"The only reason I'm telling you about this is because I don't know anybody else I can go to who knows more about Dormentalism."
"You mean… you mean a Dormentalist flayed this off her and then sat down and drew on it?"
"Not at all. Take a closer look." He waved a hand over the pocks, the lines. "This isn't a drawing. These are scars. Don't ask me how, but all this was on her back before she died."
"Before? But how—? Where's the rest of her?"
His eyes were leveled at her. She saw pain there.
"Gone."
Jamie didn't know what to say, but she did know her glass was empty and she needed another—needed it big time.
"I'm going for a refill. My turn." She pointed to Jack's almost full glass. "You want a back for that?"
He shook his head.
Jamie made a quick trip to the bar.
John "Jack" Robertson hadn't struck her as a nutcase, but obviously he was. What other explanation could there be?
But he seemed so sincere. Her bullshit meter wasn't even flickering. Did he believe all this?
By the time she sat down with her fresh drink she felt a little more focused.
"Okay, the lady is gone, but while she was living, these marks appeared on her back like some stigmata. Sorry, pal, but I don't believe in the supernatural."
He leaned forward. "Jamie, I don't give a rat's ass what you believe. What I'm trying to get across to you is that we're talking about something bigger than just a money-grubbing cult here. Lots bigger."
She felt her spine stiffen. "Well, if you don't give a rat's ass, why show me?"
"I told you, because you probably know as much as any outsider can about Dormentalism—which may not be anywhere near as demented as you think. Have you found any evidence, any hint, anything that might lead you to think the cult could be connected to something else? Something bigger, something darker, something…" His mouth twisted, as if he didn't want to say the word. "… other."
"No… but I may have found someone who does know."
He leaned closer. "Who?"
Don't, she told herself. Don't say it.
But she was caught in the grip of the moment. This man had challenged her credulity—more like sucker punched it—and so now it was her turn.
"I think I've found Cooper Blascoe."
11
Maggie had known the call would come, but not so soon. And not on the convent phone. Her stomach quivered when she recognized the voice.
"I really can't speak now," she said, looking up and down the hall. She was alone but she'd have to keep her voice down.
"Then just listen. I want to know when I'm going to see the money you owe me."
"Owe you?" She felt a spear of anger jab through her anxiety. "I don't owe you."
"The hell you don't! I'm saving your holy-roller ass by keeping those photos under wraps. So you owe me. And by the way, it's a nice-looking ass you've got there."
Maggie felt her cheeks burn.
"I don't have it," she said, remembering what Jack had told her. "I'll get it for you but I need more time."
"You know where you can get it."
"I'm trying but it's not easy."
"It's easy as pie. Just start skimming a little every day."
"It's closely watched."
"Find a way, sissy, or your pretty little ass and lots more will be plastered all over the neighborhood."
"But that won't be good for you either. You'll get no more from me after that. At least this way you're getting something."
"Don't try to play games with me. You're just a tiny part of my action. I'll cut you loose without a second thought."
Maggie thought she detected a note of desperation in his voice.
"I'm doing my best," she told him, sounding plaintive. "I can't give you what I don't have."
"Then get it! I'm in a generous mood today, so I'll give you till next week."
"Next week?" Would she have to suffer through another of these calls next week? How long before he gave up? "Okay. I'll see what I can do."
"No, you'll do it. By next week. All of it."
And then he hung up.
Her hand was shaking as she replaced the receiver. He'd sounded desperate. A thought struck her like a blow: Was he calling all his victims and trying to squeeze them? That meant Michael would be on his list. She knew Jack had said to tell no one, but… but how could she let someone go on paying this serpent when he didn't have to? She was sure Michael could keep a secret.
She headed for the street to a public phone.
12
Jack leaned back in the booth. He imagined his expression right now looked like Jamie's when he'd told her about Anya's skin.
"Yeah, right," he said. "Now who's playing 'Can You Top This'? He's dead."
