Sunrise
Andean Mountains
Peru, 1538
There was no
escape.
Crashing through the misty jungle,
Francisco de Almagro had long given up all prayer of ever outrunning the
hunters who dogged his trail. Panting, he crouched along the thin path and caught
his breath. He wiped the sweat from his brow with his sleeve. He still wore his
Dominican robe, black wool and silk, but it was stained and torn. His Incan
captors had stripped him of all possessions, except for his robe and cross. The
tribal shaman had warned the others not to touch these talismans from his
“foreign” god, afraid of insulting this stranger’s deity.
Though the heavy robes ill suited
his flight through the dense, cloud-draped jungle of the upper Andes, the young
friar still refused to shed his raiment. They had been blessed by Pope Clement
when Francisco had first been ordained, and he would not part with them. But
that did not mean he couldn’t alter them to suit his situation better.
He grabbed the hem of his garment
and ripped it to his thighs.
Once his legs were free, Francisco
listened to the sounds of pursuit. Already the call of the Incan hunters grew
louder, echoing along the mountain pass behind him. Even the screeching cries
of the disturbed monkeys from the jungle canopy overhead could not mask the
rising clamor of his captors. They would be upon him soon.
The young friar had only one hope
left—a chance at salvation—not for himself, but for the world.
He kissed the torn edge of his robe
and let it drop from his fingers. He must hurry.
When he straightened too quickly,
his vision darkened for a heartbeat. Francisco grabbed the bole of a jungle
sapling, struggling not to fall. He gasped in the thin air. Small sparks danced
across his vision. High up in the mountainous Andes, the air failed to fill his
lungs adequately, forcing him to rest frequently, but he could not let
shortness of breath stop him.
Shoving off the tree, Francisco set
off once again down the trail, stumbling and weaving. The sway in his gait was
not all due to the altitude. Before his scheduled execution at dawn, he had
suffered a ritualistic bloodletting and been forced to consume a draught of a
bitter elixir—chicha, a fermented drink that had
quickly made the ground under his feet wobble. The sudden exertion of running
from his captors heightened the drug’s effect.
As he ran, the limbs of the jungle
seemed to reach for him, trying to trap him. The path seemed to tilt first one
way, then the other. His heart hammered in his throat; his ears filled with a
growing roar, washing away even the calls of his pursuers. Francisco stumbled
out of the jungle and almost toppled over a cliff’s edge. Far below, he
discovered the source of the thunderous rumbling—frothing white waters crashing
over black rocks.
A part of his mind knew this must
be one of the many tributaries that fed the mighty Urabamba River, but he could
not dwell on topography. Despair filled his chest, squeezing his heart. The
chasm lay between him and his goal. Panting, Francisco leaned his hands on his
scraped knees. Only then did he notice the thin, woven-grass bridge. It spanned
the chasm off to the right.
“Obrigado, meu
Deus!” he thanked his Lord, slipping into Portuguese. He had not spoken
his native language since first taking his vows in Spain. Only now, with tears
of frustration and fear flowing down his cheeks, did he fall back upon his
childhood tongue.
Pushing up, he crossed to the
bridge and ran his hands over the braided lengths of ichu
grass. A single thick cord stretched across the width of river below, with two
smaller ropes, one on each side, to assist in balance. If not for his current
state, he might have appreciated the engineering feat of the bridge’s
construction, but now all his thoughts dwelt on escape—putting one foot in
front of the other, maintaining his balance.
All his hopes lay in reaching the
altar atop the next peak. As they did many of the mountains of the region, the
Incas revered and worshiped this jungle-fringed spire. But to reach his goal,
Francisco needed first to cross this chasm, then climb out of the cloud forest
to the crag’s rocky escarpment above.
Would he have enough time?
Turning to listen once again for
the sounds of pursuit, Francisco could hear nothing but the crashing tumble of
the river below. He had no idea how far behind the hunters remained, but he
imagined they were closing the distance quickly. He dared not tarry or cower
from the drop below.
Francisco ran a sweating palm over
the stubble of his shaven scalp, then grasped one of the two support ropes of
the bridge. He squeezed his eyes closed for a moment and grabbed the other
cable. With the Lord’s Prayer on his lips, he stepped onto the bridge and set
off across the chasm. He refused to look down, instead fixing his eyes on the
bridge’s end.
After an endless time, he felt his
left foot strike stone. Sagging in relief, he clambered off the bridge and onto
solid rock. He almost fell to his knees, ready to kiss and bless the earth, but
a sharp call barked out behind him. A spear struck deep into the loam near his heel.
Its shaft thrummed from the impact.
Francisco froze like a startled
rabbit, then another cry shouted forth. Glancing behind him, he saw a single
hunter standing on the far side. Their eyes met briefly across the chasm.
Predator and prey.
Under a headdress of azure and red
feathers, the man grinned at him. He wore thick chains of gold. At least,
Francisco prayed it was gold. He shuddered.
