Dangerous Innocence: Chapter 2
Dangerous Innocence (Five-Leaf-Clover)
I sat at our small kitchen table in the dark, only the lights from the street below spilling in. Something told me that Imogen was in huge trouble.
Imogen had a penchant for choosing the wrong men. Mum always said it was one of the few things sheâd inherited from her. Considering what Patrick admitted to yesterday, I seemed to have inherited that trait too.
The door groaned when Mum came home from work in the early morning hours, smelling of spilled beer and smoke. She froze when she spotted me at the table. âWhy are you up? Is something wrong with Finn?â
I shook my head. âHeâs asleep. Has been for hours.â
Mum put a heap of coins and bills down on the table. As usual, customers, mostly men, had tipped her more than generously. At thirty-six, Mum looked as if she, too, could walk the catwalks of the world. Women tipped her well because she was a jovial lass whose boisterous laughter was infectious and made them forget how pretty she was.
She sat across from me, frowning. âWhat is it, Aislinn? I know that look.â
âI need to go looking for Imogen. I have to know sheâs all right.â
Mum began to shake her head, pulling her brown hairâdyed for as long as I could remember because she disliked her strawberry blond just like Imogenâinto a ponytail. âAislinnâ¦ââ
We had this conversation several times before. Mum didnât want me to leave. âDonât try to talk me out of it, Mum. Arenât you worried about Imogen?â
Mum sighed, looking down at her hands. Her fingernails were chipped, and she began to pick at the edges, breaking off even more of the polish. âOf course I am, but Iâm even more worried about the truth.â
âSo you have a bad feeling too?â
âHow can I not? You know Imogen. Sheâs a lot like me when I was at her age, always choosing the wrong guy.â
I nodded. Imogen had bad taste in men. Married. Much older. More often than not, criminals or losers.
âYou havenât dated for as long as I can remember Mum, so I canât vouch for your taste in men.â
Mum waved me off. âI donât want a man in my life. They are nothing but trouble.â
I rolled my eyes, but I kind of got it. Before Patrick I had stayed clear of men for that exact reason. I wasnât sure if Iâd inherited bad taste in men as well. Now, of course, I knew that I had.
I didnât have time for someone anyway. Work, Finn and household chores took up most of my time. Not to mention I was still making time every day to improve my cooking skills in the hopes that I could one day open up a restaurant of our own. âI have enough money to pay for a one-way ticket to New York and a few nights in a cheap hostel.â
She paused. âWhat about Patrick? What does he say to you going away?â
I hadnât told Mum about the breakup yet. She was exhausted when sheâd come home late last night, and I didnât want to burden her with my problems.
My expression must have given me away. Mumâs eyes widened. âWhatâs wrong? What did he do?â Mum had never been Patrickâs biggest fan, that and her general distrust of men naturally made her assume heâd done something, and she was right for once.
âHe cheated on me,â I said.
Anger twisted Mumâs lips. I could tell she wanted to say something really awful, but she was one of those people who preferred to say nothing if there was nothing good to say. âYou broke up with him?â
I shrugged. âYeah. Well, kind of. He asked me to think of my trip to the States as a break and to give us another chance when I get back.â
âBlimey, donât tell me you agreed to this nonsense. Thatâs male code for wanting to cheat without cheating.â
âI didnât agree. I didnât say anything. I asked him to leave.â
âDonât give him another chance. Once a cheater always a cheater, trust me.â
âI know, Mum.â My dad had cheated on her, repeatedly, and Mum forgave him time and timeâuntil she finally stopped and then he took off. I hadnât seen him since. That was fourteen years ago.
âI donât want to think about him now. All I want to focus on is Imogen and how to find her as quickly as possible.â
Mum gave a terse nod. âYou might need more than a few days to find your sister, and you need a return ticket too. You know I canât spare any money, not with the horrendous interest rates and Finnâs horse therapy.â
We paid for Finnâs physical therapy with horses out of our own pocket; it wasnât included in public health care. Even if we werenât sure if it would help with his spasms, it made him happier and had reduced his stutter so it was money well spent.
