Strangers Page 69


Suddenly, no one knew what to expect. Anything might happen now.


We believed we were in control of the situation that night in July, Leland thought somberly, but perhaps it had escalated beyond our control even before we arrived on the scene.


The single consolation was that, thus far, only Corvaisis and the priest appeared to be . . . infected. Maybe “infected” wasn't exactly the right word. Maybe “possessed” was better. Or maybe there wasn't a word for what had happened to them, because what had happened to them had never happened to anyone else in history, so a specific word for it had not heretofore been required.


Even if the siege at Sharkle's house ended tomorrow, even if that possibility of media exposure was eliminated, Leland would not be able to strike at the group at the motel with full confidence. Corvaisis and Croninand perhaps the othersmight be more difficult to apprehend and incarcerate than they'd been two summers ago. If Corvaisis and Cronin weren't entirely themselves any more, if they were now someone elseor something elsedealing with them might prove downright impossible.


Leland's headache was worse.


Feed on it, he told himself, getting up from the desk. Feed on the pain. You've been doing that for years, you dumb son of a bitch, so you can feed on it for another day or two, until you've dealt with this mess or until you're dead, whichever comes first.


He left the windowless office, crossed a windowless outer chamber, walked a windowless hall, and entered the windowless communications center, where Lieutenant Horner and Sergeant Fiw sat at a table in one corner. “Tell the men they can hit the sack,” Leland said. "It's off for tonight. I'll risk another day to see if the situation at Sharkle's house gets resolved."


“I was just coming to you,” Horner said. "There's a development at the motel. They finally left the diner. After they came out, Twist brought a Jeep Cherokee in from the hills behind the motel. He, Jorja Monatella, and the priest piled in it and drove off toward Elko."


“Where the hell are they going at this time of night?”


Leland asked, uncomfortably aware that those three might have slipped through his fingers if he had ordered his men to move against the motel tonight, for he'd been certain the witnesses were settled down until morning.


Horner pointed to Fiw, who was wearing headphones and listening to the Tranquility. "From what we've heard, the others are going to bed. Twist, Monatella, and Cronin have gone off as . . . as sort of insurance against us getting our hands on all the witnesses in one quick clean sweep. This had to be Twist's idea."


“Damn.” Massaging his throbbing temples with his finger tips, Leland sighed. “All right. We aren't going after them tonight, anyway.”


“But what about tomorrow? What if they split up all day tomorrow?”


“In the morning,” Leland said, “we'll put tails on all of them.” To this point, he had seen no need to tail the witnesses everywhere they went, for he had known that, in the end, they would all wind up at the same placethe motelmaking it easier for him to deal with them. But now, if they were going to be spread out when the time came to take them into custody, he would need to know where they were at all times.


Horner said, "Depending on where they go tomorrow, they're likely to spot any tails we put on them. In this kind of open country, it's not easy to be discreet."


“I know,” Leland said. "So let them see us. I've wanted to stay out of sight, but we're at the end of that approach. Maybe seeing us will throw them off balance until it's too late. Maybe, scared, they'll even get back together for protection and make our job easier again."


"If we have to take some of them at a place other than the motel, say in Elko, it'll be difficult," Horner said worriedly.


“If they can't be taken, they've got to be killed.” Leland pulled up a chair, sat down. "Let's work out surveillance details now and have the tails in position before dawn."


3.


Tuesday, January 14


At seventhirty Tuesday morning, in response to a telephone call from Brendan Cronin very late the previous night, Father Stefan Wycazik prepared to set out on a drive to Evanston, to the last known address of Calvin Sharkle, the trucker who had been at the Tranquility Motel that summer but whose telephone was now disconnected. In light of the enormity of last evening's developments in Nevada, everyone was agreed that every possible effort must be made to contact the other victims who had thus far been unreachable. Standing in the warm rectory kitchen, Stefan buttoned his topcoat and put on his fedora.


Father Michael Gerrano, who was just sitting down to oat meal and toast after celebrating sunrise Mass, said, "Perhaps I should know more about this whole situation, about what on earth's wrong with Brendan, in case . . . well, in case something happens to you."


“Nothing's going to happen to me,” Father Wycazik said firmly. "God hasn't let me spend five decades learning how the world works just to have me killed now that I'm able to do my best work for the Church."


