Authors: Ken Bruen
Lady of Galway. W h e n I'd sheltered from the rain and met
Father R a l p h I'd never given her a second thought, so if I
made up for the lapse now, w h o knew, maybe she'd
appreciate it.
A seventeenth-century Italian M a d o n n a . There is a
mother-of-pearl bead in her hand, given by a fisherman.
Her crown was presented by the first ever Catholic mayor
of Galway in 1683.
She was literally buried when the waves of persecution
began.
I love the altar surrounding her, it shows
a Claddagh boat,
St Nicholas, patron saint of Galway,
St Enda, venerated on the A r a n Islands.
It is said that if a real Galwegian asks her help, she w i l l
grant it.
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KEN BRUEN
So I asked,
'What am I supposed to do?'
Waited, then decided that walking was the only thing I was
able to do just now. I blessed myself, then headed on, moved
along Grattan Road, glancing to the right at the abandoned
lighthouse. Maybe I could rent that and put the isolation in its
proper place. I reached the aquarium. I'd never been inside.
Perhaps they had displays of the poisoned water.
Beside it was Seapoint ballroom. My m i n d attempted to
recapture those glory days of the showbands:
The Regal,
The Capitol,
The Clipper Carlton,
The Indians,
The R o y a l ,
The M i a m i .
Dressed in blazers and pants with actual creases, those
guys played three-hour sessions, and the c r o w d loved them.
I'm not going into some rap about a more innocent time, but
the fact we knew less seemed to suit us better.
N o w we k n o w everything and talk to nobody.
A priest w o u l d patrol outside to ensure lewd behaviour
didn't occur. If only we knew, we should have been
patrolling the priests.
As I hit the promenade proper, I gazed out at the ocean. It
never failed to make me yearn. For what?
America,
love,
peace?
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THE DEVIL
I don't know, but it was like balm to my tired soul. It
didn't quiet the voices in my head that had the same refrain
of
reminding,
re-telling,
reprimanding
the trash I was.
Once a cop . . .
Those instincts never fully leave y o u .
I'd been aware for the past ten minutes of a sleek black
B M W tracking me.
Sawyer's men?
Payback?
The Sig was to hand. I was ready and be-jaysus, I was
willing.
I kept w a l k i n g , replaying my most recent conversation
with Stewart, his anger at my insistence that we were deal-
ing w i t h the D e v i l . He even asked if I'd checked for the
number 666. I'd laughed out l o u d , said,
'He's bald, how hard w o u l d it be to look?'
Then I added, venom spilling all over my words,
' Y o u saw
The Omen
and bought the glitz version.'
He didn't k n o w what I meant so I told h i m .
H o l l y w o o d versus Revelation.
A n d read out the actual passage from Revelation, 13,
16-18:
'And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free
and bond, to receive a hiark in their right hand, or in their
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KEN BRUEN
foreheads. And that no man might buy or sell, save he that
had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his
name. Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding
count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man;
and his number is six hundred three score and six.'
He was confused and I said,
'The number 666 is the mark of the beast, not of Satan!'
The B M W stopped, the back door opened and a voice
said,
'Get i n . '
Cautiously I bent d o w n and there was Superintendent
Clancy. Once my best friend, but my lethal adversary for a
long time. In my last case, I had saved the life of his child
and he owed me. I knew he hated that, the debt. I got in,
closed the door. Sitting in the front were two Guards, plain
clothes. One I didn't know, but the other, he had beaten me
to a pulp the year before. He was k n o w n as T o m the Thug.
It fitted. I said,
' H o w ' s the hurting biz. Tommy?'
He didn't reply, but I could see his neck redden from
temper.
Clancy said,
'Always with the mouth. Jack?'
Jack.
For years, it had always been Taylor.
I looked at him. He was in full regalia, the deep-navy
Commander's rig, with medals pinned on the right collar.
H e ' d been carrying a lot of weight the last time we met, but
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THE DEVIL
seemed to have grown even larger, his stomach pressed
against the tight tunic. H i s jowls testified to rich dinners
with the lads and layers of fat had narrowed his eyes into
slits. I asked,
'Life treating you good?'
He sighed and I knew he was waiting for me to ask about
the boy, to remind him.
I didn't.
He said,
'I was reliably informed you were going to America.'
I smiled, said,
' N o t that reliable, it seems.'
Usually, at this stage in the proceedings, one of his men
w o u l d have walloped me, hard. He said,
'Jack, we have the Volvo racing competition coming to
Galway. O u t of all the cities in the w o r l d , we get to be the
base. This means a huge influx of money, prestige, tourists,
puts us on the w o r l d stage.'
He paused, shot his hand out, adjusted the cufflink on his
snow-white shirt.
W h o the fuck wears cufflinks any more and more to the
point, why?
I swear, they had the Garda crest on them.
I had a real hard time not to burst into R o d Stewart's
'Sailing', but that w o u l d have definitely gotten me a
hammering. He continued,
' N o w Jack, h o w w o u l d it sound to the w o r l d media if
some eejit were running round making w i l d accusations
about Satanic murders and'such crazy talk as that?'
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KEN BRUEN
I said,
'I'm guessing the Tourist Board wouldn't be happy w i t h
such an individual.'
He turned his beady eyes on me, said,
'You've got it arseways as usual. Jack. You're forever
bleating about not liking our new G a l w a y but it's the other
way round, G a l w a y doesn't like you, I don't like you and the
f u c k i n g Tourist B o a r d is prepared to ship you out
themselves.'
