Until Proven Guilty

Until Proven Guilty by J. A. Jance Page B

Book: Until Proven Guilty by J. A. Jance Read Free Book Online
Authors: J. A. Jance
Ads: Link
cleansing. These apparitions are Satan’s own instruments, sent to tempt you from the True Way. Shut them out, Sister! Pray without ceasing.” He rose, turned on his heel, and returned to the study, locking the door behind him.
    Carstogi struggled free from Peters’ grasp and rushed toward the door just as it slammed shut in his face. He leaned against it, his shoulders heaving with impotent sobs. Carstogi was no lightweight in the physical department, yet Brodie had disposed of the younger man so easily, he might have been a child. A lot of the power Brodie wielded over the True Believers had to do with sheer brute strength and fear. Fear so strong that he could walk away from a kneeling Suzanne and know she would refuse to speak to us even with her spiritual master out of earshot.
    Carstogi swung away from the door and went back to Suzanne. He too knelt before her, cradling her face in his hands. “How could you let him do it? How can you let him get away with it?”
    Suzanne Barstogi’s eyes were blank. She might have been struck blind. When he let her go, she dropped to the floor like a limp rag doll.
    “Come on,” Peters said, placing his hand on Carstogi’s shoulder. “Let’s go. This isn’t doing any good.”
    Carstogi rose to his feet like a sleepwalker. Peters led him outside. A thin mist was falling, and I welcomed it. There was a sense of reality in the rain’s touch that was lacking inside the barren waste of Faith Tabernacle.
    “You did what you could,” Peters was saying to Carstogi.
    “I shoulda brought a gun,” Carstogi mumbled. “I shoulda brought a goddamned gun.”
    “It’s a good thing you didn’t,” Peters replied. “Airport security would never have let you out of O’Hare. We need your help. Are you in?”
    Carstogi nodded grimly. “What do I do?”
    “For one thing, tell us everything you know about what goes on in Faith Tabernacle.”
    We spirited him back to the Warwick. No way were we going to take him down to the department. The last thing we needed was to give the press a shot at him.
    Peters picked up a paper on our way through the lobby. Maxwell Cole’s article and picture were the lead items of the local section. The headlines read, SLAIN CHILD BURIED. There was a close-up of Suzanne Barstogi kneeling stoically during Angela’s service. According to Max’s story, Pastor Michael Brodie was a man of God with enough courage and faith to say hallelujah when one of his flock made off for the Promised Land. Suzanne Barstogi’s face reflected total agreement with Brodie’s words.
    Peters read the article first, then handed it to me. Our charge went into the bathroom. “According to that, Brodie’s some kind of latter-day prophet,” Peters said.
    “I picked up on that too. I can hear our case getting picked apart on page one, can’t you?”
    Carstogi returned to the room and read the article without comment.
    “What was Suzanne doing at church this morning?” I asked.
    “It’s the start of a Purification Ceremony,” he said as he studied the picture. “Did she talk to the cops when it happened?”
    I nodded.
    “That’s why, then,” he continued. “True Believers are never supposed to talk to outsiders, especially cops. That’s why he threw me out.”
    “Why doesn’t he throw her out?”
    Carstogi looked at me incredulously. “Are you kidding? If he kicks a woman out, he loses food stamps, welfare, and medicaid, to say nothing of part of the harem.”
    “Welfare fraud and sex?” Peters asked. “Is that what all this is about?”
    Carstogi flashed with anger. “Of course, you asshole. Did you think this was all salvation and jubilee? I couldn’t make that judge back home see it either.”
    I took the newspaper from Carstogi’s hand. “With the likes of Maxwell Cole working for the opposition, we’ll be lucky to get anyone to believe it here, either,” I said. “What do you know about the good pastor?”
    “Brodie’s a fighter.”
    “We picked up

Similar Books

Savage Tempest

Cassie Edwards

Torn

C.J. Fallowfield

Children of Time

Adrian Tchaikovsky

Kissing in Manhattan

David Schickler

Borderline

Allan Stratton