11

‘And I go on contradicting him until he understands that he is a monster that passes all understanding.’

Pascal, Pensées, 420

 

 

 

I decided to go and see Tom Reed first – he was the one who supplied bouncers to nightclubs. Another indication of how Ireland had changed. In my youth, I don’t think there was a single bouncer in the country. Now, almost every pub, club, hotel had them. They even had a school. I’m not kidding. Ludicrous as it sounds, there was a year-long course in it. Among the subjects were crowd control and the art of defusing situations. I guess, if all else failed, you could return to basics and kick the living shit out of people. Lest you be confused and believed it was simply an extension of the security business, it was listed under the heading ‘Entertainment Enterprises’. When Jan 1st rolled round with the proposed ban on smoking in pubs, clubs, prisons, hospitals, the bouncers were going to need a little more under their jackets than people skills.

I was heading along Mary Street when a Daimler pulled up beside me. I’d been limping along, preparing my approach to Reed. I’d more or less decided not to begin with ‘Let’s cut the shit, did you behead Father Joyce?’

The front and back doors opened, two very large men got out, blocked my path. I thought,

‘Uh-oh.’

Their shoes . . . Guards. You can always tell. Heavy black jobs with the thick soles. Few items as good for the solid kicking. Tried and tested and yet to be found wanting. The first one said,

‘Taylor.’

Not a question. The second one glared at me, not liking much what he saw, said,

‘Get in the car.’

I looked round, didn’t see any likely citizen about to protest. The first one added,

‘The superintendent wants a word.’

The devil was in me, urging to ask,

‘No chance it might be a civil one?’

Went with,

‘It’s not real convenient right now.’

The second one smiled, said,

‘We won’t take much of your precious time.’

Translation: Get in the fucking car.

I did.

The second piled into the back beside me and the driver clocked the mirror, eased out into traffic. The guy beside me was wearing aftershave, a bucket of it. Took me a moment to identify the name . . . then . . . Brut. Jeez, I didn’t even know they still made it. Maybe he’d stockpiled it, cornering the market. The early seventies, it was the scent of choice. Came in that distinctive green bottle with a silver medallion and guys lashed it on like a blessing. Women have a hard life but that mass era of Brut must have been among the blackest spots. Then it disappeared.

I looked at his left hand. Wedding band. Perhaps his wife figured it ensured he wouldn’t play around. We passed Mill Street and I asked,

‘We’re not going to the station?’

And no one answered. If they were going to drop me in the Bay, it’d be a relief to escape the Brut. We cruised through Salthill, past Blackrock and turned into the golf club. Pulled to a stop and the guy in the front said,

‘Get out.’

I did and the driver said,

‘He’s waiting in the bar.’

I looked at the guy in the rear, then back to the driver, asked,

‘You get hazardous pay?’

A flicker of a smile, then the window rolled up. As a child, I’d been here a few times, searching for golf balls. Usually got chased off. I didn’t belong and didn’t think I ever would. Went in, past lots of guys in bright sweaters talking loud and saying, birdy . . . four-ball . . . eagle, as if the words carried weight. Found the bar, and at a large window table was Clancy. Dressed in a diamond-patterned sweater and, I swear, cravat. Nobody – and I mean nobody – other than Roger Moore and the stray mason wears them. Even Edward Heath had managed to forgo them. John Major had wanted to wear them but lacked the balls.

Clancy had golf pants, those shiny affairs that chafe your thighs and make a swishing noise when you walk. Slip-on cordovans on his feet. His face was ruddy, stout, well fed. His once full head of hair was now a sweepover, drawing notice to his accelerating baldness. A pot of coffee, one cup before him.

I walked over, feeling like the poor relation whose sole mission is to beg. He stared at me, said,

‘Sit down.’

I did.

We had a moment of eyeballing, the macho stuff. Hard to credit we’d been great friends, back in my days as a Guard. I got bounced and he got promoted. An inversion of ‘Amazing Grace’ unfolded in my head. ‘Was found but now am lost.’

Oh yeah.

He said,

‘The limp hasn’t improved.’

I smiled, thinking,

‘Game on.’

Answered,

‘Least mine is visible.’

A waiter appeared, asked if the Super required fresh coffee, then looked at me. Clancy said,

‘He’s not a member.’

