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“Yes, Prophet.”

“Make me a casket. Bore a one-inch hole near the head of the box.”

“Yes, Prophet.”

“Brother John, my blacksmith.”

“I’m here, Prophet,” said a man with the shoulders of an ox.

“Make me a pipe. Five feet in length. Fit it to the hole that William bores in the box.”

“Yes, Prophet.”

Dillon turned to the men at his side. “Bring her, and bring me the infiltrator you caught yesterday.”

Two men nodded and left. The third grabbed Courtney by her forearm and led her away, Dillon following. He paused, stopping next to pregnant young woman. He placed his wide, open hand on her dress over her belly, looked at her, his eyes piercing, and said, “I feel the blood and spirit of a Celt warrior. You are a chosen woman, Sister April.”

She lowered her eyes, a demure smile working in the corners of her small mouth. The residents drifted back to their routine tasks as Dillon caught up with Courtney and her sentry walking down the hard-packed dirt road, past a cornfield, and then coming to a small clearing bordered by a large strand of oaks. Two men brought a third, younger man, his feet and hands shackled in chains.

He was in his late twenties, wearing a University of Virginia T-shirt, red baseball cap, jeans and hiking boots. Courtney could see he was terrified, his breathing quick, eyes darting around, vein pounding in his neck.

Dillon said, “Remove the iron from the limbs of this dissident. And two of you hold his arms until I say to release them.”

The man said, “Let me go. I didn’t do anything. I was just up here scouting the area for a student film we’re shooting. I heard about these old buildings. I didn’t know anybody actually lived in this place. Please, just let me go, okay. I won’t say anything about you people living here.”

“You people?” Dillon cocked his head, his eyes like laser beams. “You, sir, have no idea who these people are and why they’re here. This is the valley of the gods, a place of rebirth. To find a renaissance, to seek a better path to the future, death is often the key because the transference — the spirit leaving the body uses the limbs, even the blood of the body to point the way to the future.” He looked at one man without moving his head. “Brother Arthur, it is your turn.”

* * *

After the flames subsided somewhat, and I could see there wasn’t a body in the Toyota truck, I moved on quickly. The last two hundred yards were not accessible by car. I carried my rifle, put Dave on speaker-phone and ran, ran hard in the direction he pointed out. He said, “Another hundred feet and you should reach it. Be careful. The drop-off is damn steep, more than eleven hundred feet straight down. There’s a fast-moving river at the bottom.”

“Got it.” I arrived in a small clearing of ancient rock and cedar trees on the edge of a mountain. Ground water seeped between the boulders making their surface slick. I looked toward a small valley to my left, maybe a quarter mile away. There were a few ramshackle buildings, wood smoke curling from a chimney attached to a rickety cabin. A few people milling around the property.

“What do you see, Sean?”

“Hold on Dave.” I slipped my phone into my shirt pocket and then used an outcropping of rock to set up the bipod for my rifle, looking into the scope. I panned slowly to the right across the cleared property, spotting men, woman, and a few children. It was an agrarian, eighteenth century Appalachian farming community. I kept panning to the right, past a grist mill, past a whitewashed church.

And then I found Courtney.

And Dillon Flanagan.

It had to be him. Tall, thick black hair, cheekbones. A resemblance to the actor Daniel Day Lewis. He stood next to Courtney, her hands shackled behind her back. Standing there, next to five men, her head cutting from right to left as if she was looking for a place to run. But there was no escape, nowhere to run. One man, wearing a red baseball cap, was being held by two others. Even through the scope, I could see the man was pleading for his life.

I chambered a round, moving the cross-hair sight to the back of my brother’s head.

* * *

The man called Brother Arthur waddled like a grizzly bear walking on its hind legs. Courtney watched him, saw the vacancy in his eyes. She knew what was about to happen. He towered more than six-four, near three hundred pounds, ruddy face with a salt and pepper Van Dyke beard. He slid an ice pick from his overall pocket and slowly approached the frightened man who was held by two other men, each one gripping one of the man’s forearms, stretching his arms outward.

Courtney shouted, “Leave him alone! Uncle Dillon, please, don’t hurt him. Dear God, please.”

“God?” Dillon turned to her, his head cocking like a cat watching a goldfish in a glass bowl. “God can’t help you. Never could. Never will.”

“Please, let him go. Kill me instead.”

“Is that what you would desire, Courtney? Be careful what you wish for. This man before us was sent here on a mission. And now his mission is altered, he will help show us the future because the honesty of a real death cannot be false. The flailing of the limbs and blood flow speaks the truth and the future. It is the way of the Celts.” He looked at the large man and said, “Proceed.”

The large man gripped the ice pick, slowly raising it in the air. Courtney bit her bottom lip and closed her eyes just as the bulky man’s head exploded.

He was dead before he hit the ground.

96

As the big man was collapsing, I sighted the cross-hairs on the chest of another man. He was one of two gripping the outstretched arms of the captive man. I squeezed the trigger, saw a cloud of red mist erupt through the scope, and then sighted on the chest of the man on the opposite side of the prisoner. The round hit him just below the neck.

Three down in less than five seconds.

And in that time, Dillon Flanagan was gone. He fled, pulling Courtney with him, vanishing in the thick woods. The younger man who had been held captive, ran the opposite direction and away from what he undoubtedly must think was the village of the damned.

“Sean, are you okay?” Dave’s voice sounded synthetic, like it came from inside a lead pipe.

I fished the phone out of my pocket. “Yeah, I’m okay. Three hostiles down. He’s got her, Dave. Dillon vanished with Courtney back up in the woods. He’s running an eighteenth century farm here. Looks like some kind of cult following. It’s definitely a compound. Don’t know how well they’re armed. But I’ve got to go in, and do it quickly.”

“You can’t cross the ravine, at least not fast. Walk back to your car. I see what looks like an old logging road. According to my data, International Timber logged some of the mountain before World War Two. Some of the loggers probably stayed in whatever homes or buildings that were left standing from the ghost town of Mount Gilead.”

“From what I can see, there are about a dozen cabins and assorted buildings including a working grist mill. Residents may be heavily armed.”

“Only one road leads into that place. You can bet it’s being watched.”

* * *

One man held a pistol on Courtney. Two others carried a wooden box as they followed Dillon Flanagan deeper into the forest, down winding logging trails. Soon they came to a low-lying area, a gorge or a large washed out gulley that had been cut at the base of the cliffs by fast moving water. Dillon pointed to a spot in the sand, turned to his men and said, “Dig.”

They used two shovels to remove the soil, and within a few minutes had dug a hole — a grave. Dillon said, “Brother John … fit the pipe onto the box. We’ll sink it to allow for three inches of pipe to rise up out of the soil.”

The man called Brother John nodded, worked the pipe into the hole that had been cut to receive it.