Eve felt her legs weaken and she moved to the chair and sat down. “He didn’t kill his sister. He wouldn’t do this,” she said. “I know Anthony. He’s not capable of murder.”
She glanced up to see Father Oliver’s response, but there was none. “He loved Kelly,” she added and then turned her attention once again to the dead woman at her feet. “And Anthony would never hurt her.”
“Yes, yes, of course,” the vice superior responded. “It’s just the way he came to me tonight, the things he said.”
Eve recalled how Anthony had confessed that he had killed Kelly when they were together earlier in the chapel. She shook her head. “But he didn’t do this,” she said. “He just thinks he was the reason this happened, that he brought this evil to her.” She paused. “He would not murder her.”
“Right. I know this, of course. There has to be some other explanation. He was preparing tea for himself, taking it to his room.”
Eve tried to slow her breathing. She held her hand to her chest. “Somebody else brought her this tea.”
He took another look at the victim. “Or maybe she took her own life,” he suggested. “Could she have done this to herself?”
“Suicide?” Eve responded. “No, it doesn’t make any sense. She was excited when I talked to her today. She was looking forward to breaking the news about this discovery.” Eve remembered the last time she had talked to Kelly. “I think she believed this could push the beatification process forward for Sister Maria, and she wanted that as much as anyone.”
She shook her head. “And her clothes . . .” She nodded in the direction of the suit hanging on the closet door. “Having the clothes you are planning to wear the next day hanging on the closet door as if you are making preparations for the event . . .” She shook her head again. “No, she didn’t take her own life.”
She glanced down at the items on the desk. “And we would know that for sure if we knew whether or not the pages from Sister Maria were still here.” She turned her gaze back to the vice superior, wondering if he would be willing to make a search.
“We will need to call the police,” the abbot said, not taking Eve’s hint but rather stating what she knew to be the obvious. “We need to call them right away.”
“The police.” Eve nodded, glanced at her watch, and then noticed once again the broken cup at her feet. “They’re going to want to know everything.” She was saying this as much to herself as to the abbot.
Father Oliver nodded. “Yes, and we will tell them what we know.” He sounded sure of himself, confident of his decision. “We will tell them every detail of this night,” he continued.
Eve didn’t look at the vice superior. She was trying to make sense of all that they knew, everything that had happened, the details.
“We will tell them why we came to the room in the first place, how Anthony told us what he had found, what we saw when we arrived, and”—he paused—“what we know about the siblings, what we saw that transpired between them.” He seemed to be rehearsing what he intended to say to the police. “We will tell them everything we know. It’s the only way.”
She didn’t respond. Eve knew that if they told everything they had experienced that night, if they both reported everything that Anthony told them before they came to the room, including a confession of murder, and if they reported having witnessed the argument that the siblings had in the dining room, and if the vice superior then also told the officers that later in the evening he saw Anthony fixing a tray with tea, then an arrest would likely be made, an arrest that no one at the monastery would believe, an arrest that she didn’t think should happen.
“We don’t have to tell them everything,” she responded softly, clear on how things would appear to investigating officers.
The two locked eyes.
“We can tell them if they ask,” she said. “But we don’t need to tell them until they do.” She waited. “Not until we have a chance to figure things out, not until we know who could have stolen the writings, who else knew about them, who she might have told.”
A thick silence fell between them.
The vice superior shook his head. It was clear he understood what Eve was suggesting. “I made a vow to be truthful in all things.”
“Yes, as have I,” Eve replied. “And I will be.”
“But only if the right question is put forward to you?” He studied her. “Only if they ask a question that they will not even think to ask without hearing all of the information we have?” He closed his eyes. “Is that not still deceit? Is that not also being untruthful?”
Suddenly Eve thought about the recent history of their community. She thought about the interviews held, how he had claimed support for the change even though he had told her he was not in favor of what was happening. She remembered the vice superior’s position, what he said in private to the residents of the monastery and what he stated on public record.
“Do you believe what you told the reporters about the archbishop’s decision? Do you really believe it was right to make the sisters leave?” She spurted out the questions and then cleared her throat and watched him, waiting for his response.
He made no reply, but it was clear he understood what she was doing, how she was bringing to light his own indiscretions.
She studied the pieces of the broken cup scattered around her and shook her head. “I’m sorry,” she said, making an apology. “It’s just that I know Anthony would not murder his sister.”
“Then the police will discover that truth as well.”
Eve didn’t respond right away; instead, she recalled a conversation she’d had with the Captain and how her father had discussed how quickly and sometimes carelessly a police officer would manage an investigation. Yes, he was proud of the work he did as a detective for the Santa Fe Police Department, he had explained, and he admired his colleagues still in the same line of duty, but he confessed that they, too, often chose the easiest path in making an arrest. This was one of the reasons he had retired from the force, one of the reasons he had chosen to be a private detective. In private work he felt he was better able to sift through all the details without feeling pressured to make a hasty judgement.
“What about your friend?” the abbot asked, pulling Eve away from her thoughts.
“What friend?”
“The one on the police force. The one who always came to the monastery to see you, your father’s former partner.”
“Daniel,” she replied.
“Yes, what if you contact him first? What if you call him, tell him what we know, tell him that we are certain of Brother Anthony’s goodwill, his innocence, and let him manage the details?”
It was a good idea, Eve thought. He was the right one to call. She wasn’t sure if he would actually be given the position of lead investigator, but the monastery was in his jurisdiction, and contacting him first would at least make things easier for everyone involved.
She would do as he suggested. She would contact Daniel. And she was just about to say all of these things to the abbot, agree to his idea, when they both heard the sirens moving in their direction.