Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
already way past her simmer date, asked,
“What?”
To her horror, she noticed he was wearing his
riding breeches as he strode to the BMW. He
stopped, said,
“We’ll discuss this at home. I had to pull a lot of
strings to save your pathetic career.”
She almost ran up to him, got right in his
aristocratic face, said,
“Pull this.”
Instead yanked the cravat from his neck.
He was about to protest when she said,
“One fucking word, just one, and I’ll make you eat
this piece of rubbish.”
Turned on her heel and walked towards the city
center.
She had to stop at the Wolfe Tone Bridge as she
realized her whole world was going down the
toilet.
She fumbled for her mobile, her hands shaking,
called Stewart.
No frills, she begged,
“Can I stay with you for a few days?”
If he was fazed, he didn’t sound it. Then, nothing
ever seemed to get to him. He said,
“A Garda in my house, fantastic.”
One of the reasons she loved him, he never, never
asked,
“Why?”
You find a friend like that, you’re freaking gold.
That a convicted drug dealer and a Garda were
tight was a conundrum neither analyzed. Jack had
brought them together but even he never expected
they would form a separate peace. They did share
one quality, an indefinable regard for the train
wreck he was. Both, in their separate ways, felt
they might yet save him. When Ridge had begun her
martial arts program, Stewart had encouraged her,
offering Zen wisdom to beat the wall of pain. Jack,
of course, true to form, on hearing of her
enterprise, muttered,
“I’ll rely on my hurley.”
When Ridge arrived at Stewart’s house, he already
had a room prepared. His home was on the edge of
Cooke’s Corner. But a postmortem away from the
fish shop where a body had been found in the
freezer, and had been there for many years. Of
course, the local wits had a field day, the very
least of which was, “………………...Ah, he was
always a cold fish.”
Mafia jokes too, of course, not so much sleeping
with the fishes as being on ice with them.
Stewart was dressed in a silk kimono, black with
gold dragons. It should have looked ridiculous,
like Hefner on ludes. But his smooth, lithe
movements, his air of total calm, carried it off . He
hugged her and she nearly broke down. How long
since anyone had done that and truly meant it. She
could feel the easy strength of his body. He
released her, said,
“Tea’s on the pot, toast ready to pop, and my
special omelet is just the right tone of crisp and
delicious.”
He ordered her to sit, served them both breakfast,
commanding,
“Eat first, talk after.”
She asked,
“Is that Zen?”
He smiled, said,
“No, that’s hunger.”
The omelet was heaven, laced with a hint of a
spice. She gasped,
“God, this is good.”
He said,
“And not a magic mushroom in the mix.”
Finished, they sat back, sipped the Darjeeling tea,
and he told her about the new player, Mason, the
official PI. She said she would run a background
check, adding ruefully,
“If I’m still allowed to use the computer at work.”
Stewart wasn’t big on self-pity and asked about the
attack on her.
He considered, moved into a lotus position on the
chair, said, “First Malachy, then a handicapped
man murdered, and now you. And one of your
attackers referring to your sexual orientation.”
She asked,
“You think they’re connected?”
He wasn’t sure, said,
“Sometimes, you need Jack’s crazy view on things.
He sees weird patterns that a normal person would
miss.”
Ridge nearly smiled. Whatever else, Jack would
never be condemned as normal. She asked,
“Where is he? Do you think he’s gone on one of
those biblical benders?”
Stewart never replied instantly, took all the factors
into account, then,
“A ferocious lash, no. He’s drinking, sure, but not
in his usual blitzkrieg blaze. Laura, the American
woman, is due soon and I sincerely believe he has
feelings for her. I’m almost afraid to voice it but I
think he’s close to happy.”
Ridge tried to envisage such a concept, said,
“Jack and happy in the same sentence?”
Stewart didn’t reply to this, moved like a cat from
the chair, offering more tea, and Ridge confided,
“One of my greatest fears is going to his apartment
and finding he’s choked on his own vomit.”
Stewart stopped in mid-stride. He’d imagined that
very scenario more times than he’d ever admit.
Torture should be inflicted as though
completely disinterested.
No more than a procedure to be
carried through to its brutal
conclusion.
—Ex-freedom fighter [
sic
]
I cringe when I think how easy they took me. Am I
ashamed.
You betcha.
Mortified, in fact. Worse, it made me vulnerable,
the worst sensation in the world when all you’ve
got to protect yerself is…………yerself. Thing is,
I’d been busy, oh fuck, like a banshee on a mission.
Flush on my result from Loyola’s housekeeper, I’d
nicked the photo of the cottage and muttered
inanities
about
later
visits.
She
seemed
bewildered. Not my problem, least not then. I
headed for Monroe’s at the end of Dominick
Street. Huge place with the great asset of quiet
corners. I ordered a Jay, Guinness black. Settled in
to savor my triumph. I pulled the photo from the
frame and bingo, all me ships coming in, the
address was on the back.
Just outside Oughterard. I knew beyond a shadow
of a tinker’s doubt he’d be there. The loving way
the housekeeper had glanced at it, he was there. I
drained the Jay in one burst of elation.
Told meself,
“You’ve still got the moves son.”
A hefty draft of the black and I was flying.
…………………………..in the face of God?
As the old people say.
I was as close to delighted as I’d been since
Galway won three All Irelands in a row.
Glory days.
I was having me some now.
Muttered,
“I found him, Jesus wept, I did it, cracked the case.
