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Mr. Lynch's Holiday: A Novel
Mr. Lynch's Holiday: A Novel
Mr. Lynch's Holiday: A Novel
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Mr. Lynch's Holiday: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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A sophisticated and touching novel of a father and son reconnecting in a foreign place, from the award-winning and bestselling author of What Was Lost

Retired bus driver and recent widower Dermot Lynch grabs his bags from the bus's dusty undercarriage and begins to climb the hill to his son's house. It is Dermot's first time in Spain and the first time he's been out of Birmingham in many years. When he finally arrives at the gates of the crumbling development, Dermot learns that Eamonn, only one of a handful of settlers in the half-finished ghost town of Lomaverde, has fallen prey to an alluring vision and is upside down in a dream that is slipping away.

But Dermot finds something beautiful and nostalgic in Lomaverde's decline—something that is reminiscent of his childhood in Ireland. Soon he is the center of attention in the tiny group of expats where paranoid speculation, goat hunting, and drinking are just some of the ways to pass the days. As the happenings in Lomaverde take a strange turn, father and son slowly begin to peel back their pasts, and they uncover a shocking secret at the heart of this ad hoc community.
With the depth, grace, and wry authenticity that have characterized Catherine O'Flynn's previous work, Mr. Lynch's Holiday gives us a story that again shimmers with "the power of good old realism" (Jane Smiley, The LA Times) about love, connection, and a father and son finding each other exactly when they need it most.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 8, 2013
ISBN9781429947305
Mr. Lynch's Holiday: A Novel
Author

Catherine O'Flynn

Catherine O'Flynn was born in Birmingham in 1970, where she grew up in and around her parents' sweet shop as the youngest child of a large family. She has been a teacher, web editor, mystery customer and postwoman. What Was Lost won the Costa First Novel Award 2007 and was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and longlisted for the Orange and Man Booker prizes. She is the author of two further novels - The News From Where You Are and Mr Lynch's Holiday.