âIâll find work in New York. They need waitresses there too, right?â
âThen youâll need a work visa, Aislinn, and those are expensive.â
I bit my lip. I hadnât thought about that part. âIâm sure there are employers who donât care about visas.â
Mum shook her head. âYou arenât a girl who causes trouble. Donât start now. Donât go the illegal route. It leads nowhere.â
âMum, I need to know what happened to Imogen. I canât just pretend everythingâs fine.â
âMaybe she wanted to cut all ties to us and Ireland.â
âMaybe,â I amended.
I wished I could say I was certain that Imogen wouldnât do that, but she was a runner. She ran from everything that caused her distress. âIf she doesnât want us in her life, then I can try to move on. But either way, I need to know.â I wasnât sure if I really could. Imogen and I didnât have many things in common, but I loved her just the same. Not to mention I didnât want Finn to grow up without his biological mother, even if Mum and I had mostly raised him ourselves.
In the past, when Mum spent her nights working to pay the rent, Imogen and I would huddle together in one bed and protect each other from the dark. That was what sisters were for.
Mum looked away, her lips set in a tight line. âDo you remember Gulliver?â
âUncle Gulliver?â I asked. He was a distant memory. Tall and redheaded, the same shade as my hair. I had been five or six when he last visited us. He and Mum had fought loudly, and I never saw him again.
âYes,â Mum whispered. When she looked up and met my gaze, trepidation filled her green eyes. âHeâs in New York too, leading the Irish parish there.â
âRight, heâs a priest,â I said then paused. âDid Imogen go to him as well?â
Mum swallowed. âGulliver and I arenât on speaking terms. He thinks Iâm a sinner.â
âDidnât you at least try for Imogen?â
Mum pursed her lips, obviously not liking my indignant tone. âOf course I tried. Iâd do anything for you girls and Finn.â She swallowed loudly. âWe didnât talk much, but he told me she came to see him.â Mum wrung her hands.
âThatâs good, right?â If Gulliver helped her, she might be all right. As a priest, he probably had the right contacts to make sure Imogen didnât get in trouble. âDid she sleep at his house?â
âNo,â Mum clipped. Then in a softer tone added, âAnd itâs not good, Aislinn. Not good at all.â
I waited for her to say more and make sense. Mum was selective with sharing information about the past.
Mum got up and reached into her back pocket as if she was reaching for her cigarette package but sheâd stopped smoking more than two years ago. Now, I was really nervous. âGulliver is the confessor for the Devaney clan.â
My mouth fell open. âWhat?â
Mum shook her head. âI never wanted you to know. But if you go to New York, you canât go blindly. You must stay away from Gulliver.â
âUncle Gulliver is involved with the Irish mob?â
Everyone in Dublin knew the name Devaney. Their clan ruled over the underworld in the city. Truth be told, their influence in all of Ireland was huge too. I had, on occasion seen one of their debt collectors at Merchantâs Arch during one of my shifts. They were collecting money for âprotection,â from mainly them. âI didnât know the Devaney clan is in New York too.â
Mum looked increasingly uncomfortable, which, in turn, made me increasingly curious. We had always stayed away from the Devaneys and everyone involved with them. We led a mundane life, far away from trouble. Not that they had any interest in us. âLorcan Devaney, the second son of Devaney Senior, rules over the clan there,â Mum said, and I wondered how the hell she knew. She must have seen the questions swirling in my eyes. âYour uncle mentioned it.â
The words were rushed and higher than her usual tone.
Suspicious, I narrowed my eyes.
âDo you think Imogen got involved with the mob because of Gulliver?â I asked, alarmed.
Mum shrugged. âYou know Imogen.â
Damn.
âNo, she wouldnât be that reckless ⦠right?â If they dangled the right carrot in front of her face, sheâd try to take a bite.
Mum didnât say anything.
