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Pillar of Fire

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by R. R. Irvine




  PILLAR OF FIRE

  A Moroni Traveler Novel

  PILLAR OF FIRE

  A Moroni Traveler Novel

  By R. R. Irvine

  The author wishes to thank Natalie Bowen for making the journey.

  To Elisabeth Story

  And to the memory of John Buettner-Janusch who helped me see Utah through fresh eyes

  PILLAR OF FIRE

  Copyright © 1995 by Robert Irvine.

  All Rights Reserved.

  First eBook copyright © 2013 by AudioGO. All Rights Reserved.

  978-1-4821-0215-4 Trade

  978-1-62460-678-6 Library

  Cover photograph © iStock.com.

  Other eBooks by R.R. Irvine:

  Robert Christopher Series

  Jump Cut

  Freeze Frame

  The Face Out Front

  Ratings are Murder

  Moroni Traveler Mysteries

  Baptism for the Dead

  The Angels' Share

  Gone to Glory

  Called Home

  The Spoken Word

  The Great Reminder

  The Hosanna Shout

  Pillar of Fire

  Nicolette Scott Mysteries

  Track of the Scorpion

  Flight of the Serpent

  Wake of the Hornet

  The Return of the Spanish Lady

  Thread of the Spider

  Novels

  Horizontal Hold

  The Devil’s Breath

  Footsteps

  Barking Dogs

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  1

  A HALO, some trick of the light, surrounded him like bridled fire. A foot-high platform, nothing more than raw pine planks crudely nailed together like a barker’s soapbox, creaked beneath his shifting weight. Gusting wind flapped his shirttails as he stretched out his hands toward the crowd, which abruptly closed around the wooden stand as if reacting to a prearranged signal.

  “If you came here expecting miracles,” he told them, his voice rising, “leave now. I’m only a man, not a magician. God knows my failures outnumber my successes.”

  His hands fell, thumbs hooking into the pockets of his well-worn jeans, a cowboy’s pose.

  “You cured my son,” a woman said.

  “I comforted him. I spoke with him, but in the end he cured himself.”

  “You gave him medicine when all others said it was useless.”

  “I gave him hope.”

  Another woman fell on her knees, hands together in prayer, eyes shining with gratitude. “My child also. You stole her back from death’s door.”

  Shaking his head, the man raised his eyes to the red buttes that dominated the horizon. The soil, too, was red, and the sky, in contrast, seemed a painful blue beset with clouds shaped like white boulders.

  The kneeling woman held up her child; the man beside her followed suit. “We ask to feel your touch, your blessing,” they said in unison.

  “Each will be seen in turn.”

  “Bless you,” the crowd murmured.

  Someone screamed. A woman, wild-eyed, hair as disheveled as Medusa’s, leapt onto the platform, thrust a revolver hard against the man’s chest, and fired. He stumbled backward a step before regaining enough balance to look down at his blackened shirt front. He touched what should have been a wound, then smiled to show he wasn’t hurt. His lips moved. The words, lost in the tumult as the woman was knocked from the platform and subdued, could have been “I’m sorry.”

  The image froze. Josiah Ellsworth, apostle of the Mormon Church, fiddled with the remote control device in his hand, punching buttons until the television screen went black and the videotape ejected from the VCR on Moroni Traveler’s desk.

  “They say he’s the messiah,” Ellsworth said. “They say God’s hand reached out and stopped the bullet.”

  Traveler said nothing.

  “I’m told he walked out of the desert one day and began working miracles,” Ellsworth added. He was a tall, bone-thin man, an inch or so below Traveler’s height, dressed in a dark blue, almost black, suit, stark white shirt, and funereal tie.

  “Does the man have a name?” Traveler asked.

  “Jason Thurgood.”

  Traveler gestured at the blank screen. “Where was this taken?”

  “Just outside Fire Creek, one of those old mining towns in the Furnace Mountains. It’s what they call a home video and was taken by one of Thurgood’s followers. Someone, a friend, had it dubbed for me.”

  He rose from the client chair in front of Traveler’s desk, stepped to the door, and knocked on the frosted panel. Immediately, two men, the Tongan bodyguards who’d earlier carried in the TV equipment, retrieved the gear and departed.

  As soon as their footsteps faded down the Chester Building’s granite hallway, Ellsworth unfolded a map and pointed out Fire Creek in the extreme southwest corner of Utah, not far from the borders of Arizona and Nevada.

  “That’s cult country,” the apostle said, running his finger along the state line. “Filled with would-be prophets claiming to have the ear of God. Polygamists mostly, who mistake hormones for piety.”

  “And Thurgood’s one of them?”

  Ellsworth returned to his chair, sat stiffly, steepled his fingers, and stared at Traveler. Traveler stared back, wondering at the man’s motives. Being an apostle placed Ellsworth among the chosen twelve who advised the president of the Mormon Church, the living prophet. But there were those who said that Josiah Ellsworth was more than an apostle, that he was in fact the White Prophet, the head of the legendary Danites, the church’s avenging angels since the days of Joseph Smith and Brigham Young.

