Guys think, Where's the booze?
She was carrying a Gladstone bag, and it looked like it had seen active service.
She said, 'I might know you better than you think. I qualified as a doctor, but I work as a therapist mainly.'
That slight trace of an accent was very attractive, as if she had to carve out the right pronunciation.
I asked, 'Get you anything – tea, coffee? Oh, and I have Jameson and vodka.'
She gave me a look that asked, 'This is a social occasion?'
She said, 'Sit down and let's see what you've done to yourself.'
She was thorough. She washed and cleaned the wounds, made those hmmm sounds unique to the medical profession, then applied a splint to the fingers of my right hand.
'Those fingers have been broken before, but I'm fairly sure they're not broken now. However we'd need an X-ray to be certain, and I'm thinking you're not in any hurry to get that done?'
My hands dressed and wrapped in light gauze, she stood back.
'You'll live, but get to a hospital tomorrow.'
I was feeling very laid back, not hurting at all and able to appreciate her scent – the scent of a woman and something else I couldn't quite identify, but I liked it.
She looked at her watch, a very slim Rolex, and said, 'I'll have that drink now, vodka with tonic. I'm not working tomorrow so I can lie in.'
I wanted to lie with her. Blame Stewart's pills.
She asked if I was hurting much and the addict in me said, 'Lie big.'
I did.
She took some pills from her bag, rationed them out as doctors do, with that measured concentration lest they give you one more than you could need.
She said, 'These are very strong. Don't take alcohol with them.'
I tried not to grab them. I was building a nice little stash of defence. I got her the drink, asked, 'Why did you come? I mean, it's – what's the term – highly irregular?'
She sighed and then I recognized the scent. Patchouli oil, like the hippies used to peddle. Don't know why, but it gave me hope. Of what . . . I don't know, it had been so long since I had any. I just took it without analysis.
She stared into her glass. I knew there were no answers in there. The illusion of them, sure, but nothing that would give you the truth.
She said, 'I am from Napoli. We grew up poor. I married an Irish doctor, it's a long story, he is gone now and we had one daughter, Consuelo, the most beautiful girl. She died three years ago.'
She took a decent wallop of the vodka and continued.
'I got to join the most exclusive club in the world – the family of victims. No one wants to belong, we share the pain that never goes away and we can recognize each other, even without words. To outlive your child, this is the greatest torment the world can send. And when I saw you, saw the expression in your eyes, I knew you had joined.'
I wanted to say, 'Bollocks, peddle your therapy in some other neighbourhood.' Not even the pills could still the anger I felt.
I said, 'I sure do appreciate your help, but don't make any assumptions about me and loss.'
It sounded as fierce as I intended.
She gave a tiny smile and nodded her head. 'I understand rage.'
I wanted to shake her, scream, 'Do you? Do you fuck.'
She said in a quiet tone, 'It's one of the five stages of grief.'
I was on me feet. 'Me? I've narrowed it down to two – anger and drinking.'
She stood up, said, 'I must go. I would like to spend some time with you, Mr Jack Taylor.' And touched my face with one finger. It burned more than the spit of Cody's father.
I faltered, 'You mean like a date?'
She was at the door.
'No, I meant like consolation.'
'I don't need consolation.'
As she headed down the stairs she threw back, 'I wasn't talking about you.'
I was restless after she left, not knowing what to think. I picked up a book, opened it at random, read:
. . . if once a man indulges in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing, and from robbing, he next comes to drinking and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination . . .
The hell was this? Looked at the author: Thomas de Quincey.
Vinny, from Charly Byrnes's bookshop, had recently dropped me off a pile of books. A lot of them looked old and Vinny had said, 'Some of those volumes, the same age as yerself.'
I put the volume aside and figured the only one of that list remaining for me was procrastination. But if you factored in my total lack of dealing with whoever had shot Cody, I guess I had that pretty well covered too. I knew I should really be out there, giving my full attention to finding the shooter, but I was afraid. What if it was Cathy, Jeff's wife? I'd destroyed her daughter and husband, her whole life.
I took one of Gina's pills and waited, my mind in the dead place, and thought, 'These aren't worth a shite.'
Decided to lie down anyway, and slept for eighteen hours. If I had any dreams I don't recall them, but you can be sure they weren't the skip and jig variety. They never were.
The soaked-in-sweat sheets on my awakening testified to that. Business as usual.
As I'd slept, they were fishing Eoin Heaton's body out of the canal. His days of dog investigations were over.
16
'If you carry a cross in your pocket,
no harm will come to you.'
When I came to, the first feeling I had was relief that I hadn't drunk. Then I checked the clock and realized with alarm I'd been out for nigh on eighteen hours, and . . . I was hungry.
My right hand was throbbing, but not as bad as I'd expected. The guy in the alley, how would he be doing? I showered, made some kick-arse coffee and dressed in a white shirt, clean jeans and a tweed jacket I'd bought in the charity shop. It had leather patches on the sleeves, and if I had a pipe I could pass for a character out of a John Cheever novel or a professor on the skids. While I'd been shaving, I'd risked looking at my eyes in the mirror. They didn't reflect a killer, but then they rarely do. Murderous bastards I'd met – and I've met more than my share – had real nice eyes.
I briefly listened to the news and they mentioned a man found in an alley, victim of a mugging, who was in intensive care. Did I give a sigh of relief?
No.
Headed out, taking my by now usual walk up to the top of the Square, to have a look at how the renovations were progressing.
They weren't.
And turning towards the city centre, walked past Faller's shop, stared with a pang of regret at the rows of gold Claddagh rings, then crossed the road and entered the Eyre Square Centre. They have a restaurant that still serves heart-attack food – fry ups, tons of cholesterol and no lecture. I ordered the special, the works, the whole clog-your-arteries mess: rashers, two fat sausages, black pudding, fried egg, round of toast, pot of tea. Got a table near the rear and was halfway through when my nemesis appeared.
Father Malachy.
He didn't ask to join me, just sat down, accused, 'Where have you been?'
I was mid bite of the second sausage so needed a second to answer. Malachy was, to pun heavily, fuming, as he couldn't smoke here. This was a lunatic who set the alarm to smoke in the small hours of the morning. Life for him was simply an irritation that occurred between cigarettes. He had the smoker's pallor, the heavy lined face and that slight wheezing that sounds almost like humming.