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    Fat Tuesday

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      laughed. I said the taxi driver must've gotten his churches mixed up.

      Or his saints," says the Father. And we laughed some more.

      "To keep him occupied a while longer, I asked if he was a New Orleans

      native, and he said he'd been here ten years. But he knew all the good

      restaurants. Not that he could afford them, he rushed to say, but some

      of his parishioners could, and they were generous enough to invite him

      out frequently. Duh-da-duh-da-duh-da. So we killed maybe ten minutes.

      Enough?"

      "Plenty. Now will you shut up?"

      He didn't want to chat with Gregory. He wanted to reflect on those few

      minutes he'd been separated from Remy Duvall by only a thin wall and a

      screen. He'd been close enough to smell her perfume and to hear her soft

      sobs as she confessed a sin Burke hadn't expected.

      Drugs, drunkenness, adultery none of that would have shocked him But

      guilt over a miscarriage? He hadn't expected that, and it had knocked

      him for a loop.

      All the same, he would use it to his advantage. Even while her perfume

      was making him damn glad he'd never taken a vow of chastity, he'd been

      in his policeman's mode, wondering how he could apply this confidential

      information to the job that must be done. In a burst of inspiration not

      necessarily divine inspiration he'd dreamed up a penance that fit her

      sin and worked nicely into his overall plan.

      But he wasn't all that happy about it.

      He wished he didn't know about the baby she'd lost. That made her human.

      He wished he hadn't touched her hand through the screen.

      That made him human.

      "Say, Basile, did you undergo a religious experience or something?"

      Drawn from his thoughts by Gregory's question, Burke shot him a dirty

      look.

      "Because you're acting really weird. You came out of the cathedral

      looking like you'd seen God." Again, Burke gave him a disparaging

      glance."Okay, forget it. I guess I'm just not used to you sans mustache,

      and with your hair slicked back like that. I don't think your own mother

      would recognize you. The glasses are a nice touch, too."

      Realizing that he'd forgotten to remove the square, horn-rimmed

      eyeglasses, he did so now, dropping them on the console between him and

      Gregory. The lenses were only clear glass, but it was strange that he

      hadn't thought to take them off. A guy could get himself killed

      overlooking a detail like that. Cop or criminal, it was the small stuff

      that tripped you up.

      He ordered himself to snap out of it, whatever it was. If he started

      second-guessing his decision, he might waver in his determination to

      avenge Kev's death. If he couldn't go through with it, he couldn't go on

      breathing. It was something he had to do or die trying. His right hand

      flexed around the steering wheel.

      When they reached Gregory's townhouse, he wheeled into the driveway and

      applied the brakes with such resolve that the car rocked to a halt.

      Gregory reached for the door handle."Reluctant as I am to admit it, it

      was fun. See you around, Basile. But only if I'm very unlucky."

      To his consternation, Burke got out of the car along with him and

      accompanied him up the brick walkway."I'm glad you had a good time.

      Because you're not finished yet, Father Gregory."

      Pinkie cut into his rare filet mignon."What's it called?"

      K} Remy looked away from the blood-red juice oozing across his plate.

      "Jenny's House. Named in honor of a three-year-old girl whose mother

      abandoned her. She was starving when they found her. They couldn't save

      her."

      "That's incredible," Flarra exclaimed."In America, a nation of

      overweight people who spend fortunes dieting, a kid actually starved to

      death?"

      "Horrible to think about, isn't it?"

      Remy had carefully chosen a night when Flarra was joining them for

      dinner to broach this subject with Pinkie. She knew Flarra would rally

      to her side. Her sister was a crusader against any social injustice.

      Pinkie swirled his stem of Merlot."This priest, Father?"

      "Gregory," Remy supplied."He called and asked if he could meet with me

      to discuss the special needs of the facility."

      "Needs, meaning money." She conceded with a nod."He said they're

      struggling financially to get Jenny's House open and operative."

      "Places like that are always begging for donations. How come you're not

      eating?" he asked, motioning down at her plate.

      "I'm not very hungry."

      "Your appetite was spoiled by all this talk of starving little girls.

      My wife, the soft touch." He reached across the table and stroked her

      hand."If it'll make you feel better, I'll have my secretary send Father

      Gregory a check tomorrow." "That's not good enough," she said, sliding

      her hand from beneath his.

      "I want to become directly involved."

      "You don't have time to become involved."

      Believing that he'd put an end to it, he went back to his steak.

      But Remy couldn't let the matter drop. This was more than just a need

      for a hobby. It was a spiritual matter. The priest had said, "Maybe if

      you did something to benefit children ..."

