Authors: Ralph McInerny
“Tell me!”
He got out the
Confessions
and found the line and read it aloud.
Sero te amavi.
“What does it mean?”
“Late have I loved thee.” Roger actually blushed. “Of course, Augustine was addressing God, so the use I suggested to Caleb was perhaps inappropriate, but⦔
Sarah interrupted him by throwing her arms about Roger. Or as about him as his girth and the length of her arms permitted.
Roger made popcorn then, and hot chocolate, and they settled down at the trestle table. Phil was in a beanbag chair in the next room, napping before the television, where a muted basketball game was on.
“Tell us again how you knew it was Kitty Callendar who had killed Madeline O'Toole,” Sarah urged.
“How I pinned the crime on her?” He tried to duck her playful punch.
Fauxhall had shown little confidence when Jimmy presented him with the basis for charging Kitty Callendar with the murder of Madeline O'Toole. “That's all you've got?”
It was more than enough for Crumley, who successfully demanded that his client be released. But of course physical evidence is always incommensurate with the crime it points to. If Kitty Callendar had not decided to take pride in what she had done, the case would doubtless have seemed flimsy. Where outside of a detective novel would three hairpins spell Q.E.D.? But Kitty had decided that she had acted as an agent of the divine wrath.
“Would Abraham have been guilty of murder if he had slain Isaac?”
It said something of her state of mind that she found this a relevant parallel. By that time, in fact, her lawyer, a shrewd local attorney named Alex Cholis, had decided to enter a plea of innocent because of insanity.
“I am not insane,” Kitty said to her lawyer.
“Well, you're not innocent, either, are you?”
The plea made Fauxhall's work much simpler, and there was little doubt that Kitty would spend some years undergoing therapy, a severer punishment perhaps than life imprisonment or even execution. Not that either of those would have been in the offing.
Roger's course in the spring semester was devoted to Ambrose Bierce.
“What has he got to do with Notre Dame?” Phil asked.
“Not much, but he fought in an Indiana regiment.”
Bierce's haunting stories of the Civil War, rather than
The Devil's Dictionary
, were the focus of the course. But it was the way Bierce's life had ended, or seemed to end, when he mysteriously disappeared into Mexico that fascinated Roger.
“Just faded away?” Caleb asked.
There are worse ways for a story to end.
ALSO BY RALPH McINERNY
MYSTERIES SET AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
The Letter Killeth
Irish Gilt
Green Thumb
Irish Coffee
Celt and Pepper
Emerald Aisle
Book of Kills
Irish Tenure
Lack of the Irish
On This Rockne
Â
ANDREW BROOM MYSTERY SERIES
Heirs and Parents
Law and Ardor
Mom and Dead
Savings and Loam
Body and Soil
Cause and Effect
Â
FATHER DOWLING MYSTERY SERIES
The Widow's Mate
The Prudence of the Flesh
Blood Ties
Requiem for a Realtor
Last Things
Prodigal Father
Triple Pursuit
Grave Undertakings
The Tears of Things
A Cardinal Offense
Seed of Doubt
Desert Sinner
Judas Priest
Four on the Floor
Abracadaver
The Basket Case
Rest in Pieces
Getting a Way with Murder
The Grass Widow
A Loss of Patients
Thicker Than Water
Second Vespers
Lying Three
The Seventh Station
Her Death of Cold
Bishop as Pawn
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
IRISH ALIBI
. Copyright © 2007 by Ralph McInerny. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
McInerny, Ralph M.
Irish alibi / Ralph McInerny.â1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-0-312-36457-1
ISBN-10: 0-312-36457-1
1. Knight, Roger (Fictitious character)âFiction. 2. Knight, Philip (Fictitious character)âFiction. 3. College teachersâIndianaâSouth BendâFiction. 4. Private investigatorsâIndianaâSouth BendâFiction. 5. University of Notre DameâFiction. 6. South Bend (Ind.)âFiction. 7. United StatesâHistoryâCivil War, 1861â1865âInfluenceâFiction. 8. MurderâInvestigationâFiction. 9. College stories. I. Title.
PS3563.A31166I63 2007
813'.54âdc22
2007018142
First Edition: September 2007
eISBN 9781466835238
First eBook edition: November 2012