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Crisscross rj-8, Page 2

F. Paul Wilson


  "Just Jack'll do fine." He sighed. How to tell her? "I don't know, Maria. It seems like you could get more bang for your buck with someone else."

  "Who? Tell me. You can't, can you. All you have to do is work your way into that Dormentalist temple and find Johnny. How hard can it be? It's one building."

  "Yeah, but it's a worldwide organization. He might not be there. He could have been assigned to the Zambia chapter or whatever."

  "No. He's in New York, I tell you."

  Jack sipped his bitter green tea and wondered how she could be so sure.

  "Why don't we start with calling the New York temple and asking if he's still there?"

  "I've already tried that. They tell me they release no information about church members—wouldn't even confirm or deny that Johnny was a member. I need someone to go inside and find him." She leveled her dark eyes at Jack. "I will pay you twenty-five thousand dollars in advance to do that."

  Jack blinked. Twenty-five large…

  "That… that's a lot more than I usually charge, Maria. You don't have to—"

  "The money means nothing. It's a week's interest from my treasury notes. I'll double it, triple it—"

  Jack held up a hand. "No-no. That's okay."

  "You'll have expenses, and perhaps you can use whatever is left over to offset the fee for someone who can't afford you. I don't care about the money, just find… my… son!'"'

  She underscored the last three words by rapping the tip of her cane against the floor. Benno, who'd been stretched out next to her, jumped up from his nap and looked around, ready to attack.

  "Okay." Jack responded to her pained expression, to the need calling through her eyes. "Let's say I do work my way into this temple, and let's just say I find your son. What then?"

  "Tell him to call his mother. And then tell me you've found him and how he is."

  "And that's it? That's all?"

  She nodded. "That is all. I simply want to know if he's alive and well. If he doesn't want to call me, it will break my heart, but at least I will be able to sleep at night."

  Jack finished his tea in a gulp. "Well, that's a relief."

  "Why? What else did you think I'd want you to do?"

  "Abduct him for deprogramming."

  She chewed her upper lip. "And what if I did?"

  "No deal. If he's not being held against his will, I won't yank him out. I believe in everyone's inalienable right to be stupid."

  "What if he is being coerced?"

  "Then I'll do what I can to yank him. If I can't, I'll do my damnedest to provide you with enough probable cause to get officialdom involved."

  "Fair enough." She extended her right hand. "Then we have a deal?"

  Jack gently gripped her twisted fingers. "We do."

  "Excellent. Look in the top drawer of that bureau over there. You will find an envelope and a newspaper article. Take both. They're yours."

  Jack did as she asked. He opened the white legal-size envelope and thumbed through the bills—all Grover Clevelands.

  "What if I can't deliver?"

  "Either way, keep the money. I know you'll try your best."

  He looked at the sheets of newspaper. A multipage, two-week-old article on Dormentalism from The Light by someone named Jamie Grant.

  The Light … of all the papers in New York, why'd it have to be The Light? He'd had a bad experience with one of the paper's reporters a few months ago. Memories from June flooded back and swirled around him… his sister, Kate… and that kid reporter… what was his name? Sandy Palmer. Right. The kid had given him a few gut-clenching moments.

  "Make sure you read that," Maria said. "It will serve as a good primer on Dormentalism."

  Jack checked out the title: "Dormentalism or Dementedism?" He smiled. Whoever Jamie Grant was, Jack liked him already.

  He tucked the envelope into a front hip pocket but held on to the article.

  "I'll get to work on this right away."

  "Wonderful." Her smile faded. "You won't fail me, will you?"

  "Not if I can help it. All I can guarantee is that I'll give it my best shot."

  Maria Roselli sighed. "I suppose that's all one can ask for. What will be your first step?"

  Jack held up the newspaper. "First I'm going to have to learn about this Dormentalism stuff. Then I guess I'll become a convert."

  3

  Back on the street, Jack was tempted to make a quick run to Gia's—she lived less than ten blocks uptown from Maria Roselli's—but his visit had taken longer than expected and he was running late for a meeting with another customer.

