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Authors: Lisa McInerney

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BOOK: The Glorious Heresies
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“You're being mean to me already,” was her reply.

“I'm not being mean to you already.”

“You are,” she said. “You never wanted me to come.”

“Don't be daft.”

“It's true. You've been trying to put me off for weeks. You'd much rather be up there on your own, wouldn't you? You could fuck whatever slut you liked then.”

The words were caustic and he deserved them; Elena from Salerno had been the kick-off of a really bad habit. He looked up at Karine and she stared back at him, flushed, and maybe it was just because it was early morning or the start of a potentially great weekend or maybe even because he was a bit hungover, but he didn't want to fight with her, couldn't see the justification for it.

She identified the change in him and reeled back the tantrum.

“I just don't want to be uncomfortable, Ryan.”

“But you won't be, girl.”

“I will be! I hate being mucky and I hate not having anywhere to shower and…and you know the girls he'll have around him. Joseph. You know his mates. They'll be all these ripped tights rocker bitches and that's not me at all and…” She exhaled. “They're all gonna hate me.”

“It's not even possible to hate you, girl.”

“They'll think I'm a slut and I just want to be pretty for you.”

He got up, stepped over two of the pillows and the make-up case and held her.

“You don't need to be anything for me,” he said, and she shied away from his kisses and flexed her shoulders and said, “I do, though, Ryan. I'm not good enough.”

“Oh God, please don't say that. Please.”

“It's true, isn't it?”

“None of it is your fault. None of it. I'm a dickhead who can't believe his luck.”

“Are you only saying that because you want me to leave half this stuff behind, though?”

“No.” He wrapped his arms tighter around her. “Bring all of it. Bring your whole fucking bedroom in a trailer if you like.”

She rubbed her cheek against his chest like a cat and said, “Tell Joseph.”

—

Elena. Sasha Carey who was friends with Joseph's ex-girlfriend. Rachel O'Riordan; she worked behind the bar in Room, a nightclub in town. Christina whatever-the-fuck-her-surname was, at that party in Ballincollig; she of the lacklustre blowjobs. Triona Neville who booked session musicians down in the Union studios; she was at least twenty-three but what the fuck. Kasia…yeah, he didn't know her surname either, back at Bobo's gaff, and that was only last week. Was he finished yet? He didn't know. He hoped so.

Betrayal was a miserable salve and he was not at all cut out for it. It had started with a beautiful tourist, a goddess come to his sphere specifically to grant him justice; it should have ended there too. Beautiful as Elena was, she wasn't what he wanted. What he wanted was to go back in time and stop himself getting caught with Dan Kane's coke so that Karine would never have cheated on him. Even if he could only go as far back as the night he met Niall Vaughan in The Relic, just to walk the fuck away when Karine told him to. What he wanted, Ryan Cusack, was Karine D'Arcy, all of her: body, soul and intent.

That denied to him, he tried revenge, and the more he pushed it the harder it punished him. The ease at which he coaxed opportunity was a gilded curse. His life had become a gauntlet run of parties, negotiations, car parks, VIP rooms. He'd done more cocaine in the last year and a half than he was comfortable thinking about, and that's what it had come to: cocaine, money, pills, women.

Oh, very fucking glamorous. It wasn't glamour that kept him sleepless and dry-mouthed, or prompted the big deals and the big reprisals. And what had he become, in his travels through the underworld? Just another cheating cunt in a city of cheating cunts. It had started when he was fifteen and he was stupid for thinking he could hold it back. The predictability of his transformation hurt him terribly. He hated it. He hated the girls who came on to him at parties and his inability to say no to a nice smile and a fresh slice. He hated it all, he hated himself, he hated Dan, he hated Karine; it was all just hate hate hate, a cacophony, a blizzard, line after line after line.

—

The first night was a dream, more than just figuratively. Having pitched tents and torn open slabs of lager, they dropped a few yokes and crowded around each other at the backs of the big tops that housed the star performances, dancing and drinking, shouting and wading chin-deep into conversations of a hazy and numinous quality.

