Tracer Bullet and the Smoke of Libville. Episode 9: The Vespers of Betrayal

Continued from Episode 8 – HERE

“That’d be Chester.”

I stood with my back to the warped blinds, one hand in my coat, the other resting on the scuffed back up folder that contained every sorry truth we’d dug up like undertakers exhuming a coffin.  The rain was a steady percussion on the window, tapping out a dirge for the last illusions anybody here still nursed.

Across the room, Bishop McButterpants slouched in his chair like a deflated parade balloon, pink face shiny under the wavering fluorescents. He shifted nervously as he tried to pretend he wasn’t watching the door. He was waiting for more chaos. He was waiting for Chester. His barks getting louder.

Meeks arms folded in defiance, her smile stretched tight and bright as piano wire hiding her clear apprehension.

As the canine bellows crescendo I went to the doors and kicked them open just in time for Chester’s advent. “C’mon in boy!” I shouted but with a razor edge that cut.

Chester came barreling in. Sixty pounds of wiry fur, crooked ears and unsettling speed. His claws skittered on the linoleum as he made for the Bishop with the single-minded purpose of a loan shark or the Bishop himself at the All-You-Can Buffet.

Fr. Gilbert, hair still perfect, gasped in after Chester who was already halfway to the desk.

Time slowed.

With a snarl Chester took out Fr. Hugalot’s mime legs with rush that’d make a left tackle green. Then he raced two circles around the room, nails slashing for a grip on the slippery floor until, skidding sideways, four paws splayed he crashed onto the conference table.

The dog’s jaws parted in a grin no sane creature can muster. He lunged sliding across the long, wide wooden surface, and closed his teeth around the USB drive like it was a chunk of kielbasa.

Plastic cracked. Metal crunched.

“Chester, no!” Gilbert hollered, too late.

The Bishop emitted a noise somewhere between a squeal and a prayer.

Chester stood still for a moment, methodically chewing. He jumped down, tail whipping like a metronome, and planted himself in front of Meeks, contentedly reducing terabytes of incriminating evidence to a mush of doggy slobber and shards.

Meeks straightened, her eyes gleaming. “Well,” she purred, “I suppose that’s that, gentlemen.”

“Not so fast, lady”, I said.

I reached into my coat pocket, slowly and deliberately, and drew out the paper folder containing all that was on the drive. With my other hand I drew out… the duplicate drive.  

Father Tommy reached into his cassock and extracted the recording device he was wearing and took the tiny microphone off the button of his sable soutane.

“No, Patsy!” Tracer said. “It isn’t over by a long shot.”

Chester lifted his head, looking around the at the principles in the room. With a crooked and yet jaunty step, tail wagging in a deformed mobius strip of delight, he trotted up to Meeks,  ears flattening, and threw up on her left shoe. I could have sworn he was smirking.

Meeks exhaled through her nose, the last mask dropping. “You think you’ve won,” she said, voice like a snake uncoiling. “But you haven’t seen the last of me. This diocese—this whole rotten town—it never really changes.”

Her gaze flicked over Tracer and me. “I’ll be seeing you both.”

She turned on her heel and slipped out, the echo of her heels a count-down to whatever fresh hell she was planning.

Gilbert went to Chester with the remnant of his broken leash. The dog resisted for a second, tail wagging in a perverse rhythm. Finally, with a little woof, he acquiesced and was lead out of the room.

McButterpants pulled a handkerchief and wiped his hands, though it would take more than cotton to scour this business off his mind.

The bishop drew the spare drive closer and stared at it like it might sprout fangs. His face was pale, beaded with sweat. “God help us,” he whispered.

I leaned over the desk, close enough that the Bishop had to meet his eyes. “This gets buried the right way, or it all comes up again. Understand?”  I put the spare drive on the table.

The bishop nodded, a jerky little movement. He swallowed. “Thank you, Tracer… Father Tommy”, he managed, though it sounded more like a confession than gratitude.

His gaze drifted past us to some invisible horizon. as though seeing ghosts pressing their judgments through the cracked plaster.

