The Bishop and the Missing L Train

The Bishop and the Missing L Train

by Andrew M. Greeley

Narrated by George Guidall, Johanna Parker, Johnny Heller

Unabridged — 7 hours, 27 minutes

The Bishop and the Missing L Train

The Bishop and the Missing L Train

by Andrew M. Greeley

Narrated by George Guidall, Johanna Parker, Johnny Heller

Unabridged — 7 hours, 27 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$19.99
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $19.99

Overview

International best-selling author Andrew M. Greeley is hailed by the Los Angeles Times as "a fascinating novelist" with a rare, possibly unmatched point of view. In this baffling mystery, the unpopular and incompetent Bishop Gus Quill is assigned to the Archdiocese of Chicago despite loud protests. When he disappears while riding the L Train, it falls to Bishop Blackie Ryan to find him.

Editorial Reviews

bn.com

The disappearance of a visiting bishop sends Bishop Blackie Ryan searching for a clergyman no one really wants to find.

Barnes & Noble Guide to New Fiction

This "enjoyable" mystery marks the return of Blackie Ryan, the improbable bishop working for the aristocratic, haughty, but often slyly good-humored, Sean Cardinal Cronin, the Archbishop of Chicago. "The usual." "Blackie Ryan fans will be glad to have him back, but this is more romance novel than mystery." "Quite entertaining," but readers found nothing new here.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The lighthearted Bishop Blackie returns with this thoroughly beguiling entry in Greeley's series detailing the misadventures of venerable Bishop John Blackwood Ryan, the erudite assistant to Sean Cardinal Cronin, archbishop of Chicago. An embarrassment to the Vatican, oafish and mean-spirited Most Reverend Augustus (Gus) Quill is appointed by Rome to Cronin's archdiocese as an auxiliary bishop, infuriating Cronin, who calls Quill by his seminary nickname: Idiot. But when the unwelcome Quill disappears, along with the L train he was riding on, the sardonic, benevolent Bishop Blackie is in charge of finding him and unraveling the mystery of why the L never arrived at the terminal. Intertwined with the Quill enigma are the dual quandaries of Tommy Flynn Jr., a young trader at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange who's smitten with Notre Dame's All-American star women's soccer captain, Christy Logan, and irresistibly sexy Jenny Carlson, an abused ex-wife of a Nobel also-ran, who is having a steamy affair with her boss. Tommy's lustful fantasies and Jenny's struggle to find happiness are waylaid when they both become suspects in the investigation, each having made public threats against the missing bishop. When Blackie finds Quill in an alley drugged with heroin, he sets out to track the villains. Bemused observers of Greeley's trademark--an arguably adolescent, definitely titillating preoccupation with soft-core sex--will not be disappointed. (July) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Internet Book Watch

The religious leadership of the Archdioceses of Chicago is stunned by the Vatican decision to place ignoble Auxiliary Bishop Gus Quill among them. The Archbishop protests the appointment of the "Idiot", but is ignored. Even aid Bishop John "Blackie" Ryan states his opposition to Gus' arrival. However, soon irony takes a spin as Gus and the entire L train vanish without a trace. Blackie begins an investigation to locate the missing bishop and the other riders. As he begins his inquiries, Blackie wonders who hates Gus so much that other innocents have been taken along for the ride. Meanwhile the police conduct their search based on a radically different hypothesis. The lighthearted Bishop Blackie investigations are always entertaining fluff that anyone who wants a humorous, enjoyable mystery tour of Chicago will relish. The latest tale, The Bishop And The Missing L Train, is fun to read because of the wonderful subplots that spin back into the main theme. Blackie remains charming and the secondary cast, especially the Lioness and the gambler, provides a wonderful joy ride of the Second City. Andrew M. Greeley's latest Bishop Ryan novel is an amusing winner.
—Internet Book Watch

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171254391
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 05/23/2008
Series: Bishop Blackie Ryan
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt



Chapter One

Blackie


"One of our L trains is missing!"

