent-free.â
âOh, Raoul! Iâd love to live on a houseboat!â
âIâll see what I can do.â Raoul picked up the wine bottle. âHere. Have some more Château Whatever.â
Raoul was as good as his word. Straightaway, he put in a call to his mate Aidan, and sorted Cat out with her brand new home from the place she couldnât call home. And by the time theyâd finished the bottle and left the house the way theyâd come in and hit the main road, Cat was feeling buoyant and full of hope.
âBye, Raoul,â she said, as the twice-weekly bus to Galway appeared over the brow of the hill, and drew up by the turn-off to Hugoâs house. âYou are my fairy half-brother.â
âLess of the fairy, thanks. Iâll be in touch.â
Cat hugged Raoul the way she never hugged anybody else, and watched him board the bus.
âHere,â he said, taking something from his backpack and tossing it to her. âYou may need this.â He gave her a final salute, then the bus door slid shut and he was gone.
In her hand, Cat was clutching the screwdriver sheâd used to gain access to the showhouse. She smiled, and turned towards the path that would take her to the house in the forest, the house that she hoped soon to leave. As she passed through the gate and rounded the first bend, a voice from behind her hissed: âCat! Cat! Here, Kitty Cat!â
She swung round as they emerged from the trees. There were three of them. They were wearing stocking masks and stupid grins. One said, âA little bird told me it was your birthday, Kitty Cat. Come here to us now, like a good girl, and let us give you your birthday present.â
Without pausing for thought, Cat aimed the first kick.
Chapter One
RÃo Kinsella thought that she had never seen an uglier building. Constructed from precast concrete, it was veined with fissures and topped with a corrugated roof of some leprous-looking material. The grey steel shutters clamped over the doors and windows lent it a hostile expression. On the forecourt, dandelions clumped, and amorphous masses of machinery lay rusting. The place would make an ideal location for one of those murky
Glenna Vance, Tom Lacalamita