Page 7 - My FlipBook
P. 7

the countertop and dotted mounds of chopped onion turned a
                   ghastly shade of pink.
                       “Willa, leave now,” Nick ordered.
                       Paddy reached out his free hand and s uee ed my wrist. Da
                   and Nick could glance at the door as much as they wanted but I
                   wasn’t leaving Paddy’s side.
                       “I’m not going anywhere,” I reassured Paddy.
                       “Dammit! This is the last thing we need.” Da swept a shaky
                   hand through his copper hair, a dash of white sprouting above
                   his ears. The entire MacCarthy family—with the red hair, deep
                   brown eyes, and sprinkling of freckles across the nose—was the
                   spitting image of our Da and his long line of Irish ancestors.
                       Paddy continued to gulp the whiskey. Small rivers of the
                   brown liquid slid down over his lips and neck.
                        Da, alcohol won’t fix his hand,  I said over the strains of the
                   banjo as the band worked its way into a stirring version of “Rocky
                   Road to Dublin.”
                       I turned back to Paddy. His skin was clammy. His pupils wid-
                   ened with each of his strangled gasps. If we didn’t act quick, he
                   was going to faint.
                        “We need to get him to a doctor!” Ignoring their frantic pacing
                   and graying pallor, I pulled another rag off the bar, tore the cloth
                   in half, and moved to Paddy’s side.
                       I’d never admit this to anyone except God, but Paddy was my
                   saving grace in this family. Just a year younger than Nick, Paddy
                   was the only one who didn’t give me a murderous stare when
                   he caught me with my medical books. The one who taught me
                   how to hide them under the loose floorboard in my room so Mam
                   wouldn’t catch me with them. What good was all my reading if I
                   couldn’t help him now?


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