To nearly all of the questions, Sheard said he’d d
i
vulged all that he could at the moment and would not presume to speak for the government. He was simply a policeman doing his job, but there was progress.
As ever, he appeared confi?dent, competent, and in command of the situation.
Until Orla Bannon asked, “What about the mix-up on the Glasnevin Road? My sources indicate that the driver of the vehicle was not killed with a Garda weapon but rather a bullet from an assault rifl?e of the sort not in the armory of the Garda Siochana.”
Sheard’s features glowered. “A rumor like that was fl?oating around. But as announced yesterday, the ma
t
ter is under investigation with the offending...the commanding Garda offi?cers having been suspended.
“But I should like to say this—police investigations cannot be allowed to become witch hunts, just because a senior offi?cer feels some personal animosity toward one group or another, based on their suspected crimes or public appearance and deportment.
“By the day, this country is becoming more pluralistic, more democratic, and—it is to be hoped—more tolerant. I’m not certain all of the country’s native-born
communities can accept the new paradigm, but they must be made to conform to law and democratic practice. By whom I mean at the present time: both the New Druids on the one hand and rogue elements of the police on the other. I’m certain the government backs me in this stance.”
“And bad cess to you and your miserable minions,” Nuala said to the screen; she was standing in the doo
r
way. And then to McGarr, “That ambitious man, wit
h
out question acting with Kehoe’s complicity, has as much as burnt you, buried you, and pissed on your grave. Whatever will you do?”
McGarr’s cell phone had begun ringing. He shook his head; he did not know. It was Sweeney. “They’ll be ringing up any minute now, as soon as I put down the phone.”
McGarr tried to estimate how long it would take him to get into town to Bresnahan and Ward’s digs in the Coombe, where they had set up all their electronic gear. “I can’t talk now.”
“But aren’t you talking to me?”
“Make it quick.”
“McGarr!” Sweeney roared. “You’re making a balls of this thing. They will talk to you now or never.”
“Anything else?”
It took a second or two for the man to gather hi
m
self. “I’ve also got those names for you—the ones who’ve joined me in putting up the money.”
Traffi?c would still be heavy now at midmorning. “Forty-fi?ve minutes at the inside. Make it an hour.”
“They told me you’d say that and it was a no-go. What in the name of sweet Jesus could you be doing that’s more important than this?”
“Family. You know that about me, Sweeney. My family comes fi?rst. They’re never out of my thoughts.” McGarr rang off.
The Coombe lies in a hollow that runs down to the banks of the Poddle; once a center of textile manufa
c
turing and weaving, many of its old commercial buil
d
ings had been converted into lofts and offi?ces.
Bresnahan, Ward, Ward’s other wife, Lee Sigal, and their three children lived in a rambling series of buil
d
ings that also housed Lee’s antiques business and looked out over the narrow stream.
The bell on the door, which had been a feature of the shop for more than a century, scarcely produced a sound any longer, but a buzzer that sounded in the li
v
ing quarters soon brought Lee.
“Well, Peter McGarr,” Lee said, advancing on him with her hand out. “Aren’t you all the news these days? I hope you’re keeping on.”
“Have I any choice?” McGarr accepted her hand, and they embraced.
“No—none whatsoever. That Sheard is a bloody piece of self-serving work, so he is. And we must right the record. I take it you’ve come for Ruth. Hughie is on stakeout, but I suppose you know that.”
Turning on her heel, she moved through rows of fu
r
niture, architectural appurtenances, and other co
l
lectible items that stretched off into the shadows of low, crowded rooms, which changed into a bright and airy apartment with tall windows the moment they passed through a heavy curtain.
Only then did McGarr notice that the dark, pretty woman was pregnant. “Well, this is news. Why am I always the last to know?”
With fi?nely formed features and dark eyes, she smiled, dimples appearing in her olive-toned cheeks. “I suspect Hughie thought you’ve had enough on your mind.”
They found Ruth in a large work area fi?lled with computers and other gadgetry. Quickly, McGarr fi?lled her in about the possible call from the ransomers, adding, “If they’re prompt, it should be any minute now.”
Bresnahan phoned Ward, and they decided upon a strategy that would enable them to learn the number of the incoming call and perhaps even learn its location.
One of the machines that Bresnahan and Ward used for surveillance was also able to detect the location of the wireless service sending the signal, and from there it could track back to the place from which the call was being sent.
Learning the number of the phone was more compl
i
cated. “But the point is to keep him on the line as long as possible.” Bresnahan tucked a strand of her auburn hair behind an ear and typed several codes into a co
m
puter. “You should sit here for the best reception.”
McGarr had scarcely taken a seat by a tall window when his cell phone bleated. “Yes?”
“You’re McGarr?” the same fractured voice from the videotapes said.
“I am, yeah. And who might I be speaking with?”
“The money. The helicopter. Once you’re up we’ll be in contact with you.”
“How do I know this is real? That you’re in posse
s
sion of the books?”
“The objects on the wall in the videotapes? I should add your pate to them with an eighteen-inch nail.” He rang off.
“Shit. Not enough time by half,” said Bresnahan.
McGarr’s cell phone rang again.
It was Sweeney. “So? You think he’s coddin’?”
McGarr didn’t know what to think; because of the
Ath Cliath
headline and the Orla Bannon article, it was now public knowledge that the ransomer collected heads. But the eighteen-inch nails had not been me
n
tioned and would have been apparent only to som
e
body who had a copy of the tape and the capability of magnifying the image, like Kara. “You have those names I asked for?”
