Authors: Ken Bruen
'They'll be wanting that back.'
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KEN BRUEN
I said w i t h fake levity,
' G o o d luck w i t h that.'
He adjusted his cap, turned to head back to the carnage,
said,
'A
cara, bhi curamach:
( M y friend, be careful.)
I replied,
'Agus leat fein:
(You too.)
A n d more's the Irish pity, neither of us heeded that benign
blessing.
A year after that encounter, he was found hanging in his
garage, one year short of his retirement.
But a lot of other malevolence was coming d o w n the
G a l w a y pike before then.
Somewhere I'd read:
Good which is unused is prone to turn to evil.
I'd gone back to my apartment; the snow had started
falling heavily again.
We don't do snow here. It's so rare, we're almost
enchanted at the novelty.
T i l l it starts fucking up transport, heating, our daily lives.
Then we react.
Badly.
A n d as is our way, we blame somebody.
I turned on the news, almost my penance at this stage.
Banks failing.
The Euro fucked.
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THE DEVIL
A n d I nearly laughed. In the midst of all this they went
local, showing h o w a new hotel was to be built on the site
of the Connacht laundry.
A n d h o w wonderful. It w o u l d have saunas, hot tubs,
tanning booths.
Oh Mother.
Mo croi.
I went to see how much was left of the Jameson.
I had a real bad feeling it wasn't going to be enough.
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8
'Being unwanted is the worst disease.'
M o t h e r Teresa
N e x t morning, I was all over the frigging place.
Me nerves were shot to ribbons.
I wanted to get right on the Sawyer case, the girls bully-
ing the D o w n syndrome child. But I knew I was too frazzled
to do that w i t h any refinement.
Beating the be-jaysus out of three children wouldn't
exactly look good on me next American application.
I had some coffee, real smart I k n o w when yer nerves are
dancing jigs along the ceiling.
D i d a X a n a x , muttered,
' D o some k i n d of fecking magic, w i l l ye?'
It d i d .
Took a time, but it got me there.
The snow had eased and there even seemed to be a ray of
bright sunshine on the horizon.
As I got me all-weather gear on, I was even able to listen
to some music.
Counting Crows.
Johnny D u h a n , of course, me beacon always.
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KEN BRUEN
A n d the truly angelic Gretchen Peters.
Song on her album, 'Breakfast At O u r House', about the
agony of divorce and it was too acute, too accurate, I had to
stop it.
The bells for the Angelus tolled.
I stopped, blessed myself.
I was probably one of the last people on the whole damn
island w h o still took the time to say it.
'The Angel of the Lord . . .'
A n d like the song goes, took some comfort there.
N o t from childhood, fuck no. But maybe from that
vanished Ireland where people stopped in the streets, blessed
themselves and said the prayer.
We'd come a long way.
A n d gained?
Sweet fuck all.
I tried not to think of that gorgeous girl E m m a and her
heart torn from her body. The anger and rage literally
steamed off me.
I said aloud,
'Get a bloody grip, son.'
Then without another thought, headed out to the pub.
Answers there?
Course not. But at least I could be numb enough not to
ask questions.
M y mobile rang.
Ridge.
A l l warmth.
T h a n k i n g me for my fine behaviour at the drinks party.
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THE DEVIL
Through gritted teeth, I asked,
' H o w is Carl?'
Like I gave a fuck.
She gushed. G o d forgive us both, but she d i d . Went,
' H e is very taken with you. W h o ' d have guessed you had
such charm?'
W h o indeed?
She prattled on.
Ridge!
I reined in me animosity, not easy but got there, and she
said,
'I hope you don't m i n d . Jack, but he asked for your
mobile number. Was that OK to give it to him? I think he
has plans for y o u . '
I nearly laughed, said,
'You're right, I do believe he has plans for me.'
Then she changed her tune, asked,
'Are you all right. Jack? Y o u sound a bit strained.'
Surely not.
I said,
' M u s t be a bad connection. But I wonder if I might ask
you a wee favour, you being a newly appointed sergeant and
all?'
She was still high on the party's success and agreed to do
whatever I needed.
D u m b bitch.
I told her about the Sawyers, the little girl K e l l i and the
bullying.
N o problem.
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KEN BRUEN
She'd be deHghted to straighten them out, and in fact was
in town the next day and w o u l d appear in full uniform to
have a
chat
with the bullying girls. She said,
' W h o knows better than y o u . Jack, the effect of a
uniform?'
I felt a pang.
True, me days in uniform, you had a certain presence.
Said,
'Thank you so much, I owe you.'
She laughed, said,
'Tis nothing.'
She was so wrong. A n d ended the call w i t h ,
'Jack, I think you've really turned your life around. I'm so
proud of y o u . '
I hung up before she got more ridiculous.
Caravan's, on Shop Street, one of the last remaining old
G a l w a y pubs, with an Irish barman.
Wouldn't last.
But I'd appreciate it while it d i d .
A busker outside was singing 'It's Raining In Baltimore'.
I dropped a ten in his wet tweed cap and he said, in a
German accent,
' Z a n k y o u . '
The barman thankfully hadn't k n o w n of me travel plans,
so no need for all the fandango of bullshite. He said,
'Usual?'
I nodded and headed for the snug, a portioned little
corner where you can see but not be seen.
The Brits w o u l d love it.
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The
Irish Independent
was on the table. I scanned the
headlines:
1,177 workers lost their jobs every day during January.
327,861 are now out of w o r k .
132,263 posts have been axed since the new Taoiseach
came to power.
