Page 13 of October Skies


  ‘Far worse . . .’ Keats muttered.

  There was movement to the left and the others turned to see several more emerge from the trees and foliage, and more to their right.

  ‘They’re Paiute.’

  Weyland leaned forward. ‘Would they be the—?’

  ‘Yeah . . . the ones you don’t want to run into,’ Keats replied evenly and quietly, his eyes locked on them.

  Some of the Paiute carried older flintlock muskets, acquired hand-me-downs from another era. Others carried bows - but all of them held in the other hand hunting knives, or war-clubs of one sort or another, ready to be used with lethal efficiency at close quarters. Keats counted six of them. Six he could see, that is.

  Even if the other men with him were all loaded, ready to fire and managed each to bring down a target with their first and only shot, he suspected there’d be more who would be in amongst them within seconds, wielding the serrated edges of their tamahakan to lethal effect. It would be a bloody and brutal fight that Keats suspected would be over even before their powder smoke cleared.

  ‘Look at their skin,’ muttered Hearst. ‘Scorched by God . . . they’re demons!’

  ‘Shut up and be still!’ Keats hissed through clenched teeth.

  Dark skin - Keats had heard the Mormons refer to that as the mark of evil.

  He studied the Paiute, coiled and perfectly still. The bone piercings and the shrivelled leathery tokens that dangled from their necks served to make them look more demonic.

  The Indian who had first emerged from the trees spoke. The language was sharp and guttural, but one Keats recognised as the common tongue loosely shared by the Paiute, the Shoshone, the Bannock . . . he was speaking Ute.

  ‘Trapper, you lead these white-face here?’

  Keats nodded. ‘I lead them through only—’

  The Indian frowned and cocked his head curiously at Keats’s poor pronunciation.

  ‘White-faces bring evil spirit with them into mountains. Must leave.’

  ‘Snow stops us—’

  ‘They must leave.’

  ‘Snow stops us.’

  The Indian studied them, his eyes drifting from Keats onto the others, slowly scanning each of them in turn, drinking in every small detail from head to foot.

  ‘The evil spirit will bring much bad before snow is gone.’

  And then barking a command to his men, he turned round to step back through the undergrowth from which they had emerged. The others followed, backing up very slowly through the branches, keeping their eyes on the white-faces. They were all young men, very young and keen to prove their courage. Keats realised the encounter might not be over just yet.

  ‘What did he say?’ asked Bowen as he watched them warily withdraw through the thick veil of frosted foliage.

  Keats shook his head. ‘Later . . . listen,’ he said, quickly turning round to face the others, ‘put your guns down right now.’

  Weyland shook his head incredulously. ‘Are you mad?’

  Keats placed his rifle gently on the snow. ‘Do it! Before—’

  At that moment there was a shrill cry from ahead and one of the Paiute charged out into the open with a ferocious speed and agility, crossing the distance between them as a frightening blur of motion.

  The Indian singled out Hearst, his eyes locked resolutely on him as he snarled a vicious war cry. The Paiute scrambled across the deep snow, his raised hand holding high his war-club.

  ‘Hearst! Drop your gun!’

  The thickset Mormon froze, his face a static cast of panic. The Indian swooped down on him, swinging the blade of his tamahakan, missing Hearst by no more than a foot, and lightly, almost tenderly, tapping his shoulder with the handle of the club. He whistled past Hearst with a whooping cry of victory - goal achieved - and raced for the safety of the trees beyond.

  Hearst spun round and shakily levelled his gun at the retreating Indian.

  ‘No! Don’t shoot!!’ cried Keats.

  But his words were lost amidst the deafening report of the rifle.

  In the silence, they heard the crack of gunfire rattle around the forest and the startled flutter of feathered wings in the trees above them. Keats quickly scooped up his rifle again.

  ‘Damn! You’ve fuckin’ done it now,’ he spat at the man, dropping to one knee and shouldering his weapon ready to fire. ‘I told you to drop your gun.’

  ‘He . . . I thought . . .’

  ‘He was countin’ coup, you fool! That’s all!’ Keats looked around at them. ‘Close up and ready your guns.’

