Sunday, January 9, 2011

Red Neck / short story




RED NECK  

The new Dual cab Ute was impressive. Nine hundred dollars a month for four years, it would want to be?”

The drive into town was as much about reassurance as it was for the Fish and Chips.
It was the start of the ‘long weekend’ and a blow-in, driving a BMW was stealing the last parking spot outside the ‘Charcoal Chuck.’
I did a U-turn and parked outside the Pub.

“Who’s next?” The young girl behind the counter asked. Two pieces of crumbed fish and one lot of chips” I said, queue jumping a few tourists
Positioning myself to look out through the glass door and across the highway to the Ute, I felt reassuringly to my jacket pocket for the keys. ‘Try the trousers?’ Not there. ‘Do I run across and get the keys, or do I wait for my order?’ Fate would decide:
Climbing into my Ute was a city kid. No more than seventeen; his baseball cap on back to front and thief written all over him.

“Hey that’s my fucking Ute!” I shouted.
Every face in the store turned. I was heading out through the door with my mind exploding. –“Get a description of him… Call the police… Throw a brick,” and all the time he was driving off in my Ute.
I looked inside the first parked car and there was a dog on the passenger seat. The next car was locked. The last was the BMW, windows down, skis on the roof, keys in the ignition and the radio playing “see you later alligator.”
I did a U turn across the medium strip and accelerated back past the Charcoal Chuck. The traffic sign said sixty. I was doing eighty. Passing the golf club the sign said eighty. I was doing ninety. An oncoming car flashed me. Shit I had no lights on. A glance at the Speedo and I was doing one hundred in an eighty zone.
He had about two minutes start on me and I just knew he was heading for the Freeway and then onto the Western suburbs. A steady one twenty passes most traffic. Maybe that’s what he’s thinking?
“Think smart?” One thirty.

The approach to the Freeway was a blur. Be cool. Everything comes to he who waits.
“Bullshit…” I screamed.
“Why are we having this conversation? How fast can this car go?”
“To fast… Think rationally. Any way what will you do if you catch him?”
“What do you mean if? When I catch him, I’ll tear his fucking head off.”
The phone on the console was vibrating.
“Who is it?” I asked
“Bastard…Bastard…” he shouted down the phone
I threw it behind the seat.
My phone rang.
“Who is it?” I ask.
“It’s me Anne. Where are you love?”
“I’m on the Freeway. Someone’s stolen the Ute”

“I can’t hear you. Did you get my crumbed fish?”

Then nothing……….

I have to point out that Anne is my wife of thirty four years.

The sign read Western Suburbs straight ahead. At this point he could have taken the exit but he looked a Westie through and through.

I can’t believe it, he’s only three hundred meters ahead of me and I’m gaining on him. “Slow down. Don’t pass him. Phone the police. What a brilliant idea.”
 I dialled the number and after three rings I heard a recorded message.
“You have dialled emergency your call is being connected” Two more rings and a woman answered. “Emergency, Police, Fire, or Ambulance, which service do you require?”
“Police?”
“What state are you calling from?”
New South Wales
“What is the name of your nearest major town?”
“Campbletown”
“Connecting you now sir”

Three rings and a very soft male voice answered.
“Western Suburbs Police Station Constable Christian speaking, how can I help you?”
“Someone’s stolen my ute”
“When did you last see your vehicle sir?”
“I’m looking at it.”
“I thought you said it was stolen.”
“I did. I’m following it”
“Could I have the registration number of your vehicle sir?”
“I’m going to have to get a closer.”
“That’s ok sir. Can you give me the make and number of the vehicle you’re driving at the moment?”
“Err…”
“Are you still their Sir?”
 “Yes”
“Could you please give me the make and number of the vehicle your driving?”
“I don’t know the number. I borrowed it. It’s a dark blue BMW with skis on top. He’s taking the off ramp… He’s taking the off ramp…”
“Calm down sir.?”
“He’s turning right over the Freeway and down past the University.”
“I see you are familiar with the town. If you could remain calm, follow the vehicle at a safe distance, stay on the phone and I’ll link you with the Highway patrol?”

 “This is Sergeant Dobbs of the Western Suburbs Highway patrol. What is your speed and location?”
I don’t like the sound of him.
Realities check…Steeling a motor vehicle, speeding in a stolen motor vehicle and using a mobile phone while speeding in a stolen motor vehicle. I hung up.

“Ok, I’ve just given them my name address and the rego number, which means he knows where I live.

Besides the fines, what’s the worst that could happen to me? The thief pulls up outside a drug house. I follow him into the back yard and ask him politely to give me back the key’s, at which point four of his mates give me a kicking and throw me to the Rottweilers.
Just as that thought hit me, my phone rang again.
“This is Sergeant Dodd’s, are you their sir?”
“Yes Sergeant, we got cut off.” It was reassuring to hear his voice
“I’m following him towards the second set of lights and I think he’s turning left.”
“That’s fine, just call out as you go.”
“We have just turned left Sergeant and I’m passing a concrete supply place and car repair joint. Are you still there Sergeant?”
“Yes I’m here. You’re doing fine.”
 “Sergeant I’m heading under what looks like the Freeway and theirs a roundabout. He’s turning right and I’m behind him… Are you there Sergeant?”
Silence…
 “Sergeant, answer me, please. He’s indicating right and turning into a Cul-de-sac. The Cul-de-sac is full of cars and people”
“The Westies stopped behind a Volvo. He’s getting out and trying to make a run for it, I’m going after him.”

