One Hundred Names (Special Edition)
his voice was quieter. ‘She was last seen by a witness in the car park of Donaghmede shopping centre telling that lad, Brian “Bingo” O’Connell, to leave her alone, a lad who was not her boyfriend but who was in fact her friend’s boyfriend. He’d developed a fascination with her and wouldn’t leave her alone. I told the gardaí all this the day she didn’t come home. I told them countless times but they kept insisting they had nothing on him. If it wasn’t for a cabbage farmer who came across her body they never would have found a thing. They kept barking up the wrong tree.’
‘More specifically, you,’ Kitty said.
‘They wouldn’t leave me alone, they just couldn’t get it out of their heads. The only person they fully investigated was me, and I was the only one with the slightest bit of information on the last place she was seen.’
‘Maybe that was why.’
‘My friend Brick was the guy in the car park. They were so obsessed with pinning it on me, they didn’t believe anything I told them.’
‘Don’t they always look to the family first?’
‘Not like that they don’t. Brick wasn’t exactly the most reliable of witnesses. He’d been in some trouble.’
Kitty supposed he didn’t get a nickname like ‘Brick’ for any good reason.
They were silent. Archie watched the woman again. She was wringing a tissue around her finger, spiralling it till it pushed the skin up between the tissue and then unwinding it again. The café was filling up and the chef was busy behind the counter cooking fry-ups on a hot plate. The food sizzled and the smell filled the small room. Kitty’s stomach churned and she reached for another grape.
‘What made them eventually stop looking at you?’
‘When they found the body.’
He was silent.
‘She was raped, you know,’ he said suddenly, and Kitty had a hard time swallowing her grape.
‘No, I didn’t know that.’
‘I wanted to keep that out of the papers. Give her a bit of dignity. Her body had been left out too long and there wasn’t enough evidence.’
‘And you’re sure it was that guy? Brian O’Connell.’
‘Bingo,’ he said firmly, confident as hell. ‘As sure as I live and breathe. I used to see him around and he’d give me a look, a look like he’d got away with it and he found it funny.’
Kitty shook her head. ‘I don’t blame you for what you did to him.’
‘I’d do it again if I could,’ Archie said straight away. ‘Only blessing is I didn’t kill him, because it means I could do it again if I wanted.’
‘You wouldn’t.’
He dropped the bravado. ‘I went far enough to see the fear in his eye and that was enough for me. I’ll remember that look for ever. Keep it right here.’ He tapped his temple. ‘That was for Rebecca.’
Kitty thought about his life since then, family man, life torn apart by a tragedy, suffering twice as a consequence.
‘You don’t live with your wife any more?’
He shook his head. ‘She moved to Manchester. She’s with a good man. She’s found a way to live again. She deserves it. It’s not right to be living with such anger. It’s unhealthy. It destroys things. Destroyed our marriage, my friendships. Needless to say my job wouldn’t take me back. Having a record doesn’t make you a desirable candidate for employment.’
Tell me about it, Kitty thought. ‘So you work at the chipper.’
‘And I’m a bouncer at a club around the corner. That’s why I end up here for breakfast most mornings.’ He looked at the woman again. ‘Have to make ends meet. Work as many jobs as I can. Build my life back up again, as much as I can.’
‘Any other jobs going?’ Kitty asked.
He gave her that amused look. ‘Nah. You’re not looking for a job. You’ve got one.’
‘I’m not so sure about that.’ She thought about Pete and how the shit was really going to hit the fan after her supposed exposé in today’s paper.
‘Well, you make sure,’ he said, standing up. ‘Because you have a story to write.
My
story.’ And with that, he left with his rolled-up paper, leaving Kitty to ponder that, and pay the bill.
Archie left Kitty Logan at the Brick Alley Café and followed the woman who’d been sitting inside. As always she’d had a pot of tea and a fruit scone with butter and jam, stayed for twenty minutes and then left. She was like clockwork; every single morning that Archie had been there for the past nine months she had also been there. She never acknowledged his
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