  The others adopted Keats’s stance, dropping to one knee and shouldering their rifles. Hearst was unready, fumbling to pour a measure of powder into his gun with shaking hands, then dropping his lead shot in the snow.

  ‘Hurry, Hearst,’ said Keats. ‘Hurry, you fool!’

  The faint peel of gunfire was still echoing around the woods as the man finished ramming the shot home with a rod, readied a percussion cap and shouldered his weapon.

  Then it was quiet.

  The silence stretched out for half a minute, all five of them waiting, holding their breath trying to keep the long, heavy barrels steady with hands that were trembling and arms that were tiring.

  ‘Where are they?’ Weyland whispered.

  There was no answer. They were gone.

  ‘Anyone see any of them?’ muttered Keats.

  ‘No.’

  ‘Check to the sides, an’ behind,’ said Keats. ‘The bastards may try and surround us.’

  Weyland obeyed the guide and turned to face towards their rear, taking a few cautious steps back until he nudged up against one of the others.

  ‘Keats, what the hell are we supposed to do now?’ he asked.

  ‘We sit tight an’ wait is what we’ll do.’

  Several minutes passed, with all of them straining to detect the slightest rustle of movement amongst the trees. Keats glanced down to his left and saw the body of the Indian lying on its side. A single small hole was drilled into the back of the young man’s head. His face, by contrast, was spread out over the snow. One of the young Indian’s hands moved involuntarily, slowly balling into a fist, then opening, then closing, then opening again.

  Keats turned and hissed angrily at Hearst. ‘That’s why I told you to drop your fucking gun!’

  ‘I thought his axe had struck me!’ complained Hearst. ‘I thought—’

  ‘It’s done now.’ The old guide shook his head. ‘Some young men amongst them, I knew one of ’em would try an’ count coup.’

  Bowen looked up from the twitching hand. ‘Count coup?’

  ‘A test of manhood, courage. He touched him on the shoulder is all. Nothing more.’

  Several tense minutes passed before Weyland whispered. ‘Mr Keats, what did the Indian say to you? You know, before he turned to go?’

  Keats shrugged. ‘Hell if I know . . . strangest goddamned version of Ute I ever heard.’

  ‘You must have an idea.’

  Keats wondered how much to share with the others. The Paiute hadn’t directly threatened them; in fact his words had carried the cadence of a warning, more than a threat. Although, Keats reflected, that might change now that Hearst had killed one of theirs.

  ‘We ain’t welcome here, was the best I can make of it,’ replied Keats. Not exactly the truth, but close enough.

  CHAPTER 28

  17 October, 1856

  Preston’s wounds seem to be healing well, with only small indications of infection. There is some inflammation around one of the wounds, and a little weeping, but one would have expected far worse from the unclean claws of a wild animal. There are some signs of a mild fever - the man’s skin is hot to touch - but his greatest discomfort seems to be pain from the wound. Inside which, regarding the lacerations, the bruising must be quite considerable. I have given him more laudanum, to which he responds well. It is a potent solution, which I prefer to prescribe sparingly.

  Too much can lead to a reliance upon it.

&nb
sp; Dorothy Dreyton is with me now. As a matter of fact, she lies asleep on the floor. Her vigil is almost constant. She must be at the point of exhaustion to allow herself the luxury of an hour or two to sleep. I wonder if she has the slightest notion that her children have spent more time during the last few days at our end of the camp than they have in theirs.

  Preston stirred restlessly in his sleep and muttered, his deep voice thick with cloying mucus. Ben guessed that the recently administered opiate was doing its work and had entirely banished the pain for now. But it was also weaving a darker magic. On an unconscious mind it conjured the most lurid nightmares. He had seen first-hand the poor wretches that had found themselves admitted to Banner House Asylum by way of over-using laudanum and other such soothing tonics, tormented by visions and delusions that hounded them in their sleeping and - for the less fortunate - waking hours.

  Ben leaned over and stroked his forehead, feeling the warmth and dampness of his pale skin. Lying on a cot in this sorry condition, there was still something very impressive about William Preston, Ben decided; he exuded an air of authority even as he slept. A man like that, in the right place with the right message, could lead a people to do anything.

