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“A place called Abbey Island, near the Ring of Kerry, on Ireland’s west coast. I found my father’s grave.”

“When you get home, when this settles down, we’ll sip an Irish whiskey and you can tell me how you found his gravesite. Speaking of finding places, that information you gave me from the priest with the God-complex, Father Thomas Garvey … a background check reveals a lot of skeletons in the priest’s closet, so to speak. Thomas Garvey was maybe the worst of the worst in the Catholic Church sex abuse scandals during the seventies and eighties in Ireland. Beyond that, he was also known as an expert, a scholar in his knowledge and appreciation of nineteenth century poets and writers. Dickenson, Cummings, Carroll, and Poe, among his specialties.”

“Let’s focus on Poe.”

“The narrator in The Raven seems to get a perverse pleasure between his desire to remember and forget, like a shunned lover. Your brother Dillon, if he’s a master hypnotist, he specializes in causing people to forget or remember — to recall what he wants them to remember, and ultimately, to have them carry out his desires.”

“And if the desire is murder?”

“Like Nick mentioned, you might get a Manchurian Candidate, a pre-programmed assassin. Dillon could surround himself with these types.”

“Maybe.”

“Father Garvey used the word balm for the wound and your soul … in the Raven, Poe writes: ‘On this home by horror haunted — tell me truly, I implore — is there balm in Gilead? — tell me — tell me, I implore!’ Sean, the mention of ‘balm in Gilead,’ is found in Jeremiah eight — twenty-one, where it asks … ‘is there no balm in Gilead?’”

“What’s your take on that?”

“He may be referring to Mount Gilead. In biblical times, it was east of the Jordan River. Some speculate in the land of Nod, places were Cain wandered, east of Eden, if you will. There is a Mount Gilead in America, or at least there was.”

“Was?”

“Yes. According to my research, it was hidden in the hills of Virginia. An eccentric herbal doctor, a spiritualist, built a health commune there in 1821. Way atop a Virginia mountain he renamed Mount Gilead. Apparently it had the right elevation, natural springs, Goose Creek in particular — the spiritual vibe and so on. Anyway, the conditions may have been right, but something else wasn’t. A few serial murders happened back up in the woods, people fled, the Civil War arrived and the Goose Creek area became a blood bath. Eventually the county no longer maintained the one road leading into Mount Gilead. The settlement was literally at the end of a dead-end road, no highway to Heaven, for damn sure. The village became a ghost town. Father Garvey told you that Dillon found it and Aideen, but not you. What was it?”

“I don’t know.”

“We do know Aideen is east of Eden, and the reference to balm and Gilead. Although there are two other towns with the name Mount Gilead in the states, one in North Carolina and the other in Ohio, I’d wager the ghost town in the mountains of Virginia might be pay dirt.”

“And that’s where I’m going. Dave, rent a car at Dulles in your name. List me as one of the co-drivers. Make up a name for someone else.”

“Okay.”

“One thing, more.”

“What’s that?”

“On Jupiter, under the bed in the master, I have my Remington 700 there. It’s packed in a travel case. Wrap it in brown shipping paper and overnight it to the Red Fox Inn in Middleburg, Virginia.”

“Is that where you’ll be staying?”

“For five minutes. Book a room and tell the clerk someone will be picking up a package that’s being delivered to the hotel. Tell them the package is part of the accessories for a group meeting, part of visual presentation.”

“Gotcha.”

“Thank you.”

“Be damn careful, Sean. Between the legacies of those serial murders, which were probably some kind of Hatfield and McCoy-style killings and a bloody Civil War battle, Mount Gilead has a very dark history.”

92

Courtney Burke tried to find something that wasn’t on the map of Virginia. At least not on modern maps of the state, and it couldn’t be located through satellite GPS. But it was there. Tucked away in a valley of ghosts, blurred by the lines of change and lost through the slivers in time. The remnants of the town were still there. Vine-covered buildings left standing. An old wooden post office. General merchandise store. A saloon. A half dozen ramshackle monuments to an age in Virginia of grist mills and moonshine stills. But like a faded tintype photograph of troops from the Civil War, the town of Mount Gilead, Virginia was a shadow of its former image.

Courtney needed directions, and she needed them from someone who knew the mountains well. She drove the red Toyota truck over roads winding through the Blue Ridge Mountains. It was mid-morning and she felt that she was getting close, felt the nervousness, the anxiety of seeing him again, face-to-face. Sometimes, even after the years, she could smell his sweat, the stench of his cheap cologne, feel the scratch of his beard stubble on her skin — her thighs, and she remembered his filthy jeans. He never removed them when he raped her, only pulling his pants down to his knees or ankles. His flannel shirt was always half unbuttoned. God, how she hated the pattern of those red and black colors.

She took one hand off the steering wheel, lowered it to the space between the seat and console, her right hand wrapping around the butt of the .22 pistol. She could do it, now she could. And he would never hurt another child. She knew he’d be wearing the ancient torc when she found him because he believed that was the source of his power. He believed all the crap about the druids, the Irish people of the Iron Age — how they thought forged iron and gold and locked in powerful spirits. They also believed in reincarnation and human sacrifice. He was just like them, the druids — the bastard.

She eased the Toyota off the road and slowed to a stop in the potholed parking lot of a 1950’s era gasoline station and country store. There was one gas pump in the center of the lot, directly in front of the entrance to the store. She parked at the pump. The only thing that didn’t resemble the 1950s was the price of gas.

Courtney entered the dim store, the smell of hoop cheese and pickles in the air. In one corner, two wooden chairs were next to an aged barrel with the stenciled words Jack Daniels on one side, a checkerboard on top of the barrel. A single paddle fan turned slowly, the uneven blades causing a slight squeak on each turn. Jars of honey, canned okra and green beans were sold from the top of a glass counter, hunting knives sold underneath.

Courtney rang the bell on the counter. A half minute later, a slender middle-aged man appeared, using a red towel to wipe grease off his bony hands. He had a basset hound face with an Adam’s apple almost the size of a golf ball. He wore his denim shirt tucked into his jeans, the jeans tucked into his boots. “Hep you?” he asked, his dark eyes almost veiled under the bill of a John Deere cap.

Courtney smiled. “I’d like to buy some gas.”

“Don’t accept no credit cards.”

“Okay. Here’s twenty dollars.” She slid the money across the counter.

“Pumps on. You know how to pump it?”

“I’ve done it before.”

“Bet you have.” He swallowed, his Adam’s apple rising and falling.

“You from around here?”

“All my life.”

“Maybe you’ve heard of a place called Mount Gilead.”

“Maybe.”

“Can you give me directions to it?”

“Ain’t much left. A few old buildings. A shut down grist mill. It’s a ghost town.”

“I’m a photographer, and I’m documenting places like that. Where can I find whatever’s left of Mount Gilead?”