Outside, the wind started up again, keening around the eaves. I could feel the chill settling into my bones, the same way it had the first night we’d followed the trail of betrayals down into Libville’s gut.

I straightened and gestured to the door. I moved to open it.

I paused at the threshold and turned back to the Bishop, voice soft but deadly. “Don’t mistake quiet for safety,” he said. “If she comes back, we’ll be ready.”

We stepped into the hall, Fr. Tommy and me, the door creaking shut behind us. The last thing I heard was the Bishop’s whisper, ragged and low.

Out in the night, the rain had made everything shine like it was wrapped in cellophane, but nothing sparkled in Libville for long. I pulled out my victory cigar. The flame from the lighter danced in the reflection on the wet pavement, a tiny beacon in a city that liked to swallow beacons whole.

Fr. Tommy stood beside me, cassock clinging to his legs in the wind, eyes fixed on the  chancery. Inside, ghosts were still whispering and the libs were still whimpering. We’d done our part for tonight.

We didn’t speak. Some endings don’t need words.

I slid behind the wheel of the Charger and turned the key. The engine growled, low and steady, like a warning.

I nodded to the priest.  “Padre.”

He nodded back. “Tracer.”

Somewhere in the dark, Chester barked.

One case closed, a hundred more waiting.  I gripped the wheel, the Charger rumbling like an omen, and put her into gear.

Who can tell what’ll come next in a town that thrives on secrets and devours the unwary whole?

Libville. A city that chews up your conscience and spits out regrets. Libville. Where a tough case never really stays closed.

Posted in Lighter fare, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged | 7 Comments

Good videos about the leaked document and what might happen next

Some good comments in these videos about the leaked report about the survey of bishops. Francis used it to go ahead and do what he wanted and imposed his whim by issuing Taurina cacata…. Traditionis custodes.

I think Robert Royal’s point about JUSTICE is important.

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Pay attention to Mark and Gavin.

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Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Traditionis custodes | 12 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 1385 – R.I.P. Fr. Ray Blake

Welcome Registrants:

Be Not Afraid
BridgetM
Charbel82
FJP

 

Here’s a shot of Fr. Blake when we had lunch at the Criterion (Piccadilly) back in 2008.  I remember that lunch like it was yesterday.

Farewell for now, Father Blake.

Take a few minutes and read this: HERE

“The Catholic Burden in an Age of Infidelity, by Fr. Hansen”

“Fr. Hansen” is a pen name for obvious reasons.  It is, inter alia, an apologia for the SSPX.  Thoughtful points.  The writer is not a priest of the SSPX.   It is also about paying the price in difficult times.

White to move and mate in two. Time yourself. Under 30 seconds?

Meanwhile in Zagreb, Magnus and Wesley are tied for the lead.  Yesterday Magnus defeated Wesley who in turn beat Caruana and Giri.  In Round 4, So with black drew against Saric.  In Round 5, he drew with white against Nordirbek.  Round 6 is underway as I write.

 

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 4 Comments

This is the way.

Yes, this is the way.

Posted in Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged | 5 Comments

The Empire Strikes Back. Vatican SPOX on the “leaked” TLM report

Diane Montagna published a leaked summary of the responses of bishops who were queried about the TLM.

The kraken was released.

Today there was a presser for the publication of a new Mass formulary for a “Mass for the Care of Creation” which will be added to the Masses for Various Needs and Occasions in the Roman Missal (Novus Ordo, of course).

The Pillar says:

At a July 3 Vatican press conference, Archbishop Vittorio Francesco Viola, the secretary of the Dicastery for Divine Worship, was asked to comment on a document published July 1, which was reported to be an excerpt from the Vatican’s 2021 assessment of a global survey of bishops on the use of preconciliar liturgical rubrics.

When the question was raised, Matteo Bruni, the director of the Holy See press office, intervened, objecting that the press conference was dedicated to the presentation of the new formulary of the Mass for the Care of Creation, which will be added to the Masses for Various Needs and Occasions in the Roman Missal.

Bruni said subsequently that he wasn’t “confirming the authenticity of the texts that have been published.”

But he immediately added that “it is presumably part of one of the documents on which the decision [to publish Traditionis custodes] was based, and it’s a contribution to a very partial and incomplete reconstruction of the decision-making process.”

