Authors: Ken Bruen
w h o ' d given C o l i n Farrell a free card for life for their fare.
After the pub, he'd always fancied a kebab.
I crossed at Holland's newsagents and moved on up to
Supermacs.
G a l w a y owner, and fat chips.
W h a t more could you ask?
I went to the counter and reckoned a burger, the big
fucker, w o u l d bring me levels up, not to mention the fun it
w o u l d have with my cholesterol.
A pretty girl in the Supermacs T-shirt said,
' H o w are you?'
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O K , I k n o w they're told to be polite, but this?
She added,
' Y o u don't remember me, and me thinking I made such an
impression on y o u . '
The college student I'd talked to, w h o luckily was wear-
ing a name tag. E m m a .
I gave my best laugh, tried,
' E m m a , h o w are you? Didn't recognize you in uniform.'
D i d she buy it?
D i d she fuck.
Said,
'Yah divil yah, you read my name tag.'
I ordered the burger and she told me to take a seat and
she'd be right over.
Worked for me.
It was busy, always is, and I had to share a table w i t h a
guy in a bad-fitting suit, munching d o w n on the Philly Steak
Sandwich, w h i c h was new to the menu, like his life
depended on it.
He had the look of somebody w h o ' d got all the bad news
there is and recently. Without preamble, as grease dribbled
from his mouth, he launched,
' K n o w w h y the country is gone to the dogs?'
I had a feeling he was about to tell me.
H e did.
Said,
'The fucking non-nationals, you k n o w they get free
medical cards? I've worked all me fucking life, do I have
a medical card?'
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KEN BRUEN
I was guessing no.
But thank Christ, his mobile rang, with one of those awful
tunes you can download, hke a baby crying.
He muttered,
'Right away.'
Then, grabbing the remains of his Philly, he stood up,
said,
'Fuckers won't give y o u two minutes for lunch, and yeah,
a non-national.'
The careless bigotry, n o w more prevalent, was like a slap
in the face.
E m m a arrived w i t h the burger and chips, said,
'I added French fries cos you need fattening up.'
I barely stopped meself from correcting her.
French fries?
Chips.
Jesus.
But as the Brits say,
that would have been a tad churlish.
No doubt about it, I was channelling Evelyn Waugh.
I thanked her and then her face fell, literally, as she said,
'Poor N o e l , what an awful way to die, the poor creature.'
I could hardly bite d o w n on the burger. I asked,
'What are the students saying, anything to do with Mr K ? '
She shook her head, said,
' N o one's saying anything, and not a light or a sight of Mr
K since.'
She motioned to me to eat my food, saying,
'It w i l l be stone c o l d . '
I gave it a shot and asked her,
'You're a bright girl, E m m a . W h a t do you think?'
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THE DEVIL
She looked at her watch. The place was really jamming up
and she stood, said,
' M i n d the darkness. E v i l rarely appears that on the
surface.'
I'd have to hook her up w i t h Stewart.
I'd never seen h i m with anybody. But then he's never seen
me with anybody either.
I liked her, she was that new bright shining face of Ireland,
w o r k i n g to pay her way through college, smart, confident
and no one's inferior.
My generation, we'd been raised Church-beholden and
afraid, and wouldn't have recognized self-esteem if it bit us
on the arse.
If we'd had a mantra, it w o u l d have been,
'Expect nothing, and by Christ, you're entitled to even
less.'
I got outside. The part of the burger I'd eaten had lodged
in me stomach like a bad prayer.
I took out my mobile, ruefully thinking,
'If I'd gotten to America, I'd be calling it my cell phone.'
Stewart answered on the second ring.
I asked,
'Are you going to Ridge's . . .' I had to swallow hard and
then spit it out. 'Soiree?'
I could hear h i m laughing and I waited.
He took the hint, said,
'Yes, I'm invited, and w o u l d you be needing a lift?'
'If you don't m i n d . '
I let my resentment pour ail over that and he said.
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KEN BRUEN
'I'll pick you up at seven, and try to be a bit sober.'
He hung up.
Anthony Bradford-Hemple, n o w isn't that one hell of a
name?
No way you're going to be w o r k i n g in a fast-food joint
w i t h a name like that.
Ridge's husband.
I was afraid to join up their names. Hers in Irish, Ni
lomaire.
Jesus, you'd need a prompt card to spit it out.
A n d worse, I'd been the one who hooked them up.
H i s daughter, Jennifer, was being threatened and her pony
was stolen. I'd got Ridge to check it out, thinking I was
helping her away from a dire place she'd reached.
And so, dear reader, she fucking married him.
I could understand her reasoning. As a gay Ban Garda,
she was already heavily compromised, and then having a
radical mastectomy, she was indeed all out of options.
Sure enough, she got her promotion, was n o w among the
ruling classes.
A n d mostly, I'd kept my mouth shut.
Comes a horseman, came the dreaded Friday.
I put on my new gear, leaving the jacket till last.
Studied me o w n self in the mirror, tried to persuade
myself that I looked like a slightly befuddled English
professor.
Didn't fly.
The doorbell went and there was Stewart, in a fucking
Louis Copeland suit. The k i n d of suit, you r o l l in the gutter
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with it, you come to, that suit is brushing you off, saying,
'You're a player.'
He looked at my gear, said,
'Wow.'
My temper wasn't at its best. I'd only dropped one X a n a x
and one shot of Jameson and it wasn't mellowing me out at
all.
I said,
'That is one flash suit, three grand or so, I'd guess.'
He gave his enigmatic smile, said,
'You're close.'
I deliberately moved across the r o o m , glancing briefly at
the nuns' convent - they'd be starting evening rosary -
poured a large Jameson and asked,
'Get you something.' I'm fresh out of that decaffeinated
tea, alas.'
