“I WILL HELP YOU to find Andrew. I think you should meet him. I can understand that you feel you must assure yourself that your friend is all right, but I don’t think that you can see Lorna. And you’ve stumbled into something that you shouldn’t have.”
“Stumbled into—”
“Never mind. Forget I said that.”
“Forget! How—”
“Because it’s the only way that I’ll help you. But this is the deal. You keep your mouth shut. You stop driving the police crazy, and you stop searching for Andrew McKennon.”
“I can’t do that! You just said that something was very wrong. That I’d stumbled into something! And now you’re asking me to pretend that none of this exists—”
“No, I’m asking you to keep your mouth shut. But I’m beginning to wonder,” he added dryly, “if you’re capable of doing that.”
“Do you know, Father, you’ve been giving me comments just like that ever since I found you!” Donna protested.
“I believe I found you, Ms. Miro,” he retorted politely.
“Point well taken,” Donna acknowledged. “I meet you and discover that you do know this man that no one else has ever heard of. But I shouldn’t even be asking about a friend who disappeared. I’m supposed to forget all about it. I don’t trust you. But you’re going to help me. If I can learn to keep my mouth shut.”
“In a nutshell, Ms. Miro.”
“But I don’t know a thing about this McKennon! And everything that happened to Lorna must have started with him!”
“Ms. Miro, I feel I should warn you now that Andrew McKennon is more than a parishioner. He is a…friend of mine. More than a friend. And if I’d done what I should have done, I would have denied that I knew him. Andrew has to decide what to tell you now, do you understand? I’m going on faith myself right now, Ms. Miro. I have to trust you to be discreet. I shouldn’t be doing this at all.”
“Then why did you say you would help me? Why did you allow me to go on—”
He stood abruptly, walking to the deep-maroon drapes and pulling them aside. Night had come to Manhattan, but gentle light from the streetlights warmed the tree-lined block in a soft glow. The priest stared out at the trees with their beautiful decking of fall colors for a moment before he turned and sat in the chair behind the oak desk. Then he spoke. “I allowed you to continue because I wanted to hear if you understood me. And I can only repeat that I’ll help you find Andrew. But I’d deny a thousand times over that he existed if you started pressing this thing.”
Donna’s fingers tensed in her lap but she bit back anything she might have to say. Fine. All she wanted to do was find McKennon and then she would take it from there. She’d promise to keep quiet and then do anything that she could to find out where Lorna was. She had to. She had to make Lorna her main concern—even if it meant giving a promise that was a lie to a priest. There was something going on, and for all she knew, this particular priest could be deeply involved in…whatever it was.
Could he really be a priest? she wondered for the thousandth time? None of it fit, none of it made sense. But it would have been impossible to plan it all. Mary and the home and the very priestly white collar. And it had been dark, but she was certain that she had seen the steeple of a church just down the street….
Donna started, realizing that the priest was watching her, amusement still touching his features, even though he appeared to be in deep thought. Had he known what she was thinking? Heaven forbid. How could she? She had grown up with such a very, very Catholic family! Yes, that was true, but, she reminded herself, the friars who had conducted the Inquisition had been religious men.
“Ms. Miro, are you quite all right?” he queried her suddenly.
“Fine, thank you. But would you mind telling me what you’re doing?”
“Not at all. I’m thinking.”
He drummed his fingers on the desk and started speaking again, slowly, as if he carefully weighed each word. “Andrew is not always an easy man to find, Ms. Miro. I haven’t the right to explain to you why that is. If you want my help, you’re going to have to trust me.”
“But why—”
“Questions already!” he reproached her.
“Father, you make less sense by the moment.”
“Nothing is going to make sense to you, but I can’t change that. It’s going to have to be part of the deal.”
“Ah, yes! The deal,” Donna murmured with annoyance.
“Yes, the deal.” He raised a dark brow high, as if questioning her integrity. “It begins right now. And it encompasses only this, Ms. Miro. You’re going to have to put your faith in me. Absolutely no questions asked. No matter what you think, see, or hear, you’re going to have to believe me when I tell you that Andrew McKennon is a good man—and that what I’m asking of you is for your own good.”
“You want me to go by blind faith?” Donna asked incredulously. “In you?” Was he asking her the ridiculous, or could it be true that Andrew McKennon was not a bad or evil man? That the priest couldn’t—for reasons unknown to her—say more, but that he was really trying to give her an emotional assurance?
Father Luke smiled. Faint lines of laughter crinkled about his eyes, giving them a mocking and devilish glow. He lifted his hands, as if to heaven. “Blind faith? In me. Yes, I suppose I do want you to go by blind faith. I’ve gotten quite accustomed to doing it myself, you see.” The laughter faded from his handsome-features. “It’s the only way that I will help you, Ms. Miro.”