[…]

At the press conference, Bruni said: “The consultation that has been mentioned was supported by other documentation and other reserved reports, and subsequent internal consultations received by the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith.”

[…]

Uh huh.

Posted in SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, Traditionis custodes, What are they REALLY saying? | Tagged , | 10 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 1384 – Procession

The day after the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul is, traditionally, the Commemoration of St. Paul (since Peter gets most of the attention on the 29th).  It is also the Feast of the Protomartyrs of Rome.   It is celebrated by a particular Confraternity which is dedicated to the cult of martyrs and which also foster the Roman Stations during Lent.   There is a Mass at the Teutonic College inside the Vatican next to the Basilica and then a procession in Vatican Gardens.  The Archconfraternity of Santissima Trinità dei Pellegrini takes part.

Here are a few pics.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

Frankly, I think there should be lots of processions with the Blessed Sacrament all around Vatican City, through the Piazza and Basilica, etc., to wash away the filth of Pachamama and all the other things that were going on.   There should be exorcisms as well of all the offices of the Curia.   This would be good for diocesan chanceries, too, and parishes.

Get this!   More information following the revelation of the reportage from Diane.

Wisdom from Card. Zen.

Here’s a small thing. I noticed that, early on Pope Leo had a cassock (technically a simar) with the double sleeves and the little button hole for the hook to sling up the pectoral cross.

I haven’t noticed lately the little pectoral button hole and it seems Leo has chosen not to wear the pectoral that way… yet. I hope he will. It just looks better. However the double sleeves are visible in his recent audiences.

Again, this is a pretty small thing and I don’t want to make that much out of it. It’s just interesting.

You were all waiting for chessy news…

The Grand Chess Tour’s SuperUnited Croatia Rapid & Blitz 2025 is underway in Zagreb. Magnus, Fabi, Pragg, “Puer”, Anish Gukesh, Nodirbek, Jan-Krysztof
and, hurray!, my guy Wesley So are at it, 2-6 July. I am rooting, of course, for Wesley. Alas, Magnus beat him with white in their first game. It went into an end game with symetrical pawns but Magnus had the bishop pair and Wesley had a bishop and a knight. The bishop pair proved to be strong. But as one of the older members of my OTB group says, “Anyone can win with white.” Wesley beat Fabi with white.

Black to move and mate in 4. HERE

Please buy beer.  Lot’s of beer.  Do NOT over chill this superb beer.  Just a little.   It is really good.  I took some for a couple of priest friends last week when we did stuff on the grill.  Well received, for sure.  Yum.  Buy lots of beer.  Give it to your priests.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 4 Comments

YOUR URGENT PRAYER REQUESTS

PLEASE use the sharing buttons! Thanks!

In your charity would you please take a moment look at the requests and to pray for the people about whom you read?

Continued from THESE.

Let’s remember all who are ill, who will die soon, who have died recently, who have lost their jobs, who are afraid.

I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Some are heart-achingly grave and urgent.

As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand. We should support each other in works of mercy.

If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below.

You have to be registered here and approved to be able to post.

  • In your kindness continue prayers for my mother, who has been diagnosed with something grave, progressive and incurable.
  • Pray for me, for my circumstances and wisdom in my decisions.
  • Pray for a really good episcopal appointment which could have a massive impact.
Posted in PRAYER REQUEST | Tagged | 13 Comments

Tracer Bullet and the Smoke of Libville. Episode 8: Spies, Lies and a Bark in the Dark

Continued from Episode 7 – HERE

The door swung shut behind us with a click that sounded like a trap snapping on a rat that thought it was in charge.

The conference room reeked of pumpkin spice coffee and betrayal. Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants perched at the round table, cheeks pink from whatever catered buffet he’d demolished, his face caught between boredom and the creeping suspicion that the collection plate had a hole in it.

Clerics and lay “facilitators” tilted their heads toward the simpering priest. Hugalot froze like a French mime in mid-gesture.

Patsy Meeks loomed behind the bishop. When her eyes locked on us, they went flat and bright, like a serpent sizing up a couple of careless field mice.

