Read The City of Shadows Online
Authors: Michael Russell
âWhat about his things?'
âHe'd a few clothes, a few books.'
âYou've still got those?'
âWhat do you think this is, the left-luggage office? I kept hold of his things for a while, but when I saw he wasn't coming back I got rid of it all.'
âDid you get the letter he sent you?' Stefan was watching him closely.
âWhat letter?'
The response was quick, controlled; perhaps he was anticipating the questions now. But neither Stefan nor Dessie had any doubt that Billy Donnelly knew all about the letter, and that it had arrived. However, they could get nothing more out him now. There was no letter. He knew nothing about any letter. Yet the letter mattered and Stefan knew it. Vincent Walsh's words still rang in his head. âThey won't look in the same place twice.' If Vincent had died that night they were some of the last words he ever spoke. They couldn't be explained, but they certainly couldn't be cast aside.
As the two detectives left, Billy Donnelly could feel the sweat, cold on his back where it had been hot only seconds before. As he went to pour himself a drink, Dessie MacMahon reappeared at the door. He had remembered something.
âWeren't you in the Joy for a stretch last year?'
âSix fucking months.'
âWhat for?'
âWhat's it to you?'
Dessie grinned. He had a memory for these small things. âAttempting to procure an act of gross indecency at a urinal in Upper Hatch Street, but as it happened the feller was a guard, wasn't that the story, Billy?'
Two fingers ushered Dessie out. Billy stood in the empty bar. He hadn't forgotten Vincent. He never would. The drink was the first of many.
*
Inspector Donaldson had been reading Stefan Gillespie's report for almost ten minutes. It wasn't a long report. It deliberately avoided any facts that could be avoided and it made no attempt at theories or opinions. It described the discovery of the two bodies and the bare details of Wayland-Smith's examination. Vincent Walsh and Susan Field had been identified, and although the circumstances of their deaths could not be determined, there could be no question but that the deaths were indeed suspicious. Something like two years separated the two events. Nothing linked them except the place of burial and the State Pathologist's opinion that damage to both skulls could have been caused by a captive bolt pistol. Donaldson had already pencilled in the word âspeculative' above the word âopinion'. There was considerable information about the probable movements of both Vincent Walsh and Susan Field close to the time of their disappearance. The inspector had crossed out the word âprobable' and replaced it with âpossible'. He turned the pages of the report over several times more, not because there was anything else to read, but because he didn't want to have the conversation he knew had to come next. Nothing was going to make this trouble go away.
âThe man Walsh,' he said, finally looking up. âHow reliable do you think these people are? Purcell, I mean, and the publican, Donnelly?'
âI'd say Purcell is telling the truth. Billy Donnelly knows more.'
âI know Donnelly. The other one's a queer too, I presume?'
âPurcell doesn't have any reason to lie.' Stefan knew exactly what Inspector Donaldson meant. You couldn't believe anything a queer said.
âLying is a way of life with these people. At any event there doesn't seem to be anywhere else to go. The man disappeared. He hasn't seen him since. Or are you suggesting Donnelly was involved in the death somehow?'
âLike I say, I think he's got more to tell us.'
âAnd if he hasn't?'
âSir, four men attacked the pub the night Walsh disappeared.'
âOh, yes, the Blueshirts.' Donaldson smiled. He didn't believe it.
âI've no reason to doubt that,' Stefan continued. âYour man Purcell could see Vincent Walsh had been beaten up. And what the hell has Billy Donnelly got to gain from a story like that, two years down the road?'
The inspector sniffed. The Blueshirts, under the leadership of Eoin O'Duffy, the first Garda Commissioner and almost the first man President de Valera sacked on taking office in 1932, had been banned a year ago. They had threatened to march on Dublin in the same way Mussolini's Blackshirts marched on Rome. After the ban the sale of blue shirts had declined rapidly, and the movement had faded away. But there were plenty of Gardaà whose sympathies lay with O'Duffy and the march that never was, and James Donaldson had been one of them, however quiet he kept about that now.