Her eyes widened. "Yeah? Says who?"
"Says Occam's Razor."
He frowned. That particular razor had lost its edge lately. Occam's but-terknife was more like it.
She flashed a yellow smile. "I can't believe you're such a cynic. How can you possibly have the slightest doubt that he's in suspended animation?"
"Let's see… dead or in suspended animation: which requires the fewer assumptions?"
She shrugged. "Dead, of course."
"Exactly. How does a cult that's supposed to prepare you to be a survivor of doomsday handle the death of its founder?"
"Hide it. Or find a way to explain it. The Scientologists got around it by telling their members that L. Ron Hubbard had 'causatively discarded' his body because it had become an impediment to the research he was doing for the betterment of mankind."
"So, knowing all that, why do you think Blascoe's alive?"
Another shrug. "I agree with everything you've said. You'd expect them to cover up his death, not his longevity. Unless…"
"Unless he's got some terminal illness or is completely off his rocker."
"Rüüght. A dead guru is an embarrassment, sure, but one with dementia is even worse. Doesn't say much about the value of fusing your personal xelton with its Hokano half, does it?"
Jack had been watching Jamie's eyes. She was onto something. Question was, how much would she tell him?
"And you say you've found him."
"I say 1 think 1 may have found him. You see, getting kicked out of the temple made it impossible for me to investigate Dementedism from the inside, so I did it from the outside. I've learned that Brady rarely leaves the temple unless it's for a public appearance. And then he's always driven back and forth in a limo. But Sunday nights are a different situation. Sunday nights—at least three out of four as far as I can tell—he drives himself."
"Where?"
"Wish I knew. He and Jensen and the High Council guys keep their cars in a garage around the corner from the temple. I've seen him pull out a number of times and tried to tail him, but always lost him."
"He ditched you?"
"I don't think so. I'm just not very good at it. But I tailed the GP a few times and had better luck with him."
Jack had to laugh. "You've been following him too? That's dedication."
"That's me, all right. Dedicated to a fault."
Jack saw a strange flash in her eyes as she took a sip of her Scotch.
"It's more than professional, isn't it."
She shrugged. "A journalist's credo is impartiality and objectivity. But you might say I have a thing for cult situations. You might say I think they're poisonous, that they prey—sometimes knowingly and sometimes unwittingly—on confused people and exploit their weaknesses."
An idea was taking root in Jack's head. "Were you ever in one?"
"Uh-uh. No way. Never. But my sister Susie was. She died of exposure on a hilltop in West Virginia. You may have read about it a few years back."
Jack nodded. Half a dozen bodies, two males, four females, found stiff and cold by some hikers. They'd been dead since New Year's Eve. It had been all over the news for a day or two, then dropped.
"She and her fellow cultists literally froze to death while standing naked in the cold waiting to be 'taken home.' So yeah, it might be personal, and my articles may have an adversarial edge. I'm looking for dirt, I won't deny that, but my facts are facts and all double- or triple-checked. That's why I follow the Dementedist bigwigs. Because that cult is dirty at the top. They're hiding something."
"Like their founder, for instance?"
"I get a feeling it's bigger than that. But getting back to Blascoe: On two occasions I followed Jensen and one of his TPs to a supermarket where they packed Jensen's car full of groceries. Then he dropped off the TP and headed for the hills—literally. I followed him up 684 and lost him the first time. But then, back in September, I managed to tail him all the way into
Putnam County. Way up in the hills there I saw him unload the groceries at a house in the woods, then leave."
"Maybe it's a relative."
"An old white man with long hair and a scraggly beard came out on the front porch and shook his fist at Jensen as he was leaving. Not exactly the way I'd picture his daddy."
"Blascoe?"
She shrugged. "I don't know. In any pictures I've ever seen of Cooper Blascoe he's been a hale and hearty fellowT with this blond mane. This guy was skinny and kind of stooped. I've heard Blascoe had some kind of germ phobia, but this guy looked like he hadn't seen soap and water since the Beame administration."
