Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
Ridge was sobbing. Stewart moved to her, put his
arm round her, said,
“I know some people, I’ll have them keep watch
on Anthony.” Stewart wasn’t much of a drinker but
he kept booze in the house. Never knew, Jack
might arrive. He went to the kitchen, poured a
sizable glass of Jameson and added sugar, for the
shock, brought it back to her, and literally held it to
her lips and waited till a sizable dent had been put
in it.
Waited.
He had, of course, every drug known to man but he
needed her to have the trauma eased and fast.
Finally, she composed herself, said,
“I’m not as tough as I thought.”
He smiled, said,
“None of us are.”
Then added,
“It’s not about toughness, it’s about strength.”
She asked,
“Zen?”
“No, just the truth.”
She averted her eyes from the carnage on the table,
said,
“They’re like ghosts in the wind. We’ll never find
them.”
Stewart, fighting like a dervish not to let his
simmering anger show, said,
“They’ve made two major mistakes. The first was
setting down a pattern that we can trace.”
She waited, then had to ask,
“The second?”
“Not killing Jack when they had the chance.”
From the place
Term
Vulnerable.
—Romanian saying
I had the usual professionals come and, as the
Americans say,
visit
. They had the obligatory
psychologist who, I shit thee not, said,
“This will require a period of readjustment.”
I was like a bastard, they’d cut back on my
painkillers. I asked,
“For us both?”
He’d obviously been clued in as to what I was
like, gave that tolerant smile, said,
“Anger is part of the process.”
So I said,
“Then you won’t be surprised at my next line.”
He continued with that emphatic smile, asked,
“Yes?”
“Fuck off .”
Was he delighted?
Yeah, I think so.
He continued in that soothing tone they use for
Musak interludes,
“You’ve been through a traumatic experience and
time is needed . . .”
I cut him off , asked,
“How would you know?”
He had doe eyes, and a mop of hair that he
continually flicked back, annoying the hell out of
me. He said,
“Believe me, Mr. Taylor, I’ve worked in this field
for many years.” I asked,
“They’ve a field for Stanley knives?”
Lost him for a sec but he rallied,
“We have many modules for coming to terms with
such events.”
I said,
“Cutting your balls off, which module would that
come under?”
He stared at me. I continued,
“That’s what I thought they were going to do.”
He stood up, said,
“Perhaps another day when you’re less . . .”
He reached for the euphemistic adjective, settled
for,
“Stressed.”
I sat up in the bed, asked,
“What’s your name again?”
Like I could give a flying fuck.
He said,
“Dr. Ryan.”
I held up my bandaged right hand, said,
“See this? They sliced off my fingers. How many
days you figure for me to de-stress every time I
look at it?”
He fucked off .
Next up was the woman who spoke about the
wonderful strides in artificial aids. I let her
yammer on and she took my silence for interest,
finally wound down, asked,
“Which appendage do you think you might most be
interested in?”
I said,
“The one that allows me to swing a hurley.”
Threw her. She said,
“I don’t follow?”
But I felt she was truly trying to help, so I went
easy.
Well, easier, said,
“I’ll get back to you.”
The nurses liked me.
Actually that’s a lie.
One did.
She enjoyed the runaround I gave the highfalutin
consultants, said,
“You’re a terrible man.”
I agreed.
She had some edge so I liked her, anything to get
away from the freaking platitudes I’d been
listening to. She said,
“You’re fierce cranky.”
I said,
“Give me a few shots of Jameson, I’m a teddy
bear.”
She had a great laugh. I love women who laugh
with their whole body, not worried if their
mascara will run. She said,
“From the look of you, I’d say you’ve had your fair
share of that devil.”
Any mention of the devil tended to quiet me: too
many bad memories of an individual who
might/might not have been the Antichrist in person.
Any further discussion was deferred when she
said,
“You have a visitor.”
Caz, a Romanian who managed to avoid the
periodic roundup of nonnationals for deportation.
Ten years he’d been in Galway and had learned, as
Louis MacNeice wrote,
“…………………all the sly cunning of our race.”
And I figure he was no slouch to begin with. He’d
even acquired a passable Galway accent and was
more native than a Claddagh ring. I never knew if
we were friends. He was too elusive but we’d
known each other a long time and had an
arrangement: I’d give, he’d take.
But he was one of the most reliable sources of
gossip in a city that thrived on stories. Add to that,
he worked with the Garda as an interpreter for the
Romanian community, so he had the ear of the
powers that be, sort of. True, he was as
trustworthy as the eels that swam in the canal, but I
liked him.
Mostly.
He was dressed in a Boss leather jacket. I know
that item as my surrogate son had once given me
one. Both were gone.
A white sweatshirt with the logo
“Don’t Sweat It.”
He said,
“I’m sorry about what happened to you Jack.”
“Thanks.”
He reached in the fine jacket, said,
“I brought you something.”
Now I sat up, this was a first, said,
“If it’s fucking grapes, I’ll strangle you with the
fingers I’ve left.”
He produced a half bottle of Jay, checked the door,
handed it to me, and to my left hand. I said,
“Take the seal off .”
He did.
I drank deep and gratefully, handed the bottle to
him. He still had the moves, didn’t wipe the neck;
that’s class. He took a fairly decent wallop
himself, grimaced, said,
“Sláinte.”