      Jenny's House had been a direct answer to her prayers. She'd asked for

      an opportunity to atone, and it had come in the form of Father Gregory's

      telephone call this morning. If this is what God wanted her to do, not

      even Pinkie Duvall could deter her.

      Keeping her voice casual, she said, "I have a i that aren't committed to

      anything else."

      "I think it would be good for her, Pinkie," Flarra chimed in.

      "She's been so despondent lately."

      "I have not," Remy said.

      "You've noticed, too?" Pinkie ignored Remy's protest and addressed

      Flarra.

      She nodded, her black curls bouncing."For months she's been a real

      drag."

      "Thank you."

      "Well you have, Remy. It must be true if both I and my favorite

      brother-in-law noticed." She batted her eyelashes at him."May I please

      have some wine?" "No, you may not," Remy said, answering for him.

      "Jeer, no public school. No boys. No wine. I might just as well live on

      Mars."

      "Sister Beatrice would have a fit if we returned you to the convent

      tipsy."

      "I bet Sister Be takes a nip on the sly. Can we talk about Mardi Gras?"

      "Not tonight." Pinkie had let the conversation between her and Flarra go

      uninterrupted, Remy noticed. He was focused on her, and his hard

      scrutiny made her uneasy."What are you thinking, Pinkie?"

      "I'm thinking how much I hate the idea of my wife rubbing elbows with

      riffraff."

      "I don't even know what Father Gregory plans to propose," she argued.

      "He may only want permission to add our name to their list of

      supporters, or to ask that we encourage our friends to contribute I

      won't know until I meet with him, but I'd really like to get involved in

      this project. At the very least, I'd like to personally present our

      check." few hours a week "Where is this new facility?"

      "He didn't say specifically."

      "Where did he propose the meeting take place?" "He said I could pick the

      place."


      His index finger impatiently tapped against his wineglass."Why is this

      so important to you, Remy?"

      How she answered was critical. For Pinkie to agree, he must hear

      something he liked."It's important to me because little Jenny didn't

      have a Pinkie Duvall appear in her life in time to save her. She wasn't

      as fortunate as Flarra and I." "That gives me goose bumps," Flarra said.

      Pinkie relaxed and signaled Roman to refill his wineglass."All right,

      Remy, you may have your meeting. Here in the house. During the day."

      "Thank you, Pinkie." "Cool," said Flarra.

      Father Gregory hung up the pay telephone and turned to Burke.

      "Their house, tomorrow afternoon."

      During their previous conversation Father Gregory had given Mrs. Duvall

      the number of a telephone in the men's room of one of her husband's own

      strip joints. The sounds of bass instruments vibrated through the

      paper-thin walls.

      "Their house?" Burke repeated, rubbing the back of his neck."I was

      expecting to meet in a public place."

      "Well, no such luck," Gregory said."So it's no go, right? You have to

      ditch the plan." Upon reflection, Burke said, "Actually, this might work

      out better.

      What time did you set the meeting?"

      "Didn't you hear what I said, Basile?" "Yes. You said, their house

      tomorrow. And I asked you what time."

      "This is never going to work."

      "It'll work. If you keep your cool and do everything I tell you to do,

      it'll work."

      "Maybe you think you know me, Basile, but you don't. Basically I'm a

      coward. When it comes to choices, I always think of myself first."

      Good. That's good. Think of yourself. If you leave me in the lurch, or

      choke up and blow the sting, think of yourself in jail for a very long

      time."

      Gregory moaned forlornly."Even if something goes wrong that's not my

      fault, you'll probably blame me."

      "No, I won't. I promise," Burke told him, meaning it."No matter how this

      goes down, you'll walk away free and clear."

      "Free and clear? From Pinkie Duvall?" Gregory snorted scornfully.

      "I nearly shit bricks just calling his house on the telephone. I

      remember my folks talking about him around the dinner table when I was

      still in grade school. He's a freaking legend, one of the most powerful

      men in this town, if not the most powerful." "I know all about him."

      "So then you know he's a damn scary character. It's rumored that he's

      had people killed if they crossed him."

      "It's more than rumor."

      Gregory's jaw dropped open with incredulity."Yet you expect me to walk

      into his house impersonating a priest, meet his wife face to face, and

      take money from her?"

      "Unless you want to go to jail and become the sweetheart of a guy

      everybody calls Bull."

      "You've used up that marker. I went to the cathedral with you and acted

      out my scene. Brilliantly, I might add. That squared us." "I never said

      that," Burke countered blandly."I said that if you agreed to play Father

      Gregory, I'd let you off the hook."

