Authors: Ken Bruen
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Sanctuary
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ALSO BY KEN BRUEN
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JACK TAYLOR NOVELS
The Guards
The Killing of the Tinkers
The Magdalen Martyrs
The Dramatist
Priest
Cross
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BRANT NOVELS
A White Arrest
(collected in
A White Trilogy
)
Taming the Alien
(collected in
A White Trilogy
)
The McDead
(collected in
A White Trilogy
)
Blitz
Vixen
Calibre
Ammunition
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MAX/ANGELA NOVELS
Bust
(with Jason Starr)
Slide
(with Jason Starr)
The Max
(with Jason Starr)
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COLLECTED IN
A FIFTH OF BRUEN
Funeral: Tales of Irish Morbidities
Shades of Grace
Martyrs
Sherry and Other Stories
All the Old Songs and Nothing to Lose
The Time of Serena-May/Upon the Third Cross
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OTHER NOVELS
Rilke on Black
The Hackman Blues
Her Last Call to Louis MacNeice
London Boulevard
Dispatching Baudelaire
American Skin
Once Were Cops
KEN BRUEN
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MINOTAUR BOOKS
NEW YORK
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This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
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SANCTUARY
. Copyright © 2008 by Ken Bruen. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
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Extract from
The Singer
by Cathi Unsworth reproduced by kind permission of Serpent's Tail.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
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Bruen, Ken.
Sanctuary / Ken Bruen. â 1st U.S. ed.
     p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-38441-8
ISBN-10: 0-312-38441-6
1. Private investigatorsâFiction. 2. Serial murder investigationâFiction.
I. Title.
PR6052.R785S36 2009
823'.914âdc22
2009003582
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First published in Ireland by Transword Ireland,
a Random House Group Company
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First U.S. Edition: May 2009
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10Â Â 9Â Â 8Â Â 7Â Â 6Â Â 5Â Â 4Â Â 3Â Â 2Â Â 1
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For Lou Boxer
M. D.
The spirit of David Goodis
Frank Callinan, who restored my faith in lawyers
and
Jay and Lisa Bolick, true renegades
In total admiration
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âFor my own part, I believe no one on Earth
should be so happy as a nun.'
          Dame Laurentia McLachlan, Benedictine nun
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Part OneÂ
âFor now at least, all that was to come, and
would come in its own delicious time. She
would enjoy each minute of what was to come
next, let it unfurl as slowly as she liked.'Â
Cathi Unsworth,
The Singer
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Dear Mr Taylor,
Please forgive the formality. We'll progress to a more informal tone. Here is my shopping list â I know you like lists:
Two guards
One nun
One judge
And, alas, one child.
The latter is tragic but inevitable and certainly not negotiable.
But this you already know â the death of a child, I mean.
The list has already begun: see Garda Flynn, deceased two days ago.
Only you will truly comprehend my mission.
You are to be my witness.
I remain, in benediction,
Benedictus
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I was standing on the bridge that faces the Spanish Arch in Galway city and the rain was pelting down, drenching me to the core. Despite my all-weather coat, item 8234 of my former Guards issue, and a watchcap pulled down over me forehead, I was soaked. And thinking.
Oh sweet Jesus, if only I could stop thinking.
I should have been in America â even better, down in Mexico, lying on a beach, cold beer on my mind and who knows, maybe a señorita? I certainly had the cash. Yeah, I'd sold my apartment and was sitting on my suitcase, waiting for the cab to the airport. Then the phone had rung.
Even now, I cursed myself for answering.
Ridge, in Irish Ni Iomaire, a female Guard and my partner in hostility and uneasy alliance for years, had been having tests for breast cancer. She was scared, not a thing she ever gave in to, and I was scared too, for her. It's God's own vicious joke, the only woman I managed to keep in my life was gay.
I put the phone to my ear and she had said one word.
âMalignant.'
Is there a more loaded, sinister one in the whole of the language?
I remembered the story about Joyce furiously ripping through a dictionary and Nora Barnacle asking, âAren't there enough words in there for you?' And he said, âYes, but not the right ones.'
What's the right word for a death sentence?
So I had stayed.
And every single day I was sorry.
Sorry is what I do if not best, certainly most frequently.
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They'd removed Ridge's right breast and she was now two months along in recovery.
How does a woman recover from that?
She was out of hospital and recuperating at home, if recuperating means sitting in an armchair, listening to the kind of whining music they give free razor blades with, and drinking.
Yeah, Ridge, drinking. She'd busted my balls for years about my drinking and here she was, sinking into the abyss.
I tried to go round most days to see how she was doing and at first it was a bottle of dry sherry on the mantelpiece, then the bottle was on the coffee table, always getting nearer to reach, and now it was vodka.
First few times, I didn't mention it, especially as she was glaring at me, willing me to go for it.
I didn't.
But finally, a damp cold Monday, not yet noon and there she was, in her dressing gown, the bottle, near empty, perched on the arm of the chair.
âNeed to watch that shite, it creeps up on you,' I said to her.
âThat's priceless. The last of the real alkies telling me to
watch it
?' She stood up, went to the dresser, took out a pack of cigs, turned and with sheer brazenness lit one and blew the smoke in my direction.
Smoking? Another stick she'd beaten me with for so many years.
I was still wearing the patches and hadn't smoked for a long time. Her body language suggested she was ready for war.
Patience has never been one of my strong points. I asked, âLike me to score you some coke? Then you'd have all my old habits down.'
Her eyes were slits of anger. âI think I'd have a while
to catch up with you, Jack. I mean, how many are in the cemetery because of you?'
It hit me in the stomach like a knife. It was true.
Seeing my reaction, she faltered, tried, âSorry, that was uncalled for. I didn't mean . . .'
Was I letting her off the hook? Was I fuck. âOh, you meant it, and if you carry on like this, you'll be joining them,' I lashed.
Did I do the childish thing of banging the door on my way out?
You betcha.
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I limped down the road, ready to kill some bastard, adjusted my hearing aid, then turned it off. I'd heard enough for one day.
Hearing aid, limp, you're wondering what kind of shape I was in?
Take a wild guess.
The limp was the result of a beating with a hurley, and my hearing had begun to fade in one ear. The specialist asked me, âEver get a bang on the head?' Count the ways.
Back on the bridge now.
I could see my beloved swans, so graceful. Sheer poetry to watch them glide on the water. I could just make out the Atlantic Ocean, and but a wish from there was my promised land, America.
The Spanish Arch, of course. Still intact, portal to
Long Walk and gateway to the Atlantic. Primarily, it acts as overseer to the old fishing village of the Claddagh and literally, as the line goes, âAge has not withered its appeal.' The Virgin sits atop the arch, like a forlorn illusion of hope.
I was thinking of the letter I'd received.
It had come about a week before and contained a list of people the writer was going to kill: guards, a nun, a judge and, most frightening of all, a child. A whole series of questions jostled in my mind. How did this lunatic get my address? I'd have to check on that and it worried me, not just the disturbing letter but the psycho knowing where I lived. Should I get the locks changed? To say these thoughts preyed on my mind is understatement.
I phoned a guy in the Post Office named Sean. I did him a favour a time back and he'd said, âYou ever need anything, give me a call.'
He was friendly, as always, and pre-empted me with âJack, anything I can help you with?'
I said, âI recently changed address and have got a letter from someone I don't know. How would that happen?'
He laughed. âEasiest thing in the world, mate. We live in a world where information is readily available. Not just your address â if you follow the news you'll see they can find out your bank details nowadays, your credit rating, anything.'