CHAPTER FIVE
Cupped in the warm, green hollow of the
campus, Damien Karras, jogged alone around an oval, loamy track in
khaki shorts and a cotton T-shit drenched with the cling of healing
sweat. Up ahead, on a hillock, the lime-white dome of the
astronomical observatory pulsed with the beat of his stride; behind
him, the medical school fell away with churned-up shards of earth
and care.
Since release from his duties, he came here
daily, lapping the miles and chasing sleep. He had almost caught
it; almost eased the clutch of grief that gripped at his heart like
a deep tattoo. It held him gentler now.
Twenty laps...
Much gentler.
More! Two more!
Much gentler...
Powerful leg muscles blooded and stinging,
rippling with a long and leonine grace, Karras thumped around a
turn when he noticed someone sitting on a bench to- the side where
he'd laid out his towel, sweater and pants: a middle-aged man in a
floppy overcoat and pulpy, crushed felt hat. He seemed to be
watching him. Was he? Yes... head turning as Karras
passed.
The priest accelerated, digging at the final lap
with pounding strides that jarred the earth, then he slowed to a
panting, gulping walk as he passed the bench without a glance, both
hands pressed light to his throbbing sides. The heave of his
rock-muscled chest and shoulders stretched his T-shirt, distorting
the stenciled word PHILOSOPHERS inscribed across the front in
once-blade letters now faded to a hint by repeated
washings.
The man in the overcoat stood up and began to
approach him.
"Father Karras?" Lieutenant Kinderman called
hoarsely.
The priest turned around and nodded briefly,
squinting into sunlight, waiting for Kinderman to reach him, then
beckoned him along as once again he began to move. "Do you mind?
I'll cramp," he panted. "Yes, of course." the detective answered,
nodding with a wincing lack of enthusiasm as be tucked his hands
into his pockets. The walk from the parking lot had tired
him.
"Have---have we met?" asked the
Jesuit.
"No, Father. No, but they said that you looked
like a boxer; some priest at the residence hall; I forget." He was
tugging out his wallet. "So bad with names."
"And yours?"
"William Kinderman, Father." He flashed his
identification. "Homicide."
"Really?" Karras scanned the badge and
identification card with a shining, boyish interest. Flushed and
perspiring, his face had an eager look of innocence as he turned to
the waddling detective. "What's this about?"
"Hey, you know something, Father?" Kinderman
answered, inspecting the Jesuit's rugged features. "It's true, you
do look like a boxer. Excuse me; that scar, you know, there by your
eye?" He was pointing. "Like Brando, it looks like, in Waterfront,
just exactly Marlon Brando. They gave him a scar"---he was
illustrating, pulling at the corner of his eye---"that made his eye
look a little bit closed, just a little, made him look a little
dreamy all the time, always sad. Well, that's you," he said,
pointing. "You're Brando. People tell you that, Father?"
"No, they don't."
"Ever box?"
"Oh, a little."
"You're from here in the District?"
"New York."
"Golden Gloves. Am I right?"
"You just made captain." Karras smiled. "Now
what can I do for you?"
"Walk a little slower, please. Emphysema." The
detective was gesturing at his throat.
"Oh, I'm sorry." Karras slowed his
pace.
"Never mind. Do you smoke?"
"Yes, I do."
"You shouldn't."
"Well, now tell me the problem."
"Of course; I'm digressing. Incidentally, you're
busy?" the detective inquired. "I'm not interrupting?"
"Interrupting what?" asked Karras,
bemused.
"Well, mental prayer, perhaps."
"You will make captain." Karras smiled
cryptically.
"Pardon me, I missed something?"
Karras shook his head; but the smile lingered.
"I doubt that you ever miss a thing," he remarked. His sidelong
glance toward Kinderman was sly and warmly twinkling.
Kinderman halted and mounted a massive and
hopeless effort at looking befuddled, but glancing at the Jesuit's
crinkling eyes, he lowered his head and chuckled ruefully. "Ah,
well. Of course... of course... a psychiatrist. Who am I kidding?"
He shrugged. "Look, it's habit with me, Father. Forgive me.
Schmaltz---that's the Kinderman method: pure schmaltz. Well, I'll
stop and tell you straight what it's all about."
"The desecrations," Karras said,
nodding.
"So I wasted my schmaltz, the detective said
quietly.
"Sorry"
"Never mind, Father; that I deserved. Yes, the
things in the church," he confirmed. "Correct. Only maybe something
else besides, something serious."