Not hesitating, Francisco slipped a
silver dagger from inside his robe. The weapon, stolen from the shaman, had been
his means of escape. It must now serve him again. He grabbed one of the
bridge’s balancing ropes. He would never have time to hack through the main
trunk of the span, but if he could sever the side ropes, his pursuers would
have difficulty crossing. It might not stop them, but it could gain him some
time.
His shoulders protested as he sawed
at the dried-grass braid. The ropes seemed to be made of iron. The man called
out to him, speaking calmly in his heathen language. The friar understood none
of his words, but the menace and promise of pain were clear.
Renewed fear fueled Francisco’s
muscles. He dug and sliced at the rope while hot tears streaked his muddy face.
Suddenly, the rope severed under his blade, snapping away. One end grazed his
cheek. Instinctively, he reached a hand to touch the injury. His fingers came
back bloody, but he felt nothing.
Swallowing hard, he turned to the
second support rope. Another spear struck the rock at the cliff’s edge and fell
away into the chasm. A third followed. Closer this time.
Francisco glanced up. Four hunters
now lined the far side of the chasm. The newest hunter held a fourth spear,
while the first hunter deftly strung a bow. Time had run out. Francisco eyed
the untouched rope support. It was death to stay there. He would have to hope
that severing the one braid would slow them enough.
Turning, he sped back into the
jungle on the far side of the chasm. The path climbed steeply, straining his
legs and chest. Here the trees were less thick, the canopy less dense. As he
struggled, the forest grew thinner with each hard-earned league. While glad to
see the jungle begin to thin, he knew the lack of foliage also made him an
easier target for the hunters. With each step, he expected an arrow to feather
his back.
So
close…Lord, do not forsake me now.
He refused to look ahead,
concentrating on the ground beneath his feet. He fought to place one foot after
the other. Suddenly light burst around him, as if the Lord Himself had pushed
aside the trees to shine His Glory down upon him. Gasping, he raised his head.
Even such a simple movement was difficult. In a single step, the jungle was
behind him. Raw sunlight from the dawning sun blazed across the red and black
stones of the barren peak.
He was too weak even for a prayer
of thanks. Scrambling up through the last of the brush, he used his hands and
feet to fight for the summit. It must happen there. At their holy altar.
Crying now, but deaf to his own
sobs, he crawled the final distance to the slab of granite. Reaching the stone altar,
he collapsed back upon his heels and raised his face to the heavens. He cried
out, not in prayer, but in simple acknowledgment that he yet lived, casting his
voice for all to hear.
His call was answered. The sharp
cries of hunters again echoed up from the pass below. They had crossed the
chasm and renewed their pursuit.
Francisco lowered his face from the
blue skies. Around him, spreading to all horizons, were the countless peaks of
the Andes. Some were snow-tipped, but most were as barren as the one upon which
he knelt. For a moment, Francisco could almost understand the Incas’ worship of
these mountain heights. Here among the clouds and skies, one was closer to God.
A sense of timelessness and a promise of eternity seemed to ring forth in the
heavy silence. Even the hunters grew hushed—either from respect for the
mountain or from a desire to sneak upon their prey unawares.
Francisco was too tired to care.
His gaze settled upon the one other
type of peak that shared these heights. Below, to the west, were two smoldering
mountains, volcanic caldera, twin craters staring up at the same morning skies.
From here, the shadowed pair were like two blasted and cursed eyes.
He spat in their direction and
raised a fist with his thumb thrust between his two fingers in a ward against
evil.
Francisco knew what lay within
those warm valleys. From his mountaintop altar, he christened the twin
volcanoes. “Ojos el de Diablo,” he whispered…the Devil’s eyes.
Shivering at the sight, he turned
his back on the view. He could not do what must be done while staring at those
eyes. He now faced the east and the rising sun.
Kneeling before the blaze of glory,
he reached within his robe and slipped out the cross that hung from around his
neck. He touched the warm metal against his forehead. Gold. Here was the reason
the Spaniards had struggled through these foreign jungles—the dream of riches
and wealth. Now their lust and greed would damn them all.
Francisco turned the crucifix and
kissed the golden figure upon its surface. This was why he
had come here. To bring the word of the Lord to these savages—and now his cross
was the only hope for all the world. He brushed a finger along the back of the
cross, fingering the etchings he had carefully carved into the soft gold.
May it
save us all, he prayed silently, and nestled
the cross back into his robes, resting it near his heart.
Francisco raised his eyes to the
dawn. He had to be certain the Incas never took the cross from him. Though he
had reached one of the Incas’ sacred sites—this natural mountaintop altar—one
final act was required of him to ensure the cross’s safety.
Once again, he slipped free the
shaman’s silver dagger from his robe.
With a prayer of contrition on his
lips, he begged forgiveness for the sin he was about to commit. Whether he
damned his soul or not, he had no choice. Tears in his eyes, he raised the
knife and slashed the blade across his throat. Lancing pain dropped the dagger
from his fingers. He fell to his hands. Blood poured from his throat across the
dark stones under him.
In the dawn’s light, his red blood
glowed brilliantly against the black rock. It was his last sight as he died—his
life’s blood flowing across the Incan altar, shining as brightly as gold.
