Bloodland

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Bloodland Page 26

by Alan Glynn


  He saw him on TV a few days after he got back, on one of the Sunday morning talk shows, Meet the Press or Face the Nation or Suck my Dick, one of those, he doesn’t remember, he was flicking around, hungover as shit, waiting for room service, and up he pops on the screen, with a brace on his hand, and they spin this . . . this fucking fairy tale about an early morning accident on the streets of Paris. But he doesn’t want to talk about it, no, of course not, he wants to talk about the issues.

  That’s who he blames.

  The guy on TV.

  The guy they were protecting and who Ray Kroner should have blown away when he had the fucking chance.

  That’s who.

  Senator John fucking Rundle.

  *

  Maria Monaghan can’t meet Jimmy until lunchtime.

  Which means he has a few hours. He looks at his watch. Three hours, give or take.

  So maybe he should . . .

  Have some breakfast. Establish a little structure.

  He eats a bowl of cereal. After that he takes a shower. He gets dressed. He puts on more coffee. Then it’s down to work. He has to concentrate. His impulse is to give in here, to let it all overwhelm him – exhaustion, revulsion, confusion – but unless he can clarify certain points, and gather some evidence, he will remain the deranged person he was on the phone a short while ago to Maria.

  So.

  First. A body found in the Wicklow hills. He locates the story from a few weeks ago. There are reports in four different newspapers on the same day.

  Couple out walking their dog.

  Remains of a body found in a ditch.

  There was some speculation, apparently, about who it might be, but no names were mentioned and no official identification was made. He keeps searching.

  These are the only references to the story that he comes across.

  He does another search, with a specific date range, and finds the missing person story from three years ago. Thirty-one-year-old Joe Macken, a security guard. He went missing. That’s it. No detail about where he worked. No known criminal associations. He had a wife and baby. A further search using his name turns up very little, just two or three other references in more general stories about people who have disappeared.

  Is it him? Have they identified him yet? Presumably when they find a body they cross reference it with their database of missing persons.

  DNA, dental records, finger prints, stuff like that.

  And what if it is him?

  Conway said this guy had seen something or had felt that something wasn’t right at the place where he worked, the Leinster Helicopters maintenance hangar in Kildare. But what specifically? And now that he’s dead – which is presumably why – how is anyone ever going to find out?

  On to phase two.

  Jimmy picks up his phone again.

  He calls the Missing Persons Bureau. He calls Leinster Helicopters. He calls a guy he used to work with who is now a crime correspondent for a local radio station. He calls a few other people. He leaves messages. He even gets a couple of callbacks.

  But what comes from all of this is . . . nothing.

  The crime correspondent tells Jimmy in the strictest confidence that although it hasn’t officially been confirmed yet the body that was found in the Wicklow hills a few weeks back is probably that of missing Dolanstown drugs kingpin Derek Flood. The woman he talks to at Leinster Helicopters barely remembers Joe Macken and when she checks with a colleague it turns out that Macken worked for an agency in any case. A further inquiry reveals that about a year after he disappeared Macken’s wife remarried and emigrated to Australia.

  It’s as if everything has evaporated.

  As for the CCTV footage in the London hotel where Bolger died, what is that, conceivably, going to reveal? And how is Jimmy Gilroy, unemployed journalist, supposed to get his hands on it in the first place?

  He looks up from his desk and out across the room.

  Let’s hear it everybody for the deranged person.

  *

  ‘Housekeeping.’

  Tom Szymanski turns to face the door, groans.

  ‘Yeah,’ he says, half shouting it, ‘five minutes.’

  He stands up from the bed, flicks the TV off and throws the remote onto the pillow.

  There’s less work these last few mornings for housekeeping to do. What is it? He looks around the room. He doesn’t know. This is Friday. The last time he had a hooker up here was Sunday or Monday. The last time he got properly shitfaced, with all the concomitant fallout, beer bottles, ashtrays, pizza boxes, take-out cartons, was . . . night before last? Or night before that again?

  He’s not sure.

  Last night he did nothing.