He settled himself on the sofa, like a cat, total relaxation,
and I pushed,
'What is it y o u do again, since you stopped pushing dope,
that affords you the suit?'
He didn't rise to the bait, rarely d i d , said,
'Jack, I have all sorts of interests and if you ever want to
get your act together, I'd be delighted to have you along.'
I looked at my watch, said,
'We'd better get this over w i t h . '
He got to his feet, his suit without a crease or crinkle, and
added,
' Y o u might have fun.'
As we headed out I said.
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'Yeah, and I might get to America someday.'
H i s car was the new sleek Datsun, grey. Accessorized his
suit. He turned the key and pulled effortlessly into the traf-
fic. He hit the tape deck or iPod or whatever and we were
blasted by music. I listened in silence for five whole minutes
- I know, I counted out the time - and finally asked,
'What on earth is that?'
He turned it up a notch, said,
'Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus.'
There are some lines there is just no reply to.
Ridge's new home was one of those huge sprawling
monsters, so beloved by the Anglo-Irish when they ruled the
land.
Once impressive, no doubt, but badly in need of repair.
A n d a bastard to heat.
We drove up a tree-lined path to the main entrance. I
asked,
' H o w many acres y o u figure he's got?'
Without a beat he said,
'One hundred and fifty-eight.'
' Y o u checked?'
He gave that familiar half-smile, said,
'I check everything.'
Didn't add,
'Reason I have the suit and the car.'
The whole place was lit up, and a bevy of cars were
already parked. Stewart reached into the back seat, grabbed
flowers and bottles of wine. He looked at me, asked,
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THE DEVIL
' Y o u didn't bring anything?'
I waited till I was out of the car, said,
'Brought y o u . '
A girl in a maid's uniform welcomed us and offered to
take our jackets.
N o .
Led us into a large room, w i t h maybe fifty people already
lashing into champagne, a huge chandelier overhead and the
walls hned w i t h paintings.
We were offered canapes and champagne. I took a glass
and Stewart asked for some water.
Ridge emerged from a throng of people, looking radiant.
I've seen her look
like shite,
lost,
angry,
hurt,
but radiant, never.
A blue silk gown made her seem like a beauty.
She hugged Stewart, thanked h i m for the lovely flowers,
then turned to me, said,
'Well, you tried.'
I was a bit taken aback, asked,
' Y o u don't like the jacket?'
She hugged me, a rare and rarer event, and said,
'It's so . . . y o u . '
The fuck was with that?
There was Anthony Bradford-Hemple and a tall bald-
headed man. She told us that her husband was deep
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in conversation w i t h a very important prospective cHent.
Something about h i m .
The man feh my stare, turned, and I felt a chill. Bald or
not, it was the guy from the airport, K u r t .
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5
'The Divil knows his own.'
O l d Irish proverb
Jesus wept.
I was rooted to the floor.
The blond locks had been shorn, but it was h i m .
The fuck was going on?
Champagne on top of X a n a x and the shots of Jay w o u l d
screw w i t h anybody's head. Right?
Ridge was pulling at my sleeve, going,
'Jack, are y o u O K ? '
I focused, shook my head and asked her,
'The guy w i t h your, er . . . husband, w h o is he?'
She threw a fast glance at Stewart. The one that
asks,
' D o we need to get him out of here?'
Stewart was no help and she finally said,
'That's C a r l Franz. He's arranging for Anthony to turn
our home into a tourist resort. He is so amazing.'
K u r t . . . o r maybe Carl?
C a r l with a K, Fd bet.
M r K ?
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Fuck, champagne really does meddle w i t h the brain
sockets.
Before I could arrange any of those fevered thoughts into
cohesion, they were approaching. I braced meself, resolved
to
go with the flow.
Anthony was all Anglo-Irish cordiality, warmth without
conviction, went,
'Jack, so delighted you could make it. M a y I introduce
you to an esteemed prospective business partner, Mr Franz.'
K u r t put out his hand, manners counting most. He said,
'Jack, I've heard so much about you. A wicked pleasure to
meet you in the flesh.'
I took his hand, and felt nothing.
Everybody's hand conveys something.
Sweat,
tremors,
warmth,
cold.
H i s . . . zip, nada, like white space.
A n d oh my sweet L o r d , I remembered the old people
saying,
'Shake hands w i t h the D i v i l , you feel nothing.'
I asked,
'We met before?'
He gave me the eye-fucking look, smiled, said,
'Alas, I don't think so. I'm sure I w o u l d remember.'
The tension was palpable and I could see even Anthony
looking - what is it the Brits call it? - nonplussed.
But as the story of me bedraggled life, I went w i t h it.
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reckoning if tiiey are willing to m i n d fuck,
bring it on, yah
bollix.
I asked,
' Y o u ever heard of a Mr K ? '
He gave a tolerant smile to the others, like he could go
along w i t h nonsense, said,
' N o . Is this a lacking on my part.''
The odd twisted teeth had been fixed, or maybe I was just
way off me fucking head.
He let go of my hand and, as luck w o u l d have it, the bell
sounded for dinner. Ridge grabbed my arm and said, in no
uncertain terms,
'Time to eat. Jack.'
A n d pulled me away.
I didn't look back. I could feel his eyes boring into my
head.
Ridge whispered,
'What on earth are you doing? C a r l is our bail-out
money.'
I shrugged her arm away, said,
'I met the bollix before and trust me, he is the worst news
you ever encountered.'
She was l i v i d . Nothing's quite like the fury of an
Irishwoman crossed. She hissed,
'Don't you dare make a scene! Y o u taint everything, but
you won't do it here.'