"Murder?"
"Yes. kick me again, I enjoy it."
"Well, Homicide Division." The Jesuit
shrugged.
"Never mind, never mind, Marlon Brando; never
mind.
People tell you for a priest you're a little bit
smart-ass?"
"Mea culpa," Karras murmured. Though he was
smiling, he felt a regret that perhaps he'd diminished the man's
self esteem. He hadn't meant to. And now he felt glad of a chance
to express a sincere perplexity. "I don't get it, though," he
added, taking care that he wrinkled his brow. "What's the
connection?"
"Look, Father, could we keep this between us?
Confidential? Like a matter of confession, so to speak?"
"Of course." He was eyeing the detective
earnestly. "What is it?"
"You know that director who was doing the film
here, Father? Burke Dennings?"
"Well, I've seen him."
"You've seen him." The detective nodded. "You're
also familiar with how he died?"
"Well, the papers..." Karras shrugged
again.
"That's just part of it."
"Oh?"
"Only part of it. Part. Just a part. Listen,
what do you know on the subject of witchcraft?"
"What?"
"Listen, patience; I'm leading up to something.
Now witchcraft, please---you're familiar?"
"A little."
"From the witching end, not the
hunting."
"Oh, I once did a paper on it" Karras smiled.
"The psychiatric end."
"Oh, really? Wonderful! Great! That's a bonus. A
plus. You could help me a lot, a lot more than I thought. Listen,
Father. Now witchcraft..."
He reached up and gripped at the Jesuit's arm as
they rounded a turn and approached the bench. "Now me, I'm a layman
and, plainly speaking, not well educated. Not formally. No. But I
read. Look; I know what they say about self-made men, that they're
horrible examples of unskilled labor. But me, I'll speak plainly,
I'm not ashamed. Not at all, I'm---" Abruptly he arrested the flow,
looked down and shook his head. "Schmaltz. It's habit. I can't stop
the schmaltz. Look, forgive me; you're busy."
"Yes, I'm praying."
The Jesuit's soft delivery had been dry and
expressionless. Kinderman halted for a moment and eyed him. "You're
serious? No."
The detective faced forward again and they
walked. "Look, I'll come to the point: the desecrations. They
remind you of anything to do with witchcraft?"
"Maybe. Some rituals used in Black
Mass."
"A-plus. And now Dennings---you read how he
died?"
"In a fall"
"Well, I'll tell you,
and---please---confidential!"
"Of course."
The detective looked suddenly pained as he
realized that Karras had no intention of stopping at the bench. "Do
you mind?" he asked wistfully.
"What?"
"Could we stop? Maybe sit?"
"Oh, sure." They began to move back toward the
bench.
"You won't cramp?"
"No, I'm fine now."
"You're sure?"
"I'm fine."
"All right, all right, if you insist."
"You were saying?"
"In a second, please, just one
second."
Kinderman settled his aching bulk on the bench
with a sigh of content. "Ah, better, that's better," he said as the
Jesuit picked up his towel and wiped his perspiring face. "Middle
age. What a life."
"Burke Dennings?-"
"Burke Dennings, Burke Dennings, Burke
Dennings..." The detective was nodding down at his shoes. Then he
glanced up at Karras. The priest was wiping the back of his neck.
"Burke Dennings, good Father, was found at the bottom of that long
flight of steps at exactly five minutes after seven with his head
turned completely around and backward."
Peppery shouts drifted muffled from the baseball
diamond where the varsity team held practice. Karras stopped wiping
and held the lieutenant's steady gaze. "It didn't happen in the
fall?" he said at last.
"Sure, it's possible." Kinderman shrugged.
"But..."
"Unlikely," Karras brooded.
"And so what comes to mind in the contest of
witchcraft?"
The Jesuit sat down slowly, looking pensive.
"Well," he said finally, "supposedly demons broke the necks of
witches that way. At least, that's the myth."
"A myth?"
"Oh, largely," he said, turning to Kinderman.
"Although people did die that way, I suppose: likely members of a
coven who either defected or gave away secrets. That's just a
guess. But I know it was a trademark of demonic
assassins."
Kinderman nodded. "Exactly. Exactly. I
remembered the connection from a murder in London. That's now. I
mean, lately, just four or five years ago, Father. I remembered
that I read it in the papers."
"Yes, I read it too, but I think it turned out
to be some sort of hoax. Am I wrong?"
