Herren, Greg Acts of Contrition [EQMM 2006 11]







Greg Herren: Acts of Contrition [EQMM 2006.11]
















Acts of Contrition

Greg Herren

Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

November, 2006







 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 






H






elp me, Father," she cried. Her brown eyes were wide
open with terror. The rain was falling, drenching them both, soaking her white
T-shirt so that it clung to her body. Her dreadlocked hair was dripping with
water. The water ran down her face, streaming from her chin as she gripped his
arms with her black-fingernailed hands. She reached for one of his hands and
drew it to the crevice between her breasts. "Please, Father," she
pleaded again. He didn't pull his hand away from her cold chest. He knew in his
heart he should, but somehow he couldn't. He let it rest there, feeling her
frantic heartbeat through her cold, wet skin, and closed his eyes. This is a
test, he reminded himself, a test. But still he left his hand there, betraying
the collar he was wearing, betraying his God. He tried to pray for strength,
for guidance, but all he could think about was the feel of her skin beneath his
hand. Push her away, reprimand her for her
temptation, do something, anything, don't just stand here with your hands on
herbe strong, find strength from your love of God, but don't just keep
standing hereHis hand remained where it was.

And she began to laugh, her lips pulling back into a smile
of exultation. Her eyes glowed with triumph.

"Fallen priest, fallen priest," she chanted
between her laughter, "You're going to hell, aren't you, Father?"

He pulled back from her, staring at her face as it changed.
She wasn't Molly anymore, the sweet young runaway he was trying to help, she
was something else, something evil. The hair on the back of his neck stood up,
and he opened his mouth to scream, but nothing came out.

"Fallen priest, you're nothing but a fallen
priest." Her voice deepened and she took a step forward, her lips still
curled in that horrible smile. She tore at the collar of her T-shirt, ripping
it downward and exposing herself. She grabbed his hand again, and pulled it to
her breasts.

"Get thee behind me, Satan," he finally managed to
choke out, provoking her to more laughter. It echoed off the alleyway, and a
light went on in a house a few yards from where he was standing.
"Stop," he whispered, glancing at the lighted window.

"What are you so afraid of, fallen priest?" she
leered, her lips pulling back even further. "That you'll be exposed for
what you are?" And she laughed again, throwing her head back and sending
the sound upward, to the spires of the cathedral, and more lights were going on
up the alleyway.

"Please," he said, and pulled his hand away from
her. Where the knife came from he had no idea. One moment there was nothing and
in the next it was there, in his hand, the sword of the Lord. It glowed with a
righteous, cleansing blue fire. It pulsed and throbbed in his hand with an
almost unimaginable power. Tears filled his eyes as he raised his hand.
"Please," he whispered again, not wanting to do it, knowing he had no
choice. He brought the knife down into her chest. Black blood splattered,
spilling down her stomach and onto her wet denim skirt. Yet still she laughed,
and he brought it down again, tears flowing down his face and mingling with the
rain. She must be cleansed, she must be cleansed,
she must be cleansed, he thought as he kept swinging his arm. She must be cleansedcleansedcleansedand he
hacked at her, the blood spurting and splashing, mixing with the rain, and yet
still she laughed

 

* * * * *

 

He sat up in his bed, wide awake and shivering, his body
damp with sweat, his short, graying hair plastered to his scalp. He wiped at
his face. It was still raining, the windows fogged up. He sat there, hugging
his thin arms around himself trying to get warm. The digital clock on the
nightstand read 9:23 A.M., but it was still dark as night. Lightning flashed,
so near it was merely a sudden bright light blinding him, followed almost
immediately by a roar of thunder that rattled his windows. It had been raining
for days, one storm rolling in after another, filling the gutters and streets
with water, swirling as the city's pumping system desperately tried to keep up.
The ground was soaked, the big elephant ferns outside his door waving in the
wind and drenching him every time he walked outside. He tried to slow his
heartbeat by taking deep breaths, and he slowly felt warmth creeping through
his body again. He threw back the covers and swung his bare feet down to the
cracked linoleum. He walked over to the opposite wall.

The walls of his apartment were cracked, the plaster
buckling. The ceiling was covered with brownish water stains, and he could hear
the steady plopping of water landing in the pots and pans he had set out in the
kitchen to catch the leaks.

