Robert Wilson - Eureka Street - A Novel of Ireland Like No Other

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When your street address can either save your life or send it up the creek, there’s no telling what kind of daily challenges you’ll face in the era of the Northern Irish Troubles.
“All stories are love stories,” begins
Robert McLiam Wilson’s big-hearted and achingly funny novel. Set in Belfast during the Troubles,
takes us into the lives and families of Chuckie Lurgan and Jake Jackson, a Protestant and a Catholic — unlikely pals and staunch allies in an uneasy time. When a new work of graffiti begins to show up throughout the city—“OTG”—the locals are stumped. The harder they try to decipher it, the more it reflects the passions and paranoias that govern and divide them.
Chuckie and Jake are as mystified as everyone else. In the meantime, they try to carve out lives for themselves in the battlefield they call home. Chuckie falls in love with an American who is living in Belfast to escape the violence in her own land; the best Jake can do is to get into a hilarious and remorseless war of insults with a beautiful but spitfire Republican whose Irish name, properly pronounced, sounds to him like someone choking.
The real love story in
involves Belfast — the city’s soul and spirit, and its will to survive the worst it can do to itself.

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Her group seemed comfortable enough.Those girls and boys chatted in some infinitely tolerant, infinitely self-sufficient way. I tried hating the guys she was with but I couldn't.They looked so much nicer than me. I could only applaud her taste.

Still, after twenty minutes or so, I began to hope that she liked me. She looked in my direction with varying frequency but her gaze was grave. And my heart started its business, its racing, charged-up, I'm-still-young routine. I felt all springtime, all happy. I thought about trying out the Reluctant Look.

I had no chat-up lines. Hardly anybody ever slept with me. I couldn't be called a sleaze. But I had one thing that worked.The Reluctant Look. I hadn't used the Reluctant Look for years now. The problem with the Reluctant Look was that it always worked. Always. Anyway, it was banned in several European countries. The UN would get involved. Maybe I'd also thought about growing up to the point where such artifice would seem childish, unworthy, dishonest. But then again, maybe not.

I wound up for the RL. I wrinkled the corners of my eyes, I pouted slightly, I felt a wash of melancholy descend on my features (I was nearly thirty and I was still at this stuff). Just as I was about to unleash the full ballistic terror upon her, a boom microphone was shoved under my nose.

'Do you think it's ironic that the Peace Train has been halted by a bomb on the line?'

'Wha'?'

I looked up to see myself surrounded by the film crew. The cameraman moved in for a close-up while the producer repeated the question.

I stared dumbly at him.

He coughed and tried again. `What message do you have for the people who planted this bomb today?'

There was another silence. I was staring silently at someone else. I'd just noticed that Shague Ghinthoss was with them, standing there with a proprietorial air. He beamed at me with the fauxhumility of an everyday evangel. Already, he'd hijacked it so that whatever film they were making had become a biopic. Great.

The producer followed my gaze. It gave him an idea. `We have Shague Ghinthoss, Ireland's greatest living poet, here. Would you like to ask him a question?'

`Yes.'

He was delighted to get a response from me. `What is it?'

I addressed Ghinthoss. `You're a poet?'

`Yes, I have that honour.' He smiled patronizingly.

`I've always wanted to know something.!

`Yes?' smiled Ghinthoss.

'What the fuck do you guys do in the afternoons?'

The producer said, `Cut,' acidly enough but at least the soundman sniggered. They moved off. Ghinthoss glanced back at me when the others weren't looking. It was a good look. He must have practised. I'm winning, his look said. I searched my memory for a look that said I couldn't give two fucks, but I couldn't find one.

Intriguingly, the camera crew had moved on to the group in which my girl sat. They behaved amiably enough. They weren't inviting celebrity but they didn't tell them to go away either. They also seemed able to bear with the excitement of meeting Shague Ghinthoss. I found my regard for them increasing.

After a minute or so, I stopped watching. I lit another cigarette. I found myself missing Chuckie. It would have been fun to see what that fat fucker would have made out of all this. Money, probably.