  Preston’s murmuring continued. Beneath the thin parchment skin of his closed lids, his eyes jerked from one side to the other rapidly. Then with a gasp, they snapped open.

  ‘Mr Preston?’

  He licked his lips dryly - thirsty.

  Ben put away his inkpot, pen and journal and reached for a cup of water. He placed a hand behind Preston’s head, the man’s long grey-blond hair lank with sweat, and lifted him to take a drink.

  ‘Here, some water,’ he said quietly.

  Preston’s glassy eyes focused away from the low canvas ceiling, bulging with the weight of snow, and onto Ben’s face. By the flickering light of the oil lamp, it looked like the elder’s irises were fully dilated.

  The laudanum.

  ‘M-my G-God . . . they . . . they . . . they know!’ gasped Preston.

  ‘Shhhh,’ Ben comforted him. ‘Drink some water.’

  Preston refused. ‘Th-they know!’ he rasped again, grabbing Ben’s hand tightly with one of his own, squeezing desperately.

  Ben leaned down closer to him. ‘Mr Preston . . . William, it’s okay.’

  ‘W-what if . . . they know! They s-see . . . they can see . . . see what I am!’ His voice was dry and soft, a keening whisper that sounded like the wheezing rattle of an old man. Preston stared wildly at him, intently, but Ben wondered what exactly his eyes were seeing - whom he thought he was talking to.

  ‘I . . . I . . . hear nothing from it! N-nothing!’

  Preston’s head jerked round to look at the dark space behind his cot, towards the metal chest nestling amongst sacks of oatmeal. ‘Nothing!’ he cried, his voice cracked pitifully.

  He turned back to face Ben. ‘Eric! What if they know? What if they know we took it . . . that we stole it!’

  Ben could have replied that he wasn’t Eric. But he decided not to.

  ‘Eric, what if they know the angel sh-shuns me? What . . . what’ll I do?’

  Preston slumped back in the cot, his head resting once more against the pillow.

  ‘Just words . . .’ he wheezed quietly, his voice softening, spent. ‘They’re just words . . . just my words.’

  His eyes closed again. ‘My words,’ he muttered, slipping back into a restless and troubled sleep, ‘not God’s . . .’

  Ben sat and watched over him for a while, fidgeting in his sleep, several times murmuring, but nothing Ben could understand.

  He knew the stronger tonics could do that - take the small whispering voices at the back of a person’s mind and turn them into a deafening scream. He was wondering what was troubling Preston in his sleep and had a mind that the answer might lie inside the metal chest just beyond him, when he heard Dorothy Dreyton stirring on the floor and begin to rise.

  ‘Did he wake you, Mrs Dreyton?’

  She said nothing, sitting up and staring wide-eyed at Preston. There was something about her manner that troubled Ben.

  ‘Mrs Dreyton?’

  Her eyes were distant. Without a word, she got to her feet and, stooping low, she pushed the flap aside, letting in a gust of freezing wind that set the flame on the oil lamp dancing, and stepped out into the cold day.

  Above the rumpling wind, he thought he could hear distant raised voices; a commotion from across the clearing, and a ripple of disturbance and questioning from the Mormons standing nearby. Something was going on.

  Ben stood up, and stooped as he swept the flap aside, squinting at the brilliant all-white glare of the day.

  ‘What is it?’

  A man standing dutifully beside the entrance, Mr Hollander, with a dark beard almost down to his belt, pointed across the clearing. Ben could see Keats and several others moving quickly down-slope and emerging from the tree line onto the open ground of the camp, their guns unslung and held ready, anxiously looking back over their shoulders.

  ‘Thought I heard someone shout something about Indians,’ said Mr Hollander.

  CHAPTER 29

  Monday

  Central London

  Julian found a number of books on the subject in the library’s index. The librarian helped him locate them amongst some shelves towards the back. He thanked the young man and sat down at a table to work his way through them.

