Read Here Are the Young Men Online
Authors: Rob Doyle
âBut I can't!' It came out as a terrible screech. His eyes were frantic, like he was looking out at me from a burning room. âI can't,
Matthew.
I don't know how to. I really don't. I just can't turn me mind off. I don't know how to walk down a fuckin street any more. I can't even sit on a bus without thinkin about it from a million different angles at the same time. I keep seein the
reasons
behind things, why people do what they do. It's horrible, it's fuckin shameful. I'm fuckin ashamed of meself. I don't know what to do.'
The medication seemed to have lost all effect, if he was even still taking it. He was definitely not tranquilized, not sedated â he looked like the only thing he wanted now was to try again to kill himself and this time get it right.
âI know, Rez, it's bad, I know. But there's more to it than that, there are some good, valuable things â¦' I said this even more softly, trying to put some warmth and emotion into it. But the words floated from my mouth like feeble things, dying on the air. I hated Rez for hearing my useless words and knowing they were useless. I hated him for seeing everything so clearly, especially me. I met his gaze, just as the furtive thought escaped, like noxious gas from the bowels, that it would be better for everyone if he did kill himself. People who saw the truth all the time, and insisted on telling you about it, were no good for anyone.
âOh Jesus,' he whimpered, as if he'd heard my thought.
I closed my eyes and directed them away from Rez's locked stare before opening them again.
âI'll see ye, Rez,' I said, standing up.
He didn't answer. Still avoiding his eyes, I pulled up my hood and left the room.
âWait,' I heard him croak as I stepped out the door, letting it close behind me.
      Â
I had no energy these days. At work I just got stoned and spoke to no one, sluggishly washing cars and filling tanks, coming to life
only
when my manager gave out to me. I wouldn't have cared if he'd fired me. When I wasn't working, I hardly left my room unless I was going to get wasted with Kearney or Cocker. I hadn't heard anything from Jen. I thought about calling her; maybe we could patch things up and make it like it was before, at the start of the summer. I missed her. But then I would remember what had happened and tell myself that she could be dead for all I cared. Because of what my ma had started referring to as âthe Richard situation' I was left alone, not hassled about anything. That was a relief.
Then Rez got out of hospital. He'd been in there ten days. His ma said maybe it was best that his friends gave him some space for a little while, till things were back to normal.
He kept to himself after meeting Matthew at the industrial estate. Now that the intention was there â the intention to kill somebody â he found that his mind was whirring away below decks, doing the creative work while he played
Grand Theft Auto
or smoked on his bed
. Ideas would pop into his mind at random moments. For instance, there was the thought that he could push some old fucker down the stairs. Or he could leave the gas on in his grandmother's house, causing a tragic accident that was no accident at all. Or he could go all out and accost someone on the street, or down a dark lane, and bludgeon them to death. When he thought of that one in particular his mind whirled and he experienced a great dizziness, akin to vertigo: there was no limit to what he might achieve if he put his mind to it.
But the idea of bludgeoning, stabbing or beating someone to death, though thrilling, seemed too far-fetched, too outrageous. He would end up getting caught and having to go to Mountjoy for the rest of his life. No fucking way.
When
the idea appeared, he knew straight off that it was the right one.
He told no one about his plan. He brooded on it for two days, getting the details just right. Then he awoke on a midweek morning and he knew: it was time to climax.
When his ma had gone out to work â she was a cleaner, Monday to Friday, nine to five, much to Kearney's inner derision â Kearney lifted open the portal in the garage and climbed down the sturdy wooden ladder into the basement. He was wearing rubber gloves. He stuffed what he needed into a Dunnes Stores bag inside a SuperValu bag, and left the house.
He took a bus into town, on his own. He sat on the top deck and looked at no one.
He had a victim in mind. And if he wasn't there, that was no matter; Kearney would transfer his intentions to another of his preferred victim's mangy, stinking kind. They were all the same, all as worthless as one another. Fuck the lot of them.
Kearney got off the bus at the Central Bank. He stepped off Dame Street and down the cobblestoned laneway that sloped through Temple Bar towards the Liffey â a run-off sewer of vomit, fast-food cartons and half-digested burgers.
