The Gates of Babylon

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Authors: Michael Wallace

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BOOK: The Gates of Babylon
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ALSO BY MICHAEL WALLACE

Other titles in the Righteous Series

The Righteous

Mighty and Strong

The Wicked

The Blessed and the Damned

Destroying Angel

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

Text copyright © 2014 Michael Wallace
All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

Published by Thomas & Mercer, Seattle

www.apub.com

ISBN-13: 9781477809693
ISBN-10: 1477809694
Library of Congress Number: 2013907888

For Melinda, who brought me water in the desert

CONTENTS

START READING

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN

CHAPTER TWENTY

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

CHAPTER THIRTY

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.


Genesis 8:22

CHAPTER ONE

Jacob Christianson’s wife woke before he could sneak out of the bedroom. Maybe she heard leather creak as he pulled on his boots, or maybe she shifted in her sleep and sensed, in the way wives do, that the other half of the bed was empty. In any event, something changed in her breathing, and he knew she was listening.

When he finished buttoning his shirt, he rose from the chair and made his way silently to the closet for his sheepskin jacket. She was awake, and she knew that he knew she was awake, but maybe if they kept up the fiction she would let him go in peace. He would walk down the long hallway lined with rooms—rooms filled with children, unmarried half siblings, and his father’s widows—then slip out the back door without argument. Armed men would be watching the driveway, so instead of the truck, he’d saddle up a horse and ride across the desert to meet the others. Get this ugly business over with and return home by breakfast.

But instead of making a run for it, Jacob paused at the door and waited for her to speak. He rested his hand on the back of her empty wheelchair.

“I assume you have a reason,” Fernie said at last.

“I always do.”

“Medical supplies?”

“Not this time.” When she didn’t respond, he added, “I’ll share if you want me to. But I can tell you how and why and with whom, and it won’t make you worry any less.”

“I’m going to worry either way,” she said. “I’m going to lie here, wishing my legs would carry me down those stairs so I could be by your side while you did whatever it is you do.”

Jacob wouldn’t want that in any event. It was bad enough putting his brother and sister in danger, and putting his friends into morally compromising situations, without placing Fernie in physical and moral risk as well. And what if she told him no, it wasn’t worth it? The time had come to trust in the Lord and not the arm of flesh.

And what if we’re alone? What if there is no God and we have no help?

Then he was alone, and that was the nightmare. Every time a patient came into his clinic, he wondered how he would remove an appendix without analgesics, or treat conjunctivitis without antibiotics. Any day now—
any
day—someone would come in with a strange lump in the armpit or breast and then he’d collide headlong with the near nineteenth-century reality of their situation. How to treat cancer without an oncologist. Because nobody from the church would leave Blister Creek for
Salt Lake, knowing she was likely to end up in a refugee camp, unable to return.

“Who else?” Fernie asked, jarring him from his worries.

“Steve Krantz. Eliza and David. Sister Miriam. Brother Stephen Paul.”

“So many.” Fernie sounded surprised. “It’s something big, then.”

“Bigger than usual,” Jacob admitted. “We’re leaving the valley.”

“And everyone you’re taking can shoot and kill, so it must be dangerous.”

“That’s also true.”

“Don’t forget the people who love you and need you.”

“What does that mean?” he asked.

“You can’t worry so much about filling your father’s shoes that you forget you have a wife and four children.”

“I’ll never fill his shoes, even if I wanted to. And nobody in the church would believe it anyway. They’re too quick to notice my flaws and doubts.”

So much pressure. As their physical and spiritual leader. As a doctor. A husband and father. He was so busy these days that he barely noticed until it was lifted from his shoulders.

Last week, during a warm stretch that marked a feeble attempt at an Indian summer during this cold, wet fall, Jacob made the time to take the oldest two, Daniel and Leah, into the Ghost Cliffs with a map, a compass, and handpicks. It took about an hour to find the fossil bed where his own father had brought him as a boy. They flaked open shale like leaves of a stone book. Between the
pages lay the record of an ancient sea, written in fossilized shells and trilobites. Daniel found the skeleton of a sardine-sized fish and Jacob took his son’s thumb and traced it over the fine rib bones. The stone, freshly exposed to the air for the first time in ages, gave off a faint, distinct smell.

