Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
was the time to share. He continued in a curt, no-
shite tone,
“I’ll expect more positive news on your next
report.”
Report!
I said,
“Your money, pal.”
He near shouted,
“Not
my
money, the Lord’s!”
Is there a reply to this kind of spiritual mugging?
He ended with, “You’d be wise to remember,
Taylor, that God is watching.”
“A divine accountant, no less.”
Rang off and thought,
“Pray that.”
You want to find a priest, there is one, dare I say,
infallible route,
“Ask a nun.”
I knew exactly my pigeon. My previous case, I’d
met a Sister Maeve. Like most of my relationships,
it began well. Then, per rote, came apart. I liked
her a lot but she, like so many others, had come to
despise me.
I’d say loathe, but I’m not sure nuns have that one
in their training manual. She taught at the Mercy
School in Newtownsmith, beside the Electricity
Board, what the ESB failed to electrify, the
teenage girls made up for. The name of the school
in Irish has a lovely resonance,
“Scoil an Linbh Íosa.”
Last time I’d met her, a huge construction site was
in full roar opposite. Now complete, it was a mega
retail outlet, named, I shit thee not . . . Born. I
walked down there, stopped at Holland’s shop, got
a warm hello from Mary, God bless her, bought a
large box of Dairy Milk.
Beware of gimps bearing gifts.
I glanced at the tabloids, all ablaze with the tragic
suicide of the German goalkeeper. I said a silent
Hail Mary for him.
A Mhuire Na Gras………………
Passed down by the Town Hall, advertising the
coming appearance of Steve Earle. I loved his
singing and even more his role in
The Wire
.
“Galway Girl” began to unreel in my head.
At the school reception desk, I asked if I might
have a moment with Sister Maeve?
“Yes.”
Was she glad to see me?
Take a wild fucking guess.
She had aged but then, apart from Donny Osmond,
who hadn’t?
She fixed me with those clear, unyielding blue
eyes, said,
“Mr. Taylor.”
In nun speak,
“Aw fuck, not you.”
I said,
“Jack . . . please.”
Her eyes gave that the disdain it deserved.
Establishing, from the get-go, you are no friend of
mine. Yet, during our brief time before, there had
been genuine affection building. The death of a
former nun had banjaxed that. I offered the
chocolates, she said,
“No thank you.”
I felt whipped.
I asked,
“If I might have five minutes of your time?”
Before, we’d gone for coffee and I remembered
her childlike joy in a slice of Danish, coupled with
a frothy cappuccino. She said, “We’ll step into the
recreation room.”
We did.
She indicated we sit at a hard wooden table.
Seemed appropriate.
She folded her hands, asked,
“How may I assist you, Mr. Taylor?”
I tried to ease the level of frigidity present,
inquired,
“How have you been, Sister?”
“The Lord provides.”
Jesus wept, the usual wall of spiritual
gobbledygook. I abandoned the ingratiation, went
with, “I’ve been employed by the Church.”
Paused.
Let that nugget hover.
Continued,
“To find a Father Loyola.”
The name hit.
She almost recoiled, actually moved physically
from the table, as if to distance herself. Deception
was not in her DNA, so I pushed,
“You know him, I guess?”
She nodded, guarded.
I went for the kill,
“Do you know where I can find him?”
Long silence. I didn’t try to fill it, then she said,
“He belonged to the Brethren.”
Past tense?
She knew, I waited.
Taking a deep breath, she said, “I imagine your
employer is less the Church than Father Gabriel.”
Her use of his name implied she was not a fan. I
asked,
“Are they not the same?”
She gave me a look of not quite disdain but in the
neighborhood, said,
“Father Gabriel is more interested in . . .
power
than pity.”
Bitterness leaked over the last words.
She fingered her rosary beads, continued,
“The Brethen started as a wonderful idea. To
reform the church from within. A return to the
teaching of Our Lord, Jesus, and the hope of
restoring the people’s trust in their church.”
I nearly laughed.
The sheer fucking naïveté of this. Every day, the
papers screamed about how the bishops continued
to hide and minimize the abuse. To such an extent
that the Guards were considering prosecuting them.
And still, the hierarchy, entrenched in arrogance,
refused to co-operate. I wanted to roar,
“Good luck with that.”
Went with,
“Didn’t work, huh?”
She sidestepped my sarcasm, said,
“In the beginning, it did so well. Later it emerged
that Father Gabriel had another agenda. A return to
the fundamentalism that would bring the people to
their knees. Father Loyola believed that if he
removed their funding, they’d be powerless.”
I said,
“Gabriel sounds like an ecclesiastical hit squad.”
She nearly smiled, said,
“That is bordering on sarcasm, Mr. Taylor, but
Father Gabriel is not a man to be crossed. They
even have a motto, Brethren Eternitas.”
The initials on his sharp briefcase.
They were sounding like the militant wing of
Dominus Deo.
Cut to the chase time. I asked,
“Do you know where I can find him?”
If she told me, my case would be wrapped right
there. I could wipe the smug look off Gabriel’s
face, pocket my fee, and look forward to Laura’s
imminent arrival. Sister Maeve was on the verge
of answering when her whole body shuddered. I
recognized the effect. It’s called in Ireland
“When someone walks on your grave.”
She stared at me and,
oh sweet Jesus,
fear and
terror in her eyes.
She said, as if she was channeling something,
“You have recently been in a dark place.”
Recently!
