WIN Coben, Harlan (best ebook reader for surface pro .TXT) đ
Book online «WIN Coben, Harlan (best ebook reader for surface pro .TXT) đ». Author Coben, Harlan
The Reverend Sinclair spots me as I get out of the back of a black car. With his free hand, he shields his eyes. He looks to be his ageâsixty-fiveâwith thin wisps of hair on his scalp. When heâd opened the church door, he wore a practiced wide smile, the kind of thing you put on just in case someone is around and you want to appear kind and friendly, whichâwho am I to judge yet?âCalvin Sinclair may very well be. When he sees me, however, the smile crumbles to dust. He adjusts his wire spectacles.
I start toward him. âMy name isââ
âI know who you are.â
I arch one eyebrow to register my surprise. Calvin Sinclairâs voice has a nice timbre to it. I am sure that it sounds celestial coming from a pulpit. I did not call beforehand or announce my arrival. Kabir had contacted a local private investigator who assured us that Sinclair was at the church. Had Sinclair traveled somewhere else whilst I was in the air, said private detective would have followed him so I could have confronted him wherever I saw fit.
The British bulldog waddles toward me.
âWhoâs this?â I ask.
âReginald.â
Reginald stops and regards me with suspicion. I bend down and scratch behind his ears. Reginald closes his eyes and takes it in.
âWhy are you here, Mr. Lockwood?â
âCall me Win.â
âWhy are you here, Win?â
âI assume you know why.â
He nods with great reluctance. âI suppose I do.â
âHow do you know my name?â I ask.
âWhen Ry Strauss was found murdered,â he begins, âI knew that would mean renewed interest inâŠâ Calvin Sinclair stops and squints up at either the sun or his version of God. âYou were on the news a lot.â
âAh,â I say.
âRy Strauss stole your paintings.â
âSeems so.â
âNaturally, I followed the story with interest.â
âWith personal interest?â
âYes.â
I was glad that the Reverend Sinclair was not going to give me a giant song-n-dance pretending that he had no idea why I was here, had never heard of Arlo Sugarmanâall the verbal red tape I had feared having to waste time slicing through.
âCome along, Reginald.â
He gives the leash a gentle snap. I stop scratching Reginald behind the ears. They start walking. I stay with them.
âHow did you find me?â he asks.
âLong story,â I say.
âYouâre a very rich man, from what Iâve read. My guess is, you are used to getting what you want.â
I donât bother to reply.
Reginald stops by a tree and urinates.
âStill,â Sinclair continues. âIâm curious. What part of our life gave us away?â
I see no reason not to tell him. âOral Roberts University.â
âAh. Our start. We were more careless then. You found Ralph Lewis?â
âYes.â
He smiles. âThat was three aliases ago. Ralph Lewis became Richard Landers and then Roscoe Lemmon.â
âSame initials,â I say.
âPerceptive.â
We are behind the church now, heading toward a path in the woods. I wonder about that. I wonder where we are going, whether there is a destination or whether the Reverend Sinclair is just taking his mighty Reginald on their daily walk. I donât bother asking. He is talking, and that, after all, is what I want.
âAfter we graduated,â Sinclair says, âRalph and I went on a missionary trip to what was then known as Rhodesia. It was supposed to be a one-year deal, but with the heat still on him, we ended up staying on the continent for the next twelve years. He and I had different interests. I was religiously focused, albeit in a much more liberal way than what weâd learned at Oral Roberts. Ralph despised religion. He had no interest in conversions. He wanted to work the classics: feed and clothe the poor, get them access to clean water and medical care.â He looks at me. âAre you a religious man, Win?â
âNo,â I tell him.
âMay I ask what you believe?â
I tell him the same thing I tell any religious worshipperâbe they Christian, Jew, Muslim, Hindu: âAll religions are superstitious nonsense, except, of course, yours.â
He chuckles. âGood one.â
âReverend,â I begin.
âOh, donât call me that,â Sinclair says. âIn the Episcopal tradition we say âthe reverendâ as an adjective, a descriptive. Itâs not a title.â
âWhere is Arlo Sugarman?â I ask.
We are in the woods now. If we look straight up, we can see the sun, but the trees are thick anywhere off this path. âThere is no way I can convince you to just go home and let this go, is there?â
âNone.â
âI figured as much.â He nods, resigned. âThatâs why Iâm taking you to him.â
âTo Arlo?â
âTo Roscoe,â he corrects. âYou know something funny? Iâve never called him Arlo. Not once in the more than four decades weâve been together. Not even in private. I think itâs because I was always scared that I would mess up and call him that in front of other people. This was always our big fear, of courseâthat this day would come.â
We are getting deeper into the woods now. The path narrows and veers down a steep incline. Reginald the Bulldog stops in his tracks. Sinclair sighs and lifts the dog with a huge grunt. He carries Reginald to the landing below.
âWhere are we going?â I ask.
âHe didnât do it, you know. Arloâyes, Iâm going to call him thatâbacked out. He wanted to draw attention to the war by throwing what appeared to be Molotov cocktails, but in reality, the bottles would only be filled with water dyed red to look like blood. Just something symbolic. When Arlo realized that Ry meant to really firebomb the place, they had a falling-out.â
âYet,â I say, âhe ran and hid anyway.â
âWho would have believed him?â Sinclair counters. âDo you know how scary-crazy it was those first few days?â
âCurious,â I say.
âWhatâs that?â
âAre you also going to claim that he didnât kill a federal agent?â
Sinclairâs jowly jaw is set, but he doesnât stop walking. âPatrick OâMalley.â
I wait.
âNo, I wonât claim that. Arlo shot Special Agent OâMalley.â
There is a clearing up ahead. I can
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