  In the old days, long before he was born, a person could have hopped the El on Second Avenue. Or Third. Today he settled for a crosstown bus at Forty-ninth Street. He'd take the 27 over to the West Side and catch a subway up to Julio's.

  He dipped his Metrocard and found a seat on the half-full bus. As he unfolded the Dormentalism article he glanced up and noticed one of the ads above the opposite seats. He looked closer. Damned if it wasn't for the Dor-mentalist Church. He stood for a closer look.

  DORMENTALISM!

  Another better You slumbers within! The Dormentalist Church will help you awaken that sleeping part of you. Reestablish contact with your hidden self now! DON'T DELAY! Momentous change is coming! You don't want to be left out! PREPARE YOURSELF! Join the millions of Seekers like Yourself. Find the nearest Dormentalist Temple and discover the Other You… before it's too late!

  A toll-free number and a Midtown address on Lexington Avenue ran along the bottom. Jack jotted them down on the margin of the article.

  "You'll stay away from that lot if you know what's good for you," said a creaky voice behind him.

  Jack turned and saw a chubby, hunched old woman staring up at him from a nearby seat.

  "Sorry?"

  "You heard me. How can they call themselves a church when they never mention God? They're doing the devil's work, and you'll endanger your immortal soul if you even go near them."

  Jack instinctively looked around for a dog of some kind, but didn't see one. She wasn't carrying anything big enough to hide one.

  "Do you have a dog?" he said.

  She blinked up at him. "A dog? What sort of question is that to ask? I'm talking about your immortal soul and—"

  "Do… you… have… a… dog?"

  "No. I have a cat, not that it's any business of yours."

  A sharp reply leaped to his lips but he swallowed it. Just some Paleolithic busybody. He glanced back at the ad. The last line bothered him.

  Other You…

  He'd got to the point where the word other triggered all sorts of alarms. And now this old lady warning him against the Dormentalists. But the strange women who'd been popping in and out of his life lately never appeared alone. They always had a dog along.

  Jack dropped back into his seat. Second-guessing every little thing that happened was a sure shortcut to the booby hatch.

  "Just trying to give you a friendly warning," the old lady said in a low voice.

  Jack looked back and noticed she was pouting.

  "I'm sure you were," he told her. "Consider me warned."

  He turned to the article from The Light. "Dormentalism or Demente-dism?" delved into the early days of the cult—sorry, church. Founded by Cooper Blascoe as a hippie commune in California during the sixties, it mushroomed into a globe-spanning organization with branches in just about every country in the world. The Church—apparently they liked an uppercase C—had been run by a guy named Luther Brady, who Grant called a "propheteer," since Blascoe had put himself into suspended animation in Tahiti a couple of years ago.

  Whoa. Suspended animation? Jack hadn't heard about that. No wonder Blascoe hadn't been in the news. Suspended animation does not exactly make you the life of the party.

  The reporter, Jamie Grant, contrasted the early Dormentalist commune, which seemed little more than an excuse to have orgies, to the upright, uptight corporate entity it had become. The Dormentali
sts' cash flow was top secret—apparently it was easier to ferret eyes-only documents out of NSA than the Dormentalist Church—but Grant estimated that it was well into nine-figure country.

  The question was, what was it doing with all the money?

  Except for a few high-profile locations in places like Manhattan and L.A., the Church was run on a tight budget. Luther Brady's doing, Grant said—he had a business degree. Grant reported that the High Council, based here in New York, had been buying plots of land all over the place, not only in this country but around the world, spending whatever it took to secure them. To what end was anyone's guess.

  In the next installment, Grant promised in-depth profiles of the inanimate Cooper Blascoe and on Dormentalism's Grand Poo-bah, Luther Brady. And perhaps the reason behind the ongoing land acquisitions.

  Jack refolded the article and stared out the window as the bus crossed Fifth Avenue. He watched a young, orange-haired Asian woman in black talking on a cell phone as she waited for the walk signal. A guy next to her was talking into two phones at once—on a Sunday? The pair of antennae gave him an insectoid look. On a weekday in Midtown there were so many antennae on the street it looked like an ant farm.