T o m laughed out l o u d , nudged his mate and they
snickered in unison. Clancy said,
'Get the fuck out of t o w n , and this warning as opposed to
other . . . measures . . . means our slate is clean, am I clear?'
'Yes, sir.'
He made a bone-breaking noise w i t h his fingers, said,
'Get the hell out of my car and remember, next time I'll
send T o m alone.'
I was not fully out of the car when the driver put it in gear
and roared off. I fell on to the pavement, shouted like the
show bands always d i d ,
'Goodnight and G o d bless.'
I suppose in the interests of truth I'd have to admit that I'd
been to see Sawyer but had been holding off on recounting
it. I'm not ashamed of it, it needed to be done, but the stuff
about his daughters, spoilt or otherwise, made me hesitate
to relate the event, the reason why I'd expected Sawyer and
not Clancy in that sleek B M W .
In truth, it comes to the same deal.
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THE DEVIL
Thugs and bulhes.
Save one wore a uniform.
It was almost too easy to get to h i m .
Arrogance breeds stupidity and he had both.
In buckets.
H e ' d played his usual round of golf, seemed mightily
pleased w i t h his o w n self. H a d the customary drink w i t h his
buddies after, picked up the tab.
Just one of the guys, and generous with it.
Except he kicked the living shite out of a Ban Garda.
M y Ban G a r d a .
Dressed in a cashmere sweater and, I swear to G o d , a
cravat and pleated golfing pants, he was whistling as he
headed for his car.
A l l was hunky fucking dory in this cat's w o r l d .
Looked momentarily puzzled as his driver didn't bounce
to open the car door.
The driver was out cold in the back seat.
I came up behind Sawyer, smashed his face into the door,
broke the fingers of his right hand, the gun nuzzled against
the base of his neck, and said in a whisper,
'Once, only once am I going to give you this message.'
Paused.
'Your three spoilt brats of daughters bully a child again,'
I pushed the barrel of the gun harder into his neck,
'I w i l l k i l l you, your wife, and then I'll take a decent look
at your three precious darlings.'
Then I cold-cocked the sucker and got the fuck out of there.
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KEN BRUEN
W h o says golf chills y o u out?
The papers reported the Sawyer shooting, the consensus
being 'drug related'.
Ireland today had so many drug shootings, even the old
reliable drive-by gig didn't warrant the front page any more.
The Cheltenham Race Festival had begun and fears of the
recession affecting the number of Irish w h o usually travelled
over to it seemed unfounded.
To the great relief of the Brits.
The Paddy pound,
as they termed it, meant a huge source
of income to the tiny English town.
They didn't like us any better, but they sure as hell were
glad of the Irish insane gambling spirit.
It wasn't just the betting, the Irish liked to party and their
parties were the stuff of myth.
Like the Oscars on meth and Jameson.
Publicity wise. Sawyer got shot the wrong week.
The lead singer of the Devil's M i n i o n s , nobody gave - for-
give the pun - a toss. Trash was tossed in the canal every
night.
Sawyer had, to stay w i t h the racing terminology, form.
Or as the Americans say,
' H e was a person of interest.'
D i d I feel any remorse?
D i d I fuck.
Ridge phoned me a few days after, asked if we could meet
for a coffee.
I asked if I had to gear up.
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THE DEVIL
She thought I meant clothes.
We met in Cafe du Journal on Q u a y Street.
Does it get more Irish.'
The place was packed and we had to wait for ten minutes
to get a table.
Recession?
N o t for the designer-coffee crew, or maybe the news
hadn't
filtered
d o w n yet.
Or perhaps, following the government's lead, they just
didn't give a fuck.
St Patrick's Day was looming and the government, in the
midst of the worst crisis we had faced in twenty years,
awarded themselves a twelve-day holiday.
St Patrick had obviously seriously screwed up the ridding-
of-snakes gig.
Ridge looked well.
Despite her recent beating, she had an almost healthy
glow. M a k e - u p had disguised most of the fading bruises. She
was dressed in a tweed suit, as befits the wife of a L o r d .
I could see black shadows under her eyes though.
No make-up is that effective.
I k n o w shadows, and not just beneath my eyes.
I lied, said,
' Y o u look great.'
She lied right back.
' Y o u too.'
Getting a table finally near the door, we ordered lattes
from the extremely affable Polish waitress. Ridge declined a
Danish and me, of course, I don't do sweet.
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KEN BRUEN
Never one to preamble, she launched in w i t h ,
'I see Mr Sawyer had some bother.'
One way of putting it, I suppose.
I nodded.
She knew, let a silence build, then,
'Thanks.'
I gave her my fake smile, admitting nothing. She was still
a G u a r d .
The coffee came, lots of froth. I asked the waitress,
'Think you could hit that with a double espresso?'
Gave me the radiant smile of another caffeine fiend,
said,
'I think we could manage that.'
Ridge sipped at hers, I just knew she couldn't let it slide,
said,
' A l w a y s the
rush:
I could play, went,
'Don't tell me, the movie with Jason Patric and Jennifer
Jason Leigh. N o t a lot of people k n o w this, but Pete Dexter
did the screenplay.'
M o v i e buffs like that kind of small print.
Ridge didn't.
I think the last movie she saw was
The Quiet Man.
But Jesus, she'd had the crap beaten out of her by a thug,
so I said,
'The rush, the edginess, it's what I'm used to.'
Surprise, surprise, she let it go, asked,
' H o w was your dinner with Carl?'
I had a lot of answers that didn't contain civility, so I said.
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THE DEVIL
'Didn't develop along the lines I'd anticipated. He speaks
very highly of you, though.'
H e r face darkened, like a cloud crept behind her eyes and