CHAPTER 74

1 November, 1856
‘Oh, no . . . no, that won’t do. We can’t have
them skulking around in these woods,’ Preston called out to the
nearest of his people. ‘You hear me?’
The men nearby nodded.
‘Find them for me. We can’t let them slip away and
then come back. Spread out and find them!’
The swinging lights of dozens of oil lamps and
flickering, sputtering torches filled the space around them with
dancing shadows as they beat multiple paths through the coarse
undergrowth and pushed through thick boughs of fir needles.
‘And be careful!’ he cautioned, raising his voice
above the murmur of other voices, the snap of branches, and the
rustle and tumble of dislodged snow around him. ‘They’re evil
spirits. They will jump at you and cut you if they can. Be aware,’
he said with a chilling certainty, ‘if you corner them, they will
try to confuse you. Whatever you do, do not listen to them! Do not
look into their eyes; do not let them into your head! They may look
like people . . . but they’re not.’
Preston pushed forward with renewed determination,
frantically scouring the ground in front of him, looking for signs
of a recent footfall.
We cannot let any escape. This place must be
purged.
The noises of movement from either side diminished
as the men around him began to fan out, making their own way
through the thickening woods. He turned to look over his shoulder
and saw the familiar faces of two men following too closely in his
wake.
‘Pieter, Jacob . . . you must spread out some more.
We must—’ Turning forward again, the light from his lamp suddenly
picked out a trail of kicked-up snow crossing directly in front of
him. ‘Look! There! More tracks.’
Several people by the looks of it, running
together.
A drift of snow was disturbed and flattened to one
side of the tracks.
Someone weakened and fell, perhaps stumbled.
‘We have them!’ He smiled.
The three of them veered to their right, following
the recently made tracks, taking them up the gradually increasing
gradient. Their breathing grew more laboured as they pushed
onwards, and after a while the noises of the other men out combing
through the trees were all but lost, except for the occasional
distant voice calling out a find, calling to each other.
The tracks suddenly separated.
Preston stopped and studied them. ‘Four of them, I
would say. Three went this way, and one has gone to the
right.’
Pieter Brumbaugh squatted down and pushed a lock of
long, dark hair from his square face. ‘Look! Can you see, one of
the three is hurt - do you see it?’ he said, pointing to a train of
ink-black stains in the snow. He dipped a gloved finger in one and
held it close to the lamp. He looked up at them, invigorated by the
chase, his eyes wide.
‘It’s blood all right.’
‘Then you and Jacob hunt them down,’ Preston said.
‘And mark my words, there’s trickery in them. Don’t let them talk.
Be quick when you find them. Kill them immediately. They’ll try to
trick you, get inside your head and turn you on each other. Do you
understand?’
Both men nodded, breathing hard with exhaustion,
fear and excitement.
‘God will be with you both. Now go!’
Both men set off, following the larger set of
tracks. Preston turned right, to follow the one heading off on its
own.
He watched Preston, hunched forward, his oil lamp
held aloft in one hand, lighting the way ahead. The man moved with
the clumsiness of one unused to tracking through woods, unable to
find firm footing on the bumps and troughs beneath the deep
snow.
He lacked agility; he lacked grace.
There is no beauty in him. He is as ugly on the
outside as he is within.
My promise to you. He is yours.
Thank you.
He moved with effortless speed up behind the man,
following delicately in his wake, stepping only on the compressed
footsteps in the snow, no crunch . . . no noise at all . . . and
now only a dozen yards from him.
If you turned around, you would see me, Preston.
You might even have one chance to fire your gun at me if you were
quick enough.
He smiled. This was fun. He had been following the
outsiders like this, only a few minutes ago; the Indian, the tall
southern man and his dying Negro girl, listening to their ragged
breathing, the terror in their muted whispers. To be so close as to
smell the odour of fear that trailed behind them and yet remain
unseen was such good sport - he had to struggle not to laugh out
loud with the excitement of the chase.
He’d been close enough to kill them.
But the angel was wise. The angel told him to use
them as bait.
The tracks suddenly ceased.
Preston stopped dead. Confused, he knelt down,
moving the lamp closer to the ruffled folds of snow. The hurried,
carelessly placed footsteps of one fleeing alone simply
ended.
‘What?’ he muttered.
To his right he noticed the thick, gnarled trunk of
a cedar tree. He looked up at the bare branches above him, each
coated with undisturbed snow, like icing on a layer cake. Except
one bough directly above him. The snow had been brushed off this
branch, where two hands must have grasped it.
Tricky devil.
The angel, Nephi, had often warned him of that . .
. the trickery of evil, the games of deception that Satan and his
advocates played for their amusement. He stood up, craned his neck
to look up into the dark branches above him, raising his lamp as
high as he could to project the dim amber light further.
‘I know you’re up there!’ he called out.
Only one of the smaller imps, one of the ones
daring to masquerade as a child, would have had the agility to pull
itself effortlessly up into the tree like that, like a
monkey.
‘Child!’ He used the word, though the taste of it
curdled in his mouth. ‘Come down this instant!’
