WORLD-RENOWNED SCIENTIST LEAVES ESTATE TO SELF!
Oh, my God, it can't be!
She dropped everything on the counter and snatched up the tabloid, praying it was just an awful coincidence, just another crackpot tale to go along with The Light's usual UFO, eye-injury, and freak-show contents.
"Story on page three" read the small print in the lower right corner. Her hands trembled as she opened the paper.
Please don't let it be!
But her prayer went unanswered. She almost screamed when she saw the byline, "by Gerald Becker."
"Everybody's reading that," said the redheaded, gum-cracking lady behind the counter. "Wished I had twice as many, the way they're selling."
Carol barely heard her. She saw the name Hanley in the first line and the word clone in the second, and then she was crushing the paper against her chest as her feet carried her toward the door.
"Hey!" said the woman. "Y'forgot—!"
Carol managed to say, "Keep the change!" and then she was out the door and running for the car. She had to get home, had to get to Jim with this before someone else did.
As she raced through downtown Monroe, one word kept echoing in her head.
How? How had Becker found out? How?
After pulling into the driveway she ran around to the other side of the house and pushed the rhodos aside. The access cover to the crawl space was still closed. She pulled it open and stared in horror at the sandy emptiness. There was a flattened spot on the sand where she had left the journals, but the journals were gone!
She rushed inside and found Jim sitting in the easy chair. His pale face and stricken expression were like a knife ripping into her chest.
"Somebody left this on the front step," he said, holding up a copy of The Light.
"Oh, Jim—"
"How, Carol?" he said, looking at her with eyes that were so full of hurt she wanted to cry.
"Jim, I didn't!"
"Then how did Becker get hold of this stuff? He's got passages in his article that are practically word for word out of Hanley's letter to me. How could that be if the journals were incinerated as you said?"
The phone rang, startling her. It sat at Jim's elbow but he ignored it. As she started toward it he said, "Leave it. It's just some reporter from one of the New York dailies wanting to know if the story is true."
"Oh." This was awful and getting worse.
"You haven't answered my question, Carol. How?"
"Because I didn't really throw them away!"
Jim rose slowly from the chair.
"What?"
"I—I only told you that so you wouldn't go looking for them. Actually I hid them in the crawl space until—"
He took two steps toward her. "You mean, you lied to me about throwing them out?"
"Yes. You see—"
He came closer, his eyes angry now, almost wild. And that damn phone kept ringing and ringing.
"You lied then, but you're telling the truth now?"
"Yes."
His expression had become so fierce it frightened her.
"How do I know you're not lying now?"
"Because I wouldn't!"
"But you already did!" He thrust the headlines of The Light to within inches of her nose and shouted, "Will the real Carol Nevins Stevens please stand up and tell me why she did this to me?"
Carol couldn't hold it in any longer. She began to cry.
"But I didn't, Jim! This isn't fair!"
The phone stopped ringing.
"Well, we agree on that, at least," he said in a softer voice. He pointed to the paper. "I know you didn't intend this, but you've got a hell of a lot of explaining to do."
She told him everything—from reading the journals to hiding them in the crawl space to confronting him the next morning with her fabricated story.
"I wish now they had been burned."
"So do I! Oh, you don't know how I wish that! But they were yours. It just didn't seem right."
"Yeah. Mine." He sighed. "I think I'll go over to the mansion for a while."
"No!" she cried as he turned and headed for the door. "Don't run away from this. We can handle it together!"
"I'm sure we can. I'm not running away from anything. I've just got to be alone for a while. Just a few hours. I've got to figure out how I'm going to handle this"—he tapped his forehead—"up here. Then we'll face the world together—if you're still with me."
"You know I am."
His face was a tight mask. "Okay. I'll see you later."
And then he was out and moving down the front walk. As she watched him go, Carol felt as if a noose were tightening around her throat.
This was all her fault. God, how had she gotten them into this? And how were they ever going to get out?
Behind her, the phone began ringing again.
3
Bill sat in his office and sipped a second cup of coffee while flipping through the Sunday Times. This was his favorite part of the week. The boys were all at breakfast and it was quiet. He had said early Mass at Our Lady of Lourdes and now had some time to himself. It was especially pleasurable today because "The Week in Review" section was full of news of the coming New Hampshire primary, just two days away, and how McCarthy was gaining on President Johnson. Not that anyone thought he could actually defeat the incumbent, but if he could make a decent showing, it could possibly influence the rest of the campaign and maybe the Democratic Party's stand on the war when convention time came around.
Bill sighed and stared out the window. More than ever, he wished he could be in New Hampshire for the next seventy-two hours. That wasn't to be. And he wasn't going to get near any of the other primaries if he didn't get on the stick and write those letters to the New York and Maryland Provincials.
He rolled a piece of paper into the old gray Olympia portable his folks had given him as a high-school graduation gift and began banging away. He was halfway through the first letter when he was interrupted by a timid knock on his office door.
"Father Ryan?"
It was Sister Miriam.
"Yes, Sister? Is something wrong?"
"I'm not sure." She held a folded newspaper in her hand and seemed unusually reticent. "Wasn't that friend of yours who was here a few weeks ago—the one who wanted to go through the records—wasn't his name Stevens?"
"Sure. Jim Stevens."
"Isn't he the one who inherited the Hanley estate?"
"That's him. Why do you ask?"
"Now, mind you, Father, I'm not the sort to buy this kind of trash on a regular basis," she said, unfolding the tabloid and extending it toward him, "but this paper has some very strange things to say about your friend and Dr. Hanley."
Bill took the paper and frowned when he saw the logo, The Light, and its notorious left ear, "The News That Hides From the Light of Day Can't Escape The Light." Sister Miriam was an exemplary member of the Sisters of Charity, but she had an addiction to gossip magazines and tabloids. The Light was just about the cheesiest member of the latter category.
"Jim Stevens is in here?" he said, opening to page three.
"I think that's who they're talking about."
He scanned the first paragraph and saw Jim's name, Roderick Hanley's, and Monroe, Long Island, mentioned. It looked like a long article.
"Can I give this back to you later, Sister?"
"Of course," she said in a conspiratorial tone, no doubt thinking she had won a convert. Then she left him alone with The Light.
Fifteen minutes later Bill had finished the article and was up and pacing his office, feeling rocky.
Bullshit! All bullshit! Has to be!
But the paper had to have a damn near unimpeachable source to dare print something this far out. Otherwise Jim would sue it for every cent it had. And then there was the matter of Carol's call last week, about Jim being so upset as he traced his mother's identity. Of course he would have been upset—if this article was true, it meant he didn't even have a mother. Or a father, either, for that matter!