Back in the Habit (2 page)

Read Back in the Habit Online

Authors: Alice Loweecey

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery, #private eye, #murder, #soft-boiled, #amateur sleuth novel, #medium-boiled, #amateur sleuth, #nuns, #mystery novels, #murder mystery, #private investigator, #PI

Two

“I know this is
good, Ms. Pizza Snob, so don't go all connoisseur on me.” Frank reached across his desk and handed Giulia a paper plate with two triangular slices on it.

Giulia set down her Mountain Dew and filled her mouth with sausage and peppers. Workouts plus stress had tripled her appetite.

“Mmgph, yefs, it isf.” She swallowed. “Where is this place?”

“It took over the sub joint on Oak.” He wiped his hands on a recycled-paper napkin. “Did your head nun get her attitude from putting up with everyone singing Fabian songs at her?”

Giulia forced herself to swallow so she wouldn't spray Frank with Dew. “We never did it where she could hear us. When she was younger, she had a vocal range like Julie Andrews. But she had surgery for throat cancer, and it killed her voice.”

“Ouch.”

“She has trouble being grateful for surviving. It spills over into everything.”

Frank started another slice. “Giulia, I thought you gave up sugary nun-speak. Real people don't talk like nineteenth-century prayer books.”

She shrugged with one shoulder. “Force of habit, even after more than a year in the real world.”

He grinned. “That's why you have me and Sidney to set you an example. Anyway, so Sister Fabian runs the place? No wonder you bailed.”

“It was much more complicated than that.”

He smiled around a mouthful of crust. “Like a bad divorce, huh?”

Too many replies crowded Giulia's tongue for her to give voice to any of them.

Frank swallowed. “Never mind; you know I'm not serious. Here's the scoop on our new job. First, did you know that four different convents merged last spring?”

“Communities, Frank. A convent is a single building.”

“I bow to your superior wisdom. So many nuns called it quits that separately the four Communities couldn't make rent.” He finished his Coke. “What did you and your convent-mates think about the merger?”

“We were all for it if it kept us going.”

“All mergers should go so smoothly. Apparently everyone felt like that. You done?”

When Giulia nodded, Frank closed the pizza box on the last two slices, and Giulia cleared plates and napkins off the desk. Fire trucks and at least one ambulance sped past their building.

“I'll show you why that's important in a sec.” Frank turned his monitor so they could both see it. “This isn't pretty. A Novice—that's the second year, right?—killed herself eight days ago.” He continued over Giulia's gasp, “The higher-ups are positive it was suicide, and the police closed the case. But the parents aren't happy with Sister Fabian's explanation. She claimed the Novice was depressed and unbalanced, and the parents disagree.”

“They should. The Community puts us through the entire spectrum of psychological tests before we're cleared to enter.”

Frank shrugged this time. “She claims this Novice slipped through the testing cracks. Plus the Novice was from southeast Maryland. She had trouble adjusting with no family nearby as a safety net.”

“Did Sister Fabian say whether or not the Novice was watched and hounded and scrutinized every minute she was off the Novices' floor? Did she say that maybe the Maryland Motherhouse was different, and Pittsburgh was the real problem? Did she admit to using her personal brand of humiliation plus intimidation to bring everyone into line?” Giulia snatched her pop can and took a long drink to cut herself off.

Frank whistled. “That bad?”

“Sorry for the rant. Yes, that bad.”

“Jesus, Giulia, why'd you stay there so long?”

“Some other time. What does the job entail?” She clipped the words to avoid breaking into another rant.

“Right.” He opened a spreadsheet on the monitor. “The parents threatened to sue the convent—Community—for wrongful death. Sister Fabian offered to bring in an impartial third party—namely, us. The parents agreed to abide by the third party's decision, but here's the catch. Some big celebration's on Wednesday, and she wants this dealt with before then.”

Giulia rolled her eyes. “Saint Francis Day, Mr. Francis Driscoll.”

“Oh, yeah. She said there's also a major reunion starting this week, and the investigation has to be invisible to everyone.”

“We'll just use our interdimensional travel beam and psychic powers?”

