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One chilly April morning a stranger shows up at a commune in the Catskill Mountains, upstate New York. Conor is greeted by Liv, sixty-seven years old, mother, cancer survivor and founder of the once pilgrimage-worthy Birdeye Colony, now well past its heyday. Liv lets him stay, unaware that her two oldest friends are about to make a devastating announcement. Conor seems to offer a lifeline, but who is he really? As truths masked by free spirit push their way into the open, Liv must reassess what she asks of those she loves most. Birdeye is a novel about tolerance, the choices we make in good faith, and, ultimately, what they cost. Praise for Birdeye 'With luminous prose, infinite humanity and exceptional storytelling, Heneghan shows us family – whether chosen or given – in all its fascinating complexity. Evocative, haunting, masterful.' —Claire Fuller An emotive, twisty read that explores the strength and choices of women determined to create a better world – make your next read a journey of passion, buy your copy now!
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‘A captivating story about foreigners in Ukraine in the 1990s. In Snegurochka grand historical and political narratives – of Ukraine’s newfound independence, of the Second World War – interweave with the very personal stories of the book’s female protagonists – Rachel, Zoya, and Elena.’
—Emily Couch,The Moscow Times
‘It’s a very interesting and clever read. With no narrative tricksiness it shows us the author’s knowledge of that time and place, and more importantly a wonderful character, one who struggles with her new-found family and her new-found sense of displacement. Rich and readable, this is well worth turning to.’
—John Lloyd, NB Magazine
‘An unnerving and enthralling novel set in newly independent Ukraine, Snegurochka is a captivating story of motherhood, betrayal, belonging and control.’
—Hampshire Life
‘It is ajoy to read a novel in which the elements fuse so harmoniously: taut but lyrical prose, an exceptionally vivid sense of place, politics and culture but also of a pivotal time which is neither recent nor of the distant past. I regularly say that a good novel makes me feel I’ve seen the film; this one made me feel I was there, confronted with the vertigo-inducing view from that balcony.’
—Isabel Costello, The Literary Sofa iv
vvivii
JUDITH HENEGHAN BIRDEYE
In memory of my parents, Michael and Gill Heneghan
Rose looks, but the noisy dog is gone.
No yapping mouth. No pushing nose.
The noisy dog is gone, and the quiet dog is watching with its ears.
He was probably just a hiker.
Liv Ferrars hadn’t noticed him as she walked through the trees, but when she turned away from the river, his bright blue jacket caught her eye. He was standing on the bridge a couple of hundred yards downstream, between the struts, near the public information sign. Young, she guessed, by the way he raised his arm. He wasn’t waving at her; he was taking a selfie.
Liv didn’t wait to see if he would cross over to her side, or head back into the town. Instead, she continued up the slope towards the dead end of Dutchman’s Road, where a track climbed between still-bare beeches to the old house, her home, snug and safe from rising floodwater. Run-off could still cause problems though, after heavy rain, or during the spring thaw. Sonny had asked her to check the drain beneath the road, so when Liv reached the outlet pipe, she peered in. Immediately she put a hand over her nose. The matted fur of a dead racoon showed through a mesh of twigs and other debris. They’d need the gaff pole to clear it.
She winced as she straightened up, out here where Sonny couldn’t see her. Her limbs were sinewy after decades of hiking, but arthritis was taking its toll. Numb fingers fumbled with the blister pack of Advil in her pocket. Gunther, her German Shepherd, regarded her from a few yards away with pale, reproachful eyes.
‘I know,’ she said, raising her voice over the rush of the river below them. ‘Do you lay down and die, or wait for breakfast?’
The dog lifted his tail, once, then picked his way across the fallen leaves towards her. The leaves had been compressed by almost five months of snow, and now, where Gunther’s paws had disturbed 2them, they sloughed up like flakes of dry skin. Liv tugged gently on one of his ears and looked around. The trunks that rose about her seemed like a veil, mournful, as befitted the back end of winter. The light between the mountains was subdued and still, washing everything in a palette of fawn and slate and rust. High up on Sheridan and North Dome the snow lingered among the conifers, while down the valley a few vestiges clung on in clefts and the corners of backyards. The only thing that moved was the river, gushing and spilling towards Apollonia and the reservoir beyond. At this time of year its waters were muddied by silt and its wide, winding course was littered with brush and fallen branches. No pokes of skunk cabbage yet, no hint of spring green, if you didn’t count the dark sludge of the spruce firs, or that hiker – she could see him more clearly now – making his way along the narrow road towards her. His khaki backpack, too cumbersome for a day tripper, made him stoop a little.
Another one, then. This was how they came, hopping off the Trailways bus or hitching up from Poughkeepsie.
She tipped her head back and swallowed her pill.
‘Hello!’ The young man took a step towards the edge of the asphalt and stared down at Liv. ‘I’m looking for Birdeye – the Birdeye Colony?’
His accent was from the city. Gunther raised his head and sniffed.
‘Poor old Gunth,’ said Liv, pushing up her glasses with the back of her hand. She took in the stranger’s formal-looking chinos and heavy, unyielding boots, and wondered what they said about his intentions. ‘He hopes that someday his real owner will step out of the trees and take him home to a bowlful of meat.’