The day after had been stuffed into a timetable and suffered for it. Ryan had acts he wanted to see and a girlfriend who wanted placating. They walked the breadth of the arena, their tempers slipping. Twice there was a proper, thunderous row which made shit of the moods of the people around them. Once, Joseph took him aside and told him to rein it the fuck in, but though Ryan took the words as wise and heartfelt, they weren't gospel, and he couldn't heed them. After the second row Karine said fuck it, she was going home, and had gotten halfway to the main gates before he caved in and dashed after her. But sure what could he do? They were now as they would always be: splintered but desperate, in love and worn out.

Karine retired just after midnight but he was nowhere near ready for sleep, thanks to the double-drop he'd sneaked only an hour back. There was a discussion at the door of Joseph's tent. Joseph was mucky-stoned—“I couldn't get up if I climbed your fucking leg, Cusack”—but Ryan was itching for a distraction, and in the end he wandered off to the rave in the woods with Joseph's friend Izzy, who played lead guitar in a punk outfit called Scruffy The Janitor and taught a contemporary dance class on Thursdays. She wore lots of eyeliner, but never any lipstick. Joseph was desperately in love with her, and proved it by pretending very badly that he wasn't.

There was no dancing. Ryan blamed himself because the pills were the best he'd had all year and he'd known before he'd even arrived at the Picnic that he'd be blasted. He sat instead on the grass, back from the dancers, with his arms hooked round his shins and, from time to time, his forehead on his knees.

Izzy bounced over. “You're no craic.”

“I am usually. I'm just
fffffucked.

“You're no craic all day. You or Carly.”

“Karine.”

“That's right,” she said. She pulled her hair over her shoulders and started plaiting it. Around them the tree trunks blazed neon green and pink, and the beats crashed.

“Why are you guys even together if you don't like each other?” she shouted.

Ryan was getting rushes up the inside of his arms, so he stretched, and put his hands flat on the ground behind him, and let his head loll backwards. Izzy sat beside him.

“How long are you going out, like?”

“Years and years. Since the night of my fifteenth.”

“Oh right. So it's a bad habit, hard to break.”

“No, no.”

“Look,” yelled Izzy. “It's kind of obvious. You keep her all the ways up here…” She stretched an arm over her head and walked her fingers along the underside of the canopy far above. “And she doesn't deserve it. I mean that with kindness and love, by the way. It's a shit thing to be someone else's religion. And you know, even you've got issues with it and it's coming out in all sorts of shitty little ways. Like, Joseph was telling me the story. First she did the dirt on you and now you can't stop doing the dirt on her. And still you're wearing her like a hair shirt. It's fucking tragic. As in, it's sad
and
it's pathetic.”

“She didn't.”

“She didn't what?”

“She didn't do the dirt on me first. I did it first.” He didn't leave Izzy time enough to soak it in. He turned to her and said, “Joe doesn't know that and neither does she.”

“Shit,” she said.

As the beats ebbed into a breakdown, the voices around them came back to a roar. There was a chorus of whistles and cheers. Izzy moved closer.

“You're not to tell either of them,” he said.

“Obviously.”

“Because it'd end me.”

“Cross my heart and all that.”

He rolled out the confession. The yokes swam through him. He could see himself: sitting on the ground beside his nodding acquaintance, eyes perfect circles and jaw slipping in and out of alignment. He got to the end of his story and it meant nothing. No weight off. He still felt like a cunt.

“You know what it is?” shouted Izzy. “You set up this whole relationship as this picture-perfect penance for something stupid you did when you were fifteen and you're pissed off now that Carly…Karine…” She raised her eyes to the lights. “…didn't follow the script.”

“No. I love her. That's all.”

“So why'd you keep cheating on her?”

“Because. I dunno.” An epiphany. God, he remembered epiphanies. “Because I can.”

“Oh man. That's such a shitty thing to say.”

“No, I mean…Because I didn't want to the first time. Or I didn't mean to, and so now at least…Fuck. You know.”

“You didn't mean to, like, you feel Missus MILF had all the power or something?”

“I don't even fucking remember. It's just…Yeah. Probably. I dunno. I don't know why I did it and it kills me.”

