The Magdalen Martyrs

The Magdalen Martyrs Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Magdalen Martyrs Read Online Free PDF
Author: Ken Bruen
my husband.”
    “It’s direct.”
    She laughed, said,
    “You have a phone number, if I decide to confess?”
    “Bailey’s Hotel.”
    “That’s where you live?”
    “Yeah.”
    “Well, Jack Taylor, you might not be very good at your job, but you have a certain style.”
    I’d reached the front door when she added,
    “You decide to go back on the booze, give me a call.”
    I gave her my best blank look, as if I’d no idea what she meant. She gave a nasty smile, said,
    “I know the signs, and believe me, you’ll be back sooner than you think. It’s not really
if
you’ll drink, only when.”
    “Screw you, lady.”
    “You wish.”
    And she banged the door in my face. I hated that she was right on both counts.

 
    “I loved my friends so much I was in love with them, wanted them to be in love
with me. But since life isn’t like that, this completely shafted any chance of a
significant relationship for longer than I care to think about.”
    John Ramster,
Ladies’ Man
    The following Monday, a second year student got a cappuccino from the deli. It was one of those crisp fine days, not a cloud in the sky. You could almost touch hope in the air. People’s spirits lightened and you’d get a howyah, a smile from strangers.
    That kind of day.
    The student sat on a bench at the Square, sipped at the coffee. A stray wino would approach and ask for
    “Price of a cup of tea, sur.”
    But it wasn’t a serious beg, more from habit than necessity. No intimidation in it. Two non-Europeans asked for directions to Social Security. At noon, the bells rang for the Angelus. Down near the Great Southern, two workmen stopped their labours and blessed themselves. That is a rare sight. Not that they ceased working but that they observed the Angelus.
    Around 12.15 p.m., a man approached, stood for a second behind the student. Then he took out a gun, put it to the base of the student’s head and pulled the trigger. He then turned on his heel and walked towards the top of the Square . . . and dis-appeared.
    As he walked away, he threw the wrapper from his Juicy Fruit on the road.
    The guards weren’t appealing for witnesses. They had far too many.
    All contradictory.
    Descriptions ranged from, tall, short, fat, thin.
    He had, variously, long hair, black hair, no hair.
    Was wearing, a suit, leather jacket, wax jacket, raincoat.
    But definitely, old, young, middle-aged.
    A photofit issued fit half the male population and wasn’t dissimilar to a few women.
    Superintendent Clancy intoned,
    “This is a horrendous, heinous crime. The gardai will not cease until the perpetrator is apprehended.”
    He rambled on about lawlessness, a crisis in society, drugs and a range of vaguely related topics.
    Concluded with,
    “The gardai are pursuing a definite line of inquiry.”
    In other words, they had zilch.
    I had gone to ground with a book.
    Here’s the lengthy title:
    Movie Wars: How Hollywood and the media conspire to limit what films we can see.
    By Jonathan Rosenbaum.
    I was well into it, had almost forgotten how badly I wanted a drink. The phone went. I picked up, said,
    “Yeah.”
    “Jack, it’s Bill.”
    “Hi, Bill.”
    “I’m calling for a progress report.”
    “Oh.”
    “So, what progress?”
    “Inquiries are in hand.”
    Bitter laugh, then,
    “You sound like a guard.”
    “Old habits, eh?”
    “Except I don’t want to hear that shite.”
    “It takes time, Bill.”
    “And who told you to involve that religious fuck, Flood?”
    “Nobody told me. You want to find someone, he’s the best.”
    “I’m telling you, keep him the fuck outa my affairs.”
    I was getting tired of this, said,
    “What are you going to do, fire me?”
    I could hear his intake of breath, then,
    “Don’t get fucking smart with me, Jack. You definitely don’t want to do that.”
    “I don’t take threats well, Bill.”
    “Time you learned.”
    Click.
    I tried to go back to the book, but the spell was gone. What I most wanted to do was to
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