    Sean Cronin, Cardinal priest of the Holy Roman Church and, by the grace of God and abused patience of the Apostolic See, Archbishop of Chicago, swept into my study with his usual vigor. Since he was not wearing his crimson robes but a gleaming white and flawlessly ironed collarless shirt with diamond-studded cufflinks, it would not be appropriate to describe him as a crimson supersonic jet. Perhaps a new and shiny diesel locomotive.

    "Tragic," I said, pretending not to look up from the Dell 300mx computer on which I was constructing the master schedule for the next month in the Cathedral parish.

    "And Bishop Quill was on the L train!!"

    He threw himself into a chair that I had just cleared so as to pile more computer output on it.

    "Indeed!" I said, looking up with considerable interest. "With any good fortune we will find neither the L train nor Bishop Quill."

    Out of respect for his status among the missing, I did not refer to our lost bishop by his time-honored nickname, imposed by his unimaginative seminary classmates—Idiot.

    "You South Side Irish are innocent of charity," he replied. "You have any tea around?"

    Normally he would have appeared at night in my study and commandeered a large portion of my precious Jameson Twelve Year Special Reserve or Bushmill's Green Label before he assigned me another cleanup task. Auxiliary bishops play a role in the CatholicChurch not unlike that of the admirable Harvey Keitel in Pulp Fiction: they sweep up messes. However, it was morning, a sunny early autumn morning to be precise. Banned from coffee by his foster sister Nora Cronin, he was reduced to pleading for tea to fill his oral needs.

    Before I could wave at my ever present teapot, he spotted it, stretched his tall, lean frame to the table on which it rested (surrounded by the galleys of my most recent book, There Is No Millennium), and poured himself a large mug of Irish Breakfast tea.

    "Great!" he exclaimed with a sigh of pleasure. The pleasures of being a cardinal these days are, alas, few and simple.

    I waited to hear the story of the disappearance of the L train and its distinguished passenger. He continued to sip his tea, a tall, handsome man just turned seventy, with carefully groomed white hair, the face of an Irish poet, the political skills of a veteran ward committeeman, and the hooded, glowing eyes of a revolutionary gunman.

    "So what was Idiot doing on an L train?" I asked, realizing that I was missing one of the lines in our routinized scenario.

    "Your brother auxiliary bishop," he said with radiant irony as he played with the massive ruby ring on his right hand, "was mingling with the poor on the way home from his weekly day of ministry in the barrio. Preparation doubtless for the day when he succeeds me." Milord Cronin laughed bitterly.

    "He will never be able to learn Spanish that does not cause laughter among those who know the language."

    "That, Blackwood, is irrelevant to the present story.... His limousine driver was to pick him up at the Kimball Avenue terminal of the Ravenswood Line and drive him back to his parish in Forest Hills."

    "Brown Line," I said in the interest of accuracy.

    "What?" he exploded, a nervous panther looking for something to spring upon.

    "The Ravenswood Line is now known as the Brown Line."

    "The Ravenswood Line is the Ravenswood Line, Blackwood," he insisted with the sense of shared infallibility that only a cardinal can muster and that rarely these days.

    "Arguably."

    "So the train never arrived." He extended his tea mug in my direction and, docile priest that I am, I refilled it. No milk. The valiant Nora had forbidden milk as part of her virtuous campaign to keep the Cardinal alive. "And Bishop Quill never arrived either."

    "Remarkable."

    "The chauffeur became concerned and called the CTA, which, as one might expect, assured him that the train had arrived at Kimball and Lawrence on time—that's a Korean neighborhood now, isn't it, Blackwood?"

    "An everything neighborhood—Koreans, Palestinians, Pakistanis, some Japanese, and a few recalcitrant and elderly Orthodox Jews who will not leave the vast apartment buildings they built so long ago."

    "Safe?"

    "Much safer than many others I could mention, some of them not distant from this very room."