I got up and paced our small kitchen. The floor boards creaked with every step. Outside someone hollered something unintelligible. âBut if thatâs the case, itâs even more important for me to find her. Maybe she needs help getting out of trouble.â
âOr maybe sheâll only drag you into trouble with her, Aislinn.â This changed so many things, and gave me a lead I didnât have before. New hope flickered inside of me, even if the news about the mob wasnât good news so to speak.
âSwear that you wonât go to your uncle. Swear it on my life.â
âMumââ
Mum stepped in my way and grabbed by hands. âSwear it.â
âI canât. If Gulliver knows where Imogen is, then Iâll have to talk to him.â
Mumâs grip on my hand tightened even more. âDonât go anywhere near the Devaney clan even if Imogenâs trail leads right there.â
âMum, donât be dramatic. Iâm sure Imogen is fine and not involved with the mob.â I pursed my lips in contemplation. âMaybe Uncle Gulliver knows a place where I can work without a work visa.â
Mumâs eyes widened in alarm. âNo.â
âMum â¦â
She turned and walked out. My eyebrows rose. Mum wasnât someone who ran away from a conflict.
I followed the sound of rummaging into Mumâs room. She was pulling a wooden chest from the depth of her wardrobe when I entered.
âWhat are you doing?â I asked, confused. The chest was covered in dust and the lock was rusty. Nobody had opened it in a long time.
Mumâs fingers shook when she opened the chest. Stacks of letters were inside. Pushing them aside, she pulled out a passport. She held it out to me. When I came closer, I realized it was a U.S. passport. I stared down at it with a frown. âTake it,â Mum whispered.
I took it out of her hand and opened it. My eyes grew wide when I read the name of the person the passport belonged to:
Aislinn Killeen
I stared at Mum. âIs this forged?â
âNo,â Mum said, her eyes full of despair.
I shook my head. âI donât understand. Iââ I swallowed. âI thought I was Irish.â
âYou are. But you are also American.â
âHow ⦠I canât â¦â
Mum sank down on the soft bed and patted the spot beside her. I plopped down, my heart beating wildly in my chest.
âYou know how I told you that my parents died when I was only a teenager?â
I nodded. Even though Mum rarely talked about them either, sheâd mentioned their passing once or twice.
âItâs true that Uncle Gulliver took care of me from age fourteen. He worked in the Irish parish in New York for a while, and when I had to move in with him, that meant moving to New York.â Gulliver was twelve years older than Mum. I knew he took care of Mum for a while but not that sheâd lived in the States with him. How many more secrets did she keep from me?
âI wasnât quite honest about my parents, though. I didnât get along with them so I moved in with my brother. They hoped heâd get me in line for the future.â
âTheyâre alive?â
Mum closed her eyes briefly. âI donât know. I ceased all contact with them and Gulliver over a decade ago.â
I was stunned. I couldnât believe Mum had lied about something that concerned me. Sheâd kept my grandparents from me!
âYour uncle has always had connections with the mob. When he moved to the States, he immediately started working with the Irish mob there, becoming their confessor.â
Mum paused, looking increasingly uncomfortable. âYou and your sister were born while I still lived in the States. I only moved back to Ireland when you were ten months old.â
I blinked. âPlease donât tell me my father was part of the Irish mob.â
Mum chuckled. âHe was just an everyday thug who wished he were part of the Irish mafia.â Mum paused, and I could tell she was keeping things from me again. âBut due to your uncleâs connection, I came into contact with the Devaney clan on occasion, and trust me, you donât want to get involved with them. Donât ask them for money or help. No matter what your uncle says, stay away from them. They might seem like the quickest or easiest solution to finding your sister, but trust me, the longer way is the only valid option.â
I nodded, not so much because I intended to give Mum the promise she wanted, more to indicate I was listening. I had no intention of asking any shady figures for help, but if the Devaneys were the only way to Imogen â¦
The name Devaney was infamous in Dublin. Now Mumâs insistence about never getting close to any of Devaneyâs men made even more sense. I wasnât really surprised that the name carried power in New York as well.
