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Tarretti’s reply was immediate. “What kind of angels?”

Nathan suddenly knew that the answers to everything plaguing him these past two weeks were either with this man, or nowhere at all. He was falling, losing any last vestige of hope that his world would soon come back into focus.

He retightened his grip and actually shook Tarretti back and forth twice. When he shouted, drops of spittle landed on the man’s cheek. “The angels above John Solomon’s grave! Are you happy?” He shook Tarretti one more time. He sensed more than saw the dog rise back up and Elizabeth’s renewed reprimand. The animal settled onto its haunches, barking angrily across the room. “Now tell me what’s going on! Tell me or so help me I’ll—”

He didn’t finish. As quickly as it had changed a moment before, Vincent Tarretti’s stance sagged, and his eyes closed. Nathan saw droplets of his own spit on the other’s face, and was filled with self-loathing. He let go of the caretaker’s shirt. The material was bunched in a three-dimensional handprint. How could he have lost his cool like that? He needed to hang on. Needed to remember who he was.

Still, he was close to something. Close to answers.

Elizabeth’s hands landed lightly atop his shoulders. He felt a final urge to lunge at Tarretti, but held himself back—or was held back by Elizabeth’s soft contact. Tarretti sagged further against the counter.

“Then you must be the one,” he breathed. He opened his eyes and wiped his face with a sleeve. He stared at Nathan, at Elizabeth, back again. “You are the new caretaker, and my time is over. Nothing else makes sense. But there might not be enough time left for any of us.”

For a moment Nathan thought he was resigning his position. Much later, in retrospect, he realized that this was exactly what Vincent Tarretti was doing.

Chapter Forty-Two

Peter Quinn felt conflicting emotions when he saw what Josh Everson had uncovered on the Internet. Part of him was amused at the way rumor and overactive imaginations could twist the truth into nonsense. Aliens, of all things.

But not all of what Everson showed him was rubbish. There were just as many sites accurately describing some aspects of Quinn’s group and their activities as those which accused them of coming from a comet. Too much accuracy, even when buried in nonsense, to give him comfort. Peter wondered how much of his people’s cloak of secrecy would be lifted when the Great Molech, at last, had his prize. If the power it held would be enough to emerge from the shadows and into their own light.

If not, then he would need to show these pages to his uncle Roger and the other elders.

His cell phone rang. Josh blinked rapidly.

“Remain here,” Peter said, “and do nothing until I say.”

He moved a few feet away and answered the phone. “Quinn.”

“Hi. Manny Paulson. Something’s up.”

Peter raised an eyebrow. “Something’s up,” he echoed, irritated with Paulson’s habit of not getting to any point immediately. “What kind of something, Mister Paulson?”

“Tarretti has visitors. Guess who?”

“No.”

“OK, OK. The new preacher-man. Dinneck. Art’s boy. And he brought his girlfriend.”

Peter checked his watch. A bit late for a visit. He decided not to ask about the “girlfriend.”

“Details please.”

Paulson’s car was parked in the access road running alongside the main cemetery, out of sight from the street. The road was used for driving in the town’s backhoe when digging new graves. He told Peter about the arrival of Nathan and Elizabeth, and how they were quickly ushered in to Tarretti’s dark house. The fact that the house remained mostly dark rang a warning bell in Peter’s head. Secrecy, it said. Clandestine meeting.

Perhaps the authorities had finally found Hayden’s corpse. Peter had left the old man’s body where it had fallen, far into the woods at the edge of the monastery’s property. He did not want to carry it in his trunk, too much risk of leaving DNA traces. When the preacher was found, Peter hoped it would send a signal to Tarretti, perhaps make him move.

Apparently it had.

The time was close.

Or, he thought, the time is now.

“Manny, stay there. If they leave, call me. No matter what, stay on Tarretti. Don’t move unless he moves. Got it?”

“You’re the boss.”

“Yes, Mister Paulson, I am. I’m going to head over to Greenwood Street Cemetery. If they make a move tonight, it’ll be to go there.”

“You ever going to tell me why that grave is so interesting?”

No, Peter thought. Or maybe I will, before I put a bullet into your head for your disrespect. “If I’m not mistaken, you’ll find out soon enough. Stay put and watch the house.”

He disconnected. An idea occurred to him. He hit the speed dial for the Dinneck house. As the phone rang, he looked down at Josh Everson. He thought. Everything’s coming together. Everson might prove more useful than he had already.

“Hello?” Beverly Dinneck’s voice. Peter silently cursed.

“Mrs. Dinneck,” he said. “I apologize for calling so late. This is Raymond George from operations. Art’s program has a problem and I need to speak with him. It is a very important program; otherwise I wouldn’t have bothered you.” He was uncertain if he’d used the correct jargon, but this woman likely wouldn’t understand it any more than he. He had to get her husband on the phone.

“One second,” she said. “Art...?” The phone was placed onto a table, the sound clunking in Peter’s ear.

“Disconnect your computer,” he said to Josh while he waited, hearing the couple’s conversation in the distance over the phone line. “We’re going out.”

Josh clicked his browser closed as Art Dinneck’s tired voice came onto the phone. “Art Dinneck.”

Peter moved into the apartment’s living room as he spoke, so the boy beside him wouldn’t overhear and think the words were directed at him. Using the Voice over the phone took a somewhat more focused control. Over the years, it had become second nature when talking in person. Now, even with the clear reception afforded by his digital phone service, it took more concentration and control.

“Art Dinneck, listen carefully. The person you are speaking to is Raymond George, who works with you.”

Chapter Forty-Three

As Tarretti told Nathan and Elizabeth his tale, adding as much detail as possible, save a few important facts that needed to wait a while longer, the couple moved back across the kitchen and sat in the two chairs. Johnson returned to his perch under the table and worked his long legs between their feet. When Vincent realized his constant pacing was a distraction, he paused in his story long enough to pull a metal folding chair from the closet at the front of the house. He sat near Nathan, chair turned backwards so he could lean forward.

The woman’s presence still bothered him—he’d gone over this conversation in his head hundreds of times but imagined it being with only one person. The recipient of the tale was always a faceless being in his mind, his eventual successor. But she seemed genuinely close to Dinneck. In any event, she was involved now, and he would have to trust her. He would have to trust God. Especially now, when time no longer seemed on their side.

He told them of his past, abbreviating only those facts not applicable to the moment or still too painful to discuss. He felt naked before these two. Was he failing in his mission by sharing this? Was he saying the right words? What if he couldn’t convince them?