The Searcher

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The Searcher Page 6

by Simon Toyne


  “There’s my ride,” Morgan said, heading to the door.

  “Where is this guy?” Cassidy asked. “You taken him in for questioning?”

  “No. I thought it best to keep him off the record, in case he has to—disappear. Last I saw, he was heading to the church.”

  Cassidy stared out of the window at the white stone of the church beyond the wall. “Let me go talk to him first.”

  “Now why would you wanna go and do that?”

  “Because if I’m going to sacrifice a man’s life to save my town, the least I can do is have the courtesy to look him in the eye first. And I still think we should establish whether the crash was an accident or not.”

  Morgan shook his head and took in the room. “Must be nice, living in your oak-paneled world where everyone plays by rules and any disputes can be resolved with a handshake. Let me tell you how things work out in the real world. Talking to this guy is going to achieve absolutely nothing. If anything, it’s going to complicate things. You don’t strike up a friendship with a man you’re about to execute. And it won’t matter a damn to Tío whether the crash was an accident or not. His son died and someone is going to have to pay for it. Someone—or something. Ever hear of a place called El Rey?”

  “Rings a bell.”

  “It’s a little town up in the Durango Mountains. The local banditos took it over and it became a sort of Shangri-la for criminals fleeing south across the border. Anyone who made it there with enough money to pay for protection could stay as long as they liked, knowing no law would ever touch them. El-Rey is also Tío’s hometown. Or it was. It’s not there anymore.”

  “What happened?”

  “Tío happened. I don’t know the exact details, but when Tío was a kid there was some kind of family tragedy involving his father and brother. Could be they fell afoul of the bosses or something, but whatever happened, Tío never forgot it. When he rose to power years later, he got his revenge. El Rey was the headquarters of the old bosses, so it made sense for him to take it over. But he didn’t. What he did was massacre every living soul in the town and burn the place to the ground. It was symbolic, I guess: out with the old and in with the new. But it was also revenge, pure and simple, an old-fashioned blood vendetta. Tío did the killing himself, the way I heard it. Showed the world what would happen if anyone dared to hurt him or his family.” He pointed out of the window at the smoke rising beyond the church. “And his son just died, flying into our airfield. So you think about that when you talk to this guy. I’ll be at the control line if you need me.” Then he opened the door and was gone.

  15

  SOLOMON STOOD INSIDE THE DOOR OF THE CHURCH LETTING HIS EYES adjust to the gloom after the fierce sunlight outside. Huge stained-glass windows poured light into the dark interior, splashing color onto what appeared at first glance to be a collection of old junk.

  To the left of the door a full-size covered wagon stood behind a model of a horse and a mannequin dressed in nineteenth-century clothes. A fully functioning Long Tom sluice box stood opposite with water trickling through it, making a sound like the roof was leaking. A collection of gold pans was arranged around it, beneath a sign saying Tools of the Treasure Hunter’s Trade. There were pickaxes too and fake sticks of dynamite and ore crushers and softly lit cabinets containing examples of copper ore and gold flake and silver seams in quartz. Another cabinet contained personal effects—reading glasses, pens, gloves—all carefully labeled and arranged, and there was a scale model of the town on a table showing what Redemption had looked like a hundred years ago. And right in the center of the strange diorama a lectern stood, angled toward the door so that anyone entering the building was forced to gaze upon the battered Bible resting on it. Solomon walked forward, feeling the cold flagstones beneath his feet. He could see the remnant of a lost page sticking out from the binding, its edge rough, as if it had been violently torn from the book. The missing page was from Exodus, chapters twenty through twenty-one, where Moses brought God’s ten holy laws down from the mountain on tablets of stone.

  “The Church of Lost Commandments,” Solomon muttered, then continued onward into the heart of the church, breathing in the smells of the place: dust, polish, candle wax, copper, mold.