This meant a serious bonus from the lizard Gabriel
and Laura was due real soon. I could afford to
have the apartment professionally cleaned.” My
mobile shrilled, I signaled to the barman for the
same again, answered,
“Yeah?”
“Jack, it’s Stewart.”
“How’s it going buddy?”
Stopped him, then,
“You sound very . . . chipper.”
Chipper?
People actually used this outside British sitcoms?
I said,
“Laura’s arriving in jig time and . . . I cracked a
major case.”
His voice quickened,
“You found who mugged Malachy?”
Malachy, Christ, I’d forgotten all about him. I said,
“No, but a case with a nice lump of change.”
Silence.
I figured he wasn’t counting my blessings. Then he
said,
“Malachy too poor to count?”
Sarcasm leaking all over the words.
I was fucked if I’d let him puncture my balloon.
Said, with total ice,
“Don’t lecture me pal.”
And God forgive me,
added,
“You weren’t so damn righteous when you came to
me whining about your dead sister.”
I regretted it instantly, knew how horrendous it
was. I can’t excuse it, was a low cheap wounding
shot. Blame my state of euphoria.
He sounded as maimed as I’d anticipated, said,
“I called to tell you that I’d been checking on
Ronan Wall’s sister.”
Another case that had dropped way down on my
priorities. As I fumbled for a way to erase or stem
the pain, he said,
“Ronan Wall is an only child.”
But Bethany, the Goth girl I’d met?
I said,
“What?”
“He doesn’t have a sister.”
Clicked off.
I worked on my second pint, considered calling
him back to say . . . what?
Instead, I used my mobile to get Directory
Enquiries, got them to connect me to the best pub in
Oughterard. It rang a bit, then a gruff voice
answered.
I said,
“Liam, it’s Jack Taylor.”
Another ex-Guard, took early retirement, bought a
pub/restaurant, we have some history, most of it
fairly good. He needed a moment, then,
“By the holy, Jack Taylor. I was beginning to think
you were a rumor running round as a fact.”
You don’t have to be Irish to decipher that, though
it helps to remove logic from such conversations. I
asked,
“How’s biz?”
He sighed, said,
“Sweet Jesus, bollixed. The usual crop of
Christmas parties, and they bring in major cash,
would usually be booking now but they’re scarcer
than a politician with the truth.”
I didn’t sympathize. That would be as much help to
him as an audit. I said,
“A lady friend and I were hoping to have dinner
there this Saturday.”
Jesus, it felt odd to say that, strange and wondrous.
To be, in fact, no longer singular. He laughed,
astonished, said,
“There must be a rib broke in the devil. Jack
Taylor finally hooked.”
Now for the lure, I said,
“I was hoping to introduce her to Loyola”
(deliberately omitting the Father; get that hands-on
friendship gig going).
He paused.
Few are as loyal as an ex-Guard and especially
when they are protecting a disgraced priest. Our
history was riddled with such precedents.
Carefully, he asked,
“You know him?”
Time to kick for the sympathy/guilt trip, said,
“When my poor mother passed, may she rest in
peace, he was a tower of strength, arranged
everything. I don’t know how I’d have got through
without him.”
Dumb fuck bought it.
Nothing like
priests,
dead mothers,
and guilt
to shake the bastards.
He flustered,
“Jack, I meant to get to the funeral, to send a mass
card, to . . .” Enough of this shite. I cut him off at
the knees, said, adding a wee sting,
“She always loved you, Liam.”
Then before he could regroup from that shovelful
of polite recrimination, I asked,
“Is he still partial to the old drop of Paddy?”
Anxious to move on, he rushed,
“Oh, Lord yes. Only yesterday, I made him a hot
one.”
Gotcha.
I said,
“Liam, put one of your oldest vintages aside, cost
no problem, and don’t tell him we’re coming. We
really want to see the look on his face.”
“Honest to God, Jack, my lips are sealed.”
“See you Saturday mate.”
Rang off.
Man, I was hitting them out of the freaking
ballpark. Sank my second Jay in pure delight. It
burned, like the Resurrection. I needed nicotine for
the best call of all. Settled my tab with the barman
and added a twenty for his trouble. He had to
know, asked,
“Jack, you’re all lit up, you win the lotto or what?”
I gave him my best smile, said,
“Only the ecclesiastical version.”
More’s the Irish curse, I actually believed it. The
next day, I’d arranged the cleaning service. They’d
be done by evening. I made strong coffee, and it
kicked in about the same time as the Xanax. Now
for the fun part. I rang Gabriel; he answered on the
second ring. I said,
“It’s Jack Taylor.”
He replied with a terse,
“Well?”
Boy, I’d be so glad to be free of this shithead. I
decided to skip the frills, just lunge in, said,
“I found Loyola.”
He couldn’t hide his astonishment, went,
“Already?”
Trying, if not much, to rein in my smugness, said,
“What you paid for.”
The guy was really up now, said,
“That is capital. You’ve done splendidly and more
than earned your bonus.”
I gave him the details and location of the cottage. A
tiny voice niggling in my head, intoning,
“Thirty pieces of silver.”
I put the phone down and the Xanax dissipated my
feeling of unease. I focused on Laura; two days and
she’d be here. I was excited, as close to happy as
it gets. I said aloud,
“Ton of cash imminent, Laura arriving, it’s almost
too good to be true.”
I should have paid more attention to my own