Gregor Demarkian couldn't decide if he liked fax machines or not. They were one of the few of the new machines he had no real trouble withâalthough lately, being around Bennis as much as he was, he had become far more relaxed on the computer. They also had the virtue of being able to get him large amounts of material in a very short time without the waste or expense of traveling through the city. Garry Mansfield and Lou Emiliani hadn't bothered to make him get into a cab, or to make their department pay a messenger. They had both just got on their fax machines and sent him everything they had, reams and reams of it, so that, by late in the morning, he had found himself surrounded by flimsy paper: toxicology reports, search reports, interview transcripts, expert advice. What worried Gregor was that, having supplied him with all this information, Garry and Lou would now expect him to make something of it. It certainly seemed as if there ought to be enough to make something of something. At the very least, he ought to have a clue. Instead, he was just as bewildered as he had ever been, and the information that was now coming in about the death of Sister Harriet Garrity wasn't making things any clearer. All three victims had eaten arsenic. None of them had eaten anything else in common, at least in the period for which the autopsy would be validâalthough that wasn't as sure as it could be. It didn't take much arsenic to kill a person. If they had ingested it in something very small, like a gel-cap pill, the elements might not always show up in the autopsy reports. All of them had known the same people, more or less, or at least been in close proximity to them, and all of them
had been connected, to one extent or the other, to the archdiocesan priest-pedophilia scandal. Beyond that, he had nothing. The police had nothing. Maybe there was nothing to be had. He was being asked to come to a logical solution to a series of crimes that amounted to ducks being shot off a conveyer belt at the marksmanship booth at a carnival.
The taxi pulled up in front of St. Anselm's side gate. Gregor got out, paid the fare, dropped a better tip than he should have in the front seat, and looked around. He couldn't see the main street from there, but St. Stephen's looked calm enough, if a little busier than it had the first time he had been there. He went through the gate and around the back of the church to the parking lot and the convent. The offices were still sealed, and would be for three days, in case the police suddenly found they needed to investigate something they hadn't thought of before. A uniformed policeman was standing on the convent steps, looking cold.
“Mr. Demarkian,” he said, when Gregor walked up. “They're in there. In the front room. The, uh, the parlor.”
“Thank you,” Gregor said.
The patrolman looked uncomfortable. “You figure this is okay?” he asked. “With the Church, I mean. It's okay to question the nuns?”
“Of course it's okay to question the nuns,” Gregor said.
“I guess.” The patrolman stepped out of the way so that Gregor could get through to the door.
Gregor didn't bother to ask if he were Catholic. Of
course
he was Catholic. Gregor let himself in the front door and headed for the parlor, easily visible a few steps to his left.
Garry and Lou were there, sitting uncomfortably at the edge of a couch. Lou, at least, was also Catholic. Sister Scholastica was there, too, which Gregor had not expected, and as he came in he raised his eyebrows at her.
“It's the rule of the order,” she said, standing up to take his coat. Garry and Lou practically leaped to their feet. Gregor revised his estimate. Garry Mansfield, too, was probably Catholic. He looked at the other nun, the very young one, and nodded.
“This is Sister Peter Rose,” Scholastica said. “The order says none of us can be alone with a layman or even with a priest, except for Confession or spiritual counseling. And
that's man, not in the generic sense. If you know what I mean. Actually, if the police department insisted, we'd oblige. But they didn't insist, so ⦔
“No, no, no,” Lou said. “It's perfectly all right, Sister. We understand.”
Sister Scholastica put Gregor's coat on a coat tree and sat down again. Lou Emiliani sat down, too. Garry remained standing. Sister Peter Rose looked up, and said, “We met, you know. In Colchester. When all that happened. I'd just taken tertiary vows. Sister thought I was a flake.”
“I never said you were a flake,” Scholastica said.
“You never
said
it,” Peter Rose said. Then she turned to Gregor again. “It's true, you know. I am a flake, at least a little bit. I should have realized she was up to something. Even Thomasetta noticed there was something very odd. It just never occurred to me.”
“Thomasetta?” Gregor said.
“You met her last night,” Garry said. “Older nun. She was on duty in the main office when Sister Harriet first came looking for Sister Scholastica.”
“I remember,” Gregor said.
“The thing is,” Sister Peter Rose said, “it didn't make sense, not really. I mean, Sister Harriet never came looking for Sister Scholastica. She phoned up and demanded that Sister come visit her. If you know what I mean. She was just soâshe thought that we were all terrible for wearing habits, that was one thing. And she wanted everybody to know she had an important position in the parish, as parish coordinator, and that she wasn't just another parochial-school nun. Although what's more important in the life of a parish than running the school, I don't know. Oh. Except for celebrating the Eucharist, of course.”
“Of course,” Gregor said. “And youâyou work in the office?”
“Oh, no, not usually,” Sister Peter Rose said. “I teach second grade. And I serve as vice principal, you know, which means I'm supposed to mete out the discipline when it's necessary, but I'm not very good at thatâ”
“She's a marshmallow,” Sister Scholastica said.
Sister Peter Rose blushed. “I'm a marshmallow. It's true. And most of the kids who get sent to me are just boys who
have too much energy, and they're bored. It's terrible what we do to boys, trying to make them sit still in a classroom for six hours a day.”
“But you were in the office yesterday,” Gregor said.
“Yes,” Peter Rose agreed. “I was. It's First Communion, you see. They're all going to make their First Communions right after Easter. And they had practiceâ”
“Practice?” Gregor said.
