I was in the kitchen when Ryan arrived, a couple of battered carryalls over his shoulder. He was steering each child by the top of the skull. Deb: Hey, Gaerity, you sly dog! What’s this? I was grinning. Young children, impressionable heads to mess with! How fun! Ryan: What? He looked as though he had just emerged from a cave. Deb: I said, what’s this? You have a child stashed someplace who’s not like that other little freak? They make a grandpa out of you? Ryan’s eyes bugged and he started to look cornered. The children had caught sight of me and did what young children always do: they hid, arms wrapped tightly around Ryan’s knees, peeking around his legs as though he were a sturdy tree. I saw the panic and the shyness and I backpedaled. Ryan: Where’s Jade? Deb: Upstairs. Ryan… Ryan: She’ll know what t’do. She’ll help me with these two. I thought of Jade, who laughed everytime I got into a sparring match with one of the boys because it wasn’t her problem and it would never happen to her. Jade: What will I know, Ryan? Jade was standing in the door, covered in chalkdust and looking pleased with herself. She had been drawing again—Ryan in charcoal. Jade: Whose kids are those? Ryan: Och, Jade, there ye are… His relief was instant and visible and it only made Jade more confused. Jade: What’s wrong with you, boyo? Where did you find those kids? Ryan: Lass… d’ye remember me brother, Rob… an’ the babies… Mick and Nuala… Jade: Oh, no way. Jade was quick on the draw, anyway. Nuala: Auntie Jade? She doesn’t like us? Ryan: Hush, Nuala… she’s a bit… surprised, is all, wee one. Jade swallowed something intense. Now there were two adults looking trapped by these two Irish mites. We stood, the tableau ridiculous but lending some humor to the afternoon. The front door slammed. Mick: Is that Mr. Bill, Uncle Ryan? Deb: Oooooh, nooooo… I blew past Jade like a cool breeze. If it was Bill, the intercept was vital. If not… not. Bill: What in hell crawled up your ass, woman? Gaerity back? I nodded, glancing back at the kitchen door. Bill had never particularly wanted children around him though he tolerated mine with good grace. How would he react to two outsized babies? Probably not well. Deb: He brought company with him. Bill: What’re we runnin’ here, a fuckin’ home for the displaced? Get ‘em a goddamn hotel. Deb: I can’t, Bill. It’s his niece and nephew, Mick and Nuala. Bill: And? Deb: And what? Bill: Finish it. He knew there was more. There was always more with me. Deb: They’re four, Bill. They’re twins and they’re four. Bill: What in the goddamn hell do we need with a couplea carpet biters… Bad enough I haveta put up with that one little freak of yours… Calls me fat one more time and I’m gonna show him fat… Deb: You like my little freak. You can mess with him. Bill: Ain’t the point. He leaves. Deb: True enough. But these two… well, their father wants them out of Northern Ireland for a while and he had to con Ryan the way it was and Jade looks like someone wants her spleen… Bill: And you’re lovin it. I leveled a stare at him. Deb: Not really. They’ll require care and minding… but I can’t put them out, now they’re here. If nothing else, I know the program. Between myself and Jade, hopefully, we’ll keep them out of your hair. Bill: Why do you keep takin’ this shit on? Deb: What else can I do? Ryan is my friend, those are children… hell, the rest of the world lands here eventually, didn’t you and Elmore wind up putting Tom to bed in the bathtub because he was so drunk he wouldn’t go to his hotel? Bill: You know the answer to that, girl. Deb: Yeah, I do… I’d’ve dragged the big goof, but not you two, oh no. So I get in there the next morning and start getting ready to shower and this voice says, ‘don’t usually see a full moon in the mornin’, darlin’, but thanks so much for sharin,’ and I damn near had a heart attack. Don’t be giving me any shit… no such thing as no room at the Inn around here. Get downstairs that day… Hiatt has his head in the sink running water on his tongue, feeding Hewey raisins… I wandered back to the kitchen, grumbling. Bill followed me. The children attempted to further their retreat when they caught sight of Bill. Ryan fidgeted, since the children appeared to be trying to crawl up his pantlegs. Bill: Christ all-eff… Jade and Deb: Bill! We cut loose with a yell, stopping him before he could do more than sound the first letter. Bill’s face darkened as he ripped a beer out of the fridge. Bill: Take those two outside, show ‘em the llamas or somethin’. I wanna talk t’you, boy. Jade: He’s gonna bitch at him. Deb: Doubtless. Come on, kids… you ever been to McDonalds? As I endured four-year-old excitement and fended off children, feeling myself edging towards grandmother mode, Jade continued to mutter fiercely. Jade: It’s nothing compared to what he’ll get later, though… Jade was completely unaccustomed to buying