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Authors: Sister Carol Anne O’Marie

The Missing Madonna (30 page)

BOOK: The Missing Madonna
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From outside, she could hear the muffled sound of traffic: the rattle of a pick-up truck, the dull roar of a passing motorcycle. Yet inside, the basement had a tomblike silence.

With a sense of dread, Mary Helen approached the
ice maker near the middle of the basement. She touched its motor. Cold. She opened the ice-storage lid. It was empty except for a puddle of nearly stagnant water covering the bottom. Bending over, Mary Helen studied the concrete floor surrounding it.

Her stomach dropped. Her mouth was suddenly so dry she could hardly swallow. Just as she had suspected: new cement. Kate Murphy, she thought straightening up. I must phone Kate Murphy. Immediately!

Suddenly the floor overhead creaked. Was it really a creak? Or simply her imagination? A second creak followed. Frozen, Mary Helen listened. It was the unmistakable sound of someone walking lightly, cautiously, across the kitchen floor. Someone who did not want to be heard. Someone who was heading toward the basement.

Hardly breathing, Mary Helen crept toward the alley door. Its window was covered with dust. Perhaps that was why she didn’t notice, until she ran her hand along the wooden surface, that someone had removed the inside handle. That same someone had recently nailed a two-by-four to the door to make sure it was securely shut.

As she backed toward the corner, the rough wall snagged her sweater. She crouched in the shadows. Cobwebs brushed her face. Mary Helen shuddered, but refused to imagine what else might be with her in the corner. Her muscles cramped, yet she waited, not moving, too terrified to even breathe. Dust tickled her nostrils, tempting her to sneeze.

Straining, she heard the footsteps stop, the door to the basement grate open. For a long moment all she could hear was the sound of her own heart beating. A stair creaked, then another. She watched as the figure outlined by the glow of the kitchen light carefully descended the steps.

Midway, it stopped, listened for noise, descended
again. She was surprised to see that the figure was clutching a large pillow.

*  *  *

Kate Murphy yawned and checked her wristwatch. Not even noon and she felt ready for a nap. Or maybe she wasn’t awake yet. Stretching, she looked out the window of the Hall of Justice. Outside, it was that kind of day—gray and cold and sleepy. She checked her watch again.

“A minute later, right?” Dennis Gallagher must have been watching her.

“Right,” she said. Then, unable to resist, Kate stuck out her tongue. Whoever invented sticking your tongue out was a master psychologist, she thought. It made her feel a little foolish but a lot better.

“Did you guys have a rough night?” Obviously Gallagher had chosen to ignore her reaction. “You look bushed. Still making up?”

Kate could feel her face flush. “For your dirty mind’s information,” she said, “what we did was have the nuns over for dinner last night”

“The nuns?”

“After we made up,” she added, to satisfy the incredulous look on Gallagher’s face.

He was about to comment when Kate’s phone rang. She was surprised to hear Sister Eileen’s voice, although at first the nun’s brogue was so thick Kate could barely understand her.

“Slow down, Sister,” she said.

“Speak of the devil.” Gallagher pushed back in his swivel chair to listen.

“Is there something wrong, Sister Eileen?”

“Something is always wrong,” Gallagher muttered. With her free hand, Kate shushed him.

“Glory be to God, I’m not sure, but I’m afraid so. I know how busy you are, Kate dear, and I would not think of bothering you ordinarily, but Sister Mary
Helen took out of here about eight-thirty this morning like the devil himself was on her tail.”

For the third time in a matter of minutes, Kate checked her wristwatch. “That wasn’t even two hours ago.”

“You haven’t the ghost of an idea the amount of devilment the woman can get into in two hours. Or maybe you do. Anyway, she left without telling anyone where she was going and, what is worse, she had that look on her face.”

“What look?”

“ ’Tis difficult to describe unless you’ve seen it.” Eileen paused. “ ’Tis a cross between Joan of Arc and Miss Marple,” she said, “and it leads to only one thing—trouble!”

“Are you sure?” Kate tried to speak calmly and reasonably, but it was no use.

“Surr-re, I am surr-re.” Eileen was rolling her r’s. “I have been friends with the old dear for over fifty years, and I know that look when I see it. Besides, Kate, I have had a turrible eerie feeling all over since the moment I saw her leaving.”

