Pagan Babies
By Elmore
Leonard
Excerpt – Chapter One
By Elmore
Leonard
Delacorte Press
Fiction
224 pages
Delacorte Press
Fiction
224 pages
In Rwanda during the
genocide, Hutu thugs storm into a church and kill everyone except Father Terry
Dunn, on the altar saying his first mass. He's powerless to do anything about
it -- until one day he faces several of the killers and exacts a chilling
penance. But is Terry Dunn really a priest?
He comes home to Detroit
and runs into Debbie Dewey who's doing standup at a comedy club. Through twists
and turns and other characters only found in an Elmore Leonard novel,
"Pagan Babies" emerges with a big payoff.
EXCERPT
The church had become a
tomb where forty-seven bodies turned to leather and stains had been lying on
the concrete floor the past five years, though not lying where they had been
shot with Kalashnikovs or hacked to death with machetes. The benches had been
removed and the bodies reassembled: men, women and small children laid in rows
of skulls and spines, femurs, fragments of cloth stuck to mummified remains,
many of the adults missing feet, all missing bones that had been carried off by
scavenging dogs.
Since the living would no
longer enter the church, Fr. Terry Dunn heard confessions in the yard of the
rectory, in the shade of old pines and silver eucalyptus trees.
"Bless me, Fatha, for
I have sin. It has been two months from the last time I come to Confession.
Since then I am fornicating with a woman from Gisenyi three times only and this
is all I have done.
They would seem to fill
their mouths with the English words, pronounc-ing each one carefully, with an
accent Terry believed was heard only in Africa. He gave fornicators ten Our
Fathers and ten Hail Marys, murmured what passed for an absolution while the
penitent said the Act of Contrition, and dismissed them with a reminder to love
God and sin no more.
"Bless me, Fatha, for
I have sin. Is a long time since I come here but is not my fault, you don't
have Confession always when you say. The sin I did, I stole a goat from close
by Nyundo for my family to eat. My wife cook it en brochette and also in a stew
with potatoes and peppers."
"Last night at
supper," Terry said, "I told my housekeeper I'd enjoy goat stew a lot
more if it wasn't so goddamn bony."
The goat thief said,
"Excuse me, Fatha?"
"Those little sharp
bones you get in your mouth," Terry said, and gave the man ten Our Fathers
and ten Hail Marys. He gave just about everyone ten Our Fathers and ten Hail
Marys to say as their penance.
Some came seeking advice.
"Bless me, Fatha, I
have not sin yet but I think of it. I see one of the men kill my family has
come back. One of the Hutu Interahamwe militia, he come back from the Goma
refugee camp and I like to kill him, but I don't want to go to prison and I don't
want to go to Hell. Can you have God forgive me before I kill him?"
Terry said, "I don't
think He'll go for it. The best you can do, report the guy to the conseiller at
the sector office and promise to testify at the trial."
The man who hadn't killed
anyone yet said, "Fatha, when is that happen? I read in Imvaho they have
one hundred twenty-four thousand in prisons waiting for trials. In how many
years will it be for this man that kill my family? Imvaho say two hundred years
to try all of them."
Terry said, "Is the
guy bigger than you are?"
"No, he's Hutu."
"Walk up to the
guy," Terry said, "and hit him in the mouth as hard as you can, with
a rock. You'll feel better. Now make a good Act of Contrition for anything you
might've done and forgot about." Terry could offer temporary relief but
nothing that would change their lives.
Penitents would kneel on a
prie-dieu and see his profile through a framed square of cheesecloth mounted on
the kneeler: Fr. Terry Dunn, a bearded young man in a white cassock, sitting in
a wicker chair. Sideways to the screen he looked at the front yard full of
brush and weeds and the road that came up past the church from the village of
Arisimbi. He heard Confession usually once a week but said Mass, in the school,
only a few times a year: Christmas Day, Easter Sunday and when someone died.
The Rwandese Bishop of Nyundo, nine miles up the road, sent word for Fr. Dunn
to come and give an account of himself.
He drove there in the
yellow Volvo station wagon that had belonged to the priest before him and sat
in the bishop's office among African sculptures and decorative baskets,
antimacassars in bold star designs on the leather sofa and chairs, on the wall
a print of the Last Supper and a photograph of the bishop taken with the pope.
Terry had worn his cassock. The bishop, in a white sweater, asked him if he was
attempting to start a new sect within the Church. Terry said no, he had a
personal reason for not acting as a full-time priest, but would not say what it
was. He did tell the bishop, "You can contact the order that runs the
mission, the Missionary Fathers of St. Martin de Porres in Bay St. Louis,
Mississippi, and ask to have me replaced; but if you do, good luck. Young guys
today are not breaking down the door to get in the seminary." This was
several years ago. Terry left the bishop shaking his head and was still here on
his own. This afternoon the prie-dieu was placed beneath a roof of palm fronds
and thatch that extended from the rectory into the yard. A voice raised against
the hissing sound of the rain said, "Bless me, Fatha, for I have
sin," and started right in. "I kill seven people that time I'm still
a boy and we kill the inyenzi, the cockroaches. I kill four persons in the
church the time you saying the Mass there and you see it happen. You know we
kill five hundred in Nyundo before we come here and kill I think one hundred in
this village before everybody run away."
Terry continued to stare at
the yard that sloped down to the road, the clay hardpack turned dark in the
rain.
"And we kill some more
where we have the roadblock and stop all the drivers and look at the identity
cards. The ones we want we take in the bush and kill them."
The man paused and Terry
waited. The guy wasn't confessing his sins, he was bragging about what he did.
"You hear me,
Fatha?"
Terry said, "Keep
talking," wondering where the guy was going with it.
"I can tell you more
will die very soon. How do I know this? I am a visionary, Fatha. I am told in
visions of the Blessed Virgin saying to do it, to kill the inyenzi. I tell you
this and you don't say nothing, do you?"
Terry didn't answer. The
man's voice, at times shrill, sounded familiar.
"No, you can't,"
the voice said. "Oh, you can tell me not to do it, but you can't tell no
other person, the RPA, the conseiller, nobody, because I tell you this in
Confession and you have the rule say you can't talk about what you hear. You
listen to me? We going to cut the feet off before we kill them. You know why we
do it? You are here that time, so you understand. But you have no power, so you
don't stop us. Listen, if we see you when we come, a tall one like you, we cut
your feet off, too."
Terry sat in his wicker
chair staring out at the rain, the pale sky, mist covering the far hills. The
thing was, these guys could do it. They already had, so it wasn't just talk,
the guy mouthing off.
He said, "You going to
give me my penance to say?"
Terry didn't answer.
"All right, I
finished."
The man rose from the
kneeler and in a moment Terry watched him walking away, barefoot, skinny bare
legs, a stick figure wearing a checkered green shirt and today in the rain a
raggedy straw hat with the brim turned down. Terry didn't need to see the guy's
face. He knew him the way he knew people in the village by the clothes they
wore, the same clothes they put on every morning, if they didn't sleep in them.
He had seen that green shirt recently, only a few days ago ...
Excerpted
from "Pagan Babies" by Elmore Leonard. Copyright© 2000 by Elmore
Leonard. Excerpted by permission of Delacorte, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted
without permission in writing from the publisher.
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