‘Oh.’ The young man looked at the dog.
‘Been with me for ten years, and still resents our veggie ways. You like dogs?’ 3
‘Yeah, but I don’t have one. I think it’s cruel in the city. Yours has all the space he wants up here.’
Liv smiled, warming to him. ‘Well, this is Birdeye. Did you call ahead? We’re not expecting anybody.’
The young man shifted his feet and nudged a couple of small stones off the asphalt. His black hair lay flat against his scalp, and his clean-shaven skin was so white it was almost blue.
‘No, I didn’t call – I hope that’s okay. I mean, I couldn’t find a website. I read The Attentive Heart – you’re Olivia Ferrars, right? I’m Conor. Conor Gleeson.’
‘Hello, Conor. Call me Liv, please.’
He bent down to shake the hand she offered, and his grip was soft, as if he didn’t know what to do. He looked tired, too; his eyelids were grey and puffy. Maybe he hadn’t slept in a while.
‘We don’t see many visitors this early in the season,’ she went on, ‘but if you’re hungry we can find you some breakfast. First, though, I’m going to need some help.’
Conor’s gaze faltered. As always it was a question of trust, and trust cut both ways. She raised her arm again, ignoring the pinch in her shoulder.
‘Haul me up there, will you?’
‘Sure!’ He sounded relieved, and pulled firmly, without yanking.
Liv led the way across the road, then walked alongside him as they started up the track that led to the house. Conor kept glancing over his shoulder to where Gunther had stopped beside a paper birch.
‘Your dog seems kind of sad,’ he said.
Liv nodded. ‘He’s pining.’
‘What for?’
‘Well, his pal Pinto died of a stroke a couple of days back. The whole night, Gunther lay beside her.’ She paused, once again assailed by loss: Pinto’s brindled coat, the brush of white down her nose, her cloudy, cataracted eyes that never dimmed her yapping. The little dog had appeared on the porch during the dark days of Liv’s mastectomies a decade before. ‘People drive up from the city, their 4dogs go crazy after squirrels and that’s it. They’re gone. Owners should tag them, or microchip. I’ve had dogs for thirty years, and each one came off the mountain, dehydrated, half starved.’
‘So it’s not just people you fix, huh?’
Conor’s tone wasn’t flippant, but Liv had dealt with this before – a cynicism, often unconscious, usually to hide the longing. Visitors came to Birdeye for all sorts of reasons, bringing their problems, their pain and loneliness, hoping to be mended, made whole. Some still expected a loved-up summer camp with herself as an earth-mother messiah. In recent years, several visitors had wondered openly why they’d bothered to make the trip to such a hokey Catskills backwater. Go pick some peas in Mishti’s garden, Liv would tell them. Take a hike up the mountain or sit with Rose in the yard. Then they started to unfold.
‘We don’t fix anything,’ she said, letting Conor down gently. ‘There’s no cure here. Just listening and accepting.’
‘That’s what I read,’ he said. ‘In your book.’
They had reached the bend in the track, and Conor raised his head. Liv looked too, as she sometimes did – a sort of dry-eyed reckoning of the old place with its peeling purple clapboards above the deep, old-fashioned porch that wrapped itself around two walls and shored up the drooping south-east corner. The circular attic window that had given the house its name was set high in the steep-angled front gable; someone had spray-painted a sooty outline, like smudged kohl, a good twenty years back, then picked out the surrounding shingles in rainbow colours. The wide stretch of backyard was hidden, mainly, to the rear, but to the left, an eight-foot-high scrap metal sculpture of the goddess Artemis giving birth to twins squatted in front of Mishti’s winter-wasted veggie garden. To the right of the house hunkered the donkey barn, where visitors used to sleep in bunk beds and hammocks, sun-kissed limbs akimbo. Nowadays the metal legs of the swing-set stuck out like shin bones through the unglazed window, and a string of Tibetan prayer flags hung limply from the chimney. 5
‘Awesome.’ Conor’s face twisted momentarily, as if he were wistful, or disappointed. Before Liv could ask, he walked on, then stopped beside the tan pickup parked near the steps with his head tilted to one side. ‘Who’s that?’
A figure hovered on the porch above them, behind the stack of shelves that Mishti used for seedlings in the spring. The see-through plastic covering was blotched with mildew, but Liv could still make out an angular nose that mirrored her own, fading copper hair cut short, and a long, flapping hand.
‘Hey, Birdie,’ she said, using an old nickname. ‘Were you waiting for us? This is Conor. Conor, this is my daughter, Rose.’
Conor seemed to hesitate as Rose moved into view. Rose would be forty-nine soon, and she was tall, like Liv. Her sweatpants and cardigan only partially disguised her thin frame; she put her arms behind her back and clasped her fingers in a way that pushed her shoulders forward and made her chin jut out. Like a heron, Liv often thought – her Argus-eyed child.
‘Great to meet you!’ said Conor, recovering. He shrugged off his backpack and leaned it against the steps before holding out his hand.
Rose did not reciprocate. Instead, she made a sound that might have come from some large-winged bird, wheeling and keening. Arms flailed. A white neck; wide damson eyes.
‘What did I do?’ Conor pulled his arm back as she veered around the porch corner.