      "I assumed I only had to pose as Father Gregory that one time."

      "Well, you assumed wrong. What time tomorrow?"

      "You're crazy as hell, Basile."

      "Probably."

      Gregory had him there. This plan of his was crazy. Dramatic, yes.

      Effective, assuredly. Crazy, definitely.

      Since hearing Mrs. Duvall's confession, he'd thought the plan through

      from every angle. There was always a damn good chance that something

      would go awry, but he was taking every precaution against failure.

      He'd vacated his apartment and, using a false name, had moved into

      another place that was equally as disreputable. He'd ditched the Toyota

      for an older model.

      When in the new car, he kept an eye on his rearview mirror. On foot, he

      checked frequently to see if Bardo, or someone of his ilk, was tailing

      him. He was fairly certain no one was.

      Had Duvall called off his dogs? After Burke declined his job offer,

      Duvall might have dismissed him as insignificant. Maybe he was too

      cocksure of himself to fear retribution from a bummed-out, broke,

      besmirched ex-cop like Burke Basile. If he did expect reprisal, he would

      be looking for it to be violent.

      That's why this just might work.

      "Why can't another cop play the priest?" Gregory whined."How come an

      undercover cop can't be Father Gregory?"

      "Because you're a better actor than anyone in the division."

      Gregory still thought he was participating in a covert police action.

      "Well, I quit," he said, taking a stand."I don't want to play Father

      Gregory anymore. I'd rather go to jail than have Pinkie Duvall after my

      ass."

      Burke bore down on him."If you back out on me now, your skinny ass will

      be fair game for every pervert in the Orleans Parish jail.

      I'll see to it." He now had the younger man backed against the stained

      wall of the men's room. Teeth clenched, Burke said, "Now, for the last

      fucking time, Father Gregory, what time tomorrow?"

      "What a pleasure it is to meet you, Mrs. Duvall." Gregory James smiled

      disarmingly as he shook hands with their hostess."Thank you for agreeing

      to see us."

      She glanced beyond him to the second priest."Uh, this is Father Kevin,"

      Gregory stammered."My colleague and cofounder of Jenny's House."

      Burke had chosen his pseudonym in honor of Kev Stuart, which seemed

      appropriate.

      "Thank you both for coming," she said."I'm flattered that you want to

      enlist my help."

      The solarium into which the butler had shown them overlooked the rear

      lawn and afforded a clear view of the gazebo. Looking at it, Burke

      remarked, "You have a beautiful estate, Mrs. Duvall."

      He wasn't worried about her recognizing his voice. In the confessional

      he'd spoken in a muffled whisper and had faked several coughs Nor would

      she make a connection between the spit-and polished Father Kevin and the

      casually dressed, mustachioed man in the baseball cap who'd retrieved

      her forgotten sack of oranges at the outdoor coffee bar.

      "Thank you. Please sit down."

      He and Gregory sat side by side on a wicker settee. She sat in a chair

      facing them and asked if they would like coffee.

      Father Gregory smiled at the butler."I'd love some. Decaf, please."

      "Same for me," Burke said.

      He withdrew, leaving the priests alone with Mrs. Duvall. And her

      bodyguard.

      The man's wide shoulders extended beyond the back of his chair and the

      wicker seemed to be straining to support him. His dark suit was

      incongruous with the sunny garden room. He looked as out of place as a

      monkey wrench in a floral arrangement.

      Burke had experienced a heart flurry when he entered the solarium and

      saw the familiar bodyguard. Mrs. Duvall hadn't recognized him, but the

      man was supposedly trained to be on the alert. Burke had given him a

      pleasant smile and a slight nod. He'd grunted a greeting, his eyes

      registering no recognition. Whatever Duvall was paying the dullard, it

      was too much.

      Mrs. Duvall addressed him as Errol."You don't h
    ave to stay. I'm sure

      you'll be bored with this discussion."

      He thought it over, gave each of the priests a look that could have

      passed for a stern warning, then stood."Okay. But I'll be right outside

      if you need me."

      When he left, Father Gregory turned to their hostess."Is he always like

      that? Or is he sometimes dour?"

      She laughed spontaneously. Burke silently thanked Gregory for putting

      her at ease. So far the young man was doing an exceptional acting job.

      They chitchatted easily until the butler, whom she referred to as Roman,

      returned with a large silver tray and set it on a wheeled cart, from

      which Mrs. Duvall herself served them coffee and small cakes frosted

      with pastel icing. Her motions were fluid, effortless, natural. She

      handled the heavy silver coffeepot as gracefully as she handled her

      spoon, with which she stirred a single dollop of cream into her coffee.

     


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