âCat fights are common enough in the queer fraternity I'd say. The man wouldn't want to be pointing his finger at friends, even after all this time.'
âI think I need to take the Blueshirts seriously, sir.'
âI don't know where you'll find any Blueshirts now, but you might want to remember that the majority of them were ex-soldiers who served this country well, whatever the views of the current regime. I would be careful about stirring up the past, and on the back of what's probably a pack of lies.'
âSusan Field.' Stefan wouldn't let Donaldson avoid this any longer.
âWe've been here already, Sergeant. I'm well aware that it comes back to Keller.'
âI can't question Keller. I don't know where he is. I did speak to Sheila Hogan, his nurse. But that was after Jimmy Lynch had had a go and put her in the Mater.'
Donaldson ignored the last remark.
âDidn't she say she'd never seen the woman?'
âThat doesn't mean a bloody thing. There was a foetus.'
âI know that Gillespie. Obviously you've established the woman was pregnant.'
âShe wrote a letter that said she was having an abortion!'
âYes, there are questions to ask, Sergeant, I do accept that. And I will pass a request up the line for the German police to try to locate Herr Keller.'
Stefan looked at his tight-lipped superior and shook his head.
âHe was driven to Dún Laoghaire by the head of the Nazi Party here. With friends like that, not to mention our own Special Branch, I don't think we'll hear much back. That leaves us with one witness â Father Byrne.'
Inspector Donaldson might sideline the references to Adolf Mahr and Special Branch, but Byrne was another matter. However much he wanted to ignore it he knew he couldn't. And so he had already tackled the problem.
âI understand that and I have spoken to Monsignor Fitzpatrick.'
Stefan was surprised. The smile on Donaldson's face was troubling.
âYou should have asked me before speaking to him yourself.'
âI wanted to find out where Byrne was. It was the shortest route.'
âThat wasn't a decision for you to make, Gillespie.'
âIt was a simple question, sir.'
âIt was a series of scandalous allegations against a priest!'
âI have good reason to believe Francis Byrne was the man Susan Field was having an affair with, that he was the father of her child and, according to her letters, that he was the man who arranged for her abortion with Hugo Keller. He also paid for it. That makes him one of the last people to see Miss Field alive. And he left the country within a few days of her disappearing.'
It was more troubling that the inspector seemed untroubled by this.
âAs I said, I have spoken to Monsignor Fitzpatrick.'
âSo when do I get to question your man Byrne?'
âEverything you've said about Father Byrne is speculation.'
âI don't think so, sir.'
James Donaldson frowned. It was there again, âsir', as a kind of insult.
âThe woman never even mentions his name in these letters.'
âCome on, how many priests did she know at UCD?'
Donaldson's tight lips grew even tighter.
âShe was pregnant, Sergeant. Sadly we know that was true. As for the rest, a woman in that sort of trouble might come up with any kind of story. Shame does strange things, particularly to women. She may not even have known who the father of the child was. It wouldn't be the first time a woman has fantasised about a good man being the father of an illegitimate child. Monsignor Fitzpatrick has no doubt about Father Byrne's integrity. He is a fine man and a fine priest. He knows him. The man lived in his house!'
Stefan stared at the inspector. He had already heard this. Hadn't another policeman said the same thing to Susan's father? But he doubted it could have been said with such conviction. He struggled to keep the word âbollocks' in his mouth, but there wasn't another word that would do.
âI didn't pick the questions, sir. I just need to ask them. And the man I need to ask is Father Byrne, sir. He's the only witness there is now.'
âI understand. That's exactly what I've said to the monsignor.'
âDoes than mean Father Byrne is coming back to Ireland?'
âNot in the foreseeable future.'
âThen shouldn't I be going to him in Danzig?'
âI hardly think we'll be sending you to the Baltic, Sergeant Gillespie.' Donaldson laughed. Reluctant as he had been to enter into this, it was done. It hadn't been so hard after all. Detective sergeants could be controlled.