‘She’s fine,’ said Liv, keeping her voice quiet and firm. ‘Everything is fine. Please go inside. Say hi to Sonny. I just need a minute.’
Rose, meanwhile, had stumbled down the side steps and disappeared towards the rear of the house. She never went far; the house was her lodestone, and in the ten or so seconds it took for Liv to skirt the goddess sculpture and the veggie garden, she was already circling the backyard, weaving between the boulders at the edge of the treeline where the ground rose sharply. She had stopped crying out, but her shoulders were pulled up to the base of her skull and her knees had locked, causing her to move stiffly, painfully. Liv knew 6what was coming. As she tried to take her daughter’s elbow Rose lunged at her, grasping her hair in both her hands and yanking Liv’s head down with some force. Liv held her then, one side of her face pressed against Rose’s abdomen, her arms around Rose’s waist, not resisting, and in the minute or so while she waited for the sharp tugs to subside, she, too, felt a kind of release, at once unsettling and familiar.
How much had Conor seen, she wondered, as she reached up to uncurl her daughter’s fingers. She and Sonny and Mishti had agreed that, moving forwards, they wouldn’t take in anyone new without each other’s explicit agreement, but the winter had been long, and the old hope was stirring within her.
He could stay one night, she decided. One Sharing.
By the time Liv had coaxed her daughter indoors, Conor was sitting in the kitchen at the back of the house, eating a plate of Sonny’s crispy paprika potatoes. Liv could see Conor’s legs stretched out across the floorboards as she walked along the gloomy passageway. Sonny stood at the sink beyond him, a familiar silhouette against the window, framed by the spider plants and aloe vera shoots that dangled in macramé holders around his head. He was wearing faded cargo pants with a woven belt and his Janis Joplin t-shirt, which made him look like a college professor. The wispy remnants of his hair were gathered in a ponytail, and the burnished dome of his head shone in the electric light that accentuated his stooping shoulders.
‘Hey,’ said Conor, drawing in his stockinged feet.
‘You two have met, then.’ Liv pulled out a chair and sat down. ‘Conor found me checking under the road. There’s a dead racoon in there.’
‘Yep,’ said Sonny. ‘I’ll deal with it.’ He was scooping up potato peelings and didn’t turn round.
Conor nodded his head towards Rose who wavered in the passageway. ‘Is she okay?’ He pushed another piece of potato into his mouth.
‘Rose,’ said Liv, glancing up towards her daughter. ‘Conor is asking if you’re okay. He’s here to visit.’
Conor stopped chewing, as if he’d worked something out. ‘If that’s cool with you, I mean,’ he said to Rose.
Sonny flicked on both faucets suddenly, splashing water across the counter. ‘Have you checked with Mishti?’
‘Mishti won’t mind.’ Liv leaned back in her chair, trying to catch Sonny’s eye. He knew perfectly well that she couldn’t have checked with Mishti, because he’d just dropped Mishti at the high school where she worked and there was no cell service along the valley. But what Liv really wanted him to know was that she couldn’t turn Conor away. This was never how they’d lived the communal life. Birdeye welcomed all comers.
Conor was staring around at the scuffed orange walls and shelves crammed with dusty tins and jars. ‘I’m not a freeloader,’ he said. ‘I’m good with tools. I work at Home Depot.’
‘Home Depot, huh?’ Sonny turned off the water. ‘Gas grills and wallpaper.’
‘I could fix this table.’ Conor nudged it with his knee so that it creaked. It was actually three small tables screwed together, made level with back issues of the Catskill News and covered with a bedspread that one visitor had liberated from the Zen Mountain Monastery. Like most of the house it smelled of dog and several decades of sandalwood incense, as well as Sonny’s cooking spices. ‘Eau de Sixty-Nine,’ they called it. Eric, Liv’s ex-husband, was always joking that they should bottle it for the second-homers down in Saugerties.
‘There’s nothing wrong with the table,’ said Sonny. ‘We have outside jobs to do.’
Rose, who had ventured in and was standing straight-backed beside Conor, lunged towards his fried potatoes. She grabbed a handful and immediately dropped them near her feet. Gunther padded under the table and began to eat. 8
‘You’re very welcome.’ Conor looked around again. ‘Who else lives here? I thought there’d be more of you.’
‘Used to be.’ Liv smiled at his growing confidence. She took a brown egg from a bowl on the table and broke it straight onto the floorboards, next to the dropped potatoes. ‘Twenty or twenty-five, most summers, back in the eighties, early nineties. The four of us have been here from the start – that’s Rose, Sonny, Mishti and I – but others come and go, travelling, off to college, off to the city. Even Mishti goes out to work, these days.’
‘And Mishti is Sonny’s sister.’ Conor tipped his head to observe Gunther as he lapped the glistening egg.
