Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Crime
“Who’s going to put out this dude’s lights?”
Bine smiled, his recent tongue ring still not healed,
so his mouth looked like the sorry pit of disease,
said,
“Eeny
Meeny
Miney
Mo.
Catch a retard by the toe . . .”
His finger stopped at Bethany. He gave her that
look that scared her, like he knew what she’d been
thinking and was way ahead in the fuck you
department. He asked,
“You cool babe? You up for this?”
She shrugged, said,
“Whatever.”
Getting enough boredom in there to convince him.
It seemed to. He asked,
“You gonna go up close and in the dude’s face,
like with the Stanley—or you wanna waste him
mega, like with the AK?”
She risked a look into his eyes and just saw the
psycho megalomania, said,
“I’m thinking, the blade, yah know? Send a
message to Taylor, let him know, like, it’s on the
edge, like we’re burning bad.”
Even with drugs, sometimes she found it difficult
to trot out the half-arsed Americanisms and ghetto
gangsta shite. But he bought it, said,
“I’m liking it, lady. I’m real up on this.”
Bine downed his tumbler of Jack, gulped as it hit,
turned to the blowup of the school, and then,
reaching for a samurai sword—which was still
legal to buy in Ireland—pointed out the entrance,
said,
“I’m thinking, the bros go in here.”
Paused, did a little flick with the sword, nearly
dropped it, which they’d have to pretend not to
have seen, recovered, said,
“Here, the back, me and the babe, we’ll do our
mojo from here, start killing the retards as they
head for the exit.”
He let that hover. Jimmy asked,
“You got a head count in mind?”
Bine graced him with a bow, said,
“I’m thinking twenty-four would be, like,
adequate.”
Fever Kill
—Tom Piccirilli
We got to Nimmo’s ten minutes before the
appointed time and in silence. Both of us thinking
on Caz, but for wholly different reasons. Kosta, no
doubt, wondering how much of a stand-up guy I
was going to be. And me, thinking, how much of a
friend do you have to be for me not to kill you?
Jesus, ghosts must do again what once they had
thought was over and done.
A BMW, shining new, was already there, blocking
the end of the pier. Kosta said,
“Ah. How predictable. He so likes his expensive
toys.”
His eyes aglow with such venom that I could have
lit a cig from them, he ordered,
“Reach in the bag for the satchel. The money is in
that—the money he thinks is his.”
I gave it to him and he asked, without looking at
me,
“Ready?”
“As rain.”
We got out, waited by the Volvo. The BMW
bathed us in its lights. Two figures emerged, began
to stroll towards us. Caz was nervous, I could see
it in the slope of his shoulders. And he didn’t even
know yet that I was part of the gig.
Edward.
Edward was glorious. Beautifully coiffed blond
hair, permanent tan, aviator shades, and, of course,
of fucking course, an Armani suit.
Jesus, didn’t anyone dress down anymore?
He was striking in the way that certain sharks are.
You could admire their sleekness but you didn’t
ever want to get close. He said,
“Who is this? I told you Kosta, I told you to come
alone.”
Now I could see Caz’s nervous eyes and the twist
in his body language. He was trying to say,
“No problem.”
Kosta said,
“My driver, like you have.”
Edward was enjoying the rush, the sense of calling
the shots, asked,
“Has he got a name?”
Kosta was totally relaxed, said,
“Employee.”
Edward enjoyed that a lot. Asked,
“You got my money?”
I kept hoping the macho posing, the cock of the
walk—or pier—bullshit would be all we’d have
to deal with. These guys were having themselves a
fine old time, strutting and mind fucking. Kosta
threw the satchel at his feet. Edward, without
looking at Caz, said,
“Count it.”
As Caz knelt, and began to do that, Kosta asked,
“How do I know this is the last time?”
Edward laughed, said,
“You don’t know shit, I’ll let you know when I’m
done.”
Kosta looked at me and I slid the Mossberg out,
racked the slide. Edward laughed harder, asked,
“Is that to scare me…………whoo-eh, I’m so
afraid. Fuck your employee, fuck you.”
I shot him in the face, range of about five yards.
The proximity nearly took his head off —clean off.
Caz, on his knees, looked up as pieces of brain and
gore splattered over the money and his face was a
study of pure bewilderment. He began to rise when
Kosta shot him between the eyes, a great shot if
you weren’t a friend of the one on the receiving
end.
He moved fast, stood over Caz, put in the coup de
grace. He glanced at me, the Mossberg still in
position, and with his boot shoved Edward into the
water. Then he turned, plucked the sodden notes
from my dead friend’s hand, pushed them in the
satchel, said,
“You drive the Volvo, I’ll follow in their car.”
A moment.
The gun in my hand, my mutilated hand, still hot
from the firing, and I thought,
“Yah think?”
But Kosta was up and moving and I’d have to
shoot him in the back.
He said,
“Jack, I’m truly sorry for your friend.”
I said,
“Not my friend anymore.”
Lowered the Mossberg and got in the Volvo,
reversed, turned towards the city, looked in my
mirror to see Kosta boot my friend into the dark
water. Said,
“Codladh sámh leat mo chara.”
…..Sleep safe my friend.
Yeah.
I felt as fucking hollow as the words.
We got to Kosta’s home, parked the cars, and,
standing outside, he touched my shoulder, said,
“Let’s get inside, get some serious drink in us.”
I shrugged him off, said,
“Oh, I intend to get some serious drinking done but
not with you, not now.”