Suddenly Donna found that she couldn’t meet his eyes—eyes that raked over her with both a peculiar appreciation and a searing that seemed to touch her soul. She felt absurdly stripped by that gaze; as if she had been taken down to naked flesh—and naked motive. He was a very strange man. Compelling, frightening. She began to feel that she might have been safer in the hands of the mugger. There was about him a sense of energy, and of danger, and of sexuality. He truly had no right to be a priest.
“Well?” He demanded suddenly.
Donna paused a minute, wondering what purgatory awaited those who purposely lied to priests. She swept her lashes over her cheeks. Andrew McKennon was impossible to find. She had hired a private detective, who had gotten nowhere. She had tried the police, and they had almost thrown her out the door. She had tried the streets and fared even worse.
“Blind faith, Father. All that I want to do is meet McKennon for myself and get some kind of real assurance that Lorna is all right.”
She watched as he suddenly frowned, then drummed his fingers on the desk for a moment and picked up the telephone. After a second a smile touched his features, making Donna once more acutely aware of his devilish, ruggedly male good looks.
“Tricia? Ummm…it’s Luke. Fine…fine…thanks. Listen, I’d like to see you as soon as possible. It’s about Andrew.”
Apparently “Tricia” had a few things to say about the reason for his call. Not angry things; just worried things. The next thing Donna heard was the priest reassuring the woman. “You know that if I didn’t really believe that what I was doing was okay, I wouldn’t be doing it.”
More conversation. Then: “Trust me. Andrew would.”
Donna waited tensely as the woman replied. The priest’s golden eyes abruptly turned her way. “Where are you staying?” he demanded.
“The Plaza,” Donna replied quickly.
His gaze swept swiftly over her body and his ever-subtle grin touched his lips. “Where else?” he murmured, as if directing his question with a certain amused exasperation to the divinity above.
Donna ground her teeth together to keep from snapping out a reply. It didn’t matter. The priest was speaking to Tricia—whoever she was—again.
“How about the Oak Room at the Plaza? Ummm…better give us an hour. I don’t want to give anyone a scare in my raven weeds and I’m certain Ms. Miro is going to want to change. Eight sounds perfect.” He glanced at Donna and suddenly laughed. “Don’t worry about the expense, Tricia. The lady I’m bringing with me will pick up the tab.” He laughed again, then closed with “Thanks, Tricia.”
He hung up the phone and stood quickly. “Excuse me, will you, Ms. Miro? I’ll be back down directly.”
“Wait a minute,” Donna demanded, but he ignored her. His long, sure strides took him out of the room before he could reply. Donna sat fuming for a moment with her foot still soaking, wondering just what she was getting herself into. She had the strangest feeling she was playing with fire.
She stood with sudden vehemence, wincing as she placed weight upon the still-soaking foot. It didn’t matter! she thought angrily. She owed it to Lorna to find out what was going on, if she really was all right.
Donna winced and glanced down at her foot. The ankle wasn’t half so painful as it had been. She grimaced, remembering what might have happened to her if the disturbing priest hadn’t come upon her. She was grateful to him, she reluctantly admitted to herself as she tentatively removed her foot and shook it slightly so that water would drip off. But, hell, what a messy situation she had literally fallen into. She didn’t even know what was going on.
Grimacing slightly and looking about guiltily, Donna placed her still-damp foot on the thick Oriental carpeting. Her foot seemed to take her weight if she was very careful.
Silently fuming, she gazed about the room. This time she noted the mounted deer head above the mantel and the gun rack in its handsome wood case against the far wall. The man was incredible.
He swore like a truck driver, cuffed would-be thiefs, hunted and had the closest damn thing to bedroom eyes she’d ever seen. Oh, why had God put this man in her path?—and a priest, no less.
Donna stopped muttering to herself as her idle hobbling brought her to his desk. The piece was as comfortably tasteful, austere, uncluttered, and as simple as the rest of the room. As the man? Surely, no. He was more like a walking powder keg but then, he could also hide his emotions. He released his anger only when it served his purpose. He was capable of raw violence, but that violence was very purposely controlled. She should know. He had used it to rescue her from a terrifying experience.
Cautiously she moved to the bookcase. Ah! At least there was a Bible in it. Confessions of Saint Augustine. A number of things by Andrew Greeley. Why not?
Donna kept combing the bookcases. There were novels by Robert Ludlum, Sidney Sheldon, and a number of other contemporary writers. A copy of Moby Dick, Beckett, and a bound collection of Shakespeare, Plays by Moliere….
There were also a number of books on the occult: Witchcraft Today. Understanding ESP. A History of Magic/White and Black. And then there were The Psychosis of the Criminal Mind, In the Eyes of the Strangler, and An Analysis of One Murderer.