âDid you and Uncle Gulliver fight because he was working with the mob?â
Mum huffed. âWorking with those monsters, your uncle forgives the unforgivable on a daily basis, but he couldnât forgive me for getting pregnant out of wedlock.â
Iâd heard the story before. Mumâs resentment of Gulliver had only grown as we struggled to keep our heads afloat in Dublin. He wasnât rich but had far more money than us, and most priests, which could now be explained from his association with the Devaneys.
These new discoveries did nothing to decrease my worries. If someone promised Imogen a quick way to fame, even if it was a Devaney, sheâd take it.
The River Liffey rushed beneath my feet as I stood on the Haâpenny Bridge. The Liffey was a constant in my life, something that never changed. Whenever I came here, itâs rippling soothed whatever worries plagued me.
I loved my hometown, everything from its cobblestone streets to the sound of Irish folk music carrying from the pubs out onto the streets. I would miss it, even the loud tourists and the stench of puke and spilled beer in every nook and cranny in the Temple Bar neighborhood.
Closing my eyes, I took another deep breath. Unlike Imogen, I never wanted to leave our hometown behind, at least not for more than a short vacation, but she wanted to see the world, always on the lookout for something bigger and better. Now, I was following her to the big city that held nothing I wanted, to save her, possibly from a fate she didnât even want saving from.
Iâd gathered most of the spare money Iâd earned in the last two years waiting tables at Merchantâs Arch for a one-way ticket to the States. Whatever remained would have to buy me a return ticket. If I didnât find a job quickly, I didnât have a single penny for a hotel or hostel.
If Uncle Gulliver didnât take me in, Iâd be stranded on the street. Mum might not like it, but he was my best option, mob confessor or not.
I finally packed my suitcase the evening before I was set to leave for the States. Iâd pushed it off until then because I foolishly hoped that Imogen would call or even appear on our doorstep but of course she didnât.
My flight was leaving in the morning so I needed to get everything done. The door creaked. I turned to find Finn poking his blond head in. He looked at the suitcase with trepidation. âHey, whatâs up? Do you want me to put on another episode of Pepper Pig for you?â
Mum had left for work two hours ago and I had no other option than to sit Finn in front of the TV so I could get some work done. He gave a tiny shake of his head and kept staring down at my suitcase, which was piled messily with clothes. I still intended to fold them and sort them into categories, but would probably just end up throwing the suitcase shut to be done with it.
âW-w-w-wâw-w-will you co-co-come b-b-b-b-back to us?â Finn whispered. That he stuttered in my presence showed how much this topic bothered him.
I pulled him against me. âOf course, Iâll come back. Why would you ask something like that?â
âImogen l-l-l-l-left, and my d-d-d-d-d-dad never wanted me.â
My eyes burned. âOh, Finn. Imogen got stuck in New York and she needs my help to return to you, thatâs why Iâm leaving, and you know I canât be without my little cuddle bug for long.â I hugged him very tightly and kissed his cheek. âIâll call you often, okay? And before you know it, Iâll be back with Imogen.â
I really hoped it was true. I didnât like to lie to Finn, even if it was to console him. I wasnât even sure if Imogen wanted to be found and if she did, would she even consider returning to Dublin? She had never accepted her role as a mother, and while sheâd tried to spend time with Finn, sheâd always been more like a sister to him. Would she even care if I told her he missed her? She probably wouldnât believe me, in order to protect herself and her vision of the future.
Sometimes this made me really mad, but then I remembered how happy Imogen had looked before she left for New York.
âWill you help me sort my socks? I canât do it alone.â
Finn pulled back, dragged his sleeve over his nose, and nodded. He loved to help me with chores, and it was always a good way to distract him when he was sad or upset. With his tongue wedged between his lips in utter concentration, he began to pile socks and tights in one corner of the suitcase. Tears burned my eyes. This was only a short-term goodbye, but I was still inexplicably sad.