“Ever think you're being too hard on yourself? We all did stupid shit when we were kids, like. I was into shoplifting and I only got caught once and I'm still morto. And fifteen-year-old boys are just…all dick, like. So, maybe it was just hormonal. Adolescent craziness. Maybe fucking
own
it. Face up to it, own it, and let it go.”

“How do I own it? I didn't want it. Hence the last few ould dolls I fucked. If I'm going to be hung for it, it might as well be for shit I actually wanted to do. Every fuck improves the ratio.”

A girl walking behind them stood on his fingers. He examined them as she came down to his level, put her arm around his shoulder and bawled an apology into his ear. Ryan smiled forgiveness. The girl kissed his cheek.

“That is seriously fucked up!” Izzy shouted, once the clumsy girl had barrelled on. “Dude, I love you wholly right now, but you have issues. Like I think you need to see someone.”

Ryan stared at his muddy fingers.

“But you're not going to do that, are you?” Izzy went on. “Because you're too fucking male or something. Well, you know what I think you should do? I think you should go talk to Missus MILF. Ask her for the gory details. This is a part of your story you can't even remember and it's turned you into a control freak.”

“I can't do that either,” Ryan said. “She took off a few months back. Left a ton of debt behind her, locked the doors and hightailed it. Even her daughter doesn't know where she is.”

—

“This is insane!” Saskia hissed. “Mo, I am totally on your team in terms of philosophy, absolutely, one hundred per cent, you are right and I should know, I've been looking for truth long enough. But this? This is morally wrong.
Criminally
wrong. I can't be part of it. I can't
blah blah blah blah blah.

Maureen stood at the gable end of the church, her back to rolling, sightless countryside. She had already broken a stained-glass window, partly to take the first step and partly to check whether the place was alarmed. It wasn't. It was probably too small. This was the thing with the countryside parishes; you were attacking something of minor import and massive sentimental value.

“Mo, listen…” reasoned Saskia; she did not make as good a pupil as her ex cult-mate. “You have a bone to pick with the Catholic Church; I get that. I'm Irish as well, you know. We all harbour resentment. But this is criminal damage! You'll spend the rest of your life in prison!”

“Jesus, how old do you think I am?”

“I can't be a part of this. The Gardaí will follow this back to the commune. Think of the others. Everyone's trying to deal with their own issues. Causing havoc will impinge on them.”

“Era, it's not like we're family.”

“You can't come back, then. This kind of mischief is at total odds with how we're trying to live!”

“Mischief me arse,” cried Maureen. “How you're trying to live…don't make me cough up a lung! Wasters and dropouts and dregs, hiding in fields in the arse end of Ireland, oh! don't stick your heads out of the trenches anyway, for fear, for fear.”

“Oh right! Right! So we're just not being active enough. And what in God's name is this going to achieve? D'you think this is anarchy? This isn't anarchy!”

“It's what you make of it.” Maureen turned, her back to the stone, and held the night sky in her outstretched arms. “And you should run with it, because they can't catch me, you know. I've done my time. Everything after that is my bonus to spend as I wish. Take advantage if you want to make your mark.”

“What, and follow you? Mo, this is insane because
you
are insane, and I've copped preachers a lot more cunning than you.”

“Grand,” said Maureen. “Off you go. Tell Scooby Doo thanks for everything.”

“Oh my God. You have no respect.”

“Scoot along, Saskia. And for Jesus's sake will you learn to stand on your own pair? Commune to commune—get a fecking job!”

Well, that had done it. Maureen had banked on having an ally, and Shattered Saskia had seemed a damn good candidate, in the absence of tried-and-tested serfs. It certainly looked as if she was going to tell tales, which was probably to be expected in an off-the-wagon born-again. She hadn't even waited long enough to hear blinding reason: the smoke would belch into the air but everyone would feel cleaner after it. It had worked for the Laundry, it had worked for Jimmy's brothel, and it would work for the Catholic Church.

As Saskia stalked away, Maureen lifted onto tiptoes and peered in through the splintered glass. Not much to see but varnished shadows, and varnish likes to burn.

BOOK: The Glorious Heresies
2.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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