‘Right. You’ll meet her later. Eric, Rose’s dad, lives in Tukesville now, but he still calls by to take care of the plumbing and electrics. Karin walks up a couple of times a week. She helps out with beds and cleaning.’ Liv watched Sonny’s shoulders move up and down as he swabbed the wet counter. Sonny still thought they should live by their hands – growing things, teaching yoga, reiki, running the stall at the flea market in Woodstock. It wasn’t practical anymore though; they’d stopped all that after Liv’s surgeries. ‘We’re a bunch of old hippies,’ she added, as much for Sonny’s benefit as Conor’s. ‘Always will be. Visitors come and go. Some like you seek us out, while others show up because they can’t find a room in town. But anyone who stays must be open and humble in our Sharing. If you’ve read anything about us, you’ll know that we have very few rules, but the rules we do keep are how we survive. “Listen first. An attentive heart—”’
‘“Responds with love.”’ Conor stressed each word and tapped his fingers on the table in time with their beat.
Liv studied him over the top of her glasses. ‘It’s what keeps us alive.’
‘Oh, sure!’ said Conor, swiftly. ‘You’ve done a ton of stuff here. Seen it too.’ He nodded towards the piece of blackboard that hung from a nail next to the refrigerator. ‘What does that mean?’
A long time ago, Mishti had painted ‘Peace and love thoughts’ in 9gold nail polish across the top of the blackboard’s frame, and visitors had scrawled their slogans and exhortations: ‘Human Be-in!’ and ‘An Army of Lovers Cannot Lose’ and ‘If not you, then who?’ Lately it had been used for little more than lists of shopping or gardening tasks, but Liv could still make out the letters that someone had once scrawled in greasy pink Crayola across the bottom.
‘“Communi”-something, exclamation mark,’ Conor read out. ‘“Communition!” Is that an actual word, even?’
Liv smiled again – warmly, she hoped – and got up from her chair. ‘People have expressed themselves on that board in all kinds of ways, over the years – not all of it in English, not all of it making sense. I’ll show you where you’re sleeping. Then, if you feel up to it, Sonny could use some help in the yard.’
Conor rose, too, but seemed in no hurry. He was wearing a white button-down shirt half-tucked into his chinos: a little formal, to Liv’s mind, as if he’d come for an interview. He reached for the backpack he had propped against the wall. ‘Where’s Rose’s twin?’ he asked as he shouldered its weight. ‘I thought she’d be here.’
Rose, still hovering, made a soft sound like a hum, with her lips open.
‘Mary visits,’ said Liv, gently. ‘She lives in England, doesn’t she, Rose?’
‘Where you’re from,’ said Conor. ‘I guess she didn’t subscribe to the Birdeye manifesto.’
At last Sonny turned around. He gripped the dishcloth in his hand. ‘We’re not a cult.’
Liv waggled her fingers at him, willing him to let it go, but Sonny’s frown deepened.
‘Oh, come on,’ he said, as if it were Liv who had suggested something outrageous. ‘You know what we’ve put up with. I’m tired of the insinuations. He’d better not be a reporter, or I’ll—’
‘Whoaa!’ Conor put up his hands.
‘Let’s rewind a little,’ Liv said hastily, troubled more by Sonny’s hostility than Conor’s choice of words. ‘We don’t get much interest 10from anyone, these days, although even if you were a reporter, Conor, we wouldn’t turn you away. Because everyone is searching. That’s why you’re here, isn’t it? Sonny’s just concerned—’
‘I’ll speak for myself if you don’t mind,’ muttered Sonny, throwing the cloth into the sink. He stomped past Conor and exited the kitchen, heading for the study, his moccasined feet sticking slightly along the painted wooden floor.
‘Peace and love, man!’ said Conor, once he’d gone. Two pink spots had appeared below his cheekbones, and Liv felt her colour rising too. She wished Sonny could have shown his tender side: the Sonny who drove fifty miles out of his way to fetch a visitor, or who knelt in the wet grass to remove Rose’s slippers on summer mornings so that she could sweep her toes through the dew.
Instead, her old friend was being an asshole. Sure, they knew nothing about Conor. Wasn’t that the whole point?
Conor hung back in the kitchen when Liv followed Rose along the passage to the big room next to the front door. ‘The parlour’, as Liv had called it, was opposite ‘the snug’, which was full of craft stuff. Mishti’s space, he guessed. Another door, between the snug and the kitchen, was firmly shut. Sonny was in there. It didn’t matter. He had plenty of time.
He breathed in deeply through his nose, then extracted his cell phone from his back pocket. After swiping to find voice memos, he tapped the red circle and brought the device up to his mouth.
‘Communition,’ he said, speaking slowly and deliberately.
He looked at the screen again, scrolled down to a previous file and tapped the play arrow.
‘Flooding hazards.’ The voice didn’t seem like his, but it was. Earlier that morning he had recorded himself reading the information about river restoration and flood defences on the board for tourists down by the bridge. ‘Before restoration. After restoration. After the flood.’ The phrases sounded biblical with the rushing river in the background, and while he wasn’t religious, he knew that if he wanted to, he could give them another meaning.
He refreshed the screen and tapped the play arrow one more time.
‘Area of detail.’
These words had appeared several times on the information board, next to a yellow magnifying glass that zoomed in on a specific feature such as a strand of river weed or a bald eagle. He repeated them under his breath, noting their out-of-context 12blandness, but also their precision. Such thoughts helped him feel calmer.
‘Conor?’ called Liv. ‘Come on, I’ll show you where you’re sleeping.’
He stood up and slid his phone back into his pocket.