  Watched TV, smoked a little weed, looked out the window.

  It’s not that he’s getting bored or anything, because if you’re a vet, an experienced one, you don’t really get bored. You don’t have the luxury. There’s no longer any unoccupied territory in your brain where that can happen.

  But you have to keep busy all the same – either working, or overloading your senses – because you are fighting something, and if it isn’t boredom, maybe it’s antiboredom. Like antimatter.

  Or whatever that shit is.

  Dark matter.

  Dark boredom.

  Fuck.

  Can he stop this, please?

  Outside, Szymanski walks around for a while – up and down Fifth Ave, between Thirty-fourth and Forty-second. It’s a nice day and there’s something easy about New York. It’s frenetic and ceaseless, but if you don’t bother the place, it won’t bother you.

  He stops in at a diner for some breakfast.

  He takes a booth by the window and sits down. Beside him, there’s a newspaper. He picks it up. It’s a New York Post. Today’s. Someone must have left it behind.

  He lays it out on the table in front of him.

  Waitress comes. He orders coffee and –

  It’s really all about the coffee.

  Coffee and pancakes.

  ‘You want some OJ with that today?’

  No, I want it tomorrow, you stu—

  Easy.

  He nods. Goes back to the Post. He doesn’t buy newspapers. Doesn’t believe in them. All the shit you’re expected to eat.

  Sports coverage maybe, but even that.

  He reads a thing about City Councilman Tony Rapello (D-Bronx), who wants to introduce legislation forcing bar and nightclub owners to install a minimum number of security cameras. He reads about a newborn baby that was found abandoned at a subway station in Queens, left in a bag next to a fucking MetroCard machine.

  Jesus.

  Then, as his pancakes are arriving, he sees it.

  Run, Johnny, run.

  That motherfucker.

  John Rundle is rumoured to be setting up an exploratory committee for a possible presidential run next year . . .

  Szymanski nearly chokes on his coffee.

  Accompanying the article there’s a photo of Senator ‘Johnny’ Rundle, complete with prominent hand brace, standing next to some bearded guy outside an unidentified office building. Although Rundle isn’t quoted directly in the article, an aide says that the senator will be attending a reception in the city on Wednesday, at the Blackwood Hotel, and that an announcement may be made then.

  The article goes on to explain that the senator sustained a serious injury while on a recent trade delegation to Paris. He was coming to the aid of a motorcyclist, who had collided with a bollard, when his hand was crushed underneath the hapless Parisian’s chopper.

  Szymanski laughs at this.

  Again.

  And this time out loud.

  Which gets some looks.

  He starts his pancakes, and re-reads the article.

  What was it Lutz said the day of the incident? That the senator’s brother owned the mine at Buenke? That they were a ‘big’ family? And that consequently Ashes had picked the wrong day to go crazy?

  Szymanski leans forward a
nd studies the photo again.

  It’s well known that politicians lie all the time, but it’s not every day you get to catch one out in as blatant and incontrovertible a lie as this.

  He pushes his plate aside and drains his coffee.

  What day is this? Friday?

  He air-signs check to the waitress.

  Maybe he’ll hang around the city until Wednesday, see what happens.

  See what kind of a day that is.

  *

  Walking along Wicklow Street on his way to meet Maria Monaghan, Jimmy’s phone rings.

  He pulls it out and checks the incoming number.

  ‘Phil?’

  ‘Jimmy.’ Phil Sweeney’s voice is quiet, muted. ‘How are you?’

  ‘I’m in shock. I’m sure you are, too.’

  ‘Yeah, I actually can’t believe it. I knew he had financial difficulties, but Jesus, he was always so –’

  ‘That’s not why he did it, Phil.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘I was there last night. I was with him. Not when he jumped, but up to a few minutes beforehand.’

  In the silence that follows, Jimmy slows down and stops. Standing now by the side window of Brown Thomas, he waits. But the silence goes on so long that he eventually has to interrupt it.

  ‘Phil?’

  ‘Yeah. I’m here. Look, this is weird. We have to meet.’