The bishop perked up. “Father Tommy! What…um…what are you doing here? It’s wonderful to see you, but…I never thought…”.

Tommy stepped closer. Hugalot shrank back like a … French mime.

“You never thought I’d come to a meeting like this? You’re right, Your Excellency,” Tommy said, voice steady. “Under normal circumstances, I wouldn’t be caught dead…”—he shot a cold glance at Hugalot — “…except to end the monstrous betrayal of your good-natured desire to make everyone happy.”

“Father. Detective.” Meeks’s smile was all laminate and lemon. “We weren’t expecting you.”

Tommy’s cassock whispered like a warning as he stepped to the projection system. The bishop’s bleary eyes landed on me like I was a package dropped at the wrong door.

“Tracer Bullet? Tommy? What is this? Why is the legendary private eye with you?” He tried to straighten up. “You’d better explain right now.”

Tommy held up the USB drive, letting the overhead lights glint off the plastic. Then he slotted it into the port, and the projector whirred to life.

“Your Excellency,” he said, voice pitched just loud enough, “we have reason to believe this listening circle is more of a pressure chamber. You’ve been fed false information. They even sent letters in your name to the Nuncio.”

At the word Nuncio, the bishop’s color drained as fast as the coffers in the diocese’s quarterly reports.

Meeks folded her arms, voice dripping acid. “We were clarifying the bishop’s pastoral instincts for him.”

Tommy began scrolling images across the screen—memos, doctored letters, emails with timestamps that told the real story.

“This one,” I said, tapping a line with the laser pointer, “quotes you endorsing ‘the absolute retirement’ of the Traditional Latin Mass, ripping out altar rails, forbidding Latin and ad orientem worship, Roman vestments, kneeling for Communion, reception on the tongue.  You even suggest bullying little girls for wearing a chapel veil like their mothers.”

In the silence there was an audible gasp from the bishop.    “I NEVER….

Fr. Tommy continued like he was reading last rites, voice low and unhurried, “… all for the sake of unity and congruence with Vatican II.”

As the priest concluded I added, “We know you didn’t do these things, Bishop.  They did, in your name.   They diced and spliced your words counting on the fact that you didn’t know what you didn’t know.”

The bishop’s mouth worked silently. “I…I never wanted to eliminate anything. I mean, I’m not into that stuff… but… but…I just asked for feedback. Dialogue!”

Meeks stepped forward, voice sharpened to a scalpel. “With respect, Bishop, people are tired of kneeling and Latin. They want something expressive. Something that breathes.”

I flicked to another slide.

“Bishop, we have proof Ms. Meeks and C.I.L.I. fabricated opposition to the TLM and pre-drafted statements claiming your support. They built a false consensus to manipulate your decisions. They lied to the Nuncio about you.  Here’s the proof.”

I pulled the USB drive and slid it across the table to the Bishop’s pudgy hand, his ring in the florescent light looking like a gold-plated manhole cover waiting for some poor sap to fall through. He hesitated, index hovering over the plastic as if it might bite. Maybe it would. In this town, secrets had sharper teeth than truth ever did.

The bishop sagged back, all pretense evaporating. “This stops. Tonight. Meeks, you’re relieved of any liturgical duties. The Council is suspended pending canonical review.”

“I’ll inform the Nuncio myself,” Tommy said.

Meeks wheeled toward us, eyes bright with murderous calculation.

Then a bark echoed in the hall through the door. Not a normal bark. More like the sound a drywall sheet might make if it was being exorcised.

Fr. Tommy fixed his eyes on Patsy Meeks.

“That’d be Chester,” he said.

TO BE CONTINUED….

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged | 7 Comments

TLM suppression REPRIEVE in Texas

LifeSite says HERE that Rome has granted St. Margaret’s parish in San Angelo a two-year permission to continue offering the Latin Mass despite Pope Francis’ restrictions.

This even as “The Great Diminishment” begins in Detroit.

The Archbishop there could have asked for an extension and, probably, have gotten it.  That’s speculation on my part of course.  But look at San Angelo.

Curious.