for children. I was out of practice and had never bought for a girl closer to me than my niece. We made a confident pair, then, sallying forth with Mick and Nuala to the local temple of consumerism. Bill was my first stop. He didn’t like me taking plastic to Target. Where other people made purchases, he claimed I made assaults on different departments with every intention of cleaning them out. He and Ryan were sitting across from one another, faces set, drinking beer the way some people fought with knives. Deb: Bill, I’m going to Target. Normally, he would ask me how much and then give me twice what I had asked for. This time was different. The clawed his wallet free and flipped it at me. Bill: Get goin’, girl. I knew he rarely kept less than two grand in that scarred leather trifold. This was going to be interesting. It felt like warp speed when we blew into Target. We had three hours and I suspected we’d need most of it. Mick and Nuala had coated themselves with McFlurry, so we washed them up before dumping them in carts and heading off to do battle. We started in the shoe department and worked toward the back of the store. And it never seemed as though I’d thought of everything. Sneakers led to dress shoes, for some reason, which lead to sandals. We plowed through jeans, shorts, t-shirts—got badly sidetracked among girly short-sets and playsuits, which annoyed Mick to no end. We did socks and underwear, pajamas and bathrobes, and finished with light jackets. Deb: Bedding. Jade: What beds? Deb: Shit fire and save matches. There’s a field trip for tomorrow. Well… bedding. Star Wars for Mick—he and Jade bonded instantly over Qui-Gon Jinn. Nuala preferred Mickey and Minnie Mouse. Deb: Toys. This was going to be the wild part. Target was not Toys R Us, but it would more than satisfy a couple of Irish children who had never had a lot to begin with. Jade: What did you play with at home, Mick? Mick: Sticks. Nuala: We had a ball. Jade: Oh, Christ. Deb: Get another cart… Hang on, I’ll go. The first thing Nuala saw was a plush white bear. When I tried to convince her to look at his cut pile brown brother, she put on a face I was to become intimately familiar with the Angry Little Irish Girl. The white one was what she wanted. Nothing else was acceptable. Meantime, Mick had found Sebastian the Crab from the Little Mermaid and he was busy clouting Nuala upside the head with the claws. Mick set his jaw until he got a Darth Maul light-saber, while Nuala chose a Jar Jar Binks figure. We did games and trucks and dolls. We found them little twelve inch bicycles, crayons and coloring books, storybooks, radios… and a Sony PlayStation as well as a number of games. I knew I was going overboard, but I couldn’t seem to stop myself. Deb: Should we get them a television? Jade: We’ll put the PlayStation on Ryan’s and my television. Deb: Will the children get to play on it? Jade: If they move fast enough. Deb: That was what I figured. Come on… stop me before I spend more. It topped at over a thousand dollars. The little Target cashier wonk was already shell-shocked. She kept scanning and bagging, scanning and bagging. There was a tense moment when we tried to get Nuala’s bear away from her to scan it, but the Angry Little Irish Girl prevailed and the wonk pulled out her scanner gun. Other cashiers were wandering by, supposedly at work but actually trying to get a look at the order from Hell. Jade ran a cartload out to the Expedition when she got back the wonk was just finishing up the clothes and getting ready for the final push. Mick sat contentedly chewing on a Butterfinger bar he had helped himself to. When Nuala saw this she demanded equal treatment and by that time I was numb myself. The cashier scanned the candybar and punched the total button. Jade: Jesus Christ! A manager was standing by, ready to approve the charge slip. Instead, I pulled out Bill’s wallet and started throwing fifties and hundreds at the girl. When I finally finished and got control of the twitching in my arm, Bill’s wallet was visibly thinner and the manager was howling for a cash drop into her walkie talkie. Jade: Geez, Deb… I’m sorry. I had no idea it would cost so much. Deb: Don’t worry about it. It’s done for a while. Jade: We could have gone to Goodwill. Deb: Sure, we could have. But don’t these two deserve something nice? At least to start? We can save money later. Jade: What will Bill say? Deb: Lotta ‘what’n hell, did’ja think I’m madea money, woman?’ and not much more. I’m not sure where the money comes from and I know I don’t want to know, but he’s not hurting and he usually doesn’t grudge me. Jade: He’s a good guy, really. Deb: He got handed a lot of shit he never though much about when I barged into his life. He’s been magnificent. But don’t tell him I said that. He’ll get cocky. Jade: *Get* cocky? Deb: Cockier, then. TO BE CONTINUED...