Michael shook his head. “You're always so . ”Certain in my faith? Of course I am. Rely on God, and He will never fail you, Michael."


“Actually,” Michael said, smiling, "I was going to say: You're always so bullheaded."


“Such impudence from a curate!” Stefan said, winding a thick white scarf around his neck. "Attend thee, Father: What is wanted of a curate is humility, selfeffacement, the strong back of a mule, the stamina of a plow horseand an unfailingly adoring attitude toward his rector."


Michael grinned. "Oh, yes, I suppose if the rector is a pious old geezer grown vain from the praise of his parishioners-" The telephone rang.


“If it's for me, I'm gone,” Stefan said.


Stefan pulled on a pair of gloves but was not quite able to make it to the back door before Michael held the receiver toward him.


“It's Winton Tolk,” Michael said. "The cop whose life Brendan saved. He sounds almost hysterical, and he wants to talk to Brendan."


Stefan took the phone and identified himself.


The policeman's voice was haunted and full of urgency. "Father, I've got to talk to Brendan Cronin right away, it can't wait."


“I'm afraid he's away,” Stefan said, "out at the other end of the country. What's the matter? Can I be of assistance?"


“Cronin,” Tolk said shakily. "Something ... something's happened, and I don't understand, it's strange, Jesus, it's the strangest craziest thing, but I knew right away it was somehow related to Brendan."


“I'm sure I can help. Where are you, Winton?”


"On duty, end of the shift, graveyard shift, Uptown. There's been a knifing, a shooting. Horrible. And then . . . Listen,


I want Cronin to come up here, he's got to explain this, he's got to, right away."


Father Wycazik elicited an address from Tolk, left the rectory at a run, and drove too fast. Less than half an hour later, he arrived in a block of identical, shabby, sixstory, brick tenements in the Uptown district. He was unable to park in front of the address he had been given and settled for a spot near the corner, for the prime space was occupied by police vehiclesmarked and unmarked cars, an SID wagonwhose radios filled the cold air with a metallic chorus of dispatchers' codes and jargon. Two officers were watching over the vehicles to prevent vandalism. In answer to Stefan's question, they told him the action was on the third floor, in 3-B, the Mendozas' apartment.


The glass in the front door was cracked across one corner, and the temporary repair with electrician's tape looked as if it had become a permanent solution. The door opened on a grim foyer. Some floor tiles were missing and others were hidden by grime. The paint was peeling.


As he climbed the stairs, Stefan encountered two beautiful children playing “dead doll” with a battered Raggedy Ann and an old shoebox.


When he walked through the open door and into the Mendozas' thirdfloor apartment, Father Wycazik saw a beige sofa liberally stained with stillwet blood, so much that in some places the cushions were almost black. Hundreds of drops had sprayed across the paleyellow wall behind the sofa, a pattern that evidently had resulted when someone in front of the wall had been hit by largecaliber slugs that passed through him. Four bullet holes marred the plaster. Blood was spattered over a lampshade, coffee table, bookshelf, and part of the carpet.


The gore was even more disgusting than it might ordinarily have been because the apartment was otherwise extremely wellkept, which made the areas of bloody chaos more shocking by comparison. The Mendozas could afford to live only in a slum tenement, but like some other poor people, they refused to surrender toor become part ofthe Uptown squalor. The filth of the streets, the grime of public hallways and staircases, stopped at their door, as if their apartment was a fortress against dirt, a shrine to cleanliness and order. Everything gleamed.


Removing his fedora, Stefan took only two steps into the living roomwhich flowed without interruption into a small dining area., which itself was separated from a halfsize kitchen by a serving counter. The place was crowded with detectives, uniformed officers, lab techniciansmaybe a dozen men altogether. Most of them were not acting like cops. Their demeanor puzzled Stefan. Apparently, the lab men had completed their work and the others had nothing to do, yet no one was leaving. They were standing in groups of two or three, talking in the subdued manner of people at a funeral parloror in church.


