Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) đ
- Author: James Ross
Book online «Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) đ». Author James Ross
âI wouldnât know,â said Dolan.
âBut you see the sense of it.â
Dolan shrugged.
âI donât have Bishop Mczynskiâs gift for fund-raising,â Gauss persisted. âMy specialty is counseling troubled teenagers. They come with problems, not cash; and their problems arenât spiritual. Their lives are messed-up. They come from broken homes. Theyâre depressed or schizophrenic, but their families donât believe in mental illness and refuse to get them treatment. Or theyâre gay and trying to come to terms with that in a church that labels them sinners.â
âYou said you had a point,â Dolan interrupted, visibly uncomfortable with being on the receiving end of an interrogation.
âAnd I think you get it,â said Gauss. âPriest or attorney: a file like the one you just drooled through is about what youâd expect of a professional whoâs been working with troubled minds for thirty years.â
The young lawyer looked away.
âLook,â Gauss pressed, âI hope you find the misfits youâre after. Theyâre there, and theyâre probably more of them than the Bishop wants to know about. But there should be some integrity to the process, donât you think? There arenât many of us left in the vineyard, and weâre getting old. Harassing old plow horses on their way to the glue factory isnât just wrong, itâs pointless. If youâve done more than a few of these investigations, you must know that by now.â
The young attorneyâs expression had not changed, but Gauss could sense that his point had at least grazed the untested armor.
âAnd how would you go about finding these⊠misfits?â Dolan sniffed.
âIâd start with Bishop Mczynski,â said Gauss. âThereâs a first-class mind behind all that glad handing and baby kissing. Not much gets by him, and heâs the one who keeps the report cards around here.â
âIâve spoken with His Eminence. Heâs the one who directed me to you.â
Gaussâs mind paused, but his tongue kept moving. âThen if I were you, and investigation was my specialty⊠then I might ask myself why?â Dolan pressed his fingers together as if he were about to respond, and touched them to his mouth as if to signal himself not to. âHave you been to the seminary yet?â Gauss pressed. âHave you talked to some of the delicate young men theyâre taking in there these days?â
Dolan shook his head. Gaussâ eyes shone like Paulâs on the road to Damascus. âHa! I get it. The seminaryâs off limits, isnât it?â When the lawyer still said nothing, Gauss took it as an admission. âThen your investigation is a fraud, Counselor. Itâs not going anywhere, and itâs not meant to.â
Dolanâs lips buckled at the corners. âI wouldnât count on that, Father Gauss.â
CHAPTER 11
Joe made it home in time for dessert, then apologized that he had to leave again. The girls pleaded for him to stay. âWeâre practicing for a play! You have to hear our lines.â
âYour fatherâs got a job to do,â said Mary.
Bonnie stood to clear the table.
âSorry girls. Iâll be back before bedtime.â Joe motioned for Tom to join him outside, where the sound of dishes crashing like percussion instruments was muffled. âDid you find out where that priest friend of yours was on Saturday night? Or where he says he was?â
âQuote âOn my knees praying for skirt chasers in Smokey the Bear hatsâ unquote. That would be Bonnieâs skirt, right? PDA in the back pew?â
âKnock it off, Tommy. He wouldnât say where he was?â
âI donât know about wouldnât. He didnât and I didnât press. He pulled me up short with that skirt chaser line. Is everything okay with you and Bonnie? Iâm sensing a certain tension.â
Joe sighed. âBonnieâs pissed about the no help, no time off drill, thatâs all. Iâve got to get back to the Grange Hall to deal with the troopers from DuBois who want in on the Billy Pearce investigation.â
âGood. You need help.â
âDonât be naive, Tommy. They donât want to help. They want to take over. No one in Coldwater is going to talk to an outsider. They know that. But theyâve got Paulie Grogan, my former deputy, with them now and they think thatâs going to make a difference.â
âJoeâŠâ
âTommy, Iâve got to go. Donât worry about the skirt chaser crack. People say all sorts of things to priests just to stir the pot.â
* * *
Tom escaped in Joeâs truck after everyone had gone to bed, intending to unwind from an eventful day by revisiting the watering holes of his youth. Instead, and within minutes, he found himself idling at the columned gates of the private drive leading to the Pearce estate. The question that buzzed in his head was one of those that are answered just by being asked. âWhat are you doing here?â
The main house was a three story, double winged Adirondack chateau with acres of slate roof, miles of copper gutter and sweeping lawns that undulated in triple terraces down to the edge of Coldwater Lake. How many times had Tom driven his clapped-out VW Beetle up that long, tree-lined driveway, never entirely certain if the rickety car would make it to the top? On summer weekends, the house would be ablaze with lights, like a small European hotel at holiday time. Music would drift gently from the piano room, and guests would stroll the lawns amidst the sounds of tennis balls being thwacked smartly under outdoor illumination. Weekdays, there would be a glow from the kitchen wing when Tom brought Susan home from their date, or if Dr. Pearce were up late, a single shaded lamp glowing from behind the six-paned glass of his study.
Tonight the house was dark. Tom leaned out the truck window to look for signs of occupancy. But all he saw was darkness and all he heard were crickets. Leaving the truck in front of the house, he followed a brick path through the hemlocks and around the kitchen wing to the back. No lights shown from
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