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Rating: 4.062499937499999 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An eloquent and moving tale of a father and son rediscovering each other, juxtaposed with a black comedy about the lives of expats in a semi-abandoned half-built Spanish resort, and stories of various forms of emigrant experience. I enjoyed this a lot - full of surprising observations, well observed characters and amusing details.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    interesting portrait of spain. is eamonn autistic?
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    (if you don't want to learn the ending, simply skip to last line.)Most endearing father and son: Recent widower, former bus driver Dermot comes from Birmingham England to visit Eamonn and wife Laura where they have moved, as both have jobs they can do on computers, to small town Lomaverde on Spanish coast, buying into a modern complex that's gone broke, only 5 apts occupied. (plus one secretly occupied by illegal farm workers, which offers a mysterious point of interest for all.) Dermot is not met at airport and makes his way by buses to this most remote village, ending up walking miles across country. He's always loved to walk; takes shortcuts to house. Eamonn has slept late, played card game on computer instead of correcting tests, hardly eaten. He sees he has mail now, which is hardly ever delivered in this remote uneventful outpost. Letter from his father saying he will be arriving etc TODAY. E runs to his car but battery dead; looks off in distance to see his father come striding over the hill. Dermot appalled at state of E's kitchen: a mess, and no food 'cept few cans. In time, is told Laura has left, "to think." E obviously depressed, mopes in room claiming to be working, supposedly on a novel along with teaching English online. 53 tests have piled up for him to correct. Often puts off any effort, except for continuous letters to Laura, no answers. E & D walk together, run into neighbors E has tired of and reluctantly accepts overjoyous ovations to the visitor--someone new to make things interesting for the forlorn residents. Parties, barbecues in D's honor. Inga, who lives alone, paints, seems content. D gravitates to her, often visits to watch her paint, have meaningful conversations other than the usual party small talk. D doesn't drink; E drinks too much, makes fool of himself at party, after which locks himself in room for days and days. His last night there, D stays late talking at Inga's and, learning she knows how to change tickets on computer, changes his ticket name to Eamonn's. Actually, D likes it there, happy to stay. In morning Eamonn finally taking more positively about future. D says he should go speak to L in person, sends him off in place of him. Final scene, Laura and E are together. She had gone off because of pregnancy and now they have a baby girl and have come back to Lowaverde. Not clear if D will keep staying there but at least now all happily together.A melancholy story but i loved it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is a quiet Brit book - Irish/Brits in exile, that is. Eamonn and his wife Laura are off to Spain and end up in a bankrupt housing development in paradise. Eamonn's father Dermot, an Irish transplant to Birmingham, arrives unannounced for a visit and, being a man who can repair anything, gets down to work. Both have demons - Dermot's are a lot more conquerable- but there is a satisfactory resolution in the offing, although not all mysteries are revealed. Reminded me of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce. A comforting book on for a rainy day -like a cup of tea and a simmering blaze in the fireplace.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a gem of a story. Catherine O'Flynn is very economical in her writing while building up the story and characterisation. The father-son relationship at the heart of this novel is heartening and moving and she really captures the desperation of living in a half finished town in the middle of no where. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Dermot, the retired and recently widowed bus driver from Birmingham, takes two weeks holiday to visit the son he's never been close to, Eamon, at his home by the sea in Spain. Eamon doesn't realize his father's even coming to visit because his despondency since his wife suddenly left him has him ignoring all the realities of life -- including the mail. The complex where Eamon and Laura purchased their dream escape from home was never completed, is seriously under occupied, poorly built and has been abandoned by its now bankrupt builder. Fortunately Dermot is a bit of a handyman and more sociable than his son and it is through Dermot that we meet the handful of other ex-pats who are also stuck in their units that no one will ever want to buy and that will likely never be finished.I really enjoyed this story of a man and his adult son connecting for the first time in their lives. Dermot is a great character; his son less so but all too familiar. I loved the ending to the story. But (here it comes) having read O'flynn's previous two novels, What Was Lost and The News Where You Are, I must confess that this one just didn't pack the same punch as the first two. Still enjoyable, just not quite up to what I've come to expect from this author.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Dermot Lynch travels to Spain, where his son Eamonn is living in a failed and crumbling development with other expats looking for a new life. Eamonn's wife has just left him, his employment is shaky, and he is not coping well at all. He stares at his computer, composes long unanswered emails to his wife, and barely can be lured outside the house.Dermot meanwhile has injected a bit of life into the expat community, and finds himself drawn to the Swedish painter, Inga. And there is something lurking in crumbling Lomaverde, the community by the sea.The underlying theme of much of this novel is communication in its many forms--failed, missed, electronic, face to face. The theme is explored with flashbacks to Dermot and Eamonn's childhoods and marriages, as well as in the present of Dermot's visit to Spain.A quick read, and a satisfying conclusion. I truly enjoyed this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Because of synopses mentioning "holidays" and "Spain," I requested this book, expecting a somewhat light and enjoyable read. The book turned out to be so much more! It was definitely enjoyable, but also a portrait of conflicting approaches to life -- specifically the ability to make the best of a situation versus losing what is "good enough" in pursuit of "the perfect." I thought the author did a particularly good job of conveying an almost tangible sense of atmosphere. As I read the chapters with focusing on Eamonn's life in Spain, I felt a very real sense of malaise and lethargy. The poignant ending stood out in sharp (and welcome) relief!My favorite quote: "...hope, it seemed, clung on tenaciously, like the most insidious of weeds. He spent his waking hours hunting down its tendrils and subjecting them to ruthless dousings of cold facts, but still they returned -- a fresh web of low-lying rhizomes each day."