In the center of the wall was a huge crucifix. Jesus' face,
blood running down the sides from the crown of thorns, was turned imploringly
to the sky, his beautiful features twisted in agony. Blood leaked out of the
wound in his side, his ribs pressing through the pale skin; the nails in his
hands and feet were drenched in red.

He grabbed the worn rosary from the small table and clutched
it. Carefully he lit the votive candles, then sank to his knees and began
praying. His knees ached from contact with the hard floor. The Latin words
rolled off his tongue easily, feverishly, as he counted the beads with his
fingers. After a few minutes, when his heart had slowed to a normal pace and he
felt calm again, he finished his prayers and crossed himself. He rose to his
feet, walked to the window, wiped the condensation away, and looked out into
the street.

Such a horrible dream. He still felt chilled, rubbing his
arms to increase the circulation. Was it a sign from God? he wondered. The
feelingsof lust and desirethe girl aroused in him had been dormant for so
long. He knew they weren't wrong, but after so many years of self-denial through
prayer, his vows were ingrained too deeply in his head to shake off easily.
There was no reason anymore for him to feel ashamed of his feelings or to deny
them, but even though he was no longer a priest, he kept his vows. Maybe she
was sent by God to test his dedication to Him. He'd been released from his vows
for nearly five years now, so perhaps it wasn't really a testbut then again,
God moved in mysterious ways. Maybe he was supposed to save her.

No one knows the mind of God.

She was one of the street people, a runaway. One of the
disposable teenagers, the throwaway children who somehow made their way to the
French Quarter to hang out in coffee shops or in doorways, cadging change and
cigarettes from passersby. She couldn't be older than fifteen, he thought, but
then again, as he got older he found it more and more difficult to judge the
ages of the young. It was possible she was older. He had found herwas it only
three weeks since that evening he had found her asleep in one of the back pews
at St. Mark's when he'd gone in to pray? At first he'd thought it was just a
bundle of rags someone had left there. Then the pile had moved, and he jumped,
startled. It had only been three weeks. He hadn't stopped thinking about her
since that moment she'd sat up in the pew, coughing.

Three weeks only.

"What's your name?" he'd asked, slipping into the
pew beside her.

She just smiled and said, "Call me Molly, Father."
He opened his mouth to correct her, but closed it again without saying
anything.

It was the smile that brought the memories back, memories so
strong he had to catch his breath. There was something about her that reminded
him so strongly of Carla Mallorythe girl he'd loved when he was young, before
he'd answered the call and entered the seminary. She'd been so angry when he
told her his plans. Her pretty face had contorted with rage before collapsing
into tears. But I thought you loved me, she'd
accused him, I thought we were going to get
married.

"The streets are dangerous, Molly," he'd said to
her, putting thoughts of Carla firmly away. "There's a killer out there,
preying on girls like you. Don't you want me to call your parents? Don't you
want to go home?" There had been a story in the paper just that morning
about the latest girl, found near the French Market, her young body carved up.
Just another teenager thrown away, not missed and with nobody to mourn or care.
She was the tenth one in the last eight months.

Molly looked back at him with eyes suddenly old and tired.
"Sometimes home is more dangerous than the streets, Father."

He'd taken her hand, rough and dirty with the nails painted
black. "Please be careful, and know you can always come here. We minister
here to homeless kids, Molly. You can always come here, get some food, take a
shower, get cleaned up." He gestured back to the office area at the rear
of the chapel. "I can get you a list of shelters"

"And sometimes shelters are just as dangerous as
home." She shook her head, the multicolored dreadlocks swinging. "But
a shower would be cool."

"But where?" He shook his head. Sometimes there
was nothing he could do for them. "Come with me." He stood up and
started walking towards the front.

It was after hours, and against the rules, but he used his
keys to open up the shower area and get her a fresh towel. Father Soileau would
not be happy, but there was no need for him to know or find out. Besides, even
if Father Soileau did find out, the most he would get would be a reprimand, and
not a strong one for that matter. Father Soileau depended on him too much for
the work he did with the teenagers, and it would be hard to replace him. Who wants to work for the pittance they pay me? he
thought bitterly as he handed her a towel and shut the door behind him.

While she showered, he heated a can of soup for her, found a
package of crackers, got her a fresh bottle of water.

She was so pretty with the dirt scrubbed off her face. So
like Carla. He watched her as she slurped down the soup, crunching the crackers
into the broth, and gulped down the water. There was a wounded innocence about
her. She wouldn't tell him where she was from, or where she'd been. And when
she was finished, she patted his hand in thanks, before slipping out of the
church and back into the night.

