Alex Kava Bundle - Alex Kava [665]
“When my husband first passed away…” The woman set her coffee mug down and began wringing her hands. She had been staring at Pakula since he’d walked into the room but now her eyes were everywhere but on him. “Well, when he died it was hard on Mark. They were so close the two of them. Monsignor O’Sullivan, although he was only Father O’Sullivan back then, asked if he could come over for dinner, spend some time with Mark. He said he was worried about him. I was always raised to believe that there was no better way to grace your home, your family, than for the parish priest to come to dinner. You have to understand. Well, you probably can’t understand,” she said, shaking her head.
“No, I do,” Pakula said. “I’m Catholic.”
“So am I,” O’Dell said.
The woman looked from him to O’Dell and back to him like she was seeing them for the first time. Pakula wondered if knowing they were both Catholic would help her trust them or simply strengthen her distrust.
“When Mark finally told me what Father O’Sullivan did to him whenever he volunteered to tuck Mark in bed after dinner…well, I’m ashamed to admit, I didn’t believe him. He was ten. Boys make up all kinds of stories at that age.”
“But I wasn’t making it up,” Mark interrupted.
Pakula noticed that all of them jerked their heads to look at him, surprised to realize that he was even listening.
“I know, I know,” Brenda Donovan said, bobbing her head. “But that’s what Father O’Sullivan told me when I finally got up enough courage to tell him why he couldn’t come to dinner anymore. He told me that if I believed my son’s lies then I couldn’t come to his house for dinner anymore, either.” She looked up at them again, searching their faces for understanding. Evidently she saw their confusion because she tried to explain. “You know, his house being the church and dinner being Holy Communion. I was devastated. I didn’t know that a priest could punish you like that. So I went to Archbishop Armstrong.”
Pakula waited, watching Brenda Donovan shake her head as if she still couldn’t believe it. He glanced at O’Dell who was now not only paying attention but sitting forward in her chair.
“Tell us what the archbishop had to say, Brenda,” Hamilton said.
“Father O’Sullivan must have warned him that I’d be calling. The archbishop asked me why I would want to ruin a good priest’s reputation with such lies. Then he held my hands and asked me to pray along with him. He said we’d join hands and pray for him. It wasn’t until we were halfway through our prayer that I realized the ‘him’ we were praying for was not my son, but Father O’Sullivan. That was the day I left the Catholic Church. I haven’t been back since.”
There was an uncomfortable silence but Pakula sat through it. He had learned a long time ago that when people confided something gut-wrenching, they didn’t necessarily want someone telling them it’d be okay. They knew it would never be okay. They just wanted someone to listen.
“Mark wasn’t the only boy,” Hamilton finally said. “I’ve found seven others who are now thirteen to twenty-five years old. Two the archdiocese paid over a hundred thousand dollars each. One told me his father forfeited a payoff when Armstrong promised he’d send O’Sullivan away for treatment. O’Sullivan was gone for two months.”
Pakula rubbed his jaw. He wasn’t surprised. He had heard about the various scandals all over the country, but had to admit he hadn’t paid much attention. He remembered being grateful that the Omaha Archdiocese seemed to have escaped it. Once, he and Clare had gotten into an argument about it when he suggested that he didn’t understand why the boys didn’t fight back. Why they waited until years later when they were adults and the statute of limitations had long expired. At the time he couldn’t help wondering if many of the cases were simply about money. Okay, so a priest put his hand down some kid’s pants, he’s definitely a sicko, but is it traumatic enough to equal a couple million dollars? Clare had told him that he had no idea what those boys had gone through.