Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
of water sucking the embers of what might have
been. I’d laid the gun on the countertop and
avoided looking at it lest I put the barrel in my
mouth.
I thought of
A Moveable Feast,
of all the wood that
had surrounded us then and how I never touched
one single piece of it for luck. Blinded by love and
joy, I believed I’d little need of luck and that Paris
would simply continue in Galway and that Laura
would hold my hand forever. One glorious
moment, as we were standing by the Eiffel Tower,
I’d been looking up at the steel girders when Laura
kissed the nape of my neck; a fleeting kiss, almost
imperceptible, and my whole body was alight with
awe that such a single gesture could have me
believe I was bulletproof and that the future would
be writ as it was then. A light rain had begun to
fall and Laura turned her face up to it, said,
“Thank you, Lord.”
I said,
“Wait till you see the rain in Galway. It’s incessant
but soft, like your eyes.”
She’d never feel the Galway rain and I’d never
feel her gentle eyes light on my face.
Och ocon………………Oh misery is me.
I moved back to the sofa, the gun resting in my arm
again, turned on Marc Roberts’s new album, the
track “Dust” killing me slowly. My mobile rang,
thank Christ.
A Dhia, ta bron orm.
(God, I am so sad.)
—Old Irish prayer
Stewart.
He launched,
“Father Malachy has regained consciousness.”
Father!
I never . . . never heard him call him thus.
I said,
“Good, how is he?”
Stewart seemed momentarily lost for words;
Malachy had that effect, then,
“I think the nurses might be about to blacken his
eyes, too.”
I might actually help them. I asked,
“When can I go see the oul bastard?”
“Ridge has the day off on Thursday and asks if she
can pick you up then, go with you?”
I laughed, not out of humor, but Ridge? Said,
“Safety in numbers. You think we need that for
him?”
Without hesitation, he said,
“Actually we were both thinking of protecting him
from you.”
Nice.
I needled,
“You think I’d assault a priest?”
“Why not? You’ve assaulted everyone else.”
The little sanctimonious prick. I hissed,
“Thanks Stewart, your Zen spirit has made a
contented man very old.”
Silence, then,
“Jack, you OK? You sound a little . . . off.”
I thought of Kosta, said,
“I’m all right, as right as a rumor.”
Clicked off .
I crashed early, meaning I managed to get to my
bed, took the Mossberg with me, and, as long as I
didn’t shoot meself during the night, I was doing
OK.
Next morning, thank Christ, I couldn’t remember
my dreams but they’d been rough. When you wake
with your hair drenched in sweat and panic riding
roughshod all over your torso, you weren’t
dreaming you won the freaking lotto.
Got a scalding shower done, a lethal strong coffee
in me and the Xanax. Spent an hour practicing the
moves with the gun. I was clumsy, couldn’t get into
a rhythm but stayed with it; it would come. By
fuck, I’d make it. Got my all-weather coat. The
right inside pocket was a shoplifter’s dream, large
and unobtrusive. The Mossberg slid in like sin. I
got a yellow pad, wrote down all I knew about
Headstone. Took me a time, writing with your left
hand for the first time is a bitch.
Done, I sat back, drained the coffee, and stared at
the pad, willing it to speak to me. There was a
pattern, a design; I just hadn’t got it yet. I brushed
my teeth, the smell of burnt paper still lingering in
the air, hovering above the sink, like some specter
of paradise lost, a lost plea of transcendence.
Shrugged on my coat, the gun in place, and headed
out to face the day. Whatever it brought, I was at
least locked and loaded. As I opened the door, I
glanced one last time at the sink and my dead
dream, muttered,
“Smoke, that’s all.”
I came out of my apartment building, made a sign
of the cross at the cathedral, moved across the
Salmon Weir Bridge, and didn’t look to see if the
salmon were jumping. The water had been
poisoned two years now and the only things
jumping were me nerves.
Of course, I ran into a wise guy, some fuck I
vaguely knew, who immediately stared at my
fingers, said,
“Not paying your debts, eh?”
It did flit across my mind to have him jump where
the salmon didn’t. I said,
“Yeah, how’d you know?”
Smirk in place, he said,
“Common as muck these days, everybody’s in debt
and having to give up parts of their life they never
expected.”
I said,
“I gave them your name, said you’d cover my tab.”
Whatever he shouted after me, it contained not only
invective but a sense of alarm.
Good.
Books.
I needed to ground myself and nothing, not even the
Jay, quite does it like books. I don’t always have
the focus to read them but I sure do need them
around. Especially as a woman was not in the
cards, not no more. I headed for my second home.
Charlie Byrne’s Bookshop has grown and become
almost as important as the swans of Galway in the
very pulse of the city. I hadn’t been since my most
r ecent
accident
and felt almost content to be
heading there. I passed the newest head shop,
doing, it seemed, a brisk trade. Not a high away
was the Oxfam shop, emanating a mellow vibe.
And then Charlie’s. Sylvia Beach would have been
proud of those guys.
Vinny was behind the counter, chatting animatedly
to a customer. He had that Clinton touch of making
each person feel like the most important one. His
trademark long black hair was trimmed. He no
longer resembled John Travolta in
Pulp Fiction,
whose character was named . . . Vincent.
Go figure.
He handed a stack of books to the customer, said,
“Sure, pay the rest when you can.”
Why the town loves the shop.
