thinks a part of her calling is posting bail for murderers.â
âBut how did she come up with the million bucks? What is she, independently wealthy?â
âShe got Bol out on a property bond. And you wonât believe on what property.â
âIt must have been the fucking Taj Mahal,â Rayburn says.
âItâs the churchâs parsonage.â
Rayburn stares in disbelief a second. âAre you shitting me? Can she even do that?â
âShe had the power of attorney with her,â I say. âThe address is 625 Glendale Avenue, Belle Meade.â
Rayburn whistles. âBelle Meade? The lots alone are worth a fortune over there.â
âShe had the last tax appraisal with her. A million-five. The original deed was dated 1956. Probably cost a tenth of that back then.â
âOK, so the place is worth the money. How the hell does she sell this to the church?â
âTowns got a new church constitution passed giving her the right to dispose of church property however she sees fit. And she sees fit, apparently, to use it as collateral against the future court appearance of Moses Bol.â
âThe hell she does.â Rayburn is fuming, feeling things unravel with disturbing unpredictability. âWhere did this woman come from, anyway? Does anybody know?â
âBasically, sheâs little Miss Protest. You remember when the state legislature tried to cut funding for low-income housing? That bunch of people who tried to storm the House chambers? She was a part of that crowd.â
âAnd sheâs a preacher?â Rayburn asks. This offends his sense of order. In his thinking, preachers marry, bury, and stay the hell out of the way the rest of the time.
âYeah,â I say. âBut the ultraliberal, radical-fringe stuff. Do you know she conducted a funeral in absentia for Bishop Romero?â
âWhoâs Bishop Romero?â
âMurdered in El Salvador by government death squads during the Reagan administration.â
âReagan? Thatâs twenty years ago.â
âRomero never got a proper funeral. Towns wanted to give him one. They had a casket, the whole thing. That was at her previous church.â
âWhere was this?â
âMuskeegee, Michigan.â
âI bet that went over great in Muskeegee.â
âThey fired her for it.â
âGood for them. How the hell did she end up in Nashville?â
âFar as I can tell, she worked for some homeless agencies in Michigan, did a lot of volunteer work. Ended up coming here to work for the Center for Peace and Justice over at Vanderbilt University. That lasted about a year, until the grant ran outââ
âFrigginâ delusiacs,â Rayburn interrupts. Delusiacâ a combination of delusional and maniacsâ is his favorite, made-up word for any over-the-top political movement he encounters. âAll these frigginâ delusiacs hate the government,â he says, âbut they donât have any problem taking money from it.â
âAnyway,â I say, âshe quit when they ran out of money, and took the job at the DPC. Sheâs been there ever since.â
âSheâs a nut,â Rayburn declares.
âYeah, well, sheâs got a degree in public policy from Oberlin and a masterâs in theology from Harvard. So maybe itâs better not to underestimate her.â
Everybody looks at each other a second. Rayburn raises an eyebrow. âShit.â
âCare to know what her dissertation was about?â I ask.
âWhat?â
âThe impact of the death penalty on race relations in the South.â
A moment of silence, as pieces of a puzzle slide into place. âSon of a bitch,â Carl says. âYou think sheâs behind this thing with Buchanan?â
âPretty interesting coincidence,â I say. âThereâs only one way to find out for sure.â
âItâs not like you can
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