Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
“Jaysus, enough.”
And I couldn’t stifle a huge yawn. Stewart stood,
said,
“C’mon Jack, let’s get you home, back to your
apartment.”
We left a large tip for our waitress and I could be
wrong but did she slip Stewart her phone number
and fuck, God forgive me, worse, was I jealous?
Headstones signify a lot of profound
thoughts but a drunk on Quay Street
said they meant,
You’re beyond fucked.
At Nun’s Island, as we got out of the car, Stewart
said,
“Just a second.”
Opened the trunk and took out three large grocery
bags. I asked,
“You’re moving in with me?”
He sighed, said,
“Felt you might need some provisions.”
It was such a decent thing to do; you’d be delighted
at someone’s care.
Right?
I was wondering if there was booze in there. Fuck
the other crap. He carried them up the three flights
of stairs, too. Opening the door took a time, as we
had to literally push it due to the stack-up of mail.
The usual free offers, pizza vouchers, notification
of winning millions of euros, and a letter from
Laura; I could recognize her handwriting. I stared
at it for a few minutes until Stewart asked,
“You going to open it?”
I told the truth, said,
“Maybe later.”
I turned the heat on full and Stewart marveled,
“The place is spotless. I’d have thought, and sorry
Jack, but it would be like a . . . you know, a
bachelor pad.”
Translate………………….filthy.
I didn’t tell him about the professional cleaners. I
reached in my jacket, got the envelope Gabriel had
given me, and let the contents spill onto the coffee
table. A turmoil of large-denomination notes
littered the surface, swirled to the carpet, a
whirlwind of blood cash. A treasure trove of
treachery.
Stewart gasped, muttered,
“They paid you for being in hospital?”
I could have laughed. He asked,
“How much is it?”
I said,
“A lot.”
Stewart began unpacking the goods, asking if there
was a special place for things.
I gave him the look, he figured,
no
. I went to the
overhead cupboard, pulled down the Jameson, and
said,
“I’m fresh out of herbal tea, unless you bought
some.”
Fuck, he did.
And brewed it up. It smelt like vinegar gone south.
He’d bought cookies, the healthy ones, the ones
they manage to remove everything from, especially
the taste. We imbibed our separate feasts and
Stewart asked if I’d like him to cook up
something?
I said I was good, the sandwich had been plenty.
As the latent control freak he was, he began to pick
up the money and I near shouted,
“Don’t.”
He stopped, a hundred note resting in his hand, and
he asked,
“You like to see it spread out, yeah?”
“No, I like to see it on the floor, where it belongs.”
Finally, he said he’d better make a move and
asked,
“You going to be OK, Jack?”
I said sure and thanked him again for the hypnosis
feat, reiterated it was very impressive.
He stopped his exit, said,
“Jack, there’s all sorts of things I could help you
with.”
He had an eagerness I was loath to puncture but
that never stopped me, I said,
“Yeah, you mean that?”
His face lit up. He said,
“Just name it, Jack.”
“Restore my fingers.”
I saw the pain in his eyes as I shut the door. I went
to the fridge, pulled out an icy bottle of
Hoegaarden, that blond fine imported beer that we
can never pronounce, and got the top off with my
left hand. Figured I might as well get familiar with
that hand, it was in for a lot of use. I drank some of
the beer chased with the Jay and felt, if not better,
at least energized.
Time to get ready for action. Some years ago, I’d
run into a serious hard case named Kosta. His
nationality was never established.
I’d done him a major service. He was the real
deal, never needed to shout the odds about his
nature—it showed in his eyes and his complete
ease with violence. We shared the same ideas
about justice and had become almost close. He
was a good guy to have in your debt. I was about to
call it in. Rang him. He’d told me on our last
outing, a messy affair that I’d blundered our way
out of, that his gratitude was infinite, saying,
“Jack, anything you ever need, you got it, my
pledge to you.”
Right. Let’s see how much smoke he was blowing.
If I was American, I’d have him on speed dial. I
laboriously dialed his number from my landline,
using, yeah, my left hand. I kept telling myself,
Kosta dealt in everything on one condition: it was
under the radar, i.e.:
illegal,
discreet.
He answered on the third ring with,
“Kali mera.”
Greek today, then.
I said,
“Kosta, it’s Jack . . . Jack Taylor.”
“Madonna del mio.”
That’s what I heard or something like it but it had
warmth. I can recognize that in any tongue. I
remembered then, he was one of those rarities I’d
helped—he actually liked me. He said, “My friend,
I am so happy to hear you. They tell me bad things
have been done to you.”
I said,
“Why I’m calling you, buddy.”
I remember introducing him to the collected works
of Tarantino and he was fond of quoting from the
movies. Worked for me and, I guess, Tarantino.
Never missing a beat, he said,
“Give me their names Jack, I’ll go biblical on their
ass.”
I said,
“Thank you, I need a Mossberg Pump.”
Not exactly something you can ring up Tesco and
order, least not yet.
No hesitation, he said,
“Give me your address, I’ll swing by round
seven.”
My kind of guy.
And seven, on the dot, my bell rang. I’d managed
to grab close to five hours sleep, popped some
Xanax, and was, if not aware, at least alert. I
opened the door. He was a small man with a
heavily weathered face. Now my own face, I’ve
lines you could plant spuds in, but Kosta made me
look young.
Kind of.
