Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
“Leat féin.” (You too.)
Clicked off.
Lock and load.
The van opened, four figures spilled out, all
dressed in black combat gear, and on the back of
the jackets, in red………… Headstone. I thought,
fucking everybody advertises. A large combat bag
was on the ground and they began to pull out its
contents.
A fucking arsenal. Enough firepower to keep
Afghanistan lethal for a year. The two brothers,
Remington rifles, grenades, ran to the front of the
building.
The remaining two:
Bethany, appearing strung out and spaced, held a
shotgun in her thin arms. Then Bine……...fuck, I
recognized him. Ronan Wall, the swan killer, the
psycho brat, shielded by money and upbringing, to
get to this—massacre of handicapped kids.
Like fuck.
He was barking at Bethany and I felt a twinge of
sorrow for her. She hadn’t told, had shown up,
knowing we’d be waiting, and had that awful
expression of the truly doomed, nigh pleading,
“Do it.”
Mr. Macho, having torn her a new arsehole, began
to arm up. A bandolier of shells around his
shoulder, a Glock in his hip holster, and the pièce
de résistance, the Remington Pump, in the
neighborhood of my Mossberg but not as rapid.
The guy loved hardware. Starring in his own
movie, he racked the pump, pushing shells into the
chamber like a good un. I was about to send his
movie straight to video. He slammed the van door,
then marched towards the back school door. I
stepped out, said,
“Hi buddy.”
He turned around, stunned. His mind couldn’t quite
collate the scenario. He said,
“Fucking Taylor, always fucking Taylor. The fuck
is with you man, following me around?”
I said,
“I like swans.”
As they say in literary novels, a frozen tableau.
The word
tableau
gives that careless hint of
learning but not pushing it. Ronan finally got it,
turned to Bethany, said,
“You cunt.”
Shot her twice in the face. I clubbed him with the
Mossberg and he went down fast—not out, but
dazed. I moved to Bethany, cradled her head in my
arms for a moment, tried not to look at her
devastated face, muttered,
“Thank you.”
If she heard me, she gave no sign, just a soft sigh as
she let go of all the troubled existence her so short
life had been. I felt a torrent of rage escape as I
turned back to Bine/Wall/the fuck ever. He was
reaching for the Glock on his hip. I kicked it
effortlessly away, pushed his legs apart, stood
over him, the Mossberg pointed at his groin,
reached down, pulled his top aside, and tore my
Medugorje chain from his neck. He said, spitting
blood and teeth from where I’d clubbed him,
“What now, Taylor? You going to shoot me?”
Gave a harsh laugh, pushed his hand towards me,
commanded,
“Help me up.”
I put my mutilated hand in his face, said,
“Alas……………”
Added,
“All I can give you is . . . the index finger.”
I looked down on the concrete he was lying on,
said,
“See that slab you’re on? Kind of like a headstone,
you think?”
He spat in my face, said,
“Get real, Taylor. I’m connected. Like, I got juice.
So fold your pathetic tent and fuck off, I have
history to write.”
I gut shot him.
Let him savor that awhile. Moved the barrel up to
his right eye, the one the swans hadn’t taken all
those years ago, asked,
“This your good eye?”
He was finally beginning to realize that maybe
there was a court of no appeal, that no family, no
money, upbringing, class, would step in to save
him. He pleaded,
“I’m insane, don’t know what’s right or wrong, you
have to get help for me. Right, Jack?”
I said,
“The thing with your good eye is you’ll see it
coming.”
He did.
I pumped three shells in there and kicked his
fucked-up body for good measure.
Then I was moving. As if the Hound of Heaven
was nipping at my heels, thinking,
“We get out of this, I might even go back to mass.”
Heard the wail of sirens, a whole shitload of them.
Kept moving. I was near the end of Forster Street
when Stewart pulled over, the door open, the
engine still primed, he screamed,
“Move. Fast.”
I did.
Sweat teeming down my cheeks, I glanced at
Stewart. He wasn’t much better. We were past the
Meyrick Hotel, turning down by the Tourist Office
and into Merchant’s Road. Stewart, not booting it,
desperately wanting to.
Tick.
Tick.
Tick.
I could hear the clock, not on our side. One error
and we were fucked. Outside McDonagh’s, but a
docker from the water, he pulled into a vacant
space near the hardware store. I opened the flask,
took a deep hit, offered it. He took it, coughed,
near spluttered, gasped,
“The fuck is that?”
I said,
“My own concoction, I might patent it, call it
Headstone.”
He wasn’t amused but did take another hit. I was
fingering
the
Medugorje
stones
like
an
unreasonable mantra. He asked,
“What’s that?”
I said,
“A hint of grace.”
We tried to get our respective shredded nerves in
gear.
I asked,
“How’d the Guards respond so quick?”
He stared straight ahead, said,
“I called them.”
Jesus wept.
I grabbed the flask back, hit it with ferocity, said,
“Fucking great, just brilliant, Christ Almighty.”
He continued,
“Actually, I called Ridge, said she’d find two
wannabe Columbines handcuffed to the front door.
And that two more shooters were at the rear so to
bring backup. The credit and publicity will rocket
her career.”
I had nothing, so he asked,
“How’d it go for you?”
Almost dreading the answer, he knew it wasn’t
going to be good.
I sighed, said,
“A lovers’ quarrel. Bine/Ronan Wall, he shot her
after she opened up on him with her Browning.”
