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“That’s just it, Liam. I’m here to find Garry Randolph’s burial place.”

The man nodded. “You two did a damn fine job of disrupting the IRA’s agenda to drive out English rule years ago. The peace was hard-bought, but it finally came and is many years old. And so did the penalty for your actions then come due at last here on our common soil. We are not inclined to exact further punishment on ye at this late date.”

“Apparently there are hold-outs,” Max noted.

Kathleen smiled. “Like rock ‘n’ roll, the IRA never forgets.”

Liam shook his head and paid her attention for the first time. “Kathleen, Kathleen, Kathleen, your nerve is as storied as your beauty, but we are all older now and cherishing different goals, different means. I can’t say which is the greater shock for my old eyes. The sight of you again, or the sight of you accompanied by this misguided American traitor to our cause.”

“He forced me back here,” she said.

Liam nodded. “Politics does indeed make strange bedfellows, although I believe you and he are not new to this truth. I have never known in that case whether you were following your IRA head or your cold, cold heart, Kathleen, sleeping with the enemy, but the result was to make us a formidable foe for years and cost us dearly before the peace.”

“I didn’t come to Northern Ireland an enemy,” Max said. “I was a sympathizer. And the dearly won peace now,” he added, “means nothing if the lingering past is not forgiven, although not forgotten.”

“Eloquent,” Liam said, then again repeated himself. “D’ye have an ache to commit suicide, Michael Kinsella? We still have old business with you and will do it privately.”

Liam nodded at his men. Two rose and swept Kathleen into a private room. Both she and Max started to object, but the movement was so swift that dissent was an afterthought.

Max wondered if the former IRA members wanted to spare Kathleen witnessing any brutal revenge they had planned, little knowing how much she’d rejoice in his maltreatment and bad luck.

Liam sighed and kept center stage, pacing in front of his patch of bar.

“Yes, the peace is here and holding, with exceptions. Too much blood has been shed,” he said. “We don’t hold a grudge against Randolph. He was a professional agent, he operated in Germany and Spain as well as Northern Ireland. You, on the other hand, Michael Kinsella, were a tourist and a turncoat, an Irish lad from America who betrayed us. At least you learned the taste for revenge we Irish have cultivated after centuries of brutal English rule.”

“So this is a kangaroo court,” Max said, looking around.

“Are you not going to plead mercy because of the stupidity of your youth?” Liam asked.

Max shook his head. “I did what I did to the best of my lights then and would do it again.”

“Yet now you know your cousin did not die in the bombing, did in fact join us later.”

“So you’ve been following us. Sean joined you in making the peace. And even though Deirdre saved Sean’s life, other innocents perished in that explosion. They deserved justice too.”

“We called in a warning. Whoever answered at O’Toole’s pub couldn’t hear in the hub-bub, put down the receiver and forgot it, thus tied up the line.”

“You had cars.”

“The time was tight and the traffic heavy.”

“You had feet, as some in the pub probably lost.”

“We were too late. During the peace negotiations, it was recognized the warning was intended and went awry. The men you and Randolph fingered for the job had their life sentences commuted at that time.”

“So they’re free, Sean is alive, and Garry is dead.”

“Yes, Garry Randolph is dead.”

Liam stood aside from his place against the polished wood bar.

Max stared past him, confused to see two empty pint glasses and a tall brass vase.

Not a vase, an urn.

“We’ve been expecting you. You’re not one to let go, that’s for sure.”

“You cremated him out of revenge?”

“Respect. His death was not intended. Yet he was an agent who acted against a free Ireland. We’d never put him in Irish soil for eternity.”

Max bit the inside of his cheek to keep from saying, doing something foolhardy, but regret for leaving Gandolph’s body behind still burned his soul like rock salt would sear the raw place inside his mouth.

Liam narrowed his unsmiling Irish eyes. “Swear his ashes will go anywhere except the soil below and the air above Ireland, and you can take them away.”

“I swear,” Max said.

“Then your work here is done.”

Max stepped to the bar, picked up the urn. It was lighter than he expected. Holding it gave him no self-defense moves.

The man guarding the door stepped aside. Max could carry Gandolph into the misty Irish night and back to…wherever a homeless man from Las Vegas would go.

“Hotheads remain among us,” Liam said. “We intended to get information, not to take a life, even yours.”

Max laughed wearily. “Sorry not to oblige you.”

“That could be rescinded at any time. We still want information.”

“About what? I’m retired. At least I am when I’m left alone. The two thugs you sent to find me in Las Vegas a couple of years ago forced me to leave for a while and then they beat up my girlfriend, a true threat to noble Irish manhood weighing in at one hundred pounds.”

“She must not have said anything.”

“She didn’t know where I was.” Max thought. “I don’t think she’d have said anything if she did. Stubborn as a Skye terrier and as good at rooting out vermin.”

Liam chuckled. “Her I’d like to meet. Sorry to inform you that you are not the high-value target you’d like to think yourself. We sent no men to find you, or to Las Vegas, although we may send some now.”

“What about the rogue branch?”

“Too lazy. They like to vent a bit o’ venom locally. We have a new benevolent mission.”

“I’ll believe that when I see it.”

“You don’t want to stay,” said a man from the fringes. Flanagan, Max remembered.

Liam nodded. “This is a kangaroo court, as you call it. Only you’re not the one on trial.”

“Maybe I don’t want to go,” Max said slowly.

“Watch and pray, then,” Liam said, consciously quoting Jesus’s instructions to his disciples in the Garden of Gethsemane, where Judas would shortly finger him for the Romans.

Max grew even more uneasy. That reference evoked brutality, betrayal and destiny. He eyed the handsome urn. Someone had respected Garry.

Would he be forced to choose between getting Gandolph or Kathleen out of here before the night was over?

37

Ghost Stalking

Matt looked with loathing at the worn baseball cap on the Probe’s passenger seat, then picked it up and pulled the grimy sweatband down over his clean blond hair.

The right “wrong” hat was the quickest and best disguise a man could manage. Matt had figured that out since he’d started tailing the guy from the Lucky Stars nudie bar. The hat and a beater car.

So far it had worked, but he needed to keep Woodrow Wetherly ignorant of his plans. When he’d started driving the Probe exclusively, Woody immediately had accepted Matt’s explanation that the Jag was “in the shop”.

“Knew a guy once, Matt. Mobster. Drove the pettiest Jaguar in Mafia-black you ever would see. Like a grand piano on wheels. Had two of ’em. Exact year, exact model. You know why?”

Matt had waited for the old guy’s punch line. “One to drive while the other one was in the shop.”

Matt then had added some rueful ha-ha’s to Woody’s wheezing laughter. “I tell you, Matt. Next time someone offers you a gift horse, hold out for a spare.”

“Great advice,” Matt had said, bracing for the sure shoulder clap. You’d think Wetherly had lived in Minnesota.