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
âWhat are you saying?â Marchetti demanded.
âThat youâre taking at face value what common sense ought to tell you not to.â
âArrogance.â The Bishopâs emissary turned the envelope over in his hands and frowned. âYour answers leave His Eminence little room for permitting you to resume Holy Office.â
âThey donât leave him anything, as far as I can see.â
âJust you in a pornographic photo taken by a murdered homosexual.â
âAnd a letter the bishop doesnât want me to see?â
Marchetti glared at the priest and, with equal irritation, the running fountain. He no longer attempted to hide the anger in his voice. âIâve spoken with your housekeeper.â
âWhat now?â
âShe says that you knew this Billy Pearce better than youâve let on.â
âDoes she?â
âShe listens in on your phone conversations, Father. And on your âcounselingâ sessions. She also reads your email.â
âIâll have to have her say a penance when I return.â
âYouâre not returning anywhere, Father.â
âReally?â
âThis housekeeper says that Pearce called you the evening before he was found murdered.â
Gauss clasped his fingers behind his head.
âThat she heard you yelling into the phone and using foul language.â
Gauss closed his eyes.
âThat you left the rectory in a hurry and didnât come back before sheâd left for the evening. But that when she returned in the morning there was a pair of wet trousers and a wet tee shirt in the laundry.â
âColdwaterâs own Miss Marple.â
âAnd she wants to know what to say to that persistent sheriff whoâs been to the rectory twice now and who was on the phone with me this morning demanding that we produce you for questioning.â
âI didnât ask to be hustled away in the night, Monsignor.â
âWeâll have to produce you sooner or later.â
âIâm sure you will.â
âAnd our attorneys advise that it would be better if you talk with Sister Dion first.â
âI have. But we seem to have run out of new material.â
âAnd that you undergo a general examination of conscience.â
âWith you?â
âThere are legal as well as spiritual advantages.â
âIâd rather have my tooth drilled.â
* * *
At Dr. Dwyerâs direction, the Coldwater Hospital put Joe through a vigorous gastric decontamination followed by several rounds of magnesium citrate cathartics. After two days of torture, there was nothing left to come out and nothing inside that wasnât raw. The hospital doctors said he was ready to go home.
Mary came with her geriatric boy toy, Herbert to bring her son home. Joe thought she looked like hell. There was a weariness about her that had not arrived with her fall or in the days afterwards. She had lost weight. Her eyes were rheumy. When he kissed her cheek, it felt chilly and clammy. He reached his hand to her forehead.
âIâm not sick, Joey,â she snapped, pushing it away. âIâm worried sick. Thereâs a difference.â
He didnât need to ask about what.
âItâs a good thing youâre getting out of here. Because your brotherâs about to do something stupid, and you need to stop him.â
As the originator of several large and recent stupidities, Joe withheld condemnation. But she pressed. âYou need to talk to him.â
âAbout what?â
âDonât be thick. About the Pearce girl.â
âYouâre a pyromaniac, Mom.â
She waved a hand in dismissal. âYour brother doesnât know whether heâs coming, going or been there with that girl. Thatâs going to get him and you into serious trouble.â
Joe could think of nothing he might say or do to respond to his motherâs directions. He wasnât even sure he understood them. He said so.
âYour confused older brother seems to think heâs a Pearce. That family didnât adopt him, they used him. Itâs time he understood that.â
âIâm not following you, mom.â
âDidnât you and your father ever talk?â
âAbout the Pearces?â
âAbout what they were doing with your brother.â
âThe only thing Dad ever said to me about Susan Pearce was that there was nothing wrong with Tommyâs eyesight.â
Mary snorted. âFor a man who didnât speak much, your father could pack a lot in a few words.â She turned to Herbert. âBe a dear and get me a lemonade from the cafeteria. I need to take my pills.â
âThereâs some water in that pitcher, Mom.â
âI need lemonade,â she said firmly.
Herbert nodded. âSure thing, Mary. Mind if I stop and chat with that pretty candy striper while Iâm at it?â
âKnock yourself out.â When he had gone, she resumed, âThereâs something I need to tell you. Then you need to talk to your brother.â
âSomething you donât want Herbert to hear?â
âFamily business.â She took a breath. âThe Pearcesâ didnât care for your brother. But they were happy to use him. The mother especially. The rich donât like to be reminded of how they got that way, and Tommy was a walking road map: copâs kid who doesnât know which fork to use, but as smart as any of them, and a go-getter with it.â
He leaned back into the pillows. His mother was launched.
âMrs. Pearce was from the South⊠some part where they donât have Catholics. Having your brother mooning around her daughterâright after that foreign exchange student⊠it made the poor woman take to her bed with the vapors.â She paused. âYour father never told you any of this?â
Joe shook his head.
âJust before Tommy showed up, the family had the son of some foreign diplomat living with them for the school year. He went to Coldwater High at first, but some of the boys there gave him a rough time. Pushed him around. Shaved a swastika on his head. That sort of thing. He refused to go back to school, and he just hung around the house. Iâm sure the Pearces didnât know what to do with him.â
âI heard something about that,â said Joe, âat a parole bash for one of the
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