Monday, August 20, 11:52 A.M.
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, Maryland
Professor Henry
Conklin’s fingers trembled slightly as he unwrapped the final layer of blankets
from around his frozen treasure. He held his breath. How had the mummy fared
after the three-thousand-mile trip from the Andes? Back in Peru, he had been so
careful to pack and crate the frozen remains in dry ice for the trip to
Baltimore, but during such a long journey anything could have gone wrong.
Henry ran a hand through his dark
hair, now dusted with a generous amount of grey since passing his sixtieth
birthday last year. He prayed his past three decades of research and fieldwork
would pay off. He would not have a second chance. Transporting the mummy from
South America had almost drained the last of his grant money. And nowadays any
new fellowships or grants were awarded to researchers younger than he. He was
becoming a dinosaur at Texas A&M. Though still revered, he was now more
coddled than taken seriously.
Still, his most recent discovery of
the ruins of a small Incan village high in the Andes could change all
that—especially if it proved his own controversial theory.
He cautiously tugged free the final
linen wrap. Fog from the thawing dry ice momentarily obscured his sight. He
waved the mist away as the contorted figure appeared, knees bent to chest, arms
wrapped around legs, almost in a fetal position, just as he had discovered the
mummy in a small cave near the frozen summit of Mount Arapa.
Henry stared at his discovery.
Ancient eye sockets, open and hollow, gazed back at him from under strands of
lanky black hair still on its skull. Its lips, dried and shrunken back,
revealed yellowed teeth. Frayed remnants of a burial shawl still clung to its
leathered skin. It was so well preserved that even the black dyes of the
tattered robe shone brightly under the surgical lights of the research lab.
“Oh God!” a voice exclaimed at his
shoulder. “This is perfect!”
Henry jumped slightly, so engrossed
in his own thoughts he had momentarily forgotten the others in the room. He
turned and was blinded by the flash of a camera’s strobe. The reporter from the
Baltimore Herald moved from behind his shoulder to
reposition for another shot, never moving the Nikon from her face. Her blond
hair was pulled over her ears in a severe and efficient ponytail. She snapped
additional photos as she spoke. “What would you estimate its age to be,
Professor?”
Blinking away the glare, Henry
backed a step away so the others could view the remains. A pair of scientists
moved closer, instruments in hand.
“I…I’d estimate the mummification
dates back to the sixteenth century—some four to five hundred years ago.”
The reporter lowered her camera but
did not move her eyes from the figure cradled on the CT scanning table. A small
trace of disgust pleated her upper lip. “No, I meant how old do you think the
mummy was when he died?”
“Oh…” He pushed his wire-rimmed
glasses higher on his nose. “Around twenty…It’s hard to be accurate on just
gross examination.”
One of the two doctors, a petite
woman in her late fifties with dark hair that fell in silky strands to the
small of her back, glanced back at them. She had been examining the mummy’s
head, a tongue depressor in hand. “He was thirty-two when he died,” she stated
matter-of-factly. The speaker, Dr. Joan Engel, was head of forensic pathology
at Johns Hopkins University and an old friend of Henry’s. Her position there
was one of the reasons he had hauled his mummy to Johns Hopkins. She elaborated
on her statement, “His third molars are partially impacted, but from the degree
of wear on the second molars and the lack of wear on the third, my estimation
should be precise to within three years, plus or minus. But the CT scan results
should pinpoint the age even more accurately.”
Belying her calm demeanor, the
doctor’s jade eyes shone brightly as she spoke, crinkling slightly at the
corners. There was no disgust on her face when she viewed the mummy, even when
she handled the desiccated remains with her gloved fingers. Henry sensed her
excitement, mirroring his own. It was good to know Joan’s enthusiasm for
scientific mysteries had not waned from the time he had known her back in her
undergraduate years. She returned to the study of the mummy, but not before
giving Henry a look of apology for contradicting his previous statement and
estimation of age.
Henry’s cheeks grew heated, more
from embarrassment than irritation. She was as keen and sharp as ever.
Swallowing hard, he tried to redeem
himself. He turned to the reporter. “I hope to prove these remains found at
this Incan site are not actually Incan, but another tribe of Peruvian Indians.”
“What do you mean?”
“It has been long known that the
Incas were a warrior tribe that often took over neighboring tribes and
literally consumed them. They built their own cities atop these others,
swallowing them up. From my study of Machu Picchu and other ruins in the remote
highlands of the Andes, I’ve theorized that the lowland tribes of the Incas did
not build these cloud cities but took them over from a tribe that already
existed before them, robbing these ancestors of their rightful place in history
as the skilled architects of the mountaintop cities.” Henry nodded toward the
mummy. “I hope this fellow will be able to correct this error in history.”
The reporter took another picture,
but was then forced back by the pair of doctors who were moving their
examination farther down the mummy. “Why do you think this mummy can prove this
theory?” she asked.