Posted in I'm just askin'..., SESSIUNCULA | 5 Comments

HUGE: “Official Vatican Report Exposes Major Cracks in Foundation of Traditionis Custodes”

Diane Montagna has it. HERE

You might remember that part of the justification Francis used for stomping on the TLM (aka the people who wanted it) was a consultation of bishops around the world.

It turns out that what we were told about that justification may not have been entirely on the up and up.

Read all of Montagna’s piece there. However.

EXCLUSIVE: Official Vatican Report Exposes Major Cracks in Foundation of Traditionis Custodes
Previously undisclosed documents raise serious questions about the stated rationale for Pope Francis’ 2021 decree restricting the Traditional Latin Mass.

VATICAN CITY, July 1, 2025 — New evidence has come to light that exposes major cracks in the foundation of Traditionis Custodes, Pope Francis’ 2021 decree that restricted the traditional Roman liturgy.

This journalist has obtained the Vatican’s overall assessment of the consultation of bishops that was said to have “prompted” Pope Francis to revoke Summorum Pontificum, Benedict XVI’s 2007 apostolic letter liberalizing the vetus ordo, more commonly known as the “Traditional Latin Mass” and sacraments.

The previously undisclosed text, which forms a crucial part of the official report by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on its 2020 consultation of bishops concerning Summorum Pontificum, reveals that “the majority of bishops who responded to the questionnaire stated that making legislative changes to Summorum Pontificum would cause more harm than good.”

The overall assessment directly contradicts, therefore, the stated rationale for imposing Traditionis Custodes and raises serious questions about its credibility.

[…]

[FRANCIS] told the bishops that he was “constrained” by their “requests” to revoke not only Summorum Pontificum but “all the norms, instructions, permissions and customs” that preceded his new decree.

However, what the Vatican’s overall assessment reveals is that the “gaps”, “divergences”, and “disagreements” stem more from a level of nescience, prejudice and resistance of a minority of bishops to Summorum Pontificum than from any problems originating from adherents to the traditional Roman liturgy.

Conversely, the official CDF report states that “the majority of bishops who responded to the questionnaire, and who have generously and intelligently implemented Summorum Pontificum, ultimately express satisfaction with it.” It adds that “in places where the clergy have closely cooperated with the bishop, the situation has become completely pacified.”

The overall assessment, which can be viewed at the end of this article in the original Italian and in an English translation, also confirms the contention I reported in October 2021: That Traditionis Custodes magnified and projected as a major problem what was merely ancillary in the official CDF report.

Furthermore, the text clearly shows that Traditionis Custodes disregarded and withheld what the report said about the peace Summorum Pontificum had restored, and turned a blind eye to a “constant observation made by the bishops”— that younger people were being drawn into the Catholic Church through this older form of the liturgy.

The overall assessment also predicted, based on the responses of bishops, what would ensue were Summorum Pontificum suppressed — forecasts that turned out to be accurate.

[…]

Montagna describes the genesis and structure of the official report.  There is an anecdote about Francis snatching the report from Card. Ladaria’s hand.

Then, in the overall assessment part of the report, it seems that the majority of bishops who implemented Summorum Pontificum were satisfied with it.

Furthermore, the report found that “the bishops most attuned to this matter observe that the older form of the liturgy is a treasure of the Church to be safeguarded and preserved: it constitutes a good to find unity with the past, to know how to advance along a path of coherent development and progress, and to meet, as far as possible, the needs of these faithful.”

According to the report: “The majority of bishops who responded to the questionnaire state that making legislative changes to the MP Summorum Pontificum would cause more harm than good.”

Based on its findings, the report predicted that “weakening or suppressing Summorum Pontificum would seriously damage the life of the Church, as it would recreate the tensions that the document had helped to resolve.”

Moreover, “it would delegitimize two Pontiffs—John Paul II and Benedict XVI—who had committed themselves to not abandoning these faithful.”

[…]

Interesting.  Isn’t that last point what we saw systematically going on for some 13 years?

You will want to read the whole thing.

Fr. Z kudos to Diana Montagna and a biretta tip…

o{]:¬)

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices, Traditionis custodes | Tagged | 21 Comments