had been a major player in academic circles and was suspected of multiple assaults, perhaps even murder of young students. He was found with a nail in his head. For a time I was lead suspect and Emily provided a highly dubious but unbreakable alibi. Further not endearing her to Sergeant Ridge.
I strongly suspected that one dark day Emily would be back on the scene. Something about the Galway air had lodged in her bones and she sure did love to mind-fuck the city. Too, her alcoholic mother still lived on the outskirts of town, not that Emily actually gave a sweet fuck about her but she did like the family home. Had said,
“I’d like to inherit the family residence.”
Surprised, I’d replied,
“Didn’t really figure sentiment in your agenda.”
She gave that laugh that no matter how infuriating she was, you couldn’t help but warm to her. She had looked me right in the eye and said,
“I want to see it burn.”
While I was in mid-interview, the Grammarian was adding the letter
i
to his murderous list. This time, he offed a teenager at the Galway docks. A cruise ship had tried to dock but the port couldn’t handle the size and the two hundred or so shop-anxious passengers who might have been ferried to the shore to satisfy their retail mania had to simmer on deck as the rain came lashing down and this cost the city a small fortune in lost sales. The Dublin council would come in for another whipping but this was par for its muddled course. An asshole running the council refused to budge on the Garth Brooks concerts, stonewalling the five concerts due to give the country a badly needed uplift.
There was even a personal plea by Garth, who begged the Taoiseach, saying,
“I will crawl on my hands and knees if that is what it takes but let the people have a party.”
Enda Kenny, as was now his wont, showed total scorn for the population and rebuffed the offer in just about as rude a fashion as he could muster.
And … with that knowing smirk he usually reserved for when he was threatening us with the water charges. It would cost the nation nigh on fifty-six million in lost revenue, not to mention the goodwill of close to a million voters.
The teenager mentioned above had pushed an elderly man, sneering,
“Outta my way, yah old fuck.”
The Grammarian had moved right in and shot the idiot in the back of the head. And strolled away. He was dressed in a blue overall and carrying a clipboard. The ultimate disguise.
Superintendent Clancy had gone ballistic.
“In front of a cruise ship of Yanks?”
… as if that were the real crime.
Ridge was given a whole new arsehole after he had reamed her and told her to catch this perp or go back to uniform.
The Galway Races came and I backed a horse named Road to Riches who won at six to one, giving my account in Bank of Ireland some credibility. I meanwhile continued to walk the dog and had taken a new and odd route to reading. I was letting each book lead to another direction. For example, the Lance Armstrong book led me to
Double Down
, a fascinating account of the 2012 U.S. election. Which brought me to Joe McGinniss’s book on Sarah Palin, which led me to
Freakonomics
, and thus back to Nick Kent with his superb book on music,
Apathy for the Devil.
I don’t quite know what this speaks to regarding my state of mind save to suggest I was befuddled but highly engaged.
And then I collapsed. Right on Shop Street. The frigging shame. One minute I was considering having a pint in Garavan’s then next I am on my back, staring at the gray sky, wondering,
“How the fuck did that happen?”
Result, I spent three days in hospital. My only visitor was my next-door neighbor. The Guards had come round and told him my arse was stretched. He brought grapes, if not of wrath, at least of thoughtfulness. And
Essential.
“A bottle of Seven-Up.”
Yeah, right.
It was in that bottle but was 58 proof. He said,
“A pick-me-up.”
And he was taking the dog for walks and