Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
It occurred to me that I knew next to nothing about
him, and yet we had a deep, almost ferocious,
bond. I said,
“Of course.”
He gave me the address, in Taylor’s Hill, our own
upper-class part of the city, home to doctors and
other professionals. He asked if I could be there by
five and I said, sure. Then he added,
“I need your help, my friend.”
“You have it.”
A pause, then,
“Thank you. Please bring the Mossberg.”
Jesus.
Was I being invited to dinner or murder?
Taylor’s Hill still retains those glorious houses,
set well back from the road, with large carefully
tended gardens. Kosta’s was midway, huge hedges
almost shielding it but you could glimpse the
majesty of the building. Built when money was
used lavishly on homes. I opened a heavy wrought
iron gate, and, instantly, two heavies were on me.
Front and back. I said,
“Whoa, easy guys, I’m Taylor, and expected.”
The one facing me, all hard mean muscle, gave me
a cold calculating look, then spoke into a lapel
microphone, waited. Everybody wanted to be an
FBI clone. He motioned,
“Pass.”
Not big on chat those guys. I moved up to the
house, three stories of Connemara granite and kept
scrupulously clean. I rang the bell and wondered if
a maid would answer the door. Did people have
them anymore? Apart from the clergy, of course.
Kosta answered. He was dressed in a navy blue
tracksuit, not unlike Ridge’s, trainers, a white
towel round his neck. He greeted, “Welcome to my
home, Jack Taylor.”
Waved me in. A long hallway was lined with
paintings. I know shite about art but I do know
about cash and here was serious dough in frames.
The only painting I had was of Tad’s Steak-house
in New York. He led me to a book-lined study. Not
the books-for-show variety; you could see they’d
been well used. Comfortable armchairs in front of
a roaring log fire. Few things as reassuring as that.
When I looked closer, I could see it was turf. A
man who knew the country. He indicated I sit after
I shucked off my coat. Left it close by. He offered a
drink and I said,
“Whatever you’re having yourself.”
“Gin and tonic?”
“Great.”
He didn’t ask about on the rocks. Serious drinkers
don’t do ice. I settled in the chair, putting the
Mossberg on the carpet. Maybe he wanted it back.
Got my drink, and he sat, reflected for a moment as
he gazed into the fire, the flames throwing what
seemed like a halo on his bald skull. Like Michael
Chiklis in
The Shield
.
The Mossberg rested—a lethal snake—near his
feet. He said,
“To good friends.”
“Amen.”
He liked that answer. Took a large wallop of his
drink, savored, then swallowed, said,
“Genever.”
Dutch?
I’ve found nodding sagely stands you in good stead
when you don’t have a fucking clue.
I nodded sagely.
He let out a deep…..Ah.
I knew we were now at the main event. He said,
“Jack, like you, I live my life to the minimum.”
He was kidding, right?
Bodyguards, a huge house . . . not really Zen. He
continued, “I have few friends, and you I regard as
one. My history is violent but we don’t need to
dwell on that. I have one daughter, her name is
Irini . . . means peace.”
Stopped.
Fuck, I hoped we weren’t in sharing mode. No way
was I reliving Serena-May and the tragedy.
Pain ran across his eyes, took hold as he said,
“She is . . . otherworldly. Very beautiful, with a
true purity of spirit. I have always, siempre,
always protected her.”
I believed him.
He said, slowly,
“But I was detained for nearly two years. She met
a man named Edward Barton.”
He spat into the fire, continued,
“A Londoner, he smelled money, married her, and
by the time I was . . . undetained, they had a
daughter. This precious girl is five years of age
now.”
Something had entered the room. Apart from the
dark evening full set and the foul weather, it was a
pervading sense of impending doom. Blame the
genever, I guess. He suddenly was on his feet,
grabbed a bottle, refuelled us. Then put the bottle
back, sat again, all his body language reeking of
rage and spittle. The line of his jaw was a study in
controlled ferocity. He said,
“I despise this Edward. A lowlife, a rodent, rank
in every way. I put such shit under my heel every
week but Irini pleaded with me to be . . .”
He paused again as he searched for a word that
wouldn’t blow a hole through his face, said,
“Lenient. This man has spent all the money I had
put aside for her. OK. I can deal with that. Money
is not the issue, but then she comes to me, tells me
this . . . man, is . . . abusing their daughter.” He let
out a torrent of bile and obscenities that were
nearly impressive in their range—if you weren’t
sitting a few feet from the source, realizing he was
close to losing it. And a loaded weapon at his feet,
serious booze in his hand and system. You get the
picture. He looked into the fire as a large piece of
turf fell, and I’d swear I saw tears. A woman
crying is always a man’s undoing. But to see a man
cry, fuck, especially a man like him, it was a knife
in the soul that would forever leave its imprint. I
stayed with the sage gig, i.e., I said fuck all. He
reined it in, took a deep breath, said,
“I am meeting this Edward soon, this evening. He
needs more money. As he is not so stupid to be
unaware of my reputation, he insisted on a public
place. Nimmo’s Pier? You know this?”
Oh, shite, did I ever. Bad, bad history there.
He checked his watch, a slim Philippe Patek. I
know of what I can never afford. He said,
“I’m to meet him in one hour.”
I knew where this was going so I volunteered for
my own lynching, despite the fact he had thugs in
the garden and God knows where else. I said,
“Would you like me to come along?”