He'd prayed for her that night, and every night since.

He prayed she'd come back.

He found himself coming back to St. Mark's every night at
the same time, hoping she would show up. Sometimes she did, most nights she
didn't. He didn't ask questions he knew she wouldn't answer. It almost became a
kind of routine on those nights when she showed up. He would get her a towel
and while she showered he made her something simple to eat. While she ate,
they'd talk about little things, nothing important. And when the food was gone,
she would slip back out into the night.

He worried sometimes that Father Soileau would find out. It
wasn't beyond the realm of possibility that he would be fired. Rules were
rules, and the Church was very big on rules. He knew that very well. It was why
he wasn't a priest anymore. "But I've done nothing wrong!" he'd
begged them up in Chicago as the archbishop shook his head.

"We cannot take that risk, Father Michael." The
archbishop shrugged. "We have to release you from your vows. Even the
slightest hint of impropriety must be avoided. But there's a place you can make
yourself useful, down in New Orleans. There's a small church just outside the
French Quarter, St. Mark's. They minister to homeless teenagers, the kind of
work you enjoy. The Church will get you a small place to live, and pay you a
small salary, and you can continue your work."

"But the boy is lying"

It didn't matter. They'd shipped him off to the
foul-smelling little apartment in New Orleans, sent him to work for Father
Soileau, and the anger burned in his heart. But he was working with the
teenagers again, the ones who needed him, and while he'd been released from his
vows, he kept them.

But MollyMolly changed everything.

She made him feel like a man again. She awakened the
feelings, the emotions that had lain dormant for so long.

He prayed for guidance, but none came. He found himself
thinking about her, worrying about her while he attended Mass. He found himself
going to confession at St. Louis, unwilling to confess his feelings to Father
Soileau. He received his penance, said his prayers, counting the beads as he
repeated the words over and over again. And he worried about her, where she was
sleeping, what she was doing for money. So many of them sold their bodies to
strangers for a warm bed and a twenty-dollar bill, for something warm to eat.
They were so fearless yet somehow wary at the same time. But there was pained
innocence in her eyes, and he longed for her to tell him her story, what had
led her to the streets of the French Quarter. He warned her, over and over
again. There was a killer stalking the alleys of New Orleans, mutilating young
girls, raping them and then mutilating them. He begged her to go home, to call
her parents. The streets were not safe at night.

She would just smile, and shake her head. "The streets
are as safe as anywhere."

Was that what the dream had meant? he thought as he stared
into the rain. That Molly was in danger? That Molly was dead?

He went cold, and sank to his knees in front of the crucifix
again. Please, God, watch out for Molly, she is
just a child, for all her bravado and airs. Hers is an innocent soul, protect
her from the evils that lurk out there in the night and the rain, bring her
safely home

He was climbing out of the shower when the knock came on the
door. He wrapped a towel around his waist and peered out at a tall black woman
in a dove-gray suit, shaking off a dripping umbrella with one hand. He opened
the door without removing the chain. "Can I help you?"

She smiled, flashing a badge at him. "Michael
O'Reilly?"

"Yes."

"Detective Venus Casanova, New Orleans police. May I
come in and talk to you?"

He felt a wave of nausea, the coffee he'd drunk burning an
acidic hole in his stomach. "I just got out of the shower. I'll be a
moment while I get dressed, is that all right?"

"Take your time." She kept smiling as he shut the
door again.

He dressed hurriedly, his mind racing. This was how it
started back in Chicago: The police showed up at the rectory with the boy's
accusations and their knowing smiles. Calm down, he
told himself as he finished buttoning his shirt. There's
no need to be afraid.

He walked back to the door and opened it. He smiled.
"Sorry, I was" He stood aside to let her in. "Come in. Would
you care for some coffee?"

She shook her head, giving her umbrella one last shake.
"No, I thank you, though." She walked in, glancing around the
apartment and then giving him a big smile. She was beautiful, her hair cropped
close to the scalp, with high cheekbones and strong white teeth. Her face was
unlined; she could have been any age between thirty and fifty. "I'll try
not to take up too much of your time, Mr. O'Reilly." She sat down in the
worn thrift-store reclining chair. "This rain is something, isn't
it?" She shook her head. "Everyone complains about the heat and
humidity, but I just hate rain."

"It's depressing, isn't it?" he replied, and his
voice sounded false.

