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"I have a preliminary finding on that fire of yours." "Any sign of arson?"

"No. There were a couple dozen bottles of 120-proof rum on the premises, some of them broken, but I couldn't detect any accelerant."

"So what caused it? Natural gas?"

"Gas pipes were all intact. Stove was turned off. No—all the early indications are that it was lightning."

"Lightning? There was no lightning around."

"Well, it can come out of a clear sky sometimes. The way the humidity's been building up lately. But there's all the signs. Scorch marks on the wallpaper, electrical appliances all blown out."

"You're sure about this?"

"I'll stake my reputation."

Decker turned right, down the ramp into the police park­ing lot. Hicks said, "What?"

"The fire department thinks that Moses' apartment was hit by lightning. His daughter said that she warned him not

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to mess with Changó. Chang& in Santeria mythology, is the god of fire and thunder and lightning. So what do we conclude from that?"

He pulled into his parking space and killed the motor. He turned and looked at Hicks and he expected an answer.

Hicks said, "I don't know. You make me feel cornered."

"I make you feel cornered, do I? How do you think I feel, with this Changó breathing down my neck? You don't be­lieve in it? You don't want to believe in any of this? You're a police officer, Hicks, you have to believe in it. Just because you want to deny your ethnicity, don't let that distort your judgment."

"I'm not denying my ethnicity. I just don't like all of this African magic stuff. It's primitive, and it's demeaning." "And?"

"And nothing. I just don't like it, that's all."

"Then why do I get the feeling there's something more personal here?"

Hicks didn't answer. "I'll get on to that Mason family tree."

227

CHAPTER TWENTY‑

S EVEN

Cab held a media conference at 4:15 that afternoon. The press room was crowded and noisy and electronic flash flick­ered like summer lightning.

"All I can tell you so far is that John. Mason was the vic­tim of a suspicious drowning incident. We have some con­structive leads and we'll report any developments . . . well, as soon as any developments develop."

Leo Waters from WRVA News Radio raised his pencil and asked, "I talked to the super at John Mason's building He said that the victim was deliberately blinded and then scalded to death. Is there any substance in that?"

"The super was not an eyewitness to the incident." "With respect, Captain, that doesn't exactly answer the question."

Cab paused for a moment and then he said, heavily,

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"There were some unusual circumstances attached to this incident, yes."

"So you're admitting it's true? The guy was blinded and drowned in boiling water?"

"Yes."

Decker heard the news bulletin as he drove back to his apartment. "A cook was himself cooked last night. Thirty­year-old John Mason was boiled to death in his bathtub at his apartment on the edge of the Fan District. An unknown assailant blinded him with a sharp instrument and then somehow raised the temperature of his bathwater until he was literally poached to death."

Decker said, "Shit," and switched the radio off. The last thing he needed right now was hysterical pressure from the media. He had a feeling that the killings were somehow connected to the Devil's Brigade, but no clear idea how, or why, and no hard evidence at all. Having the media chasing him around was only going to make these investigations ten times more difficult.

He went home and took his ritual shot of Herradura Sil­ver. Then he took a hot shower and changed into a baggy pair of gray drawstring pants and a white T-shirt. He felt hungry but he didn't know what he felt like eating. He opened the icebox and stared into it for a long time before closing it again. He would have done anything for one of Cathy's spicy pork and guacamole burgers.

The phone rang. To Decker's surprise, it was Father Thomas, from the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart.

"Decker, I tried to call you at headquarters, but they told me you'd gone home."

"Even us detectives get a few hours off. How can I help you?"

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"I'm not sure, but I think that I may be able to be of some assistance to you. I heard about this latest homicide on the radio this afternoon, while I was out pruning my roses."

"Sick business, Father. Very sick."

"The thing that struck me was the way in which he was killed. Blinded, and then boiled in a bath of hot water."

"Not a pretty way to die, was it? But I guess you can't ac­cuse the perp of not being original."

"Actually, I can. I think his method was highly derivative." "Derivative? What do you mean?"

"That was the exact same way in which Saint Cecilia was martyred by the Romans in 265. Her eyes were put out. Then she was seated in a bath of scalding water and boiled."

"Go on."

"It was then that I got to thinking about your other vic­tims. Mrs. Maitland was beheaded, and her unborn child was killed. This happened to Saint Anne of Ephesus, who was supposed to have been pregnant with a virgin birth. Major Drewry had his stomach cut open, like Saint Cyril. Mr. Maitland was disemboweled, and this was very similar to the martyrdom of Saint Erasmus in the fifth century . . . a hole was pierced in his stomach and his intestines were wound out of him by means of a winch. There's a very fa­mous altar piece of it by Nicolas Poussin in the Pinacoteca Vaticana."

"So what are you saying? All of these people were killed in the same way that saints were martyred?"

"I may be jumping to conclusions, but you have four very unusual homicides on your hands, don't you? And it does seem that there might be some kind of pattern emerging. You see, I discovered something else: your victims were killed in the same sequence as their saints' days, starting with Saint Anne on December fourth, Saint Cyril on Janu­ary twelfth, and so on. Saint Cecilia's day is March ninth."

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"What about Junior Abraham? He had his head blown off."

"It's difficult to tell if Junior Abraham fits into this pat­tern, because so many saints had their heads removed, in one way or another. You should read your Foxe's Book of Martyrs. One poor soul was tied to the tail of a mad bull, so that he was dragged down the temple steps and had his brains knocked out."

"Jesus. Gives me a migraine to think about it."

"Oh, there were far worse tortures than that. Some Chris­tian converts had their stomachs cut open and filled with corn, so that pigs could be brought to feed off it and devour their intestines at the same time."

"Terrific. I'm glad I haven't eaten yet. But thanks, Father. This could be a very useful line of inquiry. We're pretty sure that these homicides are something to do with Santeria, so maybe you're right, and there is a connection with saints."

"Santeria? I'd advise you to be extremely cautious, in that case. The santeros guard their secrecy with great zeal."

"Thanks for the warning, Father, but I think I already have a good idea of what I'm up against."

"God be with you, Decker."

"You too, Father."

That night, he was struggling his way through the under­growth again. He knew it was only midafternoon, but the smoke from the burning scrub was so thick that the sun ap­peared only as a pallid disk, paler than the moon. The crackling of the fire was deafening, and he could hear terri­ble screaming somewhere off to his left. Men were being burned alive.

He lurched down into an overgrown hollow, where his face was lashed by crisscross briars. For a few moments he thought he was going to be hopelessly entangled, but then

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