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Linehan's Trip, Page 2

Bryan Murphy


  Now that emigration, as well as immigration, was banned, it was starting to be an enticing prospect, better than killing people you felt no hatred for. And this job would give her some capital, if she brought it off.

  Daria snapped out of her reverie. There might be food at the station, but railway food was rarely nutritious at the best of times, and these were the worst of times.

  She headed south, opposite the post office depot attached to the station. It still had a few battered vans loading and unloading. No shops or eating places on that side. On her side of the street, Daria passed a couple of open establishments, one selling bolts of fabric, the other doing good business in folk remedies. Then she caught a whiff of bread and turned off the main street to track it. On the corner of the side street and a small, harmonious square lined with abandoned cars was a baker’s. The door examined her irises and let her in. Daria had not seen so much bread in one place since she had left Italy. A porcelain dog on the counter solicited donations to the PSPCA. Daria slid a handful of neuros into its whining mouth. She was allocated half a dozen rolls. After the door let her out, she crossed into the heart of the small square and sat on a concrete bench to eat and plan.

  The Paris-like elegance of the square’s buildings was tarnished by the charred ruins of the church opposite her. What was it? San Salvario? No, there was a plaque: St. Peter and St. Paul, she read. That rang a bell. She ran her memory files. Yes, San Salvario was the name of the area, the former immigrants’ ghetto. This was Largo Saluzzo, and the church was where, five years earlier, some of the last remaining immigrants in the city had taken refuge from the Greenshirts’ pogrom. Although it had got rid of one of its “turbulent priests” in the blaze, the Roman Catholic Church had kicked up one hell of a fuss. It had refused to rebuild the church, out of respect for the victims, and for once the Padanian Government had been shamed into inaction. Daria stared disconsolately at the blackened stone. The bread was stale.

  She left it for the crows, moving out of the square, along the same side street as it continued past the church, deeper into San Salvario. When it gave onto a larger road, she turned left. Ahead of her, there should be a market. Yes, there it was, sheltering under a rusty metal canopy, on the underside of which items of fresh produce had been painted with twee end-of-the-century optimism. There was even a lobster. But the few stalls huddled together like orphans in the vast space of the market square held precious little to eat. Not unless you had a penchant for raw cabbage, potatoes or turnips, or had somewhere to cook them.

  Daria moved towards one of the stalls, calculating whether she had enough loose neuros to buy some cabbage. A hand tugged at her cassock. Reflexively, she swivelled in its direction and kicked the beggar hard in his pallid face. The man toppled silently from his cart. For a moment, the stumps of his legs waved like tentacles. As they subsided, Daria leaned over him and began lashing out at his torso, first with one foot, then with the other, as her fury mounted. She slipped a hand inside her cassock and reached for the knife strapped to her thigh. She had thought the beggar was groping for that. A wave of nausea rose from the pit of her stomach, filled her throat and clouded her brain. She stopped, and pulled in deep draughts of the clean city air to clear her head.

  What had happened to her training, she wondered, if a casual encounter could leave her ready to cut someone who was not a target and, moreover, when she was on the way to a job?

  Her head cleared. She turned away from the prostrate beggar, who was moaning softly, and strode out of the market. The stallholders and their few customers avoided looking at her.

  Never mind the food, it was time to get the job done.

  Past another looming church, this one fully intact, Daria came to a an intersection with a major road that ran between the station and the river Po. Ahead of her, the road was blocked by works intended to get the underground railway running again. A big nuclear waste deal with Pershi’a had provided the funds.

  Ever since Roman times, circuses had proved more popular than bread, especially among those in society who could afford cake. The thought disturbed Daria’s stomach juices, so she cut it off and turned left, keeping alert, moving in the direction of the river.

  The place she was looking for was well marked. A large gaudily painted sign proclaimed, “Disney Po Casino”. The pariah state felt no need to observe trademark copyright. Above the entrance door, another hand-made sign enticed: “‘l dubi ‘d vosti Neuro” – Double Your Money - in the local dialect. The management really seemed to be thinking globally and acting locally.

  The door checked Daria and let her in. You could take a knife anywhere, if it was made of plastic. Daria took it to the saloon bar. She chose a table from which she could observe the entrance. The hour was early, so the place was not full. Casinos were a growth industry, a great way of laundering dirty money. Every town had one; there would be more if only the owners could find staff or subvert the ban on the transfer of robot technology.

  There were 57 varieties of water on the menu. Daria ordered a Pocahontas. It came from nearby Vinadio, where the water had benefited from the early days of de-industrialisation without yet, as far as she knew, suffering from the dumping of noxious foreign waste. As she nursed it, Daria surveyed the two men at the nearest table. Neither was her target, but she tuned in to their conversation.