  ‘I’m not so sure about that, Phil. I’m in the –’

  ‘Jimmy –’

  ‘I don’t have –’

  ‘JIMMY.’

  ‘OK. Fine.’ He clears his throat. ‘Of course.’

  There is silence for a moment, and then in quiet tones, almost whispering, they make an arrangement to meet.

  Tomorrow evening. The Long Hall on George’s Street.

  Jimmy’s head is reeling as he puts his phone away.

  Ten minutes later he’s in Rastelli’s sitting down opposite Maria Monaghan.

  It takes him a while to adjust. He’s also distracted by how Maria looks. There’s something different about her, and he’s not quite sure what it is.

  A girl comes over and they order coffees.

  Jimmy is hungry, but this isn’t a conversation he wants to have while he’s eating.

  ‘Thanks for agreeing to see me,’ he says. ‘I realise it must seem a bit . . . ’

  ‘Yes,’ she says, ‘it does.’ She studies him for a moment. ‘You look like shit, Jimmy.’

  ‘Thanks.’

  ‘So what’s going on? You made some pretty big claims on the phone there. You’d better explain yourself, because I’m not staying here any longer than I have to.’

  Then it hits him what it is. She’s not dressed for work. She’s in jeans and a zip-up sweater. And she’s slightly paler-looking, too, no sign of any make-up.

  She seems more relaxed.

  ‘Not at work today?’ he says.

  ‘I’ve taken some time off. I was due a few days.’

  He nods, delaying.

  ‘Jimmy?’

  ‘OK.’ He launches into it. He may look like shit, and feel like shit, but the one thing he can’t afford to be accused of here is talking shit. What he says has to make sense, and not just to her, to himself as well. Which it does, largely. But as he proceeds, as he talks, as their coffees arrive, it occurs to him that all he’s doing is describing a sequence of conversations he’s had – and private, unrecorded conversations. It doesn’t help that two of the people he spoke to are now dead. Nor does it help that what he got from the others – from Gary Lynch, from Francesca and Pia Bonacci – was little more than conjecture and speculation.

  Jimmy wants Maria to believe what he’s saying, partly because he believes it, and partly because he hopes the knowledge that Susie wasn’t to blame for what happened will bring Maria a certain degree of solace.

  But he’s not going to convince her with this.

  What’s to stop her from thinking he’s deluded and has made it all up?

  Nothing.

  It’s only when he gets to the end that he sees a flicker in her eye, a response to something he’s just said.

  He leans forward. ‘What?’

  Maria doesn’t answer.

  He glances around, thinking back for a second, going over it in his mind. He’d been telling her about the mine in Congo, about Dave Conway trying to sell it, about the deposit of thanaxite they’d discovered.

  About Buenke.

  And BRX.

  Clark Rundle.

  Gideon Global.

  ‘What?’ he says again, looking directly at her.

  She’s pale, even paler than before.

  ‘Maria?’

  She swallows. ‘Did you say thanaxite?’

  ‘Yes.’

  She holds his gaze, but doesn’t speak.

  ‘What’s wrong? Have you heard of it?’

  She nods her head very slowly. ‘Susie mentioned it in that text she sent me from the hotel, before she left. I had no idea what it meant. It seemed like nonsense. I mean, the whole text, it was –’

  ‘What did it say?’

  Maria hesitates. This clearly isn’t easy for her. Some of the texts that Susie sent to people that morning were leaked to the media and quickly became infamous – evidence that she wasn’t in a stable frame of mind. She sent one to her agent screaming, Get me a decent fucking job before I go completely FUCKING insane!!!! She also sent a couple to a friend in Dublin in which she said some fairly scurrilous things about a well-known broadcaster who had recently interviewed her.

  But the text she sent to Maria that morning has always remained private.

