Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
“Irish. And for your information, this thing was
sold out months ago. I practically had to auction
off my firstborn to get us two tickets.”
“Well, tempting as it occasionally might be to
sell Kyle, you should get your money back. I’m not
going.” He tossed the flyer onto the counter with an
air of finality and reclaimed his coffee mug.
Instead of responding immediately, which was
what he expected, she took another sip of her
coffee, looking thoughtful. “I thought we agreed
last night that maybe the right thing to do was talk
to an expert.” Her voice was neutral.
Matt’s lip curled. “Oh, like ‘renowned medium’
Paddy O’Malley? A man who advertises on a
chartreuse green flyer?”
“His name,” Sheila said with a pointed look, “is
Kiernan Fitzpatrick, and I doubt he picked out the
card stock personally. You might not have ever
heard of him before, but I have.”
“Where?”
“He has a television show, something you might
know if you ever watched anything other than
Sports Center.
What kind of gay man are you,
anyway? We get Logo here, you know.”
He snorted.
“His show is pretty popular. And he’s actually
kind of amazing.”
“At what? Communing with the dead? Give me
a break.”
“I’ve seen the show,” she went on earnestly.
“Several times. I’ve seen the people he’s done
readings for. I don’t believe he’s a fake. He’s
astonishingly accurate.” She set her cup aside and
crossed her arms, mirroring his posture. “He’s
also worked with a number of police departments
on unsolved murders.”
“What police departments?” he asked, his voice
tinged with skepticism.
“Boston, for one. And Seattle.”
He pursed his lips. “Boston and Seattle both
hired this guy as a consultant.” He shook his head.
“I don’t believe it.”
“Actually, I think he was hired by the victims’
families.” She lifted her chin obstinately.
“Did he find the killers?”
She hesitated. “No.”
“See?” His smirk was smug. “He’s a fake.”
“But,” she said, her face clearly showing her
irritation, “he did find the location of two bodies.
Bodies of kids. Missing children, who would have
stayed listed that way if he hadn’t found them. At
least now there’s a chance to bring their killers to
justice. Think of the parents of those missing kids.
At least now they have closure.”
“
Closure
is psycho-babble crap.” His voice
was tight. “There is no
closure
for the families of
murder victims. Other people say that in order to
make themselves feel better. And I’m surprised he
didn’t get arrested for the murders himself.
Knowing where the bodies are buried is usually
the domain of the bad guys.”
“God, you’re such a damned hardhead,” Sheila
burst out. “He didn’t get arrested because he was
hundreds of miles away at the time of the murders.
And what is it going to hurt to just go and listen to
this guy?”
“What the hell for? I don’t buy into this shit,
Sheila. You know that.”
“Says the man who saw a ghost yesterday.”
Matt glared but didn’t retaliate, and heavy
silence settled in the space between them.
Sheila sighed, propping her hands on her hips.
“Look, he’s in town for a symposium at the
university. He’s only doing one public session,
today at the Hilton. It will probably last all of
about three hours. He does readings from the
audience. It’s all completely random. Odds are he
won’t pick you. But he really is fascinating. What
can it hurt to just go and listen to him?” She
paused, her eyes imploring. “Please. I’d like to
hear what he has to say. Come with me. You just
might learn something.”
He made a scoffing sound in his throat. “It’s
more likely you’ll have wasted your money. How
much did this thing cost, anyway?”
She grimaced. “Enough we aren’t telling your
brother about it. As far as he knows, I’m taking you
to lunch.”
Matt’s lips twisted as he felt his resistance
wavering. “Oh, you’re taking me to lunch all right.
If you force me to sit through this crap, at least I
get a steak out of it.”
* * *
answered calls there and had a drink or two in the
bar. The lobby was huge, with soaring modern
lines and white travertine marble on the floors.
Massive
canvases
of
splashed
colors
impersonating modern art hung on the walls, and
the brass chandeliers were comprised of hard lines
and angles. The place felt cold, and he didn’t like
it. His opinion was reinforced when he
accompanied Sheila into one of the personality-
free conference rooms and took a seat on one of
two hundred mass-produced hotel chairs. The
space smelled of burnt coffee and stale cigarette
smoke.
The diversity of the crowd surprised him. He’d
been expecting a sea of overweight middle-aged
women in polyester pants. There were some of
those, but there were also young professionals and
older couples dressed in high-end designer
clothes. While the crowd appeared to be pulled
from all walks of life, they shared a commonality
of expression. They looked earnest, impatient and
anxious. With a sinking feeling in his chest, Matt
realized exactly who they were.
One had only to have experienced loss to
recognize it. They were the bereaved, almost all of
them. Some were merely curious, but the majority
were grieving. They’d lost someone near to them,
someone important. It had brought them to the
crowded ballroom in the hope that someone might
be able to tell them it was all right, their loved one
wasn’t gone forever, and death hadn’t been the
end.
His eyes fixed on the twisted tissue in one older
woman’s hand. When he looked up, he found her
returning his gaze with a combination of fear and
desperation, and it made him angry. Really, really
angry.