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Dermot Lynch, a recently widowed bus driver, decides to spend his two week holiday in Spain visiting his son Eamonn. Things are not what Dermot expected. The complex Eamonn loves in is not completed and filled with expatriates from all over the world. Eamonn's personal and professional attachments slowly disintegrate Eamonn is at a loss at how to recover from these losses. Through his holiday Dermot meets quite a few members of the community including Inga who he seems to take a slight fancy in. The difficulties in the father-son relationship are beautifully and accurately detailed. I'm always glad to receive a book from an unknown(to me) author. I'll be sure to look for more from Catherine O'Flynn in the future
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Mr. Lynch's Holiday is about a father and his adult son getting reacquainted over a two week visit. Dermot, the father, is recently widowed and Eamonn 's wife has just left him in his dying ex-pat community in Spain. Dermot leaves England, arrives in Spain unannounced, and gently enters Eamonn's world. Catherine O'Flynn is a good writer and does a wonderful job portraying character nuances and the tentative, loving relationship between father and son.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Mr. Lynch's Holiday is my first experience with this author. I really glad I was introduced to this book. The writing was a gentle flow of both character development and setting. Ms. O'Flynn is very talented at setting a place and an atmosphere. Set in Spain, the main character's are from England....Eamonn and his wife have moved to Spain and Dermot, Eamonn's father has traveled for a visit. The writing was so well done that the reader feels they too are visiting Spain.Ms O'Flynn does especially well with her characters inner thoughts and struggles. This story is primarily about a young man who has found himself trapped in his own frustrations...he feels that he is at odds with all that he "thought" he should have accomplished. With tenderness and humor Catherine O'Flynn portrays this man's struggle to accept the cards he has been dealt. Eamonn's wife leaves shortly before his father arrives for a vacation........ the story is about the two weeks the two men spend in each other's company. Eamonn is from a humble background, Dermot is a retired bus driver and a recent widower. Dermot's experiences as a bus driver, his interactions with people on a daily basis, have given him a lot of insight into what it is to be human. His interactions with his son help both men to settle and move on. How they do this is beautifully rendered in this novel.My favorite aspect of this book was the humor and humanity with which Catherine O'Flynn tells her story. Humor is so essential to healing and I believe that Ms. O'Flynn hit just the right notes when she incorporated it into her tale. I guess the best way to describe reading this book.....it was a very very pleasant experience....like a vacation with a little drama on the side. Read it ! Enjoy it ! I was very happy to see that she had two previous novels.....after reading this book, I will go back and enjoy her earlier works.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    At first I was put off by the writing style; the first several pages were composed of shot, choppy sentences. I could not figure out what the author was trying to convey with this sentence structure. Later the sentence structure changed and in many ways the sentences sang. There is little doubt that Ms. O'Flynn is a talented writer. The plot on the other had was superb, though it may drag for American tastes. The book was well written and the plot grab the readers attention.There were several themes in the story; Eamonn Lynch's life is a shambles and he has not come to terms with it. His white left him, his house is falling down and his job is menial. His father Dermot has lost his wife and though, not at peace, has come to terms with growing old. He has made many mistakes in his life and during the course of the book he has come to terms with them. Eamonn has not come to terms with his mistakes.Another theme that runs trough the book is how differently these two people see the same thing. Is it because of the age difference, the experience difference or the educational difference. It is best that I leave this up to the reader.I highly recommend this book, now if she would only do something with the first chapter...
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A delightful novel about a father and son getting to know themselves and each other. While this novel deftly touches on a number of political and social issues, it also contains a great deal of humor and warmth. O'Flynn is a fabulous writer who is able to show the reader the pitfalls of making up stories in our heads about our lives and other people which don't contain any truth (even if we think they do).