They both got a kick out of that. I waited and he reached in his pocket, flicked a card on the table. I could see,

Taylor and Cody
Investigations
No divorce work.

He asked,

‘Is that a joke?’

‘Not to Cody.’

‘You set up in business, you better get a licence.’

‘Yes Sir.’

He lifted the coffee pot, poured a cup, added cream, sugar, took a sip, went,

‘Ah . . . lovely.’

Then,

‘I’m surprised they let you out of the madhouse. Thought we were rid of you.’

I let him have that one. If he wanted to fire the cheap shot, I’d let him blaze. Someone shouted to him from the corridor, ready to tee off. I said,

‘Don’t let me keep you from your game.’

He prepared to stand, said,

‘The priest who was murdered – don’t even think of going near that.’

I put up my hands, said,

‘Why would I?’

He let out a deep belch, said,

‘Listen to me, Taylor, listen good. I know all about you. That lunatic Father Malachy, who was probably shagging your oul wan, they say he’s going to enlist your help.’

I wanted to wallop the smug smile off his face, ask him was it true his mother was the town ride? I said,

‘If you know so much, how come you don’t know Malachy and I have bad history? Not as bad as you and I, but you get the drift.’

He leaned over, a smell of mint on his breath, said,

‘As for your security job, you can scratch that. I told them you were a bad risk.’

Watching me to see how that landed, he administered his coup de grâce, the one he’d been holding.

‘If your firm want to investigate something, put your detection skills to the test, I might have something for you.’

This was going to be bad, but I asked,

‘Yeah, what would that be?’

He pulled himself up to his full height, shoulders back – he’d practised this in front of the mirror – said,

‘They pulled a wino out of the canal. All we can tell is he was in his fifties. Ring any bells? Maybe you could solve it for us, clear our books, eh?’

My heart pounded. I thought,

‘Jeff.’

I tried to keep my voice neutral, asked,

‘How do you know he was a wino?’

He took a long moment, then,

‘The stench of him.’

 

Outside, as the Americans say, my ride had gone. I walked down the drive, my head in turmoil, going,

‘Oh God, if God there be, let it not be Jeff.’

Spent the rest of the morning trying to find where the body was. Tedious, frustrating, but primarily terrorizing. At four thirty I was in the city morgue, finally allowed to view the corpse. I stood before a metal table, a sheet covering the body, enclosed by the institution-green colour on the walls, dizzy from smells, real and imagined. The attendant, impatient, asked,

‘You ready yet?’

A whine in there, but I couldn’t really start beating on him, tempting though it was. I nodded and, like some second-grade magician, with a flourish he whipped off the sheet – this was his party piece.

Closed my eyes real tight and begged, did the old Catholic barter, whispered,

‘God, if You let this not be Jeff, I won’t smoke again. I give You my word.’

What else did I have? And that item was shaky, suspect, at the best of times. As a child, you wanted something – something impossible, like civility from your mother – you went to the Abbey, lit a candle and did the trade-off. Telling the Sacred Heart, ‘If Mum is nice to me, I won’t hate people.’

Shit like that.

Never worked. She was hostile till she drew her last bitter breath, which is some achievement. I thought of Jeff, his love of that child, the way his eyes lit up when she smiled. Thought too of his face when he realized the broken tiny body on the footpath was his daughter. And she was lying there, her head twisted to the side, a small pool of blood under her ear, because his best friend, me, wasn’t paying attention.

The very first time I met him, the signs in his pub read, NO BUD LIGHT. He was my age, and always wore a waist-coat, black 501s like Springsteen and his long grey hair was tied in a ponytail. I’d been a Guard – it was my training to kick the crap out of men with ponytails. It said so in the manual, under Section # 791: beat on hippies, students, leftwingers.

He had effortless cool, the real kind, none of that poised shite. I introduced him to Cathy Bellingham, an ex-punk from London who’d washed up in Galway while kicking a heroin habit. Such was the nature of our cosmopolitan city these days. Who could have foreseen it. She married him, like some Jane Austen novel written by Hunter S. Thompson.

Against all the odds, it worked, and they had the little girl. I loved them and deeply envied them. They had what I could only ever dimly imagine, and I was the one who smashed it to smithereens. Jeff wasn’t just my best mate, he was probably my only one.

