Parishioner

Parishioner Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: Parishioner Read Online Free PDF
Author: Walter Mosley
Tags: Fiction, Crime, Urban Life
that I created.”
    She gave Xavier’s erect nipple a hard pinch.
    “So you’re telling me you believe we’re Frank’s living scriptures?” he managed to say.
    “Come fuck me, Ecks, and I’ll tell you more.”
    “I don’t want to have to hurt Chapman,” he said. This his last line of defense.
    “I gave him some of my special tea. He won’t wake until morning. By that time I’ll be sleeping peacefully by his side.”

    When Xavier woke at three in the morning she was already gone, but the words she’d shed in his ear were still there—loud and clear.
    She told him about the missions Frank had orchestrated and the tolls paid by his parishioners.
    “So you think that I’m connected to Benol in some way?” Xavier asked in between their second and third ruts.
    “Not necessarily,” she cooed. “Sometimes the missions are metaphors for the missionaries.”
    Iridia knew how to get a man excited and keep him that way. In the dark of morning, while Xavier drove his truck down to pick up his young paper delivery staff, he still felt the physical sensations.
    “Why didn’t anybody else tell me about this?” he asked her as they drifted on the aftermath of passion, leaving the border of obsession.
    “Less humility and more humiliation keeps us quiet. Frank doesn’t give you a mission until he thinks you’re ready to face yourself. The Sunday sermons are like boot camp. But when he sends you out on a job, that’s a one-man war. And when a soldier comes home from battle she doesn’t want to talk about it.”

    Forty-seven hundred newspapers filled the canvas-covered back of Xavier’s oversize pickup truck. Inside Damien, Carlo, and Angelique folded and wrapped, threw and carried the papers and special insert advertisements up and down the blocks of Xavier’s district. The kids were all fifteen years old, making thirty dollars a day. They worked from approximately four forty-five until eight fifteen, seven days a week.
    After dropping them off at their school, Xavier went to Lon’s Diner on Grand for breakfast and the first reading of Benol Richards’s file.
    He read the seven sheets of legal-size yellow, lined pages from front to back. There were no surprises: the names of the victims and their parents, the private detective, Lou Baer-Bond, and the places where the crimes occurred.
    The parents of the kidnapped boys were the Van Dams, the Tarvos, and the Charleses.
    While he read he remembered Iridia in his bed. There was a scent to her that he knew like his own sweat.
    “Did Frank send you here?” he asked just before sleep.
    “He didn’t tell me or ask me to come,” she said. “But whether he sent me or not I can’t say.”
    “I don’t think you should come here anymore after this,” Xavier said.
    “I don’t think I’ll need to.”

    Lou Baer-Bond’s office was on Olympic a little east of La Brea. It was the last office down a drab hall on the third floor above a D-Right Drugstore.
    Ecks stopped at the door. Black lettering painted on the opaque, wire-laced glass read,
Lou Baer-Bond, Discreet Private Investigations
. Rule wondered at the use of the word
discreet
. It rhymed with
sweet
but had the feeling of decay to it.
    After a moment of empty contemplation he knocked.
    “Come on in,” a medium tenor called.
    It was a janitor’s closet with a desk instead of a sink, and a dirty window in place of a pegboard. Not enough room for a couple to practice a two-step waltz under a ceiling that was a foot too low for Xavier’s comfort.
    Behind the desk sat a white man who was in the process of turning gray. His hair was salt-and-pepper, and any élan that he was born with had drained out of his face and hands. Maybe fifty, maybe more, he looked up through light blue eyes wondering about the black man with the deep gash under his right cheekbone.
    “Yes?”
    “You the man on the door?”
    “Can I help you?”
    “I come here for my cousin,” Ecks said, falling into the speech pattern of an
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Detection by Gaslight

Douglas G. Greene

Superhero

Victor Methos

The Little Friend

Donna Tartt

Intrusion

Dean Murray

Stars Screaming

John Kaye

The Voynich Cypher

Russell Blake