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Catherine O’Flynn is such a class act, I would read anything she put out there, so it was great to find this one in the book shop. The trouble was, I didn’t like it half as much as the previous two. I made an assumption that the humour that characterised her first two novels would continue in this one, but I didn’t laugh once from start to finish. Here the category would be “poignant” (and there’s something about that word that makes me cringe but there’s no alternative in this case).With its father-son dynamic this is parked right in the middle of Tony Parsons territory, but has a literary feel. The narrative is spare, brief sections set in the characters’ past sprinkled here and there, just enough information for the reader to join the dots. For me, the best bits were the ones set when Eamonn was a child, though I also thought the bit with the charity shop with its apathetic manager was spot-on. But always lurking at the margins were the two “no-nonsense couples”, expats living in the ‘urbanisation’ in Spain where the story is set, trumpeted in the blurb as though they were going to be an integral part of the narrative. Here surely would be the opportunity for the author’s trademark humour and characterisation, and wouldn’t we all like to have a laugh at the expense of obnoxious Brits abroad. Whoever wrote the synopsis knew how to reassure the fan-base, but ultimately misled them – those couples were kept on the shortest of reins, and no matter how hard they knocked on the door of the plot, they weren’t allowed in. What we did get was a lot of brooding from Eamonn, a man of little charm – for me the mystery wasn’t so much why his girlfriend had left him, more what she ever saw in him in the first place – and coverage of his father Dermot getting along with everyone. Dermot was such a salt-of-the-earth type, so free of foibles that conflict was excluded. Oddly enough it doesn’t make any difference in the long run. I still think she is a class act; I would still read anything she put out there. This one just wasn’t my type.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loved Mr. Lynch’s Holiday by Catherine O’Flynn but I didn’t love the beginning. It was so depressing that I wondered if I could finish the book! But I am very glad that I did. The author slowly developed a tale of family relationships that did not work. Dermot Lynch, a retiree and recent widower who lives in the U.K. decides to a take a trip to see his son who lives in Spain. Dermot’s son, Eamonn lives in a development that has been abandoned by the builders and investors. Eamonn feels lost in despair, not only is he living in the crumbling Lomaverde complex but his wife recently left him. He doesn’t know if she will ever return. Everywhere he looks in Lomaverde, he sees decay. He doesn’t have any positive relationship with the remaining inhabitants of the complex. His life is bleak. He recently lost a job and has no real prospects of another one. He is a failure and cannot do anything about it. Dermot sees Lomaverde buildings as pretty white boxes and sees in the decay some similarities of his childhood home in Ireland. The downfall of his home seems to be echoed in Lomaverde. Dermot and Eamonn’s relationship had never been much. They both keep their thoughts and inner selves very primate. But the longer that Dermot stays with Eamonn, the more their secrets seep out. The writing of this book is so wonderful that the Eamonn’s view of Lomaverde and his life which he was afraid to deal with made me feel depressed that I really wanted to quit reading the book. But when his father came, I was fascinated by the two men’s past histories and revelations. So my advice is don’t give up on this book, you will be well rewarded soon. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in family dysfunction and growth.I received this book as a win from LibraryThing but that in no way influenced my thoughts and feelings in this review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Notes on MR. LYNCH’S HOLIDAYby Catherine O’FlynnAugust 21, 2013For Library Thing Early ReviewersRecently widowed Dermot Lynch takes a two-week holiday to visit his only child, son Eamonn, in a remote Spanish development. His father’s visit is a surprise to Eamonn and not entirely welcome. In the course of things, we discover Eamonn’s sad problems are stacking up relentlessly, and hosting his father in this out-of-the-way place would’t seem to be of any help to either of them. Somehow, in this baked development, this father and son discover connectedness and place with each other in a way they never imagined. Catherine O’Flynn writes in a way that is a reader’s dream. From the first sentence, we feel the heat and foreignness of where we are. Within a few paragraphs, we know a great deal about this man and his son as things stand. And within a few pages, we care deeply about them and what will happen next. All this in a skillful, graceful style.As Dermot approaches Eamonn’s condo by bus and on foot, we could be approaching a painful scene. With little detail, we feel Dermot’s anticipation and Eamonn’s reluctance at the coming meeting, but there are layers and layers of feeling and history here, humans being humans and family being what it is. Somehow, O’Flynn gets the sense of all that here in this one, initial encounter. And, being who they are, little is said in that first moment, but we empathize with both their awkwardness and their love for each other. As things progress, O’Flynn manages to touch a tender place that the parents of adult children will recognize, as well as the thoughtful adjustments that adult children make to the changes they encounter in older parents. There are passages so beautifully rendered that we go back to read them a couple more times just to enjoy the craftsmanship of the writing, the way the passage flows and the perfect imagery they evoke.Dermot has landed in the midst of Eamonn’s desperate life and the desperate, hollow situation of all the ex-pats of this dead end housing development. They find themselves having invested in property in Spain and now stuck in a place like a ghost town. There is astute social commentary on the ex-pats, their motives and their illusions and great commentary on what passes for community in the modern age, with lovely metaphors like the slowly emptying swimming pool, the water level sinking to nothing through a small crack in the cement. The neighborhood is far from any central community life and full of sad, lonely people who had thought they’d be improving their lot in a cheap foreign land and who had sought that common hope that lies just over the next hill, yet find themselves thoroughly disillusioned and longing for family, love and connection; all this while coping with sinister undercurrents of native hostility and their vulnerability as immigrants. Over the passing days, Dermot touches the hearts of several in the community with his fresh, unburdened perspective as a visitor, as well as his sympathy for their situation earned by his own experience as an outsider, having suffered prejudice and hostility as an Irishman living in England. It is through Dermot that his son learns to see his neighbors and his own life in a new way, and that the people in the housing complex learn to see themselves differently. Dermot’s hard won wisdom and openness shift the basis of relationships and compel an adjustment that reveals the resilience of human intimacy and bonds.

