Exit Kingdom (21 page)

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Authors: Alden Bell

BOOK: Exit Kingdom
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Beyond bein my brother, he says, I don’t
give a damn what you are.

It’s an ambiguous statement, but one that is just left to hang there between them. Abraham does not ask for more and Moses does not proffer it.

You know, Abraham says after a while. These two nights, I can’t say as I was sure you’d come back for me.

No? Moses says and rubs his eyes against the tiredness he finds there. Then you mistake me, brother. I’m the
keeper and the caliper of your life, Abraham. Some- times it seems that’s
the beginning and ending of what I am.

*

You are already wondering, the man Moses says, what became of him, this brother of mine. You see me, here in the dark. It’s my voice talkin the night through to all its
corners. But it seems I’ve swapped travellin companions.

He points to where the large mute
sleeps on the ground, the shape of the man like a desert stone.

Maury, he says, I picked him up later. A child of God, that one – and more trouble to haul around than you might think. But he’s a wonder at keepin his business to himself –
which is more than I can say for most. No, he came later.

Moses scratches at his beard and brushes his hair out of his face, exposing, barely visible
in the blackness, the pale lumen of his skin crossed diagonal by the eye patch and its
strap.

You’re wonderin – is this the story that kills Abraham, that brings him his due which the universe in all its scaled balance, all its holy recompense, owes to him? Is this the
story that finishes him and closes the book on the ledger of his accounts? Is that the holiness that drives this story
crash bang to its God-spoke end? Or maybe it’s some other story that
takes Abraham away from me? That’s what you’re wonderin, ain’t it?

He pauses.

There was a girl, he says. Not even a woman. A little girl. A warrior she was, and she knew about the balance of things. The order . . . What? The girl? She don’t belong here. This
ain’t her story. Forget I said anything about her.

Moses picks something from his teeth, but his eyes look at no one – they never stray from the firelight, as though the elements of the earth themselves are his true audience. He speaks
to the land, and the land is nourished by his breath.

One story or another, Moses says, it makes no difference. All men find their ends in stories told by firelight. My end, too, when it comes – it’ll be spoke
by someone, and my
death’ll persist a little while on the planet.

Then he looks again at the shape of his travelling companion.

Or, he says, it’ll just keep mute.

*

They are on the road. Moses has now travelled back and forth over this same length of highway more times than he has ever done just about anything in his singular life. The road
begins to have an aspect
of familiarity that makes him queasy in the pit of his stomach. As though time has stopped dead – as though the progress of the earth has wound down, entropy coming
to bear all over, everything gone flaccid and spent. The rote repetition of days and action. He recalls it from the time before – when it was known simply as life. The things you
might
do were shoved to the side, he recalls, in
favour of the things you
could manage
to do in the brief hiatuses between doing all the same things you did the day before and all the same things
you would do again tomorrow.

Yes, life. Life is what they called it.

And Moses supposes he could do worse than an exis- tence filled with equal parts death and discovery – when the alternative is life and listlessness.

He will be happy
to be off this road at last. Happy to be forging ahead.

They are two hours from Colorado City when they come across a wreckage that Moses doesn’t remember from before. Perhaps he has got the roads mixed up and they are now on a different route.
Perhaps he has become blinded to the nuances of the world now that he is locked in the repetition of it.

Moses brings the car to a stop.

Abraham starts to complain about his leg and doesn’t mind the break from riding folded up in the passenger seat.

The leg’s stiff as hell, he says. I got to stretch it. Plus, I need to piss.

So they climb out of the car. It is dark again already – the days are shuffling by quickly now, as though in the agile hands of a professional card sharp. And maybe God is a gambler after
all.

Peabody helps Abraham stand, and the two begin to limp in circles around the car.

Moses takes the stub of a cigar out of his pocket and lights it with a match. The road is a cut through the hills, and he gazes around him at the trees. The road looks familiar and unfamiliar at
the same time. The wreckage blocking their way, though, doesn’t look new. He puffs thoughtfully on his cigar.