Fuck.
Fuck.
Fuck.
His gratitude was embarrassing. We both knew
why I was here.
He said,
“My regular employees, you met two on your
arrival—they are as loyal as money.”
I nodded, said with a sinking heart,
“Let’s get this show on the road.”
We stood and he didn’t thank me. If gratitude was a
condition of our friendship, I wouldn’t be there. He
took me out to a large garage with a line of cars,
selected a beat-up Volvo. Cops use them for one
reason: below the radar. Before he put the car in
gear, he flipped the glove department, expertly
caught the Glock that tumbled out. He checked to
be sure it was primed, said, “Jack, my terrible
dilemma is this: I can’t harm the man. He knows
that, my promise to my daughter, so he
feels……………. invincible.”
We sat there as he waited for my answer, which
could be nothing other than,
“I haven’t promised.”
He smiled, put the car in first, said,
“Acrivos.” (Greek for exactly.)
We got there early, and to fill the time, I told him
about Father Gabriel and the drowning of Loyola.
He produced a silver flask, drank from it, handed it
to me, and I didn’t wipe the top, took a swig. He
said,
“Stoli.”
Strong is what I thought, thank God.
From where we were parked, we could see across
the bay, the lights of Quay Street, beckoning to
come party. He moved to get his back comfortable,
said,
“One more thing, Jack. He has a driver, a new one,
some Romanian trash named Caz.”
Oh, shite.
Christ on a bike, no. My decade-long, sometimes
friend. He’d done the thing that counts in my
narrow book: he’d come to see me in hospital—
brought booze, too. In those ten years he’d been
around a lot of, let’s say, under-the-gun stuff I did.
He worked with the Guards as a translator for the
Romanian refugees, and he could not only have
scored major brownie points with Clancy by
selling me out but got paid as well and secured his
always precarious position as a nonnational.
Superintendent Clancy was, yes, that keen to see
me go down.
And, simply, deep down, I just liked him. Doesn’t
need any more analysis.
In one fluid movement, Kosta lit two cigarettes,
handed one over.
He had the instincts of a feral cat.
I took a drag, coughed. He said,
“Gitanes.”
Gypsies.
He was a veritable United Nations of moves,
gestures, and actions And his instincts were
uncanny. He said,
“Jack, your face tells me you know this man.”
When all else is up for grabs, sometimes, the truth
is the only way. I said,
“I do.”
He watched the ash on his cigarette, letting it build,
then,
“And, he is a friend, n’est-ce pas?”
I considered, said,
“We’re about to find out.”
I cannot persuade myself that a
beneficent
and omnipotent God would have
designedly created parasitic
wasps with the express intention of
their feeding within the
living bodies of caterpillars.
—Charles Darwin
Bine was dressed in full combat gear, as if heading
for a riot. All he needed was a face shield to
complete the picture. Blown up behind, in glorious
Technicolor, was the school, the relevant positions
marked in red. He was wearing a holster holding a
Walther, and around his neck, beads with stones
spelling out Medugorje.
Bethany watched him as he downed some speed,
working up his shtick, getting ready to impress his
minions. She thought, as she’d thought so many
times,
“Arsehole.”
And wondered yet anew about men and guns. Like
freaking kids with toys. Give them a weapon and
even deadbeats like the lame brothers developed a
swagger. Jesus, she wanted to puke. But she had a
lust/heat gig going with Bine and still wasn’t sure
where it would go. Mainly, he gave the constant
rage she felt a focus. Gave her the jolt to feel alive.
Too, she had to admit, when the sorry prick got
ranting, he was mesmerizing. Got her to do stuff
she’d never thought she’d have the grit to even
attempt. And got her off on her little independent
flights, like the mind-fucking with the alcoholic
Taylor. Not something she felt was wise to share
with the crew.
And, if they pulled it off, a first in Irish history, as
Bine kept saying, she’d be famous. Maybe get on
Oprah, have Angelina play her in the movie, and
be on the cover of
Hot Press
. One thing she knew:
the girls rarely did jail time, they just did a Linda
Kasabian and squealed. Even in the movies.
She tuned back in to Bine, took a hit of the speed
her own self, washed it down with today’s special,
Jack Daniel’s. Bine was into his rap. She’d missed
the starters, never no mind, it wasn’t too difficult
to play catch-up. He said,
“Now this cat Stewart, the ex-dope dealer, is a
whole different ball game than the lesbian and
Taylor. This dude has interests in the head shops,
so that tells us the guy is clued in. He did six years
in the Joy and no, I don’t mean an English barmaid,
I’m talking h-e-a-v-y time in Mountjoy. So the
dude is cool, into some Zen bullshite, but real laid-
back and real sharp. I’m thinking, like, we got to
waste the dude, right when we make our move, no
bringing him back to base, just close his case there
and then.”
He’d been OD’ing on
Pulp Fiction
again.
Bethany was dizzy trying to sort out his American
expressions and distorted brain sequence. Bine
looked at Jimmy, said, “Your assignment is to
watch this guy, twenty-four-seven. You hear what
I’m saying? Like all the time, and when you get his
routine down—and I mean like cold bro—you
report back.”
Jimmy was down all right, and nodding, not from
the assignment but from the sheer amount of coke
he had inhaled. His brother, always the sharper of
the two, asked,