The Price of Blood
semi-d as a fate worse than death. But those days were gone, and young couples on good salaries were now living cheek by jowl with people they used to cross the city to avoid, and they were getting a crash course in the social policies that had left many of those people disaffected and alienated, confined to bleak estates decimated by drug abuse and criminality.
    Still, for all Leonard’s south-county Dublin brashness, at least he was trying to do something positive about it. Many liberals who’d be appalled by his views had the luxury of simply not having to confront the problem: they lived safely in the very enclaves he and his wife came from and dreamed of returning to, semidetached paradise lost. Who knows, if Leonard made it back there, maybe he could afford to be a liberal too.
    "So what do you want, photographs? Video? I can set up a pinhole camera and record the comings and goings across the way."
    "What if they see it? They’ll target us," Annalise said, all irony past.
    "They won’t see it," I said. "It’s about the size of a roll of coins, and it’s wireless. I can hide it in the trellis. Connect a receiver to your VCR, you can record all the comings and goings. You’d need to keep track of the tapes yourselves, unless you want me to move into your living room. But I’ll review them with you, and we can isolate any incidents of dumping where we can make out faces or registration plates or whatever, then have those sections transferred to disc."
    Leonard nodded, his eyes widening.
    "And that would be evidence, like CCTV," he said.
    "Something like," I said. "Chances are the council might recognize faces if they’re council tenants; if it’s kids, we can try the local schools."
    "And then?" Annalise said, her tone skeptical again; already the wine that had briefly lit her up was darkening her mood; her reddening eyes were squinting, as if hurt by the light. "We match a list of names from faces and/or registration plates, we present it to the Guards and the council and then what? We sit back and wait until fuck all happens, that’s what, until a rap on the knuckles is administered. And five minutes later the Butlers or whoever it is’ll be tossing cider bottles out their windows. Or through ours. And we’ll still be here because we can’t afford to fucking move. If it wasn’t for Mummy, we wouldn’t even have been able to buy
this
house."
    She didn’t have to direct this at Leonard for him to take it like a slap in the face; he blinked hard and grimaced, smarting from the rebuke. When he spoke, it was in that careful, steady, neutral kind of voice people who live with alcoholics often use, the kind of voice it’s difficult to infer any judgment from, however self-loathing the drinker.
    "I don’t know what I’ll do with the list of names. Maybe I’ll take an ad out in the local paper. Maybe I’ll nail it to the church door. I don’t know. What I can’t do is nothing."
    His petite wife rolled her eyes at this, and drained her glass again, and smiled in a knowing way at me, inviting me to join her in her contempt for her husband, and asking, in that pouty, lip-moistening way unhappily married women who drank often had, for something else: not sex, or even the promise of it, but sexual endorsement, the reassurance that I would if she wanted me to, even though we both knew all she really wanted was a good drink. But I didn’t want to give her that or any reassurance: I didn’t like the way she had humiliated Leonard in front of me, and I didn’t like the way she mocked his attempts to better their situation. I didn’t even like the way she drank, and I was no one to talk.
    I had initially thought Joe Leonard was one of those arrogant rugby guys, born to privilege and temporarily light on dough, unable to fathom how a successful school’s rugby career hadn’t led to greater things. But now he seemed more like one of the also-rans, the lads who cheered the winners from the sidelines, the
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