The music began as a muffled bass beat that pulsed through the floor joists as if welling up from underwater. Liv, crouching in the attic beneath the eaves, guessed it was coming from Conor’s phone in the bedroom directly beneath her. She didn’t know what kids listened to anymore, she realised. Birdeye had been silent for too long.
The attic these days was little more than a storage nook for boxes of mildewed camping gear, old yoga mats and a lopsided double bedstead. Liv had left Conor to settle in before climbing the narrow stairs on the pretext of checking for damp along the sheathing, but she couldn’t see much in the dull light from the round window and anyway, the roof was always leaking. No, up here Liv could exercise an unspoken principle of communal living: the right to disappear, if only for five minutes. Rose proved the point each time she slipped from a crowded room to an empty one, while Sonny had long ago claimed the old dining room as his study through a series of slow, deliberate acts of occupation. Even Mishti had her meditation shrine up in the woods, out of range from the house.
Liv reached into the shadows and ran her hand along a cross beam until her fingers found the grooves she sought, smooth, now, and familiar: the words I HATE carved directly above a distinctive round knot, like a bird’s eye, in the timber. Mary used to hide up here when she was a teenager. To Liv, the message she had gouged was part of the Birdeye story – a fleeting impulse, a youthful act of rebellion, but also a commitment, of sorts. 14
The music below was getting louder. A woman’s voice was singing, though not with words Liv could pick out. She sat back on her heels to listen, glad of the noise; it reminded her of the old days with Mary and Rose screaming and shouting, guitars playing and footsteps thundering on the stairs. Liv had lived here for forty-six years with Rose and Sonny and Mishti, plus Eric and Mary for the first seventeen, along with dozens of others who came and went like so many dandelion seeds, floating in and out of their lives. People sometimes asked Liv when Birdeye really began, and she told them January 1973, when a gentleman called Roman, whose only sister had died when he was still a boy, walked into our house and was comforted by Mary’s yelling. Roman had been suffering from dementia, and somehow, the noise of children helped disrupt the constant looping of his early loss, with its terrible silence. The story formed the first chapter of The Attentive Heart, which had brought more people, so that for a decade or two the community had been almost famous with bedrooms turned into dormitories, with bodies sleeping top-to-toe wherever there was floor space and meals served cookout-style on trestle tables along both porches. Then came a frightening period in the mid-nineties when a couple of twenty-somethings had almost destroyed the community. Afterwards, Liv and Mishti and Sonny had glued themselves back together, and in some respects, they were stronger for it, although traces remained: in Rose’s hair-pulling, for example, and Liv kneeling here under the roof, picking at scabs such as Mary’s bitter message.
A thumping crescendo from below broke into Liv’s thoughts. Conor was waiting. Each visitor, she’d always said, was the start of something new, so she took a deep breath and stood up with the help of the crossbeam. As the blood rushed from her head, she rested one hand on her flattened and scarred chest, aware, briefly, of the lack of tissue for gravity to tug on. She’d had the all-clear for seven years now, and while she didn’t require breasts, never sought reconstruction, her body still managed to feel surprised. 15
Conor’s door was ajar. He was bending over the old walnut bureau in front of the window, and when Liv caught sight of his face in the mirror his reflection seemed strikingly intimate, more real than actual flesh. She hoped they could start afresh, without the atmosphere from earlier.
‘Everything okay?’ She spoke loudly, so that he would hear her over the music. Conor removed his hand from a drawer and turned around.
‘This is wild!’ he said, without a trace of embarrassment, holding out a yellowed sheet of newsprint. ‘The Catskill Times, from 1972!’
‘Ah.’ Liv pushed the door open wide. Conor prodded his phone where it lay on the bed, and the room fell silent. She glanced at the clothes he had scattered across the covers: a couple of t-shirts, a pair of jeans, a hooded sweatshirt, underwear. A sleeping bag sat in a heap on the floor, as if he’d just pulled it out of his backpack. On top lay a copy of The Attentive Heart with its cover image of Liv embracing her girls. Back then, the three of them had looked quite similar with their coppery hair, bright brown eyes and those teeth with her grandmother’s gap at the front. The book’s pages were well-thumbed, she noticed. The spine was concave and broken. ‘That’s the year we moved in. It was more like camping, really. Sonny stripped out everything, fixed the floors, replastered walls. We learned by doing.’ She smiled, remembering her first sight of the house, so at ease in its wooded surroundings. They’d arrived in the fall, and she could still picture Mary sitting on the porch steps, holding out chubby fingers to catch leaves next to a row of pumpkins carved with peace symbols and letters spelling ‘Dump Nixon!’ How young they’d been: Eric, at twenty-four the eldest, did plumbing work for cash in Apollonia; Sonny taught himself house maintenance from a manual, and Mishti, barely eighteen, spent the winter dreaming up a garden that would feed them. Liv, meanwhile, had her hands full with Rose and Mary, yo-yoing between surprise and acceptance, 16discovering the different things her girls could do, or might one day do, or possibly not do, ever.
‘Then,’ prompted Conor, ‘you helped that dementia guy. Word got around. You had a vibe, here.’
Liv noticed the way he had marked certain pages of her book with a fold in the corner. She pointed to the newspaper. ‘What’s the lead story?’
