wrinkles were visible upon his high forehead.
âSo Sister Lucia found the body. That mustâve been a shock.â Montoya studied the shivering girl, a waif with a pale face and wet ringlets. Yep, he recognized her, too. Lucia Costa. This was damned surreal. The knot in his gut tightened.
âAfter Sister Lucia yelled for help,â Bentz said, âthe mother superior, Sister Charityâthatâs the older womanâshe responded.â Bentz hitched his chin toward the bigger nun, a mound of black fabric accented by white coif secured by a wimple. âCharity Varisco.â Again Bentz double-checked the notes on his small pad. âShe heard Sister Lucia screaming and came running. When she got here, she tried to revive the victim and sent the younger one to call the police and get the parish priest.â
âWho put the altar cloth over the vic?â
âThe reverend mother,â Bentz said, and when Montoya opened his mouth to protest any alteration of the crime scene, he held up a hand. âI know, I know. Already discussed. She claims she didnât think about contaminating or altering the crime scene. She just wanted to be respectful of the vic.â
Montoya cast another glance at the woman in question. Tall and big-boned, mouth set, eyes glaring at the police. âWhatâs the reverend motherâs relationship to the victim?â
âJust what it seems. She met Sister Camille two years ago when Camille entered the convent.â
âWhat about the priest?â
â Priests, plural. The older oneâs Father Paul Neland. Heâs the senior priest and lives here on the grounds in an apartment next to the younger oneâFather Francis OâToole.â
Montoyaâs head snapped up at the name. âFather OâToole? Frankâwhere is he?â
âAlready separated out for his statement. Doing the same with the rest of them.â
Two officers were, in fact, starting to force the tight little knot apart. Sister Lucia looked at him pleadingly, then hurried off while the mother superior was ushered in a different direction.
Montoya felt a headache starting to throb at the base of his skull. Too many familiar faces here. First Camille, then Lucia, and now Frank OâToole? What were the chances of that? âWhat do you know about the priests?â
âThe older guy, Father Paul Neland, has been here about ten years, second only to the mother superior, whoâs been in charge for nearly twenty years. Before that, she and Neland worked in the same parish once before, up northâBoston, I think. OâTooleâs the short-timer. Less than five years.â
âI need to speak to him. Frank OâToole,â Montoya said.
Bentz let out a long whistle and stared at his partner, as if reading Montoyaâs mind. âOh, Christ, Montoya. Donât tell me you know him, too?â
âOh, yeah,â Montoya admitted, not liking the turn of his thoughts. âI know him.â
Sitting cross-legged on her rumpled bed, Valerie tried to turn on her stubborn computer one last time. âCome on, come on,â she ordered the struggling laptop. It made grinding noises that caused her to wince as she waited for the screen to flicker to life.
It was nearly one-thirty in the morning. The rain had stopped, and moonlight filtering through high clouds cast an eerie glow on the damp bushes outside her window.
Her body was tired, but her mind was still spinning. Wired. She wanted to check her e-mail one last time before shutting off the lights and hoping sleep would come. Though it probably wouldnât. Wretched insomnia. Ever since she was a teenager, sleep eluded her if she was troubled. Sheâd tried everything from sleeping pills to working out to the point of exhaustion, but nothing seemed to allow her sleep for more than a night or two.
Itâs the divorce.
And your worries about Cammie.
As she waited for the screen