‘Nicky!’ Just Albert says, smiling despite himself.
A man in the rear seat with Nicky leans across the boy and stares out at the men on the tram, locking eyes with Just Albert for a second.
O’Hanley, O’Keefe thinks, remembering his face from the grainy ‘Wanted’ poster in his RIC barracks during the Tan war. O’Keefe watches as O’Hanley appears to decide something and turns to speak to Nicholas.
O’Keefe, Finch and Just Albert look on as the boy shakes his head and O’Hanley says something else. He sits close to the boy, and it is impossible to make out what he is saying, but all three men can see the commandant’s pointed index finger wagging in a universally understood gesture of authority. There is a long pause while the boy appears to contemplate the coming action—the tram rattling at speed, the Ford pacing it along the empty coast road, the barrel of the tommy-gun like an amputated limb extruding from the driver’s window. It is now that Just Albert notices the bandaging on Nicholas’s hand, and rage quietly ignites within him. Just get the boy first.
As he thinks this, the Ford accelerates and overtakes the tram, and when it is one hundred yards ahead, the car swerves, bouncing up and onto the tram tracks. The tram driver clangs his bell, shouting in disbelief, and begins to slow the tram down as the car reduces speed in front of it. The conductor, standing next to the driver, looks back at Finch, Albert and O’Keefe. There is fear in his eyes. He summons the two remaining passengers seated behind the driver and takes them up the front stairs to the tram’s upper deck. A quarter of a mile and two minutes later, the driver brings the tram to a halt behind the idling Ford.
‘We can’t do it on board ’ere, mate,’ Finch says to Just Albert.
‘Why not?’ A wave of nausea washes over O’Keefe, and he would not hear the answer to his question even if Finch were to answer it.
‘Come on, we’ll do it outside,’ Just Albert says, stepping down off the conductor’s platform, his gun drawn. Finch follows him with the bag, and then slowly, painfully, so does O’Keefe. He catches up to them at the front of the tram, his body flaring with pain with every footstep. He watches as O’Hanley and the gunman from the hotel emerge from the car and begin to walk towards them on the tracks, the gunman with the Thompson across his chest, O’Hanley with a Webley pistol held at his side.
‘Bring Nicholas out of the car,’ Just Albert says, as they close the distance.
‘Give us over the money.’ O’Hanley and the Gilhooley stop ten feet away from them on the tracks, the wind rustling the sea grass in the dunes beyond.
‘Give him the bag, Finch.’
Finch looks at Albert, and then walks forward and sets the bag at O’Hanley’s feet.
O’Keefe watches as Gilhooley steps forward, crouching down to open the bag, rifling through a few of the packets of bills on top before standing up and nodding.
His eyes locked on Albert’s, O’Hanley shouts over the wind and the distant shushing of the tide. ‘Nicholas…’
The boy gets out of from the car, and walks past O’Hanley and Gilhooley without looking at them.
‘I’d send the boy on a long voyage away from here,’ O’Hanley says, undisguised bitterness in his voice. ‘The new republic has no place for the likes of him or any of you in it.’
With his eyes still on O’Hanley, Just Albert says, ‘Get up on the tram, Nicky.’
The boy is crying as he passes O’Keefe, tears streaking his face in the Indian summer sunlight.
‘You’re lucky men, you two,’ Just Albert says, turning to join the boy. ‘Lucky men…’
O’Keefe follows while Finch covers their return to the tram, his pistol held loosely at his side, a half-grin on his face that O’Keefe makes no effort to understand. He tries to mount the conductor’s platform and finds that he can’t. Finch and Albert take him under the arms and haul him aboard.
‘Might be best if we made our way up to the top deck, if you can make it, Sar’nt…’ Finch says, looking down the length of the tram and out the front glass at Gilhooley and O’Hanley as they climb back into the Ford. A moment later, O’Keefe hears the Ford’s engine revving and turns to watch the car bump off the tracks and swing around on the road to head back towards Dublin. He turns then to look at Nicholas standing silently next to Albert, his eyes too following the Ford as it leaves. I hope you were worth it, O’Keefe thinks.
