Late June sunlight streamed through the window
of Chris's bedroom. She folded a blouse on top of the contents of
the suitcase and closed the lid. She moved quickly toward the door.
"Okay, that's all of it," she said to Karl, and as the Swiss came
forward to lock the suitcase, she went out into the hall and toward
Regan's bedroom. "Hey, Rags, how ya comin'?"
It was now six weeks since the deaths of the
priests. Since the shock. Since the closed investigation by
Kinderman. And still there were no answers. Only haunting
speculation and frequent awakenings from sleep in tears. The death
of Merrin had been caused by coronary artery disease. But as for
Karras... "Baffling," Kinderman had wheezed. Not the girl, he'd
decided. She'd been firmly secured by restraining straps and sheet.
Obviously, Karras had ripped away the shutters, leaping through the
window to deliberate death. But why? Fear? An attempt to escape
something horrible? No. Kinderman had quickly ruled it out. Had he
wished to escape, he could have gone out the door. Nor was Karras
in any case a man who would run.
But then why the fatal leap?
For Kinderinan, the answer began to take shape
in a statement by Dyer making mention of Karras' emotional
conflicts: his guilt about his mother; her death; his problem of
faith; and when Kinderman added to these the continuous lack of
sleep for several days; the concern and the guilt over Regan's
imminent death; the demonic attacks in the form of his mother; and
finally, the shock of Merrin's death, he sadly concluded that
Karras' mind had snapped, had been- shattered by the burden of
guilts he could no longer endure. Moreover, in investigating
Dennings' death, the detective had learned from his readings on
possession that exorcists frequently became possessed, and through
just such causes as might here have been present: strong feelings
of guilt and the need to be punished, added to the power of
autosuggestion. Karras had been ripe. And the sounds of struggle,
the priest's altered voice heard by both Chris and Sharon, these
seemed to lend weight to the detective's hypothesis.
But Dyer had refused to accept it. Again and
again he returned to the house during Regan's convalescence to talk
to Chris. He asked over and over again if Regan was now able to
recall what had happened in the bedroom that night. But the answer
was always a headshake; or a no; and finally the case was
closed.
Now Chris poked her head into Regan's bedroom;
saw her daughter with two stuffed animals in her clutch, staring
down with a child's discontent at the packed, open suitcase on her
bed. "How are you coming with your packing, honey?" Chris asked
her.
Regan looked up. A little wan. A little gaunt. A
little dark beneath the eyes. "There's not enough room in this
thing!" She frowned.
"Well, you can't take it sill, now, sweetheart.
Leave it, and Willie will bring the rest. Come on, baby; hurry or
we'll miss our plane."
They were catching an afternoon flight to Los
Angeles, leaving Sharon and the Engstrom to close up the house.
Then Karl would drive the Jaguar cross-country back home.
"Oh, okay." Regan pouted mildly.
"That's my baby." Chris left her and went
quickly down the stairs. As she got to the bottom, the door chimes
rang. She opened the door.
"Hi, Chris." It was Father Dyer. "Just come by
to say so long."
"Oh, I'm glad. I was just going to call you
myself." She stepped back. "Come on in."
"No, that's all right, Chris; I know you're in a
hurry."
She took his hand and drew him in. "Oh, please!
I was just about to have a cup of coffee."
"Well, if you're sure..."
She was. They went to the kitchen, where they
sat at the table, drank coffee, spoke pleasantries, while Sharon
and the Engstrom bustled back and forth. Chris spoke of Merrin: how
awed and surprised she had been at seeing the notables and foreign
dignitaries at his funeral. Then they were silent together while
Dyer stared down into his cup, into sadness. Chris read his
thought. "She still can't remember," she said gently. "I'm
sorry."
Still downcast, the Jesuit nodded. Chris glanced
to her breakfast plate. Too nervous and excited, she hadn't eaten.
The rose was still there. She picked it up and pensively twisted
it, rolling it back and forth by the stem. "And he never even knew
her," she murmured absently. Then she held the rose still and
flicked her eyes at Dyer. Saw him staring. "What do you think
really happened?" he asked softly. "As a nonbeliever. Do you thinly
she was really possessed?"
She pondered, looking down, still toying with
the rose. "Well, like you say... as far as God goes, I am a
nonbeliever. Still am. But when it comes to a devil---well, that's
something else. I could buy that. I do, in fact. I do. And it isn't
just what happened to Rags. I mean, generally." She shrugged. "You
come to God and you have to figure if there is one, then he must
need a million years' sleep every night or else he tends to get
irritable. Know what I mean? He never talks. But the devil keeps
advertising, Father. The devil does lots of commercials."
