The Going Rate

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The Going Rate Page 30

by John Brady


  Minogue turned to him again.

  “Which now, Ciaran?”

  “Well I’m not going to repeat it.”

  Minogue was beyond confused now. Wall’s sympathetic smile returned.

  “What you said there. Whatever you read there, it must have gotten your goat something wicked, is all I can say to that.”

  Had he been cursing out loud? He was more tired than he knew then.

  “It’s a sign, I suppose,” he said to Wall. “Hit the hay.”

  Wall folded his arms.

  “So we’ll see what a night in custody does to their recall that night,” he said. “And a search of their effects at home?”

  “Exactly,” said Minogue.

  “And track any extra money they have, or had. No doubt it’d be spent already anyway.”

  Minogue nodded. He was finding the drawer for the folders ornery. Wall shuffled over.

  “There’s a trick to it,” he said, and jiggled it. “A Hail Mary does it.”

  This only speeded up Minogue’s departure. He had been thinking of the tin of Gosser beer in the fridge at home.

  Wall was on the stairs behind him.

  “I had been meaning to ask you about something,” he said. “But of course, it’d probably be, you know. Off limits?”

  “Give it a go anyway.”

  “Concerning a friend of yours, a colleague.”

  Minogue stopped on the landing.

  “Jim Kilmartin,” said Wall.

  “Friend,” said Minogue. “Both.”

  “Am I stepping on…?”

  For a reason that made no sense, Minogue shook his head.

  “Good. We’ve been putting out feelers to him. Now you’d hardly know that. But we have.”

  “Who has?”

  “NightWatch. Have you heard of us?”

  A small hint flared but disappeared into the pit of Minogue’s tired brain.

  “Started up there a couple of years ago. We decided to go formal. Out of the closet as they say.”

  “You’re saying Jim is gay?”

  Wall made a teacher’s laugh.

  “Oh no, no, no. That’s a good one. I must remember that one.”

  Minogue’s anger was rising.

  “Ciaran, I have no clue what you’re talking about here now. But you have me jittery. What gives?”

  Wall turned serious. He gave Minogue a searching look.

  “Jim’s predicament,” he said. “What happened that night.”

  Minogue gave him a hard look. Did every damned Guard in Ireland consider it his business to comment on Kilmartin’s folly?

  “NightWatch,” he grunted. “Is that like Road Watch, the traffic reports and all?”

  “In a sense, Matt, in a sense. It is to guide a traveller home safely.”

  “What roads would they be, I wonder.”

  Wall hesitated, but Minogue knew he was committed to his message.

  “Heaven, basically. Same place we all want to end up.”

  Minogue examined Wall’s face.

  “The name is from Holy Week,” said Wall. “Kind of good timing I suppose, there with Good Friday just behind us.”

  Minogue’s thoughts went to Rachel Tynan. Had she waited until after Good Friday, to leave at Easter instead, a wish for her husband’s future that he might bear her death better? But she was never a “religious” person, was she? He remembered the paintings around the church at Calary, the happy racket from the birds throughout the ceremony, the highland bogs and the skies. The right type of holiness, damn it all, the only type worth having.

  “Remember Gethsemane?” Wall asked gently. “The apostles falling asleep, not one of them to keep watch with Him? That’s what started it. Only Guards know what Guards go through, Matt. That’s a given. Don’t you think?”

  Kilmartin and his Half Three Divils that kept him awake, haunting him with what could have been, should have been. The nights in the hospital, the long awkward frame of James Kilmartin asleep on cushions by his wife’s bed.

  “The dark night of the soul,” Minogue muttered.

  Wall’s eyes lit up, and his smile returned.

  “Exactly. I knew you’d be the sort of a man that’d get it.”

  Minogue watched a sleepy Garda pass them in the hall on the way to the toilet. He looked at Wall.

  “We might have a word about it tomorrow then?” Wall whispered.

  “It’s tomorrow already, Ciaran,” was all he could come up with.