Kate needed more to go on than faces and feelings. “Have you any idea of where—”

Eileen interrupted. “I have an idea, all right. A good idea that it has something to do with Erma Duran’s disappearance. And furthermore, I would wager all the books in Hanna Memorial, the rare ones included, that she is over there right now, poking around.”

“Perhaps she had another appointment.”

“Sure as the sun will rr-ise”—her r’s were really rolling now—“I know she’s into this Erma business. And don’t ask me if I called around. Sister Anne and I have called her office, her dentist, her eye doctor—anyplace we thought she might have an appointment. And the other OWLs as well. No one has any idea where she might be.”

“You realize, Sister, that, strictly speaking, this is not my case. It’s Inspector Honore’s.”

“Sister Anne is on the horn this minute, trying to get through to the Inspector.” Obviously Eileen had thought of everything. Kate was undoubtedly her last hope.

“What exactly is it you want me to do?” she asked and braced herself for the answer.

For the first time there was a long pause on the other end of the line. “I really do not know,” Eileen said. Kate noticed a slight quiver in her voice. “I just know my dear friend could be in some danger. And I cannot possibly sit by and let it happen.”

“I understand how you’re feeling, Sister.” Kate had picked that phrase up in a communications workshop, although she wasn’t at all sure she did understand. Sister Eileen must be frantic. She had never heard the round, jovial woman sounding so distraught “But I really don’t know what it is you want me to do.” There was another long pause. “Sister, are you all right?”

For several seconds there was no answer. “Sister?” Kate repeated.

Apparently Sister Eileen was mulling over something. “Just fine, dear,” she said, suddenly calm. “I realize, as you say, that this is not your case, so there is really nothing you can do. Thank you for listening.” Abruptly she hung up.

Kate stared at the dead receiver. “Damn!” She began to thumb through the phone book, looking for the number of the Sisters’ Residence.

“What happened?” Gallagher asked.

“I’ll tell you in a minute.” Kate dialed. The phone rang twenty times before someone finally answered.

“Sister Eileen is in the library,” a polite voice answered. “Would you like that number?”

By the time the voice found the number, gave it to Kate, and she redialed, Sister Eileen had just left.

“Double damn!” Kate slammed down the receiver.

“What was that all about?” Gallagher stood up.

“Let’s go, Denny.” Kate grabbed her coat. “I’ll explain on the way to the bistro.”

“The bistro? Why the bistro?” Apparently Gallagher wasn’t moving until he had some sort of explanation.

“Because that seems to be the only logical place Sister Eileen would go, and she was suddenly too calm for comfort—my comfort.”

“Sister Eileen?” Gallagher sat back down. “One’s bad enough; now we got the second one. And we have no damn business at all with either of them nuns. I told you not to get involved. It’s not our case. Stick to your own business.”

“Suit yourself.” Kate took her purse from her bottom drawer. “And I know you’re right, Denny, but I have the uneasy feeling that sticking to my own business may have caused Sister Eileen to make our business hers. Frankly, I couldn’t live with myself if I went by the book and let something happen to the old dears.”

Kate crossed the detail, heels clicking. Behind her she heard a familiar grunting noise. Gallagher!

“I thought you weren’t coming.” She pushed the Down button on the elevator and tried not to smile.

“Goddamn it! Get that smirk off your face.” Gallagher paused to light the stub of his cigar. “By rights, we should let those nuns get themselves killed. Serve them right! But you say you couldn’t live with yourself. What about me, huh? What do you think, that the younger generation’s got an edge on this guilt business?” He pointed his finger at her. “Hey, I could tell you stories about guilt, Katie-girl, that you wouldn’t believe!”

*  *  *

The moment Mary Helen heard the voice, she recognized it. She was not surprised. A little saddened maybe, but not surprised.

“I know you’re in here somewhere.”

From her corner, she watched him squinting, trying to adjust his eyes to the dimness of the basement.

How long would it take him to spot her?

“There’s no way out, you know,” the voice rasped.

Mind whirling, she crouched more deeply into the shadows. Think calmly! she told herself, ignoring the trickle of perspiration that ran down her back.

“I’ll find you. Why don’t you just come out?” Finn coaxed. He was moving slowly toward the center of the room.

She watched him peer around the old ice machine. Her hand groped along the rough wall, searching to grasp something—anything. If only she could find a board, an old wrench, something she could hit him with. That always happened in her mystery stories. But there was nothing. Not even a loose board! Her heart jolted.