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Mr. Lynch's Holiday - Catherine O'Flynn

1

2008

He arrived on a cloudless day. As he stepped onto the tarmac, he looked up at the sky and saw nothing but blue and the traces left by other planes.

The terminal was deserted. He wandered along polished floors with a handful of other passengers. Music was playing somewhere. An old tune, he couldn’t remember the name. It was not how he’d imagined airports. It seemed more like a ballroom to him. Something grand and sad about the place.

Walking through a sliding door, he found himself in the arrivals hall, confronted by a crowd of people crushed up against the rail, waving pieces of paper and looking at him expectantly. Scanning the faces and signs, he smiled apologetically for not being their man. He looked beyond them, to others who hung back and leaned against walls, but saw no trace of Eamonn. He had never assumed that he would be able to meet him. It wasn’t always possible to just drop what you were doing.

*   *   *

Eamonn wasn’t sure how long he’d been awake or if what had passed before had been sleep. He seemed to have been conscious for hours, lying inert in a kind of trance. He rolled onto Laura’s empty side of the bed and picked up the barely there scent of her perfume, citric and uncertain. He sat on the edge of the bed for a moment, waiting to recover.

He sidled over to the window, opening the shutters an inch before slamming them closed again. He tried once more, pulling back slowly, keeping his gaze downcast, watching color flood the floor tiles. His feet retained their mortuary hue, luminously pale on the terra-cotta slabs.

When he thought his eyes could stand it, he looked out of the window. It was just as he’d known. Another day, dazzling and merciless.

*   *   *

He found the pay phones and pulled an address book out of his bag. The book was ancient, a faded lady with a parasol on the cover, the Sellotape holding it together dried out and yellow. The pages bulged with various additions and amendments on old letters, birthday cards, and torn scraps of a tea-bag box. Looking for Eamonn’s details, he came across the phone numbers of various friends and family long dead or forgotten. It was strange to think that by pressing a few buttons he might hear some of their voices again. The book contained his and Kathleen’s entire life, and the information it held was almost all obsolete.

When he found the number, he realized he’d need coins, and suddenly it was all too much bother and messing about when he could be off and on the road already. He was happy to make his own way. He thought there were few places you couldn’t reach with a decent map and public transport.

He found the buses easily enough at the airport. He boarded one with the name of what looked like a fairly large town, in the general direction of Eamonn’s place. The woman driver gave a small nod when he attempted his pronunciation of the place. Receiving change was the first thing that really struck him as foreign. He wondered if she appreciated how much grief she avoided by not insisting on exact fares.

*   *   *

Eamonn was hungry. He rooted listlessly in the kitchen cupboards, conscious that he had done the same thing the previous day, and maybe the day before that too. He found the madeleine cake hitherto rejected for the dark stain of mold on its underside. He cut away the exterior, leaving a cubic inch of untainted yellow sponge, which he put on a plate and took out onto the balcony along with a cup of stale mint tea.

