
they even had a name for this time-defying metropolis.
It would be called Everville.
Ah, Everville!
How many nights had Maeve listened to her father talk of the place, his eyes on the crackling fire, but his gaze on another sight entirely: the streets, the squares, and the noble houses of that miracle to be.
"Sometimes it's like you've already been there," Maeve had remarked to him one evening in late May.
"Oh but I have, my sweet girl," he had said, staring across the open land towards the last of the sun. He was a shabby, pinched man, even in those months of plenty, but the breadth of his vision made up for the narrowness of his brow and lips. She loved him without qualification, as her mother had before her, and never more than when he spoke of Everville.
"When have you seen it, then?" she challenged him.
"Oh, in dreams," he replied. He lowered his voice to a whisper. "Do you remember Owen Buddenbaum?" "Oh yes.
How could anybody forget the extraordinary Mr. Buddenbaum, who had befriended them for a little time in Independence? A ginger beard, going to gray; waxed mustache that pointed to his zenith; the most luxurious fur coat Maeve had ever seen; and such music in his voice that the most opaque things he said (which was the bulk of his conversation as far as Maeve was concerned) sounded like celestial wisdom.
"He was wonderful," she said.
"You know why he sought us out? Because he heard me calling your name, and he knew what it meant."
"You said it meant joy."
"So it does," Harmon replied, leaning a little closer to his daughter,
"but it's also the name of an Irish spirit, who came to men in their dreams."
She'd never heard this before. Her eyes grew huge. "Is that true?"
"I could never tell you a lie," he replied, "not even in fun. Yes, child, it's true. And hearing me call for you, he took me by the arm and said: Dreams are doorways, Mr. O'Connell. Those were the very first words he said to me."