Only one detective was working. He was sitting at the dinette table with a Madonnafaced Latino woman of about forty, asking questions of her (Father Wycazik heard him call her Mrs. Mendoza), and recording her answers on legallooking forms. She was trying to cooperate but was distracted as she glanced repeatedly at a man her own age, probably her husband, who was pacing back and forth with a child in his arms. The child was a cute boy of about six. Mr. Mendoza held the child in one burly arm, talking constantly to him, patting him, ruffling his thick hair. Obviously, this man had almost lost his son in whatever violence had occurred earliere, and he needed to touch and hold the child to convince himself that the worst had not actually happened.


One of the patrolmen noticed Stefan and said, “Father Wycazik?”


The officer's voice was soft, but at the mention of Stefan's name, the entire group fell silent. Stefan could not remember ever seeing expressions quite like those that came over the faces of the people in the Mendozas' small apartment: as if he were expected to deliver unto them a single sentence that would shed light upon all the mysteries of existence and succinctly convey the meaning of life.


What in the world is going on here? Stefan wondered uneasily.


“This way, Father,” said a uniformed officer.


Pulling off his gloves, Stefan followed the officer across the room. The hush prevailed, and everyone made way for the priest and his guide. They went into a bedroom, where Winton Tolk and another officer were sitting on the edge of the bed. “Father Wycazik's here,” Stefan's guide said, then retreated to the living room.


Tolk was sitting bent forward, his elbows on his knees, his face hidden in his hands. He did not look up.


The other officer rose from the edge of the bed and introduced himself as Paul Armes, Winton's partner. "I ... I think you'd better get it directly from Win,“ Armes said. ”I'll give you some privacy." He left, closing the door behind him.


The bedroom was small, with space for only the bed, one nightstand, a halfsize dresser, one chair. Father Wycazik pulled the chair around to face the foot of the bed and sat down, so he could look directly at Winton Tolk. Their knees were almost touching.


Removing his scarf, Father Wycazik said, “Winton, what's happened?”


Tolk looked up, and Stefan was startled by the man's expression. He had thought Tolk was upset by whatever had happened in the living room. But his face revealed that he was exhilarated, filled with an excitement he could barely contain. Simultaneously, he seemed fearfulnot terrified, not quaking with fear, but troubled by something that prevented him from giving in completely, happily, to his excitement.


“Father, who is Brendan Cronin?” The tremor in the big man's voice was of an odd character that might have betrayed either incipient joy or terror. “What is Brendan Cronin?”


Stefan hesitated, decided on the full truth. “He's a priest.”


Winton shook his head. “But that's not what we were told.”


Stefan sighed, nodded. He explained about Brendan's loss of faith and about the unconventional therapy that had included a week in a police patrol car. "You and Officer Armes weren't told he was a priest because you might've treated him differently . . . and because I wished to spare him embarrassment."


“A fallen priest,” Winton said, looking baffled.


“Not fallen,” Father Wycazik said confidently. "Merely faltering. He'll regain his faith in time."


The room's inadequate light came from a dim lamp on the nightstand and from a single narrow window, leaving the dark policeman in velvet gloom. The whites of his eyes were twin lamps, very bright by contrast with the darknesses of shadows and genetic heritage. "How did Brendan heal me when I was shot? How did he perform that . . . miracle? How?"


“Why have you decided it was a miracle?”


"I was shot twice in the chest, pointblank. Three days later I left the hospital. Three days! In ten days, I was ready to go back to work, but they made me stay home two weeks. Doctors kept talking about my hardy physical condition, the extraordinary healing that's possible if a body's in tiptop shape. I started thinking they were trying to explain my recovery not to me but to themselves. But I still figured I was just really lucky. I came back to work a week ago, and then . . .


something else happened." Winton unbuttoned his shirt, pulled it open, and lifted his undershirt to reveal his bare chest. “The scars.”


Father Wycazik shivered. Though he was close to Winton, he leaned closer, staring in amazement. The man's chest was unmarked. Well, not entirely unmarked, but the entry wounds had already healed until they were just discolored spots as big as dimes. The surgeon's incisions had almost vanished thin lines visible now only on close inspection. This soon after major trauma, some swelling and inflammation should have been evident, but there was none. The minimal scar tissue was pale pinkbrown against darkbrown skin, neither lumpy nor puckered.


“I've seen other guys with old bullet wounds,” Winton said, his excitement still restrained by a rope of fear. "Lots of them. Gnarly, thick. Ugly. You don't take two .38s in the chest, undergo major surgery, and look like this three weeks later or ever."