‘Something about a burn ban. And anglers.’
Liv smiled. ‘Us Catskill folk are nothing if not consistent. I used to do some fly-fishing myself when I was young, before I thought about the killing. It’s an English invention, although the Catskills like to claim it.’
‘You’ve still got a British accent,’ said Conor. ‘I mean, you speak the way they do in that movie about Jackie O, or that old black and white actress, kind of snooty …’ His voice trailed off as he realised what he had implied. Again Liv was struck again by the mix of outspokenness and nerves.
‘Katherine Hepburn?’ She sucked in her cheeks to make her cheekbones look sharper. ‘You’re not the first person to say so. It’s my privileged vowels. Can’t shake ’em.’ Conor’s charger and earbuds, she noticed, sat on the nightstand beside a rolled-up necktie. He was still wearing his white shirt, as if he’d come straight from an office job – or a judge. If he’d been in trouble, he wouldn’t be the first. ‘We’re in a dead zone,’ she went on, ‘as you’ve probably discovered. No cell signal, just Wi-Fi. Sonny can give you the code. The best place for reception is next to the router outside the study.’
Conor clicked his tongue, then waved around at the mossy green walls with hand-painted flowers and vines that curled across the ceiling. ‘Who usually sleeps here? Is it always for visitors?’
Liv moved across to the window. ‘It’s Mary’s old room. When she was young, and her dad and Rose and I also slept in here, she used to make signs for visitors and hang them above the porch so that you could see them from that bend in the track – welcome signs, goodbye signs …’ She pictured her daughter with her forehead 17against the glass, sobbing when a favourite visitor left. It only lasted until she latched on to someone new, usually female – a big sister she could follow around, copying how they walked or fixed their hair.
‘What does she do?’
‘She’s a lawyer. In London.’
‘Sounds intense.’
Conor’s tone was a little dismissive, in a way that made Liv wish she’d not said anything. Mary was due to fly out from London for her joint birthday with Rose the following week, and it had been a year since Liv last hugged her. Some of Sonny’s defensiveness slid under her skin and she closed her eyes for a moment, focusing on her toes, the balls of her feet, her heels, the solid weight of herself pressing into the floor – an old habit, these days re-branded by Mishti as mindfulness.
‘Hey are you okay?’ Conor’s voice broke through behind her.
She nodded. ‘When you’re ready, come downstairs. We’re glad you’re here.’
Mary was speed-reading a client review at her desk when she heard the shivery tinkle of wine glasses. Frowning, she looked up from her computer screen as someone rolled the drinks trolley past the frosted glass wall of her office. She had forgotten that one of the departmental managers was leaving. Bottles jiggled as the wheels hit a wrinkle in the carpet.
Mary paused the clock on her timesheet, stood up and slipped her phone into her jacket pocket. Keep this brief, she told herself, as she stepped out into the corridor. She was making her annual trip to the States in a few days and, as well as fund managers to placate, she was waiting for a call from the solicitor who was handling the conveyancing for the house she was buying up in Highgate. The 18purchase had been planned for the past year and a half, but she had worked absurdly hard to afford it. The stress had caused an itchy rash to break out across her fingers.
Several PAs were already crowding in the boardroom doorway. Mary edged inside, looking around for other partners, but the afternoon sunlight was glancing off the steel-framed chairs, so she slipped past a trio of fresh-faced associates and reached for a glass.
‘Here.’ Martin, the department’s most senior equity partner, stood waggling an open bottle of prosecco.
‘Thank you.’ Predictably, it wasn’t chilled. Martin always said that the booze shouldn’t be too enticing. He’d be out of the building by half past five, heading to one of the drinking holes down in Canary Wharf.
‘Sláinte from the dinosaurs!’ He raised his glass in the associates’ direction, as if he and Mary were the same generation, when in fact he was mid-sixties and she was forty-eight. He was like a hippopotamus: wallowing, thick-skinned, a killer. ‘I’m off,’ he murmured, leaning towards her ear. ‘Say a few words, won’t you.’
Mary’s phone vibrated briefly against her hip – her solicitor, she assumed, with his usual impeccable timing. She waited until Martin had retreated, then made her way towards the huge floor-to-ceiling window where clients were brought to view the Tower of London far below, and the yachts lining St Katherine’s Dock. The screen was tricky to read in the brightness and she had to shield it with her hand, still awkwardly clutching her glass. Everyone is fine but I need to tell you something. Please call later. It wasn’t the solicitor. It was Sonny.
Mary was entirely used to stepping out of one world and into the other, but unexpected overlaps were another thing altogether. She closed her eyes to suppress the vertigo, then peered again as Birdeye swung towards her. Sonny wouldn’t be coy if Rose was unwell. No, this was almost certainly about Liv, or a money problem, or both. Not an emergency, but something that couldn’t wait until her visit.
Okay, she messaged. 19
‘Nice of you to come,’ said a woman’s voice close by. The departing manager was hovering.
Mary frowned. A few words, Martin had said. She tapped the rim of her phone against her glass and cleared her throat.