And there he was, the pitiful cunt, slouched in his usual place, all on his own. There he was, where he always was.
The tramp sat in the shadowy staff doorway of the Hot Chick takeaway, wheezing and splayed like he'd been stabbed, only he sucked on a can of cheap cider every few seconds, ruining the effect. Kearney approached the tramp and stood above him, looking down and feeling like the Angel of Death. He took in the tramp's grey, matted hair that spilled out under an ancient baseball cap with
Remember the Alamo
printed across it, and the shitty grey crust of clothing that swaddled him. Kearney's lip twitched in revulsion.
âThere's a smell of piss here,' he said coldly, his eyes on the tramp.
He imagined a camera filming him, someone looking on.
Th
e tramp mumbled something and continued to stare vacantly, vagrantly ahead, at the opposite wall of the laneway. He slurped again on his can, either unaware of Kearney, or just not giving a fuck that he was there, looming above him.
Kearney sniffed, leaning in a little over the tramp and his dank, stinking doorway.
âFuckin hell man, that really reeks. Does it not bother ye, sittin there in the filth like that? Do ye just not give a fuck, like?'
The tramp mumbled again. This time Kearney discerned the words âcunt' and âfuckers', fishing them out of the slur of babble like boots or soiled condoms in the drift of a filthy river. He grinned.
âAh, it can't be that bad, pal. Shift up a bit there and let me sit down. If ye don't mind, like.'
The tramp didn't respond, so Kearney gave him a hard shove with the toe of his boot, almost a kick. âGet up, would ye. Jaysus Christ.'
Finally the tramp lurched into a greater awareness of Kearney. He looked up at him in glazed perplexity, like someone who'd just woken up.
âWhat do ye fuckin want?' he rasped.
âNothin. Move up a bit and let me sit down.'
âYe little faggot â¦' The tramp began to mumble a string of insults at Kearney, but then cut himself short. Dimly scenting opportunity, he said, âGis a smoke.'
âWhat?'
âGis a smoke, I said.'
âWhat do you say?'
âI say give us a fuckin smoke. Or FUCK OFF!'
The tramp tried to swipe at Kearney with his can-hand, but succeeded only in spilling cider over his chapped yellow fingers and wrists.
Kearney laughed, but pulled his pack of twenty John Player Blue from a back pocket and opened it. âThere ye go. Have two. Now let us sit down.' He nudged the tramp again with his foot and squeezed
into
the doorway beside him. He put his faded green knapsack resting between his knees. He lit the tramp's smoke, then lit one of his own. He said, âI just thought I'd have a bit of a drink.'
The tramp's sullen contemptuousness gave way to fascination as Kearney pulled a can of Oranjeboom lager from the knapsack. Kearney cracked open the can and glugged down a quarter of it, then exhaled loud and slow in theatrical satisfaction. He passed the can to the tramp and said, âHave a sup, go on.' But he needn't have bothered, for the tramp had already tipped the can back and was pouring the drink down his throat. Kearney tingled in loathing as foamy yellow lager spilled over the thicket of filthy beard that clung to the tramp's flaking face.
The tramp emptied the can, belched in a way that surely signalled grave inner disarray, and flung the can at the opposite wall, where it clanked and fell to the ground, rolling to a stop against an overturned burger carton and a crushed Pepsi cup.
âDo ye want me to say thanks?' hissed the tramp, energized by the sudden inpour, all drunk down hastier than his usual rationing would allow for.
âYeah, go on,' said Kearney.
âFUCK OFF!' barked the tramp. âThat's what I say to ye. Go and shite. Or else gis another can, ye little fuckin prick.'
Kearney laughed, highly amused.
âJesus Christ, ye don't really have what ye'd call the social graces, do ye? And ye can't have much of a clue about actin in yer own best interests, cos ye can see that I've got loads more cans here, and I'm probably willin to share them. But then ye go and insult me! To be honest with ye, I'm amazed that ye've reached the level of achievement in life that ye obviously have done, with that kind of attitude.'
Kearney chortled again, this time at his own cutting irony. He pictured the TV audiences, sitting at home and chuckling in sophisticated appreciation of his pitch-black wit. The tramp merely grunted, his zest for insult already spent.