`What did you say to them?'

I looked up, startled, squinting into the sun. She sat down beside me, pressing her skirt behind her knees. I hadn't seen h-r coming.

'Whatever it was, they don't think much of you.'

I was surprised, gratified (a little disappointed?) to find that she had approached me. I was also puzzled. I had planned to spend the rest of the eventual journey back fantasizing impossible approaches to her, opening gambits, accidental acquaintance-formers. I would have executed none. I would have been quite content to let her leave unmolested. It was part of the joy of it. Her very graveness made it so much less likely that I would ever have said anything to her. Maybe that's why I liked those grave girls so much.

'Ah… well… I, ah, didn't have much to say.'

She smiled. She was very pretty. Too pretty for me, perhaps. I'd always preferred slightly plain girls. It was somehow so much sexier when they took their clothes off.

'Me neither; she said conspiratorially. What with my train of thought, it took me some time to remember she was talking about the TV crew. I liked her inclusive tone. It put us in the same Venn diagram.

'The people you're with don't seem to mind.'

'No. They're easy-going'

'They seem nice, your friends.'

'They're all right.'

I was surprised at the coolness in her tone. I was even more surprised when she asked me for a cigarette. She looked too clean to smoke. When she lit up I knew that was because she didn't smoke. She tried manfully to swallow her chokes but it was pretty clear.

'You're a surprising character to be at a thing like this,' she said.

'Don't I look like the peaceful type?'

She pointed at my face. It was only a scratch and a fat lip but I saw what she nmeant.'What happened?'

'I was moving some furniture.'

She gave me an old-fashioned look.

`I move a lot of furniture.!

Somehow I was getting trapped in my usual macho-bullshit routine. I wanted to talk about Racine and Flaubert with this girl but it looked as though she liked the macho bullshit instead.

'You read any Rousseau?' I asked her sadly.

We talked for a while. Her name was Rachel. I liked her such a lot. She looked like the kind of girl I'd die for and, besides, my heart was so full and my mind so empty. I was as nervous as a seventeen-year-old but she seemed impressed, she seemed persuaded.

At one point a bearded guy with a couple of kids passed by. He was carrying the baby but a six-year-old girl trailed along at his hip. She was crying monotonously in some well-rehearsed grievance. The man's patience snapped. He stopped, bent over the little girl and slapped her hard on her bare legs. `I told you to stop that, he hissed at her. The child cried more.

That didn't seem very peaceable to me. That was the thing about these always wondered who they liked to beat the shit out of.The man walked on a little. His daughter sobbed bitterly. She stood a few feet from me. She saw me looking at her and her sobs were slightly interrupted. I beckoned her to me. She came hesitantly.

I got out my handkerchief and wiped her wet face. Her face was red and smeared but she was a pretty little thing. `If you cry much more, you'll melt,' I said. It was a bad line but she was tactful enough to pretend to titter. I smoothed her hair down. `What's your name, sweetheart?'

`Doris.'

I didn't blink.

`Now you look nice again, Doris.'

She smiled at me. I looked over at her pugilistic owner. `Your daddy's waiting for you.'

She ran on to join him. I was no magician but I always found that children were pretty calm if you denied yourself the pleasure of knocking them about.

I lit a cigarette, trying not to look at Rachel. I knew what I'd done. I'd been doing it for years.Things that I hoped would make girls want to sleep with me.Years before I might have criticized myself for such ostentatious gallantry, such a cynical display of tendresse. These days I comforted myself with the thought that I would have done the same if Rachel had not been there. And at least I hadn't decked the father. All the while my heart had pounded audibly and I had been racked by a profound desire to walk up and punch his head in. I hadn't done that. For me, that was a significant step. I was a reformed character.

When I finally worked up the courage to look at Rachel I saw that light in her eyes, the unmistakable glitter that meant that she thought me sleepable-with.

'That was a nice thing to do,' she breathed.

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