My hands were clenched tight. I broke the skin on my palm with my nails, and welcomed the tiny throb of pain. The attendant was out of patience, snapped,

‘Know him?’

He was chewing a Juicy Fruit, the aroma sickening in its strength. I looked down, took an unsteady breath, must have been silent for nearly five minutes as my mind whirled, then,

I said,

‘No. No, I don’t.’

He wrapped the gum around his front teeth, said,

‘No one ever knows the winos, they’re truly the cast away.’

‘What happens to him?’

Snapped the gum with a long tongue, said,

‘We burn ‘em.’

Jesus.

‘It used to be a pauper’s grave, but the city is running out of land.’

I was seriously angry, said,

‘People are so inconsiderate.’

He looked at me with vague interest, asked,

‘How’s that?’

‘Dying . . . using up valuable land.’

He gave a throaty swallow, went,

‘That’s sarcasm, right?’

‘Or something close.’

‘No biggie, I get it a lot, it’s an outlet for rage.’

I turned to stare at him, asked,

‘What, you took psychology?’

He gave a superior grin, said,

‘I know people.’

‘Well, you sure know dead ones.’

He shrugged, said,

‘It’s a job, right?’

I made to leave, said,

‘Thing is, you’re wasted. Guy like you, the caring professions are crying out for you.’

As I was leaving, he shouted,

‘Have one for me.’

‘What?’

‘You’re going for a drink, right?’

Before I could answer, he said,

‘The pub across the road? Saddest freaking place in the country. It’s where the relatives go . . . Man, not a whole lot of music there, you need a lively joint.’

‘And why would I need that?’

He gave me the look, the silent duh, then,

‘You lucked out. The stiff – you didn’t know him.’

Stiff.

I seriously wanted to pound on this guy, to quote my mother:You’d never tire beating him. I said,

‘You call that lucking out?’

He shrugged. I’m never taken by that gesture, convinced they rehearse it, get the lift exactly so. He said,

‘You’re a funny guy.’

I couldn’t resist, said,

‘You should catch me on a good day.’

 

Outside, my whole body sagged. I hadn’t realized how tight I’d been wound. That pub was almost directly across. I hoped I’d never discover which arrived first, the morgue or the pub. A whole slice of the Irish psyche in the answer. I’d made me deal with God and He’d delivered, so I couldn’t have a drink, not yet . . . Jesus, not now.

I moved on, trying not to look over my shoulder. Passed the Age Concern shop and, to distract myself, went in. Almost in a trance, I picked up a Discman. I’d come late to CDs and iPods were forever to be a mystery. Bought it and the girl said,

‘Don’t forget the headphones.’

‘Oh, right.’

She couldn’t have been twenty years old, yet she had natural compassion, an openness that stabbed at my heart. Then, to add to my consternation, she said,

‘I’ll bet you haven’t batteries. You get home and isn’t it a devil, none.’

She glanced round at the customers, then slipped two batteries across the counter. I’d swear she winked, but I think I only hoped so. I said,

‘You’ve a lovely nature.’

She wasn’t buying, said,

‘Get away our that. You should see me at home, I’m a holy terror.’

Do such brief encounters balance the daily awfulness of life? That’s too tough a measure, maybe, but for the fleeting moment you have the spur to continue.

I hadn’t listened to music in a long, long time. You need a soul for that. Mine withered when the child went out the window. Jeff’s too, it seemed. I walked up to Shop Street, went into Zhivago. Declan McEntee was still there, went,

‘Good God, it’s the resurrection.’

Like I was in the mood for this. He read my expression, said,

‘You’ll want Johnny Duhan as usual?’

‘I have all of his.’

I looked round, saw new releases, and there . . . Emmylou Harris, Warren Zevon. Took both.

Declan said, tapping the Zevon,

‘Died two weeks ago.’

‘What?’

‘Yes, recorded this album knowing he’d only a brief time. Makes it real hard to listen to.’

As he wrapped them, he said,

‘Johnny Cash’s gone too.’

Christ, I’d have to catch up, start reading the papers or watching the news or something.

Declan gave me the change, asked,

‘You all right? You’re very quiet.’

And I said,

‘At home, I’m a holy terror.’

Robert Palmer died the next day – they were dropping like flies. He didn’t have a new album. If I wanted to seriously burn, I could always listen to Johnny Cash with ‘Hurt’.

I was burning out.