90

The Traveler stood between the Bull and Gerry Fegan. “So you’re the great Gerry Fegan,” he said. “I’ve heard a lot about you, Mr. Fegan. Let’s see if you live up to your reputation, eh?”

“Who are you?” Fegan asked, his first words since entering the room.

“Now that’s the million-dollar question, isn’t it, Gerry? I’ve got lots of names, but none of them’s real. People call me the Traveler.” He gave Fegan a grin. “Pleased to meet you, big lad.”

Fegan did not respond.

The Traveler turned to the Bull. “How do you want it done?” he asked.

The Bull raised his head. “Hmm?”

The old bastard looked weak and confused, like a man who’d walked many miles to a place, then couldn’t remember why he’d made the journey.

“How do you want it done?”

The Bull’s face seemed to solidify, the strength bleeding back into it. “Slow,” he said.

The Traveler nodded to O’Driscoll and Ronan. “Get a hold of him.”

They went to Fegan’s sides and took an arm each. Fegan didn’t resist. He stared straight ahead, his face expressionless.

The Traveler kicked him hard in the groin. Fegan’s legs folded under him, and O’Kane’s men pulled him back up.

“Slow,” the Traveler said. He turned back to the Bull, took the knife from his pocket, and unfolded the blade. “I could gut him. Bad way to go.”

“Aye, that’ll do,” the Bull said. “Don’t rush it, though. Give him some time to think about it.” His gaze fixed on Fegan and his lip curled. “Give him time to think about what he did to me. How he got my son killed, and my cousin.” His voice raised in pitch, breaths forced between the words, as he leaned forward. “How I got shot in the gut because of him. How I’m in this fucking wheelchair because of him. How he made a cunt of me. Give him time to think about all that.”

The Bull collapsed back, his chest heaving. The Traveler thought of a wounded dog he’d seen as a child. It was a stray, hit by a car, and it had dragged itself to an alleyway behind his mother’s house. It snarled and snapped at anyone who came near until he went and got a shovel. Three blows had silenced its howling.

“I had no fight with you,” Fegan said to the Bull. “You could’ve left me alone. You brought it on yourself.”

“Aye, I could’ve left you alone,” the Bull said. “But I didn’t. I don’t give a fiddler’s fuck if you had a fight with me or not. I had a fight with you, and that’s all there is to it. You got anything else to say before our friend here goes to work on you?”

“One thing.”

The Bull tilted his head and smiled. “What’s that, now?”

“Remember this: I’m going to kill you,” Fegan said.

The Bull threw his head back and laughed, high and grating. “Christ Almighty,” he said. He nodded at the Traveler. “All right, finish him.”

The Traveler stepped close to Fegan, close enough to smell his sweat. He rolled his left shoulder, that stiffness continuing to nag at him, his wrist still bound in the strapping. He stared into the madman’s eyes, looking for some sign of fear. There was nothing, only a steady calm. He held the blade up to Fegan’s left eye.

“Maybe I’ll scoop it out of your skull,” the Traveler said. “How does that sound?”

Fegan didn’t react.

The Traveler pressed the blade’s edge against Fegan’s cheek, below his eye, until red beads appeared on his skin. Fegan’s eyelid flickered. The Traveler drew the knife down toward the mouth, leaving a bright crimson trail behind it. Fegan’s lips tightened.

“I’m disappointed,” the Traveler said as he leaned forward, his voice conspiratorial. “People kept telling me about the great Gerry Fegan, how he was the scariest fucker ever came out of Belfast. And look at you.”

“Was it you who took them?” Fegan asked, looking the Traveler in the eye for the first time. Blood pooled at the outer edge of his mouth.

“The woman and the wee girl?”

“Yes,” Fegan said.

“That’s right.”

“Did you hurt them?”

“The wee girl’s all right,” the Traveler said. “The woman’s hurt, though. She wasn’t looking too good last time I saw her. I don’t fancy her chances. Sorry about that.”

Something moved behind Fegan’s eyes, a decision made, before he looked back into the distance. “Go ahead and do whatever you’re going to do,” he said.

“Fair enough,” the Traveler said, and grabbed Fegan’s right ear.