âMonsignor Fitzpatrick will speak to Father Byrne. He can telephone him if necessary. I suggest you draw up a list of questions and we can send them straight off. If the letter is sent via London the air mail system will have it in Danzig in less than twenty-four hours. Let's deal with this speculation head on, Sergeant. Let's get it out of the way and clear the air.'
It was not often that real determination showed in Inspector Donaldson's face, but Stefan recognised it when he saw it. There would be no argument. If the inspector had, even for a second, wondered about the relationship between Father Francis Byrne and Susan Field, Monsignor Fitzpatrick had demonstrated, with infectious infallibility, that there really was nothing to wonder about. The list of written questions was an empty gesture. It meant that the investigation had already reached a dead end.
There was a mug of tea waiting on Stefan's desk when he returned. Dessie MacMahon didn't have to be in Donaldson's office to work out what was happening. The inspector knew there was a priest in it now all right; he was as agitated as hell. Hadn't he been to Mass twice that day already? But it wasn't the first thing Dessie said when Stefan returned.
â
She
was in to see you.'
Stefan ignored the smile that went with it; Dessie didn't miss a thing.
âWhen?'
âAn hour ago maybe. She waited a bit, then she had to go.'
For once Stefan was glad Hannah hadn't stayed. Everything she might have anticipated about the way Francis Byrne was going to be treated had just happened. If anything it was worse. Not only had Donaldson decided that Susan Field never did have an affair with the priest, the man would be questioned by post. Stefan had two bodies, two murders, and nowhere to go. He reached across the desk for a file. It wasn't there. He had been looking at it when the summons from Inspector Donaldson came. He looked round, puzzled, then saw some sheets of paper on the floor. He bent and picked them up. As he put them back he peered at the desk again. Things were not where he had left them. His desk was the exact opposite of the tip that was Dessie's. He knew where everything was; except now it wasn't, not quite.
âHere's an odd thing, Sarge.' Dessie leant back. âBilly Donnelly.'
âWhat about him?'
âSix months for getting his cock out in a jacks.'
âYou said. That's not so odd, is it?'
Stefan was still looking down, frowning.
âHave you been looking for something over here, Dessie?'
âYou think I don't know better than that?'
âWhy are these papers all over the floor? Everything's in the wrong â' He smiled; it was simple enough. âDid you leave Hannah here on her own?'
âI've got the report on Billy.' Dessie got up, ignoring Stefan's question. âHere. “The defendant approached the detective and said, isn't that a fine big one. It'll give you the horn.” Jesus wept!' He was laughing.
âShe's gone through everything.'
âYou know who it was, Sarge?' Dessie still wasn't listening.
âWho what was?'
âThe detective in the jacks.'
âWhat do I care who was in the bloody jacks?'
âIt was Jimmy Lynch, keeping the Free State's toilets safe.'
It was about as far from Special Branch work as you could get.
Billy Donnelly wasn't feeling great. He could take his drink but he'd drunk himself senseless through most of that afternoon. He couldn't remember what he'd said to his barman when they opened the pub, but Derek Blaney had walked out and said he wasn't coming back. He would, but he'd leave it a couple of days to make his point. The dreary, familiar campery in the bar that night had made Billy want to take the lot of them by the scruff of the neck and kick the shite out of them till they said something, anything different. He felt he'd been listening to the same empty conversations all his life and what lay ahead was just the same thing, over and over, night after night after night. And he was right. But he had drunk himself into a stupor and out the other side now. He was sober and wished he wasn't. The knock on the door was the last thing he needed, but he had no anger left to hurl at the unwanted visitor. He opened the door. Stefan Gillespie stood there.
Billy didn't bother to protest. He hadn't got the energy. He walked back to the bar and sat down. He left Stefan to close the door as he came in.
âI thought we were done.'
âI didn't.' Stefan sat down opposite him.
âTell me about the letter.'
âThere wasn't a letter.'
âTell me about Jimmy Lynch then.'
âHe's a gobshite, the same kind of gobshite you are.'