"No, that's right, Father, absolutely right. But
in this case, at least, you can see some connection, maybe, with
that and the things in the church. Maybe somebody crazy, Father,
maybe someone with a spite against the Church. Some unconscious
rebellion, perhaps..."
"Sick priest," murmured Karras. "That
it?"
"Listen, you re the psychiatrist, Father; you
tell me."
"Well, of course, the desecrations are clearly
pathological," Karras said thoughtfully, slipping on his sweater.
"And if Dennings was murdered---well, I'd guess that the killer's
pathological too."
"And perhaps had some knowledge of
witchcraft?"
"Could be."
"Could be," the detective grunted. "So who fits
the bill, also lives in the neighborhood, and also has access in
the night to the church?"
"Sick priest," Karras said, reaching out moodily
beside him to a pair of sun-bleached khaki pants.
"Listen, Father, this is hard for
you---please!---I understand. But for priests on the campus here,
you're the psychiatrist, Father, so---"
"No, I've had a change of assignment."
"Oh, really? In the middle of the
year?"
"That's the Order," Karras shrugged as he pulled
on the pants.
"Still, you'd know who was sick at the time and
who wasn't, correct? I mean, this kind of sickness. You'd know
that."
"No, not necessarily, Lieutenant. Not at all. It
would only be an accident, in fact, if I did. You see, I'm not a
psychoanalyst. All I do is counsel. Anyway," he commented,
buttoning his trousers, "I really know of no one who fits the
description."
"Ah, yes; doctor's ethics. If you knew. You
wouldn't tell."
"No, I probably wouldn't."
"Incidentally---and I mention it only in
passing---this ethic is lately considered illegal. Not to bother
you with trivia, but lately a psychiatrist in sunny California, no
less, was put in jail for not telling the police what he knew about
a patient."
"That a threat?"
"Don't talk paranoid. I mention it in
passing."
"I could always tell the judge it was a matter
of confession," said the Jesuit, grinning wryly as he stood to tuck
his shirt in. "Plainly speaking," he added.
The detective glanced up at him, faintly gloomy.
"Want to go into business, Father?" he said Then looked away
dismally. " 'Father'... what 'Father'?" he asked rhetorically.
"You're a Jew; I could tell when I met you."
The Jesuit chuckled.
"Yes, laugh," said Kinderman. "Laugh." But then
he smiled, looking impishly pleased with himself. He turned with
beaming eyes. "That reminds me. The entrance examination to be a
policeman, Father? When I took it, one question went something
like: 'What are rabies and what would you do for them?' Know what
some dumbhead put down for an answer? Emis? 'Rabies,' he said, 'are
Jew priests, and I would do anything that I could for them.'
Honest!" He'd raised up a hand as in oath.
Karras laughed. "Come on, I'll walk you to your
car. Are you parked in the lot?"
The detective looked up at him, reluctant to
move. "Then we're finished?"
The priest put a foot on the bench, leaning
over, an arm resting heavily on his knee. "Look, I'm really not
covering up," he said. "Really. If I knew of a priest like the one
you're looking for, the least I would do is to tell you that there
was such a man without giving you his name. Then I guess I'd report
it to the Provincial. But I don't know of anyone who even comes
close."
"Ah, well," the detective sighed. "I never
thought it was a priest in the first place. Not really." He nodded
toward the parking lot. "Yes, I'm over there."
They started walking.
"What I really suspect," the detective
continued, "if I said it out loud you would call me a nut. I don't
know. I don't know." He was shaking his head. "All these clubs and
these cults where they kill for no reason. It makes you start
thinking peculiar things. To keep up with the times, these days,
you have to be a little bit crazy."
Karras nodded.
"What's that thing on your shirt?" the detective
asked him, motioning his head toward the Jesuit's chest.
"What thing?"
"On the T-shirt," the detective clarified. "The
writing. 'Philosophers.' "
"Oh, I taught a few courses one year," said
Karras, "at Woodstock Seminary in Maryland. I played on the
lower-class baseball team. They were called the
Philosophers.'
"Ah, and the upper-class team?"
"Theologians."
Kinderman smiled and shook his head.
"Theologians three, Philosophers two," he mused.
"Philosophers three, Theologians two."
"Of course."
"Of course."
"Strange things," the detective brooded.
"Strange.- Listen, Father," he began on a reticent tack. "Listen,
doctor.... Am I crazy, or could there be maybe a witch coven here
in the District right now? Right today?"
"Oh, come on," said Karras.