I’m going up to that ridge, he says to the others. Take a look around.

He climbs the slope, pulling himself up using tree branches that pop and snap in his mammoth grip. He is out of breath by the time he crests the ridge. Down below there is nothing. It’s
possible that they are on the cusp of the Colorado City grid, but it makes no difference. The hill on which he stands is just one rib
of many on a cage of ridges that ripple the landscape. He can
only see the dipping distance between one line of hills and the next – and there is only emptiness in that unlit valley.

He sits for a moment to recover from the climb. He listens to his own heavy breathing, the rasp of air in his throat. He looks at the fat cigar between his thick fingers. He is a brute, he
knows, and there
should be laws and cages for such as he. But sometimes he is surprised to discover that he has found a home in the wild black of what America has become. He belongs on the edges of
the world – but now the world is all edges. Margins without centre for ever and ever.

Then he hears a shout from down below, indistinct and panicked, back in the direction of the car where he left Abraham and
Peabody. Then other noises. The sound of scuffle and event, followed by
two thunderous screeches of pain – voices Moses doesn’t recognize. Then another shout – his name:

Mose!

It’s his brother’s voice. And then Moses is running, crashing down through the trees, an ursine monster smashing through the underbrush, calling out, Abe! Abe!

He hears the sound of an engine below – a car
speeding away. And then he bursts through the scrub at the edge of the road and sees the mess in the pool of light cast by the headlights of
the car they have been driving. It’s a body, but not Abraham’s and not the doctor’s. Moses kneels over it.

It’s a man, grimy-faced and ugly. He wears a leather jacket with studs on it, and there’s a baseball bat still gripped tight in his dead right
hand. He lies in a wide pool of jugular
blood that is still pumping with weak persistence from the wound in his neck. Struck through his neck, from one side to the other like some horrible mockery of a bow tie, is a bowie knife that
Moses recognizes as his brother’s.

Abe! Moses calls. Abe!

There is no response, but when he hushes he can hear a guttural choke from the ditch by the side
of the road. He rushes over to find the doctor, Peabody, holding his hands over a puncture wound
in his chest. The blood seeps through his fingers, leaking insistently through his pathetic grip.

Who? Moses says. Fletcher?

Peabody coughs wetly. He shakes his head.

Highwaymen, he struggles to say through his gasps. Fletcher, he put a bounty on your heads. Three men. Abraham got one.
Wounded another. But they took him.

Dead or no?

Peabody coughs again, cringes in his breathing.

Dead or no? Moses says again, almost angry.

No, Peabody says. Fletcher’ll want to.

Okay, Moses says and begins to lift Peabody. Come on, I’ll get you to help.

But Peabody coughs a spray of blood over Moses’ face, shakes his head and pushes Moses away. There are reddish-brown
smears all over his bald pate, the thin strands of long white hair
plastered to his skull with drying blood.

I’m dead, Peabody says. It’s about time, right?

The doctor’s body seizes up with some internal organic fluttering, as of his organs all retching moribund against their own expiration. Then Peabody calms as Moses watches him, his
breathing going slack and the grip on his chest
wound loosening. He can see the man’s slowing heartbeat in the weak surges of blood coming between his fingers.

It’s about time for all of us, old man, says Moses.

But by that point, he is fairly certain that Peabody is already dead.

Nine

Rites » Pursuit » The Aftermath of an Attack » A War Room » Whitfield Explains » A Philosophy of Naming » The Abiding Dead

Moses does not delay. He takes a small knife from his pocket and drives it up underneath the doctor’s jaw and into his brain. There is no time to give him greater service
than this. Then he goes quickly to the car, but before he gets in something occurs
to him. He walks around to the front where the body of the brigand is lying dead, his brain still intact. He does
not want to put an end to this man who would messenger his brother to death. Instead he wants to hurt, to maim. So he raises his leg high and brings his heavy boot down onto the corpse’s
face. There is a brittle wet crunch as the jaw bone shatters and dislocates from the skull. When
Moses raises his foot again, there is an awful gaping smile on the dead man’s face. But the
brain is unharmed. He will come back – he will be unable to eat.