Frank snorted. “You're watching too many cheesy sci-fi movies.”

“I'm serious, Frank. I trashed an invitation to that reunion. The Motherhouse will be wall-to-wall people. You and I don't have a shield of invisibility or supersonic hearing.”

A screenshot of the Philadelphia 76ers replaced the spreadsheet. Frank kept his eyes on Giulia. “No, but we have a secret weapon. You.”

She stared.

“It's perfect, Giulia. I thought of it the minute Sister Fabian mentioned keeping things invisible.” He picked up a pen and drew bullet points on the top of the pizza box. “You won't have to learn how to fit in—you already fit in.”

Slam.

Frank jumped. The Dew can crumpled slightly under the force of Giulia's panic.

“Strip me naked, smear my body with honey, and bury me in an anthill first.”

Frank dropped the pen onto the cardboard. “What?”

“Go back in the convent? Are you kidding me?” Her heart rate ramped up like she was back on the elliptical machine.

“But it's different now, right?”

“In what possible way do you think a centuries-old institution would be different after a mere fourteen months?” Her hand crushed the pop can into a silvery green hourglass.

“I mean, you know, the nuns. The merger happened while you were getting out, so you probably wouldn't know half the nuns. That's good, right?”

“I'd know even fewer than that. I hadn't been back to the Motherhouse for five years before I left. They had me teaching in the boonies. That doesn't mean—”

“See? Piece of cake. Look at the schedule I worked up.” He moved the mouse, and the spreadsheet returned to the screen.

She dragged her hands over her face. “It is not a piece of cake.”

“I'll call Sister Fabian tomorrow and ask her to send you a habit—you didn't keep those, right?”

“Of course not.”

“You'll need a room of your own.” He started typing. “If she has to, she can make someone double up.”

“No one gives Sister Fabian orders. Listen—”

“Don't believe her poker face. She's panicking like my mother the night before Thanksgiving.”

“Frank.”

“I can drive you to Pittsburgh—it'll be smarter than you renting a car and trying to park it somewhere. We can keep in touch by cell.”

“Frank.”

“You go to Mass every Sunday, right? How does two o'clock sound? I'll clear it with Sister Fabian tomorrow; that'll give her plenty of time. Now, here's what I think your cover should be—”

“Frank!” She clenched her hands in her lap so she wouldn't try to fling the office chair through the window. “Use Plan B.”

He stopped simultaneously typing and talking. “There isn't one. This plan is flawless.”

“Wrong. It has one big flaw. Me.”

“You have a conflict?”

A thin, strained laugh escaped her. “I'll have to cancel my Sunday through Wednesday lineup of dates.”

His mouth dropped open a tick, and she laughed for real.

“I wish. Whatever gave you the idea that me going back into the convent would be easy, let alone a good idea?”

“I—but—of course it's easy. You couldn't be more perfect for this.”

“Wrong again.” She gripped her hands tighter. “I cut all ties when I left, and not only because of multiple nasty fights. I did it because bad things happened, and they're—difficult—to remember. The thought of returning never crossed my mind for an instant.”

His expression drooped, changing the pattern of freckles on his face. “Think about it now, okay? Say yes so we can get on the Pittsburgh Diocese's approved vendor list. Think of what it'll mean for the business.”

“The business won't benefit by me freaking out in the laundry room down in the cellars.”

“Then don't go into the cellars. Oh, wait. You might have to, because that's where the Novice killed herself. But you're strong, Giulia. Look how you testified in court in front of TV cameras to get Don Falke in jail. A few days in one big building won't break you.”

Her lip curled. “Fabian could eat Urnu the Snake for breakfast.”

She might not want to remember all the details of when Sandra Falke and her brother Don—also known as Urnu the Snake—tried to murder her three months earlier. But she definitely should not remember the ten years of Fabian-spewed crap she'd been inundated with.

She slammed the crumpled pop can into the trash. “For breakfast.”

“I don't doubt it. Seriously, Giulia, you're not still under that harridan's thumb. She doesn't have one crumb of power over you.”

Her mouth quirked. “That's exactly what I've been telling myself.”