  The commandments were everywhere: carved into the stonework and the wooden backs of the pews, inscribed in the floor in copper letters, even depicted in the stained glass of the windows. It was as if whoever had lost the page from the Bible had built the church in some grand attempt to make up for it. The altar lay directly ahead of him, the large copper cross standing on a stone plinth. As he drew closer he studied it, his eager eyes tracing the twisted lines and spars identical to the cross he wore around his neck, hoping for some jolt of recognition. But if he had ever been here before or stood and gazed upon this cross and this altar he couldn’t remember it and he felt frustration flood into the place where his hope had been.

  The church seemed gloomier here, as if the walls around the altar were made of darker material, and as he drew closer he saw the reason for it. The stonework, bright white in the rest of the building, was covered in dark frescoes. They depicted a desert landscape at night, populated with nightmarish creatures: hunched men and skeletal women; children with black and hollow eyes, their clothes ragged and tattered. Some rode starved horses with ribs sticking out from sunken hides, their eyes as hollow as their riders’.

  Beneath the ground, emerging from a vast, burning underworld, were demons with sharp, eager teeth and leathery wings that stirred the dust and taloned hands that reached up through cracks in the dry land to grab at the wretched people above them. A few of the demons had snagged an arm or a leg and were gleefully dragging some poor soul down into the fire while their terrified eyes gazed up at the distant glow of a painted heaven. And there was something else, something moving in the shadows—a figure, pale and ghostly—walking out of the painted landscape toward him. It was his reflection, captured in a large mirror that had been positioned so that anyone looking at the fresco became part of what they observed. On either side of the mirror were two painted figures—an angel and a demon—gazing out of the picture, their eyes focused on whoever might stand and gaze in the mirror.

  Solomon moved closer until his reflection filled the frame. He studied his face. It was the first time he had seen himself properly and it was like looking at a picture of someone else. Nothing about his features was familiar, not his pale gray eyes or his long, fine nose or the scoops of his cheeks beneath razored cheekbones. He did not recognize the person staring back at him.

  “Who are you?” he asked, and a loud bang echoed through the church as if in answer. Footsteps approached from behind a curtained area in the vestry and he turned just as the curtain swept open and found himself facing a modern version of Jack Cassidy. They held each other’s gaze for a moment, Cassidy’s face a mixture of curiosity and suspicion as he looked him up and down, his eyes lingering on his shoeless feet. “You must be Mr. Creed,” he said, walking forward, hand extended. Solomon shook it and his mind lit up as he caught the hint of a chemical coming off him.

  Napthalene—used in pyrotechnics, also a household fumigant against pests.

  He saw a small frayed hole in the pocket of his jacket—Mayor Cassidy smelled of mothballs. It was a dark suit, a funeral suit. “You just buried James Coronado,” Solomon said, and the pain flared in his arm at the mention of his name.

  Cassidy nodded. “A tragedy. How did you know him?”

  Solomon turned back to the painted landscape. “I’m trying to remember.”

  There was something here, he felt sure of it, some reason the cross around his neck had brought him to this place where its larger twin sat.

  “Impressive, isn’t it?” Cassidy said, stepping over to the wall and flicking a switch. Light faded up, illuminating the fresco in all its dark and terrible detail.

  There were many more figures populating the landscape than Solomon had first thought, their black arms and shrunken bodi
es almost indistinguishable from the land, as if they were made from the earth and still bound to it. The ones with faces had been painted in such realistic detail that Solomon wondered if each had been based on a real person, and what those people had thought when they had seen themselves immortalized as the damned in this macabre landscape. They seethed over the desert, their faces ghostly, their eyes staring up at the too-distant heaven. Solomon looked up too and saw something he had missed when the fresco had been sunk in shadow, something written in the sky, black letters on an almost black background.

  Each of us runs from the flames of damnation

  Only those who face the fire yet still uphold God’s holy laws

  Only those who would save others above themselves

  Only these can hope to escape the inferno and be lifted unto heaven

  The brand on his arm flared in pain again as he read the words, bringing back the feeling he’d first felt back on the road that he was here for a reason, that there was something particular he had to do.

