Chameleon

Chameleon Read Free Page A

Book: Chameleon Read Free
Author: William X. Kienzle
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Mystery & Detective
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repairman finished his work and left the convent. He went directly to the rectory where he met the parish priest. “Father, I’m not a Catholic, but I want to take instructions.”
    “That’s nice,” said the priest, “But why?”
    “I was just over at the convent doing some repairs,” the man replied, “and I figure there must be something to any religion that can put twenty women in the same room and for a full hour not one of them says a blasted word!”
    She didn’t see him.
    She would not have seen him even if she had been looking for him.
    He’d been waiting in the shrubbery to one side of the convent steps. That gave him the cover of the bushes and the poor light further shrouded his presence.
    As she passed by, he stepped out of the darkness behind her, gun in hand.
    In one sweeping motion, he raised the gun to the base of her skull and fired.
    She never knew what hit her. The bullet entered her head and tumbled in its unstructured path, tearing tissue as it went.
    She fell in a heap like a marionette whose strings had been cut. She was motionless.
    He pocketed the gun. Seizing her by the ankles, he dragged her, face down, toward the bushes. But the branches were too dense at the base to position the body beneath. He had not anticipated that.
    He resumed dragging her, face downward, around the corner of the building and toward the rear of the large, front-lawn shrine. As he dragged, her head and arms flopped about grotesquely.
    Here, out in the open, her body would be discovered earlier than he would have preferred. But there was nothing to be done about that now.
    He pushed the body with his foot until it rested tight up against the slightly less than life-size crucifix. Under the circumstances, it was the best he could do. He looked about one last time and faded into the shadows.

2
    Sister Joan Donovan was holding herself fairly well under control.
    It was she who had found the body, the body of her sister Helen. Sister Joan had screamed repeatedly, piercingly, and in genuine horror. But that had been slightly more than two hours ago. Now, she was merely numb. And in her state of shock, she wondered vaguely why they wouldn’t leave her alone.
    The janitor, in the process of opening the church, had heard her screams, found her at the shrine, saw the body, and called the police. Since then, she had been subjected to a barrage of questioning, first from the church people, then from the police officers.
    By now, she was convinced that it didn’t really matter to any of them that she had suffered the loss of someone very near and dear to her. The police needed information and they were single-mindedly going to pursue every lead they could uncover.
    She was seated in the front parlor of the convent. It was so chilly. The heat was on but so many people were entering and leaving by both the front and rear doors, too often leaving a door ajar as they came or went. She shivered, partly from shock and partly from the draft.
    “Are you cold, Sister? Perhaps you’d better put on your coat. It is chilly in here.”
    “I’m all right.” Joan focused on the woman nearby, seated on a chair that had been positioned between Joan and the front window by an earlier inquisitor. “Who are you?”
    “My name is Moore, Sister; Sergeant Angie Moore. There are some questions I’ve got to ask you.”
    “But I’ve already told the other officers everything I know about this … this tragedy.”
    Moore nodded. “I know. But I’m with the Homicide Division. We’re going to be investigating this case and we’ll need your cooperation.”
    “Oh …” Joan was unable to frame an objection.
    “The deceased was your sister?”
    Joan nodded.
    “Her age?”
    “She was thirty-eight … seven years younger than I.”
    “Her occupation?”
    “She was … self-employed.”
    Moore shook her head. “She was a prostitute, wasn’t she, Sister?”
    “If you know, why do you ask?”
    “A matter of getting it on the record.”

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