I was right behind him as he reached the Volvo. I spun him around. I was as mad as hell.
“What do you think you’re playing at?” I screamed. But before he could answer the Highway patrol pulled up behind us. Out jumped the Sergeant.
“Christopher” said the Sergeant, with an amazed look on his face.
“Dad” replied, the Westie with a relieved look on his face.
The Sergeant looked confused. The old man inside the Volvo looked terrified.
“Christopher” continued the sergeant, “I thought you were on your way to Christian College”.
“I was, but while I was taking a rest stop, I saw that old man steeling my Volvo. So I jumped in the first empty vehicle and I followed him.”

Sergeant Dobbs tapped on the Volvo driver’s window.
“Would you please step out of the vehicle sir?
A very nervous elderly gentleman opened the door and struggled to his feet.
“Sergeant” he said, his voice quivering.  “I know you may find this hard to believe but that blue Subaru Impressa in front of us is mine. It was a present from my wife for my eightieth birthday and the Priest, stole it.”

While sergeant Dobbs was radioing for assistance, my mobile phone rang.
“Hello it’s me Anne?” 
“Anne you’re not going to believe what’s happening. I’m in a Cul-de-sac with a Policeman, a Priest and a dozen stolen cars, and one of theme’s my Ute.”
“Your right; I’m not going to believe it. I’ve just had a phone call from the local Pub and your Ute is parked outside with the lights on and the keys in the ignition.


The end

 




Athy / short story

Athy written by Mick Beville

“Shackleton! Jesus… that’s all you ever fekin hear around here so. If the truth was told, Shackleton wasn’t an Athy man at all.” Jack O’Keefe placed his long neck stout bottle on the oak kitchen dresser and started with some agitation to rummage through the drawer in search of an audio cassette tape. “Fekin Elvis, the drawer’s full of fekin Elvis” he continued, scattering the audio tapes in all directions.
          “Who were you hoping to find in there?” asked Gerry Toomey, as he casually topped up his glass of stout at the kitchen table.
          “Awe for Christ’s sake,” snapped Jack! “I’m looking for Liam O’flynn. The feckless bitch has only smothered me Planxty tape with her pile of Elvis shite.” 
          “How is Maurine by the way?” asked Gerry.
          “Hear it is…” continued Jack, paying no mind to Gerry’s prying.

Jack O’Keefe had inherited the old forty acres, along with the house and horse business, from his father, as likewise his father had from his own father.
The good times will come again’ Jack had pleaded, when Maurine tried in vain to balance the household debts, against the pittance that came in from the riding school. When Maurine had told him that she’d had enough and was leaving him, it was like his world had suddenly ended.
It was two years after Jacks wife Bridget had died from breast cancer that Maurine had first approached him in Ryan’s Bar. At thirty seven she was the same age as Jack’s youngest son Tom, a fact that in it self did little to ease the tension that already existed between father and son.
When Maurine gave birth to Padraic two years later Tom had already left the farm to join his brothers Jimmy and Mat in London.  

Eight year old Padraic snuck out of his bedroom and sat in the dim light at the head of the stair, leaned his shoulder against the corner of the wall and listened intensely as his father and Gerry Toomey talked through the drone of the uilliann pipes in the kitchen below. The tears that had soaked Padraics pillow after his mother’s departure had now for the most part turned inwards. He would wake sometimes to the shock, that her leaving him hadn’t been just a bad dream. Under his pillow he kept a book of Poems by WB Yeats that belonged to her. Although he had no understanding of its content, the book it self was her. Padraic would look at the word ‘Yeats’ and he could hear her voice saying it. He would smell the pages and imagine her in the bed along side him reading it to him.
He remembered the night that Gerry Toomey had gone into her bedroom room, and how he had heard them argue about his father, and then later after Gerry Toomey had left, his mother had come into his bed, held him in her arms and sobbed.
His thoughts were jolted and he scurried back onto the upstairs landing. It was the shadow of Gerry Toomey crossing the foot of the stair on his way to the toilet. Padraic knew Gerry’s Toomey’s shadow better than he knew the man him-self. The toilet was directly underneath the bare floorboard of the landing and Padraic could hear the plastic seat being lifted and the sound of Gerry’s piss as it hit and missed the bottom of the porcelain. He held his breath and kept as still as a stone until the cistern started its flush. He thought some more about how his mother didn’t like Gerry Toomey coming in the house. And then he thought about how grown ups thoughts were such an intriguing mystery. How their conversations, like the pages of Yates poetry, were somehow calling out to him and that if he could only reach a little harder that everything would be reveal itself.
The Planxty tape had stopped now and he could hear the clinking of bottles as his father reached into the pantry for replacements.
          “He’s not an Athy man at all so” continued Gerry from back at the table.
          “Who are you talking about now?’ Jack asked.
          “I’m talking about Liam O’flynn the piper. He’s no more an Athy man than Shackleton. At least Shackleton was born less than a mile down the road...” Jack said nothing. Instead he took the bottle opener from the drainer and opened the two long necks.
The subject of Shackleton had festered between the two men since the pub trivia on the previous Tuesday night when Gerry had ridden Jack over his lack of general knowledge.
“You do know the Guarda will be asking questions,” continued Gerry without qualification. Jack knew that Gerry was referring to Maurine and was taken aback by the brazenness of his tone.
          “What’s that supposed to mean?” he snapped angrily.
          “It means Jack that people in this century don’t just disappear off the face of the earth, not without serious questions.”
Padraics attention sharpened with the mention of his mothers name and he quietly slid the seat of his pants down two more steps to get a better listen.
          Jack thumped his fist on the table. “You just can’t feking leave well alone so.”          
          “It had to be said Jack,” replied Gerry. “The whole towns talking about her, for Jesus sake, there’s even some who think you have her buried up here in the field”
          Conscious that their conversation may be overheard, Jack reached and pulled the kitchen door closed.
          “That’s all them fekin gob- shites ever want to do is to talk about the things they know nothing at all about. She’s gone. Good riddance to her I say. She could be in Memphis at this very moment weeping over his feking grave for all I know or care.”