  Only those who would save others . . . can hope to escape the inferno . . .

  “I’m here to save him,” he muttered, his hand rubbing at the burning spot on his arm.

  “Who?”

  “James Coronado.”

  Cassidy blinked. “You’re . . . but we just buried him.”

  Solomon smiled. “I didn’t say it was going to be easy.”

  A noise outside made them both turn, a siren howling past, heading somewhere in a hurry. Solomon could smell smoke leaking in through the open door.

  The fire.

  . . . Only those who face the fire . . .

  The whole town would be heading to the city limits now, preparing to defend their town from the oncoming threat. Most of them would have known James Coronado. Maybe his widow would be there too.

  “Are you okay?” Cassidy asked, stepping closer. “You seem a little shaken. Maybe you should head to the hospital, get yourself checked out.”

  Solomon shook his head. “I don’t need the hospital,” he said. “I need to go back to the fire.”

  He looked back at his reflection, trapped between the angel and the demon, their painted eyes looking at him as if asking: “Which of us are you?”

  Let’s find out, Solomon thought, and the pain in his arm flared again.

  PART 3

  Thou shalt have no other gods before me.

  —EXODUS 20:3

  Extract from Riches and Redemption—The Making of a Town

  The published memoir of the Reverend Jack “King” Cassidy

  I arrived at Fort Tucson with the priest’s gold all but spent and to raise more funds—and to my eternal shame—I tried to sell the Bible to an itinerant preacher name of Banks who balked at the size of the book, saying if God had meant him to have such a thing He would have sent it in smaller form. He told me instead of a Jesuit mission south of Tucson where a fine old example of scripture might find a permanent home on some sturdy lectern where no poor soul nor mule would have to carry it more.

  I blamed encroaching poverty on my decision to try and part with the Bible, but in truth I could feel the hold it had on me and I was frightened of it. The visions of the white church and the pale Christ on the cross haunted my waking hours and I feared I might be losing my mind, like the priest had lost his. But setting it down now, it seems clear to me how all of this was God’s design—the priest traveling from Ireland and finding himself in the bed next to mine, the Bible being signed over to me, the gold funding its journey west, and my chance conversation with the preacher who sent me on the path that would lead me to the Jesuit mission and the pale Christ on his burned cross.

  We saw the smoke rising in the morning sky a couple of hours after sunrise on the second day. I had joined a cavalry supply train heading south to Fort Huachuca via the trading post where the Jesuit mission was based. We smelled them long before we saw them, poor murdered souls roughly delivered to God at arrow point or at the keen edge of a savage’s knife. The trading post was an inferno, roof timbers sticking up from burning buildings like smoking ribs and a large burning cross standing by a pile of smoldering timbers that had been the Jesuit mission. At first I thought the cross and crucified figure of Christ upon it too large for such a humble chapel. It was only as we drew closer that I saw the truth. The burning man was real.

  He blazed like a grotesque torch, all signs of identity razed from him, his head thrown back in agony and fire pouring from his open mouth as if his screams were made of flame.

  Captain Smith, the officer in charge, ordered someone to throw a rope around him and drag the cross to the ground and away from sight, but no rope could ever drag the image of that burning man from my memory. I uttered a prayer, commending his immortal soul to God where it would be forever at peace and free from whatever demons had made their evil sport here. And when I finished I heard a murmur of “Amens” around me and realized that my prodigal companions, normally so cavalier and contemptuous of God when in the warm embrace of a bottle or by the light of a campfire, were drawn straight back to His goodness and love when faced with this bleak and terrible example of its opposite.