He sat on the terrace, looking over at the shared swimming pool. It had been empty for almost a year, the chlorinated water replaced with a thin layer of pine needles. He noticed that a family of cats had moved in overnight, locating themselves in the deep end on a discarded Cheetos box. Lomaverde had proven to be a popular destination for hardworking cats and their families. The legion of them snaking in the shadows around the bins had steadily grown. It was hard to tell if fresh residents were continuing to flood in or if the original settlers were simply reproducing rapidly in the promised land.

He was startled by the door buzzer—a strange skip to his heart as he pressed the button, thinking: I have become a dog. He was greeted with the Klaxon voice of the postwoman. She made occasional trips out to the development, seemingly as and when she felt it worth her while. He didn’t know what happened to the mail between being sent and being delivered, if it languished in a sorting office somewhere or if the postwoman herself kept it all in her flat. He imagined her rooms filled with crates of mail, sacks of other people’s special offers and exclusive opportunities stuffed under her bed.

There was never anything much in the post that he wanted anyway. He shuffled down to the lobby for something to do and collected the pile from his mailbox, dropping each envelope after a cursory glance—Vodafone bill, Endesa bill, Santander statement—and then he stopped. He examined the pale-blue envelope closely before opening it.

Dear Eamonn,

How are you? I hope well. All is fine here. Anne came over last week to help clear the last of your mother’s things. I’m glad now that it’s done; I’d been putting it off for too long.

You’re no doubt wondering what spirit has moved me to write, so I will get down to brass tacks. I’m not getting any younger and I have to accept that I could follow your mother any day now, and it’s high time I crossed off some of those things on the to do list.

I don’t know if you remember John Nolan (son of Eugene), but he works in Harp Travel now and has sorted out flights and tickets for me. I’ll be arriving at the airport in Almería at nine in the morning on 7 June.

Please don’t be going to any bother on my account; I’m well used to taking care of myself. I’m looking forward to seeing you and Laura and getting my first taste of abroad.

Best wishes,

Your dad

The bright sun on the pale paper was blinding. His father’s looping blue words floated up off the page into the air around him like dust motes. He moved away from the window and read it again. He found himself fixing on irrelevancies like who John Nolan might be or how Harp Travel could still be in business. He would phone his father later and tell him to cancel the trip. He started thinking of gentle excuses.

*   *   *

Dermot sat near the front of the bus and studied the passing landscape. Near the airport, everything was huge. He saw elevated advertising billboards and vast storage facilities, all on the scale of the airport itself, as if airplanes, not cars, might be passing along the road. Farther on, the landscape broke down into a cluttered mishmash that he found hard to process. Small, scrappy agricultural plots with shacks made of plastic crates and tarpaulin huddled in the shadow of mirrored-glass buildings and their empty car parks. He looked at the graffiti under every overpass—colorful images as complicated and jumbled as the landscape around them, huge letters with teeth and eyes spelling strange words and names. He saw the same poster for a circus over and over again and later passed the circus itself in the middle of a parched field. The word Alegría was written in lights above the entrance.

At the terminus, he asked if the driver spoke English and she said a little. Eamonn’s place was unmarked on the map. A new town. Purpose-built. There was just a small cross in biro that Eamonn had made for his mother before he left. Dermot tried the name of it anyway on the driver, and when she looked blank he was unsure if it was his pronunciation or the obscurity of the place. He pointed on the map to where he was heading, and she shook her head and blew air as if trying to whistle. She opened her window and called to the driver of a bus parked across the street. She turned back to Dermot.

Is very far. Difficult.

Right.

Bus T-237 to here. She indicated a point on the map a little distance from Eamonn’s cross. "Después…" She blew air through her lips again and shrugged. Taxi?

Right. Thank you very much. He hesitated and then said, "Gracias." The driver smiled and showed him where to get the bus.