“The tomb where we discovered it
predates the Incan ruins by at least a century, suggesting that here might be
one of the true builders of these mountain citadels. Also this mummy stands a
good head taller than the average Inca of the region…even its facial features
are different. I brought the mummy here to prove this is not an Incan tribesman
but one of the true architects of these exceptional cities. With genetic
mapping available here, I can substantiate any—”
“Professor Conklin,” Joan again
interrupted him. “You might want to come see this.”
The reporter stepped aside to let
Henry pass, her Nikon again rising to cover half her face. Henry pushed between
the two researchers. They had been fingering the body’s torso and belly.
Engel’s assistant, a sandy-haired young man with large eyes, was bent over the
mummy. He was carefully tweezing and extracting a length of cord from a fold
around the figure’s neck.
Joan pointed. “His throat was
slashed,” she said, parting the leathery skin to reveal the bones underneath.
“I’d need a microscopic exam to be sure, but I’d say the injury was ante-mortem.”
She glanced to Henry and the reporter. “Before death,” she clarified. “And most
likely, the cause of death here.”
Henry nodded. “The Incas were fond
of blood rituals; many involved decapitation and human sacrifice.”
The doctor’s assistant continued working
at the wound, drawing out a length of cord from the wound. He paused and
glanced to his mentor. “I think it’s some sort of necklace,” he mumbled, and
pulled at the cord. Something under the robe shifted with his motion.
Joan raised her eyes to Henry,
silently asking permission to continue.
He nodded.
Slowly the assistant tugged and
worked the necklace loose from its hiding place. Whatever hung there was
carefully dragged along under the robe’s ragged cloth. Suddenly the ancient
material ripped and the object hanging from the cord dropped free for all to
see.
A gasp rose from their four
throats. The gold shone brilliantly under the halogen spotlights of the
laboratory. A flurry of blinding flashes followed as the reporter snapped a
rapid series of photos.
“It’s a cross,” Joan said, stating
the obvious.
Henry groaned and leaned in closer.
“Not just a cross. It’s a Dominican crucifix.”
The reporter spoke with her camera
still fixed to her face. “What does that mean?”
Henry straightened and waved a hand
over a Latin inscription. “The Dominican missionary order accompanied the
Spanish conquistadors during their attack upon the Central and South American
Indians.”
The reporter lowered her camera.
“So this mummy is one of those Spanish priests?”
“Yes.”
“Cool!”
Joan tapped at the cross with her
tongue depressor. “But the Incas weren’t known to mummify any of their Spanish
conquerors.”
“Until now,” Henry commented
sourly. “I guess if nothing else the discovery will be worth a footnote in some
journal article.” His dreams of proving his theory dimmed in the glare of the
golden crucifix.
Joan touched his hand with a gloved
finger. “Don’t despair yet. Perhaps the cross was just stolen from one of the
Spaniards. Let’s first run the CT scan and see what we can discover about our
friend here.”
Henry nodded but held no real hope
in his heart. He glanced to the pathologist. Her eyes shone with genuine
concern. He offered her a small smile, which, surprisingly, she returned. Henry
remembered that smile from long ago. They had dated a few times, but both had
been too devoted to their studies to pursue more than a casual acquaintance.
And when their careers diverged after graduation, they had lost contact with
each other, except for the occasional exchange of Christmas cards. But Henry
had never forgotten that smile.
She patted his hand, then called to
her assistant. “Brent, could you let Dr. Reynolds know we’re ready to begin the
scan?” She then turned to Henry and the reporter. “I’ll have to ask you to join
us in the next room. You can view the procedure from behind the leaded glass in
the control room.”
Before leaving, Henry checked the
mummy to ensure it was properly secured on the scanner’s table, then slipped
the gold crucifix from around the figure’s neck. He carried it with him as he
followed the others out of the room.
The adjoining cubicle was lined
with banks of computers and rows of monitors. The research team planned on
using a technique called computer tomography, or CT, to take multiple
radiographic images which the computer would then compile into a
three-dimensional picture of the mummy’s interior, allowing a virtual autopsy
to be performed without damaging the mummy itself. Besides the professional
contact, this was the reason Henry had hauled his mummy halfway around the
world. Johns Hopkins had performed previous analyses on other Peruvian ice
mummies in the past and still had backing from the National Geographic
organization to continue with others. The facility also had a keen genetics lab
to map ancestry and genealogy, ideal for adding concrete data to substantiate
his controversial theories. But with the Dominican cross in hand, Henry held
out little hope of success.
Once inside the control room, the
door, heavy with lead shielding, closed snugly behind them.
Joan introduced them to Dr. Robert
Reynolds, who waved them to the chairs while his technician began calibrating
for the scan. “Grab a seat, folks.”
While the others scooted chairs
into a cluster before the viewing window, Henry remained standing to maintain a
good view of both the computer monitors and the window that looked out upon the
scanner and its current patient. The large white machine filled the back half
of the next room. The table bearing the mummy protruded from a narrow tunnel
leading into the heart of the unit.
“Here we go,” Dr. Reynolds said as
he keyed his terminal.