Like the last twenty years of my banjaxed life. But
she was right.
I’d met the devil, up close and way too personal.
I said,
“It’s true. I got to glimpse into the very mouth of
hell.”
Tad dramatic but close to the truth.
She shook her head, nigh screamed,
“No………….no Mr. Taylor, you have it wrong,
Hell looked into you.”
For fuck’s sake.
I tried again,
“Will you tell me where Father Loyola is?”
She was in some kind of trance. When she did
speak, it was in a flat dull monotone,
“The rains are coming; it will rain for nigh forty
days and nights.”
Welcome to Galway.
Then she stood, physically shook herself, and fled
from the room.
I sat for a moment, the box of chocolates like a
severe reprimand, muttered,
“Great, scaring the bejaysus out of a nun.”
I got to me feet, trying to make sense of her words.
Whatever else, she sure as shooting was right
about the weather. Outside, I looked at the skies,
dull gray and with the darkness tinge that speaks of
worse to come. A wino was perched on the small
wall, close to the Salmon Weir Bridge. I thought,
“Precarious the pose.”
He stared at me with bloodshot hopeless eyes,
asked,
“Got anything?”
I gave him the chocolates. He snarled, muttered,
“Fucking chocolate.”
and tossed the box in the river. Asked,
“Got anything else?”
I gave him twenty euros and said,
“Some advice.”
He grasped the money in a dirty fist, looked up,
asked,
“And what’s the freaking advice?”
I was already moving on, said,
“Steal a raincoat.”
A win doesn’t feel as good
as a loss
feels bad.
—Andre Agassi, from his memoir,
Open
And true indeed, it rained for nigh on forty days.
Downright biblical.
But despite flood devastation, the tabloids
continued feeding on Tiger Woods. A fallout being
that a nine iron was becoming the weapon of
choice. The Guards had issued a strike notice,
creating a fascinating conundrum: if it was illegal
for them to strike, who was going to arrest them?
The army?
The nurses were again threatening industrial
action. Sean O’Casey, our finest playwright, had
written nearly fifty years ago,
“The world is in a state of chassis.”
I.e…………………….fucked.
I had a priest to find. He’d been parish priest at the
small church in Bohermore where I made my First
Communion. It was my last resort. I stopped in at
Richardson’s Pub, holding point at the right wing
of Eyre Square. It was that rarity, a family pub.
Got a stool at the counter, ordered a pint.
The U.K. had recently introduced the Pour Your
Own. The deal being, you were given a meter that
clocked every time you poured your own. At
evening’s end, you paid your bill.
Sweet fuck, was nothing sacred?
The whole buzz of a pub was watching a
competent barman take his sweet time nourishing
your pint and creaming off the head. If I wanted to
pour my own, I’d stay home. The pint came,
splendid in all its black music. John, the barman,
said,
“Haven’t seen you for a bit, Jack.”
This was a subtle lash, meaning,
“You’ve been taking your business elsewhere, yah
bollix.”
I was saved from a lame defense by a customer
who said,
“Liam Clancy is dead.”
The end of an era indeed. Bob Dylan had called
them the finest ballad singers ever.
What the fuck was he smoking back then?
Still, I raised my glass, said,
“Codladh sámh leat”
…………….Safe sleep.
I asked John,
“You ever see Father Loyola?”
His church was less than a brief rosary away. John
gave a warm smile, said,
“Oh yeah, he’d stop in for a small Paddy once a
week.”
In the current climate, that could be hugely
misconstrued. John meant Paddy’s, regarded by
many as the true Irish whiskey. Above John’s head
was a large flat-screen TV. The top story was
whether a children’s toy, “Go-Go Hamster,” was
safe. Literally as a footnote, the irritating bottom
line script announced that the hundredth British
soldier had been killed in Afghanistan. I pulled
myself back to John, ran a scam, asked,
“He sure relied on that housekeeper of his.”
Did he have one? The fuck I knew. But some things
thankfully don’t change. John said,
“Ah, Maura, the poor creature, the salt of the earth,
she loves her port but she’s been devastated since
he left.”
Gotcha.
You don’t tip Irish barman. I do.
And did.
John nodded, said,
“Much appreciated Jack.”
I headed for St. Patrick’s church, stopping at a new
off -license to buy a bottle of port. My mobile
shrilled.
Stewart.
He said Father Malachy was still in a coma. I ran
the encounter, meeting with Ronan Wall’s sister,
by him, he said,
“The swan killer. You caught him, yeah?”
Added,
“You were a local hero for a while.”
I said,
“It didn’t last.”
He countered with,
“Jack, with you, what does?”
I bit down on my temper, said,
“I think the headstone, Ronan Wall, and his sister
are somehow all connected.”
“Why?”
“The fuck do I know why; call it a former hero’s
hunch.”
I knew he was laughing. He said,
“Lemme guess, you want me to track down the
sister and maybe even the bold Ronan himself?”
I counted to ten, said,
“What do you think I pay you for?”
Feigning indignation, he said,
“You’ve never paid me a single euro.”
Now, I nearly smiled, said,
“Money is not the only currency. Zen that.”
And clicked off.
The priest’s house was a neat bungalow to the side
of the new church.
The bungalow had been freshly painted and looked
welcoming.
Maybe spent the stolen cash on that.
I knocked on the door. It opened to a tiny robust
woman, late sixties with her gray hair scraped
back to a severe bun. How do women do that and
more importantly………..why?
I literally rushed her.