“That’s their problem.”
“Then it’s done.”
“Done.”
“Have you been doing what I’ve been doing?” the priest asked.
“Checking you out to see if there’s any resemblance?”
“There is, isn’t there?”
“A bit.”
“We sure had different mamas!” Zack observed.
“But the same daddy. I can see him in you … and you in me, for that matter.”
“I was only five when Dad died. Ma told me some things. But she didn’t know him much longer than my five years. What do you remember?”
“Not much more than you. I was just a kid when he left. I don’t know what happened. From what my-our-brothers and sisters said, he was a hardworking guy. Worked the assembly line … probably what Detroit is best known for. He had plenty of trouble from the rednecks. It was lots different then. Everybody took it for granted that he’d work here and go on supporting his family till he dropped.
“But one day he just up and left. That was it. I hardly knew him, and then he was gone.”
“It was my mother’s first marriage ….” Zack took up the story. “I came along after about a year. And I hardly got to know him. And then he was gone.”
Zoo looked at his brother intently. “Your mama must’ve really been religious … I mean you becoming a priest and all.”
“Oh, yes, she was. I think it was maybe the happiest day of her life when I was ordained.
“How about you? I gather from Bob Koesler and Anne Marie that you’re not exactly a Bible thumper.”
“We grew up entirely different. I don’t have any religion. If someone really pressed, I’d have to say I’m Baptist. But they’d have to press very, very hard.”
“Well, don’t worry: I’m not going to try to make a Catholic of you.
“Good. That attitude will eventually make you a happier man.”
“Okay, you two.” Anne Marie in an apron appeared in the door. “Everything’s ready. Father, I hope you like chicken. We’re trying. to keep your brother off red meat as much as possible.”
“Chicken’s fine. And it’s Zack to my brother, and I hope to my sister too.”
Zoo was about to stab a chicken leg when Anne Marie invited their priest brother to offer a prayer, which he did.
All in all, it was an appetizing dinner. In addition to the chicken, there were vegetables and a salad. It could not begin to challenge last night’s feast at the Adams suite. Still, this was several levels up from what Zack would have prepared for himself were he back at the rectory.
More important, this meal was punctuated with warm smiles from everyone.
“I’m not exactly in love with my nickname. Zack. But, somehow, coming from you two it has a down-home ring.”
Zoo smiled. “There’s one person you’re bound to meet who will never, under any circumstances, use the nickname. In fact, if I’m not proven wrong, he will never call you anything but Father Tully.”
“Wait a minute …” Zack held up one hand. “Anne Marie mentioned the name … I can’t think of it right now. Polish?”
“You bet. Inspector Walter Koznicki. My boss-head of our Homicide Division.”
“I’m really looking forward to meeting him … and your other friends. I can’t tell you, what a kick this is for me.”
“And for us,” Anne Marie said.
There was no sense of haste to this meal. They knew they were in for a long evening of getting acquainted. Probably at this table in the kitchen.
“By the way,” Zoo said, “before supper, you mentioned Father Koesler. I hope he didn’t get the impression he wasn’t welcome to come along.”
Zack looked puzzled. “Didn’t you know? I thought he-or somebody-would tell you. He’s gone. A vacation.”
“A vacation!” Zoo’s reaction seemed out of proportion to the event;
“That’s right. I don’t know how long it’s been since he’s had one. I don’t think’ he even knows himself. But if anybody deserves to get away, it’s gotta be Bob Koesler.”
Zoo seemed stunned. He had stopped eating.
“It’s funny with people who don’t vacation,” Anne Marie said. “They get to resemble big oak trees that are sort of dependable. They’re always there.”
“That’s just it ….” Zoo seemed to be coming out of his self-inflicted daze. “He isn’t here.”
Anne Marie was concerned. “Of course he isn’t here, dear. He’s on vacation.”
“What if we need him?”
“What do you mean, ‘What if we need him?’ Why would we need him?”
“Hey,” Zack said in a joking tone, “what am I, collard greens? I’m a priest! It isn’t that you’re left with nobody to take care of your spiritual life. Besides, after what you said, I didn’t think you’d panic if there wasn’t a priest to bring you sacraments!”
“It’s not me.” Zoo was deadly serious. “What if we come up with one of those cases like the ones that Koesler always helps us with … you know, where we’ve used him as a resource person?”
“What kind of chance would that be, honey? I mean, what are the odds?” Anne Marie said. “It’s not as if Father Koesler were on a retainer for the department. Or even that you. really expect to use him some more. For all you know, you’ll never need his expertise again.”
“Still and all, I’d feel better knowing he was here … that he was available if we did need him.”
“Zoo, he’s not that far away,” Zack said. “He’s just up in Georgian Bay.”
“Where’s that?” Zoo shot back. “I can’t place it off the top of my head.”
“It’s in Canada.”
“Canada’s a big country.”
“Well, it’s in Ontario, that much I know.”
“Can you reach him?” Zoo asked.
“It’s more a question of will he leave us alone down here,” Zack answered. “He left this afternoon, after making sure I knew where all the nooks and crannies are. I didn’t think I’d ever get him out of here.
“And then-can you believe it? — who should phone from en route late this afternoon but our reluctant vacationer, Bob Koesler.”
“He’s really not that far? He’s in touch? We can reach him?”
“Zoo …” Anne Marie maintained her light tone. “You never seemed so dependent on Father Koesler in the past. Why, I’ve even heard that there was a time when you resented his involvement in a homicide investigation.”
“That was before I got to know him. After I got convinced that his involvement wasn’t just because he wanted to meddle in police business. He’s not pushy. He just puts himself at our disposal when we invite him to help out.
“I guess I must’ve grown to depend on him being here.”
“Brother,” Zack said, “I am taking his place. Why don’t you lean on me if you come up with some problem that needs help? I had a talk with Father Koesler before he left yesterday. He explained to me, and gave me some examples of how he’s helped you over the years.
“All he was doing was leading you through the maze that the Catholic Church is so good at creating. No reason why I can’t help you out if, by rare accident, you happen to come up with a ‘Koesler situation.’“
“I don’t know … he’s good.”
It was all the priest could do to stop himself from laughing out loud. “Well, for what it’s worth-and it looks like you don’t think it’s worth all that much-I offer my services.
“Besides, with Bob Koesler you were dealing with a working pastor. All the while he was helping you, he was supposed to be caring for the day-to-day operation of a-busy, as far as I know-parish. But I’m not going to be weighed down with all that. Bob assured me-and from what I’ve seen it’s true-that the parish secretary can take care of the nuts and bolts of the parish. I’m just there for the ride.
“So: unencumbered with demanding parochial responsibilities, I am yours for the asking. If the need arises. And my hunch agrees with Anne Marie that neither Father Koesler nor I will be needed by the Detroit Police Department.”
The threesome seemed to be taking turns alternately talking and eating.
“Look at it this way, honey,” Anne Marie said. “Supposing that what we don’t think will happen does happen. What would you do? You wouldn’t call poor Father Koesler in, away from a very well-deserved vacation?”