He asked the most inane question, an indication of
how madness, gunplay, adrenaline affect people,
“She had a Browning?”
“She does now.”
Part of him wanted the details but most of him
didn’t so he went with,
“And you think the Guards are going to buy that?”
I nodded, said,
“Sure, wraps it up nice and tidy.”
The booze had calmed him. He leant back, his head
on the seat, then asked,
“OK, you think if we get past this, you might really
tell me how it went down?”
I considered for all of two seconds, said,
“I seriously doubt it.”
Ridge was on the front page of all the newspapers,
banners proclaiming:
“Hero Ban Garda Prevents First Irish Columbine.”
The accounts narrated her overpowering the two
brothers but despite her valiant efforts, she was
unable to prevent the deaths of the ringleaders who
apparently had, in a bizarre pact, killed each other.
Sales of
We Need to Talk About Kevin
went
through the roof. Gus Van Sant with
Elephant
and
Michael Moore’s
Bowling for Columbine
sold out
of HMV and Zhivago.
The papers speculated on the weird deaths of
Bethany and Wall and concluded:
…………………………A love affair,
fuelled on drugs and would-be celebrity,
gone berserk when faced with the actual
enormity of what they were about to
undertake.
Yada fucking yada, on they went, fuel for the
talking heads.
Most of the editorials called for Ridge to receive
the President’s Medal of Honor. Promotion was a
given.
She called me, demanded,
“We have to talk.”
“I don’t think so.”
A pause, then,
“Jack, I can’t accept credit for what I didn’t do.”
Jack!
I weighed my words, let loose,
“Stewart gave you shelter when you needed it. You
open this can of worms, he might go to jail. Trust
me on this, he would not be able to do time again.”
Slam dunk.
I hoped.
Then,
“Jack, I need you to tell me the truth on something.”
“Fire away.”
Tentative,
“Did you have anything to do with the deaths of the
girl and Ronan Wall?”
I could see Al Pacino in
Godfather Two
as Diane
Keaton asked him something similar, said,
“You get to ask me this just one time, right?”
“OK.”
“No.”
Did she believe me?
Did she fuck.
I could feel the cluster fuck of questions she had
but she let them slide, said,
“So, I’m indebted to Stewart, then.”
“More than you know.”
“Jack……Bhi curamach…………be careful.”
“Leat féin…………..you too.”
* * *
and got the number of the new private investigator
in town, Mr. Mason.
Rang and he answered with,
“Ultimate Investigations.”
I said,
“I’ve heard you are a great PI.”
Let him bask.
He did.
Then,
“Well, thank you, we do our best or, as our slogan
says, our Ultimate.”
Jesus.
I said,
“I’ve some hot information for you.”
“Your name please?”
“David Goodis.”
He was all biz now, barked,
“So David, let’s hear it.”
I gave him Kosta’s address, said he was about to
move a major mountain of coke at seven o’clock
that evening but to be careful, he carries a Glock
always and is extremely dangerous. “He was
involved in the killing of that Ronan Wall.”
Rang off before he could quiz me.
Then called Kosta, opened with,
“It’s Jack.”
He didn’t sound surprised. If anything, he was
almost friendly, said,
“Thanks for returning my car.”
I launched,
“You helped me in so many ways so, to clean the
slate, I wanted to warn you that a guy posing as a
PI is going to arrive at your home at seven. He’s
been hired by the Romanians to avenge Caz’s
death. I don’t know how they manage to get their
information but they do. Maybe, the daily threat of
deportation has them on constant alert.”
He digested this, then,
“Thanks Jack, maybe after this . . . matter, we can
be friends again?”
I let that dance, said,
“We’ll always be close.”
He laughed, said,
“A bottle of Stoli is waiting in the ice bucket, my
friend.”
On ice.
I said,
“Works for me, hermano.”
He finished with,
“Del corazón, mi amigo.”
Pick battles big enough to matter,
small enough to win.
—Irish saying
Kosta phoned the following evening, just after the
Angelus bell had tolled. Outside, a fierce storm
was blowing, one of those sudden blasts of terror
that come without warning. The windows in the
apartment shook from the power of it. He said,
“Yesterday evening was as you had forewarned
me, thank you.” I already knew how it went down.
Had called the Guards’ hotline and told them a
crazy man was going to try and trespass on Kosta’s
property. They were waiting for him and he was
now in custody, trying to Brit his way out of a gun
charge and various other violations.
“You are all right?”
He laughed, said,
“I am but my visitor—let’s say he won’t be making
house calls for a time. The police were not exactly
gentle in their handling of him.”
As if it just occurred to me, I said,
“Come pick me up, we’ll celebrate.”
Now the trace of caution entered his voice, he
said,
“Jack, it’s blowing up a hurricane now.”
I laughed, went with,
“It’s Galway. If you let the weather dictate your
life, you’d never go out.”
His intuition battled with his machismo and he
conceded, said,
“OK, I’ll see you in twenty minutes.”
I was waiting outside, being blown to freaking bits
by the wind. He opened the door of an Audi, urged
me in. He had certainly dressed for the elements: a
long Barbour coat, navy wool cap pulled over his
ears. Now for the tricky part. I suggested we go to
Blackrock, the area of beach passing on from the
Salthill promenade. Before he could protest, I
added,
“It’s the best view and, trust me, buddy, no more