The Ghosts of Galway (Jack Taylor)(21)



At the door, he asked,

“What will become of Lorna?”

I lied fast.

“She will be fine.”

We both smiled at that piss weak lie.

God knows, whatever else would happen to the girl, fine wouldn’t be part of it.

I thought about mothers.

Freud said that if a child was deeply encouraged, loved, praised, the adult would always be chock-a-block with confidence and self-belief.

Okay, Freud probably didn’t actually say chock-a-block. I mean, who the fuck does apart from debutantes, but you get the drift.

My mother was the bitch from many versions of hell. Her gig was to sneer, ridicule, and belittle.

Signs on.

I mean,

Look at me!

Was there a tree in Barna that lured suicides? Kind of a chilling thought and why the fuck didn’t someone chop that fucker down? On a completely different horror note, the elections were announced. The government was finally going to hear how the people felt about the water levies and all the other issues like housing and health they had so blithely dismissed addressing. Of course, we had the sneering jackal face of the leader threatening he would be back and, get this, in his own constituency of Mayo, he called people who dared to question “Whimpers.”

And worse? In Irish terms anyway,

“Whiners!”

I walked to Shop Street and a busker/mime was massacring “Delilah.”

Yeah, the awful song by Tom Jones, the guy was wailing,

“Why,

? Why,

? Why?”

I implored,

“Jeez, give it a bloody rest.”

He did stop, then,

“You can’t handle real talent.”

I had no answer for that so I put twenty euros in his box. He looked at it, said,

“You call that fair wage?”

You can’t really take back the money but by Christ I was tempted. I got a newspaper. It was all election fever. Polls predicted annihilation for the Labour party. Their leader Joan Burton was detested on a national level not seen since Henry’s hand ball knocked us out of the World Cup. Families who had been Labour folk for generations were simply disgusted. Rarely had a politician so misjudged the mood of the people.

Trump continued his blitzkrieg of hate and bullying. And he continued to lead.

Sean O’Casey wrote

“The world is in a state o’ chassis.”

Was that ever the truth.

On a wall I saw,

“The ghosts are coming.”

I didn’t think it was a rock group.



On hookers: It’s not the work,

It’s the stairs.





There is a line from Carousel, the gist of which is, As

As

Long

?As

One

Person

Remembers

? You

??It

?? Isn’t

??Over.

Now you might wonder about the state of mind of someone who knows the lyrics to that musical but Jeremy Cooper, the proclaimed ghost of Galway, had a mind clutter fucked with trivia.

Dressed now in a black Hugo Boss leather jacket, black combat jacket, Doc Martens, he was about one hour away from a murder occurring. He reminded his own self of an Irish version of Mosley but, hey, he muttered, “Who even knew of Mosley anymore?”

Or,

Utilizing his Trinity education, Mosley’s connection to the Mitford sisters? He’d said that to Woody, his second in command, and Woody asked, “They like, um, the Spice Girls?”

Help was indeed hard to get, but to ask for intelligent help?

Yeah, right.

He considered the doctor’s verdict, perhaps only months to live.

Fuck.

Still, the painkillers were mega and enveloped him a warm fuzzy cloud. The doctor intoning, “Use them sparingly as they are very potent.”

Oh, yeah, sure thing.

He’d gone back to smoking. Why the fuck not?

Thought back to the past year, phew-oh. Had started with a jewel.

Emerald.

The treacherous Emily. So, okay, he had wondered why a young and, yes,

Hot

Babe would be interested in him.

She wasn’t.

She loved to mind fuck and by God she’d sure fucked his. He had told her of his dream to lead a new religion, Ghosts, of the Irish fundamental past. Like she gave a toss. Told her of the elusive Red Book and how a rogue cleric, hiding in Galway, had it in his possession.

She said,

“Dan Brown lite.”

That should have warned him.

It didn’t.

When you think with your dick, you get shafted. Then Woody, the mad bollix, not only found the book but stuffed pages of it in the mouth of the rogue priest.

Zealous?

You betcha.

She then stole it from him.

Unleashed Woody on her who had a local crew beat her half to death.

What a freaking mess.

Deep in his heart, Cooper knew The Red Book was shite. A book that had gained a rep purely because no one had actually read it (see current bestseller literary lists).

Truth to tell, though, it was Emerald who had listened to him rant.

“I want to start a movement that will have people talking about it.”

She had stared at him with those odd eyes; times you’d swear they were truly green. Then she asked, “And then, what will you do when you have a following.”

Ken Bruen's Books