With the kitchen door closed, Padraic returned to his bed. The words ‘buried up here in the fields’ ran around inside his head. He tried to make sense of the words being associated with his mother’s name. He took out the book of poems from under his pillow and randomly opened it. The word ‘Death’ struck him like a hammer. He had heard his mother telling a woman who had quoted the marriage vows to her, that ‘there was more than one kind of death. There was death of love; death of respect and worst of all, death of hope.

‘Death’
Nor dread nor hope attend
A dying animal;
A man awaits his end
Dreading and hoping all;
Many times he died,
Many times he rose again.
A great man in his pride
Confronting murderous men
Casts derision upon
Supersession of breath;
He knows death to the bone-
Man has created death.

A shiver passed through Padraics body and he slammed the pages closed. He had reached out as he had reached out many times for an understanding of the text. Only this time it was different. This time the text had answered him. ‘His mother really was in Memphis… It all made sense, why she always called him by his middle name, ‘Aaron,’ and why she kept telling him that she would take him to America one day to meet the King.





Saturday, January 8, 2011

Mascara / short story

Mascara
Dressed in a light summer raincoat, her face streaked with mascara. Dina Moretti had been standing motionless in the rain soaked Salford back-street for almost fifteen minutes. The knuckles of her hands protruded as she clutched at the plastic garbage bag containing the last remnants of her previous existence. In front of her, the rusting industrial skip bin stood full to over flowing. ‘It was only fitting,' she thought, ‘that a life such as Dina Moretti’s should end in a place such as this.'  
Dina Moretti's life had begun eighteen years earlier amongst the vineyards and olive groves that were the outskirts of Perugia Italy.
         “The year of your birth was a good year,” her mother, Mejella, had told her as they picked raspberries from alongside the house wall.
There were indeed many happy memories; bicycle rides into the town, a smiling father, and her eldest brother Louie, swinging her around in the long summer sweet smelling grass in the meadow beside their house. She could still hear herself laughing with such happiness and joy. Louie had been the cement that had held the family together. Her other brother Aldo was one year older than Dina but having suffered through glandular fever and asthma he appeared the slighter and younger child.
In the year of Dina's birth, Alfonso her father graduated from the University of Perugia with a degree in veterinary medicine. It would be soon after her birth that he had left the family home and moved to Pisa to do a post graduate course in animal health and hygiene. Dina had mixed memories of her father's visits home. The strongest being the funeral. Dina could not recall the funeral itself, but she could recall the shouting and arguing, and her mother taking to her bed for what seemed like days.  
 ‘I'm the king of the castle' Louie sang out, as he had done with compulsive regularity on his return from school each day. But today not a single soul would witness his last act of bravado. A modest four feet could have reached the top of the wall from the pavement, but today Louie climbed the eight or nine feet that rose, with a slight batter, from the half acre meadow that ran out and around their house.
 
“The stone wall had stood undisturbed for over a hundred years; there would have been no good reason to believe that it could just give way like it did,” the policeman said, during what he called ‘a courtesy visit to tie up a few lose ends.'
Multiple Organ failure was the official announcement that came amidst angry embers that spat from underneath a qualified sympathy: Who was responsible..? Where were his parents..? There were further uneasy rumbling when Alfonzo returned to Pisa, and once again Mejella took to her bed, leaving Dina and Aldo to fend for them self's.
It was sometime shortly after her first holy communion, but before they had all left Perugia, to start what her father had said would be a ‘wonderful new life on a ‘farm' in Watford England,' that he had first knelt beside her bed; “el papa le adora” he'd said slipping his hand inside her clothes. Sometimes it would hurt when he touched her there, but his closeness made her feel safe and warm.  
The ‘farm in England' that he had spoken of was, in essence, a run down cottage on an acreage belonging to a private company that carried out research on animals. Alfonso had drilled the family to keep their business to themselves and not to get involved in village gossip.
“She has returned home to look after her sick sister” he replied, when asked by a co- worker where his wife was. Dina knew this to be a lie. She had found the note. There was no mention in it of herself or Aldo, it was simply directed to Alfonso, saying that ‘she found life with him unbearable and was returning to Italy.’ 
At the age of twelve Aldo was moved from the house and into an out building. “A boy needs his space” his father told him. Dina had started to dread her father's visits to her bed. The mumbled words of comfort, the feeble excuses had given way to a bestial silence. She would hum tunes inside her head as his vile breath invaded her. Later when he had returned to his room she could hear him praying, “holy Mary mother of god pray for us sinners now and at the hour of death amen.”
 