Detective Casanova nodded. "Yes." She reached into
her bag, removing a small spiral notebook and a pen. "Have you been
reading the newspaper, Mr. O'Reilly?"

He shrugged, and felt his hands start to shake. He grabbed
the sides of his own chair. "Sometimes."

"Then you know we have a serial killer here in the
Quarter preying on runaway teenaged girls?"

"Yes, I work with the street kids over at St. Mark's,
so I know about it, yes."

"There was another murder last night. Another runaway
girl, couldn't have been older than fifteen. Unidentified, of course." She
clicked her tongue. "She was found this morning in Pirate's Alley, right
beside the Cathedral."

Like in my dream! he
thought, biting his lower lip. "Sweet Jesus," he whispered. It was
Molly, it had to be Molly, why else would the cop have come to him? Father, why hast thou forsaken me?

"I've just been by St. Mark's, and Father Soileau sent
me over here." She reached into her bag again. "He thought maybe you
knew her." She pulled out a Polaroid and handed it over to him. "Do
you recognize this girl?"

He took the photograph, his hands shaking, and forced
himself to look at it. He let out his breath in a rush. This girl had black
hair, no dreadlocks, her face pale and eyes closed. Thank you, Lord"No, I'm sorry, I don't know
this girl."

She took the photograph back and slipped it into her bag.
"Each one of these murders has something in common, besides the fact that
each is a runaway teenaged girl. Something we haven't allowed the press to
catch on to." She gave him a searching look. "You do a lot of good
for these kids, and I know you care about themand obviously, they aren't too
interested in talking to me or the uniformed police. Have any of the kids you
work with said anything? Do they talk to you about this?"

He shook his head. "Only in general terms."

She reached into the pocket of her jacket. "Each one of
the victims had one of these in her hand." She held up her hand.

A strand of black rosary beads dangled from her fingers.

"And between her breasts, a cross was carved."

The beads swung in her hand, and he felt bile rising in his
throat. He glanced over at his own rosary, still on the scarred coffee table. "That'sthat's
just sick." He closed his eyes and took several deep breaths. "It's
blasphemy."

"I think it's some kind of religious freak," she
said slowly. "Someone who sees these poor girls as evilmost of them are
working as prostitutes, after alland he is cleansing the world of their sin by
sending their souls to God; he probably thinks he is saving them as well."
She shook her head, standing up. She placed a business card on the coffee
table. "I've taken up enough of your time. If any of the kids who come by
St. Mark's say anythinganything at all, no matter what, please give me a call
right away. We have to catch this guy." She walked to the door, shook his
hand. "You'll call me?"

"Yes, of course." The moment the door shut he ran
to the bathroom and threw up. He splashed cold water on his face, brushed his
teeth again, and stared at his red eyes in the mirror.

He watched for Molly all day, hoping that she'd break her
usual pattern and come into St. Mark's during its normal hours. As he ladled
soup into bowls, cut sandwiches, handed out towels, he listened to the kids
talking. No one was talking about the latest victimmaybe they didn't know yet,
which would be unusual. Normally, that kind of news spread through the street
kids in no time flat. No, there was talk about the usual inane thingsgood
corners to ask for money, places to avoid, business owners who chased them off
and others who were good for some money or something to eat, a great place to
get cheap clothes, and on and on and on. He looked at them with their multiple
piercings, tattoos, and wild hairstyles and colors, and wondered, as he often
did, what drove them to the streets. He opened his mouth a few times to ask
about Molly, but then closed it and said nothing. She never came in during this
time, and who knew if they would even know her as Molly?

He walked home after closing, the rain still coming down,
the gutters full of water spilling over onto the sidewalk. By the time he got
back to the miserable little apartment on St. Philip Street, his pants were
soaked and he was shivering. He pulled off his pants, toweling his legs dry and
slipping on a pair of sweatpants. He sank to his knees in front of the crucifix
and prayed again for Molly. As he clicked off the beads, nagging thoughts kept coming
into his mind, interfering with his prayers.

It's just like beforeSurely
that police detective was just grasping at straws, trying to get information
and help from wherever she couldIt's silly to be afraid of the police just
because of what happened beforeStop thinking like this, you're supposed to be
praying, communing with the LordBut I can't go through that again, the boy
lied, why wouldn't anyone believe me?

He opened his eyes and placed his rosary back on the coffee
table.