There were more books. A lot of law books. Books on architecture, on history, and a number of “do-it-yourself” books.
But it was the books on the occult and “criminal minds” that made her shiver. Besides the obvious, she felt that the priest was a mystery, that there was something about himself that he kept hidden.
Maybe she should be getting the hell out of there—going as far away as she could! She didn’t know anything about him at all, much less about anything that he might be hiding!
She closed her eyes. She couldn’t leave. She had to help Lorna. Yet at what cost to herself?
She started her half-limping, idle wandering about the room once again. And then her thoughts took on a sudden change as her eyes fell on a picture on his desk in a plain brass frame. The picture was of a young woman who had a face with a classic beauty in fine oval features and more. The photographer had caught her animation, the sparkle of dark amber eyes, even the whirling flow of golden blond hair.
As Donna pondered the small portrait, Mary suddenly swept back into the room, holding a bandage. “Donna! You shouldn’t be standing on that foot!”
Donna swallowed guiltily. “I-I’m sorry, Mary. But I had to try it—and it is so much better. Thank you. And I am so sorry if I soaked your carpet—”
“The carpet will dry! Not to worry about a thing like that! But you get off that foot now and stand only when you have to.”
Donna started to hobble obediently back to the sofa, but she couldn’t resist one backward glance to the portrait. Mary saw the direction of her eyes and smiled sadly. “April was a lovely, lovely girl, don’t you think? Ahhh…Luke was so in love with her. And she with him. But…the good Lord takes us all when he will.”
Donna was glad she had reached the sofa, for she would have fallen to the floor without it. As it was, it was all she could do to hold back a gasp of shock. God grant it, “Father” Luke gave the appearance of being an extremely healthy and virile man; he had eyes like the devil himself and exuded strength and vibrant sensuality—but the man was a priest!
How could his kindly housekeeper speak so nonchalantly about his loving a woman? Unless, of course, this April had been his wife before he became a priest? Her shock receded then, and she recalled with a sympathetic poignancy his words: “No, young women in their twenties shouldn’t die,” words that had held a note of bitter pain.
She swallowed quickly, attempting a small smile as Mary’s eyes turned to hers. She couldn’t resist further temptation.
“Who…uh…was she, Mary?”
“Why, April, Donna? Ahh…and just like a spring day, she was. So sweet, and gentle. And—”
“Mary!”
The housekeeper’s name was called sharply from the doorway. Neither woman had noticed that the door had swung open—or that the priest had returned to tower within it. Except that he didn’t look like a priest any more. He was still in black, but now he wore a light-blue open-neck knit shirt beneath a casual black leather jacket.
He might have just stepped from a page of The New Yorker. Elegantly casual man about town, the type who drove a Ferrari and had a dozen blondes practically purring as they lounged about him in sleek poses.
“Excuse me”—his tone gentled and he offered a brief smile to his housekeeper—“but we have to hurry, Mary.” His glance turned sharply to Donna. “Ms. Miro? I’m afraid we’ll have to go now if we’re to make our appointment. I do think you need time to make yourself a little more presentable.”
Donna automatically placed a hand on the escaping tendrils of her hair. She was a disaster. No pantyhose, no shoes. One foot soaked and still dripping. Clothing dirtied and crumpled, hair a disheveled mass. And she was going to the Oak Room with a man who was definitely the most striking individual she had ever encountered.
“Luke! Give the girl a minute!” Mary said firmly. She smiled warmly at Donna. “Give me just a second. I’ll get an Ace bandage wrapped around your ankle and it’ll be as good as new!”
Mary gave her employer a chastising stare as she bent down and took Donna’s ankle in her hand. Donna had to grit her teeth for a minute as Mary wrapped the bandage around her ankle, but once it was in place and her shoes were back on, she found that she could stand with little discomfort.
“Ms. Miro? Are we ready yet?” The priest queried her as she balanced a bit doubtfully.
“I…uh…yes! I’m ready. Mary, thank you so much for everything.”
“Nothing at all, dear. Nothing at all. And I’m so sure we’ll be seeing more of one another!”
Donna had no reply. She hobbled quickly to the doorway where she stared up at…the man. The flecks of molten gold and green in eyes seemed to fuse to the shade of fire as he returned her scrutiny with humor. He offered her his arm and she had little choice but to accept. His touch seemed to burn with the heat of his eyes. It rippled through her. It made her more acutely aware of being a woman than she had ever known possible.
“Come on, Ms. Miro, our chariot is waiting.” She swallowed and lowered her lashes and hurried along beside him. Whomever, or whatever, Father Luke actually was, the effect he had upon her was definitely sinful.