  She leans back in her chair. ‘It said, I can’t remember exactly, it was about going on the helicopter ride with some of the guys, along the coast, and then, Thanaxite baby, that’s where it’s all at, we’re heading for the blood-soaked motherlode.’ She shrugs. ‘I never knew what that meant. But it was just so Susie, you know, it was typical, she was a messer, she spoke in code, yo this and yo that, rhyming slang, song lyrics, made-up Dublin rap, whatever. It could have meant anything. Plus she was clearly high as a kite. So it didn’t strike me as significant at the time. And after the crash, what did anything matter? She was dead.’

  Jimmy nods, ‘Yeah. Sure.’ He lowers his voice a notch. ‘But doesn’t this corroborate what I’m saying? What Dave Conway told me?’

  Maria nods back, reluctantly.

  Jimmy can see it in her face. She was sceptical before, impatient even. Now she’s putting the pieces together and they seem to fit. ‘If what you’re telling me is true,’ she says eventually, ‘then this whole chain of events, from Susie’s death right up to what happened last night, it’s all the result of a desperate scramble to protect ownership of a mining concession?’

  ‘Yes.’

  She holds her hands out in disbelief. ‘Is that . . . could that possibly be true? I mean . . .’

  ‘Well, there seems to be an awful lot of money involved, so on balance I’d say yeah, it could.’

  But Maria is barely listening. ‘My God. Poor Susie. You know, I think I’m almost glad Mum and Dad didn’t live to hear this. It’s too awful. It’s –’

  And then she stops, as something obviously occurs to her. She looks at Jimmy. ‘What happens now?’

  He isn’t sure what to say here. He looks down at his coffee, which he hasn’t touched. ‘I don’t know, Maria. I wanted to tell you this, and I wanted you to believe it. That was important to me. Who else is going to believe it, though? On what conceivable basis could any official investigation of this go forward?’

  ‘On the basis that . . .’ She stops, trying to think it through, the ramifications.

  But he sees it dawning on her.

  ‘There’s no evidence, Maria. Nothing at all. Two of the principal witnesses are gone. If Susie hadn’t sent you that text, with that word in it, which in itself hardly qualifies as evidence, would you believe it? Would you even still be sitting here?’

  Maria considers this, loo
ks at him. ‘You’ve described a conspiracy to murder six people, Jimmy. Including my sister. That’s insane. Can these bastards simply be allowed to get away with it?’

  ‘Well . . .’

  ‘What?’

  Jimmy clicks his tongue. ‘Leaving aside for a minute the issue of resources, and the fact that I don’t have the backing, the protection, of an official news organisation, there is another avenue of approach here.’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘Two of the people who were at the table that night in Drumcoolie Castle are gone, yeah? Larry Bolger and Dave Conway.’

  Maria nods.

  ‘But there were three others. The ones who actually had the incriminating conversation, and who presumably carried through on it.’

  She nods again.

  ‘Clark Rundle, Don Ribcoff and . . . some old guy.’

  11

  At around nine o’clock on Saturday morning Rundle and Eve are having coffee in the kitchen of their fifty-seventh-floor apartment in the Celestial Building. They’re talking about Daisy, about Oxford, about England, and when Rundle’s phone rings he resents the intrusion.

  It’s Don Ribcoff. He’s downstairs in his car and needs ten minutes.

  Rundle could ask him to come up, but he’s not going to.

  ‘I’ll be right down,’ he says into the phone, and makes an apologetic face at Eve.

  She’s used to it. Twenty years of marriage to Clark Rundle and what’s she going to do, start getting snippy now?

  She reaches for her own phone as he gets up to leave.

  Descending in the elevator, Rundle feels relatively relaxed – happy to be back from his trip and looking forward to dinner with Jimmy Vaughan tomorrow night.

  Outside, he strolls across the wide plaza towards the kerb, keenly aware of the monolithic slab of bronze-tinted glass shimmering in the sunlight behind him. As he gets near the parked limousine, a door opens, and Ribcoff emerges.

  The two men stand on the sidewalk, traffic whipping past.

  ‘Some weird news,’ Ribcoff says. ‘From Dublin. Dave Conway killed himself on Thursday night. Jumped off a sixth-floor balcony.’

  Rundle is surprised, and shows it. ‘That is weird. Any fallout we need to be concerned about?’

 

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