He walked into the kitchen, ignoring the roaches as they
scurried off the counters, and made a peanut butter sandwich, glancing at the
clock. Only a few more hours until her usual time.

The boy lied.

Joey Moran. A pudgy boy of thirteen with an acne problem and
thick glasses who always seemed to have a runny nose when it was cold. Shy and
introverted, the only child of a shrew of a mother, overprotected and hovered
over. He cried often and easily, and the other boys at St. Dominic's made sport
of him, taunting and teasing, tripping him and knocking the books out of his
hands in the hallways of the school. He'd felt sorry for the boywith that
horrible mother, his life had to be miserableand tried to make friends with
him, tutoring him and trying to protect him from the other kids. Until that day
when the police officer came by the rectory and told him what the boy's mother
was saying. It was like being punched in the face. "Lies," he'd told
the cop. "I never laid a hand on that boy."

The knowing smirk on the cop's face. The endless meetings
with his superiors until the archbishop himself had called him in, and no one,
no one believed him.

'We've reached a settlement with Mrs. Moran," the
Archbishop said, frowning at him. "Shell drop the charges on condition
that"

No one cared that it was all a lie. "For the good of
the church, it's best that we do thisWe're releasing you from your vows, but
we've found a job for youIt's best that you leave ChicagoOf course I believe
you, Michael, but we just can't have another one of these scandals, and it's
just better to resolve things this wayYou've met the mother, you know what
she's like, she's threatening to go to the papers and you know what will happen
then, other families will smell blood and a chance to get money out of usIt's
best this way."

Best for everyone but Michael
O'Reilly, he thought angrily, glancing over at the crucifix.

The boy LIED.

He started trembling. He picked up his beads and started
praying for strength, for serenity, for peace.

The string snapped in his hand.

He sank to his knees and wept.

 

* * * * *

 

He waited for Molly for over an hour, watching the cars
drive by in the rain. Finally, he gave up and walked back home through the
deserted streets. Where could she be? Was she safe and warm and out of the rain
somewhere? The worry bubbled within him as he unlocked his door and stepped out
of the rain. The rosary beads were still scattered all over the floor where
he'd left them. He knelt down and started scooping them up into his palm. He
glanced up at the crucifix just as a flash of lightning lit up the room.

Jesus' eyes seemed alive, glittering and angry. Unforgiving.

"Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned" he began
reciting the words.

 

* * * * *

 

"Fallen priest, fallen priest"

His eyes snapped open. He was lying on the floor in front of
the makeshift altar, the votive candles burning and flickering in the dark. The
room was cold, very cold. The rain was still pounding away on the roof; he
could hear the dripping water in the kitchen. He was trembling, his heart pounding
in his ears. I fell
asleep and had the dream again, he thought, glancing over at the clock.
Almost midnight. He struggled to his feet, his knees stiff, his back and neck
aching from lying on the hard floor.

She was in danger.

He had to save her.

He grabbed his raincoat and his umbrella, blowing out the
candles and grabbing his keys. He took a deep breath, opened his door, and
stepped outside. The rain was pouring, the water gushing off the roof. The
street was under water, swirling dark water carrying debris, rising halfway up
the tires of the cars parked on the streets. The street lamps feebly tried to
illuminate the night, but only succeeded in giving off a dull yellow glow. She
was out there somewhere. He opened the umbrella and stepped down the creaking
wooden stairs and took a few hesitant steps into the night.

"Hail Mary, full of grace," he muttered as a car
went by, throwing up a sheet of dirty water, continuing the prayer as he
started down the sidewalk, not sure of where he was going.

There was a thick mist, and the streets were silent, except
for the rain and the hissing of streetlights, and the mist moved and swirled
like lost souls, dancing the dance of the dead in the stillness. He began to
walk down toward the waterfront, knowing somehow that that was where she was,
and there was danger, danger for her, some madman with rosary beads and a knife
wanted to wipe her off the face of the earth, send her soul to God

He tasted blood in his mouth, could smell it in the wet air.

He began to run.