He saw me, asked,
“Jack, it’s my smoke break, time to join me?”
Oh, yeah.
He has the laid-back gig down to a fine art, without
working, and yet, if the situation requires it, he can
focus like a hunting Galway heron. He lit up his
Marlboro Light, offered the pack, and I said,
“Thanks.”
Forgetting, I tried to use my right hand with the
Zippo and, without a word, Vinny leant over, fired
me up. I folded my right hand in a feeble fist and
asked,
“Want to know?”
He reflected, then,
“On reflection, no.”
Not that he didn’t care. It was the very caring that
doused his curiosity. He said,
“A friend of yours was in the other day, the Ban
Garda?”
I was stunned, asked,
“In an official capacity?”
He laughed, said,
“Jack, we’re a bookshop, not a speakeasy.”
Added,
“Least not yet.”
He finished his cig, extinguished it carefully in the
provided
bin, said,
“She bought a stretch of James Lee Burke.”
Wonders never cease. I muttered,
“Ridge buying books.”
He corrected, gently,
“Ban Ni Iomaire Jack.”
One of the girls stuck her head out the door,
shouted,
“Vin . . . phone.”
I smiled, said,
“Bet you have them primed to do that after five
minutes.”
He laughed fully and he has one of those great
ones, makes you feel good to simply hear it. He
asked,
“How’d you know?”
I said,
“It’s what I’d do.”
Now he did glance at his watch, left to him by his
late beloved dad. He asked,
“You living in Nun’s Island?”
Surprised me and I said in a tone heavier than I
meant,
“Keeping track of the customers, that it?”
It was unwarranted and I instantly regretted it. His
eyes changed, the usual merriment faded, he said,
“No, it’s called keeping track of friends.”
In a piss-poor attempt at reconciliation, I handed
over a list, said,
“Any chance you got any of these?”
Ten authors on there:
Jim Nisbet
Tom Piccirilli
Craig McDonald
Megan Abbott
Adrian McKinty
and
Others.
You want to truly off end authors, list them under
Others
.
He scanned it, said,
“
Fifty Grand
was terrific, the others, apart from
Print the Legend,
I’ll need some time on.”
I took out my wallet. Vinny gave me the look, said,
“I didn’t get them yet.”
Money just doesn’t buy you out of a cluster fuck;
ask Tiger Woods.
One last lame salvo. I said,
“We’ll have that pint soon.”
He nodded, went back into the shop.
I stood there, mortified. Maybe Vinny’s watch, my
stupid mishandling of one of my oldest and closest
friends, resurrected a painful memory.
My father, Lord rest him, had all his life, over his
bed, a portrait of Our Lady of Perpetual Help.
After he died, I’d been spending some time with a
guy I regarded as a friend. By some odd
coincidence, his father was terminally ill. In what I
believed to be one of the few decent acts of my
befuddled life, I gave the picture to my friend. Not
easily, as anything to do with my dad was beyond
sacred to me.
The man lingered on for two more years, painful
ones, and during that time, my erstwhile friend,
like so many others, had become, if not my enemy,
certainly somebody who avoided me. No surprise
there; business as usual, really. My existence of
alienation even then was in full flow.
Few weeks after the man’s funeral, I received a
parcel. It contained the portrait and a terse note:
Jack
I’m returning this as my father has no
further use of it. Not that it did him a
whole load of good. We are never going
to be friends, Jack, and you know, I
doubt we ever were.
There was more, it didn’t get better.
But that’s what I recall and I remember being
gutted by the gesture. To return a holy picture
seemed to be an act of desecration. I gave the thing
to charity. What had been holy above my father’s
bed had mutated to utter malice.
I didn’t understand the act then, I don’t understand
it now. For a man like me, always rapid to anger,
to flare-ups, I don’t think I for one single moment
felt even a twinge of anger, I felt only sadness.
Outside Charlie’s now, I stubbed my cigarette
under my boot, fuck the bin, and turned up the
collar of my Garda coat and went, as the very last
line of Padraig Pearse’s poem goes, went my way
………………………………………Sorrowfully.
An easier exercise is
to look for evidence
rather than jump to
conclusions.
—
Detective’s Handbook
I managed a day without much booze, cut way back
on the pills, and so when the morning of Ridge’s
arrival came, I was, if not clear-eyed, at least
mobile. You take what you get. As I waited and
sipped at a strong coffee, I practiced over and over
with the Mossberg. I was getting there. It began to
feel like an extension of my arm. That I thought this
was some sort of achievement is a fucking sad
depiction of how narrow my world had become. I
blamed it on the loss of a love almost reached.
Guy like me, who the hell is going to give the
dancer’s choice? I felt her loss like the departure
of an aspiration you’d yearned for but never
seriously considered.
To try and exorcise this demon of woe, I kept
glancing at the notes I’d made on Headstone.
Something. Just nagging at the edge of my mind.
Nope, couldn’t get it.
Yet.
Ridge arrived promptly as said. She was dressed
in a navy tracksuit with white stripes and looked
good, very. She handed over a package, said,
“This was at your door.”
No fucking around, I opened it fast, I was sick to
death of bad mail. It contained a glove; flesh-
colored material, with a soft gel-like substance
filling two fingers. I tried it on and the gel seemed
to almost solidify, yet was flexible. I held up my
hand to Ridge, said, trying not to let the sheer