A n d the editorial screamed,
'It's going to get worse.'
The barman came over, put d o w n the Jameson first, then
the pint of Guinness, nodded at the paper and said,
'I've applied to go to Australia.'
The young people were all heading out again. Like the
a w f u l eighties, when our best and our brightest left
the dying economy, and never came back.
But tough times bring out the street entrepreneurs.
I'd hardly sank half the Jay before I'd been offered a batch
of shirts.
Nearly bought a light blue as it was so like my old
Guard's one, but passed when the guy said,
' Y o u can't just buy one.'
The bollix w o u l d probably have his o w n franchise within
the year.
I was sinking the black when a w o m a n - R o m a n i a n , I'd
guess - offered me some D V D s . Said,
' A l l the blockbusters, sin'
I flicked through them and smiled.
Hellboy?
H e l l , yes.
A n d
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KEN BRUEN
The Reader,
The Wrestler,
London Boulevard,
Abba: the Movie,
Alien vs Predator 2,
Appaloosa.
Said I'd take them all save A b b a .
She was surprised, asked,
' Y o u no like A b b a ? '
Sacrilege?
I asked,
'It's a happy, feel-good one, right?'
She nodded.
A n d I stared into her gypsy eyes, asked,
'I look to you like a guy w h o does happy?'
We settled on a price and she was pleased. Then she leant
over, said,
'The boy - don't look now, but to your right - he no like
you, is true?'
I waited till she'd gone, then casually looked to my right
and sure enough, there was a young guy - eighteen, maybe?
- sipping a pint bottle of cider, the loony juice, giving me
what I can only describe as the E v i l Eye.
A n d his body movements, that jerky motion that spoke of
speed jag.
I knew it.
H a d , alas, been there.
I checked the sports page.
R o b b i e Keane, captain of our national team, had
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been sold from Liverpool, his big chance blown.
Before I could see why, the jittery k i d was sitting opposite
me, said,
'Taylor.'
N o t a question.
I reached for me pint, not k n o w i n g what was on this
lunatic's agenda, but at least I'd have something in me hand.
I said,
' H e l p you?' Flexing for the violence that was coming in
waves off h i m .
He smiled. H i s teeth had been filed d o w n , and he had one
of those rings through his nose and really serious sniffles.
Coke rag.
He asked,
'Ever hear of a band named the Devil's M i n i o n s ? '
I tried to keep it light, said,
' N o p e , missed that one.'
He had a battered Tesco bag clutched to his side, and he
said,
'Have a look at this.'
Reached into the bag and took out a clear jar of what
looked like water. H e l d it in his right hand. Said,
' Y o u don't k n o w how to mind yer o w n fucking business,
do yah?'
Before I could react, he said,
'But you have an acid tongue, the One says.'
In a moment, he had the top off the jar, said,
'Here's some acid. Don't mess w i t h O u r Dark One.'
T h r e w it in my face. •
103
9
Dia de los muertos.
1
I clawed at my face in total panic and it took me, I dunno,
a lifetime?, to realize it was water.
The shock was almost as bad as if it had been acid.
If.
In my days as a G u a r d , I'd once seen the result of such an
attack on a w o m a n . I was one of the first to arrive and her
face was like it had melted. One eye had completely
dissolved and bones stuck out at horrendous angles in her
screaming face.
W h a t had been her face.
H e r mouth was gone and the screams were a high-pitched
croon of absolute terror.
A jealous boyfriend.
The courts let him off with a
stern
caution.
My sergeant at the time, true old school, had told me to
meet h i m after work. Said,
'Bring a hurley.'
I d i d .
He taught me the lesson of the ash.
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KEN BRUEN
A n d that was how I began to appreciate that true justice
is dispensed in alleys.
The boyfriend learned sharp and fast, and what I most
remember is that neither the sergeant nor I said one single
w o r d .
Just used those hurleys till sweat near blinded us.
He took me for a pint after.
Wasn't till we were on the other good side of a few that
he finally said,
'You're one hard bastard, Taylor. Where d'you learn to
shut yer gob and do the job?'
I told the truth.
'Christian Brothers.'
He laughed, enjoyed that and said,
'Their day is coming. N o t even that c r o w d are above the
law.'
Twenty years ago, that seemed unthinkable.
But then, so did X
Factor.
N o w I wiped my face w i t h my sleeve, my whole body
threatening to go into shock.
I got out of there. G o d knows I even brought the D V D s
with me.
Headed for the docks.
W h a t used to be the docks before the luxury-apartments
bastards ruined them.
Even Padraigeen's, one of the great pubs, was now
Sheridan's. W i t h a fucking restaurant.
But no city ever fully goes under.
Drayton's.
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Y o u won't find it on the tourist map.
It's not for tourists.
O r
bacicpackers,
N e w Agers,
sherry drinkers.
It's for serious business.
D r i n k ,
dope,
and whatever else you're w i l l i n g to pay the freight o n .
It's like the shebeens you used to find up N o r t h .
Same feel.
There's not so much a bouncer on the door as a killer
waiting to unleash.
I went to school w i t h h i m .
He said,
'Jack.'
I nodded.
Inside it was smoky. The no-smoking edict wasn't much
in effect here. There was one simple rule, apart from d o w n -
and-dirty drinking. ' M i n d yer o w n fucking business.'
I got a corner stool at the counter and waited.
M r s Drayton - yes, there was an actual Drayton - saw
me, and after a few minutes put a pint of the black and a
large Jay before me.
I laid some notes on the counter. Asked,
' H o w ' s himself?'