"Then there could."
"Didn't get that."
"Now I'll be the doctor," the detective
announced to him, punching at the air with an index finger. "You
didn't say no, but instead you were smart-ass again. That's
defensive, good Father, defensive. You're afraid you'll look
gullible, maybe; a superstitious priest in front of Kinderman the
mastermind, the rationalist'
' ---he was tapping the finger at his
temple---"the genius beside you, here, the walking Age of Reason.
Right? Am I right?"
The Jesuit stared at him now with mounting
surmise and respect. "Why, that's very astute," he
remarked.
"Well, all right, then," Kinderman grunted. "So
I'll ask you again: could there maybe be witch covens here in the
District?"
"Well, I really wouldn't know," answered Karras
thoughtfully, arms folded across his chest. "But in parts of Europe
they say Black Mass."
"Today?"
"Today."
"You mean just like the old days, Father? Look,
I read about those things, incidentally, with the sex and the
statues and who knows whatever. Not meaning to disgust you, by the
way, but they did all those things? It's for real?"
"I don't know."
"Your opinion, then, Father
Defensive."
The Jesuit chuckled. "All right, then; I think
it's for real. Or at least I suspect so. But most of my reasoning's
based on pathology. Sure, Black Mass. But anyone doing those things
is a very disturbed human being, and disturbed in a very special
way. There's a clinical name for that kind of disturbance, in fact;
it's called Satanism---means people who can't have any sexual
pleasure unless it's connected to a blasphemous action. Well, it's
not that uncommon, not even today, and Black Mass was just used as
the justification."
"Again, please forgive me, but the things with
the statues of Jesus and Mary?"
"What about them?"
"They're true?"
"Well, I think this might interest you as a
policeman." His scholarly interest aroused and stirring, Karras'
manner grew quietly animated. "The records of the Paris police
still carry the case of a couple of monks from a nearby
monastery---let's see..." He scratched his head as he tried to
recall. "Yes, the one at Crépy, I believe. Well, whatever." He
shrugged. "Close by. At any rate, the monks came into an inn and
got rather belligerent about wanting a bed for three. Well, the
third they were carrying: a life-size statue of the Blessed
Mother."
"Ah, boy, that's shocking," breathed the
detective. "Shocking."
"But true. And a fair indication that what
you've been reading is based on fact."
"Well, the sex, maybe so, maybe so. I can see.
That's a whole other story altogether. Never mind. But the ritual
murders now, Father? That's true? Now come on! Using blood from the
newborn babies?" The detective was alluding to something else he
had read in the book on witchcraft, describing how the unfrocked
priest at Black Mass would at times slit the wrist of a newborn
infant so that the blood poured into a chalice and later was
consecrated and consumed in the form of communion. "That's just
like the stories they used to tell about the Jews," the detective
continued. "How they stole Christian babies and drank their blood.
Look, forgive me, but your people told all those
stories."
"If we did, forgive me."
"You're absolved, you're absolved."
Something dark, something sad; passed across the
priest's eyes, like the shadow of pain briefly remembered. He
quickly fixed his eyes on the path just ahead.
"Well, I really don't know about ritual murder,"
said Karras. "I don't. But a midwife in Switzerland once confessed
to the murder of thirty or forty babies for use at Black Mass. Oh,
well, maybe she was tortured," he amended. "Who knows? But she
certainly told a convincing story. She said she'd hide a long, thin
needle up her sleeve, so that when she was delivering tire baby,
she'd slip out the needle and stick it through the crown of the
baby's head, and then hide the needle again. No marks," he said,
glancing at Kinderman. "The baby looked stillborn. You've heard of
the prejudice European Catholics used to have against
midwives?
Well, that's how it started."
"That's frightening."
"This century hasn't got the lock on insanity.
Anyway--- "Wait a minute, wait now, forgive me. These
stories---they were told by some people who were tortured, correct?
So they're basically not so reliable. They signed the confessions
and later, the machers, they filled in the blanks. I mean, then
there was nothing like habeas corpus, no writs of 'Let My People
Go,' so to speak. Am I right? Am I right?"
"Yes, you're right, but then too, many of the
confessions were voluntary."
"So who would volunteer such things?"
"Well, possibly people who were mentally
disturbed."
"Aha! Another reliable source!"
"Well, of course you're quite right, Lieutenant.