“And that's why we make a kick-ass—sorry—team.” He hit the
Print
button. “Take home the cover story I wrote for you and her summary of the incident. I'll have her send a habit to your apartment.”

“When did I agree to this?”

“Just now, when my flawless reasoning won you over.”

“No, it didn't.”
He looks like an eager little boy. Does he know it's almost impossible to resist him when he gets that expression?
“I realize getting the Diocese to funnel some of its wealth our way sounds good, but—”

“It doesn't just sound good, it is good. Clients around here don't come much bigger.” He grinned wider. “When I started Driscoll Investigations, my fellow cops told me that the cheaper rents in Cottonwood wouldn't make up for all the Pittsburgh business I'd be losing. Hah.”

“Jesus, Mary, and Joseph. Maybe I'll get run over by a bus on Saturday.”

“Don't be ridiculous.” He crossed into the other room and brought back the printouts from the communal printer by Sidney's desk. “What's the address of your new apartment?”

“No. Have two habits delivered here tomorrow.” When Frank's eyebrows furrowed, she said, “I don't want her to know where I live. And don't look at me like that. Sensible people don't allow toxic ones access to their lives.”

“Point taken. I'll meet you here at one. What's your dress size?”

“So much for a woman's mystique. Twelve.” She glanced at her jeans and wool sweater. “You know, the habit's optional in most Communities now.”

“Camouflage. You'll be one more anonymous nun in black, especially to the ones from the three other cities. You'd stand out in street clothes, even bland street clothes.”

“Are you implying my wardrobe isn't stylish?”

“Well, I mean, compared to, you know …”

“Heh. I don't disagree. Okay, fine. The habit it is.”
How fast this discussion progressed from “No way” to a dress fitting.
“Frank, if I end up in psychotherapy because of this, you're paying the bill.”

“I'll get a rider on the insurance.” He folded the printouts and handed them to her. “And stop putting yourself down. You'll be fine. Strength, intelligence, and charm are the hallmarks of Driscoll Investigations. I'm charm, you're everything else.”

“That's not a compliment.” She tried to scowl.

“You bet it is. A beauty-queen bimbo would never have suited me.”

The scowl worked this time. “No improvement. Time for me to leave anyway. The bus comes in ten minutes.”

He returned it. “You're not waiting on a downtown corner alone at night. I'm driving you.” He shut down the computer. “Just because you took self-defense training doesn't mean I want to give you an opportunity to use it.”

_____

Frank pulled his Camry into the minuscule parking lot of Giulia's new apartment building. The wind blew leaves and stray fast-food wrappers across the asphalt. The few people on the street hurried past, raincoats flapping behind them.

Frank unhooked his seat belt. “Are you going to invite me in?”

“A lady needs boundaries, Mr. Driscoll. Besides, I haven't dusted and vacuumed this week yet.”

“I'm guessing I could eat off your floors. All right, since your door is barred to me tonight, let's have dinner tomorrow. A last fling before taking the veil.”

“Temporarily.”

“I should hope so. I have no desire to look for a new partner. Well?”

“I'd love to.”

“Giulia,” Frank said through laughter, “you need to practice playing hard to get. Make the man wonder if he's worth your time. Make him chase you harder.”

So much for reading
Cosmo
religiously.
She sat straighter in the passenger seat. “It sounds lovely, Mr. Driscoll, but I'll have to check my calendar.”

“Better. Now tell me you'll text me, because that's more impersonal than a phone call.”

“And rude in this case.” He opened his mouth, but she forestalled him. “All right, I get it.” She flipped her hair back with one hand. “I'll text you—sometime.”

More laughter filled the car. “Did you learn that coquettish gesture from Sidney?”

“Mingmei. It flopped, didn't it?”

“Uh, well,” he cleared his throat. “It needs a little practice.”

“I'll reread several
Cosmo
s tonight.” She opened her door, and Frank started to open his. “That's all right. I can see myself inside.”

“My mother taught me manners. Do you really read
Cosmo
?”

“I have a lot to catch up on. And your brothers taught you how to sneak in a kiss or three.”

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