“Was the attack brought about because the man was of a homosexual nature, rather than at his request?” asked Graham.
Saviour looked surprised. “Why, no. A person’s sexual orientation means nothing to me.”
“It didn’t bother you, then, that he abused little boys?” The hint of sarcasm could not be kept from Graham’s voice.
“Yes. It did. However, it is not for me to judge and the man did seek advice. He was not happy with his urges. Same-sex activity is against the Lord’s wishes and intentions, of course. He created Man to procreate so that, with the numbers increasing throughout time, amazing developments could come about — as they indeed have — and an awareness of the Greater Being would become fully integrated into the soul.
The nature of things is so designed that the female is attractive and acquiescent to the more dominant of the species — the male — and will bear him children. Males are designed by the Lord to impregnate as many females as is their wish, whilst females are designed to seek out as many males as they desire with the sole purpose of producing offspring. It is the development of various cultures and the unworthy dominance of many religions that have resulted in modern-day restrictions.
The sexual act is engineered to be highly pleasurable and there is no wrong in using the act for that purpose, whether productive or not. Same-sex activity is brought about by flaws in the genetic make up, sometimes merely a psychological problem, and is therefore a mistake in nature and against what is normal. As such, it is, by definition, a perversion and an impurity, which the Lord cannot accept into His Kingdom.”
“Do you believe, then, that genetically imperfect people cannot be received into Heaven?”
“No. The good Lord will cure all, in the hereafter. That means, upon death, the soul of the afflicted is purified.”
The interview was again slipping into a sermon and, interested though Graham was in the priest’s beliefs, he wanted to keep to the matter in hand. However, it gave an insight into the next murder, that of Mary Stewart.
This time, the Jesuit related the events without slipping into any rhetoric. The woman was troubled, he’d calmed her, given her self-belief, then sent her to the Holy Virgin by injecting liquid Opium into her arm. He seemed to derive some pleasure from describing in detail the movements of the victim after the dose had been administered. On the question of the sexual activity, it had been as before; merely pandering to the sinners wishes, bringing to her “The Staff of God.”
Thomas Singleton was, indeed, a sinner. A wretched man who had deserted his wife and daughter for another woman — his wife’s best friend! He had further sullied himself by indulging in sex in the marital bed. However, the death of his daughter had made him re-think his life and given him the notion that, had he stayed at home, she would now be alive. This was very hard for him to come to terms with and he suffered immensely from it. At the same time as bringing him contentment, Ignatious had decided that punishment was also due and so the poison given caused a more prolonged death, stage by stage.
The silence of the other persons in the small room was total, all listening with fascination to the calm, controlled Jesuit as he described the murders. It was as though he was presenting a report to the Annual General Meeting of some multi-national company. Whenever Ignatious’s stare fell upon any of those present, whether the PC at the door, McArdle or Clive, they had the immediate urge to fall to their knees and beg forgiveness! Deliberately avoiding the Jesuit’s eyes, Graham managed to keep a clear head and was able to put the relevant questions at the proper stages.
Finally, Ignatious reached the thirteen-year-old Emma Fairweather. Her mistake that day was to be a pleasant and pretty young girl. She qualified for God’s bosom on that alone. He had been so nice to her, so concerned and caring, and yet he had ended her life as easily as buttering bread. He’d even fixed her bike after she was dead! As with each victim, death had been administered by poison, but this time the substance was unknown, one that he had discovered when in the Amazon.
Graham was glad to reach the end; the confession, excellent in content that it was, was disturbing. An intelligent and most unusual man who clearly did not see the wrong in what he had been doing.
“Well, Brother Saviour,” he said, “if that is all, we’ll return you to your cell and arrange a hearing for you tomorrow morning.”
As he went to switch off the tape, he was halted by the Jesuit’s next words: “But Detective Inspector, that is not all.”
For a few seconds, Graham remained half out of his seat. Not all? The words slowly sank into his head. He sat and faced Ignatious, again carefully avoiding direct eye contact. All other eyes were on the Jesuit.
“No. While you have been chasing me, I have relieved another soul.” He sat back in the wooden chair, perfectly at ease, as he had been throughout.
“Go on,” said Graham almost in a whisper.
The priest smiled benignly. “My work is never at an end,” he said. “Another poor soul who came across my path needed my guidance.”
“Can you name this person?”
“Yes. He told me he was Andrew Clements, a drifter who hailed from the Midlands, down here seeking work. His marriage had broken up some months ago and his wife had left the area with his two young children, whom he adored. He confessed to having been forced to thieve at times in order to live but he regarded himself to generally be a good person.”
What age would he be?”
“Said he was thirty-six.”
Graham sighed. “Okay, Brother, tell me what you can.”
The usual story unfolded; a lost soul, unhappy, desperate for solace and overcome by the Jesuit in whom he was willing to confide his innermost secrets. It was suggested that they meet again early the following morning and go to a spot close to nature. Clements had suggested Woburn Safari Park, a place he had planned anyway to visit while in this district, reasoning that you couldn’t get much closer to nature than with the wild beasts. Ignatious had thought the selection perfect and readily agreed.
It transpired that the couple had found a spot next to the fencing surrounding the park, out of sight of the main tourists, hidden by thick bushes, where Ignatious had listened, counselled and finally sent the man to Heaven, using the special poison discovered in the Amazon.
At the end, Graham asked: “Is that everything, now, Brother?”
“Yes. I have no more to say. You may now return me to my cell.”
The audacity of the man was amazing. It was as though he was speaking to servants.
Before leaving, Ignatious unnecessarily thanked his solicitor, as he had been no more than a spectator, but the thanks were sincere none-the-less. Two police officers escorted him, in handcuffs, back to the cells below.
With the tapes now switched off, the conversation was about the cool unruffled attitude of the accused priest and the wicked murders he had perpetrated. Even McArdle joined in, confessing that he had never represented, if that could be the right description, anyone so willing to admit to the crimes and be so unconcerned about them.
Later in the day, Graham and Clive returned to New Scotland Yard and began the task of collating all the evidence and putting it in order. This included transcripts of the recent interview. Besides the confession, solid evidence was now in hand and it was just a matter of how soon the case could be put to the Prosecutor and the CPS — The Crown Prosecution Service — for it all to be heard in court. The lab reports and the DNA evidence were expected within the next few days and then the emotionally taxing case could be brought to a conclusion.