DuPont let Hutch finish pissing and then he made the escapee hug the tree. The sheriff handcuffed both of his wrists and ordered the prisoner to not make a sound. A few feet away, three bundled cylinders just barely a foot in length were laid in the grass. DuPont reholstered his revolver and strapped the cylinders to his back. Hutch grew concerned. “Uhh, watchu got there officer?” he asked. But the sheriff twisted a few valves along the hose connected to a firing mechanism held in his right hand and a small flame popped up at the end of the hose. “Don’t go nowheres,” DuPont told Hutch. Then he marched toward the shack.
Inside, the Priest was relentlessly cackling over Moses’ comments. All seemed to be at ease until the sheriff gently pushed open the door. Every eyeball turned to that small flame at the end of the hose. After a few moments, the priest looked into the eyes of the man holding the hose. “Sheriff DuPont,” he said. “Glad you could join us for Sunday service.”
“Do you usually invite escape convicts to your services?”
“We’re all children of God ain’t we?”
The sheriff twisted the valve further and the flame grew larger. “I know what you are,” DuPont said.
“I don’t know what this is about but I’m sure there’s a more civilized way to handle it.”
“Old folks used to talk about you,” DuPont continued. “They said that Methuselahs still walked among us. That some kind of holy water meant for consumption from the gods can turn men immortal. They said they can only be stopped by the power of the flame. I used to say bullshit. And that whatever happens in that godforsaken Morehouse Parish was none of my business until it spills over into my parish. And now it has. I know you was behind that motel fire. And you was most certainly behind that explosion off Kurtzy Road. And it was you at the Morehouse Jail fire this mornin’.
The priest nodded. “Yes, Sheriff. You are correct. You are correct in more ways than one.”
“I know I am.”
“Good. Then you should know that there’s something in Mer Rouge that needs to be stopped. You can arrest all of us and handle the matter yourself. Or we can all take care of this problem right now. Of course, your third option is you can light us all on fire.”
“I think I’d rather be arrested,” Moses interrupted.
“I just gotta know one thing,” DuPont said. “Are you one of them?”
“I am.”
“Then we all head out to Judge Castor’s this morning.”
“Even me?” asked Moses.
“Do I have to go too?” chimed Oren.
TO BE CONTINUED…