Authors: Ken Bruen
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Noir
Kebar asked, “What are you thinking?” Shea didn’t
look at him, said,
“I’m real sorry about your sister, but it doesn’t
change the facts.”
“The facts?”
“You’re a cop on the take, you’re no longer fit to
wear the uniform, my uniform was dirty, but you,
your whole existence is rotten.”
And he was gone.
KEBAR TOOK SOME SICK DAYS SO I WAS
ASSIGNED TO A desk till he returned. My mind
was a whirlwind of conflicting emotions. Sure, I
thought about his sister, I’d never seen a neck so
fucking virgin, so fucking pure, and here’s an odd
thing, I know fuck all about James Joyce, like most
Irish people. Not that we’d ever admit it, we claim
him as our great writer, but read him?
Nope.
My mother still clung to the notion that he wrote
dirty books.
But I do know the intense pain of his life was his
beloved daughter being confined to a mental
hospital.
Her name: Lucia. Riddle me that.
And more, meeting the bar person, Nora, Joyce’s
wife was Nora.
What did it all mean? Fucked if I knew. A week
behind a desk, and I was stir-crazy.
I loved the streets and maybe Kebar would resign
and I could get a new partner, new start.
That Nora was occupying me thoughts a lot and
okay … I was zoning a bit, more so than I’d ever
before and the beads … gleaming … waiting …
and no longer asking … demanding.
So I headed back there one evening and she
smiled, said, “Jameson, Coors back.” I said, “Can
I run a tab?’ She was smiling broadly and I went,
“I lo “What?” >ve your accent. I heard, yeah, the
word … love. Lame… right. I downed the
Jameson and she asked, “Where’s your partner?” I
said, “He’d got some sick time coming.” Her face
showing concern, she asked, “Is he sick?” I
thought, “He sure is going to be.” I said, “Naw,
just skiving off.” She looked at her watch, said,
“It’s my break, you want to join me at the staff
table while I grab a sandwich?”
Sure.
A sandwich in Ireland is dead bread, with a mangy
slice of lettuce and some cut of synthetic meat, but
here, shite, a triple decker of goodies and huge
plates of chips… sorry, fries.
She ate like a navvy, with gusto and not caring
about mayo leaking down her chin, Jesus, I loved
that. I kept me eyes off her neck, the time would
come. She indicated her plate, said, “Dig in.”
Not when I’m drinking, get a nice buzz building
and screw it up with food, no way. I asked, “Nora
… you’re not Jewish, I’d say?” That marvelous
laugh again and she said, “Third-generation Mick.”
And before I could respond, she said,
“I grew up in a house with Irish music playing …
all the freaking day, and on the walls, harps,
bodhrans, pictures of the pope, John F. Kennedy,
and of course a massive portrait of the Sacred
Heart.” I laughed, could be any home in old
Galway. She said, “Tell you the truth, I’m sick of
the whole patriotic gig.” I couldn’t resist, said,
“Ah, you turncoat.” She stared at me, asked, “So,
you’re a cop, you like that?” I told the truth.
“I love it.”
The bar was filling up and she said,
“Gotta go earn the bucks, hey, you want to take me
out on Friday night?”
I did.
I left the bar, floating on air, the Jameson had
something to do with it but Jesus, I liked how near
she was to answering the call of the beads, but
riding point was the other side of me, could she be
the one who would so occupy me that the beads
would be … just a beads, no light, no shimmer, no
… translucence?
Right there and then, I thought nothing could burst
me balloon of well-being.
I was wrong.
Got back to me apartment, the door off the hinges,
had been kicked in.
I pulled out my police issue, had taken to carrying
it since meeting the wiseguys.
Entered slowly, the place was destroyed, my few
possessions torn and scattered on the floor, a huge
turd in the middle of the room and urine all over
the place.
