he was a stand-up comedian tooâ¦and you could see his wit and timing came through. But then he left after a couple of days and we didnât hear anything until he came back months later with his family. He did that a few times. And then, on his last visit, he said âYouâve made me so much a part of your family, and if anything ever happens to you or your mum, please contact me and Iâll be right here for you.â But a couple of months laterâ¦it was me going to his funeral.â
Adrienne paused. Her eyes were moist but tears refused to leave the sanctuary of her eyes and she smiled: âYâseeâit still hurts. Even after all this timeâ¦â
âSometimes the death of a close friend makes people go off and fulfill a few of their dreams, their life fantasies, before it gets too late. But you stayed on here,â I said.
âWellâyouâre right. And I sort of mixed them up a bit. Yâsee, this place is not a family obligationâI love it here. I just enjoy people so much, and despite all the routines, you never know what each day will bring. And I have my adventures tooâhill walking in the high Atlas Mountains, in the Himalayas. I finally went to our Skellig islands tooâthe hard wayâclimbing all those seven hundred steps to the top of Skellig Michael, where the monks lived in those tiny beehive huts. Most fantastic place Iâve ever been to. I just wanted to lie down on the ground and cryâ¦Itâs wonderful to realize what weâve got right here in front of our noses. I love it all so much. Even if I go to Cork for the day, when we get back to Glengarriff and the whole of Bantry Bay just opens upâ¦my heart just goes aaaaaghh! What a place! I need so little. I enjoy life. Iâm not interested in a lot of money. I just want to be surrounded by good, interesting people and maybe help bring them together a little. Beara attracts who it needs. Thereâs just so muchâ¦right here!â
âThatâs what Iâm beginning to find out about Bearaâlayer upon layerâright hereâ¦â
Adrienne laughed softly and said, âYeah, rightâ¦layersâ¦â
Then she looked directly at me. (A disconcerting habit of hers. It was almost like having someone step inside your head and root around for a truly responsive self.) âHave you got a few minutes? Iâll show you some layers right now, if yâlike!â
I had no idea what she was referring to, but one does not reject such an invitation from a lady of charm and charisma.
Adrienne led the way up creaking stairs to the family house above the pub. Then she opened the door on the second floor, held it open for me, and I entered a totally time-warped room. I was back in the 1920sâmaybe the end of World War I. Even possibly somewhere around the end of the late Victorian era, if the crush of furniture and trinkets was any indication. Certainly the profusion of gracefully aged armchairs and settees, beautifully carved wooden side tables crammed with photos and family memorabilia, and dark somber oil paintings on the walls above a cheerful peat fire set in an elegant fireplace made it all feel like a refined drawing room in an affluent Dublin town house.
âMy grandfather started a store here around 1860 and then later, despite objections from other family members, he got one of the first official licenses to sell Guinness in this part of Ireland. Before that, you mainly got your porter and your uisce beatha âyour âwater of lifeâ whiskeyâfrom illegal stills and in shibeen shacks. So we did pretty all right and then my grandfather made a nice living out of supplying the British navy, who had a base across the channel there on Bere Island until 1939. He had his own bakery here behind the pub, and up in the garden he had the official powder house for the troops. So we had a nice life, which is fortunate, because he had ten children
Jules Verne
Jens Amundsen
Day Leclaire
Kevin Hardcastle
Andy McNab
Roxie Rivera
Mesu Andrews
Michael Connelly
Bonnie Bryant
Peggy L Henderson