Timpanogos (16 page)

Read Timpanogos Online

Authors: D. J. Butler

“My goodness!” Pratt ejaculated.
 
“Brother Lee didn’t make this.
 
No one in the Valley, not even John Browning, made something
like this!”

“I don’t know where it came from,” Roxie said.
 
“I do know that John has been dealing
with southerners a lot today.”

Pratt paced a circle around the Seth Beast, examining it
closely.
 
The whistle on Poe’s
breast felt very heavy.

“And how does it
work
?”
Pratt asked.
 
“Where are the
controls
?”
 
Poe
would have sworn that the long hair standing up at the back of his head stood
up even straighter as he examined Hunley’s craftsmanship, like curious
antennae.

Roxie shrugged and shook her head.
 
“He didn’t say.”

Pratt stopped pacing and clapped his hands together
once.
 
“Well,” he said, “there’ll
be plenty of time to play with this new toy later.
 
As I was saying, your arrival here is very timely.
 
Tonight… or rather, tomorrow morning,
you will be witness to a unique spectacle, a great first time event in the
history of mankind.”
 
He turned,
and gestured to his men at the Seth Beast.
 
“Leave this here, gentlemen; we can deal with it later.”
“What’s that?” Poe asked uneasily in his false twang.

Pratt turned back to face them, and he held a gun in his
hand.
 
Not a weapon of any sort
that Poe recognized—it was bulky and square, to be held in two hands, and
its muzzle was far too big for anything resembling an ordinary bullet.

“Why, Mr. Poe, the complete destruction of the Great Salt
Lake City, of course,” Pratt said calmly.
 
“By aeronautical assault, and phlogiston rays.”

“No!” Roxie gasped.

Poe considered, and couldn’t see any reason that the
obliteration of the Mormon capital would serve Lee’s interests.
 
“I thought Lee wanted to be President,”
he said mildly, dropping the false accent.
 
No point denying his identity, since Pratt had obviously
recognized him.
 
“Either his plan
is so Byzantine I cannot penetrate it, or it is misconceived.”


Lee’s
plan!” Pratt
snapped, and then chortled.
 
He’d
have looked jolly, without the exotic and sinister gun in his hands.
 
“Wrong
twice!

What did
that
mean?
Poe wondered, but couldn’t guess.
 

Your
plan, then,” he
said.
 
“Why do you want to destroy
your home?”

Pratt nodded to his men and they swooped down on Poe and
Roxie, drawing guns and grabbing with hard-knuckled hands.
 
Roxie shot Poe an imploring look and he
held his face impassive.
 
This was
not the time to resist.
 
The men
began dragging Poe and Roxie away.
 
There were so many of them, they lifted the two prisoners off the floor
entirely.

“I’ll keep the explanation simple,” Pratt shouted over the
heads of his hired thugs, trailing in their wake.
 
“John D. Lee killed my brother.
 
Brigham Young, in his infinite wisdom, forgave John Lee.”

“For that you will murder the entire city?” Roxie shouted
back.
 
Her face was twisted in
anger and surprise and pain.

Pratt ignored her travail.
 
“Lee has done me the favor of punishing Brother Brigham for
his virtue,” he further explained.
 
“Tomorrow morning, I in turn shall punish John Lee for his vice!”

 

Here ends
Timpanogos

 

Part the Third of
City of
the Saints

 

Part the Fourth is
Teancum

 

###

 

About D.J. Butler

 

D.J. Butler (Dave) is a novelist living in the Rocky Mountain
northwest. His training is in law, and he worked as a securities lawyer at a
major international firm and inhouse at two multinational semiconductor
manufacturers before taking up writing fiction. He is a lover of language and
languages, a guitarist and self-recorder, and a serious reader. He is married
to a powerful and clever woman and together they have three devious children.

 

Dave has been writing fiction since 2010. He writes
speculative fiction (roughly, fantasy, science fiction, space opera, steampunk,
cyberpunk, superhero, alternate history, dystopian fiction, horror and related
genres) for all audiences. He has written and is writing novels for middle
grade, young adult and adult readers. He is working on getting published via
the traditional route; in the meantime, he is entertaining readers with
City
of the Saints
and
Rock Band
Fights Evil
. Dave has always had a soft
spot for good pulp fiction.

 

Follow Rock Band at
http://rockbandfightsevil.com
.

 

Hear about
City of the Saints
and D.J. Butler’s other writing projects at
http://davidjohnbutler.com
.

 

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