A short time after Dina's thirteenth birthday, Alfonso was drinking heavily and the house had become over run with dogs, cats, rabbits as well as the countless fleas that came with them. “I couldn't just let them suffer” he'd say.  
It was Thursday night in early November and she knew by the excitement of the dogs that he was returning down the path on his way home from the village pub. “Leave the house,” she told herself. “There is no way he wont find you if you try to hide in the house.” She had thought for a moment to take refuge with Aldo, but realized, that it would be the first place he'd come looking. As the dogs rushed to the front door, tails wagging, to greet him, she took a blanket from the bed pushed one arm into the sleeve of her jacket and snuck out through the back door.
The wind bit hard at her face as she'd stumbled blindly and in haste over and along the fresh ploughed furrows of the field that had led her to the Browns boundary fence. There was no logical answer to her direction, other than it would be the last one that he would have thought to follow.
After climbing the wire fence at the back of the Browns tractor shed, she felt her way along its walls until she reached two large corrugated iron doors that were being held closed where they met in the middle, by a large chain and padlock.
Lying on the ground she wriggled and squeezed until she was through the gap at the bottom of the doors. “You're safe now...” she told herself while waiting for her breathing to settle. There was nothing to see in the blackness. She could smell diesel oil. She could smell the new rubber tires that had been put on the tractor two days earlier. She felt comfort in the sound of the wind as it tested and rattled the corrugated iron sheets.
Her breathing settled but she felt no inclination to move. Taking a large breath she held it fondling its freedom inside her lungs before exhaling. She took a cigarette lighter from her pocket, held it at arms length and struck it alight. It led her across a dry dirt floor to where a kerosene lamp sat on a wooden bench.
She had lit the kerosene lamp when she saw the hessian potato sacks that were stacked where the wooden bench top met the wall. One by one she held them up to the light of the kerosene lamp, checking first one side, and then the other, before methodically layering them on the dirt floor between the tractor and the work bench.
She wrapped her self in the blanket and lay down on the sacks. She had first seen the shotgun and cartridges on the narrow shelf underneath the work bench as she'd put the bags on the ground. The gun, she had thought, looked somehow casual, as it lay with its cold black steel barrel broken at an angle and a handful of cartridges scattered loosely alongside. She had also felt the urge straight away to touch it... and at first that was all she did but as the urge grew stronger she took it from the shelf. It felt heavy. It felt powerful. She closed the barrel and slowly squeezed at the trigger. ‘Click...’ It was only a click but it caused a rush that touched her whole body. She broke the barrel and then closed it again. Click... and then again, click... and again, click...  
Her father looked peaceful, his face half buried in the pillow. It was almost six a.m. and in less that one minutes the radio alarm would click to wake him for another day. She could feel her heart beating through the wall of her breast as she put the cold black steel barrel to the side of his face. ‘It was only a dream' she told herself. She closed her eyes, squeezed at the trigger, and waited for the click...   
After spending eight days in the hospital wing of Holloway women's prison Dina was moved to a medium secure hospital in Manchester. The original charge of adult murder had been dropped after a neighbor told police how she had seen marks and bruises on Dina that would corroborate Dina's and her mothers claims of abuse by her father. The case was transferred to the jurisdiction of the juvenile system where she was ordered to under go a psychiatric assessment.
An application by Mejella Moretti for the custody of Aldo was granted and after a short time in care he returned with her to Perugia.
Dina remained in England where she was made a ward of the state and would spend the next five years in various juvenile institutions, of which her last six months had been spent with the Thompsons, a foster family in Salford Manchester.  
 As the rain streaked down the window panes, thirteen year old Sally Thompson stared out from the upstairs bedroom window towards the industrial skip bin.
  "Did you really kill someone?" she asked. 
  "Your hair is as beautiful as your name Sally…" said Dina pulling the brush gently through the fine golden strands of Sally's hair.
  "You didn't answer my question," Sally persisted.
"Some questions are better left unanswered."  Dina said firmly.
"I will miss you Dina" said Sally reaching for a hug. Dina pulled away sharply. "We did our goodbyes yesterday. Now be off to school with you and not another word.” Dina turned took several strands of hair from the brush and wrapped them in a handkerchief. Her eyes started to well. "Don't forget your school bag" she called out, hiding her tears in the mirror under the pretexts of applying mascara.
This had been no ordinary goodbye. This had been a goodbye that could never be followed. Today on her eighteenth birthday after walking the short distance that took her to the industrial skip bin Dina Moretti was neither seen nor heard from again.
THE END

Athy / short story

Athy written by Mick Beville

“Shackleton! Jesus… that’s all you ever fekin hear around here so. If the truth was told, Shackleton wasn’t an Athy man at all.” Jack O’Keefe placed his long neck stout bottle on the oak kitchen dresser and started with some agitation to rummage through the drawer in search of an audio cassette tape. “Fekin Elvis, the drawer’s full of fekin Elvis” he continued, scattering the audio tapes in all directions.
          “Who were you hoping to find in there?” asked Gerry Toomey, as he casually topped up his glass of stout at the kitchen table.
          “Awe for Christ’s sake,” snapped Jack! “I’m looking for Liam O’flynn. The feckless bitch has only smothered me Planxty tape with her pile of Elvis shite.” 
          “How is Maurine by the way?” asked Gerry.
          “Hear it is…” continued Jack, paying no mind to Gerry’s prying.