  Nobody wanted to be disconnected anymore. Everyone was on call twenty-four hours a day for anyone with their number. Jack recoiled at the prospect. He had a prepaid cell phone but he left it off unless he was expecting a call. He often went days without turning it on. He loved being disconnected.

  Back to the article: As much as he liked its sardonic, in-your-face style, he felt vaguely dissatisfied with what it didn't say. It concentrated on the structure and finances of the Dormentalist Church without going into its beliefs.

  But then, according to the tagline, this was only part one. Maybe those would be covered later.

  4

  Jack got out at Broadway. Before heading for the subway he picked up the latest copy of The Light, which turned out to be last week's issue. It came out every Wednesday. He thumbed through it but found no follow-up article. He did find the paper's phone number, though.

  He pulled out his cell and dialed the number. The automated system picked up and put him through a voice tree—uIf you don't know your party's extension" blah-blah-blah—that required him to punch in the first three letters of Grant's name. He did as instructed and was rewarded with a ring.

  Not that he expected Grant to be in on a Sunday, but figured he'd break the ice with a voice mail to set him up for some talk tomorrow. But someone picked up on the third ring.

  "Grant," said a gravely woman's voice.

  "Is this Jamie Grant, the reporter?" The article's tone had given him the impression that Grant was male.

  "One and the same. Who's this?" She sounded as if she'd been expecting someone else.

  "Someone who just read your Dormentalism article."

  "Oh?" A sudden wariness drenched that single syllable.

  "Yes, and I'd like to talk to you about it sometime."

  "Forget it," she said, her voice harsh now. "You think I'm an idiot?"

  A loud clatter broke the connection. Jack stared at his phone.

  What did I say?

  5

  Jack was late and Maggie was already waiting at Julio's when he arrived.

  During his uptown ride on the 9 train he'd got to thinking about how he'd go about earning the money Maria had given him. Since he didn't know a single Dormentalist—at least no one who admitted it—he'd have to be his own mole. Infiltrating the lower echelons would probably be easy, but wouldn't get him access to membership records. He needed an advance placement course, or maybe become someone they'd usher into the inner circle.

  And that had given him an idea.

  So he'd made an unscheduled stop at Ernie's ID and described what he needed. Ernie wasn't so sure he could deliver.

  "I dunno, man. This ain't my usual thing. Gonna hafta do a lotta research on this. Gonna take time. Gonna cost me."

  Jack had said he'd cover all his expenses and make the extra effort more than worth his while. Ernie had liked that.

  As Jack entered the bar, Julio pointed out Maggie—no last name, which was fine with Jack—sitting at a rear table, talking to Patsy. Well, more like listening. Patsy was a semi-regular at Julio's and a Patsy conversation usually consisted of him talking and the other party trying fruitlessly to get a word in. Jack could see Maggie nodding and looking uncomfortable in the rear dimness.

  Jack ambled over and laid a hand on Patsy's shoulder.

  "This guy bothering you, lady?"

  Patsy jumped, then smiled when he saw Jack. "Hey, Jacko, how's it goin'? I been keepin' her company while she's waitin' for you."

  He had a round face and a comb-over that started behind his ear. He wore double-knit slacks and watched the world through aviator glasses day and night, indoors and out. Wouldn't surprise Jack if he wore them to bed.

  "That's great, Patsy. What a guy. But now we've got some private talk, so if you don't mind…"

  "Sure, sure." As he began backing away he pointed to Maggie. "I'll be at the bar. Think on what I said about dinner."

  Maggie shook her head. "Really, I can't. I have to be—"

  "Just think about it, that's all I'm askin'."

  Oh, and somehow along the way Patsy had got the idea that he was quite the ladies' man.

  "I wish we didn't have to meet in a bar," Maggie said as Patsy sauntered away and Jack pulled up a chair.