Henry jumped a bit, almost dropping
the gold cross, as a sharp clacking erupted from the speakers that monitored
the next room. Through the window, he watched the tray holding the contorted
figure slowly inch toward the spinning core of the scanner. As the crown of the
mummy’s head entered the tunnel, the machine’s clacking was joined by a chorus
of loud thunking as the device began to take pictures.
“Bob,” Joan said, “bring up a surface
view of the facial bones first. Let’s see if we can pinpoint where this fellow
came from.”
“You can determine that from just
the skull?” the reporter asked.
Joan nodded, but did not turn from
the computers. “The structure of the zygomatic arch, the brow, and the nasal
bone are great markers for ancestry and race.”
“Here it comes,” Dr. Reynolds
announced.
Henry turned from the window to
look over Joan’s shoulder. A black-and-white image appeared on the monitor’s
screen, a cross section of the mummy’s skull.
Joan slipped on a pair of reading
glasses and squeaked her chair closer to the monitor. She leaned forward to
study the image. “Bob, can you rotate it about thirty degrees?”
The radiologist nodded, chewing on
a pencil. He tapped a few buttons, and the skull twisted slightly until it was
staring them full in the face. Joan reached with a small ruler and made some
measurements, frowning. She tapped the screen with a fingernail. “That shadow
above the right orbit of the eye. Can we get a better look at it?”
A few keys were tapped and the
image zoomed in closer. The radiologist removed the pencil from between his
teeth. He whistled appreciatively.
“What is it?” Henry asked.
Joan turned and tilted her glasses
down to peer over their rims at him. “A hole.” She tapped the glass indicating
the triangular shadow on the plane of bone. “It’s not natural. Someone drilled
into his skull. And from the lack of callus formation around the site, I’d
guess the procedure was done shortly after his death.”
“Trepanning…skull drilling,” Henry
said. “I’ve seen it before in other old skulls from around the world. But the
most extensive and complicated were among the Incas. They were considered the
most skilled surgeons at trepanning.” Henry allowed himself a glimmer of hope. If
the skull had been bored, maybe he had uncovered a
Peruvian Indian.
Joan must have read his thoughts.
“I hate to dash your hopes, but trepanning or not, the mummy is definitely not of South American ancestry. It is clearly European.”
Henry could not find his voice for
a few breaths. “Are…are you sure?”
She took off her glasses, settled
them back in her pocket, and sighed softly, clearly well accustomed to passing
on a dire diagnosis. “Yes. I’d say he came from Western Europe. I’d guess
Portugal. And given enough time and more study, I could probably pinpoint even
the exact province.” She shook her head. “I’m sorry, Henry.”
He recognized the sympathy in her
eyes. With despair in his heart, he struggled to keep himself composed. He
stared down at the Dominican cross in his hand. “He must have been captured by
the Incas,” he finally said. “And eventually sacrificed to their gods atop
Mount Arapa. If his blood was spilled on such a sacred site, European or not,
they would have been forced to mummify his remains. It was probably why they
left him his cross. Those who died on holy sites were honored, and it was taboo
to rob their corpses of any valuables.”
The reporter had been hurriedly
jotting notes, even though she had a tape recorder also monitoring their conversation.
“It’ll make a good story.”
“Story, maybe…even a journal
article or two…” Henry shrugged, attempting a weak smile.
“But not what you were hoping for,”
Joan added.
“An intriguing oddity, nothing
more. It sheds no new light on the Incas.”
“Perhaps your dig back in Peru will
produce more intriguing finds,” the pathologist offered.
“There is that hope. My nephew and
a few other grad students are delving into a temple ruin as we speak.
Hopefully, they’ll have better news for me.”
“And you’ll let me know?” Joan
asked with a smile. “You know I’ve been following your discoveries in both the National Geographic and Archaeology
magazines.”
“You have?” Henry stood a little
straighter.
“Yes, it’s all been very exciting.”
Henry’s smile grew wider. “I’ll
definitely keep you updated.” And he meant it. There was a certain charm to
this woman that Henry still found disarming. Add to that a generous figure that
could not be completely hidden by her sterile lab coat. Henry found a slight
blush heating his cheeks.
“Joan, you’d better come see this,”
the radiologist said in a hushed voice. “Something’s wrong with the CT.”
Joan swung back to the monitor.
“What is it?”
“I was just fiddling with some
mid-sagittal views to judge bone density. But all the interior views just come
back blank.” As Henry looked on, Dr. Reynolds flipped through a series of
images, each a deeper slice through the interior of the skull. But each of the
inner images was the same: a white blur on the monitor.
Joan touched the screen as if her
fingers could make sense of the pictures. “I don’t understand. Let’s
recalibrate and try again.”
The radiologist tapped a button and
the constant clacking from the machine died away. But a sharper noise, hidden
behind the knock of the scanner’s rotating magnets, became apparent. It flowed
from the speakers: a high-pitched keening, like air escaping from the stretched
neck of a balloon.
All eyes were drawn to the
speakers.
“What the hell is that noise?” the
radiologist asked. He tapped at a few keys. “The scanner’s completely shut
down.”