His head was shaven, he had an aquiline nose, or
so he said, and large brown eyes that went to black
in a second. He wore his perennial black leather
coat and a bespoke suit. Like an out-of-work KGB
agent. That was not an impression he discouraged.
As I knew from our previous form, he spoke
Russian, fluently. He grabbed me in a bear hug and
was one of the few who I could not only tolerate it
from, but feel they meant it. A large sports bag
swung loosely in his left hand, with the logo
……………………………….Ti Krema.
I’d asked before.
It was Greek for
“What a pity.”
I hadn’t asked further. Who in his right frigging
mind would? I welcomed him to my home and,
before I could offer hospitality, he unzipped the
bag, produced a bottle of Grey Goose, handed it to
me, and said,
“Nice place Jack.”
I asked,
“On the rocks or neat?”
Silly question.
I poured two large, no ice, and said,
“Sit and let’s catch up.”
We clinked glasses and I got there first, toasted,
“Sláinte amach.”
He loved that. Responded with,
“To better days, my dear friend.”
Glanced at my mutilated hand, commanded,
“Drink.”
I did, we did. Ferociously.
He sat back on my freshly cleaned sofa, looked
round, said,
“Very clean, very neat; this I like.”
A few moments later, the Goose bit, and that warm
glow lined my stomach. He stood, glass in hand,
and began to move around, paid full attention to the
bookcases, selected the
Poems
of Hemingway,
said,
“I did not know he wrote poetry.”
I said,
“Take it, then you decide if he did.”
He smiled, that’s the kind of answer he liked. He
pointed his glass towards the sports bag, said,
“Your merchandise is in there.”
Paused, a vague smile hovering, added,
“With ammunition, of course.”
I took out the Mossberg and for a moment I was
amazed at how light it felt. He said,
“The barrel, the grip, have been sawn off, so it fits
almost like a handgun.”
He chuckled, quipped,
“Taylor made.”
Delighted at his own pun, he freshened our drinks.
He said,
“Give me the shells.”
I placed half a dozen on the table. They were
heavier than I’d imagined. He indicated the gun
and I tossed it to him; he caught it effortlessly, one
hand. Looked impressive and showed a deep
familiarity with the weapon. He muttered,
“Epharisto poli.”
Thank you, in Greek.
I think.
It didn’t, of course, mean he was Greek; it simply
meant he knew how to say thanks in the language.
He flipped the gun to his left hand, grabbed two of
the cartridges and inserted them, pumped the barrel
once, said,
“Rock ‘n’ roll.”
Handed it back to me, a man who treated a loaded
weapon carefully, a man who knew his trade, said,
“Practice with your left, over and over again, using
your right hand to prop the barrel.”
I tried, fumbled, and he moved his finger.
I.e.,
again.
I did.
Knowing there were shells in it kept me focused.
We stayed at it for a time, his eyes never leaving
the weapon. Finally as sweat began to roll down
my face, he signaled: enough. I went to put the gun
aside and he said,
“No, make it part of your hand. Until it is, you are
an amateur.” Lesson over, the steel left his voice.
He asked,
“Need backup?”
I thought about it, said,
“Maybe.”
Then I reached for a thick envelope I’d readied
and moved to put it in his hand. He shook his head,
said,
“No, but perhaps, a little further along, I might call
on your assistance.”
I assured him with,
“Ask and ’tis done.”
Words that will haunt me to my grave.
We sat, sipped at our drinks in more relaxed
fashion. Laura’s letter was on the table. He asked,
“A woman?”
“Yes.”
He could see it was unopened, then,
“Do you love her?”
With Kosta, everything was direct, to the point of
bluntness.
I said,
“I had hoped I might.”
He pondered that, staring at the remains of the
vodka in his glass, said,
“Quel dommage.”
That I knew.
French for what a pity.
I asked,
“Like a brew to go with the Goose?”
He nodded, and still cradling the Mossberg, I
grabbed two ice-cold Buds from the fridge.
Screw-off tops which are, in my view, damn smart.
Handed one to him, and said,
“To all the girls we loved before.”
He was a major Willie Nelson fan and the duet
with Julio Iglesias was a staple on his sound track,
inner and outer.
He smiled, said,
“And to those who might yet find us old guys . . .
colorful.”
Unless beige came back into vogue, I was shit out
of luck.
He took a large gulp of the brew, waited, then,
“Jack, you were a policeman but you didn’t carry a
gun. Now you are not a policeman, you do. Is that
how you define irony?”
I said,
“More like insurance.”
His mobile shrilled, he took it from his coat,
answered, said, “Abla.”
Listened, his face expressing nothing until he spat
out a staccato of some East European language.
Then he snapped his phone shut, said,
“A rumor, without a leg to stand on…………will
find………… another way to move around.”
I left it as cryptic as it was.
He stood, took me in a bear hug again, said,
“We have much in common, hermano.”
Thanked me for the book, the hospitality, and was
gone. I drank the Bud slowly, took one of the
painkillers the doctor had provided. I wasn’t
hurting but felt it coming on. Then I lifted Laura’s
letter, moved over to the sink, and, using my Zippo,
set it alight. If I opened it, her words would be
branded forever on a soul already too heavy. It
burnt quickly, like my aspirations, as I held it over
the sink. The slightly smoldering remains floated
towards the drain like the dying dance of a
disintegrating dream. Turned the tap on full, the jet