Jack O’Keefe had inherited the old forty acres, along with the house and horse business, from his father, as likewise his father had from his own father.
The good times will come again’ Jack had pleaded, when Maurine tried in vain to balance the household debts, against the pittance that came in from the riding school. When Maurine had told him that she’d had enough and was leaving him, it was like his world had suddenly ended.
It was two years after Jacks wife Bridget had died from breast cancer that Maurine had first approached him in Ryan’s Bar. At thirty seven she was the same age as Jack’s youngest son Tom, a fact that in it self did little to ease the tension that already existed between father and son.
When Maurine gave birth to Padraic two years later Tom had already left the farm to join his brothers Jimmy and Mat in London.  

Eight year old Padraic snuck out of his bedroom and sat in the dim light at the head of the stair, leaned his shoulder against the corner of the wall and listened intensely as his father and Gerry Toomey talked through the drone of the uilliann pipes in the kitchen below. The tears that had soaked Padraics pillow after his mother’s departure had now for the most part turned inwards. He would wake sometimes to the shock, that her leaving him hadn’t been just a bad dream. Under his pillow he kept a book of Poems by WB Yeats that belonged to her. Although he had no understanding of its content, the book it self was her. Padraic would look at the word ‘Yeats’ and he could hear her voice saying it. He would smell the pages and imagine her in the bed along side him reading it to him.
He remembered the night that Gerry Toomey had gone into her bedroom room, and how he had heard them argue about his father, and then later after Gerry Toomey had left, his mother had come into his bed, held him in her arms and sobbed.
His thoughts were jolted and he scurried back onto the upstairs landing. It was the shadow of Gerry Toomey crossing the foot of the stair on his way to the toilet. Padraic knew Gerry’s Toomey’s shadow better than he knew the man him-self. The toilet was directly underneath the bare floorboard of the landing and Padraic could hear the plastic seat being lifted and the sound of Gerry’s piss as it hit and missed the bottom of the porcelain. He held his breath and kept as still as a stone until the cistern started its flush. He thought some more about how his mother didn’t like Gerry Toomey coming in the house. And then he thought about how grown ups thoughts were such an intriguing mystery. How their conversations, like the pages of Yates poetry, were somehow calling out to him and that if he could only reach a little harder that everything would be reveal itself.
The Planxty tape had stopped now and he could hear the clinking of bottles as his father reached into the pantry for replacements.
          “He’s not an Athy man at all so” continued Gerry from back at the table.
          “Who are you talking about now?’ Jack asked.
          “I’m talking about Liam O’flynn the piper. He’s no more an Athy man than Shackleton. At least Shackleton was born less than a mile down the road...” Jack said nothing. Instead he took the bottle opener from the drainer and opened the two long necks.
The subject of Shackleton had festered between the two men since the pub trivia on the previous Tuesday night when Gerry had ridden Jack over his lack of general knowledge.
“You do know the Guarda will be asking questions,” continued Gerry without qualification. Jack knew that Gerry was referring to Maurine and was taken aback by the brazenness of his tone.
          “What’s that supposed to mean?” he snapped angrily.
          “It means Jack that people in this century don’t just disappear off the face of the earth, not without serious questions.”
Padraics attention sharpened with the mention of his mothers name and he quietly slid the seat of his pants down two more steps to get a better listen.
          Jack thumped his fist on the table. “You just can’t feking leave well alone so.”          
          “It had to be said Jack,” replied Gerry. “The whole towns talking about her, for Jesus sake, there’s even some who think you have her buried up here in the field”
          Conscious that their conversation may be overheard, Jack reached and pulled the kitchen door closed.
          “That’s all them fekin gob- shites ever want to do is to talk about the things they know nothing at all about. She’s gone. Good riddance to her I say. She could be in Memphis at this very moment weeping over his feking grave for all I know or care.”

With the kitchen door closed, Padraic returned to his bed. The words ‘buried up here in the fields’ ran around inside his head. He tried to make sense of the words being associated with his mother’s name. He took out the book of poems by Yeats from under his pillow and randomly opened it at a poem called 'Death'. The word ‘Death’ struck him like a hammer. He had heard his mother telling a woman who had quoted the marriage vow, 'untill death us do part', to her, that ‘there was more than one kind of death. There was death of love; death of respect and worst of all, death of hope'.

‘Death’
Nor dread nor hope attend
A dying animal;
A man awaits his end
Dreading and hoping all;
Many times he died,
Many times he rose again.
A great man in his pride
Confronting murderous men
Casts derision upon
Supersession of breath;
He knows death to the bone-
Man has created death.

A shiver passed through Padraics body and he slammed the pages closed. He had reached out as he had reached out many times for an understanding of the text. Only this time it was different. This time the text had answered him. ‘His mother really was in Memphis… It all made sense, why she always called him by his middle name, ‘Aaron,’ and why she kept telling him that she would take him to America one day to meet the King.





Dirty Old Town / vidio

'Dirty Old Town' Video
Cover by Mick Beville

Time Please / short story

Time please      by Mick Beville            
Every Thursday night, for the past two years, Alec Gallagher carried his pint of Stout and guitar case from the main bar of the Arlington hotel out through the foyer and into the music room.
The big clock at the end of the bar said seven minutes to eight. Alec knew that sometime shortly after eight, the musicians, old and young, would start to appear; school teachers, tilers, bricklayers, accountants, retirees and the unemployed, hauling banjos, guitars, fiddles, melodeons, whistles and bodhran drums, into a room that would see them hustling for position around three tables.
Tonight’s music session, Alec had told himself, would be his last. Today was his sixtieth birthday, an event that he had decided to keep to himself.
           
