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    Desperate Measures

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      Pittman's sudden weakness alarmed him. Light-headed, he feared that he

      would lose his balance. He leaned against the coffee machine.

      What did you expect? he told himself. The past two days, you've had

      more exercise than you've had all year. You've been running all over

      Manhattan. You got a few hours sleep on a park bench. You haven't had

      enough to eat. You've been strung out from fear and adrenaline. It's a

      wonder you managed to stay on your feet as long as you have.

      But I can't collapse. Not here. Not now.

      Why not? he joked bitterly. A hospital's a great place to collapse.

      Have to get back to Sean. Have to go back to the loft.

      But after Pittman concentrated to steady himself. and pushed away from

      the coffee machine, he discovered that he wasn't steady at all. His

      legs wavered more disturbingly. His stomach felt queasy. He gripped

      the wall, afraid that the janitor at the end of the corridor would look

      in his direction, see that he was in trouble, and call for help.

      Have to get away from here.

      Sure, and how far do you think you'll get? You're oozing sweat, pal.

      You're seeing gray. If you go outside, you're to collapse on the

      street. After the police find you, after they see the name on your

      credit card and find that .45 in your coat pocket ...

      Where, then?

      His bitter joke echoed in his mind. A hospital's a great place to

      collapse.

      As the elevator rose, Pittman's light-headedness increased. When the

      doors opened on the sixth floor, he strained to look natural and walked

      toward the intensive-care area. If Jill Warren came out, or the female

      doctor he'd spoken to earlier, he doubted that he'd have the strength to

      explain convincingly why he had returned.

      But Pittman didn't have another option. The intensive-care waiting room

      was the only refuge he could think of that he knew he could get to. Its

      lights had been dimmed. He veered left from the corridor, passed

      several taut-faced people trying to doze on the uncomfortable chairs,

      stepped over a man sleeping on the floor, and came to a metal cabinet in

      back. The cabinet contained hospital pillows and blankets, Pittman

      knew. He had found out the hard way when Jeremy had been rushed to

      intensive care and Pittman had spent the first of many nights in the

      waiting room. A staff member had told him about the pillows and

      blankets but had explained that usually the cabinet was kept locked.

      "Then why store the pillows and blankets in the cabinet if people can't

      get to them?" Pittman had complained. "Because we don't want people

      sleeping here."

      So you force them to stay awake in those metal chairs?"

      It's a hospital rule. Tonight I'll make an exception." The staff

      member had unlocked the cabinet.

      Now Pittman twisted the latch on the cabinet, found that it was locked,

      and angrily pulled out the tool knife Sean O'Reilly had given him. His

      hands trembled. It took him longer than it normally would have. But

      finally, using the lock picks concealed in the knife, he opened the

      cabinet.

      Dizzy, nauseated, he lay among others in the most murky corner of the

      waiting room, a pillow beneath his head, a blanket pulled over him.

      Despite the hard floor, sleep had never come quicker or been more

      welcome. As he drifted into unconsciousness, he was dimly aware that

      others in the waiting room groped toward the pillows and blankets in the

      cabinet that he had deliberately left open.

      He was disturbed only once-an elderly man waking a frail woman. "She's

      dead, May. Nothin' they could do."

      Daylight and voices woke him. Those who'd remained all night in the

      waiting room were rousing themselves. Others, whose friends or

      relatives had evidently just been admitted to intensive care, were

      trying to acquaint themselves with their new surroundings.

      Pittman sat up wearily, concentrated to clear his head, and stood slowly

      with effort. The combination of the hard floor and his previous day's

      exertion made his muscles ache. After he folded the blanket and put it

      and the pillow into the cabinet, he draped his overcoat over an, arm,

      concealing the heavy bulge of the .45 in his right pocket.

      A hospital volunteer brought in a cart of coffee, orange juice, and

      doughnuts. Noticing a sign that said PAY WHAT YOU CAN, Pittman couldn't

      find any more change in his pockets. Sean O'Reilly had lent him twenty

      dollars, and Pittman guiltily put in one of those dollars, drank two

      cups of orange juice, ate two doughnuts, and suddenly was afraid that he

      would throw up. In a washroom down the hall, he splashed cold water on

      his face, looked at his pasty complexion in the mirror, touched his

      beard stubble, and felt demoralized. How can I possibly keep going? he

      thought.

      suicide that he had almost conmiitted four nights earlier bother trying?

      I'm in so much trouble, I can never get out of it, he thought. Even if

      I do get out of it, Jeremy will still be dead. What's the point?

      Nothing's worth what I'm going through.