The Herald
reporter sat closest to the window looking into the CT room. She sprang to her
feet, knocking her chair over. “My God!”
“What is it?” Joan stood up and
joined the reporter at the window.
Henry pushed forward, fearing for his
fragile mummy. “What—?” Then he saw it, too. The mummy still lay on the
scanning table in full view of the group. Its head and neck convulsed upon the
table, rattling against the metal surface. Its mouth stretched wide open, the
keening wail issuing from its desiccated throat. Henry’s knees weakened.
“My God, it’s alive!” the reporter
moaned in horror.
“Impossible,” Henry sputtered.
The convulsing corpse grew violent.
Its lanky black hair whipped furiously around its thrashing head like a
thousand snakes. Henry expected at any moment that the head would rip off its
neck, but what actually happened was worse. Much worse.
Like a rotten melon, the top of the
mummy’s skull blew away explosively. Yellow filth splattered out from the
cranium, spraying the wall, the CT scanner, and the window.
The reporter stumbled away from the
fouled glass, her legs giving way beneath her. Her mouth chanted
uncontrollably, “Oh my God oh my God oh my God…”
Joan remained calm, professional.
She spoke to the stunned radiologist. “Bob, we need a Level Two quarantine of
that room. Stat!”
The radiologist just stared,
unblinking, as the mummy quieted its convulsions and lay still. “Damn,” he
finally whispered to the fouled window. “What happened?”
Joan shook her head, still calm.
She replaced her glasses and studied the room. “Perhaps a soft eruption of
pocketed gas,” she mumbled. “Since the mummy was frozen at a high altitude,
methane from decomposition could have released abruptly from the sudden
thawing.” She shrugged.
The reporter finally seemed to have
composed herself and tried to take a picture, but Joan blocked her with a palm.
Joan shook her head. There would be no further pictures.
Henry had not moved since the
eruption. He still stood with one palm pressed to the glass. He stared at the
ruins of his mummy and the brilliant splatters sprayed on walls and machine.
The debris shone brightly, glowing a deep ruddy yellow under the halogens.
The reporter, her voice still
shaky, waved a hand at the fouled lead window. “What the hell is that stuff?”
Clutching the Dominican crucifix in
his right fist, Henry answered, his voice dull with shock: “Gold.”
5:14 P.M.
Andean
Mountains, Peru
“Listen…and you could almost hear
the dead speak.”
The words drew Sam Conklin’s nose
from the dirt. He eyed the young freelance journalist from the National Geographic.
An open laptop computer resting on
his knees, Norman Fields sat beside Sam and stared out across the
jungle-shrouded ruins. A smear of mud ran from the man’s cheek to his neck.
Though he wore an Australian bushwacker and matching leather hat, Norman failed
to look the part of the rugged adventure photojournalist. He wore thick glasses
with lenses that slightly magnified his eyes, making him look perpetually
surprised, and though he stood a little over six feet, he was as thin as a
pole, all bones and lanky limbs.
Sam rolled up to one elbow on his
mat of woven reed. “Sorry, what was that, Norm?” he asked.
“The afternoon is so quiet,” his
companion whispered, his Boston accent flavoring his words. Norman closed his
eyes and breathed deeply. “You can practically hear the ancient voices echoing
off the mountains.”
Sam carefully laid the tiny
paintbrush beside the small stone relic he had been cleaning and sat up. He
tapped his muddied cowboy hat back farther on his head and wiped his hands on
his Wranglers. Again, like so many times before, after working for hours upon a
single stone of the ruins, the overall beauty of the ancient Incan city struck
him like a draught of cold beer on a hot Texas afternoon. It was so easy to get
lost in the fine ministrations of brush on stone and lose sight of the enormity
and breadth of the whole. Sam pushed into a seated position to better
appreciate the somber majesty.
He suddenly missed his cutting
horse, a painted Appaloosa still back on his uncle’s dusty ranch outside
Muleshoe, Texas. He itched to ride among the ruins and follow its twisted paths
to the mystery of the thick jungle beyond the city. He sat there with the ghost
of a smile on his face, soaking up the sight.
“There is something mystical about
this place,” Norman continued, leaning back upon his hands. “The towering
peaks. The streams of mist. The verdant jungle. The very air smells of life, as
if some substance in the wind encourages a vitality in the spirit.”
Sam patted the journalist’s arm in
good-natured agreement. The view was a wondrous sight.
Built in a high saddle between two
Andean peaks, the newly discovered jungle city spread in terraced plazas across
half a square mile. A hundred steps connected the various stonework levels.
From Sam’s vantage point among the remains of the Sun Plaza, he could survey
the entire pre-Columbian ruin below him: from the homes of the lower city
outlined in lines of crumbling stone, to the Stairway of the Clouds that led to
Sun Plaza on which they perched. Here, like its sister city Machu Picchu, the
Incas had displayed all their mastery of architecture, merging form and
function to carve a fortress city among the clouds.
