Devious - Lisa Jackson [38]
If that were possible.
Would Camille find eternal peace and pass through the gates of heaven?
Or was her soul forever damned?
CHAPTER 14
“What the hell’s going on here?” Bentz was agitated and didn’t try to hide it as Montoya drove the Mustang away from the hospital. Leaning his elbow on the open window ledge of the sunbaked car while the air-conditioning struggled against the heat, he let fly. “It feels like I was your date at a damned high school reunion!”
“Yeah, right.”
“Come on. First, what’re the chances of you knowing the victim?” Bentz asked, raising his index finger. “And then the nun who found her?” Another finger shot skyward. “Not to mention the priest she was allegedly sleeping with.” The third digit joined the first two. “Did I forget anyone?” Bentz groused.
“Not so far.”
“Humph!” Bentz was clearly annoyed, and probably tired as hell. The case had kept them up most of the night, and Bentz, too, had an infant at home who wasn’t yet sleeping through the night. His daughter, Ginny, born last Halloween and now nearly eight months old, had been colicky from the get-go.
“Christ,” Bentz grumbled. “Who knows how many more will crawl out of the damned woodwork?”
“Hopefully none.”
“Be sure to check the list of everyone associated with St. Marguerite’s. Could be some more long-forgotten girlfriends holing up there.”
“I will.”
With a snort of disgust, he discovered a pack of gum in a pat-down of his jacket and unwrapped a stick. He pointed out the obvious: “If Camille Renard really was pregnant, we’ve got ourselves a double homicide.”
“Great.”
“With your friend O’Toole as a prime suspect.” He wadded the gum into a ball and plopped it into his mouth. “You buy him being the daddy?”
Montoya snorted. “I don’t buy him being a priest.”
“I don’t like it.”
“Neither do I.”
“Nuns don’t get pregnant.”
“Yeah, usually the celibacy thing takes care of that,” Montoya agreed, turning a corner where a lone saxophone player was playing blues to a small crowd, his instrument case open in front of him, scattered coins glinting in the sun.
“You believe he was involved with another nun, one before Camille Renard?” Bentz asked, squinting from the sun.
“Don’t know what to think, but we’re checking it out. Zaroster’s on it.”
“So what is it with this guy? Why become a priest if you’re so into women?”
“Who knows?”
“Yeah, well, I just don’t get the whole vow of celibacy thing. Seems to be just another way to get everyone in trouble. It’s just not natural. God or no God.”
Montoya didn’t respond, just drove on automatic, his mind spinning as fast as the tires of his car. He wondered about Camille Renard, how she’d ended up back in New Orleans in a convent. And pregnant. He figured she must’ve really been carrying a child; there was no reason for the sister to lie, especially when an autopsy would reveal the truth.
“You know, the whole crime scene was wrong,” Bentz finally said, staring out the window.
“Staged.”
“Nuns don’t wear bridal gowns or jewelry.”
“Actually, O’Toole said they wear the gowns when they take their vows. And they have a ring, too. But I get what you’re saying. The wedding gown. The way her body was laid near the altar with the drops of blood around the gown’s neckline . . .”
“Ritualistic,” Bentz observed.
“Sick.”
Bentz’s cell phone chirped. As he answered, he rolled up the window, cutting down the ambient noise.
Montoya tuned out Bentz’s one-sided phone conversation as he passed a carriage pulled by a gray mule. Driving along the river, he tried to piece the disjointed bits of the investigation together. Camille as the victim, dressed in a frayed wedding dress, strangled, apparently. Who wanted her dead? Who would go to such bizarre lengths to kill her and display her body? The father of her unborn child?
Seemed unlikely.
Someone