  “I knew Kary, your mother,” Ellsworth said abruptly.

  “In what sense?”

  “Why is it I have the feeling that you expect me to answer ‘In the biblical sense’?”

  “In that case we might be related,” Traveler said, knowing that a man like Ellsworth would certainly be aware that Traveler’s legal father, Martin, had been off fighting a war when Traveler was conceived.

  Ellsworth smiled, removed a white, crisply ironed handkerchief from his pocket, and wiped his brow, which looked perfectly dry. “You need air conditioning, young man.”

  “We usually get cross ventilation.” Traveler indicated the office’s two open windows.

  “It’s a hundred degrees outside, hot enough to turn the asphalt into chewing gum, and God knows what it is in this office,” Ellsworth said. “And to answer your question, as far as I know Thurgood himself isn’t a polygamist. He’s not even a cult member.”

  Ellsworth reached into his coat pocket and extracted one of those self-sealing plastic sandwich ba
gs, containing what looked like a black ball. “When I was a boy we rolled tar into balls and chewed it because there wasn’t enough money for gum. On hot days like this, we’d dig it out of the road with our bare hands.”

  His perfectly manicured fingers, Traveler noticed, were far too clean for such a deed. No doubt his bodyguards had obliged.

  Ellsworth broke the bag’s seal and sniffed at the opening. “It brings back memories, I’ll tell you. Childhood is such a wondrous time. Of course, these days you can’t chew it, not knowing what’s in it.” He took a long deep breath. “Before I came here I was in the temple praying for guidance. When I stepped out into the heat, I looked across South Temple Street and saw the Chester Building and remembered your office. I took that as a sign I should come here.”

  Traveler clenched his teeth. “Does Willis Tanner have anything to do with this?”

  “He recommends you highly, if that’s what you mean. He’s a loyal friend of yours, and has been since grade school, as I understand it.”

  Traveler nodded.

  “One strayed,” Ellsworth said. “The other took God’s path.”

  “I know Willis speaks for Elton Woolley, the prophet, but does he speak for you too?”

  Ellsworth’s lips twitched, as if fighting a smile. “I wanted you to see the videotape for yourself before we talked. What do you think happened? Was it a miracle?”

  “It could have been a blank cartridge in the gun, a setup.”

  “Even as we speak, the woman who fired the shot is being held in jail at the county seat, charged with attempted murder.”

  “Have you spoken with the police there?”

  “Not personally, but I’m assured that the attempt was real enough. My sources say she doesn’t deny it. In fact, from what I hear, she says she’d shoot Thurgood again if she ever gets the chance. Of course, the whole thing may be some kind of cult dispute, though the woman—she calls herself Sister Vonda Hillman by the way—is mute on that subject. As for the police, they say she’s a member of a cult that calls itself Moroni’s Children. From what I hear, the Children have run all the other cults into Arizona.”

  Ellsworth resealed the sandwich bag and set it aside on Traveler’s desk. “Not the kind of offspring a Moroni like yourself had in mind, I’m sure.”

  “I still don’t see what you want from me,” Traveler said.

  “If the gun was loaded, that would make it a miracle, wouldn’t it?”

  Traveler replayed the scene in his mind. Thurgood had been wearing a loose-fitting shirt. A flak jacket could have been concealed beneath it.

  “I’m only a private investigator,” he said.

  “ ‘The Lord Omnipotent who reigneth, shall come down from heaven among the children of men, and shall dwell in a tabernacle of clay, and shall go forth amongst men, working mighty miracles, such as healing the sick.’ ”

  “Who has he healed?” Traveler asked.

  “That’s why I’m here,” Ellsworth said. “I want you to investigate him for me. Records show he’s licensed to practice medicine in this state, but we can’t find any indication that he’s ever done so. I want you to find out the truth about him. Is he the fake I think he is, or something more? Is it possible that the messiah is among us?”

  “No you don’t. That’s your area of expertise, not mine.”

  Ellsworth held up a hand. “A man in my position can’t go poking around in a small town like Fire Creek, or even a rural county seat like St. George. In any case, if I send in one of my people, someone known to be connected with the church, word would get around that we take this man Thurgood seriously. The resulting publicity could be disastrous.”

  “Surely, you can’t believe that he’s anything but a do-gooder?” Traveler said. “At worst a charlatan.”

  “My daughter believes, that’s enough. Her son, my grandson, who’s named after me, has Hodgkin’s disease. So far he hasn’t responded to conventional medical treatment, which means he’s going to die. So it’s no wonder my Liz—Elisabeth Smoot’s her married name—is willing to try anything. Acupuncture, Chinese herbs, or Jason Thurgood. Whatever works.”

  “Take him to Thurgood and be done with it. Even if he’s a quack, it can’t hurt the boy.”

  “She and young Josiah are with him now, living under God knows what kind of conditions.”

  “What do you expect me to do, play doubting Thomas and stick my finger in his wound to see if it’s real?”

  “If that’s what it takes.”

  “What about your daughter’s husband? Why can’t he do your dirty work?”

  “Surely you’ve heard of Orson Smoot?”

