the clearing leading a mule, the Circuit Rider issued his black grin.

'Well, now that we're all here, let's see who among us is ready to enter the kingdom tonight,' the preacher said.

'Holy fucking frijoles,' Jett said as they came upon the bizarre scene.

Katy forgot to chastise Jett for the expletive, she was so stunned by the cars, people, and goats gathered on the isolated ridge. As she applied the brakes and brought the car to a halt, she saw the man in the black suit, the one Jett had told her about. He stood on the rock, basking in the crisp glare of the various car headlights. Katy recognized a couple of the people who stood outside the cir cle of goats.

'Those are Gordon's goats,' Jett said. 'I would recognize them anywhere, especially after they tried to munch me. See that big one, up at the front? With the brown tail? That's Ezekiel.'

Katy turned to ask Rebecca about the goats, but Rebecca was gone. Or at least, most of her was. Her head floated in the air, ragged strips of ghostly neck flesh tugged by whatever gravity held sway over the dead.

'Hey, don't do that,' Katy said. 'This was your idea, remem ber?'

'Sorry, I haven't been myself lately.'

'What are we supposed to do now?'

'Get out and listen.'

Katy looked at Jett, who nodded. 'Guess we might as well get this over with, Mom. Besides, you need to see that I wasn't lying.'

'How did the goats get up here before we did?'

'Forget about that. We ought to be worrying about—hey, look!'

A figure moved from the edge of the woods, and the crowd parted to let it through. Katy recognized the battered straw hat and the feed-sack face. 'It's your scarecrow,' she whispered.

'Told you, Mom. But you wouldn't believe me about the scare crow, either.'

The scarecrow figure held a wicked-looking sickle. Its clothes were torn and rumpled, and straw leaked from the folds with each step of cracked and flapping boots.

Jett unsnapped her seat belt and was out of the car before Katy could grab her arm. 'Come back here, Jett.'

But Jett was already passing the Jeep and Odus Hampton on a horse, reaching the outer circle of goats.

'Shit,' Katy hissed getting out of the car.

'It's him,' Jett screamed, pointing at the scarecrow, which was approaching the Circuit Rider from the opposite side of the clear ing.

The Circuit Rider's pale and waxen face turned from Jett to the scarecrow. The grin froze on the preacher's lips. Katy was pushing past Odus Hampton and Sarah Jeffers, noting the shotgun in the old woman's arms. What in the hell is going on here? her mind screamed as her feet carried her after Jett.

The goats stirred for the first time since their arrival, snorting and bleating as the scarecrow stomped into their midst.

'You're not supposed to be here,' the Circuit Rider said.

The scarecrow's stitched lips gave the illusion of a wicked smile, but surely that was an illusion, because the feed-sack face bore no other expression. The scarecrow hopped over a fat nanny, catching one dusty boot on a curled horn. It regained its balance and leaped onto the stone beside the Circuit Rider.

'Solom doesn't need you anymore,' the scarecrow said, in a muffled and rough voice. 'We can appease God ourselves.'

'Solom needs me,' the Circuit Rider said. 'Who else can bring the rain and the frost and the wind and the sun?'

'You're not the only one who understands the power of blood sacrifice.'

Jett had drawn to a stop among the goats, about ten feet from the stone stage. Katy dodged around the goats, ignoring their sinister eyes and wicked teeth. Her daughter was more important to her than the whole world, and she was nearly oblivious to the strange assembly of people, many of whom held weapons. At least she had proof that she wasn't descending into madness, because if this was a hallucination, it was a communal one.

Katy sensed more than saw the movement around her: the sher iff's deputy reaching in the car and triggering the blue strobes on the car's roof; Ray Tester dashing through the goats like a drunk running an obstacle course, rousing some to their feet as he thumped against them; their reclusive neighbor, Alex Eakins, raising what looked like a bow and aiming an arrow toward the stage; a large old goat that was the spitting image of Abraham, the one that Katy had killed or crippled in the driveway, rising and stomping toward the Circuit Rider like a repentant sinner headed for the touch of a faith healer; Sarah Jeffers moving into shotgun range with the careful steps of the elderly; Odus whacking the paint pony on the flank and urging it toward the granite slab; others circling and drawing closer, wanting to be part of the malevolent miracle, some stretching out their hands like New Testament lepers reaching for the robes of Jesus.

Jett's quoting of the Tommy Keene title 'Merry-Go-Round Broke Down' popped into her mind, all the pretty ponies spilling from their poles, the center giving way, the crazy carnival lights bobbing, though the smells were those of fur and forest instead of popcorn and spun sugar. She reached Jett just as the scarecrow joined the Circuit Rider as if wanting to hog half the spotlight.

'These are my people now,' the scarecrow said, and Katy rec ognized the cruel, commanding tone.

Gordon.

'Fucking Christ on a rubber crutch,' Jett said. 'It's him'

Katy recalled the scarecrow outfit in the box upstairs, the blood in the locked cupboard. She'd accepted that Gordon was capable of murder in the wake of Rebecca's confession, but she hadn't pegged him for a lunatic until now. She figured he was just like any man, vain and cruel and possessive, but she didn't know the possession might have worked both ways.

But why the costume? Why dress up when the most successful killers were those who didn't draw attention to themselves?

Katy had no time to analyze Gordon's motives. She hadn't fig ured him out in the year she had known him, and she suspected that would be the job for a team of prison psychiatrists over the next thirty years. In fact, all of Solom's residents would probably be scooped up in a giant butterfly net and plopped gently into soft asy lum rooms, especially when they started babbling about dead preachers, man-eating goats, and mountaintop revivals where faith was challenged and madness was shared like communion sacra ments.

The scarecrow—Gordon, she had to remind herself—stood half a foot taller than the Circuit Rider, the brims of their hats nearly touching.

'Have you people had enough of the Circuit Rider?' Gordon shouted, the feed-sack mouth puffing out with the air of his words, the stitched lips moving in a grotesque parody of language.

'Get out of the way and give me a clear shot,' Alex Eakins yelled back.

Ray Tester tripped over a billy goat, and the goat snapped at bis flesh, teeth sinking into his arm and eliciting a scream. Ray swung the heavy wrench he was carrying as if it were Samson's jawbone of an ass wielded against Philistines. The scent of blood seemed to arouse the other goats, because several of them broke out of their languid stupor and sniffed the night air. Katy looked down at the goats around her legs, noting that their attention was still fixed on the Circuit Rider. The goats around Jett twitched their tails but were otherwise docile. Ray regained his balance and continued to ward the stage, holding his arm, blood trickling between his fin gers, the bloody wrench clutched in one fist.

Throughout all the chaos, the Circuit Rider stood with his grave-seasoned hands at his sides, his face calm, his eyes burning with the orange and red of coals being fanned to life by an inner wind.

'What has this preacher ever done for you?' the scarecrow/ Gordon called to the crowd.

'Is that you, Gordon?' someone said from the edge of the crowd.

'I am the son of Ceres, the daughter of Diana,' he answered, in that bombastic, lecturing tone that should have been enough for Katy to call off the engagement. But she had wanted to give Jett a happy, stable home, one far removed from the troubled past, the drugs, the divorce.

All those ordinary failures now seemed so laughable when compared to this supernatural tsunami of danger

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