The worst, my uniform, hanging on the door, they’d
taken a knife to it, shredded it. The gun in my hand
was drenched in sweat and I had to ease the trigger
back, slowly. Then I saw the note on the table. It
was in red marker, read: TIS A PITY. I muttered,
“Bollix can’t spell.”
They’d missed the beads, stupid fucks, with all that
came after, that would have proved their case …
dumb bastards.
The wiseguys, taking the war to me and letting me
know I was … touchable.
I said aloud,
“Fuck you, Kebar, look at the shite you’ve got me
in.”
And then I giggled, thinking of all the plans I’d
made and if only they’d found the beads, I yelled
aloud,
“Yah stupid fucks, if only you had any idea.”
I cleaned up as best as I could and finally headed
for the camp bed, pulled back the blanket and there
was the photo, me shaking hands with Morronni,
the envelope of bills spilling out.
What they call a damning indictment.
Man, they thought they were setting me up … if
only they had one iota of how they were actually
helping me.
Odd thing, I dreamt of that swan in Galway, the
way it
struggled, and the sounds it made and how I’d tried
to hush it, telling it I loved it.
ONE VITAL LESSON YOU LEARN AS A
GUARD IS … THEY threaten you, you either run
like a bastard, or … you get right back in their
face. Immediately. Brutally. Biblically. And I
wanted to. Shite on my floor, me beloved uniform
in tatters. Fuck that.
You go after the messenger first, the fuckhead who
left the calling card, like that song … First, we
take Manhattan.
Then you let that simmer and in jig time, you take
after the head honcho.
Gino, I remember Morronni calling his rent-a-thug
that.
And how hard would it be to find that piece of
lowlife?
You’re in the NYPD … you have access, and if not
to all areas, certainly where the bottom feeders
dwell.
At the station I got on the computer, and he had a
rap sheet as long as an Irish story, all intimidation
gigs. This guy liked to terrorize people.
Okay.
He played pool in a dive in the Village three nights
a week.
I fingered the green rosary, thinking … buddy, this
beads is gonna put you away … for ever.
Time to introduce him to our national sport.
Hurling.
A blend of hockey and homicide.
I put the hurley in a carryall, me police issue in the
waistband of me jeans, and I was good to go.
I’d let meself get into the zone.
You replay the guy trashing your home, violating
your gear, and imagine him doing it with a smirk.
You’ve entered the zone.
I’d scored some stuff from Jimmy the pizza guy and
crunched a speed tab, washed it down with a shot
of Jay, and headed out.
The dive was certainly that.
In the middle of a fairly prosperous part of the
Village, it stood out like a Brit at an Irish wedding,
defiant and sneering.
I went in, lots of bikers, lots of attitude, the bar
guy, big and I bet with a baseball bat under the
counter, snarled, “Get you?” “Coors.” Eyeballing
me but I let that slide, he wasn’t my interest.
I put a couple of bucks on the counter, moved off to
the side.
The pool table was hopping, lots of action, money
laid on the side, and there he was.
Gino.
Living it up.
You want to get a guy’s attention, take his knees
out first with a hurley.
—Irish Guard on policing methods DRESSED IN
WHAT WE CALL A WAISTCOAT AND FOR
inexplicable reasons the Yanks call a vest. A very
shiny number and tight trousers, I could see the
piece against his backbone, the butt of it outlined
against his vest when he bent to take a shot.
Let them know he was carrying.
His face was covered in sweat and he was
downing shooters like a good un. He’d need to piss
… right. He did. Shouting to his opponent,
“Gotta take a goddamn leak, be right back to hand
you your ass.” And he pushed his way to the
restroom.
I followed.
He was in one of the stalls and I locked the door,
got out the hurley, he was grunting like a pig and
finally sighed, came out, saw me, went, “The fuck
…” Took his legs out with the hurley. Swoosh. I
love that sound, clean, efficient, and highly
effective.
He was on his knees in the piss on the floor,
moaning, and I gave him another wallop to the side
of the head, not to knock him out but to focus him.
Then I stood over him, the hurley resting lightly on
my shoulder.