“How to walk in lines and how to kneel the right way and that kind of thing,” Peter Rose said. “And, you know, singing. Only, Mrs. Giametti was doing the practice. She's the head of our CCDâ”
“CCD?” Gregor asked.
“Confraternity of Christian Doctrine,” Scholastica said. “A fancy name for catechism for children in public schools.”
“The public-school children and the St. Anselm's children are all going to make their First Holy Communions together,” Peter Rose said, “and AngelinaâMrs. Giamettiâwanted to drill our children so that she was sure they'd all be in sync when the time came. So I sent them over to the church with her, and I came over to my office to get some paperwork done. Did I tell you that the vice principal has an office?”
“I think he would have expected that,” Scholastica said.
“Yes, well.” Peter Rose blushed. “Anyway, I was there. When she came in. And she was looking for Scholastica.”
“She told you she was looking for Scholastica?” Gregor asked.
“No, she didn't tell me anything at all. I don't think she ever saw me. She went right past my door without saying hello.”
“Then how do you know she was looking for Scholastica?”
“She asked Thomasetta,” Sister Peter Rose said. “Thomasetta didn't like her much. And she didn't like Thomasetta much. You know how it is. But she asked Thomasetta, and Thomasetta told her that Scholastica was out.”
“This was when?” Gregor asked.
“About ten-thirty.”
“What did she do then?” Gregor asked. “Did she leave? Did she ask questions?”
“Thomasetta said something about where Scholastica was and where she had been, and then Sister Harriet walked down
the hall and passed me again. And then she must have gone into Scholastica's officeâ”
“Must have?” Gregor shook his head. “You mean you didn't see her?”
“No,” Peter Rose admitted, “but I didn't really have to see her. There are only two places to be down on that end of the hall. Either she went into Scholastica's office, or she went out the fire door and down the stairs.”
“Why are you so sure she didn't go out the fire door?”
“Because it screams like a banshee,” Scholastica said. “We have it oiled and oiled, but nothing seems to work. The hinge probably ought to be replaced.”
“So, the hinge didn't scream,” Gregor said. “How do you know she didn't just stand in the hall for a while?”
“I don't,” Peter Rose said. “But it doesn't make any sense, does it? Why would she just stand there, not even moving. And besidesâ”
“Besides?” Gregor cocked his head.
“She was in there fifteen minutes later,” Peter Rose said. “She must have been. Nobody came in from that end, because I would have heard the hinge. And nobody came in and down the hall from the other end, because they would have had to pass me. But Mary McAllister came in at just about quarter of, and she wanted to put some things on Scholastica's desk, and when she went down to the office, the door was locked.”
“I never lock my door,” Scholastica said. “None of us do, except sometimes by accident, because there's no point to it.”
“There are duplicate keys all over the place,” Peter Rose said. “And don't say it's possible that Scholastica locked the door herself by accident, because it was open when I came back that morning and it was open not five minutes before the first time I saw Harriet in the hall. I saw it coming back from the bathroom.”
“But you're sure it was locked from the inside?” Gregor said.
Scholastica shook her head. “Inside, outside, it doesn't matter. The keys work regardless.”
“Why didn't somebody use the key to get in so thatâ”
“Mary McAllister,” Lou Emiliani said.
“Mary McAllister,” Gregor repeated. “Why didn't somebody use a duplicate key to get in when Mary McAllister
wanted to leave the things on Scholastica's desk? What things, by the way?”
“Some papers about the food drive. Mary works with a homeless shelter downtown, and she does food distribution here. Our parochial-school kids collect canned goods and nonperishables. Sometimes, there's a special callâfor peanut butter, for kidney beans, for cranberry sauce. Things that are especially needed or that somebody wants. Mary had the special-needs schedules for next month.”
“And she took them away with her?” Gregor asked.
“She just went down to the main office and put them in Scholastica's box,” Peter Rose said. “She didn't want to take the time for Thomasetta to go find the key and open up. Except, you know, that she was bothered by it. The locked room. She was, and I wasn't. And she didn't really have any reason to think there was something wrong. I should have known right then that Harriet must have been inside. It just didn't occur to me.”
Gregor stood up and began to pace, but very slowly. It was hard to move, because the room was small and too full of furniture. “So what you're saying,” he said finally, “is that Sister Harriet Garrity went into Sister Scholastica's office at ten-thirty yesterday morning and locked the door behind her. Why?”
“I don't know,” Peter Rose said.
“Probably to get a look at my computer,” Scholastica said. “It's got a password on it, but we all use the same ones. Benedicamus Domini. There are a couple of others. It wouldn't have taken her much to go through them.”
“What would be on your computer that Sister Harriet Garrity would want?” Gregor asked.
Scholastica and Peter Rose looked at each other. Scholastica took a deep breath. “Well,” she said, “nothing, really, but Sister might have hoped there was. We've been having a lot of, well, friction, since I got here in January.”
“Friction about what?”
“About the First Holy Communion Mass, for one thing,” Scholastica said. “I'm all for the traditional event, with girls in white dresses and veils. She was all for something more ârelevant,' except that wouldn't have been the word she would have used. More âfeminist,' maybe. Anyway, we had a fight
about it, and I won that round. She might have been looking for embarrassing information to use the next time we had a run-in.”
“And there was no such information?”
“Good grief, Gregor, I've been here less than two months.” Scholastica laughed. “Not that there isn't enough embarrassing information in my past, but Harriet wasn't going to find out about it in my office. She might have discovered that I've been less than strict about the academic requirements in the case of one or two of the kids, but that isn't anything Father Healy didn't know about. Besides, she was the one who was always saying that grades were a tool of white-male hegemonic oppression.”