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"That's what I hear."

"And that nine millimeter wouldn't happen to have come from a Beretta, would it?" Abe turned his palms up as his fingers did a come-here waggle. "So tell me. Tell-me-tell-me-tell-me."

Jack told him, giving him a Reader's Digest version of Sunday night and Monday morning.

When Jack was done, Abe sat back on his stool and waved a hand at the spread-out pages of The Light. His voice was hushed.

"You did this? By yourself you brought down a global cult?"

"I wouldn't say 'brought down.' It hasn't gone away. I can't see it ever going away completely."

"But you kneecapped it."

"Yeah, but it's still got more than enough members and resources to go on burying their pillars."

All Dormentalism might be reeling and in disarray, but Brady's machinery still existed. Before too long a new insertion site would be chosen, and another Dormentalist High Council fanatic would be preparing another column… and setting up another victim.

"A moratorium they'll call. Too many eyes looking at them. And without their guiding light…"

"Yeah, he's out of the picture for good, I hope."

"If not, it won't be for lack of trying on your part. But whatever, the Dormentalist Church is—"

"Hang on," Jack said. "Turn up your radio a sec." Jack thought he'd heard Brady's name.

Abe always had a radio going and, natch, always tuned to an all-news station.

Sure enough, the newsreader was saying that the Bronx DA had announced he was seeking the death penalty in the Cordova murder case. She also mentioned that Luther Brady had been denied bond and would be transferred to Riker's Island later this morning.

"Mazel tov," Abe said, beaming. "You should tell your lady friend."

"I'll bet she knows."

But giving Herta a call wasn't such a bad idea. Jack whipped out his cell phone and dialed her number.

No answer.

Probably out shopping… but a hint of warning put him into motion. "I think I'll tell her in person."

He gave Abe a wave and headed for the door. When he hit the sidewalk he broke into a loping run toward Columbus Avenue, looking for a cab.

2

"She's gone!" Esteban looked upset.

Jack tried to keep his cool as unease writhed through him.

"What do you mean, gone? When did she go out?"

"She didn't just go out, she left. Men came and packed up all her things, and she left. Her apartment is empty."

"You sure she left on her own? Could she have been kidnapped or something?"

Esteban shook his head. "Oh, no. She left me a nice note and a very generous gift. I will miss her."

"Then where'd she go?"

A shrug. "She did not say. I know she was not jumping her rent because she is paid up until the end of the year."

Had she been frightened off, or was this one of those my-work-here-is-done things?

Jack ground his teeth. He still had so many unanswered questions.

"She was a nice lady," Esteban said.

"Yeah, she was." He clapped him on the arm. "And you were a good friend to her. I know she appreciated it."

Jack left a beaming doorman behind and headed for First Avenue. He needed another taxi to take him to his rental car. He had two more stops to make before he returned it.

3

As Jack walked away from Sister Maggie's flower-smothered grave, he heard someone call his name.

"Jack! Would you be having a moment to spare."

Jack turned and saw Father Edward Halloran, an aging leprechaun in a cassock and Roman collar, hustling toward him across the grass. Father Ed had said the funeral mass, which Jack had skipped, and recited the graveside prayers. Jack had been touched by the hundreds of tearful, mourning parishioners who had made the trip from the Lower East Side to pay their respects to a beloved teacher.

"What happened, Jack?" the priest said in a low voice. Tears rimmed his eyes. "May the Lord strike me dead if a finer, sweeter, more God-loving woman ever walked the earth."

Jack looked at the bare trees rimming the fading green of the lawn, the ornate, old-fashioned gravestones filling this Queens graveyard.

"Yeah, she was something."

"But who—?"

"Doesn't matter anymore."

"Of course it does! He must be—" And then his words cut off. He looked up at Jack. "Ah, would you be telling me that he's passed beyond human justice?"

"I'll let you draw your own conclusion."

"Sure and I'll be knowing what happened to a certain fellow I asked you to keep an eye on a while back. Hasn't been seen or heard from since, has he?"

"Not by me, at least."

Father Ed sighed. "I don't want to be after condoning such things, don't you know, but, well, if justice was done, then, I guess justice was done. Still that poor woman… what was done to her. We had to keep her coffin closed." jack tried not to remember the sight of Maggie inside that body bag.

He took a breath. He'd planned to catch Father Ed later today or tomorrow at the rectory. Wanted to discuss something with him. Might as well do it now.

"On the subject of Sister Maggie, how do I set up an education fund in her name?"

Father Ed's eyes widened. "Why would you be doing that?"

"Something she told me… about some girl named Fina who'd have to leave St. Joe's because of money problems."

"Serafina! Yes, Sister Maggie was looking for a way to keep the Martinez children in school. Did you meet them?"

"No…"

"Then why would you be wanting to help?"

The leftovers from the twenty-five large Herta had given him plus the cash he'd boosted from Cordova came to a tidy sum. He couldn't very well return it to Herta.

"Let's just say I don't want to see her forgotten. Maybe you can set something up where some money can be invested, use it for the Martinez kids till they move on to high school, then use what's left for other kids who need that kind of help."

"Why, that's wonderful, Jack. The Sister Mary Margaret O'Hara Education Fund… it has a nice ring to it, don't you think? I'll get on it right away. When would you be sending the check?"

"Check?"

"Well, I assume you'll be wanting the tax deduction."

"Already have plenty of those. Cash won't be a problem, will it?"

Father Ed's eyes twinkled. "No problem at all."

4

Luther Brady moved in a daze.

A chain ran between his feet. His wrists were chained to his waist. A cop led him down a hallway of the detention center. Another followed, and one on either side guided him by the elbows. They were moving him quickly toward a rectangle of light—a doorway to the outside. And beyond that, a van to take him to Riker's.

Visions of being gang-raped by a parade of huge laughing black men weakened his knees. There had to be Dormentalists in prison. All he needed were a few… for protection…

And then he was squinting in the sudden glare of sunlight. After a second or two he realized that it wasn't the sun alone, but camera lights as well. And reporters flanking his path to a police wagon, machine-gunning questions as they shoved microphones at his face.

He blinked, then straightened as he realized that this was his chance to present his case, create sound and video bites that would air again and again.

"I'm innocent!" he shouted, slowing the pace of his walk. "Innocent, I swear it!"

He scanned their faces. Some he knew, some he didn't. Through hundreds of public appearances he'd honed his natural ability to project sincerity and dignity. He called on that ability now, looking them directly in the eyes and showing no fear.

"But what of the evidence, those photos?" someone said.