Michael Russell - The City of Shadows

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‘You’re probably right. Maybe he’d never really have stopped.’

‘Is it here then?’

She didn’t respond.

‘It’s no use to you now.’

‘And what use is it to you?’

‘I don’t know yet, but if it’s not me isn’t it Jimmy, sooner or later?’

‘People are stupid, you know that?’ She spoke the words bitterly. ‘They do stupid things. They steal and lie and cheat and fuck. That’s all they do. That’s all they are. Why shouldn’t someone get something out of it? If it hadn’t been him it would have been someone else. Didn’t they deserve it anyway, most of them? He always said when he got to the pearly gates they wouldn’t let him in, but he’d find a way. He’d just keep his eyes open and sooner or later he’d have something on God himself!’ She shook her head and looked up at the mountains again. There were no tears.

‘You’ve kept it for him long enough. He’s not coming for it now.’

He couldn’t pretend to feel much for Hugo Keller, but he understood what loss was; and somewhere in those last words Sheila Hogan sensed that. She touched the final letter she had written to Hugo Keller, a letter he had never read. Stefan Gillespie had brought with him the last breath of the man she loved, and she was oddly grateful that he had. She had waited. She had believed, as Keller had believed, that he would come back here and find her. And now he wouldn’t. She got up and walked to the vegetable garden. There was a spade sticking into a bed where she had been earthing up potatoes. She pulled it out and went across to an apple tree by the stone wall. It was full of white blossom. She pushed the spade hard into the ground and started to dig.

He stopped at the ford across the Avonbeg and sat by the river. He opened the Jacob’s biscuit tin Sheila Hogan had dug up under the apple tree; there was a picture of a goldfinch feeding on yellow gorse flowers. It was a small, dark green notebook. The handwriting was tiny and meticulous. It filled every lined page though it took no notice of the lines. At first he thought it was in some kind of code but it was no more than a truncated shorthand of abbreviations and numbers. The abbreviations were names, sometimes addresses. The numbers were dates, sometimes sums of money. Sometimes there was a page of notes following a name, but they were written in the same shorthand, missing out vowels, often stopping a word half way through. Sometimes there were lists of dozens of names on a page, with no more than an address and a series of letters after them that classified them in some way. Keller’s shorthand was German of course. It had an elliptical quality that would make it tedious to decipher, but it wouldn’t be so hard.

At the back of the book, in a small cardboard wallet, there were several pieces of folded paper. The first was a letter. He knew the woman’s name Hugo Keller had written at the top, even in its shortened form, and the name underneath it. She was the wife of a government minister and he was a senior diplomat. There was little more than the address of a hotel in London, but there didn’t need to be any more. The next sheet of paper was a list of names. There were politicians, businessmen, senior clerics, several senior Garda officers. There was no explanation but at the end of the list was the name Becky Cooper and the sum of money Keller had paid her. Stefan knew her name well enough; she ran a brothel in Dublin. By two of the names there were abbreviations and dates. The word ‘Syph.’ wasn’t hard to expand on. Keller had treated two of the men on Becky’s list for syphilis. Next there were four letters folded together. ‘My Dearest Vincent.’ He had found them.

They weren’t long, but they were filled with vivid, almost unstoppable sexual desire, interspersed with strangely banal details about work. The third letter ended with an expression of growing excitement about the upcoming Eucharistic Congress. ‘Only a month away and there is so much to do! It’s wonderful! Your Loving Friend, Robert.’ There had been little to connect the two bodies on the mountainside at Kilmashogue. There was the earth in which their bones were buried. There was the single hole from a captive bolt pistol in each of their skulls. And there was Detective Sergeant Jimmy Lynch, who sold these letters to Hugo Keller and drove the car that collected Susan Field from Keller’s clinic. That made Lynch the only link between Vincent Walsh and Susan Field. Now there was something else. Monsignor Robert Fitzpatrick had been Vincent’s lover. He was also the man who had sent Jimmy Lynch to twenty-five Merrion Square to take Susan Field away. Fitzpatrick was someone else the Special Branch sergeant worked for. That day in Earlsfort Terrace, when Stefan had questioned the monsignor, the priest had shown only bitterness and resentment towards Francis Byrne, the follower and protege who had abandoned him. But it seemed like he wasn’t so bitter or resentful that he couldn’t find an abortionist for the young priest in his hour of need and a bent garda sergeant to sort the mess out for him afterwards.

Stefan met Dessie MacMahon in Neary’s in Chatham Street the next day. It wasn’t long after opening. Dessie sat in the corner by the back door that led out to the Gaiety Theatre, wreathed in smoke. The only other people in there were actors coming and going for rehearsal. The two policemen hadn’t seen each other in three months but Dessie asked no questions. If there was something Stefan wanted to tell him he would tell him. This was business, and it was serious business. That was clear enough from the phone call.

‘How’s it going, Dessie?’

‘Ah, you know how it is yourself.’

‘Detective Sergeant McGuinness?’

‘He’s no trouble.’ It wasn’t a compliment.

‘Inspector Donaldson?’

‘Well, he doesn’t like the fact that Charlie McGuinness takes a drink, but once the Angelus bell rings and he goes to Mass and Charlie’s off to the pub, we’ve a nice quiet station so. All in all he likes that bit well enough.’

‘What’s happened about the bodies at Kilmashogue?’

‘I told you, we’ve a nice quiet station now.’

‘I was in Danzig,’ said Stefan quietly.

Dessie nodded as if that was about as interesting as a trip to Clontarf.

‘I saw the priest there, Francis Byrne. I saw Hugo Keller too.’

‘Still in touch with your woman, then?’ reflected Dessie, unsurprised.

‘Yes.’

‘And I thought you were milking cows.’

‘You can only milk so many. They’re both dead, Byrne and Keller.’

Detective Garda MacMahon finally raised an eyebrow.

‘Danzig’s not a place you’d go on holiday from what the papers say.’

‘It isn’t,’ replied Stefan. ‘But nothing new this end? You haven’t heard Jimmy Lynch has got to the bottom of it so?’

‘If he has he’s kept it to himself,’ said Dessie.

‘He wouldn’t have to look far. I think he killed Vincent Walsh and Susan Field. And if he didn’t kill them he made dammed sure they were dead.’

‘Jesus!’ Dessie looked round. No one was listening. ‘What the feck for?’

‘At the moment I’d say it was for Monsignor Robert Fitzpatrick.’ He took Keller’s small notebook from his pocket. He opened it and handed one of Fitzpatrick’s letters to Vincent Walsh across the table.

Dessie’s eyes widened as he read.

‘I need you to watch my back,’ said Stefan simply.

‘They won’t let you do anything with this.’

‘That depends what I can put together before anyone notices me. I’ve got a bit of time. Fitzpatrick won’t go running to the Commissioner, not with what I know about him, but he’s quite likely to go running to Jimmy Lynch. And Jimmy might take matters into his own hands. I need to know where he is.’

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