nothinâ.â
Dropping his hat on the back of his head and wiping the snow from his face, Brosnan walks toward the bar with his hand extended, âPaddy Keenan, is it?â
Keenan looks at the large policeman and lays a hand out for greeting, ââTis.â
âFrom what part are ye then?â Brosnan offers while pulling a pack of cigars from his tunic that reads âNa Bocklish.â
âKilmenagh.â
âSure, sure, over Kilkenny way,â Brosnan agrees. âWhy not give us a drop oâ the pure when yeâre ready, eh Mr. Keenan?â
Keenan nods.
âThatâll be the cure of it,â Brosnan says as Keenan pushes forward the home brewed poteen. âMight as well take the drop while the life is still in ye. Iâve known me quite a few from them parts. Kind people they are, from Kilmenagh. Iâm from Dooblin meself.â
âI know,â Keenan answers not so cordially.
âBut Kilkenny! Oh my, lovely place it be. Seat of our ancestors beyond the pale, but close in our hearts still today.â
ââTis, âtis,â Keenan agrees.
Leaning across the bar and whispering, âIs Dinny hâopstairs?â
Keenan looks up toward the dark, empty stairwell at the end of the bar, then back to Brosnan, âI wouldnât go up, sir.â
Brosnan though, he only hears a challenge from Keenanâs advice. He grinds his teeth inside his mouth, but doesnât show it on his face. Instead Brosnan smiles and takes off his hat, begins to sing where quickly Keenan joins along, Culkin watching by the door and the injured man.
â There once were two cats livâd in Kilkenny
Each tâought dere was one cat too many
So dey fought and dey hissât
Anâ dey scratched and dey bit
âTil instead oâ two cats dere werenâ tâany!â
Laughing along, Brosnan pronounces, âonly good tâings come from Kilkenny, ye must be a good man Paddy Keenan! How long ye been on for Dinny now?â
âWisha, I just tend bar sir, nothinâ more.â
âYe know what,â say Brosnan, pounding his hand on the bar and pulling the Na Bocklish out of his head. âI believe that! Thereâs a lotta gobshite round here, Iâll be the first to recoânize it. But I believe ye, Paddy. Ye know, we that come from the auld lanes arenât as violent as them that dragged up round the waterfront here.â
âI see it that way too,â Keenan agreed.
âDo ye?â
âI do.â
âKilkenny cats, Mr. Keenan,â Brosnan said smiling with a finger in the air, Keenan listening quietly and without offering his own opinion either. âDinnyâs got âis day tâday, but these bhoys got the nature to bring down their king. And what a king he be, yeah? King of the Diddicoys, if ye believe them larrikins are wertâ presidinâ over. Watch âem, Paddy Keenan! I seen it many time in this neighborhood. Ye tâink Lovettâs got loyalty fer the king? Do ye? Those olâ Jay Street hooligans and their knavery: Lovett, Connors, Frankie Byrne and his boyos, the Leighton brothers and others. Theyâre Dinnyâs now? Ha! Are they, Paddy? Even with Dinnyâs gift fer arganizinâ, ye canât break some, ye canât. These bhoys down by the docks, I seen over many years. Here me,â Brosnan said leaning across the mahogany for a whisper. âTheyâre the Kilkenny cats themselves.â
âAre they?â
âThey are! Bill Lovett?â Brosnan announced while staring at Keenanâs face. âWild Bill Lovett?â
Keenan wrinkles his nose but for a moment.
âTheyâll fight each other outta existence, they will. . . . If I donât take Dinny down meself, as a matther oâ fact,â Brosnan warns before blasting down a shot, then looks up the stairwell angrily. âIâve done it before, take that Dinny down I did
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