make bread-and-butter pudding, so you can add that as well.â
The phone began to ring out in the pub, and Aidan rolled his eyes. âThat had best not be the distributor saying thereâs a problem again. Weâre lower on porter than I like to be.â
And that, Shawn thought, as Aidan went out to answer, was just one of the many reasons he was glad to have the business end of things in his brotherâs keeping.
All that figuring and planning, Shawn mused, as he calculated how many pounds of fish he needed to get through the day. Then the dealing with people, the arguing and demanding and insisting. It wasnât all standing behind the bar pulling pints and listening to old Mr. Riley tell a story.
Then there were things like ledgers and overhead and maintenance and taxes. It was enough to give you a headache just thinking of it.
He checked his stew, gave the enormous pot of it a quick stir, then went to the bottom of the steps to shout up for Darcy to move her lazy ass. It was said out of habit rather than heat, and the curse she shouted back down at him was an answer in kind.
Satisfied altogether with the start of his day, Shawn wandered out to the pub to help Aidan take the chairs off the tables in preparation for the first shift.
But Aidan was standing behind the bar, frowning off into space.
âA problem with the distributor, then?â
âNo, not at all.â Aidan shifted his frown to Shawn. âThat was a call from New York City, a man named Magee.â
âNew York City? Why, it canât be five in the morning there as yet.â
âI know it, but the man sounded awake and sober.â Aidan scratched his head, then shook it and lifted his tea. âHe has a mind to put a theater up in Ardmore.â
âA theater.â Shawn set the first chair down, then just leaned on it. âFor films?â
âNo, for music. Live music, and perhaps plays as well. He said he was calling me as heâd heard that Gallagherâs was in the way of being the center of music here. He wanted my thoughts on the matter.â
Considering, Shawn took down another chair. âAnd what were they?â
âWell, I didnât have any to speak of, being taken by surprise that way. I said if he wanted he could give me a day or two to think on it. Heâll ring me back end of week.â
âNow why would a man from New York City be thinking of building a musical theater here? Wouldnât you set your sights on Dublin, or out in Clare or Galway?â
âThat was part of his point,â Aidan answered. âHe wasnât a fount of information, but he indicated he wanted this area in particular. So I said to him perhaps he wasnât aware weâre a fishing village and little more. Sure, the tourists come for the beaches, and some to climb up to see Saint Declanâs and take photographs and the like, but weâre not what youâd call teeming with people.â
With a shrug, Aidan came around to help Shawn set up. âHe just laughed at that and said he knew that well enough, and he was thinking of something fairly smallscale and intimate.â
âI can tell you what I think.â When Aidan nodded, Shawn continued. âI think itâs a grand notion. Whether it would work is a different matter, but itâs a fine notion.â
âI have to weigh the this and that of it first,â Aidan murmured. âLikely as not, the man will reconsider and head for somewhere more lively in any case.â
âAnd if he doesnât, Iâd talk him âround to building it back of the pub.â As it was part of the routine, Shawn gathered up ashtrays and began to set them out on the tables. âWeâve that little bit of land there, and if his theater was in the way of being attached to Gallagherâs, weâd be the ones to benefit most.â
Aidan set down the last chair and smiled slowly. âThatâs a good notion