His footsteps echoed in the mist, the sound bouncing off the
buildings that stood so silent and reproachful, almost contemptuous in their
silence. The mist continued to dance as he ran, and he was sweating despite the
cold, and he threw the umbrella, which was doing him no good, only slowing him
down, into the gutter, thinking I'll pick that up
later, not realizing how foolish the thought was, all he could think of
was her, and he continued praying as he ran, please
God, oh heavenly Father, save her save her save her, let me be in time she is
young she is innocent do not take her

He heard a scream. "No, mister, please, don't"

He ran harder, and still the screams continued and his lungs
felt as though they would explode, and he was crying as he ran, and the prayers
and pleas were running together in his mind, forgive
me Father for I have sinned and yea though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death hail Mary full of grace our Father who art in heaven please
protect her let me save herhe saw them, through the mist, as though the
dancing souls were parting for him, and he closed the gap, and grabbed the
man's upraised hand, the hand that held the dripping knife, and just like in
his dreams it was flashing blue fire, it was the knife, the sword of the Lord,
the sword of the righteous

"Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned," the man
with the knife said softly, then shrugged him off. He stumbled, falling down
into the water with a splash, and it was cold. The man swung the knife at the
girl again, and it flashed fire, a holy, pure fire, and the girl screamed, and
he could hear the sound of bones splintering as the knife tore at them, and it
was Molly, or was it Carla, the mist was confusing him, and he lunged for the
lunatic again, trying to grab his knife arm, shouting, "Run, Molly,
run!" as he struggled, trying to get the knife, to protect her, and then

He heard her giggle again.

He stopped fighting.

"What?" He turned and looked at her, and her face
changed, she was Molly, she was Carla, and she was Molly again.

"False priest, false priest," she chanted, dancing
a jig in the mist, her feet throwing up water, and she was laughing.

He rubbed his eyes, her face was like liquid, changing
shapes and then reforming again.

"Save her, Father, heavenly Father, she is good and
innocent, save her." It was his voice, coming from behind him, and he
turned and stared at the man with the knife. It was his own face, beneath the
rain cap, smiling at him. It was spattered with blood.

And then it changed into Father Soileau's face.

Then the archbishop's.

And Joey Moran's.

Back to his own.

He took a few steps backward.

"False priest, false priest."

"Save her, Father, save her, oh God, save her,
protect"

"priest, false priest"

"heavenly Father, save her"

"false priest"

"Father"

"priest"

He started screaming.

 

* * * * *

 

It stopped raining just before the sun
rose, and the pumps, which had been straining for days to keep up, finally
managed to drain the water from the streets. Throughout the French Quarter,
people were getting up, getting ready for work. Businesses were unlocked,
lights turned on, and everyone breathed a sigh of relief that the rain was
finally over. The sun beat down, evaporating the water, and the air thickened.

"Have you tried to get the knife away from him?"
Venus Casanova asked the beat cop as she sipped at her coffee, her eyes taking
in the scene, the girl's rain-soaked dead body, her shirt open to reveal the
cross carved between her breasts, the rosary beads dangling from her left hand.
Her eyes were open and staring up at the blue cloudless sky, her mouth frozen
in a scream. Venus shuddered. You never get used to
it, she thought as she turned her attention to the mumbling man holding
the knife.

"I haven't tried, we thought it better to wait for you,"
the cop, who couldn't have been more than twenty-five, replied. Two other
uniformed cops stood safely out of reach on either side of the man, their guns
carefully trained on him.

"What is he mumbling?" she asked.

"Prayers," the cop replied. "Hail Marys and
Our Fathers."

Religious mania, she
thought as she walked over and knelt down. "Michael?"

He stopped mumbling and slowly turned his head towards her.
His eyes were wide, bloodshot, and empty.

"Can you put the knife down?"

It clattered to the ground.

She breathed a sigh of relief, and nodded to the other
officers, who moved in, grabbed him by the arms, and raised him to his feet.
They cuffed him, moved him over to a squad car, and she could hear them reading
him his rights. He was docile and didn't say a word as they put him into the
backseat. She waved the crime-lab guys over, and they started their work.

She glanced over at the body, and shook her head. It was
over.

She looked up at the sky.

It was going to be a beautiful day.







MNQ/2010.01.07








Wyszukiwarka

Podobne podstrony:
2006 11 The Depths of Space
us intelligence exploitation of enemy material 2006
Kwaśniewski J , 2006 11 16 dr kwasniewski pl, Odchudzanie
2006 11 Linspiration
Magazine Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine 2006 11 November (v1 0) [html]
CCT 3 Acts of God UC
2006 11 Tworzenie sztuki abstrakcyjnej za pomocą Fyre [Grafika]
Kwaśniewski J , 2006 11 18 dr kwasniewski pl, Otyłość Gdy waga nie spada

więcej podobnych podstron