  Chapter 43

  IT HAD BEEN SOME TIME since he had seen Bríd crying. He could not remember her crying from pain, ever, even when Aisling was born. He watched her head moving slowly from side to side, her fingers spread through her hair while she rested her elbows on her knees.

  “Bríd,” he tried again. Her arm shot out, the hand upraised, and then slowly returned to the side of her head. A coldness was coming through him.

  “I’ll fix it,” he said. “I will.”

  This time she said nothing. The wheezes he had heard from her drawing her breath began to grow softer.

  “It’s finished,” he said. “That’s a promise. It’s just…”

  “Just what,” she said, but did not raise her head. “It’s always ‘just this’ and ‘just that.’”

  “You’ll see it happen. You will.”

  She sniffed and rubbed at her nose, and threw her head back, pushing her hair out of her face. Her face was so different, he thought.

  “It’s too much,” she whispered. “I can’t do it. I can’t.”

  “You know I wouldn’t do anything to let you down, or Aisling down.”

  “Dermot,” she said, gathering herself, and dabbing at her nostrils while she looked at the floor. “Dermot. It’s three o’clock in the morning. It can’t possibly make sense, this thing.”

  “You head back to bed,” he said. “I’ll kip here. That way I won’t disturb you.”

  He shivered, and then grabbed his knee tight to guard against his hand trembling. Bríd seemed to be hypnotized by whatever she was staring at.

  “A bit of daylight isn’t going to fix this,” she murmured.

  “Everything looks weird at night,” he said. “Come on, I’ll get you to bed.”

  She shook her head.

  “I can feel it, you know,” she said. “What you don’t tell me. It’s like a big thing here now. Like a big shadow.”

  “Bríd. I have no secrets from you.”

  She nodded now, as though she agreed. In the seconds that passed, he began to sense she did not.

  “You might believe that yourself,” she said, quietly. “That’s what I have to think.”

  She glanced up at him.

  “Otherwise, where are we?”

  He grasped his knee tighter.

  “I have enough,” he said. “Enough research, I mean. It’s finished. No more. Tonight was the last of it.”

  She was very still, but he could hear her raspy breathing. She began to get up. The ringing shattered the quiet. He put his hand over the mobile.

  Bríd frowned and sat back on her heels. He pushed at the power and held, but one more ring escaped.

  “You’re shaking,” he heard her say.

  “I didn’t know I left it on. Sorry.”

  “Look at you, Dermot. What’s going on?”

  “It woke me up, gave me a fright, love. That’s all, I wasn’t expecting it.”

  She stepped back, and stared at him. A teacher move, he knew, and anger joined his panic.

  “What,” he said. “Will you stop with the, the nanny treatment here? Jesus, this isn’t Abu Ghraib or somewhere, is it?”

  “Something’s wrong, I know it.”

  “I’m half-asleep, for Christ’s sake, Bríd. Give me a bit of space here, will you?”

  “This weekend, Dermot. This weekend, we have to talk.”

  “What does that mean? We talk every day. We’re talking now.”

  “Tell me what’s gone wrong.”

  “Nothing!
Nothing has gone wrong. Okay?”

  She waited. He took in the silent reproach.

  “Let’s go somewhere,” she said, “just the pair of us. I’ll get Ma to take Aisling for the day.”

  From tears to cool practicality, Fanning thought, all in a matter of a minute.

  “We’ll go down to Dwyer’s Cottage,” she added. “The long way, over Sally Gap. Rain or shine.”

  She was waiting for him to answer.

  “No talk about school,” she said. “I promise. Unless it’s slagging the system. How about that?”

  He was holding his breath, and he wasn’t even aware of it until the floaties showed up in his field of vision.

  “Earth to Dermot? Are you receiving me?”

  He nodded, and concentrated on his breathing.

  “I promise not to nag too,” she said. He tried to smile, but couldn’t. Her eyes were big and clear now, he saw, and full of that teasing tenderness.

  “Great,” he said. “That’d be great.”

  Her eyes flickered with concern.

  “We’ll make it, Dermot. We always have.”