He took his time walking through the town, looking in the windows of the shops he passed. He saw one that seemed to sell only slippers and another one just pajamas. At the baker’s he paused and studied the display before deciding to enter. Inside, he found he was a good foot and a half taller than any of the other customers. Some of the women turned to look at him, and he gave each a brief nod of his head. There was no queue that he could discern, but the two women behind the counter seemed to know in which order to serve everyone. When it came to his turn, he pointed at a stick of bread filled with ham and cheese and bought some kind of milk shake as well. He took them out into the street and ate them while waiting for the bus, enjoying the warmth of the sun seeping through his clothes.

*   *   *

Time: 43:08; Moves: 579. Two kings were trapped behind the seven of clubs. He shifted cards from the ace piles and back again, treading water while the clock ticked on. Just visible on the screen, above the top-right corner of the simulated green baize, a folder of students’ work sat unmarked. He glanced at it periodically and then back at the cards. There were different ways to traverse the vast floes of time.

He found himself staring at the blinking cursor, unsure how long he had been doing so. His body had become synced with the cursor’s rhythm: the ebb and flow of his blood, the throb of his heart, the pulse of his headache. When his eyes finally refocused, it was upon the date display. He stared at it for some time, finding it distantly familiar, before reaching for his father’s letter.

He stood up quickly, feeling dizzy, thrashing about in search of the car keys before running into the street. The hot breath of the Toyota threatened to suffocate him as he climbed inside. He turned the key and the engine clicked. He did it again and again, as if the act of turning the key could somehow recharge the battery. He got out to breathe and kick the car like a child, and then he was still.

*   *   *

On the second leg of the journey, the landscape was unvaried. He saw nothing for miles but great expanses of polytunnels, the entire countryside hidden behind wrapping. Occasionally he’d glimpse a field apparently abandoned, its plastic covering ripped open and hanging in sheets as if the crops inside had escaped during the night. For a long time he could detect no evidence of humanity, but gradually his eyes adjusted to the rhythm of the landscape and he began to spot makeshift shacks huddled next to the vast plastic tunnels, T-shirts and jeans hanging from washing lines, plastic garden furniture, a solitary young black man crouching in the shade.

The bus dropped him near the junction to the road that led to Eamonn’s village. From the map it looked to be about four miles by that road, but he saw there was a more direct route over the hills. He had always been a walker, often finding himself walking his bus routes on days off, investigating more closely things he had been able only to glimpse from the driver’s cab. As he climbed the main slope now, even with the footing a little tricky in parts, he realized how much he had missed decent hills like these and the feeling of his blood moving quickly around his body.

*   *   *

Eamonn’s apartment was in the upper reaches of Lomaverde, at the rear of the development, or the urbanization, as some of the other expats called it in a strange mangling of the Spanish. His block was at the end of the street; beyond its sidewall lay nothing but steep-rising, bare scrubland, optimistically described as impressive mountain scenery in the sales particulars. Now, leaning against the car, paralyzed by indecision, he glimpsed something in the distance on the hillside. He looked again and saw that it was a human figure. Nobody approached Lomaverde from the hill. Visitors, such as they were, came along the winding road from the town. The burglaries had stopped, but they all remained suspicious of strangers. He shielded his eyes with his hands and looked up toward the black shape.

*   *   *

Dermot had grown used to the sparseness of the landscape on the climb: slopes of arid white soil, broken up with wild rosemary. When he reached the top, he saw the broad expanse of the Mediterranean stretched out before him. The deep blue seemed to rinse his eyes of the grittiness they’d had since boarding the plane that morning. The water appeared completely still and he stood, equally still, his breathing slowing, fully absorbed by the color below him. He thought of the spray as you walked along the promenade in Lahinch and remembered, for the first time in many years, the taste of seaweed from a bag.

It was only now that he noticed the development below, between him and the sea. He wasn’t sure at first what it was. The gleaming white cubes looked somehow scientific in purpose, a collection of laboratories or observatories perhaps. It was a few moments before he realized that what he was looking at was Eamonn’s village. The neat white boxes, curving black roads, and lush green lawns stood out sharply against the dusty ridge. From where he stood, the sun bouncing off the sea, a heat haze shimmering around its edges, Lomaverde looked like a mirage.

