McGinty sighed. “All right, but remember - this stays between you and me. I don’t want anyone thinking I was worried about McSorley. Not the way things are now.”
“Of course,” Campbell said, raising his head.
“So, what are your plans?”
“Nothing in particular,” Campbell said. “I was kind of hoping you might need some jobs doing.”
“I might,” McGinty said. “You were always a good worker. A bit hot-headed, though. I got a text from Tom over at the bar. Eddie Coyle’s off getting stitches.”
“He was looking for a fight. He got one.”
“Eddie Coyle’s a prick, but that doesn’t mean he deserves a beating.”
Campbell knew when to back down. “Yeah, fair enough. I’m sorry.”
McGinty smiled. “You can apologise to him next time you cross each other’s paths. He’ll be told to let it go. Anyway, I might have a wee job for you. It’s kind of a sensitive one.”
“Oh?”
“You were always good at sniffing out troublemakers. Our internal security’s lost a good volunteer. Vincie Caffola was the best at clearing out touts and such, but I seem to remember you were pretty sharp yourself.”
Campbell looked up at the sound of a helicopter. “I had my moments.”
McGinty moved close to the yard’s back wall, out of sight of the intruder in the sky. “You sniffed out that bastard Delaney when he sold me to the Loyalists.” McGinty sneered. “Ulster Freedom Fighters, for Christ’s sake. Bunch of fuckwits pretending they’re Al Capone, not a brain between them. What was Delaney thinking? They’d never have pulled it off. Still, they could’ve gotten lucky if you hadn’t twigged it. It was you who beat it out of him. I haven’t forgotten that, Davy.”
Campbell watched McGinty closely. “Delaney was easy. It was Gerry Fegan who got the UFF boys.”
“If you hadn’t fingered them, Gerry wouldn’t have sorted them out, and I wouldn’t be standing here. I owe you and him a lot. That’s the only reason Gerry Fegan’s still alive this afternoon.”
“What do you mean?”
McGinty’s eyes narrowed. “Who else do you know would have the balls to take out Michael McKenna and Vincie Caffola?”
“I heard it was—”
“Forget what you heard,” McGinty said. He beckoned Campbell to come close. “You don’t need to know the details. Just believe me when I tell you it was Fegan.”
Campbell played it sceptical, stringing McGinty along. “I heard he’d lost it, took to the drink.”
“Maybe so.” McGinty nodded as a shallow smile spread across his mouth. “But don’t you ever underestimate Gerry Fegan. He’s strong, but there’s stronger. He’s smarter than he lets on, but he’s no genius. You want to know what makes Gerry Fegan so dangerous?”
Campbell couldn’t help but play along. “What?”
McGinty took a packet of cigarettes from his pocket, placed one between his lips, and tucked the packet away again. “He’s fearless. Gerry Fegan isn’t afraid of any man alive. Not one.”
“Fearless means careless,” Campbell said.
“Maybe for some. But not Gerry.” McGinty lit the cigarette and stuffed the lighter back into his pocket. He took a drag. “I’ll tell you a little something about Gerry Fegan. Years ago, late Seventies, him and Michael McKenna were just kids, fifteen, sixteen, something like that. Me and Gusty Devlin, God rest him, used to take some of the young lads down to Carnagh Forest, just over the border, for camping trips. Michael nagged me to take Gerry, but I didn’t want to. I didn’t like him. He was too quiet, always watching, saying nothing. But Michael talked me into it, and we took them in this old Volkswagen Camper I had.”
McGinty smiled and straightened his designer jacket, blue plumes of smoke leaking from his nostrils. “I didn’t dress so smart in those days. Fancied myself as a working-class hero, you know? Anyway, we got stopped at a checkpoint just this side of the border. The cops knew all about us, thought we were carrying guns. Some of the boys went to bits when the peelers searched them, had them down to their socks and their underpants on the side of the road. Not Gerry. He looked every one of those fuckers in the eye.
“So we get to the forest, set up camp, and Gusty hikes them round the lakes for a couple of hours. Everybody’s knackered, so we turn in. About two or three in the morning, all hell breaks loose. Gerry’s up shouting there’s people in the trees, watching us. Can you believe that? A kid who’ll stare out a peeler who’s ready to take his head off, and he’s scared of shadows?”
Campbell tried not to flinch as McGinty laughed, blowing smoke in his face. “You said he wasn’t scared of anything.”
“Not of any man. The dark, maybe, but no man. Anyway, next morning Bull O’Kane arrives with the guns the cops thought we’d be carrying. Nothing much, just a couple of air rifles and an old .303 from the war. So, Gusty sets up paper targets for the lads to practise with and, fuck me, Gerry can’t hit anything. Up close, he’s fucking deadly, but more than twenty feet? Couldn’t hit a cow on the arse with a shovel.”
Campbell nodded, smiled, and filed that fact away.
“So one of the other lads, can’t remember his name - he was a thick shite, blew himself up with a pipe bomb - he starts slagging Gerry, how he’s no use, he’s scared of the gun, he’s scared of the shadows in the trees, he should get his ma to come for him. So Gerry fucking lit on him. He’s battering the shit clean out of him, pasting his nose all over his face, and we’re all stood back laughing.
“All of a sudden, Bull says, ‘Enough of this,’ and grabs a-hold of Gerry, pulls him off the other lad, and he’s still kicking and screaming. Bull plonks him down on his feet, and before anyone knows what’s happening, Gerry spins around and - POP!”