Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
Which is one way of seeing it, I suppose.
I might have phrased it a little more heatedly.
I kept hoping, praying, that somehow, in some wild
flight of a miracle, Laura would write to me, and I
could then try, try to explain to her what happened.
No letter.
I wasn’t to know, she did write.
Her letter lay, among the pizza offers,
announcements of mega wins on the Spanish
Lottery, and bills from the telephone company and
other utilities.
There are lines from the insane prose poem
“Literary Heroine,” that go
“I swear I’d have read your letter dying,
But alas, it was lost, among the debris of the slow
and lying.
It’s the reason why your letter and my life, so
softly
Slip away
Un-noticed least by me.”
After he was gone, as my eyes closed, the nurse
asked,
“Is he your son?”
Ah, for fuck’s sake.
Before I could rise to indignation, she said,
“Good-looking lad.”
Then in that blunt way that Irishwomen have, she
asked,
“Is he married?”
I was messed up enough to lie that he was gay, or
say he was married, but I went with,
“I’ll put in the word for you.”
She beamed, said,
“And I’ll get you a sleeping pill this evening.”
Trade-off?
I’m not afraid of dying, but I’m
absolutely
terrified of dying with a pink teddy
bear.
—Barbara Ehrenreich,
Smile or Die
Ridge was sick to her soul at what had happened to
Jack. Stewart had told her as gently as he could but
there isn’t really a way to soften the severance of
fingers. He told her, too, about Laura, and Ridge
wept. She had so thought that, just maybe, Jack
might be happy. Recently, she’d had a checkup and
mammogram to see how she was doing after the
radical mastectomy. She loved the book by
Barbara Ehrenreich on positive thinking and the
so-called PC brigade who waxed fucking lyrical
about the positive aspects of cancer. The do-
gooders who saw cancer as a makeover
opportunity. Barbara was her new hero. Anyone
who could write that being down, being angry
about your illness, meant instant pariah status.
All the pink ribbons, pink freaking badges, made
her so furious. Now at last, here was a writer who
could say that those who preached cancer sufferers
could be cured by developing the right attitude, as
they peddled shitloads of pink garbage, books,
DVDs, T-shirts, added insult to life-threatening
injury.
She fingered her gold miraculous medal round her
neck, given to her by her late mother. God, she had
adored her mother. A strong woman who, as she
lay dying, said,
“Alanna, don’t put me in a hospice.”
She didn’t.
Allowed her the dignity of dying at home. Her
mother had fought alcoholism and every other
battle in a poor family’s life.
She had, as they say,
“A hard death.”
Near the end, she had gripped Ridge’s hand,
whispered,
“Be beholden to no man.”
In light of Ridge’s sexual orientation, this seemed
unlikely but, working as a Ban Garda, she had to
eat a shit sandwich every day from men. Despite
Jack’s numerous flaws, faults, Ridge felt her
mother would have liked him, would have said
perhaps,
“He has a good heart.”
As for Ridge’s marriage, she didn’t want to think
what her mother would make of that.
Not much.
And Ridge knew for certain she would have
described Anthony as “A poor excuse of a man.”
She read on. Stewart was upstairs, doing Zen
exercises, no doubt. He was just finishing up his
regimen as it happened. Took a moment to dwell
on Ridge. He was quite stunned at how well they
lived together. He’d been so long on his own, he
was, as the old people say,
“Set in his ways.”
But she blended right in. Was fine company, knew
when to talk and when silence was the best
communication. He finally had an eager student of
Zen and, in return, she was demonstrating her
kickboxing routines to him. He admired her
litheness and her ferocious passion to heal her
body and make it strong again. He didn’t ask how
long she intended to stay as he really didn’t care.
He’d miss her if she suddenly left, that he knew.
He’d met her husband a few times and found him to
b e
an empty vessel
. Stewart, like Jack, didn’t
really do friends, but he would put his life on the
line for either one and had. He was selecting some
casual gear. His casual gear was all top of the
range. He opted for Japanese jeans—read, small
fortune—his Ked trainers, and a silk T-shirt. He
heard the post come through the letter box. Ridge
shouted,
“I got it.”
He was dressed, ready to move, when he heard her
scream. He rushed down the stairs. Ridge, sitting
on the couch, was ashen. The remnants of an open
parcel before her. A small wooden box in the
center of the package. He picked it up and
recoiled.
Two severed fingers.
Ridge stared at him, her eyes wide from shock.
Then she indicated a pristine white card. He
picked it up, read,
Garda Ni Iomaire
A touch of Taylor for you so you can, dare we
say, finger yourself.
Nice display of the martial arts the other
evening. Perhaps we can sever your legs
when we take you next time. Send a leg to
your husband, let him have a piece of meat,
too.
Oh, what a gay delight.
xxxxxxxxxxx
Headstone.
Ridge buried her head in her hands.
Stewart, for the first time since the awful day he’d
been sent to prison, wanted to bury his head in the
sand.
He’d been about as ill prepared for jail as is
possible. Who is prepared?
But some adapt fast and learn the basic rule of
survival.
Eat or be eaten.
That day in the prison van, the paddy wagon they
called it, manacled to some thug who’d raped a
young girl, the judge’s sentence ringing in his ears:
“Six years.”