And Jacob was suddenly caught in a moment of nostalgia so deep it was as if his hand were the one being held. As if he were the son, and his father stood behind his shoulder, so tall and strong and knowing everything about everything. Would Daniel and Leah remember this moment some day, and in the same way?

Thinking about his children, and then about his father, brought a deep ache. “I’m not taking casual risks, you know that.”

“Come here for a minute,” she said.

“Fernie,” he began, but thought better of his objections, and made his way back to the bed.

Fernie shifted her pillows and maneuvered in the bed until she was sitting with her back against the headboard. She groped in the darkness for his hand. “Can we say a prayer before you leave?”

“I guess so,” he said. “If it’s quick. Go ahead, you say it.”

She squeezed his hand. “Our Dear Heavenly Father,” she began. “We come before thee to ask thy blessing upon thy servant, Brother Jacob…”

As she asked the Lord to watch over his endeavor, Jacob’s mind turned to the practical problems crowding in from all sides—how to get seed for next spring’s harvest, whether to rebuild the old millrace so they could still make flour if the power failed, when and how to recover their grain from the US Department of Agriculture. And what about the road to Panguitch? The highway
patrol had given up securing it against bandits, and if Blister Creek didn’t do something about it themselves, it would take a major expedition every time they wanted to leave the valley. Did they have enough wood to keep warm this winter?

His mind snapped back to Fernie’s prayer as her tone changed.

“… and help Jacob to recognize right from wrong.”

What was that about? Not like he was going out to kill anyone, he only—

“And build his faith. Wipe away his doubts, and soothe his troubled heart. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.”

Wipe away his doubts? As if it were no more than cleaning up a grimy little face. Here, I’ll spit on my thumb and wipe it off. Oh look, here’s another smudge of doubt up here. There, isn’t that better?

“Thank you,” he said with some effort.

“Whatever you do tonight,” she said, “do it with love and hope.”

“As opposed to fear and pessimism?”

“Yes, that. We know the Lord is on our side, and all we have to do is trust Him always. He has promised to protect His chosen people during the horrors of the Last Days.”

“Assuming these are the Last Days,” he said. “And assuming that we are the chosen people and not some crazy polygamist cult in the desert.”

The painfully earnest tone dropped from her voice. “Are you sure those two things are mutually exclusive?”

As he kissed her goodbye, Jacob felt his wife settling into her faith. The narrative that she wove for herself, the hand of the Lord
in all things. She had prayed and now she knew it would turn out fine.

Love and hope, he thought, as he reached the hallway and felt his way toward the stairs. He was setting out tonight determined to do business with thieves and smugglers. Love and hope? More like desperation.

CHAPTER TWO

Jacob was the first conspirator to arrive. He rode from the west side of the valley on his horse, following a ranch road by moonlight until he arrived at the ruined gas station with its gutted foundation filled with tumbleweed. Once he was around back, he slid from the saddle, pulled his deer rifle from the saddle holster, and tied his horse to a clump of sagebrush. He returned to the front of the gas station to wait beside the fiberglass brontosaurus with its broken tail.

The lights of Blister Creek flickered to the north, huddled beneath the frowning might of the Ghost Cliffs that marked a fortress-like boundary on the north side of the valley. A full moon hung over the cliffs, glimmering a strange orange color, like a huge jack-o-lantern suspended in the sky.

A few minutes later, a V8 truck with a mounted crane above its flatbed crunched up the road from the south—no lights, navigating
by the light of the moon. When the truck stopped, a tall, lean man with a strong jaw and piercing eyes stepped down to the pavement. He carried an M6 assault rifle slung over one shoulder.

He gave a curt nod. “Jacob.”

“Stephen Paul,” Jacob acknowledged. “Were you followed?”

“I was not. They left the road unguarded—all the way into town, I think—but I didn’t take chances. We’re expecting David and Miriam?”

“That’s right.”

“And who is driving the tanker?”

“Our usual guy. Said he’d be here by one thirty.” Jacob checked his watch. “Twenty-seven minutes. If he shows, we’ll be to there and back by dawn.”

“You’ve got the cash?”

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