Inside the Ford, O’Hanley takes the bag from Gilhooley. It weighs the same as he remembers, and as he opens the mouth of the bag, he sees the bundles of notes wrapped in paper bands marked Bank of Ireland. He smiles, and begins to root through the bundles. His smile fades. He takes one of the packets of notes and flicks through it and does it again, his eyes widening in disbelief.
O’Hanley digs deeper into the bag, and begins to reef the wrapped bundles of banknotes from inside, tossing the worthless sheaves of newsprint topped with single, genuine bills onto the floor of the Ford’s back seat.
‘Turn the car, Stephen,’ he says. ‘Do it now.’
One of the packets appears wedged at the bottom corner of the bag, and O’Hanley frees it with an angry tug. With it comes a length of leather bootlace, to the end of which is tied the safety pin of a hand-grenade.
It takes something less than a second for O’Hanley to realise what he has done. Time stops for him, but does not stop, and some ancient impulse drives him to open the bag wider, to confirm what he knows suddenly to be true.
The grenade detonates in the confines of the Ford, the car’s roof bursting upwards like an inflated paper bag, streaks of fire and scorched air and a million tiny fragments of shrapnel tear through O’Hanley and Gilhooley, the blast smashing bone, lacerating shards perforating the panelling and shooting out the open windows of the Ford, the car slowing and veering across the road where it hits the tracks and comes to a stop, smoke and blood pouring from its blast-bloated doors.
51
Nora Flynn hears the doorbell and listens as the serving girl, Martha, answers it. She hears Martha tell the caller to wait a moment please and she will ask her.
She rises to her feet, her back sore from sitting, hardly having moved from the chair by the window since she returned to her family home more than a week before. She is a worry to her mother, she knows, but there is little she can do about it. She refuses to answer her mother’s questions and her mother, mercifully, has stopped asking them. One of these days she will have to take one of her brothers and move out of her rooms in Ballsbridge, but she has decided she will leave the few bloodstained items of clothing in the room on Leinster Road for the safe house owner to dispose of as he sees fit.
‘Miss, it’s a gentleman caller,’ Martha says, barely able to contain the excitement in her voice. ‘And he’s after asking for you!’ She smiles wickedly and Nora’s heart pounds. It couldn’t be, she thinks.
‘Did he give his name, Martha, or did you bother asking?’ she says, her voice harsher than she has intended.
‘No, miss.’
It can’t be … oh please, God, please let it be Seán ….
She opens the door, and her heart skips a bit and then slows.
‘Carty,’ she says.
‘Nora.’ Carty touches the brim of his hat. ‘You look well, you do.’
‘I don’t, and you know I don’t.’
Carty smiles, appearing nervous to Nora. Imagine, Terence Carty, the hardened gunman, nervous.
‘You’re keeping well, then?’ he says.
‘As well as can be expected. And you?’
‘Grand, Nora, grand.’
‘And all at Oriel House?’
And here, Carty looks away, scanning Nora’s mother’s rose bushes, the neatly clipped grass. ‘Not so bad, I reckon. Two men, Killeen and Ahern, got theirs last week. Found dead in a car in Waterford without a notion of who shot them.’
Nora blesses herself. ‘God save them.’
<
br /> Carty nods. ‘And you know O’Hanley’s dead.’
‘I read it in the papers. Blown up in his car?’
Carty shrugs. ‘There was talk of banknotes snagged in the gorse and dune grass for days afterwards. The Howth tram was black with people on jaunts to hunt for wind-blown tenners.’ He smiles at Nora and looks away again.
There is a long silence between them. A tram passes on the Ranelagh Road in front of the house, and when its clanking rumble has passed, Nora says, ‘I’m not coming back, Carty. If that’s what you’ve come to ask.’
‘It is why I’ve come, but there’s no hurry. Take your time. You’re needed but you need take the time to get over … things.’ He examines her face as he speaks, and in his one-eyed gaze, Nora is aware of affection. She is surprised by it, having always thought of herself as more of a burden to Carty than a help, but she is almost certain it is there now. Is it more than general, this affection? She cannot decide, but knows there is nothing for it. She could no more bring herself to love a man like Carty than she could the man in the moon.