    "Who would want to abduct Gus Quill?"

    "I could provide a list of hundreds of names, with yours and mine on the top."

    "Precisely.... Anyway, the chauffeur then called the Chicago Police Department and apparently reached your good friend John Culhane, who called me about midnight. They have determined the L in fact never arrived at the terminal. Rather it has disappeared into thin air and, Commander Culhane assured me an hour ago, so has the Most Reverend Augustus O'Sullivan Quill."

    Deo gratias, I almost said. Instead I took a firm stand for right reason and common sense.

    "L trains do not disappear," I insisted. "Neither, alas, do auxiliary bishops, though sometimes they are treated as if they do not exist...."

    Milord Cronin waved away my self-pity.

    "The CTA is searching frantically for their missing train. The police are searching frantically for the missing bishop. He was the only one on the train at the last stop. The driver has disappeared too. The media have the story already. I hear there are cameras at the terminal and up in Forest Hills—"

    My phone rang. The Loyola student who monitors our lines until the Megan show up after school asked whether the Cardinal was in my room.

    "Who wants to talk to him?"

    "Mary Jane McGurn from Channel Six."

    "I will talk to her," I said, as though it were my rectory.

    "Hi, Blackie. What's happened to my good friend Idiot Quill?"

    "Mary Jane," I whispered to the Cardinal, my hand over the phone.

    Although Ms. McGurn was Sean Cronin's favorite media person—he having a weakness for pretty and intelligent women (what healthy male does not?)—he shook his head. "I'm not available for comment, am I?"

    "You're in prayer for the repose of his soul?"

    Milord winced.

    "What was that question again, Mary Jane?"

    "Our mutual friend, Bishop Quill, has apparently disappeared. Do you or Cardinal Sean have any comment?"

    "Only for the deepest of deep background, Mary Jane: like bad pennies, auxiliary bishops always return."

    Milord Cardinal favored me with a wry smile.

    "Is the Cardinal available?"

    "I think not."

    No one in the media had much regard for Augustus O'Sullivan Quill. Mary Jane held a special grudge since the day he told her on camera that she should be home taking care of her children.

    "The crews are descending on the Cathedral rectory at this moment. I'll be there in five minutes. We're going to want a statement about the disappearance of Bishop Quill."

    "You may quote the Cardinal as saying that we are confident that Bishop Quill will be found soon."

    Milord Cronin tilted his head slightly in approval of my statement.

    "Nothing more?"

    "Nothing more."

    "Off the record?"

    "We are praying for him."

    "Yeah," she snorted, "so am I!"

    I gently restored the phone to its base.

    "We cannot permit this, Blackwood!"

    "Indeed."

    "Auxiliary bishops do not slip into the fourth dimension, not in this archdiocese."

    "Patently."

    "Especially they do not disappear on L trains that also disappear, right?"

    "Right!"

    "You yourself have said that we will be the prime suspects, have you not? Don't we have powerful reasons for wanting to get rid of him?"

    "Arguably," I sighed. "However, as you well know, in the best traditions of the Sacred College we would have dispatched Idiot with poison."

    Actually neither the State's Attorney nor the media would dare suggest that the two of us could easily do without our junior auxiliary.

    "This is not a laughing matter, Blackwood," he said sternly.

    "Indeed."

    "The Nuncio and the Vatican will be all over us. They do not like to lose bishops."

    "Even auxiliaries?"

    "We have to find Gus before the day is over." He put his tea mug on the rug and rose from the chair.

    "Ah?"

    He strode to the door of my study, a man on a mission.

    "That means you have to find him."

    I knew that was coming.

    "Indeed."

    He paused at the door for the final words.

    "Find Gus. Today. See to it, Blackwood."

    He disappeared, not in a cloud of dust, since we do not tolerate that in the Cathedral rectory, but trailing an invisible cloud of satisfaction.

    I sighed loudly, saved the file, and turned off the computer. Time for the sweeper to get to work.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews