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Molina spun on her bare heels and padded through the hall and living room into the kitchen. There she ran-sacked drawers looking for something she ought to remember right where it was.

Damn! Whoever had left that candy was no friend and maybe a lot worse. She marched back to her compromised bedroom, plastic sandwich baggies in hand. The note went in one baggie via the offices of the new tweezer from her adjoining bathroom. The box went into the quart-size bag, for analysis by forensics. She’d think of some reason in the morning.

For now … she went through the house from garage to seldom-used front door, checking closets and locks.

All secure, doors dead bolted, sashes nailed shut yet easy to open in case of fire. The place was a freaking monument to advocated domestic security measures, courtesy of your local police department.

So. Someone had gotten in, and gone. And left the poison. Maybe not literal poison but mental poison. Who’s been creeping into my bed with Ethel M candies?

She didn’t even want to finish undressing to don her Land’s End sleep-size T-shirt.

But she did.

Then she unlocked the gun safe, set the semiautomatic on her nightstand, and shot the bolt on her bedroom door so Mariah couldn’t wander in.

The illuminated nightstand clock said four-twenty A.M.

Molina was thinking now that she might actually welcome having Mariah out of the house and under the constant surveillance of reality TV show cameras for the next couple weeks.

What’s a mother to do?

If she’s a homicide lieutenant, maybe a lot more than some cowardly stalker might imagine.

Chapter 13

Macho Nachos

“Dinner? At your place?”

Matt knew he had sounded unflatteringly shocked, but it was too late to backpedal. That was another disadvantage to years spent in the priesthood: an inability to shift rapidly into glib social lies.

“Just casual,” Molina said quickly. “I’ve got some issues I want to bounce off you.”

These must be some issues to merit a social occasion at Casa Molina, Matt thought.

“Yeah, fine. I’m always available for dinner.”

“Usually, I’m not. But, what say, six thirty tomorrow?”

Very pressing issues. “Sure. That’s perfect. Saturday night supper. I’m leaving town for a few days early next week.”

“Glad I caught you before you left. We’ll have something, oh … something. See you then.”

Matt stared at the phone receiver for a moment before replacing it. Molina was always busy when she was at work, and she was almost always at work.

He immediately dialed Temple’s number, but after five rings her slightly raspy voice informed him she’d had to leave town on a family matter and would be back in two weeks or so.

This time he stared at the receiver as if it were an alien artifact.

Curiouser and curiouser. Guess he’d have to go take two hours’ worth of lonely hearts phone calls at WCOO-AM, which is what paid his bills, and find out what was going on with the hearts and minds he thought he knew later.

The morning paper had a splashy front-page story about the young woman found dead outside the shopping mall.

Matt skimmed the report, which was all too similar to other senseless killings in every city and town across the country: savage attack, senseless slaughter, and another family torn apart by another demented killer.

So … surely Molina would cancel their casual dinner. She must be on this case 24/7.

The cancellation call never came. Matt changed his knit golf shirt to a long-sleeved shirt that matched his khakis, rolled up the sleeves to the elbow, and headed over to Our Lady of Guadalupe convent at about five thirty.

He found the nuns preparing dinner. They let him kibbutz while they bustled around the communal kitchen. Convent life had been characterized as “communistic” in the big, bad fifties when a Red was seen under every bed, but Matt would call it “democratic.”

Each nun had her duty and went about washing salad greens or stirring soup as if that were the most important task on earth. Next week the duty roster would changeand today’s washer would become that week’s stirrer. Just as today’s mother superior would defer to another leader when the time came.

Peter and Paul, the stray cats that had unofficially joined the community when they’d wandered into the convent yard as kittens, had arranged themselves in supervisory positions. Peter, a chubby yellow striped cat, was tolerated on one chair seat, while the darker striped Paul was lying on the wide windowsill above the sink, absently patting at the intermittent faucet drips.

There was a placid joy in the way the nuns moved, with long familiarity and an efficient grace that brought to mind the floor-length, flowing habits they’d once all worn, still welcoming a visitor to their modest domestic ritual as if he were a king, or a wandering saint.

“How’s that darling redheaded girl?” Sister Seraphina, Matt’s former grade school teacher at St. Stanislaus in Chicago, asked right up front. That was “Sister Superfine,” dynamic and blunt. “I never see her at mass with you anymore.”

“She’s Unitarian,” Matt explained, or didn’t really.

But the nun just nodded and invited him to dinner. He was tempted, but… .

“Not this time. I’ve got a dinner appointment in the parish, though.”

“A date?” Elderly Sister St. Rose of Lima beamed the way nuns who like to play matchmaker do.

It touched Matt that his past in the priesthood was taken as a given here. He’d been officially laicized, leaving with permission, unlike most ex-priests. But like all newly ex-priests, he was still sensitive about his new non-celibate status. He found it endearing how these elderly “sisters”—the last, almost, of their uniquely devoted kind—gave him a free pass on their own turf.

“Not a ‘date.’” I’m heading over to Lieutenant Molina’s.”

Eyebrows raised.

“Those aren’t exclusive subjects,” outspoken Sister Seraphina said. “Carmen Molina has achieved commendable responsibility in her job but she’s not a lieutenant all the time.”

“I couldn’t swear by that. I think she wants to find out something that relates to her job.”

“How do you know that?”

“Molina? Entertain for dinner?”

Sister Seraphina stopped bustling and folded her arms. “Too much work and no play is bad for everybody. Carmen too. Maybe you can get her to forget about her job for a few hours.”

“That would be an act of charity,” Sister Mary Monica said slyly.

Matt laughed and headed for the door. “Gossip is a sin, sisters. Don’t get any ideas.”

Their chorus of good-byes drifted out the screen door behind him like a breeze.

Trying to second-guess Molina was futile.

Matt pulled his new silver Crossfire to the curb in front of her house, got out, and heard a low wolf whistle.

She was standing on the threshold of her seldom-used front door.

“Not you. The car,” she said. “When did you develop ambitions to race in the Grand Prix?”

“It just looks fast. And I finally didn’t need an undercover car,” he added, referring to his former stalker, as he came up the walk.

“Better stay at the speed limit. That’s a real ticket-magnet. At least it isn’t red.”

This was a Molina he’d never seen. She was wearing a gauzy white puffed-sleeve blouse and paprika-andturquoise-pattern gauze skirt. Mexican casual. And shewas barefoot. She looked fifteen years younger and about twenty-five years more relaxed.

Still no jewelry, though, and no makeup except for a faint color on her lips.

Matt thought he’d never seen her looking better. “Maybe we can go for a spin in the Crossfire after dinner,” he suggested.

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