Kate Hoffmann
Brian
The sixth book in the Mighty Quinns series, 2003
Prologue
Wind-driven rain lashed at the windows of the house on Kilgore Street. The storm had rolled off the North Atlantic a day ago, a nor'easter with the force of a tropical hurricane and the chill of a midwinter blizzard. Brian Quinn stared out at the flooded street from the second-story bedroom window, his forehead pressed against the glass.
He knew the
The fishing had been bad all summer and the
Though it would mean the six Quinn boys would be on their own for five or six months, Conor had assuredSeamus that he could handle things at home as long as the money kept coming in. He had run the household for seven years now, ever since their mother had walked out. Conor cooked and cleaned, he helped with homework and meted out discipline. And he tried his hardest to keep their situation from teachers and neighbors and anyone who might consider Seamus a neglectful father. A heavy load for a fourteen-year-old.
Brian glanced over his shoulder. His twin brother Sean was already in bed, the threadbare quilt pulled up around his chin, his nose buried in a comic book. Liam, the youngest Quinn, had crawled into bed next to Sean, curling up against him for warmth. The seven-year-old had given up begging his brother to read the comic for him and was now mouthing the words as he read for himself.
'Bri! Check those buckets in the hall,' Dylan shouted from the bottom of the stairs. 'It won't do any good if they overflow.'
Brian sighed. One of these days there would be enough money to fix the leaky roof and to paint the sagging porch and to pay the phone bill before it got disconnected. There was always the next run to the Grand Banks and dreams of a hold full of swordfish and the chance to offload first and command the highest price. But Brian had learned that his father's big dreams very rarely came true.
Though they didn't talk about their father's drinking and gambling out loud, Brian knew his older brothers had tried their best to deal with the lack of money. Conor had taken to meeting the
'He's not comin' home tonight,' Sean said. 'He won't bring the boat in in this weather.'
'Is Da all right?' Liam asked.
'Yeah, he's all right,' Brian murmured, getting up from the window. He wandered out to the hall and checked the row of buckets that Conor had set out to counter the leaking roof. Then he hurried back to the bedroom and hopped into bed, pulling the covers up over his chest.
If he just went to sleep, then it would be morning and the storm would be over and his father would be home and everything would be all right. 'Your feet are cold, Li,' Brian complained. 'Keep 'em to yourself, ya little dosser.'
'Shut yer gob,' Liam said. 'Read me. Come on, Sean. Read me just a little.'
The stairs creaked. 'Conor's coming up,' Sean said. 'Ask him for a story.'
But instead of Conor, their brother Brendan poked his head in the room. 'Con says lights out,' he said. 'School tomorrow.'
'Will Da be home tomorrow?' Liam asked.
Brendan forced a smile then shrugged. 'Don't know, Li. But he'll be home soon.'
Liam sat up and brushed his hair out of his eyes. 'Is he all right? My teacher said the storm was bad.'
Brendan sat down on the edge of the bed and grabbed Liam's foot beneath the quilt, tickling it playfully. 'Of course he'll be all right. Da can steer through any old storm.' He glanced back and forth between Brian and Sean, a silent warning not to contradict him.
'Yeah,' Brian agreed. 'When I went out with Da last summer, he told me about a storm that had fifty-foot waves and wind so strong it could blow a man right off the deck. This isn't near as bad, Li.'
Liam's expression shifted, now more worried. 'How high are the waves?'
'They're just wee little waves,' Brendan said. 'Why don't you shove over and I'll tell you a story.' He crawled in between Liam and Brian, leaning back against the headboard. 'What story do you want to hear?'
The stories were a Quinn family tradition and when Seamus was home, he told a different tale nearly every night. They were wonderful stories of their legendary ancestors, the Mighty Quinns, those brave and clever men who vanquished evil. But when Seamus told the stories, the fables also featured scheming women. At first, Brian hadn't understood why the Quinns distrusted women so. But then he'd come to realize that the tales were laced with Seamus's own opinions about women-opinions based on their mother's desertion.
Her name was never spoken in the presence of their father but Conor talked about her every now and then. She had been beautiful, with long dark hair and pretty green eyes. And though Brian had been only three when she left, he remembered one thing-the red flowered apron that she wore every morning. He could still feel the starched fabric between his fingers.
'Odran and the giant,' Sean said.
'Murchadh Quinn, the mighty seaman,' Liam suggested.
'Eamon and the enchantress,' Brian insisted. Though Brendan was only eleven, he told the tales the best. He wove stories full of excitement and vivid images, better than any action movie or comic book.
'I just remembered a story that Da told a long time ago when Con and Dylan and I were younger,' Brendan said. 'I don't think you've ever heard this one. It's about Riddoc Quinn who was the smartest of all our Quinn ancestors. In fact, Riddoc Quinn knew everything.'
'No one can know everything,' Brian said.
'Ah, but Riddoc did. For he was a very watchful lad. He didn't talk much, but saw a lot.' Brendan pointed to his temple. 'And he was also a great thinker. Like me. And a little like Liam, too.'
'Get on with the story, gobdaw,' Sean said.
Brendan cleared his throat. 'Riddoc Quinn lived in a tiny village on the Irish seacoast in a small stone cottage perched on a craggy cliff. His parents were plain and simple folk who couldn't read or write, but Riddoc taught himself to do both. He read every book in the village and when there were none left, he visited nearby towns to borrow more. But that wasn't enough. Riddoc spoke with every person who passed through the village, asking of their travels, wanting to know about the rest of the world.'