Sonny worked conor hard for the rest of the morning. First they went to hook the racoon’s body from the pipe, and when they returned, Sonny held the ladder while Conor cleared the porch gutters. Liv, glancing from the parlour window, saw that Conor had swapped his smart clothes for jeans and a hoodie. Sonny’s manner seemed warmer as he leaned in to show Conor how to do things, what to look for, and why. He was a good teacher, she knew – thoughtful and generous with his knowledge when the need or the opportunity arose. Countless young wanderers had learned how to paint a window frame or bake a rye loaf or perfect a shoulder stand under his guidance, but these things took time.
Once the ladder was stowed away, Sonny decided that the crap in the crawl space beneath the steps ought to be cleared, so Conor borrowed a pair of gloves, then hauled out three sodden mattresses, full of mice nests and spattered with droppings, from an era when visitors pitched up on a Friday and camped in the yard. When Liv came outside with Rose for their lunchtime walk, he was still dragging them down to the roadside. Sonny had told him to stack them next to the remains of the farm stand where they used to sell produce.
‘Good job!’ she called, hoping to sound encouraging. ‘They’d have been a fire hazard come the summer!’
Conor stared at her for a moment, dropping the corner he was holding. ‘Well, they’ve been there quite a while.’ He pushed his sleeves up to his elbows. ‘Where are you two headed?’
Liv took in the smoothness of his inner arms, automatically checking for bruising or track marks. ‘To the diner in 21town. Our Monday treat. You like a trip to Caspar’s, don’t you, Rose?’
‘Nice!’ said Conor, in a way that made clear his preference for a burger over working with Sonny. ‘Is that your main job here? I mean,’ he nodded towards Rose, ‘caring for your daughter, now that this place is quiet?’ Rose, however, was already moving off, so Liv trotted after her with a wave towards Sonny who was brushing dirt off the porch steps.
‘You’d better ask him – Rose and I do what we’re told, mostly! We’ve plenty to keep us busy.’
Rose began pulling at her gloves when they reached the bend in the road, rubbing them against her hips until they fell off. In really cold weather Liv wrapped her daughter’s hands in Sonny’s old ski mitts, Velcroing the straps around as tightly as she dared, but Gunther had recently chewed the lining out of them, so now she tried to persuade Rose to use her coat pockets instead. It didn’t work. Rose’s bare hands flapped and gestured until Liv’s own enfolded hers and her fingers could rest there. It meant they walked slowly, as if they carried something precious between them.
As they neared the junction with its left turn onto the old truss bridge, two people came out of a driveway. Susan Kinney and her youngest boy, Kason – five years old, if Liv remembered correctly. His mother had never been particularly friendly. Liv had tried, over the years, to be a good neighbour, taking eggs when Sonny had kept hens and leaving a card on the Kinney porch with an offer of free reiki when Susan’s husband AJ lost his job. But some folk never warmed to their way of being. That was how it was.
Susan was holding a bunch of papers – flyers, maybe. She turned left towards Birdeye, but almost straight away she spotted Liv and whipped around, walking quickly in the opposite direction. Such pettiness seemed absurd to Liv, and she almost called out, but Susan hugged her flyers close to her chest, her padded nylon jacket tight across her shoulders, so Liv watched her son instead. Kason, dawdling behind his mother, bent to pick something out of a stubborn lump of 22snow beside the fire hydrant. As he straightened up, he looked over his shoulder, his gaze open and briefly curious before he skipped on. To Liv, his legs and spine seemed fluid, as if his bones hadn’t hardened, as if all the energy it would take a lifetime to expend was bubbling away inside him.
Children’s bodies were marvellous things; she had always thought so, ever since she first came to New York, before she’d met Eric, when she was barely eighteen and only half-formed herself. Take those children in her care at Camp Pine Crest – that one she had pulled from the lake – a girl of about nine, with breasts already and sombre eyes and a round, soft belly. Oh that had been another time, back then. All Liv had to do was get on a plane, they’d told her. Get the bus to the Port Authority in Manhattan, and another to Poughkeepsie. We’ll meet you, they’d said, and they did – two sweating, wide-hipped matrons who scooped her up along with a few other virgin counsellors from a parking lot behind a gas station and drove them in a bright green bus all the way upstate. Fattie Farm, the locals called it, for kids sent up from Flatbush or Queens for six weeks of dieting and exercise and a daily weigh-in and a weekly check-up at which their bodies were measured in twenty-one different places. Wrists, rib cages, inner thighs. Liv had been made a swim counsellor on account of her unfamiliarity with softball. This meant that in addition to her ‘dorm mother’ duties and sitting with her group at mealtimes and noting down any recalcitrant behaviour, she herded them like ducklings down to the lake and made sure none of them drowned. She wore her pineapple print bikini every day and burnt in the sunshine – the slender red-headed English girl in a camp full of indoor-bred city kids who ran into the restrooms to stick their fingers down their throats or swooned over pictures of burgers and sundaes instead of singers and movie stars. No one had heard of bulimia back then. No one considered the life sentences they were doling out with the lettuce leaves and the tape measures and the scales. The nine-year-old had wriggled away at measuring time and jumped into the water. Her strength as she fought to get 23away had taken Liv by surprise. Of course, back then, most things had surprised her, but it was always momentary, each new sensation quickly absorbed and forgotten. Only later, after she became a mother, did such things revisit her.