Mary Helen’s legs began to cramp. She shifted her weight and tried to think, but the only thing she could think about was the sound of her own heart hammering in her ears. She pulled in a deep breath to slow it down.

“Where are you? I know you’re here.” Finn moved closer. Mary Helen closed her eyes, clenched her damp hands more tightly, and tried to shrink into an invisible ball that the man would overlook.

Whether it was from cold or from fear, now her teeth were threatening to chatter. Her legs began to tremble. Mary Helen wasn’t sure how much longer she could stay crouched in the corner, waiting for death. Or even if she should.

What had Eileen said? “An Irish coward is an uncommon character!” If it was her time to go, by God, she would go with dignity, not quailing in some dusty corner. Squaring her shoulders, she steadied herself. Then, wondering briefly if she had more bravado than brains, she rose.

God, help me!
she prayed, swallowing hard to keep
her throat from closing. She knew from their longstanding relationship, He most certainly would.

“Here I am!” She hardly recognized her own forced voice.

Finn looked over, blinking. “Oh, it’s you,” he said, not unkindly. “I’m sorry it’s you.”

For a moment the pair studied each other. The dim light from the bulb bounced off the bald V’s Finn’s hair outlined on the top of his head.

“I rang your apartment bell when I came,” Mary Helen said, as if trespassing were the problem.

“I guess that’s what woke me up.” Finn shifted the pillow. “I was taking a nap upstairs on Erma’s bed. Makes me feel closer to her now that she’s gone.” Mary Helen remained silent.

“I’m sorry it’s you,” he repeated, “but I should have known it would be. That business about the phone call didn’t put you off, did it?”

Woodenly, Mary Helen shook her head, wishing momentarily that it had. “I was sorry when I realized it was you too,” she said slowly. “What stumps me, however, is
why
, Mr. Finn. I always had the feeling that you loved Erma.”

“I did. I still do.” Finn blinked. “And I miss her. It was an accident. It really was. I didn’t mean to hurt her. I never would have hurt her on purpose.”

“What kind of an accident?”

“I lost my temper.” Perspiration broke out on Finn’s forehead. “She fell and cracked her head against the bed and . . . I didn’t mean to.” He rocked nervously on the soles of his feet.

Mary Helen inched over, determined not to glance at the open door leading up to the kitchen. If she could just keep him talking, keep inching over, maybe, just maybe, she could make a dash for it before . . . No! She refused to think about the pillow hanging limply from his hands.

“What could Erma possibly have done to make you lose your temper?” She cleared her throat. “She always seems . . . seemed so accommodating.”

“Yeah.” Finn glared at her. “Especially with those kids of hers. She was goofy about those kids. You know her checks had been missing.”

He stopped, waiting for Mary Helen to nod.

“She blamed me. Me! Just because I had a few gambling debts.”

“And you didn’t take them?”

His nostrils flared. “Of course I didn’t. That’s what started the argument. I told her it was Buddy. She was shocked. She tells me Buddy wouldn’t do such a thing. The little twirp!”

Finn’s eyes narrowed. “I told her all her kids were nuts. Then we really started to fight. Erma brought up an old story about me doing something to Ree when she was a kid.”

Keep him talking, Mary Helen thought, shifting her feet ever so slightly. “Ree told me as much.” She kept her voice even. “And you’re saying you didn’t?”

He stared at her in amazement. “Damn right, I didn’t! Actually it was Junior who knocked his sister down. I thought the kids were lost, so I went looking for them. He was on top of her by the time I got there. Buddy was looking on. I’m sure she didn’t tell you that part.

“I got him off her. Tommy came around the comer. When she sees him, Ree says I was the one who knocked her down.” He shrugged. “We never could figure out just what happened or whose fault it was or exactly what the kid had in mind. I never seen Tommy so mad. He walloped the daylights out of Junior right there at the track. Smacked the sister good and hard a couple of times, too, just in case.”

“Did you explain that to Erma?”

“She never wanted to talk about it. Tommy—I know
he was ready to kill both kids! Somehow Erma blamed that on me too.” He shook his head. “You know, when she was around she never let him lay a hand on Ree or the little guy. And that Buddy sure could have used it. If you ask me, that’s why the poor guy drank.” He stopped to catch his breath.

BOOK: The Missing Madonna
9.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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