Carla Neggers

Rock Point


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buried his face in his Guinness, leaving Finian to answer. “We do, of course, sure. It was the country home of the current owner’s uncle, John O’Byrne, who died a few years ago.”

      “A thief broke in here ten years ago, before it was a hotel, obviously, and made off with a fortune in art,” Father Callaghan said. “The case has never been solved. A tiny, picturesque Irish village, a crumbling Irish mansion on the sea, an old widower with a taste for art—it’d make a great Hollywood movie.”

      He eyed Finian and Sean as if to see how they’d react. Sean set down his pint and made no comment. He was a strong, fit man, dark-haired and blue-eyed, dedicated to his work as a member of an elite detective unit in Dublin but still a child of Declan’s Cross. Finian was more angular, his dark hair straighter, his eyes a darker blue, his roots in southwest Ireland—he wasn’t as intimate with the details of the theft at the O’Byrne house as Sean would be.

      With an almost imperceptible shrug, Father Callaghan continued. “The thief made off with three Irish landscape paintings and an old Celtic cross. Sneaked in through that door there.” He pointed to French doors that led out to the terrace and gardens. “I gather it happened on one of your dark and stormy Irish nights.”

      Finian smiled, liking the American. Sean remained quiet, whether because he was from Declan’s Cross or because he was a detective, Finian didn’t know. He said, “November, in fact.”

      Finian’s answer seemed to satisfy Father Callaghan. The American priest’s two nights at the O’Byrne House Hotel, he further explained, were an indulgence he’d saved for the end of his trip. The hotel had opened to rave reviews, its restaurant, spa, rooms, gardens and service all meeting the test of even the most exacting and discerning guests. Finian had to admit he still had an affinity for fine hotels. He couldn’t call it a weakness when he thought about the many good people he knew who worked so hard and invested so much to provide their guests with a pleasant respite.

      Kitty O’Byrne Doyle, John O’Byrne’s niece and the proprietor of the O’Byrne House Hotel, had made herself scarce when Finian had arrived with Sean. No surprise there, although Finian had more suspicions than facts about the history between handsome Detective Garda Murphy and blue-eyed, black-haired, no-nonsense Kitty.

      “How do you like being a priest so far?” Father Callaghan asked.

      Finian welcomed the change in subject. “Is it something I’m to like or dislike?”

      “Ah. You really are new. If you can remember this one thing in parish work, it’ll save you a lot of trouble.” The American eyed his empty glass on the polished wood bar. “Sometimes you’re the first one to know something. Sometimes you’re the last one to know. Sometimes you’re the only one to know. Do your best to recognize which it is, and then forgive yourself when you get it wrong—because even if most times you get it right, there will be times when you will get it wrong.”

      It seemed like sound advice to Finian.

      Kitty swept into the lounge and went behind the bar. She wore a simple black dress that made her look at once professional and elegant. She was always, Finian thought, lovely. She smiled at him and ignored Sean. “How are you, Fin? Will you be staying with us tonight?”

      “I’m doing well, Kitty. It’s good to see you. I’m staying up at the Murphy farm.”

      She still didn’t look at Sean. “The spring lambs are starting to arrive, I’m sure.”

      “We lost one this morning,” Sean said, casual. “A coyote got it. Bit its little head—”

      Kitty stopped him midsentence with a stony glare, then turned back to Finian. “I love to see the lambs prancing in the fields in the spring.” She looked at Father Callaghan. “Anything else I can get you, Father?”

      “Not right now. I might have a look at your whiskey cabinet a little later.”

      “I recommend the Bracken 15 year old,” Kitty said with a quick smile at Finian.

      “Sean and I will be on our way,” Finian said.

      “All right, then. Good night, Fin. Sean.” She spun into a small backroom behind the bar.

      Father Callaghan raised his eyebrows at Sean. “There’s a story between you two, isn’t there?”

      “It’d take the full bottle of Bracken 15 to tell that tale,” Sean said.

      “I’ve no doubt.” The older priest’s eyes—a pale green—shifted to Finian. “Bracken 15? Father Bracken? A connection?”

      “My brother and I started Bracken Distillers in our early twenties,” Finian said.

      Father Callaghan’s surprise was obvious. “Then you decided to become a priest?”

      Sean spared Finian from having to answer. “Another long story,” he said, easing off his barstool. “Good to meet you, Father Joseph. Enjoy your last few days in Ireland. I hope you get that sabbatical.”

      “Thanks. I enjoyed meeting you both, too. Finian, if you’d like to spend a year in southern Maine, maybe we can work something out with your bishop. You know where to find me.”

      Finian stood, smiling at the American. “Saint Patrick’s Church in Rock Point, Maine.”

      * * *

      “You’re going to see about taking this parish in Maine?” Sean asked as he and Finian turned onto the quiet lane that wound onto Shepherd Head, the village lights twinkling beneath them in the darkness. It was a good walk—much of it uphill—to Murphy farm, but also a decent night for it, windy and chilly but dry.

      Finian continued a few steps before he answered. “I’d be doing the old fellow a favor.”

      “And yourself.”

      “Maybe, maybe not. It would only be a year, while Joseph Callaghan got his fill of Guinness, Irish saints and Irish genealogy.”

      “You don’t think he’ll get his fill of Irish scenery?”

      Finian could hear the Celtic Sea crashing onto the cliffs, and he could see stars and a half-moon in the sky above the black horizon. “One can never get one’s fill of Irish scenery.”

      “You’re only saying that because you’re thinking about being away from it for a year.”

      “You’re a cynical man, Sean Murphy.”

      “You know what ecclesiastic strings to pull to get this parish?”

      “That’s one way of putting it.”

      The village lights disappeared, and the hill became more steep, the cliffs closer—a sharp plummet across a narrow strip of grass and a low stone wall. Sean had grown up here on Shepherd Head. Finian had grown up on a farm in the Kerry hills, if not one as prosperous as the Murphy farm. He and his twin brother Declan were eldest of five. Declan was married with three small children. Two of their three younger sisters were married, also with small children.

      Finian braked his thinking and returned himself to this moment, this quiet walk along the edge of sea cliffs. He could hear sheep now in the dark, distant fields. When he’d arrived late that afternoon, Sean and his uncle, who worked the farm, had just brought several vulnerable pregnant ewes down to the barn and an adjoining field.

      “I suppose I should have been nicer to Kitty,” Sean said.

      “I wouldn’t have mentioned the coyote killing the newborn lamb, I have to say.”

      “As if she’s never heard of such a thing. She’s been coming to Declan’s Cross since she was a baby, and she’s lived here for two years, fixing up that blasted house of hers.”

      “You wish it’d been torn down.”

      “Leveled,” Sean concurred with a hand motion to go with the image.

      Finian didn’t