Yet, unlike the much-explored Machu
Picchu, these ruins were still raw. Discovered by his uncle Hank only a few
months back, much still lay hidden under vine and trees. A spark of pride
flared with the memory of the discovery.
Uncle Hank had pinpointed its
location from old tales passed among the Quechans of the region. Using
hand-scrawled maps and pieces of tales, he had led a team out from Machu Picchu
along the Urabamba River, and in only ten days, discovered the ruins below
Mount Arapa. The discovery had been covered in all the professional journals
and popular magazines. Nicknamed the Cloud Ruins, his uncle’s picture beamed
from many a front page. And he deserved it—it had been a miraculous
demonstration of extrapolation and archaeological skill.
Of course, this sentiment might be
clouded by Sam’s feelings for his uncle. Hank had raised Sam since his parents
had died in a car crash when he was nine years old. Henry’s own wife had died
of cancer the same year, about four months earlier. Drawn together in grief,
they developed a deep bond. The two had become nearly inseparable. So it was to
no one’s surprise that Sam pursued a career in archaeology at Texas A&M.
“I’d swear if you listen close
enough,” Norman said, “you can even hear the wail of the warriors calling from
high in the peaks, the whispers of hawkers and buyers from the lower city, the
songs of the laborers in the terraced fields beyond the walls.”
Sam tried to listen, but all he
could hear were the occasional snatches of raised voices and the rasping of
shovel and pick echoing up from a nearby hole. The noises were not the voices
of the Incan dead, but of the workers and his fellow students laboring deep in
the heart of the ruins. The gaping hole led to a shaft that dropped thirty feet
straight down, ending in a honeycomb of excavated rooms and halls, a
subterranean structure of several levels. Sam sat up straighter. “You ought to
be a poet, Norman, not a journalist.”
Norman sighed. “Just try listening
with your heart, Sam.”
He thickened his west Texas drawl,
knowing how it irritated Norman, who hailed from Boston. “Right now all I kin
hear with is my belly. And it ain’t saying nothing but complaining about
dinnertime.”
Norman scowled at him. “You Texans
have no poetry in your souls. Just iron and dust.”
“And beer. Don’t forget the beer.”
The laptop computer suddenly chimed
the six o’clock hour, drawing their attention.
A rattling groan escaped the narrow
confines of Sam’s throat. “We’d better wrap up the site before the sun sets. By
nightfall, the place will be crawling with looters.”
Norman nodded and twisted around to
gather his camera packs. “Speaking of grave robbers, I heard gunfire last
night,” he said.
Sam frowned while storing away his
brushes and dental picks. “Guillermo had to scare off a band of huaqueros. They were trying to tunnel into our ruins. If
Gil hadn’t found them, they might have pierced the dig and destroyed months of
work.”
“It’s good your uncle thought to
hire security.”
Sam nodded, but he heard the trace
of distaste in Norman’s voice at the mention of Guillermo Sala, the
ex-policeman from Cuzco assigned as the security head for the expedition. Sam
shared the journalist’s sentiment. Black-haired and black-eyed, Gil bore scars
that Sam suspected weren’t all from the line of duty. Sam also noticed the
sidelong glances he shared with his compadres when Maggie passed. The quick
snippets of Spanish exchanged with guttural laughs heated Sam’s blood.
“Was anyone hurt in the gunfire?”
Norman asked.
“No, just warning shots to scare
off the thieves.”
Norman continued stuffing his gear.
“Do you really think we’ll find some tomb overflowing with riches?”
Sam smiled. “And discover the
Tutankhmen of the New World? No, I don’t think so. It’s the dream of gold that
draws the thieves, but not my uncle. Knowledge is
what lured him here—and the truth.”
“But what is he is so doggedly
searching for? I know he seeks some proof that another tribe existed before the
Incas, but why this stubborn need for secrecy. I need to report to the Geographic at some point to update them before the next
deadline.”
Sam bunched his brows. He had no
answer for Norman. The same questions had been echoing in his own mind. Uncle
Hank was keeping some snippet of information close to his chest. But this was
always like the professor. He was open in all other ways, but when it came to
professional matters, he could be extremely tight-lipped.
“I don’t know,” Sam finally said.
“But I trust the professor. If he has his nose into something, we’ll just have
to wait him out.”
A shout suddenly arose from the
excavated hole on the neighboring terrace: “Sam! Come look!”
Ralph Isaacson’s helmeted head
popped from the shaft, excitement bright in his eyes. The large
African-American, a fellow grad student, hailed from the University of Alabama.
Financed on a football scholarship, he had excelled in his undergraduate years
and managed to garner an academic scholarship to complete his masters in
archaeology. He was as sharp as he was muscular. “You have to see this!” The
carbide lamp of Ralph’s mining helmet flashed toward them. “We’ve reached a
sealed door with writing on it!”
“Is the door intact?” Sam called
back, getting to his feet excitedly.
“Yes! And Maggie says there’s no
evidence of tampering.”
This could be the breakthrough all
of them had been searching for these past months. An intact tomb or royal
chamber within the ancient ruins. Sam helped Norman, burdened by his sling of
cameras, up the steep steps toward the highest terrace of the Sun Plaza.