At the far end of the music room a slim good looking dark haired woman sat at a table next to a tall young red headed man
            “Do you need this table?” the woman asked,     as Alec began to rearrange the chairs.
            “You’re fine. The gang won’t be in for a small while yet,” he answered, with a reassuring smile.

As the room filled and the session took hold, the woman, offered again to give up her table, only to be reassured that their was plenty of room for all.
Alec pondered the young man beside her. He looked pallid and drawn. Alec had seen him in the hotel before, but never in the music room, and never with a woman. A ‘bar fly’ was what Alec had previously thought of him. Tonight he wasn’t sure. There was strangeness about the man and about the woman that he couldn’t put his finger on.
It was people that had attracted Alec to the music session. The music itself, he believed, was a catalyst that caused a strange magical transformation in people. He had respect for talent, but the thing that kept him arriving every Thursday and staying on into the wee hours, was the possibility of something greater than perfect pitch, or the odd occasion when the musicians would finish a tune together.
            Three miles away in the West Cork countryside, thirty eight years old Kevin Carmody picked up his friend Luke Gorman from his home to start their journey into Bandon
            “So, what kind of a night are we going to have?” asked Luke.
            “God knows...” replied Kevin. “But if ‘juke box Alec turns up at the session, I think I’m going to kill myself. I wouldn’t mind if he could sing, or had some sense of time.”
Luke looked at Kevin. “What?” asked Kevin with indignation?
            “You… you’re wailing on like some old *Banshee. You have this thing about Alec. He’s there every Thursday, hail rain or shine. If it wasn’t for Alec the
Session would not have lasted this long.            
“I’m telling you, the man’s arrogant.” “He’s an embarrassment…” continued Kevin. There followed an awkward silence before Luke spoke again.
            “I’m going to re-phrase my question,” he said, and in a somewhat diplomatic tone, he continued. “What kind of a night do you think we might have tonight?”
            “Excellent, brilliant, wonderful, you’re right, you big bollix, you’re always right.” joked Kevin, with a friendly slap on Luke’s leg while launching into a loud Banshee wail that made them both laugh. 


*Banshee- a female spirit in Irish folklore, said to wail as a sign that someone is about to die
            Back in the music room several musicians were locked into a set of reels. The dark haired woman had taken on a chardonnay glow and her eyes were firmly fixed on the fiddle player. When the set had finished the woman stood up. “More?” she called out, directing her encore at the fiddle player. But before she could consolidate her call, the young fellows at the next table started to strum out one of their manic compositions. This would be Alec’s cue for his second trip to the bar.
           
“How are the boys doing Mary?” he asked the barmaid, as he had asked her every Thursday since she had told him about her twin boys going over to England to join the police force. Mary for her part never tired of talking about her boys.
            “I got an email last night;” she said, they’re on a special course, but their not allowed to tell me where. Somewhere cold I think.” Mary’s answers always left Alec with questions, but they were questions that he felt, for whatever reason, it was better not to ask. It was at this point that Kevin approached the bar.
            “How are you?” Alec asked.
            “I’m fine. How’s the session?”
            “It has possibilities?” Alec answered.
            “I see the rock and roll’s started early” continued Kevin, taking a poke at Alec’s comments to himself the previous Thursday, when he accused him of spoiling every ones night with all his ‘Bob Dylan shite.’ Alec reacted to Kevin’s snipe by raising his glass.
            *“Slainte,” He greeted, before turning and heading outside to where several of the musicians were enjoying a smoke on the pavement.
            “Here’s just the man,” said Luke, when Alec came outside. “Tell him what you just heard John.”           
            “It was Mary behind the bar, she reckons that the bar-staff are fed up with the same old tunes and have requested that we play a bit more modern stuff
            “What’s it got to do with them,” snapped Alec. “Their only the hired help for Christ sake…”
            “My sentiments indeed brother” said Luke. “Who gives a shite what they think. What are you drinking Alec?”
            “I’m fine thanks Luke. I have an early start tomorrow.”
Alec told a white lie. He would not have an early start tomorrow, or any other morning in fact.    
           
Alec had thought it strange when Margaret had first suggested that she would like to spend some time alone with her sister in Canada. But he found it even stranger when he got a phone call two weeks later from a woman, a complete stranger, living in Winnipeg Manitoba, asking him if he knew where his wife was at this very minute, and she continued, without a pause, to tell him that his wife was sleeping with her husband.
Unknown to Alec, Margaret had met the man while staying in a hotel a year earlier when she had accompanied Alec on a business trip to MontrĂ©al. She had also for the past year, on an almost daily basis, continued the secret affair on the internet. She had told Alec, when he phoned her, that the ‘magic’ had gone from their marriage of thirty two years, and that she had finally found her soul mate.

            “Luke, are you going to come back in the music room and sing a song?” Alec asked, hopefully.
            “It’s a bit early, don’t you think?”         
            “It’s never too early. You could be dead this time tomorrow, god forbid.
            “You’re right,” agreed Luke. “What shall we sing?”
            “Something slow and mournful,” replied Alec, with a solemn look on his face, “a powerful song, A song to sooth a tortured soul.”
            “Oh shit man, it’s too early for a slow song.”
            “It’s never too early,” snapped Alec, with passion. He gripped Luke’s arm. “Remember what I said brother, ‘It’s never too early.”