  “... third time running, then they’ll have to let us back in!”

  “Well, Vercelli won’t stop us, never mind their Kazakh millionaire, but UEFA might.”

  “Nah, they can’t. We’re too good. What’s Europe without us?”

  “Come on, what’s UEFA ever done for us?”

  “You’re damn right, fuck all! They let Renault take our team down to Palermo, for a start.”

  “Fucking traitors! Didn’t even keep the name. Kept our colours, though.”

  “Who cares? Green and white’s better than black and white any day.”

  “And look what happened to Renault. Our other lot did better.”

  “Monte Carlo Toro? You’re joking!”

  “Champions of France.”

  “The Green and Whites could thrash ‘em any day. Real Juve! Real Juve!!”

  “Calm down, pal. What’s in your water?”

  “Salt Walt? Nothing except shit. Er … you don’t happen to have …?”

  He caught Daria’s eye on him and immediately looked away. Every time. The first man in Padania who held her gaze, she would …

  The door let in a group of three middle-aged men and a young woman. One of the men looked familiar to Daria. He was tall, silver-haired, well-fed. His robust body strained at the confines of a sharp grey suit. If it was him, he had had his skin lightened since the video was taken. She knew they would drink before playing – old habits die hard. They sat too far away for her to monitor their conversation properly. She just caught snatches:

  “… children … shortage … block the decree … not right … need labour, but …”

  Talking politics. Rash. Nevertheless, she identified him by his body language. He shifted to face each person as they spoke, and leaned towards them as he spoke to them, the fingers of his left hand tapping the front of his shirt as though trying to sift among whatever was inside to find heart strings. That was precisely where she would plunge the knife.

  The debate warmed up. The man turned away from something he disagreed with, and caught Daria’s stare. He held it for a moment before averting his head. A perturbed expression crossed his face. His fingers resumed their search even though he remained silent. He leaned in towards his companions, muttered a few words, rose and strode to the door, which let him out immediately. When the company had stopped staring after him and resumed their conversation with less enthusiasm than before,

  Daria followed suit. She stood outside the casino, trying to calculate which way he had gone. As her senses quickened, the muddy air in her nostrils gave her the answer: towards the river.

  You cannot run in a cassock without drawi
ng attention to yourself, but Daria could move quickly. The river was close, and she soon reached the bridge. To the right was a park, to the left she could follow a path down to tiny riverside betting shops. Some people in the park were moving in a hurry. She went in their direction. There was her prey: she recognised him by his hair and non-conformist clothes. She closed the gap between them.

  Daria could tell the man knew he was being followed, and that he had a strategy: safety in numbers. He stopped at a crowded mobile drink stand. As Daria pushed in to stand behind him, she heard the man order a Monca Cola. She pressed into his back and let him feel the warmth of her body through the cassock.

  “Game over, big boy,” she whispered into his ear, “the children want to work whether you like it or not.”

  His shoulders relaxed; he turned, looked into her eyes. For seven seconds, the outside world was not there; then she was bent double, the sting of Monca Cola in her eyes, nausea burning her stomach.

  Daria brought her body back under control.

  “Never marry a gambler,” she said wrily, to satisfy the curious.

  Some of the barflies smiled; the rest just made way and looked elsewhere. The man was still in her sight, heading back the way they had come. This was going to be easy, after all.

  Daria turned her cassock twilight blue. She timed her pursuit so that she caught up with her quarry in the passage under the bridge. He stopped and turned to face her. Daria pushed him hard in the chest. There was a crack as his back hit the wall. Daria’s knife was in her hand. He held her gaze. Again, time stopped for Daria. Then she realised he was talking to her.

  “Please … let me die … another day.”

  The tip of the knife pierced the skin over his heart; blooded trickled down his shirt front. Nausea welled up inside

  Daria. Still his eyes held hers. Time stopped once more, and Daria’s befuddled brain ratched up a slide show of her working life, from her first priest to the foreigner who had not wanted to pay back a favour the Mafia had done him, even though he’d gone to live in Sicily. She realised that the man was speaking again.

  “You know … I want to live … more than you do.”

  She was not going to argue with that. She slipped the knife back inside her cassock, for the time being, then broke his gaze by grabbing his right arm with both her hands and dragging him out of the tunnel to the water’s edge. Her kick into his bruised chest was only hard enough to send him flailing backwards into the river. Daria stood watching him for a while, breathing long and hard. When she saw he was swimming towards the far bank, she whispered to her cassock to turn regulation green and, keeping to the deeper shade of the archways, walked swiftly in the direction of the city centre. She was still hungry.

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