Fox River. Emilie Richards

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it a priority.” Christian stopped to gently scold the puppy, who was beginning to strain at the leash. “He has a short attention span.”

      “He? I thought Seesaw was a girl.”

      “Not Seesaw. Tyrell.”

      “Yeah? Oh, yeah. I get it. Okay.”

      “Think you can take over? Don’t raise your voice. Praise her if she does what you want her to. Don’t jerk on the leash.”

      “Don’t know how I got stuck training dogs.”

      “Guess you were just lucky.” As well as convicted for selling cocaine to middle-class teenagers who’d been sight-seeing in Richmond’s inner city.

      Christian started back toward the kennel.

      “Christian?”

      He hadn’t noticed the Reverend Bertha Petersen at the end of the first run. An overweight woman in her fifties, she wore jeans and a sweatshirt with a bandanna covering her closely cropped salt-and-pepper hair. A barrel-chested guard stood stiffly nearby, watching every move Christian made.

      Christian approached her, stopping several yards away so as not to worry him. “Hello, Pastor. We weren’t expecting you.”

      “It’s good to see you. How are the new puppies?”

      “It’s too early to tell. But no real problems so far. The Lab’s a little excitable. She may calm down, but we’ll watch her.”

      Bertha Petersen was the director of Pets and Prisoners Together and an ordained minister in a small fundamentalist sect with a long name. While many of her cohorts were busily converting the heathen, Bertha had turned her own considerable energy to good works.

      The purpose of Pets and Prisoners was to raise and train helping dogs for the physically or mentally challenged. Ludwell was the first prison in the program to train dogs for the blind, turning over two dozen a year to organizations that did the final portion of the training and placed them. Christian had been in charge of the Ludwell program for two years.

      “So, did you just drop by to check on us?”

      “I like to keep up with everybody if I can.” Bertha’s gaze traveled to the guard, then back to Christian. “Why don’t you show me the dogs in training? How many do you have right now?”

      Ludwell had two separate programs in progress. A new program, of which Seesaw was a part, evaluated puppies who had been bred to become guide dogs. The second and more established, brought in young dogs who had already been socialized by a host family and trained in good manners and family routine. They received intensive training from the prison staff for three months before they were passed on to one of several programs.

      Christian would have liked to finish the training of each animal, but the final month involved working with the dog’s new master, often on city streets. And no one felt safe sending the blind to a prison or prisoners to the blind.

      But what did that matter compared to everything else the men were denied?

      “We have four dogs left,” Christian told the pastor. “We started this session with ten.”

      She turned to the guard. “Officer, we’re going over to the other kennel. Will that be all right?”

      He didn’t answer directly. Instead he picked up his two-way radio and spoke into it, then he gave a brief nod.

      The second kennel was on the other side of solid steel doors. Christian and Bertha waited as the doors opened, then closed behind them. They walked down a short corridor flanked by video cameras. The second kennel looked much like the first, but the track was considerably larger, and a yard fenced in mesh and topped with razor wire was visible through a window.

      The guard on duty here was used to Christian and hardly gave him a glance. He was busy watching one of the other inmates walk blindfolded through an obstacle course. A chocolate Lab wearing a leather harness led him through the maze. Javier Garcia, a huge man in blue jeans, walked confidently behind him.

      Christian and Bertha strolled over to the guardrail overlooking the course and watched.

      Christian explained what they were viewing. “That’s Cocoa. She’s had a little trouble with overhead obstacles.” The dogs had to be trained not to lead their new masters into low-hanging obstacles like tree branches and awnings, even if their masters urged them forward. Guide dogs were trained to practice “intelligent disobedience.” Their own good instincts had to supplant their blind master’s commands.

      “She’s catching on?”

      “Cocoa’s a winner. Very bright. She’ll make it. But we had one of her litter mates who flunked out the first week. He jumped at loud noises. Very distractible for a Lab. Hopefully by checking out the puppies earlier, we’ll avoid these problems.”

      The pastor was silent for a moment as she watched Javier and Cocoa move flawlessly along the track. Then she turned so she could see Christian’s face. “Christian, I’ve been considering this conversation carefully.”

      He waited stoically, another survival skill he’d learned.

      “I’ve heard something.”

      He supposed Bertha heard lots of gossip as she moved from prison to prison. Ludwell wasn’t the only penal institution that trained helping dogs.

      She continued. “I suspect I could be accused of interfering with proper procedure for telling you this. Certainly for jumping the gun.”

      “I’m listening.”

      “Have you heard of a man named Karl Zandoff?”

      Christian devoured the newspaper whenever he could. Anyone who could read had heard of Karl Zandoff. He gave a short nod. “He’s on death row in Florida. His appeals are almost up.”

      “His execution date’s been set for December.”

      “Yeah, and it looks like a date he’ll be keeping.”

      “He’s been talking to the authorities.”

      “So?”

      “Apparently he’s confessed to another murder, one they didn’t suspect him of.”

      “Nothing like a rendezvous with Old Sparky to get the juices flowing.”

      “I’m told he might confess to more before this is over.”

      Despite himself, Christian was growing curious. “Maybe confession’s good for the soul. You’d believe that, wouldn’t you?”

      “How about you?”

      “I haven’t seen much God in here, Pastor. If we were ever on speaking terms, we haven’t been for a long time. If I had anything to confess myself, I’d do it to my lawyer.”

      She didn’t miss a beat. “Zandoff told them where to look for the body, and they found it. A case solved. The girl’s parents can finally put

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