      You can't let the bastards destroy you. Remember what you told

      yourself-it has to be your idea, not theirs. if you kill yourself now,

      you'll be giving them what they want. You'll be letting them win. Don't

      let the sons of bitches have that satisfaction.

      A short, dreary-looking man whom Pittman recognized from the waiting

      room came into the washroom, took off his shirt, chose the sink next to

      Pittman, opened a travel kit, lathered his face, and began to shave.

      "Say, you wouldn't have another one of those disposable razors, would

      you?" Pittman asked.

      "Do what I did, buddy. Go down to the shop in the lobby and buy one."

      St. Joseph's hadn't benefited from the renovation that, thanks to an

      influx of Yuppies during the eighties, had taken place in other parts of

      SoHo. Although small, the church's architecture resembled a cathedral,

      but its sandstone exterior was black with soot, its stained-glass

      windows grimy, its interior badly in need of painting. Pittman stood at

      the rear of the church, smelled incense, listened to an organ that

      sounded as if it needed repair, and surveyed the impressive amount of

      worshipers who, unmindful of the bleak surroundings, had come for Sunday

      Mass. The front of the church wasn't bleak, though. A golden chalice

      gleamed on the altar. Candles glowed. A tall, intense priest wearing a

      crimson vestment read from the Gospel, then delivered a sennon about

      trusting in God and not giving in to despair.

      Right, Pittman thought bleakly. He sat in a pew in back and watched the

      continuation of the first Mass he'd attended in many years. He had

      never gone to church on a regular basis, but after Jeremy had died, his

      indifference had turned to rejection. As a consequence, he couldn't

      account for his impulse when the time came for communion and he followed

      parishioners toward the altar. He told himself that he wanted a closer

      look at the priest, for an assistant at the church's had told Pittman

      that Father Dandridge would be conducting this particular Mass.

      Coming near to him, Pittman s
    aw that the priest was in his middle

      fifties and that his strong features had deep lines of strain. He had a

      jagged scar across his chin, and his left hand was welted from what

      looked like the consequence of a long-ago fire. When Pittman received

      communion, the emptiness inside him felt immense.

      The priest ended the Mass. "Go in peace."

      Not just yet, Pittman thought.

      As the parishioners left, he made his way toward the front of the

      church, went through a door on the right, and found himself in the

      sacristy, the room next to the altar where objects needed for Mass were

      customarily stored.

      The priest was taking off his vestments, setting them on a counter, when

      he noticed Pittman enter. Deliberate movements and cordlike sinews

      visible on the priest's forearms suggested a man who kept his mind and

      body in condition and control. He became still, watching Pittman

      approach. "May I help you?" the priest asked.

      "Father Dandridge?"

      "That's correct.

      "I need to speak to you."

      "Very well." The priest waited.

      As Pittman hesitated, the priest cocked his head. "You look nervous. Is

      this a personal matter something for confession?"

      "No. Yes. I mean, it is personal, but ... What I need to speak to you

      about-" Pittman felt apprehensive about the reaction he would get-"is

      Jonathan Millgate."

      The priest's dark eyes assessed him. "Yes, I remember you from the

      Mass. The anguish on your face as you came up for communion. As if the

      weight of the entire world were on your shoulders."

      "That's how it feels."

      'Understandably. If what the newspapers say about you is true, Mr.

      Pittman."

      ic. It had never occurred to Pittman that the priest would be able to

      identify him. Nerves quickening, he swung toward the door, about to

      flee.

      "No," Father Dandridge said. "Please. Don't go. Be calm. "

      Something in the priest's voice made Pittman hesitate.

      "I give you my word," Father Dandridge said. "You have nothing to fear

      from me. "

      Pittman's stomach cramped. "How did you know ... ?"

      "Who you are?" Father Dandridge gestured, inadvertently drawing

      Pittman's attention to his scarred left hand. "Jonathan Millgate and I

      had a special relationship. It shouldn't be surprising that I would

      have read every newspaper article and watched every television report I

      could find to learn more about what happened to him. I have studied

      your photograph many times. I recognized you immediately."

      Pittman couldn't seem to get enough air. "It's important that you

      believe this. I didn't kill him."

      "Important to me or you?"

      "I tried to save him, not harm him. " Pittman was suddenly conscious of

      the amplifying echo in the small room. He glanced nervously toward the

      archway that led to the altar.

      Father Dandridge gazed in that direction, as well. The church was

      almost empty. A few elderly men and women remained kneeling, their

      heads bowed in prayer.

      "No one seems to have heard you," Father Dandridge said. "But the next

      Mass is scheduled to begin in half an hour. The church will soon be

      full." He pointed toward two men who entered at the back of the church.

      "Is there somewhere we can talk?"

      "I ask you again, do you want confession?"

      "What I want is what you promised at the end of the Mass.

      Peace. " Father Dandridge intensified his gaze, then nodded. "Come

      with me."

      The priest led the way toward a door at the back of the sacristy. When

      he opened it, Pittman was amazed to look out toward a garden, its

      well-kept appearance in contrast with the decay at the front of the

      church. Neatly mowed grass was flanked by blooming lilacs, their

      fragrance wafting through the open door. The rectangular area was

      enclosed by a high brick wall. Father Dandridge motioned for Pittman to

      precede him.

      When Pittman didn't respond, the priest looked amused. ,.Suspicious of

      me? You don't want to turn your back on me? How could I possibly hurt

      you?"

      "Lately, people have been finding ways." Keeping his hand on the .45

      hidden in his overcoat pocket, Pittman glanced back through the arch

      toward the church, which was rapidly being filled. He followed the

      priest into the garden and shut the door.

      The morning sun was warm and brilliant, emphasizing the jagged white

      scar on Father Dandridge's chin. The priest sat on a metal bench. The

      sound of the city's traffic seemed far away.

      "Why should I believe that you didn't kill Jonathan Millgate?"

      "Because if I did, I ought to be on the run. Why would I come to you?"

      Father Dandridge raised his shoulders. "Perhaps you're as deranged as

      the news reports say. Perhaps you intend to kill me, as well."

      "No. I need your help."

      "And how could I possibly help you? Why would I want to help you?"

      "In the news reports, Millgate's people claim they took him from the

      hospital to protect him from me, but that's not true," Pittman insisted.

      "The real reason they took him is they didn't want to expose him to

      reporters after the story broke about his supposed connection with

      trying to buy nuclear weapons from the former Soviet Union."

      "Even if you can prove what you say .

      "I can."

      "... it's irrelevant to whether or not you killed him."

      "It's very relevant. Look, I followed him from the hospital, yes. But

      I wasn't stalking him. I wanted to find out why he'd been taken. At

      the estate in Scarsdale, the nurse and doctor who were supposed to be

      caring for him left him alone. He became disconnected from his

      life-support system. I managed to get into his room and help him."

      "But a witness claims it happened the other way around, that you cut off

      his oxygen and caused him to have a fatal heart attack."

      "A nurse came in when I was putting the oxygen prongs into Millgate's

      nostrils. She heard Millgate tell me something. I think that's what

      all of this is about. His people were afraid of reporters asking him

      questions. But I'm a reporter, and what Millgate told me may have been

      exactly what they didn't want anybody to know. They tried to stop me,

      but I got away, and .

      Dandridge added, "So they decided to cut off JonaMillgate's life-support

      system, to let him die to prevent him from ever telling anyone else.

      Then they blamed his death on you so that even if you tried to use what

      you were told, you wouldn't be believed."

      "That's right," Pittman said, amazed. "That's the theory I'm trying to

      prove. How did-?"

      "When you hear enough confessions, you become proficient at

      anticipating."

      "This isn't confession!"

      "What did Jonathan Millgate say to you?" Pittman's energy dwindled,

      discouragement overcoming him. He rubbed the back of his neck. "That's

      the problem. It doesn't seem that important. In a way, it doesn't even

      make sense. But later a man tried to kill me at my apartment because of

      what Millgate had told me."

      "Now you tell me."

      "A man's name." Pittman shook his
    head in confusion. "And something

      about snow."

      "A name?"

      "Duncan Grollier.

      Father Dandridge concentrated, assessing Pittman. "Jonathan Millgate

      was perhaps the most despicable man I have ever met."

      "What? But you said that the two of you were friends."

      Father Dandridge smiled bitterly. "No. I said that he and I had a

      special relationship. I could never be his friend. But I could pity

      him as much as I loathed his actions. I could try to save his soul. You

      see, I was his confessor."

      Pittman straightened with surprise.

      "When you saw me in the sacristy, you couldn't help noticing my scars."

      "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to .

      "It's quite all right. There's no need to worry about my feelings. I'm

      proud of these scars. I earned them in combat. During the Vietnam War.

      I was a chaplain in I Corps. A base I was assigned to-close to the

      demilitarized zone-came under siege. Bad weather kept reinforcements

      from being brought in. We were under constant mortar bombardment. Of

      course, as a noncombatant, I wasn't allowed to use a weapon, but I could

      care for the wounded. I could crawl with. food and water and

      ammunition. I could give dying men the last sacrament. The scar on my

     


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