  Traveler shook his head.

  “My son-in-law is a theologian and church archeologist, and he’s not yet forty. He’s on his way to bigger things and can’t afford this kind of scandal. At the moment he’s doing God’s work in Kansas City, seeking the very first of our ancestors.”

  According to Mormon scripture, the Garden of Eden was located somewhere in that Missouri town.

  Traveler swung around in his chair and stared at the temple across the street. Beyond the walled temple grounds stood the Mormons’ Genealogy Library, said to house just about every written record available on earth. “When it comes to investigations,” he said, “you have everything at your fingertips already. An army of Danites if need be.”

  “Don’t believe everything you hear about me,” Ellsworth said.

  “Are you saying you aren’t the White Prophet?”

  “What I’m saying, Mr. Traveler, is that I’m offering you a great deal of money, carte blanche if necessary, to do a job for me, which I can’t do for myself. I want you to go down there and put this man under a microscope. Confirmation, that’s what I want, on every rumor and every fact. I want you to act for me, to be my eyewitness on the spot. Naturally I want my grandson cured, but if that’s not possible, I don’t want him tormented by some cult country quack.”

  It had been late September the last time Traveler had been in cult country. He’d gotten to a place called Cow Fork, looking for a young runaway called Lynn Ann. Once again he could almost feel the furnace blasts of heat that had rolled over the blistered landscape as the small town shimmered in a late summer death grip. The heat and the thirsty soil had soaked up all that blood in the blink of an eye. The ground was red on red and the blood hardly showed.

  Traveler shivered at the memory and turned his back on Salt Lake’s prime temple view. “You must have people of your own who are better qualified.”

  Ellsworth folded his arms tightly across his chest. “I want a nonbeliever like yourself. If my grandson dies because of Thurgood . . .” He left the threat unsaid. Coming from the reputed head of the Danites, it brought the hair up on the back of Traveler’s neck.

  “A grandfather should know better than to put personal vanity ahead of his grandson’s well-being,” Traveler said.

  Ellsworth took hold of his bag, fingered the ball of tar through the clear plastic, and shook his head slowly. “Chewing gum and candy, that’s what seven-year-olds should think about, not Hodgkin’s disease.”

  Sighing, he put away the bag, retrieved a snapshot from another pocket, and slid the photo across the desk. In it, a tow-headed boy was holding a puppy in his arms and smiling into the camera lens.

  “That was taken last year,” Ellsworth said. “He was six. This was taken last month.”

  A second snapshot showed a bald-headed, skeletal child propped on pillows. The impact on Traveler was visceral and sudden, not unlike a blind-side tackle from his old football playing days. He couldn’t help comparing the boy’s dispirited expression with that of the bright-eyed little girl that he and Martin had rescued from Bingham Canyon a few months back. No doubt the White Prophet had counted on Traveler making such a comparison.

  “I’ll need my father’s help,” Traveler said. “He’s in Nevada at the moment, visiting an old friend.”

  “So I hear. A missing person, isn’t it, your father’s s
pecialty as I understand it.”

  “It’s more of a condolence visit.”

  “They tell me your father’s in Pioche, just across the border. It would be an easy drive from there to Fire Creek.”

  Next to the photograph Ellsworth laid a credit card with Traveler’s name on it, along with the name of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

  Traveler stared. The card proved that the apostle’s visit wasn’t the result of a spur-of-the-moment glance at the Chester Building.

  Traveler was about to voice his suspicions when Ellsworth said, “I wouldn’t delay if I were you. Young Josiah doesn’t look like he can last much longer.”

  2

  TRAVELER WATCHED from his office window as Josiah Ellsworth’s Tongans marched out into the middle of South Temple Street and held up traffic like school crossing guards. Only then did the apostle cross the sticky asphalt and disappear into the temple grounds.

  A few cars honked, no doubt driven by Gentiles, the term applied to all non-Mormons. When traffic resumed, the tires made slapping, rainstorm sounds on the liquefying tar. Another ten degrees and South Temple really would turn into chewing gum.

  A sudden yearning for a stick of Blackjack overwhelmed him. He rooted in Martin’s desk, hoping for something to chew. All he found was an open, dusty-looking roll of Tums. He popped one in his mouth and sucked on it. It made him more thirsty than ever.

  Five minutes of running the tap produced nothing but lukewarm water. Chester water, Martin called it, drinkable enough in the lobby but heating up as it rose through the Chester Building’s ancient pipes to their office on the third floor.

  Chester water was an August phenomenon, which Martin blamed on Brigham Young. If he’d settled higher up the Wasatch Mountains, Martin claimed, instead of proclaiming his promised land in the middle of a desert sinkhole, his city wouldn’t have to suffer through its yearly heat wave.

  Traveler stepped to the east-facing window to check the Wasatch for himself. Their 10,000-foot peaks still showed the snow that provided the city with its year-round runoff, making the promised land possible.

  Traveler mopped his face. Ellsworth was right. The office of Moroni Traveler and Son did need air conditioning. But the Chester Building predated such luxuries, and a window unit would spoil the view from either window.

 

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