Dom slowed his pace as he waited to be connected. He’d nearly made it to the firehouse when the line clicked.
“Hello, Father,” Irene answered. “Look, unless it’s really important, I am swamped with-”
“Venice says that Gail is dead.”
“Oh, my God.”
“She was shot in the Crystal Palace Cathedral about twenty minutes ago. We need to get police there, but we can’t call without revealing why she was there.”
“The Crystal Palace is in Scottsdale, isn’t it? Is Venice sure?”
“She sounded sure on the phone. I don’t know how she knows. I’m on my way to her now. But if it’s true-if Gail has been shot, irrespective of whether or not she’s dead-time is of the essence. I thought you could pull a few strings to get the police out there.”
He could almost hear the FBI director’s brain whirring. She had to have a thousand questions-he had at least that many-but she also had to know that they could wait. “I’ll do it,” she said. Then she hung up.
He assumed she would reestablish contact if she got anything.
Pulling open the street-level door to the office, Dom tore up the stairs two and three at a time, startling Rick Hare, the armed security officer who stood guard outside the door to Security Solutions.
“Father Dom,” he said. “Are you all right?”
Dom didn’t pause to acknowledge him. Instead, he swiped his key card and punched in the entry code with the forefingers of both hands.
Rick grabbed the priest’s biceps. “Father, I know you’re a friend of Mr. G’s, but I can’t let you in if you’re this agitated. What’s going on?”
Dom paused. Despite his early years in the Army, cloak and dagger was not his business. Secrecy, however, was his business, and Venice had been clear about not sharing the news. He steeled himself with a breath. “Mr. Hare, you’re going to have to make a decision. I’m going in there. If you feel the need to shoot me, then may your soul be spared.”
Clearly, it was not what the guard had been expecting, and the look in his face nearly made Dom laugh. He used the awkward silence as an invitation to enter the office suite.
A second armed security guard, this one named Charlie Keeling, stood at the entrance to The Cave, and judging from the way he touched his ear, Rick had just told him about the nutjob priest who was on his way in. Rather than trying to stop him, though, Charlie used his own card to buzz him in.
“Thank you, Mr. Keeling,” Dom said as he passed.
“Rick said it was important, Father.” That was it; no further inquiry. If ever there was a place of business where need-to-know was the mantra, Security Solutions was it.
Venice sat on the far side of her desk, tears streaming down her face as her fingers flew across the keyboard. Dom had been telling himself that maybe he’d heard her wrong, but now that he saw her face, he knew that the worst fears were true.
Venice made no notice of him until he appeared in her doorway, and when she made eye contact, she melted entirely. She rose from her chair and hurried around the desk, her arms out and her wrists drooping, ready for a hug. As soon as Dom folded her in his arms, she started to sob.
“It’s my fault,” she cried. “She asked me for help and I couldn’t give it to her.” Her words were barely audible through the choking sobs.
Dom held her tightly as she pressed her face into his black shirt and let the emotion pour out. He felt the wetness in the fabric, and he just let her go. He stroked her hair and patted it. As he did, he tried to wrap his mind around the enormity of it.
Gail has been killed.
Articulating the words, even in his head, made it sound impossible. Gail was too alive to be dead. His head reeled with questions, but until Venice regained control, they would remain unasked.
It took her five full minutes to calm herself to the point where she could speak, and even then, her voice quavered. Her eyes burned red.
“Oh, Dom, what’s Digger going to do? After he lost Ellen, Gail was all he-” Her voice caught and she abandoned the thought.
She pushed away from Dom and stomped her foot once against the floor. “No,” she commanded, though Dom wasn’t sure if she was speaking to herself or to him. “We are not doing this. We are not getting emotional. Not now. There’s plenty of time for that later.” She turned her back and headed to her computer.
Dom followed. “You’re absolutely sure that she’s dead?”
“I heard it happen,” she said. “On the phone.” She made a show of pounding the computer keys.
“You heard her die? How do you know she’s dead?”
“I heard the shots, and I talked to the killer.” Her tone could not have changed more dramatically. Now it was as if this were a simple business matter. She swiped angrily at the remaining tears in her eyes, and typed some more.
Dom reached over her shoulder and thumbed the power button on her monitor.
“Dammit, Father!”
“Dammit, Venice!”
The exchange hung in the air.
“Please talk to me,” Dom said. “I’ve already got Wolverine involved. She’s finding a reason to send police to the cathedral to look around.”
Venice looked stunned that she hadn’t thought of that herself. “That’s good,” she said.
“Wolverine is going to want to know details,” Dom went on. “You’re going to have to share them.”
Venice had always been intimidated by Irene Rivers. Dom knew how little she liked to speak to her.
Venice steadied herself with a breath, then spun in her chair to face Dom. “She called me from an office inside the cathedral. I think she said it was on the twelfth floor. She was there to meet with Jackie Mitchell, and somehow or other, she ended up coming under fire. She called me to see if I could pull up drawings to get them out of there.” Her lip startled trembling again. “I just didn’t have time. They found her when I was still looking. That’s when I heard them kill her.”
“I still don’t know what that means,” Dom said. “I don’t know what you mean when you say you heard them kill her. You mean you heard them shoot at her?”
Venice nodded. “There was a lot of shooting. Shooting and yelling. And then it just stopped. A man picked up her phone and said that he’d just killed her.”
“So, you don’t know that she’s dead. There’s no certainty.”
Venice looked confused. Maybe a little angry at being questioned.
Dom explained, “Suppose she just dropped her phone in the fight? Suppose she was on the run and it just dropped out of her pocket? Just because some guy-a bad guy, no less-says that she’s dead, that doesn’t necessarily mean that she is.”
Venice thought about it and seemed to allow herself a tiny glimmer of hope. She turned back to her screen and powered it up again
Dom’s cell phone rang. Wolverine. He snapped it open. “Please tell me you have good news.” He pressed the speaker button. “Venice’s on the line, too.”
“The news is neither good nor bad,” Irene said. “The chief of police down there is an acquaintance of mine. He sent a unit to the Crystal Palace. They spoke with the security team on the main floor, and they said they knew nothing of a shooting.”
“Did they check the place out?” Dom asked.
“They didn’t feel it was necessary,” Irene said. “Under the circumstances, with the extremely limited information we have to offer, I can’t say as I blame them.”
“Are they at least going to keep the police cars on the property for a while?” Venice asked.
“I can’t imagine that they would,” Irene replied. “Venice, I need you to catch me up with the details.”