I'm just playing devil's advocate. But one thing that sometimes we
tend to forget is that people psychotic enough to confess to such
things might conceivably be psychotic enough to have done them. For
example, the myths about werewolves. So, fine, they're ridiculous:
no one can turn himself into a wolf. But what if a man were so
disturbed that he not only thought that he was a werewolf, but also
acted like one?"
"Terrible. What is this---theory now, Father, or
fact?
"Well, there's William Stumpf, for example. Or
Peter I can't remember. Anyway, a German in the sixteenth century
who thought he was a werewolf. He murdered perhaps twenty or thirty
young children"
"You mean, he confessed it?"
"Well, yes, but I think the confession was
valid."
"How so?"
"When they caught him, he was eating the brains
of his two young daughters-in-law."
From the practice field, crisp in the thin,
clear April sunlight, came echoes of chatter and ball against bat.
"C'mon, Mullins, let's shag it, let's go, get the lead
out!"
They had come to the parking lot, priest and
detective. They walked now in silence.
When they came to the squad car, Kinderman
absently reached out toward the handle of the door. For a moment he
paused, then lifted a moody look to Karras.
"So what am I looking for, Father?" he asked
him.
"A madman," said Damien Karras softly "Perhaps
someone on drugs."
The detective thought it over, then silently
nodded. He turned to the priest. "Want a ride?" he asked, opening
the door of the squad car "Oh, thanks, but it's just a short
walk."
"Never mind that; enjoy!" Kinderman gestured
impatiently, motioning Karras to get into the car. "You can tell
all your friends you went riding in a police car."
The Jesuit grinned and slipped into the
back.
"Very good, very good," the detective breathed
hoarsely, then squirmed in beside him and closed the door. "No walk
is short," he commented. "None."
With Karras guiding, they drove toward the
modern Jesuit residence hall on Prospect Street, where the priest
had taken new quarters. To remain in the cottage, he'd felt, might
encourage the men he had counseled to continue to seek his
professional help.
"You like movies, Father Karras?"
'Very much."
"You saw Lear?'"
"Can't afford it."
"I saw it. I get passes."
'That's nice."'
"I get passes for the very best shows. Mrs. K.,
she gets tired, though; never likes to go."
"That's too bad."
"It's too bad, yes, I hate to go alone. You
know, I love to talk film, to discuss, to critique' He was staring
out the window, gaze averted to the side and away from the
priest.
Karras nodded silently, looking down at his
large and very powerful hands. They were clasped between his legs.
A moment passed. Then Kinderman hesitantly turned with a wistful
look. "Would you like to see a film with me sometime, Father? It's
free... I get passes," he added quickly.
The priest looked at him, grinning. "As Elwood
P. Dowd used to say in Harvey, Lieutenant. When?"
"Oh, I'll call you, I'll call you!" The
detective beam eagerly.
They'd come to the residence hall and parked.
Karras put a hand on the door and clicked it open "Please do. Look,
I'm sorry that I wasn't much help."
"Never mind, you were help." Kinderman waved
limply. Karras was climbing out of the car. "In fact, for a Jew
who's trying to pass, you're a very nice man."
Karras turned, closed the door and leaned into
the window with a faint, warm smile "Do people ever tell you look
like Paul Newman?"
"Always. And believe me, inside this body, Mr.
Newman is struggling to get out. Too crowded. Inside," he said, "is
also Clark Gable."
Karras waved with a grin and started
away.
"Father, wait!"
Karras turned. The detective was squeezing out
of the car.
"Listen, Father, I forgot," he puffed,
approaching "Slipped my mind. You know, that card with the dirty
writing on it? The one that was found in the church?"
"You mean the altar card?"
"Whatever. It's still around?"
"Yes, I've got it in my room. I was checking the
Latin. You want it?"
"Yes, maybe it shows something.
Maybe."
"Just a second, I'll get it."
While Kinderman waited outside by the squad car,
the Jesuit went to his ground-floor room facing out on Prospect
Street and found the card. He came outside again and gave it to
Kinderman.
"Maybe some fingerprints," Kinderman wheezed as
he looked it over. Then, "No, wait, you've been handling it," he
seemed to realize quickly. "Good thinking. Before you, the Jewish
Mr. Moto." He was fumbling at the card's clear plastic sheath. "Ah,
no, wait, it comes out, it comes out, it comes out!" Then he
glanced up at Karras with incipient dismay. "You've been handling
the inside as well, Kirk Douglas?"
Karras grinned ruefully, nodding his
head.
"Never mind, maybe still we could find something
else. Incidentally, you studied this?"