He knew these people, had felt what they had.
He’d had someone he loved taken from him. He
knew the wound that opened in your soul and
wouldn’t close, understood the pain of having
something so perfect, so precious, just—end. He
knew what it felt like to bleed internally for
months, to pray and rage and bargain. He’d tried to
reason with God, receiving only silence in return.
Doubting he could bear to remain while
someone capitalized on the pain surrounding him,
he leaned toward Sheila, who was leafing through
the program they’d received at the door. He hadn’t
even opened his, which sat abandoned on the floor
between his feet.
“Sheila, I…”
The rest of the sentence was lost when a restive
stirring started near the front of the room. It spread
quickly through the crowd, followed almost
instantly by an expectant hush. Sheila shushed him,
lifting her chin and leaning forward. Matt sighed
heavily and settled into his chair.
A young woman came to stand before a
microphone on the elevated platform at the front of
the room. She studied the crowd impassively and
seemed content to wait until she had everyone’s
attention. She was pretty and petite, with fair skin
and waist-length hair so dark it was nearly black.
Her eyes were wide and light-colored, probably
blue, and she was wearing skin-tight jeans and a
Bon Jovi T-shirt. With dark liner around her eyes
and black nail polish on her nails, she certainly
didn’t resemble anyone who might be there in a
professional capacity. The room settled into
expectant silence.
“Good afternoon. I’d like to go over some
ground rules before we begin.” Her voice was
surprisingly husky but friendly. “There will be no
photography allowed during the session. Kiernan
finds it distracting, and if you are found in the
possession of a camera or a camera phone, I’m
afraid security will take it from you. Same goes for
recording equipment of any kind. If you’d like to
purchase a DVD of this session, those will be
made available on our web page at a later date.”
“When he can make sure he gets the profits,”
Matt grumbled.
Sheila elbowed him sharply in the ribs.
The young woman up front sent him an amused
look, as if she knew exactly what he’d said. “You
should know going in that Kiernan does not control
these sessions,” she went on. “The departed who
appear to him do.”
Matt managed to refrain from rolling his eyes.
“In light of this, please do not raise your hand
unless something he says sounds as if he might be
referring to your loved one. He has no idea how
many spirits, if any, will appear, but he will try to
speak for as many as he can. Because of time
constraints, he does not do private readings as a
result of these open meetings. If you’d like a
private consultation, you can make arrangements at
his website, www.spirits_speak.com. All right?”
She looked around the room expectantly. When no
one raised their hand, she gave a faint smile.
“So what is she, his handler?” Matt murmured.
Sheila responded by shushing him.
“Now that the business is out of the way…” The
woman paused and glanced toward a curtained
area, waiting for something. Apparently she saw it
and turned back to the crowd. “It’s my pleasure to
introduce Kiernan Fitzpatrick!”
The reaction was enthusiastic but polite. No
whistles or catcalls, just an extended round of
applause as the young woman left the platform. It
continued even as the stage remained empty when
she disappeared behind the curtain.
Matt did not join in. If he thought Sheila
wouldn’t nag him for the next five years, he’d have
simply left and taken a cab home. But she’d never
forgive him, and while he wasn’t really afraid of
her wrath, he didn’t want to deal with it either. So
he sat and he waited, his mouth twisted
sardonically to one side.
Abruptly, a young man bounded from behind the
curtain. The applause swelled, and Matt was sure
there’d been a mistake. This was the famous
medium? Was it some kind of a joke? But Sheila
was smiling and applauding with the rest of them.
If Kiernan Fitzpatrick was five foot eight, Matt
would have been surprised. He moved with
athletic grace, and Matt couldn’t help but admire
his physique. He had a lithe, solid build under his
tattered Levi’s and fitted hoodie, and his shoulders
were square and his thighs muscled. He was
handsome, too. Thick, messy black hair was short
on the sides and along his nape, slightly longer
over his forehead, and his face was angular and
fine-boned. His complexion was fair, smooth and
unlined, but a bluish shadow darkened his square
chin, indicating the presence of a heavy beard. It
was the only sign he wasn’t a teenager, but Matt
doubted he was more than twenty. The medium’s
most striking feature was his eyes. Huge and so
blue that even twenty-five rows back, Matt could
see the color.
He nudged Sheila’s arm. “He’s a kid.”
“He’s twenty-seven, which you’d know if you’d
read the program.”
Fitzpatrick jogged up the steps to the small
stage, the applause still ringing when he stopped in
front of the microphone. He looked around the
room, grinning impishly and rubbing the palms of
his hands on the denim covering his thighs,
bouncing on his toes as if he was brimming with
excess energy and couldn’t contain it.
An indentation appeared near the left corner of
his lips, which made him look younger still, and he
reached up absently and unzipped his hoodie.
Underneath it he wore a white T-shirt with black
printing. It read I’m Not Short, I’m Fun-sized.
Sheila laughed and angled her head toward
Matt. “Admit it,” she said as the applause went on.
“He’s adorable.”
Matt didn’t comment, but he didn’t deny it,