The tree’s limbs swayed with the clicking of twigs
on each other in the gentle breeze.
‘Child,’ he called out again, softening the cadence
of his voice this time. ‘Come down and I will help you eject the
wickedness that has crawled inside you.’
Preston knew the Lord would forgive him that small
lie; there was no cure for these creatures. But he was a man of
compassion and love - he would make its death a mercifully swift
one.
How can a man be so blind, so unaware of the space
around him?
He stood behind Preston, now no more than an arm’s
reach away, swaying silently and struggling to keep from laughing
aloud. He couldn’t wait for the stupid, arrogant idiot to turn
round and see him.
You are so blind, Preston.
The tall man in front of him, calling up a tree
like a fool, was going to die in just a few moments. But before he
died he wanted Preston to know who it was that was going to kill
him . . . as he’d managed to do with Eric Vander. Saul Hearst’s
killing had been unprepared; it had happened in the blink of an
eye, amidst a red rage that had clouded the moment. He would have
liked to have taken his time with Saul, to let the dirty old man
understand what fear truly was, for him to comprehend what a
despicable creature he was . . . but most of all, to have him know
for certain before he died that he would burn in the pits of hell
for eternity.
He’d had that exquisite pleasure with Eric.
And now it was Preston’s turn.
A gentle breeze tickled his bare skin as he rose up
from his hunched posture, now standing straight, the soft clink of
bones unheard. He whispered.
William . . .
Preston spun round at the sound of the gentle hiss
of his name.
‘Oh my!’ His voice froze in his throat instantly.
The head-rush of fear and awe, terror and elation left him
momentarily rigid and silent, his pursuit of the child-imp in the
tree completely dismissed from his mind.
Preston . . . the apparition before him hissed
again quietly.
He dropped to his knees, and looked up in stunned,
silent awe at the tall skeletal form standing over him. Love, joy
and elation forced a choked sob from his throat.
‘Nephi, is it you? You . . . you’ve come to me at
last!’ His voice quivered with gratitude. Tears rolled from the
corner of his deep eyes, down hollow cheeks into the dark thatch of
bristles beneath his jaw.
‘Oh thank the Lord! I thought I had disappointed
Him, disappointed you somehow . . . that you’d sought someone else
for this work.’
The angel remained still. Preston’s eyes wandered
up the pale form, over the spines and bones that protruded from it,
up to the long, horned skull and two dark eye sockets through which
he thought he saw the reflected glint of his flickering oil
lamp.
‘It’s done! We . . . we have cleansed this place as
you asked . . . cleansed it of devilish parasites; they’ve all
gone.’ His voice trembled with excitement. ‘Pure enough that
y-you’ve come back to us.’
The angel raised a long bony finger up to a jagged
row of teeth. Shhhhh.
Preston felt the dark eye sockets studying him
intently and was certain he sensed the angel was pleased with him -
proud of him for having the strength of purpose to see through what
needed to be done.
‘Do you wish to b-begin our work?’ Preston asked,
ending the still and silent tableau. ‘The golden plates are
w-waiting in our temple, ready for us t-to begin—’
Shhhhh.
Preston stopped.
You have waited long for this, William - to revive
me. He nodded, feeling tears of joy welling in his eyes. ‘I’ve
wanted to see you, to talk with you, to hear the voice of an angel
. . .’
But, William . . . why would an angel come to
you?
‘What?’
Why would God trust you to deliver His word from
those sacred plates? Hmm?
Preston shook his head, confused. ‘Because . . . He
. . . He brought them to me, asked of me that I—’
No! You are a fake! A liar. A thief!
‘No!’
Eric, Saul and you . . . the false prophet. You
know what happens to false prophets?
Preston shook his head.
The angel suddenly took a step forward, one hand
swiping across Preston’s belly.
Preston was startled and confused by the sudden
movement. It was only when a twisting tendril of warm steam
flickered past his eyes a couple of seconds later that he
understood the angel had just cut him open. He looked down to see a
growing pool of dark, viscous blood soaking into the snow at his
feet, and a coil of glistening intestine protruding from the ripped
gash in his clothes, hanging pendulously towards the ground.
He looked up at Nephi. ‘Why did . . . ?’
There are so many interesting things inside you.
You’re going to see them all before you die. The angel giggled like
a naughty child.
Preston felt an emerging sting of pain from his
opened belly. But his confused, struggling mind was trying to
comprehend a more important thing.
‘Why? Why . . . do . . . this?’
The angel swung a hand of long, razor-sharp fingers
across the open wound, catching the bulge of intestine and pulling
a long loop of it out onto the snow. Preston felt the tender tug
pulling him forward. He collapsed onto his knees.
Because you are not a good man. Not good enough for
God.
Another swipe and Preston felt more of himself
being eviscerated, landing with a wet splash on the ground between
his legs. His mind dully registered that in one hand he held a gun,
loaded and ready to fire. But that was irrelevant now; it was too
late. He knew he was dying.
What mattered more to him right now, more than
anything else, was trying to comprehend why this was happening to
him, and what fate awaited him in the hereafter.