â
However, I'm the mellow sort,' continued Kearney. âAnd I don't like drinkin on me own. So I'll stay with ye for a while. Only if ye don't mind, though.' He raised his hands and put on a look like he was worried about offending the tramp. âSeriously, will I stay and have a drink with ye? I've plenty here. Or will I leave ye alone? Tell me seriously, like. I don't mind which, but ye have to tell me.'
The tramp's face had glazed over; he was baffled into mental paralysis by Kearney's head-games. Kearney chuckled a little, thinking the haggard old bastard might live to drink another day. But then the tramp's watery eyes fell again on the bulging green knapsack between Kearney's legs. The greed took over and he said, âGis a can.'
âWhat?'
âGis a can.'
âYou want a can, correct?'
âYes a can.'
âYes a can. Is that yer final answer?'
âFuck off, youth. Gis a can or piss off.'
Kearney laughed again. He pulled out another can just as two teenage girls with tumours of lipstick, clutching pink and white mobile phones, came up the alley from the direction of the Liffey. Their chatter died away when they saw Kearney and the tramp, and their pace quickened, hurrying them away to the many-eyed safety of Dame Street.
Kearney watched them trotting off. He whistled. Then he turned to the tramp and said, âSee the hole on that blonde one? Fuckin Jaysus. I'd say it's been a while since ye had a bit of minge like that, am I right? Sure I doubt ye've even got it up in the last twenty years. Am I right or wha?'
âGerrup the fuck,' slurred the tramp. âOpen yer can or fuck off back home to mammy.'
Kearney opened the can. He took a swig, then handed it to the tramp, but not before deliberately tilting it so that a puddle of beer fell into the tramp's encrusted lap. Despite being thus insulted, the
tramp
took the can and guzzled on it, so degraded was he. Kearney thought he might take it even further, get the tramp to dance for him, or have him wave his mickey at some oul one, or make retard noises at the crowds up on Dame Street, or strip naked and roll on the ground, barking like a dog. Or put his finger through his own fucking eye. Kearney's mind blackened, his loathing for this worthless life form flaring up beyond control.
âYer like me da,' he spat, though the tramp, absorbed in draining the can as quickly as he could before it was snatched back off him, wasn't listening. âYer a filthy, sickenin fuckin insect, a piece of shite, a total fuckin disease. I'd kick yer fuckin head in right now if I could get away with it. I'd stamp on yer face till ye were fuckin dead.'
The tramp didn't hear a word of it, or didn't care either way. Finished, he hurled the can against the wall, belched even more violently than before and gestured for more booze. Kearney obliged.
Four cans later, Kearney looked at his watch. He didn't actually have a watch, but he knew the tramp wouldn't notice. Then he said, âShit, I have to go in a minute. Late for business. Ye know how it is.'
He reached into the knapsack, fumbled for a moment, then pulled out the bottle of cheap red wine, which had its cork reinserted into the neck.
âI suppose you could probably hang on to this. I don't need it, there'll be plenty of drink when I meet me mate later. Do ye want it?'
The detail about meeting the friend was superfluous, for the alco didn't care about excuses, only booze, and he snatched the bottle of wine, clutching it to him like it might be taken away at any moment.
âRemember the Alamo!' Kearney called back with a cheery wave as he walked away. The tramp had already taken a couple of hefty swigs before Kearney reached the end of the lane, thrust his hands in his pockets and turned on to Dame Street, blending into the indifferent city-centre crowds. Heading towards Trinity College, he wondered how long it would take for the rat poison to snuff out the tramp's filthy, hilarious life.
The Saturday after Rez came out of hospital, there was to be a house party at Grace Madden's, on the northside. None of us would have been able to throw a party then â it wouldn't have looked right â but Grace and her crowd didn't really know Rez, so it was innocent. And we saw no great reason to sit at home and mope. Grace's family was rich â compared to me and my friends' families, at least. I never felt comfortable around Grace or her friends, with their Trinners accents and their smug banter. I didn't care, though: I would go along to her party and get annihilated and who really gave a bollocks.