*   *   *

The man was carrying something and shouting. All Eamonn could catch was a single repeated word that sounded like Llover, and he wondered if this was some strange wandering weatherman come to warn them all of rain. It was Eamonn’s legs that recognized him first. They started moving, seemingly independent of his will, up the slope, his ears finally unscrambling the words correctly:

Hello there! Eamonn! He had just a moment to register the incongruity of his father’s presence there on the blazing hillside, dressed in a light woolen jacket, carrying his Aston Villa holdall, before they were standing facing each other, Dermot smiling shyly and saying, as if it were the most normal thing in the world:

And how are you, son?

2

He lurked in the kitchen, making coffee, peering through the serving hatch at his father—still in his jacket, drinking water, the glass tiny in his hand. Dermot only ever looked in scale with his surroundings when he sat in the driver’s cab of a bus, the enormous steering wheel a perfect fit for his outsize paws. He was six foot four, with a lantern jaw and an epic chest. Reminiscent, Eamonn often thought as a child, of popular cartoon rooster Foghorn Leghorn. Eamonn had inherited his father’s eyes, almost all of his height, and about half of his width.

I’m sorry if I gave you a shock, Dermot called through to the kitchen. I thought you’d have got the letter sooner. I didn’t know the post was so bad.

Eamonn saw that the arrival had a certain inevitability about it, being just the latest in a long line of unheralded appearances. There were the annual holidays to Ireland, where his father would, on a whim, call in on some childhood friend. Though always delighted, those long-ago acquaintances would nevertheless take some time to recover from the sudden appearance at their window of someone they’d last set eyes on forty years previously.

There was a well-worn family anecdote related by his uncle Joe at any opportunity. Not long after Dermot had moved to England, he took a train up to Liverpool to visit his older brother. Joe’s lot had a flat above a shop back then, and he, Tessie, and the kids were gathered around the telly, when they heard a gentle tapping at the window. Joe drew back the curtain, expecting a bird or a twig, and instead came face-to-face with his brother. Dermot had tried knocking downstairs but on getting no answer had gone off scouting for a ladder in nearby entries and back gardens. Tessie had screamed and screamed, even when she saw it was only Dermot. It took several measures of Jameson before they could calm her.

Eamonn brought the coffee through to the lounge and sat on a hard chair facing his father.

Journey OK, was it?

It was.

There followed a few minutes’ silence.

No holdups?

No. Nothing like that.

Eamonn nodded. That’s good. He wanted nothing more than to crawl back into his bed, to finally fall asleep and on waking discover that his father’s arrival had been an unsettling dream. So… He was still nodding. Is this a holiday, then?

Dermot seemed surprised at the notion. Maybe it is. I’m not sure. I just thought I’d get away for a while.

This said as if it were something he had often done. As if he were the type of man who regularly skipped off for foreign mini-breaks.

In your letter, you didn’t mention … I mean, you’re welcome to stay as long as you like, but I was wondering…

What?

The return flight.

What about it?

Eamonn rubbed the side of his face. When are you going back?

Oh. A fortnight. I thought that was long enough.

Eamonn let this sink in. I never imagined you traveling abroad.

Dermot nodded as if agreeing and then said, Spain’s a fascinating place. The different regions and cultures, the separate histories, even separate languages. Of course, the Generalisimo tried to do away with all that. He paused to take a drink before adding: ‘Extremadura—Home of the Conquistadores.’

Eamonn looked at him, waiting to see if there was to be any expansion on this chapter heading, but his father had fallen silent again.

He found his gaze returning to the Aston Villa holdall on the floor between them. Its provenance was mysterious, given that his father had no interest at all in football, and yet Eamonn had no memory of life before the bag. It had traveled with Dermot every day to the garage, filled with a thermos of tea, sandwiches, a sweater, and whatever library book he happened to be reading. In later years, when his mother’s health had grown too bad, it had served as his father’s shopping bag. Somehow, despite its many years of service, it was in pristine condition. It was his father’s emblem, the essence of him

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