"And yet…?"
"And yet, something about his hairline, something about his profile…" She shook her head. "I don't know. Somewhere in my brain a circuit closed and lit up a neon sign that kept flashing Cooper Blascoe … Cooper Blascoe . . . and wouldn't stop."
Jack knew the feeling. His own subconscious had recognized immediately the pattern on Brady's globe, but it had taken his conscious mind a while to catch up.
"How close did you get?"
"Not close enough to be sure."
"You didn't move in for a better look?"
"No. I wanted to but… Want the truth? I was scared. I'm brave behind my keyboard—I'll take on anyone, anytime—but out in the real world… out there, I'm chickenshit." She waggled the stump of her pinkie at him. "Low threshold for pain. Maybe a low threshold for death too—like if I get too scared I'll die."
"What were you frightened of?"
She placed a mocking finger against her temple. "Oh, let's see now. How about being a woman alone at night in deep woods where I was pretty sure I wasn't supposed to be? How about I was hot and all scratched up from following Jensen's car on foot and the bugs were eating me alive? Knowing how Dementedists are about security, and this being their chief of security I'd followed, how about wondering whether or not I might be walking into a trap? Like maybe an electrified fence situation or bear traps or Dobermans? How about worrying about Jensen spotting my car in the bushes where I'd ditched it? Can you blame me if all I wanted was out of there?"
Jack shook his head. "Not a bit. Can you find it again?"
She smiled as she nodded. "I might have been scared, but not scared stupid. I made careful notes on a map as I drove back to the freeway."
"And you haven't been up there since?"
"Been meaning to. Been thinking about sneaking up there in the daytime with a telephoto lens and hanging out till I got a chance to snap a few shots. Even drove by the side road a couple of times but…"
"But never left your car." Jack wasn't asking. He knew the answer.
Jamie looked embarrassed as she shook her head. " 'Lacked da noive,' as the Cowardly Lion might say."
"How about if I take you up there?"
From the look on her face he guessed she'd been hoping for just such an offer.
"Great idea. What about tomorrow?" Her words picked up velocity as she went on. "I'll borrow a camera from one of the staff photogs. We should leave in the morning so we can maximize our light hours."
Jack ran his fingers lightly over the pocks in Anya's skin as he thought about Jamie's proposal. Tomorrow looked like a good day for a road trip. But first he needed to drop in on Maria Roselli. Ostensibly to tell her about Johnny, but mostly to give her a grilling. He had a feeling she knew a lot more about the pattern on this thing than she'd admitted.
He refolded the skin. "Okay, let's do it. I'll drop you off a few blocks from your place and let you walk home."
He'd probably never set foot in a Dormentalist temple again, but he didn't want to be seen yet. Always keep your options open.
He noticed Jamie's worried expression.
"Don't worry. I'll follow to make sure you get home safe."
Jamie smiled and held up her hand for a high five. "Awright!"
Jack poked her palm with the tip of an index finger. When she gave him a questioning look, he simply shrugged. It always tended to be an awkward moment. Jack didn't do high fives.
She slid out of the booth. "You know what I might do? I think I might just tap on those watchdogs' car window and ask them how their Hokanos are hangin'."
"What kind of word is 'Hokano' anyway?" he said as he bagged the skin and slipped out to join her. "Made up or from some other language?"
"Probably just made up. The closest I could find was the Japanese hoka no—but they don't put the accent on the middle syllable like the Demente-dists do. Means 'other.'"
Jack stood paralyzed as ice crystalized along every nerve in his body.
"What… what did you say?"
"Other. Hoka no means other." She stared at him, concern etching her features. "What's wrong? Are you all right?"
Jack felt as if he'd taken a battering ram to the solar plexus. It was happening again. He was being sucked in again.
He shook it off as best he could and turned to Jamie.