“Do you think—?” Norman huffed.
Sam held up a hand. “It may just be
a basement level to one of the Incan temples. Let’s not get our hopes up.”
By the time they had reached the
excavated terrace, Norman was wheezing. Ralph frowned in disdain at the
photographer’s exertion. “Havin’ trouble there, Norman? I could ask Maggie to
help carry you.”
The photographer rolled his eyes
and refrained from commenting, too winded to speak.
Sam joined them atop the plaza. He
was breathing hard, too. Any exertion at this high altitude taxed lungs and
heart. “Leave him alone, Ralph,” he scolded. “Show us what you found.”
Ralph shook his head and led the
way with his helmet lamp. The black man’s wide frame filled the three-foot-wide
shaft as he mounted the ladder. Unlike Sam, Ralph did not get along with
Norman. Ever since the photographer had let his sexual orientation be known, a
certain friction had grown between the two. Raised in the Bible Belt, Ralph
seemed unable to let go of certain prejudices that had nothing to do with
color. But Henry had insisted they all work together. Be a team. So the two had
developed a grumbling cooperation.
“Jackass,” Norman mumbled under his
breath, shifting his camera load.
Sam clapped the photographer on the
shoulder and glanced into the excavated hole. The rungs of the ladder descended
thirty feet to the warren of chambers and hallways below. “Don’t let him get to
you,” Sam said. He waved toward the ladder. “Go on. I’ll follow.”
As they descended, Ralph spoke, his
words growing in excitement again. “We just got the carbon-dating back on the
deepest level this morning. Did you hear, Sam? A.D. 1100. Predating the damn Incas by two damn
centuries.”
“I heard,” Sam said. “But the
margin of error on dating still leaves this result questionable.”
“Maybe…but wait ’til you see the
etchings!”
“Are they Incan imagery?” Sam
called down.
“It’s too soon to say. When we
uncovered the door, I rushed up to fetch you two. Maggie is still down there
trying to clean up the door. I figured we should all be present.”
Sam continued to climb down.
Lamplight bloomed from below, casting his shadow up the wall of the shaft. He
could imagine Maggie bent with her nose an inch from the door, meticulous with
brush and tweezers as she freed the history of these people from centuries of
mud and clay. He could also picture her auburn hair pulled back in a long
ponytail as she worked, the way her nose crinkled when deep in concentration,
the small noises of pleasure she made when she discovered something new. If
only he could attract a tenth of the attention the stones of the ruins earned
from her.
Sam stumbled on a rung of the
ladder and had to catch himself with a quick grab.
After three more steps, his feet
touched rock. He stepped from the ladder into the cramped cavern of the first
level. The sodium lamps stung his eyes with their brightness while the heavy
odor of turned soil and moist clay filled his nostrils. This was not a dusty,
dry tomb of Egypt. The continual mist and frequent jungle storms of the high
Andes saturated the soil. Rather than sand, the archaeologists battled moldy
roots and wet clay to release the trapped secrets of the underground structure.
Around Sam, the handiwork of ancient engineers glowed in the light, bricks and
stones so skillfully fitted together that not even a knife blade could slide
between them. But even such design could not fully withstand the ravages of
time. Many areas of the subterranean structure had been weakened by winding
roots and centuries of accumulated clay and soil.
Around Sam, the ruins groaned. It
was a frequent noise, stressed stones settling after the team had cleared the
clay and dirt from the rooms and halls, hollowing them out. The local Quechan
workers had installed a latticework of wooden support beams, bolstering the
ancient, root-damaged bulwarks and ceilings. But still the underground
structure moaned with the weight of earth piled atop it.
“This way,” Ralph said, guiding
them toward the wooden ladder that descended to the second level of tunnels and
rooms. However, that was not their final destination. After climbing down two
more ladders, they reached the deepest level, almost fifty feet underground.
This section had not been fully cleared or cataloged. Among the honeycomb of
narrow excavated tunnels and rooms bolstered by wooden frames, shirtless
workers hauled sacks of mud and debris. Normally, the tunnels echoed with the
workers’ native songs, but now the halls were quiet. Even the workers suspected
the importance of this discovery.
Silence hung like a wool blanket
across the ruins. The garrulous Ralph had finally halted his discourse on the
discovery of the sealed chamber. The three proceeded in silence through the
last of the tunnels to the deepest room. Once in the wider chamber, the trio,
who had been squeezing through the passage single file, spread out. Sam could
finally see more than just the bowed back of Norman Fields.
The chamber was no larger than a
cramped single-car garage. Yet, in this small room buried fifty feet
underground, Sam sensed that history was about to be revealed. The chamber’s
far side was a wall of quarried stone, again so artfully constructed that the
granite pieces fit together like an intricate jigsaw puzzle. Though still
covered in many places with layers of clay and mud, the workmanship had
obviously withstood the ages and the elements. Yet as amazing as the architecture
was, what stood in the center of the wall drew all their eyes: a crude stone
arch blocked by a carefully fitted slab of rock. