Chapter 13

He left the room before Madge could get another word in. Her head spun a little and she wasn’t sure if it was the partial glass of wine on an empty stomach—unlikely—or the past half-hour in Cyrus’s company. The answer was a no-brainer. He watched over her like a protective father, or brother…or something else. He had become her family. A family of two members who had started to hurt each other.

She heard voices approaching. A laugh. The deep tones of two men.

“Hi.” Sig Smith came into the room and walked straight toward her. He gave her a white box tied up with gold ribbon. “You don’t have to wear this if you don’t like it. But it smells nice anyway.”

A little above medium height, buff, as they said, with a long, sun-bleached crew cut, very dark eyebrows and disconcertingly piercing gray eyes, Sig shifted from foot to foot a couple of times before he settled and smiled at her. That smile would be enough to stop most women in their tracks. Madge enjoyed it, until she noticed Cyrus’s expression.

Her boss, her friend, had never looked so conflicted or so sad. She wanted to see Sig out, to tell Cyrus she’d made a mistake and wasn’t interested in any kind of male partner after all.

Cyrus felt her eyes on him and flashed her a smile.

No other man’s smile competed with Cyrus’s.

“Come on,” Sig said. “At least take a look at it. Your dog can wear it on his collar if it seems too much like something meant for a prom.”

“She,” Cyrus said.

The cool sound of his voice sent Madge’s stomach toward her feet.

Sig raised a brow.

“Madge’s papillon is named Millie. She’s a girl.”

“Ah.” Sig grimaced. “Sorry about that. I haven’t really met Millie.”

Quickly, Madge opened the white box and removed a gardenia corsage from a bed of green. She smelled the blossoms and closed her eyes. “They have to be the most beautiful-smelling flowers.”

Sig took the corsage from her, pulled a pearl-studded pin from the back and placed the flowers on the left side of her bodice, just below the collarbone. Very carefully, he put two fingers behind the dress, against her skin and bent close to secure the pin through the florist’s tape.

Once more she glanced at Cyrus, and this time she felt ill. His blue eyes could turn navy sometimes, usually when he was unhappy about something. They were navy blue tonight. He watched Sig with the closest thing to hate she had ever seen on Cyrus’s face.

Cyrus didn’t hate anyone.

This was her fault, and he would suffer because he’d blame himself for reactions he had sworn never to allow himself.

“I thought I’d take Madge to the new place, the supper club, Claude’s. Would you like that, Madge?”

“I’ve never been there, but I’ve heard it’s lovely.” The new club had been opened a few miles east of Rosebank and the Savages’ clinic. It was said to be very popular and very expensive.

“I expect you know all about our trouble here at St. Cecil’s,” Cyrus said, as if he hadn’t heard Sig mention the club.

“Yes, indeed.” Sig nodded. “Jim Zachary was a really good man.”

“How would you know?” Cyrus asked, sounding unreasonably sharp.

“I don’t normally speak about these things, but I guess it doesn’t matter now. Anyway, you were Jim’s priest. He was a patient of ours. Roche and I thought highly of him.”

“Roche never mentioned treating him,” Cyrus said.

Sig’s dark brows shot up. “Which probably means I shouldn’t have, either.”

“We won’t mention it, will we, Cyrus?” Madge said.

“Not unless it becomes necessary,” Cyrus said. He wouldn’t look at her. “You live in Toussaint, don’t you, Sig?”

“I do, yes. Next door to the clinic on Cotton Street.”

“That’s what I thought,” Cyrus said. “Just bring Madge back by here after dinner, and I’ll take her home.”

Madge hoped she wasn’t as red as she felt. Saying anything at all would be a mistake.

“Wouldn’t think of it,” Sig said. “I can come right past Rosebank on my way back to Toussaint.”

Cyrus was quiet a moment. “Yes. Well, I’ll come and get you in the morning, Madge. They’re taking their time with your car.”

“They finished it today,” she told him. “And they took it home for me. How’s that for service?”