“Got a fax?”
McGarr asked Bresnahan for the number and within minutes it appeared, nearly fi?fty names long with phone numbers and contributions in Sweeney’s barely legible scrawl.
Moving to a desk, McGarr began working through the list, not getting through to at least half the contri
b
utors because of secretaries or assistants. “The blighter phoned me at half-two in the blessed morning, so he did,” said one well-known Dublin developer who had ties to Kehoe. He had coughed up 5 million. “With nary an excuse nor an apology. Strong-arm all the way, and I hope Peter McGarr sees to it I get my money back.”
Another said he was threatened; yet another said it amounted to blackmail, “him with whole teams of snoops on that rag of his.”
Not one pretended to be happy about giving. The most sanguine statement was “Well, it’s all for a good cause, and I hope, if it’s got back, it’s kept in some more secure setting. Sweeney’s right about Trinity— an object of such value should never have been kept in a library.”
McGarr thanked Ruth and said good-bye to Lee and their babies, who had arisen from a nap. He drove home and was just walking through his front door when his cell phone bleeped.
“No common detox for Pape,” said McKeon. “He’s in intensive care—suddenly, inexplicably having lost consciousness in Sheard’s patrol car, and it doesn’t look good for him. But for Sheard? Shit, with Pape’s brain scrambled or dead, well...”
The political fi?x would be in—exculpating Kehoe, the Garda as an institution, and Sheard from blame in the loss of the treasures. The onus would be put squarely on McGarr and Ray-Boy and his gang of louts.
Even Kehoe’s tenuous alliance with Celtic United might be maintained. After all, Mide and Morrigan had been thorns in Kehoe’s side, with their carryings-on about the Celtic past. Younger New Druids simply wanted to maintain their hold on drugs and other ill
e
gal trades.
“There’s been a second tape and Sweeney says he’s put together the ransom money.” McGarr glanced at his watch; it was time for Maddie to be getting ready for school, if she were going.
“You’re jokin’.”
In more than a few ways, McGarr wished he was.
“How did he do that in such a short time?”
“It appears he worked through the night.”
“But is the demand genuine?”
“Apparently so.” But McGarr wished he could be more certain, since what he was about to ask McKeon might certainly end his career too, even if they were successful.
Moving through the upper hall and down the stai
r
case, McGarr paused on a landing with a tall window that looked out on his back garden. What would be agreed between them would, he imagined, set the course of the rest of their lives.
Explaining how Ward had intercepted a second ra
n
som tape, he then detailed Sweeney’s news that he had put together a “group of patriots” who would pay to r
e
trieve the book but not return it to “that sieve of a place,” Trinity College.
“Some Opus Dei zealots or others, I’d hazard.”
“But the demand mentions a helicopter.”
McKeon waited for the other shoe to drop.
“And I thought we might provide the service.”
“You and me.”
“Well—you, me, Sweeney, of course, and the keeper of old manuscripts at Trinity.”
“The Kennedy woman.”
“So it’s not—”
“A pig in a poke we’re left with. I understand.”
There was another pause, during which McGarr moved down the cellar stairs.
McKeon sighed. “Don’t you know, it’s curious you should bring this up. Because I’m only after thinking, with this Sheard yoke always on the teley blowing his horn that it was time for me to pack it in, join up with Ruth and Hughie, and make a few quid for once in me life.
“But then the missus tells me that with the kids now gone she thought I’d give up the work altogether, and at last she’d have a companion in me.
“ ‘Companion?’ says I. ‘Not sure I like the sound of that. A companion to do what?’ And didn’t she drag out this grocer’s list of places around the globe she’d like to go courtesy of something called Elder Hostel?
And me neither an elder nor hostile in any way.”
McKeon waited for McGarr’s reaction, but there could be none. The situation was too serious for co
m
edy, no matter how well intended.
“But”—there was another long pause during which McGarr unlocked the cabinet he was now standing b
e
fore—“maybe I can learn.”
“I hope—and it’s just a hope—that you won’t have to. But I’m only offering up a suggestion here.” Mc-Keon had raised a large family, who in many ways still depended upon him; McGarr, on the other hand, had only Maddie and Nuala to care for, and having to make a living was probably no longer an issue for him. “I want you to think about it before deciding, perhaps talk with Grainne.”
Opening the cabinet door, McGarr switched on a light and looked in at what made up a small arsenal of weaponry.
“What’s to decide? Didn’t we toss our lots t
o
gether—how many years ago was it, Peter?”
“I don’t know. Over twenty-fi?ve, I guess.”
“No sense in breaking that now. I’ll ring up the ai
r
port, tell them I need to keep up me hours.”
Which would without question end up in at least a suspension, once he strayed from his fl?ight plan. “You’re sure?”
“If we’re going down, let’s do it properly. Flames. Crash and burn. Figuratively speaking, of course.”
After switching off the television that he kept in a far corner of his safehouse/headquarters in Coolock, Ra
y
mond “Ray-Boy” Sloane Jr. remained seated in the near darkness while he tried to sort through his em
o
tions and summon his instinct for survival.
It was what had saved him in the past. Through gang violence as a lad and drug warfare as a man, it had kept him alive, told him when to split, who to hook up with and who to unhook. It had even got him clean without much fuss, enabling—there was a good word, he thought—him to dominate the chancers, gobshites, and other assorted cocksuckers around him. Enabling him, in essence, to get where he was.