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Alex Kava Bundle - Alex Kava [667]

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Mrs. Sanchez let you in?” Again, he started looking around the room for the woman, past the doorways and out in the backyard.

“I must admit, I’m disappointed you don’t recognize me, Father Paul. Although I guess it has been over fourteen years.”

“Wait a minute, are you the gardener?” He recognized the hatchet from the garden shed left by the back door alongside a black case. “Did she forget to pay you?” He pushed up his glasses, hoping a better look at the young man would reveal who he was. He had to be one of the workers. She wouldn’t let just anyone in.

“Nope, not a gardener. Although I did help myself to a few tools from the shed in back. Sure is quiet back there.” He sipped more coffee.

“I’m sure she’s around here somewhere if you need to be paid.” The priest walked over to the doorway to the laundry room and yelled, “Mrs. Sanchez, are you down there?”

“I grew up in this neighborhood,” the young man said. “I was an altar boy. I’m hurt you don’t remember me, Father Paul.”

“Really?” Father Conley came back to study him once more, but still he couldn’t place him. Besides, the man certainly didn’t look or sound upset. “I’ve been here for twenty years,” he told him. “A lot of boys have served mass with me. Surely you can’t expect me to remember every single one of them?”

Now the stranger shoved his coffee cup aside and brought out a plastic bag, unrolling it on the table. Father Conley thought it looked like one of those large transparent bags that dry cleaners used when they returned your freshly cleaned garments. Ah, perhaps that was what he had come for. He must be the dry cleaner, picking up the vestments. But why come to the rectory and not the church? It didn’t make sense.

“I suppose it is difficult to remember everyone,” the young man said, pushing away from the table and standing up with the plastic bag now unfolded, and twisted tightly around both hands, his fingers balling up around its corners until they were fists. “But I would hope you’d remember the ones you fucked, Father Paul.”

Suddenly Father Conley found himself caught in a veil of plastic, stretched over his face, cutting off his breath. He fought, clawing at the hands that continued to wrap the plastic taut around his entire head, until he could feel the knot at the base of his neck. Desperate for air, he struggled, kicking and flaying his arms, trying to dig the plastic out of his face, but the layers were many and the fight was quickly being strangled out of him.

Still, he twisted and turned, thrashing about, banging into counters and knocking pots and pans to the floor, only they seemed to no longer make a sound. He slipped to his knees but still continued to pluck at the plastic, now much of it inhaled, sticking in his mouth and down his throat as he gasped like a fish out of water.

There was no more air, no more fight left in him. He fell to the floor and the last thing Father Paul Conley saw was Mrs. Sanchez’s dead eyes staring out at him from under the butcher-block table in the far corner.

CHAPTER 62

Omaha, Nebraska

Maggie was completely exhausted by the time she got back to her hotel. She and Pakula barely said a word to each other on the drive from the Saint Francis Center to the Embassy Suites. Pakula told her he’d talk to Chief Ramsey about Father Michael Keller and that the chief and Assistant Director Cunningham could discuss how to handle it. Maggie felt relieved until she remembered that she’d still have to be the one to meet with Keller. He had told her he wouldn’t relinquish any information to anyone but her.

She knew he didn’t mean it as a favor or a professional courtesy. He had to know she had been tracking him, asking questions, creating suspicion, making it impossible for him to stay in one place for long. This was his way to mock her, to put her in her place.

While listening to Mark Donovan it had suddenly occurred to her that she wasn’t all that different from this priest killer. Keller had committed horrendous crimes. No one could look at those dead little boys and not agree. And yet, he had eluded justice

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