‘I don’t need time, I’ve decided already. I just can’t do it. Not any more. Never again.’
Carty’s good eye flashes with anger, and then it is gone, replaced by something resembling contrition. ‘Look, Nora, do you think I like the things we must do? I don’t, I hate it. I hated shooting every man I ever shot. I pray to God that I did the right thing and leave it to Himself above to decide if it was right or if I’m damned, but in my head, I know it was the right thing. That chucking the English out of Ireland was the right thing. That the Free State is the right thing … for now, anyway. And that achieving what is right requires …’—he scans the roses again as if in search of the words—‘… that we do what would be otherwise wrong in peace time.’
‘Wrong is wrong, Carty. Beating and torturing a man can never be right, I’m sorry. How can a people ever trust a state that would sanction such things? Are we to be like the English masters we evicted? Ruling by force and threats and fear?’
Disgust overrides the contrition in his good eye. ‘Jesus, Nora, do you want the British back? Do you?’ His voice is momentarily raised, and he lowers it just as quickly. ‘Because they’ll step right back in if the Treaty fails, if the Free State isn’t made to work. The last thing they want to do and yet they’ll be back if we fail. Why do you think they’re giving us so much help to fight the Irregulars?’ He pauses to light a cigarette and pulls angrily at it before continuing.
‘And don’t talk to me about the people. The fine, brave people of Ireland want peace and they don’t give a shite how it’s got or who has to be hurt to get it once it’s not themselves. No one will remember the wild things done in the name of the Free State once the Free State is preserved and the good people of Ireland can get back to earning a living in peace. And it’s the likes of me, of you …’—he points a finger at Nora as he would a revolver—‘… and even Charlie Dillon, who are tasked with doing the nasty things to achieve that peace. It’s not pretty, Nora, but it’s the way of things. I thought you were wise enough to know this and here you are running on like any other woman, like some bloody Quaker.’
Nora absorbs the insult. She disagrees with him, but feels worth every slander any man would cast at her as payment for the things she has stood witness to, has done.
She says, ‘And what happens when men like Dillon and his lads get so used to doing the nasty things in service of this Free State that they’ve no way of knowing what’s right at all any more? Killing young boys is never right, Carty. Torturing men. Lifting them, killing them and leaving their bodies in ditches for the rats and dogs is never right. It can’t be.’
‘Dillon is a blackguard and a headcase, but every nation state needs men like Dillon, Nora, and don’t you forget it. You trained with many more like him. And there was little complaint from you when it was English lads he was plugging and leaving in ditches. Men in the files you pulled and copied in Dublin Castle and handed on. Who do you think was on the sharp end of all those pilfered dossiers, Nora? Or have you gone precious on us because of what he did to your Seán O’Keefe? “Can’t do it any more”, you say? You seemed to enjoy the work well enough when you were shadowing Seán O’Keefe.’
Nora flinches at his words, but cannot feel any more shame than she already feels. Part of her mind marks the disdain in Carty’s voice and decides that it had been real affection she’d seen in his face, because only affection turns so quickly, so cleanly, to hate. She says nothing to him but does not look away.
Carty shakes his head, turns and walks to the gate. He gathers a rosebud in his fingers and tugs it from the bush, bringing it to his nose to smell. He turns back to Nora. ‘I’m sorry, Nora, that things had to come to this. I’m sorry if I’ve spoken out of turn or …’
‘Go away, Carty,’ Nora says, opening the front door behind her to step back inside the house. ‘Just go away. You’ve your work to be getting on with.’
52
‘It’s not your bleedin’ turn, yeh thick flitch of shite, yeh.’
‘It bleedin’ is. Uncle Jack went first and I …’
‘Now, lads, don’t fight over cards. One of the things my old dad told me when I were a lad. “Never fight over cards.” ’Course them wasn’t words ’e ever lived by ’imself, they weren’t, but the truth of ’em stands, in my book.’
‘What book is that, Uncle Jack?’
‘Book?’
‘What’s your book?’
‘In my way of thinking, lads. Christ on a crutch, you could ask questions for the King of England, you two blighters could.’
‘No we couldn’t.’