  He realised he knew absolutely nothing of the Mormon church. He hadn’t even realised that they were otherwise referred to as the Church of Latter Day Saints. It had quickly become evident to him that if he was going to be pitching this project to a commissioning editor or two, it wasn’t going to look good if he hadn’t at least done some token research into the faith of Preston and his followers.

  At an instinctive level, he wondered if there was another angle to this story; an angle other than a simple survival story.

  What if this was some kind of Jonestown thing?

  The idea was as intriguing as it was chilling; that a community led by some charismatic religious nut had been steered into a remote wilderness - by accident or design - and there, every last one of them was talked into taking their own life for some bizarre theistic rationale.

  There were several books he’d pulled up on Amazon that looked interesting and he had quickly printed out the details of them, before taking the District Line tube into town.

  Here in the library they had copies of three out of the eight titles he’d listed. Not bad, considering how obscure some of them were. To be fair, it wasn’t as though Amazon was likely to have all of them in stock either.

  He started by flicking through a recent edition of the Book of Mormon, quickly becoming irritated with the confusing language and woolly, meaningless terminology. He moved swiftly on to the second book: Mormonism, and Departure from Christian Convention. Without drawing breath, it jumped straight into a detailed theological discourse comparing the tenets of Mormonism with those of conventional Christianity.

  He sighed and pushed it to one side.

  The third book was called The First Mormon by one J.D. Pascal. The opening prologue of the book dealt with the Mormon church’s founder, Joseph Smith, and the story of how the Book of Mormon came to be written.

  An atheist for pretty much most of his life, Julian had never had much time for what he considered the incomprehensible, paradoxical rambling of most writing on religion. A classic example of nonsensical theistic nit-picking being the eternal debate over the daily miracle that was said to occur with every communion; the debate over when the bread actually became Christ’s flesh, whether it occurred in the priest’s hand or on the recipient’s tongue . . . or, in fact, whether it was now meant to be considered merely a metaphor - downgraded from being taken as a literal miracle - because by today’s standards it was too far-fetched.

  For Julian, the discussion, at best, was a waste of everyone’s time, up there with ‘How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?’

&nb
sp; However, despite his irritation with that kind of nonsense, he found this particular account of the birth of a brand new faith utterly fascinating. Joseph Smith’s was a tale of divine inspiration, and profound discoveries in the wilderness of Utah of religious relics and seer stones, of ancient angels from bones, and sacred golden scrolls delivered from God in a long-lost language.

  It was pure theatre.

  ‘My God, this is priceless,’ he muttered, scribbling down notes in his jotter as he leafed through the prologue.

  This stuff is fantastic.

  He read on with a growing sense of astonishment at the tale, affirmed regularly by the author as Joseph Smith’s direct testimony, and not enhanced or exaggerated in any way.

  When he had finished he looked at his watch to find the afternoon had slipped away from him and that he had to make tracks to his meeting with Sean. He returned the books to the librarian to file away and stepped out onto Basinghall Street, to be greeted by the jostling hubbub and rush of pedestrian traffic, flowing like a human river towards Mansion House tube station.

  But his mind was on what he’d just spent the last few hours reading - and one circling thought kept bubbling up over and over, making him shake his head with incredulity.

  And . . . this is the fastest-growing faith in America?

  CHAPTER 30

  20 October, 1856

  The ‘others’ - I call them that instead of referring to them as Mormons now. Sam has made it quite clear to me that they don’t think of themselves as members of the Church of Latter Day Saints, nor have they since they left Iowa with Preston. They view themselves as quite apart from anyone else.

  The others, whilst Preston is still convalescing, have been prepared to take instruction from Keats with regard to the setting up of night watches around the clearing. There is a great concern throughout the camp that the Paiute hunting party encountered three days ago might just return and seek revenge for the Indian shot dead by Mr Hearst. I suspect fear of those Indians has driven them all some way towards accepting Keats’s way of doing things. Although Mr Vander and Mr Hearst, being the two most senior members of the quorum, Preston’s trusted lieutenants, are nominally in charge, neither carry the authority of Preston, and on this matter are more swayed by Keats’s greater experience.