As Luke and Alec made their way towards the music room the big clock at the end of the bar said ten-twenty-two. The serious musicians were all taking a break when Alec reached over the table for his guitar. A Strong loud G chord played in a slow waltz time had Luke in no doubt as to which tune Alec had chosen for him to sing.

“Long time ago said the fine old woman
Long time ago this proud old woman did say
There was war and death plundering and pillage
My people they starved through mountain valley and sea
And their wailing cries they reach the very heavens
And my four green fields ran red with their blood said she”

When the song had finished and another immediately started, Alec left them to it and headed back out into the main bar for his third and final chat with Mary.
In contrast to the music room, the main bar of the hotel was now quiet, and almost empty.
            “He’s had too much, and he looks like death warmed up, ” said Mary, lifting her head from a magazine and nodding in the direction of the young red headed man slumped in the corner of the room.
The relative hush of the main bar was suddenly broken by the noisy entrance of four young women, wearing their lime green shirts from the five-a-side indoor football with the words Arlington Hotel printed across the front, who were heading in the direction of the music room. Alec’s eyes turned back to Mary
             “What’s the story with the dark haired woman alongside him?” he asked.
            “What dark haired woman?”
            “The one over in the…” When Alec turned, she wasn’t there. “She was there just a second ago,” he continued.
            “You better ease up on the stout Alec. Sure hasn’t he been on his own all night?” said Mary, with a confused look.
Alec shook his head in bewilderment.   
             “When do you get the chance to see the boys again?” he asked changing the subject    
            “They have a break in September,” Mary answered, “and we’re hoping to get together for a holiday in Cyprus. We love Cyprus; we were there for eight days last Christmas. They flew me over to meet them.
            The small talk was starting to bore Alec as much as the session was irritating him. But he had started his third beer and was committed to a routine that would see him hanging around the hotel until after midnight
“A big deep breath,” he told himself. “Get back into the session. Get involved.”

Back in the session room he encouraged a few more reels and marches and even managed to muster up something of his old energy to produce a sing-a-long.           
            “How are you girls?” Kevin called out, in a bellowing voice that immediately focused the room’s attention on him-self. The girls flushed a little. “Do any of you sing a song?” Kevin called out. Alec had heard it all before.     “No we’re just here to listen” answered one of the girls shyly.           
            “Do any of you like Bob Dylan?” Kevin continued, and before the girls had time to shrug their shoulders, he started strumming his guitar in preparation for ‘Knockin’ on Heavens Door.’ “This one is for you, girls,” He shouted with a big grin on his face, “and I want to hear you sing the chorus.
The girls as it turned out were in fine form for the singing and when the song ended they were calling out for more of the same. He had his audience and he wasn’t about to let go.
Alec had decided that he would keep his cool no matter what? There would be no dirty looks or smart comments. Tonight was his last night at the session and he was determined to finish it on a high note.

            “Goodnight” was all that Kevin said, as Alec squeezed past him. ‘Goodnight’ had become more powerful than all Alec’s rational planning and will power combined. Alec had been stopped dead in his tracks by ‘goodnight.’ He turned and looked straight in Kevin face.
            “You’re a fucking cock-head” he said boldly, then turned and continued his journey outside.
He had no sooner stepped onto the pavement than Kevin came charging out behind him. Incensed by the insult he flew at Alec. Alec stood statue still on the pavement while

Kevin’s spleen exploded with every guttural insult it could muster defusing them all into a spray of hot saliva that would settle on Alec’s pale ‘emotionless face.’
But Alec wasn’t there. He was seventeen again. He was in the living room of his parent’s house and it was his father who was screaming at his ‘emotionless face.’ “Brian is dead… Brian is dead. Don’t you understand, can’t you get it through your thick head? Brian is dead” Alec didn’t understand. Alec was in shock. He remembered very little about the previous twenty four hours that had begun with a depression induced binge of alcohol and marijuana, and continued for fourteen hours before he drove himself and his thirteen years old brother through a guard rail and into the Bandon River. He could feel the pounding voice as it throbbed deeper and deeper inside his head.
            “What do you have to say,” he could hear, but his father had gone and it was Kevin’s voice. “Aren’t you going to say something?” Kevin asked.
            “When you’ve finished I might” answered Alec, with a blank expression on his face. Kevin at this point threw his arms in the air, and turned and went back inside the bar.
A few seconds later he came back out again, walked straight up to Alec, took him by his arms and kissed him firmly on the forehead.
“I love you man” he said. “God bless you.” He turned once more and walked back inside to the bar.

Last orders had been called and Alec was now sat alone on a bench outside the Arlington Hotel, listening, as a stone would listen, to the sounds that were reverberating from all around the inside and the outside his head. The breeze touched his face as it would touch a stone and he felt complete refuge inside of himself. He’d been here before, sometimes for a long time and sometimes for only a brief moment. He knew that it wouldn’t last, but while it did he felt bliss.
           