Stewart had been a designer dope dealer,
believing, well, kind of believing, that he was a
different sort of entrepreneur.
Yeah.
Had bought his own scummy act, just supplying
what the people wanted and had his rules.
Jesus.
Like that made it different.
He didn’t deal in heroin. As if all the other shite he
peddled wasn’t lethal. How he met Jack Taylor,
one of his regulars. He knew he was in deep and
deepest shit when during process, the guard said,
“Pretty boy, I give you a week before you top
yourself.”
And the thug he’d been manacled to, giggling,
“They’ll run the train on you, nancy boy.”
He learnt fast that the train was serial rape and the
train ran all the long day. He took some severe
beatings, which in a bizarre way stopped him from
suicide.
Who had the time?
They’re kicking the living hell out of you at every
moment, who had the energy to kill themselves?
He’d have gone under, no doubt, just wrapped his
neck in those wet sheets and let it swing. Then, his
sister was murdered.
And everything changed.
Stewart didn’t know then about love but he did
know he adored his sister. It was like a click in his
head, the warden telling him,
“Your sister killed herself, probably so ashamed
of you.”
He didn’t go after the warden. He went to the yard,
walked up to the train head honcho, said,
“Any last words?”
The guy and his crew laughed, laughed a lot. Here
was this yuppie, wannabe player, giving them
cheek. The guy spat on Stewart’s prison-issue
sneakers, said,
“You going to off me, that it, yah little queer?”
Stewart wondered why they not only aped
American gangsters but spoke like them, too.
Stewart glanced around at this guy’s crew, said in
a calm level voice,
“I’m going to kill him now, then, day by day, I’m
going to kill each and every one of you.”
The laughter had eased a bit, this wasn’t your
everyday occurrence, a nerd not only called out the
most dangerous guy on the yard but threatened his
whole team.
The guy, his smirk less smirksome, asked,
“What you got homie, beside your head up your
arse?”
Stewart used the palm of his right hand to slam the
guy’s nose all the way to his brain. Killed him
stone dead, turned, said,
“One down……….”
No recriminations, no payback. The warden
figured if the worst guy in the prison got taken care
of,
good.
Then he waited in his cell for hell or Armageddon.
He was the most lethal kind of man now. He just
didn’t care, and that vibe leaked its way to the
crew who were clamoring for his head.
Day One………..threats.
Day Two…………silence.
The third day, a guy appeared in his cell, said,
“Enough.”
Stewart, working on marine exercises he’d found
on the Internet, paused, asked,
“Is it?”
The guy was nervous, they’d never come across
such a case. How do you deal with a man who
truly doesn’t care? He tried,
“We want to call a truce, nobody will bother you
and, if you like, we’d be glad to have your back.”
Stewart wanted to shout,
“Stop with the pseudo-American. You fucks tried
to have my back all right.”
He said,
“I’ll give it some thought.”
And so began his Zen education.
He devoured everything he could on the subject
and then got in touch with Jack Taylor. The
broken-down PI solved his sister’s murder. For
that, Stewart would always be in his debt. In a
hugely overpopulated prison system, Stewart
remained solo. No one, not one con, would cell
with him. He got a makeshift desk, hung above it
the following:
“………………..In the hour of adversity
be not afraid
for
Crystal Rain falls
from
Black Clouds.”
He worked out every day.
Hard.
Till his body screamed,
“Enough.”
Then he worked it some more.
Devouring Zen like a famished peasant, he no
longer thought in terms of the six years he’d serve.
He thought only of discipline.
The day came when he was finally released and he
had to face the warden for the obligatory pep talk.
He had his bag of meager possessions, the grand
sum of twenty euros from his brief stint working in
the mail room.
The warden, sitting behind a massive pine desk,
said,
“So, you’re to be a free man.”
Stewart toyed with the Zen idea of saying,
“No man is free who thinks thus.”
But thought,
“Fuck it.”
Said,
“Yes, I am.”
He knew he was supposed to utter,
“Sir.”
But he’d served every day of his time so he didn’t
have to do shit.
The warden didn’t like it, asked,
“You passed up every chance of a parole hearing,
time off for good behavior. You want to share with
me why that was?”
Stewart said,
“No, not really.”
The warden was close to apoplexy, said,
“I could have you here for some more time if I
wished. You are aware of that?”
Stewart said,
“Of course, and if you do, I’ll be obliged to
divulge the young kids you personally entertain.”
The warden, on his feet, his face red and bulging
from temper, shouted,
“You’ll be back and trust me, I’ll see to it that you
have my personal attention next time.”
Stewart gave what was to become his personal
trademark, a languid smile, said,
“I very much doubt that and I’d like to give you
something to remember me by.”
The warden was again perplexed, said,
“I think I’ll remember you.”
Stewart turned to leave. He was now free. Threw a
tiny package on the pine desk, said,
“Relish.”
It was much later in the evening , a few Jamesons
to the wind, when the warden finally opened the
package, his hands trembling slightly, and out
tumbled a scrap of toilet paper, with these words:
“What you don’t see with your eyes, don’t witness
with your mouth.”