We waited a few minutes to let the Jay do its biz,
warm the stomach, promise false hope, and then he
asked,
“How bad is it?”
“Two fingers.”
He nodded. He’d literally escaped from a country
that was awash in every atrocity known, so “two
fingers” wasn’t as stunning to him as it was to your
average citizen. We had another drink like two
settled friends, the bottle going back and forth. I
gave him a brief outline of the Headstone outfit and
he pledged to ask around. The Jay and an earlier
shot of morphine were taking their toll and he
stood, said,
“It pains me to see you hurt, my friend.”
I think he actually meant it.
I hoped I said thanks.
I do remember he squeezed my shoulder and said,
“For now, rest. Later, we’ll extract the vengeance
of the Romanian.”
And I did—rest that is.
Till I came to, a single night-light burning near my
bed. I’d dreamt, of my dad and Laura.
The kind of awful dream that’s so real you can
taste it. Everything is OK till you wake and . . . it
ain’t.
My dad was holding my hand, looking at my
fingers, soothing, saying,
“They’ll heal son, don’t worry.”
And Laura, she was in the distance, her hand held
out, saying softly,
“But Jack, you have no fingers I can hold.”
Yeah, like that.
Jesus wept and then some. I think, I don’t know,
but there were tears on my face. Loss is sometimes
so palpable. You can almost touch it.
Almost.
The single night-light threw an eerie glow across
the room. I struggled to sit up, still half caught in
the wish desire of the dream, phantom pain in my
destroyed hand, and my heart did a jig as I saw a
dark figure rise from the chair in the corner. Maybe
the light-bringer was back to claim his own. He
stood, moved into the dim radiance, and I thought,
“Yeah, the devil all right.”
Being afraid is natural.
Being afraid to do something about it
is an insult to life.
—C
Father Gabriel.
Looking immaculate as usual. If the pope can wear
Gucci slippers, then no reason why Gabe shouldn’t
have his clerical suit made by Armani; it had that
cut. His white collar seemed to gleam in the half-
light, matching his perfect teeth and discreet tan.
He moved like an athlete. He leaned over me,
asked,
“How are you, Jack?”
Like he gave a good fuck.
I said,
“Been better.”
He made the sign of the cross over me. I wish I
could say it was a comfort but, from him, it was
like a curse. He smelled of some great aftershave.
Man, this guy was a player.
But at what?
He said,
“The Brethren have been praying for you.”
What? That I’d croak?
I nodded, trying to appear appreciative. He
reached in his elegant jacket, produced a fat
envelope, left it on the bed, said,
“Your bonus, and I think you’ll find it more than
generous.”
I asked,
“You found Loyola then?”
He gave a radiant smile, gave more illumination
than the measly night-light, said,
“Your information was spot on. A job well done.
Your church will remember the great service you
performed on its behalf.”
I pushed,
“So, what happens to Loyola now?”
The smile was still in place but it had eased. He
said,
“Back in the flock. All is well in God’s world.”
Fucking guy didn’t get out much it seemed.
He added,
“Now Jack, don’t concern yourself anymore with
that. You must focus on recovery and bask in the
task you did so admirably for Mother Church.”
He was so slick, so polished, you could almost
believe him. I kept at it, though,
“The money that Loyola nicked, got it back, I
guess?”
He touched my shoulder, said,
“Jack, you fret too much. Be assured, all is
restored.”
His touch was like brushing against a cobra, the
venom just waiting to be released, and his eyes had
hardened. I asked,
“You ever read Tim McLaurin?”
The tolerant smile. He said,
“Oh, Jack, if only we all had the time to read as
much as you, but no, I haven’t.”
I figured accounts sheets were more his forte. I
said,
“Esse Quam Videm.”
He finally took his hand off my shoulder, leaned
back, said,
“Latin? I should really know the meaning but one’s
memory is not what it was.”
This fuck remembered how much he got on his
First Holy Communion and who gave what. I
smiled, said,
“Don’t fret! It means, to be, rather than to be seen.”
He considered that, then,
“Meaning?”
“My doctor, Dr. Boxer, told me that and my
meaning is, do I get to see Loyola? Let’s call it a
vested interest?”
I nodded at the fat envelope, continued,
“Be nice to actually meet the dude who got me
such a fine payday.”
He looked at his watch—yeah, you guessed it: not
a freaking Timex, a fine slim gold job—said,
“I must run Jack, I’ll try and visit soon.”
And he was gone.
He made no sound as he slipped from the room. A
clerical stealth bomber and, no doubt, this guy was
incendiary. I glanced uneasily at the envelope. I
should be delighted. Few things give me the blast
like counting money, especially if it belongs to me.
But the term
tainted
was rooted in my head.
Something was off center and I knew in my heart
that, whatever else, I hadn’t, as he said, performed
a great service for Mother Church. Betrayal
touched my tongue like blood in my mouth.
My favorite nurse came in to settle me, said,
“Isn’t that a lovely aftershave? What is it?”
“Treachery.”
She looked at me, said,
“The names they give these new fragrances these
days. Men are getting better aromas than women.”
Like I’d know.
She had gotten me a sleeper and I said,
“You’re an angel.”
“Ah, go away with that. You wouldn’t know an