Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
It’s quite difficult to get beaten up in hospital. I
mean, apart from the Saturday night war zone of the
A and E. That’s open season as the skels, the
drunks, the dopers, the crazies, show up. Plus, I
don’t mean the arrogance of the consultants who
verbally cut you to shreds at every opportunity.
Despite the array of marauding infections, if you
actually have a bed, you are reasonably safe.
You’d think.
Right?
I was almost fully recovered from the virus I’d
picked up and feeling, if not exactly healthy, at
least less battered. Lord in heaven, I’d even
managed some nights’ sleep without aids. Day
before my discharge, I woke or rather was dragged
from my sleep. A burly man had a ferocious grip
on my pajamas top and was hauling me upright. It
took me a few moments to grasp this was real, not
part of the recent fever. I tried to focus and then
recognized Liam, the ex-Guard who owned the pub
in Ough-terard. I’d phoned him about Father
Loyola under the pretext of booking a table at his
restaurant and quizzed him as to the fugitive
priest’s location. He’d fallen for my story and
confirmed
that
Loyola
was
staying
near
Oughterard.
Liam was one of those old-style cops you rarely
see much anymore. Big, built like a shithouse, and
rough as bejaysus. He’d been a fierce hurler, one
of the best, and we’d played together a few times.
He took no prisoners, ever. Regular methods of
policing held no interest for him; his fists were his
investigative technique.
His face was testament to his career: bruised, the
nose broken many times, the skin mottled by
rosacea and a riot of broken veins. He drank like
he played hurling. Like a lunatic. Spittle leaked
from his lips as he shouted,
“You lying piece of shite, Taylor.”
As a wake-up call, it sure beats tea and toast. It
gets you wide-awake.
Fast.
Before I could speak, he drew back his mighty fist
and smashed it to the right side of my face. It
bounced me off the bed frame. He was about to
follow through when he noticed my emaciated
chest through my torn top. He pulled the punch.
When my head cleared a bit, I gasped,
“What the hell did I do?”
He considered that second punch, said,
“You phoned me, you treacherous bollix, got me to
confirm Loyola’s home.”
I tried to pull together the tattered top, grab, if not
dignity, at least a wee modicum of decency, asked,
“So, what’s the big deal?”
Bad, bad mistake.
He punched me in the kidneys and I’d have thrown
up the breakfast I hadn’t yet had. He spat,
“You told somebody and guess what? Guess
fucking what, Mr. Private Eye. Three days after I
talk to you, that lovely man is found floating in the
river outside his cottage.”
I muttered,
“Sweet Jesus.”
He moved back from the bed, having caught sight
of my mutilated hand, said,
“They say your fingers were sliced off .”
Delicately put.
He was spent. I guess kicking the living shit out of
a half-dead guy in a hospital bed has its
drawbacks. He said,
“You know, Jack, I used to like you. You were
always as odd as two left feet but I thought you had
some principles.”
I tried,
“What a terrible accident for that poor man.”
Jesus, he nearly blew again, roared,
“Accident! Accident my arse.”
I didn’t know what to say, my right cheek was
already swelling and I knew, from past experience,
I’d have one beauty of a black eye. I mumbled,
“I’m sorry.”
He was at the door, said,
“I’m sorry too, sorry they didn’t cut your balls off .
Two days later, finally, I was released. Ireland
was coming to the end of the freakish three-week
period of freezing ice and snow. People had
broken hips, bones, on footpaths deadly with black
ice. The government had imported salt from Spain.
Fuck, I knew we were short of most everything,
especially irony, but
salt
?
Come on.
The salt was to cover the roads.
Schools were closed, water was rationed, pipes
were burst or frozen, we’d already entered the
Apocalypse. You don’t get to leave hospital
without stern diatribes from a doctor. Mine warned
me about the phantom feelings I’d have in my lost
fingers. I nearly said,
“Rubbing salt in the wounds?”
Went with,
“All my feelings are ghosts anyway.”
He stared at my now impressive black eye. I said,
“I fell out of bed and, no, I won’t sue.”
He, God bless him, prescribed some heavy
painkillers, cautioned,
“Avoid alcohol while taking them.”
I’d have winked but my eye still hurt.
They insist on wheeling you to the door in a
wheelchair till you are safely off the premises.
Break your arse on the ice outside, they could give
a fuck. Stewart was waiting outside, dressed in a
fetching Gore-Tex coat and a Trinity scarf
wrapped round his neck. He didn’t go there but,
then, who did? I was so glad to see him but did I
show it? Did I fuck.
He said,
“I asked the hospital to notify me on your release.”
My legs were unsteady from disuse and my limp
had roared back with a vengeance. First thing, I lit
a cig, Stewart frowned and I snapped,
“Don’t fucking start.”
He sighed, said,
“The car is over here, I’ll swing it round.”
I began to walk, slowly, badly, but doing it.
Dizziness from nicotine, the cold, freedom, jostled
to land me on my arse but I stayed, if not steady, at
least moving. I said,
“I’ll be in the River Inn, and who knows, I might
even buy you lunch.”
The ice was even worse than I expected and it took
me twenty minutes to maneuver the short distance.
Getting in there—ah, bliss. The waitress who’d
served Gabriel and me like what seemed a lifetime
ago, certainly Loyola’s life, exclaimed,
“By all that’s holy, Jack, what on earth happened
to you?”