I began to walk down the driveway, knowing the
thugs were at the gates in every sense, and my back
exposed to Kosta.
If he’d shot me, I felt he would have truly done me
a service.
He didn’t.
I made my slow way into town, got into a crowded
Sheridan’s on the docks, ordered a large Jay, took
it outside so I could smoke and get wasted. As I
was doing this a guy approached, started,
“Jack.”
Without looking, I said,
“Fuck off.”
And looked across the Claddagh basin to the pier.
The double Jameson didn’t erase what lay beneath
the water. I don’t think they’ve invented that drink
yet, the one that wipes the slate clean of utter
treachery.
Pick battles big enough to matter,
small enough to win.
—Irish saying
The next week passed in a daze, Stewart and I
trying to get a solid line on Headstone, both now
feeling that time was of the utmost. That the major
event these lunatics were planning was edging
closer. Friday morning, I was up early, not booze
early, but eight o’clock.
Like that.
Feeling numb, feeling dead. You kill an innocent
friend, you get to hoping the fires of hell will be
roasting. Dwell on it, and they already are. I had
my coffee, black, bitter, strong, no sugar. No
sweetness, Jesus, God forbid. Showered, shaved,
Xanaxed to the goddamn hilt, switched on the
radio.
Galway Bay FM.
Jimmy Norman’s breakfast show. Helped me chill.
He plays the best music—music that makes you
yearn. And he keeps it light, keeps it moving. He
was saying that Keith (Finnegan) on the top of the
hour had some special guests but . . .
He had the Saw Doctors on the line from Australia.
Their manager, Ollie Jennings, is just about one of
the nicest people I ever met.
And seeing as I don’t do nice, that is something
unique. The Saw Doctors, from Tuam, just down
the road a piece, were the perfect blend of
traditional Irish, rock ’n’ roll, and their own spin
on live gigs was to be seen to be believed. They’d
been around almost as long as I’d been slogging
my befuddled gig in Galway. But they’d gone
global. A new drummer, new album, and they
sounded as down-to-earth as if they’d just released
their first single. Not a notion in their repertoire. In
America, they’d said they were fans of Jodie
Foster, she got in touch and, as the lads said,
“Went for a burger with them.”
I just loved that.
And, they said,
“She was quiet.”
There is something awesome in that apparently
simple meeting.
When a legend blends with the iconic, and the
result is humility, fuck, you want to shout,
“Bono, hope you’re taking notes.”
Jimmy asked if they’d do a song, live, right then
and there, and they did. Just sang.
My foot was tapping along, just in the groove with
the best of Irish, when the phone rang.
You get a call out of the proverbial blue that
knocks the bejaysus out of you. I’d had a dream, on
Thursday night, that I still hadn’t been able to
shake. Laura was back in my life. I swear, I could
feel her hand in my mine.
For reasons not at all.
We were feeding the swans at the Claddagh, and
she leant back into my shoulder and I was so
deliriously happy.
And woke.
Tears on my face, coursing down my cheek.
Hard arse that.
Had muttered, in a vain attempt to shake it away,
“’Tis the holy all of it.”
The awful loss had paralyzed me. I’d sat on the
side of my empty bed, woebegone. In fucking bits,
then shouted,
“Get a fucking grip.”
Had
Kind of.
I’d made my own self busy, and then pulled on a
sweatshirt that bore the logo:
NUIG, Ropes.
My oldest 501s and my winter crocs, the ones that
whispered,
“We love you, love your feet.”
You are getting love from shoes, you are so
seriously deranged, it’s pathetic.
And I’d been relishing Jimmy’s show, with the
Saw Doctors,
hated having to answer the damn phone. Said,
“Yeah.”
In that icy tone.
“Mr. Taylor, it’s Sister Maeve.”
I had given her my number, never………….never
expecting to hear from her. But nuns, they give
nothing away, in every sense. I said,
“Ah, good morning, Sister.”
Lame, right?
She replied,
“Mr. Taylor, you are a very unusual man, a mix of
tremendous sadness and such violent acts.”
I’d need a little more to go on than my character
analysis, said,
“I’ll need a little more to go on.”
I swear to God, she seemed to be suppressing utter
joy, said,
“Father Gabriel and his . . . housekeeper have
taken off and with all of the Brethren’s funds.”
Gabe did a runner? I knew I’d got his attention but
that he legged it, phew-oh. I was literally lost for
words, tried,
“Really?”
Now she let it loose, said,
“Oh, Mr. Taylor, it means the Brethren are a spent
force. Their terrible shadow has been lifted.”
I said,
“That’s great.”
Meant it. She replied with,
“Mr. Taylor, I’ve become familiar with your
methods and I don’t much approve, but this . . . I
knew you were involved and you turned it around,
did our Church a true service. God bless you,
Jack.”
And rang off.
I was still trying to digest this when my mobile
shrilled.
Stewart.
“Jack, starting today, I’m going to be at my head
shop every day at three. I’ve let my routine out
along the grapevine so people know where they
can find me. If you’re right and they’re trying to
make a move on me, well, here is a routine they’ll
find.”
I said,
“Give it three, four days, they’ll bite.”
“What makes you so sure?”
I thought about all we’d discussed, tried to figure it
out, said,
“They are working towards a very definite
timetable and everything needs to be in place for
the mad bastards.”
He gave that some thought, then,
“Why are you so certain they’ll target me?”
Easy answer if not exactly true,