He looked up, muttered, “You’re fucking dead,
pal.” Wallop. Left shoulder, spread it around. I
said,
“This is the lesson of the ash, what our hurleys are
made from, and the lesson teaches next time, it’s
your head only that gets the walloping.” I asked,
“Where’s the photo?” He dredged up some
phlegm, spat it at me feet, I said, “That is a really
disgusting habit.” Gave him a tap on the nose,
broke it, said, “Have some fucking finesse.”
I reached down, shoved him against the wall, got
his wallet out and said,
“Pay for the damage to my place.”
Must have been four, five hundred bucks, I took it
all, flicked the wallet in the toilet, said,
“Next time you come after me, bring more than a
note.”
And put his lights out.
Back in the bar, I drained the Coors and the bar
guy asked, “Another?” I shook me head, said,
“Your restroom, it’s got shite all over the floor.”
Got out of there fast.
I hailed a cab, went uptown and found a flash-
looking bar, went in, ordered a double Jay, and
when it came, I had to wait a full five minutes for
me hands to stop shaking before I could lift it.
It had been a while since I played hurling.
But you never quite lose the talent, and to hear that
whoosh of the bat, it was like the darkest music.
KEBAR HAD BEEN ON A SIX-DAY BENDER,
YOUR NO-HOLDS- barred, out-and-out blitz.
Two-fisted drinking, with serious intent. You name
it, he sank it, Dewar’s, Stoli, tequila … hello …
tequila? … Wild Turkey, Early Times and early it
wasn’t, gallons of brews, from Shiner to Sam
Adams, an equal opportunity imbiber.
Food, right… if you count Kentucky Fried Chicken,
Burger King Whoppers, pizza, Chinese, and
whatever clogs your arteries, gives you the
cholesterol jibbies, he had it.
And course, you have a hard-on for the world, and
you drink like that, trouble is gonna come down the
pike with a vengeance and that’s what he wanted.
To crack skulls, lash out, annihilate every fucker
who even glanced at him.
And they did.
Paid the price.
Kebar was a big Springsteen fan, “The Price You
Pay” unreeling in his head like a dodgy old 45.
And get this, when you have the out-on-the-
precipice dementia, there’s going to be oddities
thrown into the maelstrom.
Emily Dickinson, not the first name you’d have put
in this cauldron but logic hadn’t a whole lot of
validity in this gig And … in German.
He had no idea how that happened but he had a
battered copy of her Guten Morgen, Mitternacht.
And add to the mystery, he could quote from it,
where’d that come from?
Fuck knows.
As he brought the bar down on some skel’s head,
he in canted: “Tod macht die Saiten krumm—
Night meine Schuld.” “… Death twists the strings
— ‘Twasn’t my fault.” And his mantra:
uEinfremder Stamm, allein—”
… Wrecked, solitary, here— He fucking loved
that.
When he would finally stagger back to his crap
one-room apartment in Queens, he’d throw up the
food he’d bought, pour a lethal shot of Stoli,
thinking,
“Mellow on down.”
He’d drag his battered suitcase from under the bed,
flip it open, and his stone face would nearly smile.
His pride and joy.
Weapons.
Glock, Beretta, snub-nosed .22, and the beauty, the
Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum.
Serious firepower.
He loved that elephant, the wood grip, the sheer
weight in your hand, you hit a freak with that, he
wasn’t never getting up again.
He’d put Bruce on the turntable, “Thunder Road,”
“State Trooper,” “Stolen Car,” and he was wired.
The Magnum in his right hand, the thought of eating
the barrel occurring more and more.
One squeeze, no more crap.
Late on a Friday, Deadwood on the box, he had the
piece to his mouth when his door received a bang.
Holding the weapon loosely by his side, he opened
it.
Morronni, a box of pizza and a bottle of merlot,
said,
“Beware of goons bearing gifts, right?” He glanced
down at the Magnum, asked, “You expecting