“It’s good service,” Cyrus said. He gave a forced smile and slapped his hands together. “Well, off you go, you two. Hope you got a reservation, Sig. They do say that place is busy.”

“Yes, I did that.”

“Good man.” Cyrus thumped Sig on the back and urged him and Madge toward the front door like a pair of high schoolers.

Sig opened the door for Madge and she looked back at Cyrus. He gave her a wave and started to turn away. “See you tomorrow. Have a good time.” Then he turned toward her again. “What about Millie? You’ll probably want to stop and get her before you go home. Sig will need to get on, so I’ll take you back.”

She needed to cry. And she didn’t want to go out. “Millie will be good, Cyrus. Her crate’s in my office. If she get’s rambunctious, just put her in there for the night.”

Cyrus nodded. And felt a complete fool. But more than feeling like a fool, he had pains in his gut and the start of a sweat at his hairline, even though he was icy. “Of course Millie will be fine,” he said, forcing a big smile. “We’re going to practice bad habits until you get in tomorrow.”

Madge gave him a puzzled look, but smiled when he did, and Sig ushered her outside.

Until he heard a car engine come to life, Cyrus stayed where he was, his heart beating hard.

The sound of the car faded into the distance, and he returned to the sitting room. He went to a window and looked out into the darkness of the backyard. Dark but for Madge’s fairy lights and, more distantly, moonlight on the bayou.

Did a life alone make a man a better priest?

His own question shocked him.

Alone was the way he was, the way he was supposed to be and the way he would remain.

What he must do was obvious. No matter what it cost him, he would stay in Toussaint until Madge was settled and safe, then he’d ask for reassignment. After a sabbatical.

He didn’t know if he could be the one to perform the marriage ceremony, but if that’s what she wanted, he’d try.

When he turned toward the room, he ran into the back of the couch and paused to calm down. He was getting ahead of himself.

Quickly, he gathered the two glasses—still not empty—and took them to the kitchen in one hand.

Once more, he felt drawn to the window.

He faced what he’d been trying to avoid. What if this crazy killer decided that murdering Madge would be the way to stop the project? Murdering her and perhaps throwing her body in the bayou.

He should feel the same about the possibility of anyone getting harmed.

Anyone wasn’t his Madge.

The sweat on his brow broke free and trickled down the sides of his face. The colored lights outside shot prisms in every direction and he looked at them as if through rain beating on glass.

There wouldn’t be another attack until—and unless—the madman realized the project wasn’t going to stop.

He could stop it, Cyrus thought. He’d have to make a special request now that the project was approved, but a man’s death would be all the justification he needed. Not that Spike and his people were convinced Jim died because of the school. One of their theories was that the brochure had been meant to divert them from the real motive.

He could scarcely breath. Smith had looked handsome and perfectly dressed. He and Madge made a nice couple. The man looked at her…he looked at her as if he couldn’t and didn’t want to see anything else.

Isn’t that what I want for Madge? Someone to adore her?

Pulling air in through his mouth, he approached the deep old enamel sinks. “Damn it,” he said. Then he shouted. “Damn it, God. You ask too much.”

A squeaky sound vaguely touched his mind, but now the kitchen turned gray. He passed the back of a shaky hand across his brow.

“No!” he yelled, and hurled the glasses into the nearest sink, smashing them into an explosion of crystal shards.

Cyrus took several steps backward, his head hanging down.

He heard the squeaking again and looked for the source.

Under the table, the glint of her black eyes scarcely visible, he saw Millie.

Grabbing a dish cloth, he wiped his face and threw the cloth aside again. Now he was so useless, he was into frightening five-pound dogs.

“Come here, girl,” he said, stooping.

Millie zipped out and leaped into his arms.

Cyrus held her shivering body against him and took off along the corridor to the stairs. He didn’t stop running until he reached his austere room under the eaves and fell to his back on the bed. He left the lights off and lay there, staring at the ceiling with the dog curled up on his chest.