For a moment Dyer looked at her, and then said
quietly, "But if all of the evil in the world makes you think that
there might be a devil, then how do you account for all the good in
the world?"
The thought made her squint as she held his
gaze. Then she dropped her eyes. "Yeah... yeah," she murmured
softly. "That's a point." The sadness and shock of Karras' death
settles down on her mood like a melancholy haze. Yet through it,
she saw a speckled point of light, and tried to focus on it,
remembering Dyer as he had walked her to her car at the cemetery
after Karras' funeral. "Can you come to the house for a while?"
she'd asked him. "Oh, I'd like to, but I can't miss the feast," he
replied. She looked puzzled. "When a Jesuit dies," he explained to
her, "we always have a feast. For him it's a beginning, so we
celebrate."
Chris had another thought. "You said Father
Karras had a problem with his faith."
Dyer nodded.
"I can't believe that," she said. "I've never
seen such faith in my life."
"Taxi here, madam."- Chris came out of her
reverie. "Thanks, Karl. Okay." She and Dyer stood up. "No, you
stay, Father. I'll be right down. I'm just going upstairs get
Rags."
He nodded absently and watched her leave. He was
thinking of Karras' puzzling last words, the shouts overheard from
below before his death. There was something there. What was it? He
didn't know. Both Chris's and Sharon's recollections had been
vague. But now he thought once again of that mysterious look of joy
in Karras' eyes. And something else, suddenly remembered: a deep
and fiercely shining glint of... triumph? He wasn't sure, yet oddly
he felt lighter. Why lighter? he wondered.
He walked to the entry hall. Hands in his
pockets, he leaned against the doorway and watched as Karl helped
stow luggage in the cab. It was humid and hot and he wiped his
brow, then turned at the sound of footsteps coming down the
staircase. Chris and Regan, hand in hand. They came toward him.
Chris kissed his cheek. Then she held her hand to it, probing his
eyes tenderly.
"It's all right," he said. Then he shrugged.
"I've got a feeling it's all right."
She nodded. "I'll call you from L. A. Take
care."
Dyer glanced down at Regan. She was frowning at
him, as at a sudden remembrance of forgotten concern. Impulsively,
she reached up her arms to him. He leaned over and she kissed him.
Then she stood for a moment, still staring at him oddly. No, not at
him: at his round Roman collar.
Chris looked away. "Come on," she said huskily,
taking Regan's hand. "We'll be late, hon. Come on."
Dyer watched as they moved away. Returned
Chris's wave. Saw her blow a kiss, then pile quickly after Regan
into the cab. And as Karl climbed in front beside the driver, Chris
waved again through the window. The taxi pulled away. Dyer walked
over to the curb. Watched. Soon the cab turned a corner and was
gone.
From across the street, he heard a squeal of
brakes. He looked. A police car. Kinderman emerging. The detective
moved slowly around the car and waddled toward Dyer. He waved. "I
came to say good-bye."
"You just missed them."
Kinderman stopped in his tracks, crestfallen,
"They're gone?"
Dyer nodded.
Kinderman looked down the street and shook his
head. Then he glanced up at Dyer. "How's the girl?"
"She seemed fine."
"Ah, that's good. Very good. Well, that's all
that's important." He looked away. "Well, back to business," he
wheezed. "Back to work. Bye, now, Father.-" He turned and took a
step toward the squad car, then stopped and turned back to stare
speculatively at Dyer. "You go to films, Father Dyer? You like
them?"
"Oh, sure."
"I get passes." He hesitated for a moment. "In
fact, I've got a pass for the Crest tomorrow night. you'd like to
go?"
Dyer had his hands in his pockets, "What's
playing?"
"Wuthering Heights"
"Who's in it?"
"Heathcliff, Jackie Gleason, and in the role
Cathrine Earnshaw, Lucille Ball. You're happy?"
"I've seen it," said Dyer without
expression.
Kinderman stared limply for a moment. Looked
away. "Another one," he murmured. Then he stepped to the sidewalk,
hooked an arm through Dyer's and slowly started walking him down
the street. "I'm reminded of a line in the film Casablanca," he
said fondly. "At the end Humphrey Bogart says to Claude Rains:
'Louie---I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.'
"
"You know, you look a little bit like
Bogart."
"You noticed."
In forgetting, they were trying to
remember.
The End