‘Have I not been good? Have I not—’
‘YOU’RE A BASTARD!’ The angel’s whispered voice had
suddenly transformed into an all-too-human scream filled with
anguish and hate.
Preston flinched. He rocked back drunkenly on his
knees. The little world around them both, this small space of snow
and bare branches, lit an amber hue by the flickering glow of his
solitary oil lamp, was beginning to sway and spin. He felt
light-headed.
That screaming voice certainly didn’t sound like an
angel.
‘I HATE YOU!’ the skeletal creature screamed. ‘Your
dark fucking evil soul is going to burn in hell! I want you to know
that before I rip your heart out! You’re gonna burn and burn and
burn for ever!’ it screamed with a shrill voice. For the first time
in Preston’s fogged mind, confusion gave way to fear, and the first
inkling of suspicion.
‘No!’ he whispered.
The world suddenly keeled over to one side. Preston
felt cool snow pressed against one side of his hot face as he lay
supine. He turned to see this creature of bones and spines step
over him and then kneel down, one knee planted either side of his
pelvis.
‘DO YOU UNDERSTAND NOW, WILLIAM?!’ it screamed
again.
A spiny hand disappeared into his gaping belly, and
Preston felt the pull and rupture of tender things tearing inside
of him. He gasped, convulsed and vomited blood. His eyes were
losing focus, beginning to cross and roll uncontrollably . . . and
then close.
‘LOOK AT ME!’ the thing screamed angrily, leaning
down towards him, its face so close that the ragged teeth at the
bottom of the long skull rested on Preston’s bearded chin, hot
gasps of fetid air billowing out into the space between them.
‘See what I am!’
Preston’s eyelids obediently fluttered open. He
tried to focus on the bone-yellow face and the dark empty sockets
inches away from him.
One hand of long spines came into view, covered in
dark blood and shreds of tissue dangling from serrated edges, and
Preston’s dying mind vaguely noticed the leather straps tied tautly
around a gloved hand, securing the sharpened blades of bone to it.
In an abstract moment he wondered why an angel would want to
construct such a strange device.
‘I want you to see who I am,’ it snarled with a
keening whine, ‘before those eyes of yours come out. I want you to
see me!’
The hand grasped hold of the jagged teeth and
pushed the long bone-face upwards. The skull - Preston’s dulled
mind managed to comprehend - was just a façade, a mask. And beneath
that mask, dimly lit by the flickering amber hues of his oil lamp,
he saw a face contorted with rage, every bit as terrifying as he’d
imagined an angel might look.
It was his face he saw . . . only younger.
Sam smiled. ‘You thought I was dead? Buried?’
Preston could only nod and gurgle in
response.
Sam laughed at the pitiful, confused look on
Preston’s face. ‘No, it wasn’t me. That was the angel’s
idea.’
He’s so very clever.
The angel had so deftly taken charge when he most
needed it; his mind fogged with anger and grief, he had been
incapable of thinking clearly. His memory of it was vague now. Mr
Hearst’s attack had been brutal and without warning. Momma had been
slashed open once, twice and again; a deliberately barbaric attack
to look like an Indian’s handiwork. And as Momma collapsed, Saul
had turned towards Sam and Emily.
Sam’s memory was jumbled. He had killed Hearst in a
rage, hacking and hacking at his open bowels as Emily stared in
horror at him. He remembered a lone Indian arriving, and turning on
the savage with Hearst’s blade . . . the Indian snatching Emily
from him and running.
These things had been a confused web of
half-memories, until Nephi came to him and helped him make sense of
it all - advising him with a quiet whisper, like a much wiser older
sibling, a father, a mentor.
The angel told him there was work to do, and that
work was not the translation of sacred metal plates - not
immediately, anyway. The task at hand was to punish those arrogant
people who presumed they spoke for God, and the charlatan who was
leading them.
The grave for Momma; the same grave for the dead
Indian shot by Saul a week earlier and buried wearing Sam’s
clothes; making an example of Hearst’s body . . . an example that
let Preston know his secret was out. All of this, Sam knew, he’d
not have been smart enough to conceive of by himself. The angel was
so, so clever.
I’m glad you came to me.
You have a good soul.
His mind returned to the here and now, looking down
at Preston’s flickering, confused face. The man’s lips were wet
with blood and twitched, struggling to form what would prove to be
his last word.
‘Why?’ he gasped.
‘I’m doing this for Emily,’ Sam replied. ‘For me,
for Johanna . . . and all your other bastard children.’
Preston squirmed and gurgled.
‘I’m doing this for Momma. She was going to tell
them all about you, but you had Saul kill her. I hate you!’
Take his eyes.
Sam raised his clawed hand and smiled. ‘So, now
you’ve seen.’
With a sudden thrust, the sharpened point of the
bone claw strapped to his index finger penetrated Preston’s left
eye. It burst with a soft, wet pop. He pushed the claw in all the
way to the knuckle, feeling cartilage and bone crack and
surrender.
Preston thrashed convulsively for a moment, and
then was still.