"Can you find this place in the dark?"
"The cabin? Pretty sure. But—"
"Good. Because that's where we're going."
"Now? But it's—"
"Now."
No way Jack could let this sit till tomorrow.
13
Jensen was getting sick of waiting. "No word on those tags yet?"
"She's faxing it through now."
Fortunately one of the DMV Dormentalists had been on the night shift.
A few moments later Jensen had the sheet in his hand. But what to make of it?
The owner of the getaway car was one Vincent A. Donato, resident of Brooklyn. Somehow the guy pretending to be Jason Amurri didn't look like a Vincent Donato. Something else bothered him.
He looked up at Margiotta. "Donato… Donato… why does that sound familiar?"
"Rung one of my bells too, so I asked her to send over a photo." The fax rang in the other room. "That'll be it now."
A moment later Margiotta returned, saying, "Oh-shit, oh-shit, oh-shit."
Jensen didn't like the sound of that. "What's the matter?"
"You know why it sounded familiar? Vincent A. Donato is Vinny the Donut."
Jensen levered forward in his seat and snatched the fax from Margiotta.
"What? There's got to be—"
But there on the sheet was a pudgy, jowly face known to pretty much everyone in New York—at least anyone who read the Post or the News. At various times over the past ten years Vinny the Donut had been indicted for loan sharking, for prostitution, or for money laundering. But before any charges could be brought to trial, witnesses seemed to develop memory lapses or give in to an urge to visit relatives in foreign countries. Not a single charge had stuck.
"Can you believe it?" Margiotta said. "He's driving Vinny the Donut's car! Our phony is mobbed up!"
"Got to be a mistake. Lewis flubbed the tag number."
"That's what I thought, but look what the Donut drives—a black Crown Vic. And what kind of car whisked Grant off the street? A black Crown Vic. And I doubt very, very much that he stole Vinny's car. You do not steal from Vinny the Donut."
Jensen felt adrift on a rough sea. None of this made sense.
"But what possible interest could the mob have in Do
rmentalism?"
"Maybe they want to horn in. Maybe they hired Grant to get inside info on us."
Jensen shook his head. "No. It's got to be something else."
"Like what?"
I don't know, he thought, but I'll come up with something.
Jensen knew he'd better have some sort of explanation when he laid this double bombshell on Brady tomorrow morning.
Not only was the SO's pet recruit not Jason Amurri, but he was connected to the mob. Brady was going to shit a brick.
14
Jamie had to admit that her current situation had her a little scared. Here she was in the dark, heading toward the wilds of upstate New York with a strange man she'd met only days ago.
At least he wasn't driving fast or lane hopping. She hated that. She had a feeling he wanted the pedal to the metal but he'd set the cruise control to sixty-five and was sticking to the right or middle lanes. Very sane, very sensible. Also a pretty sure way to avoid being stopped by a cop.
It wasn't his driving. It was him… the way he'd changed when she'd told him what Hokano meant. He'd become another person. The regular fellow in the booth at the bar had become this grim, relentless automaton encased in a steel shell.
"What if it's not Blascoe?" she said.
He didn't turn his head. His eyes remained fixed on the road. "Then we've made a mistake and we've wasted some time."
"What if he is Blascoe and doesn't want to talk?"
"He won't have a choice."
His matter-of-fact tone chilled her.
"You're very scary right now. You know that, don't you?"
She saw his stiff shoulders relax a little. Very little. But it was a start, a hint that a thaw might be possible.
"Sorry. You've got nothing to worry about."
"Yeah, I do. I started out the night with Dr. Jekyll, and now I feel like I'm driving with Mr. Hyde."
"Did I suddenly sprout bushy eyebrows and bad teeth?"
"No. But you changed—your eyes, your expression, your demeanor. You're a different person."
She saw the tiniest hint of a smile in the backwash of light from a passing car.
"So I guess we're in the Spencer Tracy version."
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