Have a nice death, you bastard, says Moses Todd to the corpse.

Then he climbs into the car and backs it up. There is no time to finesse his way around the blockade before him, no time to search for another car on the road beyond.
He will ram his way
through, and it will either work or it won’t. The impact will either destroy the car or it won’t. But he is large with rage, he feels his brute, animal self in the very heat that rises
from his skin. He will not be stopped.

He backs up far enough to get the speed he needs, locks the safety belt over his heaving torso, then accelerates quickly towards the blockade that
consists of two burned-out cars positioned
diagonally across the road. He draws his own car as far to the left as possible, two wheels onto the shoulder of the road.

When the collision comes, it comes hard and expected. He clips the back end of one of the cars and it spins, letting him past but also roostering his own car into a screeching spin that sends
him out of control and off the
road on the opposite side. The spinning car collides sidelong into the trunk of a tree – glass shatters and the passenger door crumples inward with an aching
twist of metal.

When everything is still once more, Moses releases his grip on the wheel and checks himself for broken bones. There is blood all over his face and hands, but he does not know who it belongs to.
Some of it could be
his – but the ownership of blood is a sucker’s guess in such a sanguine world. It does not hurt much to move his arms and legs, and he figures that is enough to keep
going forward.

The engine is still running, which is a good sign – and even though one of the headlights has been smashed to nothing along with the whole right front of the car, the vehicle still
functions well enough to scrape
itself away from the tree trunk and huff its way back to the road.

Moses drives. He looks forward, grim and inexhaustible, and the night unfolds before him. He looks for tail lights in the distance but there is only black – no sign of the car that stole
his brother away from him.

No matter. He will find where they took him. He will find Fletcher and his band of thieves. And then there
will be a surfeit of death – and Moses does not much care whose.

*

He drives through the evening. He does not know where else to go, so he continues to the citadel in Colorado Springs where he left the Vestal. It is still hours before dawn when
he arrives. But the place looks different. The front gate looks like it has been driven through with a large truck. There is a whole
battalion of soldiers there who all point their guns at him when
he arrives.

What happened? he says, climbing out of the car.

They shine a spotlight in his eyes.

State your name, someone calls through a bullhorn.

What happened? he says again. They got my brother.

State your name, the voice repeats.

But he doesn’t have to reply this time, because there is commotion. Someone
must recognize him from the night before, because he is taken and escorted onto the compound, across the wide
courtyard. The lights on the jaw-bone chapel illuminate the structure violent against the blackness of night.

Inside, he is taken to a new place, a large room where people in uniforms of authority are gathered around a table in grim, controlled debate. On the sidelines, Moses spots
the old man, Pastor
Whitfield, who approaches him.

Marauders, Whitfield says before Moses has a chance to ask him anything. A caravan. It was led by a man in a sombrero.

Fletcher, Moses says.

You know this man?

He took my brother. Where’d he go? Which direction?

You aren’t . . . affiliated with him?

I ain’t affiliated. Except in the sense that I’m the man scheduled to
remove the head from the rest of his body.

They broke through the fence.

They were after the girl, Moses explains. The Vestal.

Whitfield looked confused.

But they didn’t take the girl, Whitfield says.

You repelled them?

We did. At some cost to our people.

He’s still got my brother. Do you know where they went?

Slow down, says Whitfield. You don’t understand.

He reaches a hand out to touch Moses’ arm, and Moses strikes it away. There is something happened inside him. Some safety turned off – some tribal code of civility gone away in the
face of his brother’s abduction. He gives Whitfield a look as violent and full of murder as any on the wild plain.

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