“Kate… My name is Kate.” Alec looked up. It was the dark haired woman. “You mind if I smoke?” she asked, sitting down beside him on the bench.
            “We have to die of something” he answered.  She lit a cigarette, looked at him and smiled.
            “You’re Alec, right? They said you were a bit of a strange one, but I never listen to all that shit, we’re all strangers to each other.” She nudged in closer as she continued. “Do you think I did ‘the right thing Alec?”
            “The right thing, about what?” he asked.
            “He’s a friend. You no what I mean? I have to look out for him. You and
Mary?” she asked, changing the subject.
            What about me and Mary?”
            I don’t miss much Alec” she said, with a knowing smile.
            “Our conversations are just small talk.” Alec said in a matter of fact manner.
            “She’s a fucking *Jackeen, did you figure that one out Alec,” she said, dropping her half smoked cigarette on the flagstone and crushing it violently with her sneaker.
            “We can’t help where we were born, sure we can’t” said Alec, trying to avoid going to where the conversation was heading.
            “Did she mention her boys?”
            Alec ignored her question. There followed an awkward silence before Kate linked her arm under his and continued.
            “I like a glass of wine occasionally Alec. And just occasionally I talk too much. But who gives a shit… Mary’s little Jack’s are over there, at this very moment and there training them Brit bastards to come over here and murder our boys...”
            “Shush…” said Alec. “Enough talking, let’s go back inside for the anthem.
As the anthem was being sung, the hands on the big clock, at the end of the bar, were pointing to twelve o’clock.
            “Goodnight everybody,” Mary called when the anthem finished “everyone outside, now…Time please.”

Alec locked his guitar in the boot of his car and walked around the back of the Hotel to where the die-hards were continuing the music session in the beer garden.
            “What was that all about with Kevin earlier?” Luke asked, as Alec sat down on the wooden bench next to him. Alec shrugged his shoulders.    
            “Nothing worth talking about,” he answered, with a smile, and then continued to watch the spectacle under the neon light, as two of the girls in the lime green shirts sent the others into fits of laughter with their antics and dancing to Luke’s rendition of ‘Satisfaction.’
Kate and the red headed man came and sat on the bench next to Alec. The red headed mans face was ashen. He was tugging at Kate’s arm in an effort to get her to leave. She ignored him.





 *Jackeen: A derogatory slang term for an Irish born person, usually from Dublin, who has favourable leanings toward the English influences in Ireland. It literally translates (small Jack)

            “Play some more on that thing,” she said, pointing to a fiddle that was laid out like a corpse inside an open case on the top of the table. The red headed man stood up abruptly and took off with a stagger down the cement path before turning into a laneway at the back of the hotel “He’s a friend,” she said, looking directly at Alec. Alec made no comment. “Am I a bad person?” she asked.
            “Probably,” said Alec. “But he’ll get over it.”
            “He wont,” she said, with a snarl. And before the fiddle had played its last note the woman had stood up and without further comment followed the red headed mans foot steps down the path and away into the laneway.    


The first rain drops had crashed ominously on the surface of the plastic table and by the time Alec had reached the sanctuary of his car the heavens had opened. He turned on his windscreen wipers and watched across the car park to where the dimly lit figures of Luke and Kevin struggled frantically to unlock their car. He watched as their tail lights came on. He continued watching through the sheets of rain as their tail lights left the car park, crossed over the bridge and then finally he watched them fade to nothing.
He turned the car radio on. Then off again. He sat listening in the darkness. The rain had become all consuming. Close to the deluge, and yet untouched, he felt good; a second skin, a cacoon, a canvas tent in a blizzard, a womb.
His tranquillity was suddenly shattered by a wailing cry that sent a chill through his body.
            “Open the door; I’m drowning” a voice called. He could see Brian’s desperate eyes, but there was no time. He had to save himself.  “Open the door,” continued the voice. It was Kate’s voice. He unlocked the passenger door. “Jesus Alec, what were you, asleep or something?” she asked, while switching the cars interior light on and turning the rear view mirror to check her appearance.
There followed a long silence until he spoke again.
            “You have a strange way of appearing from out of nowhere,” he commented “and you disappear just as quickly.
            “Well you can blame my cousins ‘the little people’ for that” she said, in a ‘dead pan’ delivery, while continuing to preen her self in the mirror.
            “Don’t get comfortable.”          
            “Why?”
            “I have to be somewhere” he replied, staring out into the darkness        
            “Maybe you could drive me at the top of the road, if it’s not too much trouble” she suggested while pushing down the locking button on her door.
            The rain had started to ease somewhat as she gave directions that took them over the bridge, then left along the river before turning right to climb the hill.
            “Just here” she said, indicating an area of dimly lit ground that was some distance from the houses. “Turn the car around,” she continued without explanation. Alec turned and parked on the opposite side of the road. He waited for her to leave.           
            “You really should leave now. I have to be somewhere,” he repeated.
            “You know that’s not going to happen, you do know that, don’t you.”
            “Please…” he begged. “It’s been some kind of a mistake, please just go.”
            “I can’t... This is what I came for Alec,” She said reaching out her hand to him. 
           
He was aware of the safety railing that was ahead of him but despite this he kept his eyes firmly focused on the lights of the barge that sat moored alongside the far river bank. With his foot pressing the accelerator hard to the floor he could see on out through the flickering lights, to a figure moving on board the barge and he wondered quite calmly at what would keep a soul awake at such an ungodly hour.
__________



“Good morning. Its seven o’clock and you’re listening to RTE Radio News.
Guarda were called out to two separate incidents in West Cork overnight. A middle aged man is believed to have drowned when the car he was driving crashed through a guard rail before sinking in the River at Bandon. Less than a half a mile away a second body, that of a younger man was discovered in a laneway behind a popular Bandon Hotel. The Guarda are yet to identify either of the two men and will await the outcome of the coroners report.”
THE END