  We set to work smothering the smoldering church with shovels of dirt and I wondered how an all powerful and merciful God could allow such monstrous sport to be visited upon His faithful servants and lay waste to His own house of worship. I could see no purpose in it and wondered if, in the battle between God and the Devil, it was the Devil who had actually won. It was only then, in the deepest depths of my doubt, that Christ Himself appeared to me, rising from the ashes of His father’s ruined church to show me the way and the truth.

  I saw His face first, shining white against the gray-black ashes. He was staring straight at me with an expression of such agony and anguish that I stumbled back in shock and my boot trod heavy on the charcoaled remains of a roof spar, which levered the thing up farther and I saw it entire. It was the Christ crucified, carved from pure white marble and fixed to a cross of hard wood that had been burned by the fire but not destroyed.

  I guessed from its position in the ruined church that it must have hung above the altar and I imagined how the Christ must have stared down in lament as flames consumed His Father’s house. It was a miracle the cross had survived, a miracle that I had found it, and I recalled the words of the raving priest as he pressed the Bible into my hands and transferred his mission to me.

  —You must carry His word into the wasteland. Carry His word and also carry Him. For He will protect you and lead you to riches beyond your imagining.

  And here He was.

  I walked into the smoking ruin of the church and took the pale Christ in my arms—His cross now mine, my burden now His. I could feel the trapped heat of the fire radiating out of the solid wood and it felt like the warmth of His love flowing into me and I realized then why God had allowed the savages to slaughter good Christian folk and burn His house to the ground.

  It had all been for me.

  He was showing me, in such a way as a simple soul like myself could understand, that the church I had to build must be stronger than this. If it was to stand against such evil as thrived here in this blasted wilderness, it had to be like the pale Christ who had been untouched by the fiery instruments of evil that had destroyed all else.

  The church I was to build had to be made of stone.

  16

  “HE SAID WE SHOULD STAY WHERE WE’RE AT?”

  “That’s what the man said.” Mulcahy was standing by the window of the motel, cell phone in hand, staring out through the gray net curtain at the parking lot beyond.

  Behind him, Javier paced, stamping dust and the smell of mildew from the carpet. “He didn’t say nothin’ else?”

  “He said plenty, but the main thing he said was that we should stay put and wait for him to call back.”

  Javier shook his head and continued to pace. He’d already visited the john several times in the twenty or so minutes they’d been in the room and Mulcahy had
only heard him flush once, suggesting either that he had terrible hygiene or he was doing something in there other than pissing. The slime shine in his eyes gave Mulcahy a pretty good idea what.

  “You think Papa knows where we’re at?” Javier said, twitching and flicking his fingers as if they had gum on them.

  “Probably.”

  “Probably? The fuck does ‘probably’ mean? Either he know or he don’t.”

  The only illumination in the room was coming from the TV. It was tuned to a local news station with the volume turned low. Carlos sat silently on the edge of one of the beds, his eyes fixed on the flickering screen as if he’d been hypnotized by it. He’d been like that ever since they’d walked in the door and heard what Papa Tío had to say. Mulcahy had seen that look a few times before: once in a jail cell outside Chicago when he was still in uniform and Illinois still had the death penalty, and a couple of times since when he’d been the cause of it. It was the look someone got when they’d resigned themselves to whatever was coming their way, like a rabbit when the headlights were speeding toward it and there was no time to get out of the way.

  “You got a cell phone, either of you?” Mulcahy asked.

  “Yeah, I got a phone.” Javier said it like he’d just asked him if he had a dick or not. He held up a BlackBerry in a gold-and-crystal-encrusted case, the blank screen angled toward Mulcahy. “I switched it off though, motherfucker. I ain’t stupid.”

  “Good for you. Who pays the bill?”

  “The fuck’s that got to do with anything?”

  “Because if Tío pays the bill then he’ll be able to track it whether it’s switched off or not. Does he pay the bill?”

  Javier didn’t answer, which was answer enough.

  Mulcahy nodded. “Then he knows where we are.” He turned back and looked outside, squinting against the brightness. Beyond the reception building he could see the traffic out on the highway.

 

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