Rose made a humming sound as she veered into the ragged verge. Kason in front of them had by now turned around and was marching backwards, staring at them, taking his time, keeping each foot in the air a little longer before stamping it down, seemingly enjoying the reverse perspective.
His mother paused at the entrance to another property, in front of a mailbox from which a small Stars and Stripes flag drooped. She opened the flap and pushed in a flyer, then glanced over her shoulder. ‘Don’t gape!’ she scolded, reaching for Kason’s arm.
Liv steered Rose back to the asphalt and tucked the loose end of her scarf inside her coat. The little girl who jumped into the water at camp had been nicknamed Nellie the Elephant by the other children. After all these years, Liv could still hear the tannoy, piping ‘Food, Glorious Food’ over the parade ground, down to the shore and out across the smooth, milky surface of the lake.
‘Come on, Rose,’ she murmured. ‘Let’s get pancakes.’ And maybe a little weed.
Rose banged her hand against the glass outside Caspar’s, eager to be let in. When Liv pushed the door, the old-fashioned bell tinkled and the warm fug of grilled bacon and donuts greeted them, as it always did.
‘Good afternoon, ladies!’ The server was a round-shouldered, light-skinned teenager in a black t-shirt. Liv hadn’t seen him before. ‘I’m Thomas. Take a seat and I’ll fetch a menu.’
Liv looked about. The place was quiet, out of season. The booths at the far end were almost in darkness where no one had flicked on the electric light. A few people sat near the bar: the girl from the 24gas station over the road, a couple of strangers in jeans and denim jackets, and Liv’s elderly friend Dolores, eyes shut beneath the peak of her red ‘This Machine Kills Fascists’ cap, napping at her usual table by the news stand.
Rose sat down heavily in the nearest booth.
‘What can I get you?’ asked Thomas, bringing over two glasses of water.
‘Is Jenna working today?’ Liv guided Rose’s arms out of her coat, then slid into the seat opposite and shrugged off her own. Rose reached out and touched Thomas’s leg. He stepped back a little.
‘She’s checking a delivery.’
‘She’s been visiting her mother,’ said a smoke-raddled voice behind Liv. ‘In Saugerties. “Assisted living” they call it. My ass!’
Liv twisted in her seat. ‘Hello, Dolores. How are you doing?’
Dolores rolled her rheumy eyes. She wore a thick padded coat, but Liv knew she was skin and bone beneath it. Her hands shook as she pushed her half-eaten slice of pizza to the other side of her plate.
‘I’m cold. This is cold! Thomas! Heat this up a little for me, would ya? I have two vests on. I can feel the dampness.’ She tapped her fingers on the table. ‘O-Livia! You want to think about Rose’s chest.’
A little girl came running out from behind the counter. A braid of hair was clamped in her mouth and the waistband of her leggings had slipped below the curve of her belly.
‘Hi Cherry,’ said Liv, smiling. Cherry was Jenna’s daughter, a longed-for, long-awaited child, although her father hadn’t stuck around much after. ‘You remember Rose, don’t you? Rose is my daughter.’
Cherry scrunched up her face. ‘She is not.’
Now Jenna appeared in the doorway by the sandwich maker – a heavy-set woman in her late forties wearing jeans and a Caspar’s t-shirt.
‘Good to see you, Liv. And Rose! How you doing, honey? What are you having?’ 25
‘Soup!’ said Dolores, lifting her chin to appraise Jenna from beneath the peak of her cap. ‘They have all the soups here.’
‘Do you want to see the specials?’ asked Jenna.
‘These are them,’ said Dolores, patting the plastic menu by her plate. ‘Today’s a good day for soup. Tomato, lentil, but not the curry. I can’t take the curry.’
‘No curry,’ agreed Liv. ‘But you’d like some pancakes, would you Rose?’
‘Oh pancakes!’ scoffed Dolores. ‘I got one word I tell ya. In-di-gestion!’
Liv watched her daughter’s face, checking for any tension, but Rose’s mouth was relaxed and her eyes were half-shut – her ‘water off of a swan’s back look’, Eric called it. ‘And my usual, please, Jenna,’ she added.
When Rose’s pancakes arrived, Liv cut them up and poured syrup and handed her daughter a fork. Jenna came over with the coffee pot and a basket of serviettes and sat down opposite.
‘You want to make triangles?’ she asked Cherry, pulling her up into her lap.
‘No.’
‘Okay, let’s go fancy.’
She showed her daughter how to fold down two corners and bring one behind the other so that the serviette stood up by itself, restaurant style.
‘Old school,’ said Dolores, glancing over. ‘That’s how we did ’em at Marlon’s. You got beef stew in a bread bowl. Or sometimes just a bowl. Rose would like it up there I betcha. But, O-Livia – you gotta wipe that crap off her chin.’
After a while, when Rose had finished eating, and Cherry had hopped down and was occupied tipping sweetener from pink sachets into Dolores’ glass of Alka Seltzer, Jenna pulled a mini Ziploc bag from her sleeve and tucked it deep into one of the serviettes. She pushed it across the table to Liv, who stared down at it for a moment. The fold reminded her of the cleft cut by the Esopus around Slide Mountain. 26