  The turmoil was actually hurting his chest.

  “I know it’s tough,” she whispered. “Working away, trying to get things done. Reinventing yourself, and having to depend on yourself so much.”

  He had to do something tonight: that was all there was to it. Waiting wouldn’t help.

  “You’re a good father,” she said. “And you’re a good husband. You keep it all together. There’s not many can do that. Very few, in actual fact.”

  An image flashed into Fanning’s mind of reaching out and slapping Bríd across the face. The shock of it stole his thoughts of Cully, and the puddled footpath where the Polish man lay. He rubbed hard at his eyes. Bríd’s face was inches from his when he stopped.

  “Give it to me here,” she whispered, and he felt her hands on his thighs, reaching.

  “Jesus, Bríd,” he muttered, and saw her face take on its usual set. She sat back on her heels, and looked sideways at the table. Then she sighed, and got slowly up.

  “Sorry,” he said. “That didn’t come out right, I know.”

  “It’s okay,” she said. She was in teacher mode, he could tell.

  She was hesitating.

  “You know Liam and Susan, how they were, back last year,” she said.

  Liam was his friend, he thought of reminding her. Had she forgotten?

  “Good ideas, we should go out with them some night. Yes.”

  “I meant Liam, what he did. The time he, you know?”

  Fanning knew immediately. When he was ten, he had seen an accident between a car and a cyclist, on the Clontarf Road. He remembered knowing it was going to happen a few seconds before it did. There was something about the way things were going that made it inevitable, he believed.

  “Bríd, don’t start that again. For Christ’s sake.”

  She was not going to let it go.

  “I’m just saying think about it. Please. I mean, you yourself saw what it’s done for Liam, for the whole family. You said so yourself.”

  “I was joking–”

  She stood very still, and he could see the anger turn her face impassive.

  “It saved their marriage,” she said. “That’s nothing to laugh at, in my opinion.”

  Fanning was up out of the chair in one move. She frowned at him. It surprised him that he did not feel rage, so much as an unbearable impatience.

  “You think a frigging counselling session is going to help the situation, do you? Like sharing feelings, and a good cry or two? Screw that. Not going to happen.”

  “Then I’ll go myself,” she snapped. “I’m the one needs it, and that’s plain to see, isn’t it?”

  “Whatever that means.”

  “I’m the one who’s the shock absorber in this family, Dermot Fanning. Or haven’t you noticed? The one who has to bite their tongue. Hold back. Be a saint pretty well, when I feel far from it.”

  “You’re not biting any tongue now, are you!”

  “Oh freedom of speech is only for the creative types, is it? ’Cause they’re the ones make the rules? Oh now I get it – but it has taken me a while, hasn’t it. I’m a slow learner, I suppose. I don’t have that, what’ll we say, flair.”

  “You switch over from being me mother to a… well I’m not going to say it, but all I’ll say is it was faster than I ever saw–”

  “Well I have to be your mother half the time!”

  The words seemed to bounce off the walls for several moments, reverberating in Fanning’s mind. The room seemed very quiet now. He took in the folded arms, the hurt look, and anger.

  “You’re shouting,” he said. “Did you know that, Bríd?”

  “Screw you, and this ‘you’re shouting’ crap!” “You want to wake up Aisling. You want her to hear you ranting.”

  “I don’t care if she hears it or not! Why would I worry? She already knows. Children know, you know. They’re not like adults that way.”

  “Adults,” he said.

  “That’s right: adults. Adults hide things, or try to. Or they hide, themselves. They avoid. They run away from things. From people.”

  He glanced at her, and then looked down the short hall, half-expecting to see Aisling there. He wondered if the people next door were listening. Of course they were.

  The furniture looked dull and even ugly now. Even Aisling’s art on the walls looked faded. The whole place looked pathetic, comforting, futile.

  “People do that, Dermot. They let things go on too long.”

  “You mean us, do you?”

  “Of course not. I mean taking care of things, of themselves.”

  “Who needs a shrink when we’ve got one in the house right here.”