‘Why’s that?’
‘’Cause the King of England hates Irish youngfellas, doesn’ he, Henry? Roger O’Brien in school told us.’
But Henry is not listening. ‘Look! Mr O’Keefe is awake, he is. We didn’t wake you, didn’t we not, Mr O’Keefe? Did we?’ He is smiling, and his brother turns and sees O’Keefe attempt to raise himself up on his good arm.
‘I don’t think I’m able for the cards yet, fellas.’
‘You lads shove off for the moment,’ Finch says, ‘and let me get Mr O’Keefe up for a piss and a shave and then we’ll ’ave some more cards later on, right?’
‘But I’ve three trumps! Please, Uncle Jack, can’t we play this hand?’
O’Keefe smiles. ‘Go on, play the hand. These lads are demons for the cards, Finch. You should never have let them in.’
‘S’all right, Sergeant. Great company, bosom chums, we are. They’ve taught me Twenty-five and I’ve taught them Pontoon and we’re best pals, aren’t we boys?’
‘Can we play this hand?’
‘I don’t want to play it, it’s not fair, I’ve no fuckin’ … sorry, Uncle Jack,’ the boy apologises.
‘You stow the naughty talk and lead it out, mate. We’ll play this ’and and then you two fack off, right?’
‘You said “fuck”.’
‘Shut it.’
When they are finished and the boys gone, O’Keefe says, ‘Uncle Jack? How long have I been out, Finch, that you’ve become family now?’
Finch smiles, but it is sheepish and not at all like his normal brazen grin. ‘You’ve been in and out for the past two days and nights.’
‘Where have you been staying then?’ O’Keefe says, searching the room for signs of Finch’s bedding and clothes and finding none.
‘Well, I been staying upstairs, ’aven’t I?’
‘Can I have some of that water?’
‘’Course you can, let me get it for you.’ Finch pours water from a glass pitcher on the desk next to the bed, and holds the glass to O’Keefe’s lips while he drinks.
‘Prop me up, here. I can drink it once I’m raised up.’
Finch helps his friend settle against the pillows and headboard and watches him drink.
>
O’Keefe sets the glass on the desk again and wipes his chin. ‘So, upstairs is it?’
Finch smiles again. ‘It is. A finer woman you won’t meet, Sarn’t, and in need of a man about the place.’
‘Uncle Jack. Jesus, Finch, you’re quick over the hurdles.’ O’Keefe smiles. ‘They’re good lads, those two.’ And as he says it, his smile fades and an image of the two dead boys on the gurneys in the morgue rises up in his mind.
Finch senses his disturbance. ‘You should be sleeping, mate. Your pal Solomon, the Jew doctor, says have more broke ribs than straight ones. And a punctured lung. Here.’ As if reminded by mention of his lung, Finch offers O’Keefe a cigarette. O’Keefe takes one and a light. ‘You’ve us to mind you now, me and Mrs C and the nippers.’
Inhaling the harsh smoke, O’Keefe begins to cough and his ribs erupt in pain. He hands the smoke back to Finch, who shrugs and smokes it himself.
When he has stopped coughing and the pain has receded, O’Keefe says, ‘I’m not going anywhere, Finch. And thanks for minding me.’
‘Don’t talk about it, mate. Who minded me when I was shot? Who was the one person I could go to in the ’ole of this God-forsaken country … no offence … but you and yours?’
‘And the boy, Nicholas, and Just Albert, what’s happened with them? Was the boy all right? Is he all right?’ O’Keefe remembers leaping from the tram and then nothing else.
‘The boy is grand, and so is my china, Albert. Gone to Blighty, a nice, posh public school for the lad, and Albert in digs nearby to make sure ’e don’t get too ’omesick. ’Til things cool down. Bad things ’ave been said about the boy by them Irregulars, and no doubt the Free Stater lads still have eyes out for him. Mrs Dolan thought, we all thought, it was best he be out the way for a time. We were going to ’ave a go at the boys who served you up, but Mrs Dolan said to leave it out. That Albert needed get the boy out the country for the while, back into school where a young lad of his class should be. I’ll still ’ave a gander for them if you tell me who they are.’
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