I haven't time to write this morning, so I am cheating like a jr. high school boy.
By late morning the street is already green with it—hats, scarves, the soft insistence of celebration. Inside the pub, the air is cool still, the wood faintly damp from the early mopping. Glasses stand in ranks. The taps gleam. There is a moment, brief and unrepeatable, when nothing has yet happened.
She is there.
Her name is Aoife. It is said quietly, almost without emphasis, as though it belongs more to the room than to her. She works behind the bar with a natural authority, not asserted, simply present. There is no haste in her, though everything she does is quick.
Her hair is dark, drawn back but imperfectly, so that strands escape and fall along her cheek. She does not correct them. They are part of her, like the way she stands—weight slightly to one side, a subtle curve through the body, not posed, not careless. Her face is pale, though not delicate. There is a strength in it, something withheld. Her mouth is full, the lower lip soft and faintly parted as she concentrates. The eyes are gray, clear but unreadable, as if they reflect rather than reveal.
When she moves, it is without display. She turns, reaches, pours. The gestures are exact, economical. There is no wasted motion, no effort to charm. And yet one watches her. It is difficult not to.
By noon the room has filled. Voices overlap. Laughter comes too quickly. Someone begins to sing, not well. The door opens and closes, opens and closes, letting in brief rectangles of light and cold. The day presses inward.
She remains unchanged.
It is not indifference. Rather, she seems to exist at a slight remove, as though the noise belongs to another register of experience. She hears it, of course—answers when spoken to, meets a gaze when necessary—but nothing adheres to her. The hands continue, the body continues. Pint after pint, each one poured with that same measured patience, the dark rising slowly, the foam settling into a pale crown.
A man leans across the bar, calling her “love,” then “darling,” as if the word itself might summon something. She does not respond to it. Only to the order. Her voice, when it comes, is low and even.
“What’ll it be.”
Not a question, exactly. A formality.
There are moments—small, almost nothing—when she pauses. A glass held just so. A look that lingers half a second longer than required. In these moments, one feels something might be disclosed. But it is not. The pause ends. The motion resumes.
I watch her as one watches a figure in a painting, aware that the distance is part of the experience. She is not performing, and yet everything is seen. The light catches in her hair, along the line of her cheek, the bare forearm as she reaches. There is a warmth to her skin that contrasts with the cool interior of the room, a suggestion of something more vivid, more private, than the scene allows.
At one point she looks directly at me.
It is not an accident. The gaze is deliberate, held. There is no challenge in it, no invitation. Only recognition—of being observed, and of permitting it, briefly.
Then she turns away.
The afternoon deepens. The room grows louder, less distinct. Glasses clatter. Beer spills. The floor becomes tacky underfoot. Outside, the light begins to fade, though it is still early. Time loosens, stretches.
She continues.
There is, in her, a sense of duration. As though she has always been here, or will be. The day passes through her without altering anything essential. One imagines her afterward, when the last customer has gone, when the lights are lowered and the door is locked. The same movements, slower now. The same silence returning.
But this is not seen.
Only this: the crowded room, the rising noise, and behind the bar, the figure of a girl who remains, in some quiet way, apart from it all—present, visible, and yet not entirely given.






