"Yes, I did."
'Your conclusion?"
Karras shrugged "Doesn't look like the work of a
prankster At first, I thought maybe a student But I doubt it.
Whoever did that thing is pretty deeply disturbed."
"As you said."
"And the Latin..." Karras brooded. "It's not
just flawless, Lieutenant, it's---well, it's got a definite style
that's very individual. It's as if whoever did it's used to
thinking in Latin."
"Do priests?"
"Oh, come on, now!"
"Just answer the question, please, Father
Paranoia."
"Well, yes; at a point in their training, they
do. At least, Jesuits and some of the other orders. At Wood-stock
Seminary, certain philosophy courses were taught in
Latin."
"How so?"
"For precision of thought. It's like
law."
"Ah, I see."
Karras suddenly looked earnest, grave. "Look,
Lieutenant, can I tell you who I really think did it?"
The detective leaned closer. "No,
who?"
"Dominicans. Go pick on them."
Karras smiled, waved good-bye and walked
away.
"I lied!" the detective called after him
sullenly. "You look like Sal Mineo!"
Kinderman watched as the priest gave another
little wave and entered the residence hall, then he turned and got
into the squad car. He wheezed, sitting motionless, staring at the
floorboard. "He hums, he hums, that man," he murmured. "Just like a
tuning fork under the water." For a moment longer he held the look;
and then turned and told the driver, "All right, back to
headquarters. Hurry. Break laws." They pulled away.
Karras' new room was simply furnished: a single bed, a comfortable
chair, a desk and bookshelves built into the wall. On the desk was
an early photo of his mother, and in silent rebuke on the wall by
his bed hung a metal crucifix.
The narrow room way world enough for him. He
cared little for possessions; only that those he had be
clean.
He showered, scrubbing briskly, then slipped on
khaki pants and a T-shirt and ambled to dinner in the priests'
refectory, where he spotted pink-cheeked Dyer sitting alone at a
table in a corner. He moved to join him.
"Hi, Damien," said Dyer. The young priest was
wearing a faded Snoopy sweatshirt.
Karras bowed his head as he stood by a chair and
murmured a rapid grace. Then he blessed himself, sat and greeted
his friend.
"How's the loafer?" asked Dyer as Karras spread
a napkin on his lap.
"Who's a loafer? I'm working."
"One lecture a week?"
"It's the quality that counts," said Karras.
"What's dinner?"
"Can't you smell it?"
"Oh, shit, is it dog day?" Knackwurst and
sauerkraut.
"It's the quantity that counts," replied Dyer
serenely.
Karras shook his head and reached out for the
aluminum pitcher of milk.
"I wouldn't do that," murmured Dyer without
expression as he buttered a slice of whole wheat bread. "See the
bubbles? Saltpeter."
"I need it," said Karras. As he tipped up his
glass to fill it with milk, he could hear someone joining them at
the table.
"Well, I finally read that book," said the
newcomer brightly.
Karras glanced up and felt aching dismay, felt
the soft crushing weight, press of lead, press of bone, as he
recognized the priest who had come to him recently for counseling,
the one who could not make friends.
"Oh, and what did you think of it?" Karras
asked. He set down the pitcher as if it were the booklet for a
broken novena.
The young priest talked, and half an hour later,
Dyer was table-hopping, spiking the refectory with laughter. Karras
checked his watch. "Want to pick up a jacket?" he asked the young
priest. "We can go across the street and take a look at the
sunset."
Soon they were leaning against a railing at the
top of the steps down to M Street. End of day. The burnished rays
of the setting sun flamed glory at the clouds of the western sky
and shattered in rippling, crimson dapples on the darkening waters
of the river. Once Karras met God in this sight. Long ago. Like a
lover forsaken, he still kept the rendezvous.
"Sure a sight," said the younger man.
"Yes, it is," agreed Karras. "I try to get out
here every night."
The campus clock boomed out the hour. It was 7:
00 P. M.
At 7: 23, Lieutenant Kinderman pondered a
spectrographic analysis showing that the paint from Regan's
sculpture matched a scraping of paint from the desecrated statue of
the Virgin Mary.
And at 8: 47, in a slum in the northeast section
of the city, an impassive Karl Engstrom emerged from a rat-infested
tenement house, walked three blocks south to a bus stop, waited
alone for a minute, expressionless, then crumpled, sobbing, against
a lamppost.
Lieutenant Kinderman, at the time, was at the
movies.