  With a minimum of effort she could have looked okay. Fortyish with a pale face, so pale that if she told Jack she'd never been out in the sun, he'd believe her. Not a speck of makeup, thin lips, a nice nose, hazel eyes. She'd tucked her gray-streaked blond hair under a light blue knit hat that looked like flapperwear from the Roaring Twenties. As for her body, she appeared slim, but a bulky sweater and shapeless blue slacks smothered whatever moved beneath. Beat-up Reeboks completed the picture. She sat stiff and straight, as if her vertebrae had been switched for a steel rod. Her whole look seemed calculated to deflect male attention.

  If that was the case, it hadn't worked with Patsy. But then, Patsy was game for anyone without a Y chromosome.

  "You don't like Julio's?" Jack said.

  "I don't like bars—I don't go to them and I don't think they're a good thing. Too many wives and children go hungry because of paychecks wasted in places like this, too many are beaten when the drinker comes home drunk."

  Jack nodded. "Can't argue with you on that, but I don't think it happens much with these folk."

  "What makes them so special?"

  "Most of them are single or divorced. They work hard but don't have too many people to spend on but themselves. When they go home there's no one to beat. Or love."

  "What's wrong with giving their drink money to charity?"

  Jack shook his head. This lady was no fun with a capital NO.

  "Because they'd rather spend it hanging out with friends."

  "I can think of lots of ways to be with friends besides drinking."

  Jack looked around at the bright afternoon sun angling through the front windows past the bare branches of the dead ficus and the desiccated hanging plants, so long deceased they'd become mummified. "Another Brick in the Wall" wafted from the jukebox, its metronomic beat augmented by Lou's hammering at the GopherBash in the corner.

  What's not to like?

  She'd been just as uptight yesterday at their first meeting. He found it hard to believe that this priss was being blackmailed. What had she ever done that would let someone get a hook into her?

  Her hands were clasped together on the table before her in an interlocking deathgrip. Jack reached over and gave them a gentle pat.

  "I'm not the enemy here, Maggie."

  Her shoulders slumped as she closed her eyes and leaned back. Tears rimmed her lids when she looked at him again.

  "I know. I'm sorry. It's just… it's just that I'm not a bad person. I've been good, I've lived a clean life, I've sacrificed for others, done good wo
rks, given to charity. Criminals, mobsters, drug dealers, they commit crimes every day and go about their lives unscathed. Me, I make one little mistake, just one, and my whole world is threatened."

  If she was telling the truth, and Jack believed she was, he was sorry for her. He couldn't help responding to the hurt, fright, and vulnerability seeping through her facade.

  "That's because you've got something to protect—a job, a family, a reputation, your dignity. They don't."

  Maggie had been under a blackmailer's thumb since August. All she would say about the hook was that someone had photos of her that she'd rather not be made public. He'd been squeezing her and she was just about tapped out. She wouldn't say what was in the photos. She admitted that she was in them, but that was it. Fine with Jack. If he found the blackmailer and the photos, he'd know. If not, none of his business.

  "And another difference between you and the sleazeballs is they'll hunt down a blackmailer and rip his lungs out. You won't, and this oxygen waster knows it. That's where I come in."

  Her eyes widened. "I don't want anyone's lungs ripped out!"

  Jack laughed. "Figure of speech. Probably better than this guy deserves, and it would be way too messy."

  She stared at him a moment, an uneasy light in her eyes, then glanced around. Though no one was in earshot, she lowered her voice.

  "The person who gave me your name warned that you played 'rough.' I'm against violence. I just want those pictures back."

  "I'm not a hitman," he told her, "but this guy's not going to just hand over those pictures, even if I say pretty please. I'll try to get it done without him knowing who I'm working for, but a little rough and tumble may be unavoidable."

  She grimaced. "Just as long as no lungs are ripped out."

  Jack laughed. "Forget lungs, I want to know who told you I played rough. What's his name?"

  A hint of a smile curved her thin lips. "Who said it was a he?"

  She wasn't going to come across. All right, he'd wait. And watch. Customers without references earned extra scrutiny.

  "Okay. First things first: Did you bring the first half of my fee?"

  She looked away. "I don't have it all. I had very little money in the first place, and so much of that is gone, used up paying this… beast." It seemed to take an effort to call her blackmailer a name. Who was this lady? "I was wondering… could I pay you in installments?"