  “Stop that!”

  It was a shriek. Fanning counted to three before he heard a tapping on the walls.

  “Because change is too scary,” said Bríd, her voice ragged now.

  It had never been this bad, ever, Fanning thought.

  He looked around the room, and then picked up the can of beer and his mobile. He took his time walking to the sink, and he poured the can down the drain. The smell coming up from the sink reminded him of when he was ten again, going down to the pub to buy stout for his grandfather in the village near Bansha.

  “Go ahead to your counsellor dude,” he murmured. “And do what he tells you, like a good little girl, and behave yourself.”

  The words hung in the air. He wondered where they had come from, and how they had tumbled out of his mouth with so little effort. He heard the bubbles from the spilled lager still breaking on the stainless steel below. He didn’t turn around.

  “You fucking asshole, Dermot Fanning,” he heard her say in a quiet voice. Then the footsteps, and the pyjama bottoms rubbing together as she made her way back to the bedroom.

  He knew he had to do something now. He switched his mobile back on and waited for the Unlock prompt. He couldn’t go back into the bedroom for a change of clothes. His shoulder bag was by the door, though. He opened the washer/dryer, and pulled the clothes out onto the floor. It didn’t matter now. There was a T-shirt, and the white dress shirt, and knickers. It took him a few turnovers of the clotheslines to find a second sock.

  His fingers didn’t seem to be working so well. He thumbed his way slowly to the Recent Calls. There it was, Murph’s number. Though he had expected it, the shock surged through his chest and down his limbs. He switched off the mobile again.

  He looked in his wallet, and checked that he had the two tenners and the twenty that he had yesterday. Movement in the window brought his eye over. It was himself, his face shadowed by the flaring light coming up from the table lamp. The row had actually happened. Aisling might be awake right now, about to cry out.

  He had no plan. It was a few hours yet before the city would come to life proper, and he could figure out what to do. He would wait until he had a spot somewhere in the city centre, and then phone Cull
y. So things had gotten out of hand, and someone had been hurt.

  Cully’s two arms up in the air, like a dancer, stomping.

  He clenched his eyes as tight as he could. Colours came and went quickly. He opened his eyes, and tiptoed to the door. There were gloves and a folded-up umbrella in the shoulder bag. Fanning paused, and considered the laptop again. It would be an impediment. He folded the shirt as best he could, and slid it into the bag, along with the phone.

  The door squeaked, he remembered, but only after it was about halfway opened. He squeezed the handle hard and opened the door, working his way around it before it had swung too wide. He turned the key before he pulled the door behind him.

  Chapter 44

  THE HALOES AROUND THE STREET LAMPS seemed to pulsate as Fanning walked through the muggy air. He heard no traffic, but there was a low, background hum to everything. A cat walked back into a driveway, pulling its shadow with it under a car. The car windscreens reflected any light in filigree; the tiny on-off lights of their burglar alarm lights put him in mind of dragonflies. A dull shine from the roadway kept pace with Fanning, fading and then strengthening as he went from light to light. The electricity transformer at the end of the avenue buzzed as it always had, from the first time he had noticed it when they had moved in.

  He began to listen to his own footsteps, and the shoulder strap rubbing against his jacket. Soon, he felt a rhythm set in. The nausea had disappeared, but in its place was a numbness. He should be panicking, he knew. It both satisfied him and unnerved him that he was not. Other than to get away from the flat, and to head into the city centre, he could still not come up with any plan. He thought of Bus Áras, and the long-distance buses that’d be lined up there soon, idling as though raring to be on their way out of Dublin and headed for every corner of Ireland.

  Aisling was actually fascinated by trains. She had been thrilled as much as scared when they had watched the DART rumble by at Merrion Gates. She had twisted around in the buggy, he remembered, reaching frantically for him when the level-crossing gates descended and the tracks began to tick and hum with the weight of the approaching train. And then she had surprised him by pushing him away. She had caught sight of the train, and was captivated. Was that peculiar for a girl? It was just sexist to think like that.

 

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