Novels by William G. Tedford

"Stories from Dark Reaches of the Imagination"

 

Home  Table of Contents  Next

Lord of Silver Ridge

Chapter Thirty-one

Despite his fear that his eyesight had been permanently damaged, Abraham Darker could see again within the week. After several days of stumbling blind through the house and eating whatever smelled safe to eat from the roach-infested cupboards and a refrigerator overgrown with mold, he was finally able to peer in the bathroom mirror beneath a twenty-five watt bulb and clean the festering blisters about his face. For several days afterward, his peeling skin itched, and he scratched his face raw.

King sent for him. Delaney arrived at the house to fetch him. Abe put on a pair of sunglasses to deal with the morning sun.

The semi-circle of motel cabins at the north end of town had become a fortress. Openly armed guards stood at the entrance. Somehow, Silver Ridge had been isolated from the world. Sheriff Krueger and key county officials had been bought off, or intimidated. Two county supervisors had vanished from the face of the earth. The only inhabitants left in town were those employed at the die-casting plant and their immediate families.

Delaney parked haphazardly in front of the cabins of the motel courtyard. King stood in the center of the court, peering up at the Trevor hill through a pair of binoculars.

King turned to the newcomers as they approached. “You have redeemed yourself in my eyes, Abraham Darker. It took resolve to fulfill your mission considering the anguish you bore upon the deaths of your family members. I dispose of lesser men, but I rejoice when men of resolve are added to our ranks.”

Abe could think of nothing to say. Both King and Delaney stared at him with a curiously benign expression.

“Our critical shipments will be arriving soon,” King said. “Concentrate on keeping your manufacturing facility running smoothly. I want our merchandise shipped as soon as it arrives.”

It was at least a step toward normalcy. Once King’s contraband had gone through Silver Ridge, King would leave, and the nightmare would end. “Yes, sir. I’ll see to it.”

“Trevor Industries will be sending its own people to investigate the destruction of the house,” King added. “We have dealt effectively with local authorities. Private investigations will have to be handled in a more creative and direct fashion. Assist Delaney when the time comes.”

Abe tried to hide his unwillingness to do that. Trevor Industries had been Silver Ridge’s benefactor for an entire century. The die-casting plant had been kept open in honor of the company’s humble beginnings in the now depleted silver mines.

“One further matter.” King drew ominously closer. “I do not wish to destroy Lazarus Darker. I want to study his illness. I will free him soon. When he returns home, do not further injure your brother. When our business here is concluded, you may do as you see fit, but not at this time. Do you understand?”

Abe managed a curt nod of acknowledgment.

“Formidable strengths are often born of intense suffering,” King said. “Often you refuse to acknowledge such strengths when you think the suffering has been earned and is the product of a just vengeance. Do you understand?”

Abe understood nothing. “Yes, sir,” he said.

King grinned broadly, his metal teeth gleaming in the sun. “Then you are dismissed.”

Home  Table of Contents  Next

 

Copyright © 2007 Library of Congress - by William G. Tedford - All rights reserved