This is episode thirty-four of the fifth book in the Trace Troy Adventures in Paradise series. The Title is A Cult in Paradise. It will be featured in episodes over the next few months. It will eventually be published in full on Amazon. All of the Trace Troy books, as well as my other novels, can be purchased on Amazon by clicking the Bookstore tab above. I hope you enjoy. And thanks for stopping by.
Meeting Me'Ached
From the opening on the right-hand side of the stage, a short man in a white robe trimmed in gold entered. The young man stepped back and aside.
“Me’Ached!” the young man proclaimed.
Me’Ached slowly stepped to the middle of the stage in front of the lectern. He carefully studied Trace, Coyote, and Sage. He lifted his head upward and spread out his arms and turned his palms up. His lips moved without making a sound. He stopped at times as if having a conversation. This lasted for a couple of minutes.
Finally, he stopped and looked at them. “I heard why you came here and who you are. Tell me who hired you?”
“A guy named Franks,” Trace said.
“Tell me more about him,” Me’Ached said disdainfully.
“He’s in prison and you had his son and his son’s girlfriend,” Trace said. “He got some sort of message they were held here against their will.”
“Franks,” Me’Ached said.
“He owned a casino in Suva,” Trace said. “He got jammed up with the law and doing his time. He still has plenty of clout.”
“How did you get here?” Me’Ached asked, “And, please, Mr. Wingate in the center, will you answer?”
“Sure,” Coyote said, “and ifin you don’t mind, call me Coyote. Mr. Wingate makes me feel uncomfortable.”
“Coyote,” Me’Ached said, “how did you get here?”
“A seaplane splashed down not far from here,” Coyote said. “We climbed out of it and into our rubber boats. And you know the rest.”
Me’Ached looked at Sage.
“Coyote’s my dad,” Sage said, “and I feel the same as he does; call me Sage.”
“Sage, who flew the plane?” Me’Ached asked.
“I don’t think he gave us a name,” Sage said and looked at the others. “Did you guys catch a name?”
“Barney,” Coyote said.
“Sounded like Barney,” Sage said, “but I think it was Carney.”
“You mean like a carnival worker?” Coyote said.
“Yeah,” Trace said, “I bet he gave airplane rides at carnivals.”
“Nah, it was Barney,” Coyote insisted. “I got good ears and they don’t have airplane rides at carnivals anymore. They stopped doing that when I was a kid.”
“Just two years ago they had one,” Sage said. “I was there.”
“Stop!” Me’Ached eemanded. “This will not work.”
“What?” Trace said.
“Stalling!” Me’Ached said sharply.
“You call it stalling,” Trace said, “I call it being precise. We don’t want to mislead you. You, above all, ought to know that when a man is under pressure, like we are, it’s hard to think straight.”
“Do you men have any idea what trouble you have caused?” Me’Ached’s lip quivered.
“We want to calm the situation here,” Coyote said. “This was just a job to us, The job is over.”
“That’s right,” Trace said.
“And we weren’t to get paid until the job was done,” Sage said.
“We should have got the money upfront,” Coyote said.
“How were you supposed to get off the island?” Me’Ached asked.
“That’s the kicker,” Trace said. “They left me. Coyote and Sage were supposed to go out in their rubber boat and meet up with the seaplane. I bet they were gonna leave them out there floating around just like they left me on the island.”
“We found no rubber boat,” Me’Ached said.
“Really?” Coyote said. “Then if I was you, I’d start counting noses. You might have some more missing besides the guy and the girl.”
“I don’t believe a word you are telling me,” Me’Ached said.
“Wait a minute,” Coyote said, “if you got a Bible or some other holy book around here, I ‘ll swear on it.”
“In fact,” Sage said, “we all will.”
Me’Ached smirked. “No one is as openly confused and naive as you three. You’re good. I know this entire charade is not rehearsed. That’s what makes it so good and—amusing.”
“Folks do like my stories,” Coyote said. “Even the true ones, but I’ve never had anybody say they were amused. They just say, ‘Is that so?’”
“I don’t think anybody has used the word amused where we’re from,” Sage said. “But we’ve used the word charlatan.”
“Careful, my amusing friend,” Me’Ached said with a slight grin and added with a feigned Texas accent, “Around these parts that there teeters on the edge of blasphemy.”
“Understood,” Sage replied.
“It looks as though you men accomplished what was intended,” Me’Ached said. “But you have been double-crossed, hung out to dry, stabbed in the back. I could use you in some well-planned and devious way to get back at those who have escaped and those who financed and recruited you poor souls. What would you think?”
“I think if I spoke up in favor of that right away, you would doubt my commitment,” Trace said.
“Yeah,” Coyote said, “that would take some chewin’.”
“We took a couple of days to think this one over,” Sage said, “and we still got it wrong.”
“Wrong!” Me’Ached said. “Your plan was perfect and well executed. You couldn’t have possibly foreseen the betrayal.”
“Do you foresee betrayal?” Trace said.
“Better than most,” Me’Ached said.
“One thing I do foresee,” Me’Ached continued. “Trace, you are the leader, the man in charge. Am I right?”
“I guess you could say that,” Trace said.
“If he’s in charge does that mean me and my son can go?” Coyote said.
“And you two,” Me’Ached, smiled, “you are trying to come off as crude and unsophisticated, but you are not. You’re trying to deceive me.”
“The jigs up,” Sage said. “We’re all working on our doctorate. We are intellectuals.”
“You just can’t give it up can you,” MeAched shook his head in disbelief. “Under less dire circumstances, I might be amused, but I’m not. The whole island is observing. My ability to lead may be called into question if I don’t act decisively.”
“It’s all about image, isn’t it?” Trace said. “I will give you one eternal truth.”
“Let’s hear it,” MeAched said.
“The great man you want to be,” Trace said, “they never die old. They die before reaching the apex of their imagined greatness.”
“That’s it?” Me’Ached said.
“I have one more,” Trace said, “your day is coming.”
Me’Ached smirked. He gave the impression that such a statement was like a shot to his ego; as if he felt stronger.
Trace saw beyond the facade. He thought, ‘He’s on the defensive. He thinks I know something he doesn’t. His next move will be to speak with me privately. He’s brimming with curiosity and he wants to push me back on my heels.’
“Trace,” Me’Ached smiled politely, “follow me to my sanctuary.” He called to the back of the auditorium, “Take these two men back to the Reform.”
Coyote twisted his face. “The Reform? Here all along we been calling it a stockade.”
“Yes,” Me’Ached said. “Allow the name speak for itself.”