I said,
“I got religion.”
She was well used to not understanding a word I
said but she liked me anyway. Led me to a corner
table and I ordered a large toddy. She said,
“And why wouldn’t you? And this is on me.”
Such people kill me. Give me the arseholes, the
head fucking bangers, the predators, and I can
function, but a truly nice person . . . it makes me
want to weep.
I was settled in a comfortable chair, watching the
wind rage outside, the hot Jay before me, trying to
prise the top off the painkiller tube, when Stewart
arrived. He took it all in but said nothing. On the
good side of the hot spirit, the pills doing their
alchemy, I let out my breath. Stewart watching me,
like a dejected Siamese cat, asked,
“How’d you get the black eye?”
“The nurses didn’t like me.”
He nearly smiled, then told me, without emotion, of
Ridge receiving my fingers in the mail and the
continual apparently random attacks on the frail
and vulnerable. I said,
“Let me guess, the victims are all different from the
so-called
ordinary
citizens?”
Those Zen eyes allowed a small surprise. He
asked,
“Go on.”
I told him of the speech the bastard had given me
before he used the knife. He stared at me, asked,
“Close your eyes for a second, visualize the
scene.”
I finished my drink, my stomach already warm and
fuzzy, asked,
“Are you out of your fucking mind? I’m trying like
a banker to blank out the whole thing.”
He persisted,
“Do you trust me Jack?”
Jesus, what a question.
I didn’t trust me own self, never mind anybody
else.
Fuck.
Before I could utter some lame shite like
“Sure…………..but . . .”
he held up his index finger, said,
“This will be brief, I promise. Focus on my finger
and then hear me count from ten.”
I thought,
“Bollocks.”
And then—whiteout.
Literally.
Where did I go?
What happened?
To this bloody day, I’ve no idea. One of those
terrible ironies of alcoholism, striving for
numbness and terrified of losing control.
What the Brits call a
conundrum
.
Great word and I might actually understand what it
means someday.
Stewart was tapping my shoulder, saying,
“You did great; it’s done.”
Took me a moment to refocus. I wasn’t in hospital,
unless they’d installed a bar on the wards and
don’t rule out the possibility. I wasn’t being
tortured, I think, and I felt pretty OK. I asked,
“What did you do?”
He shrugged, no biggie, said,
“Just a mild hypnosis.”
I asked,
“Did I give up my ATM number?”
He nearly smiled, said,
“You remembered a name, the name of the guy who
gave the ethnic cleansing speech.”
I was impressed, asked,
“Who is he?”
“Bine.”
I nearly choked, spluttered,
“Bine, that’s it? The fuck kind of name is that?”
He was deep in thought, held up a hand, the
equivalent of “Sh-issh.”
Which I love.
He said,
“It triggers something. I’m not quite there yet but
I’m so close.”
My waitress brought us over two toasted
sandwiches, said,
“You’re skin and bone Jack.”
Looked at Stewart, with a blend of interest and
amusement, said,
“Don’t worry—yours is vegan.”
He gave her his rare smile and when he did, smile
that is, he looked like a kid, a nice one, and it lit
her up. He said,
“Thank you so very much.”
I swear to God, I knew her a long time and now
she……………
blushed.
She said,
“Ah, ’tis nothing.”
The winning smile again from my Zen maestro and
“Generosity without expectation of recompense is
true spirit.” I could tell, like meself, she wasn’t
entirely sure what the hell he meant but she loved
it; me, not so much. Seeing him revealed, at least a
bit, prompted me to tell him about Laura, or maybe
I was simply maudlin. He seemed truly sorry, said,
“Isn’t there any way you can fix it? I’ll go to bat
for you, tell her what happened.”
I shook my head. Some things you can’t fix. I
switched channels, asked about Malachy, he said,
“Still comatose.”
For all his Zen masks, I knew him—knew there
was something.
I pushed,
“What else, Stewart?”
He tried a bite of the sandwich, liked it, wiped his
mouth, then took a deep breath, told me about
Ridge receiving the fingers. I had no answer. None
that didn’t involve deep obscenities, profound
insanity. I desperately wanted to have another
drink but in deference to him, I didn’t. He
described the attack on Ridge, too, then he
suddenly sat bolt upright, asked,
“The girl. The girl who asked you to find her
brother, . . . what’s his name?”
“Ronan Wall.”
He was cruising into it, asked,
“Describe her.”
I did.
He digested that and whatever wheels were turning
in that eerie head of his were at full speed. He
said, almost to himself, the sandwich forgotten,
“Bine………..abbreviation for . . . ?”
I took a bite of mine; it was good, hint of garlic on
the meat and my favorite, mayo, and I told myself,
soaks up the booze, so got to be good.
He said,
“When they made the attempt on Ridge, there was a
girl, a Goth type, and she sounds a whole lot like
the girl you just described under hypnosis.”
Time for me to add something. I said,
“This group, I figure, four core members. Worse,
these attacks, I think they are only a foretaste of the
main event.”
“Like what?”
I didn’t know, said,
“I don’t know. They could easily have killed me
when they had the chance. But, let me think, OK,
it’s like they’re holding me for the main event. That
make any sense to you?”
It didn’t.
So I blundered on,
“The girl, always the girl. I have a gut feeling, we
find her, we bust this maelstrom wide open.”
The pills, the booze, the food, being out of
hospital, suddenly ganged up on me. I gasped,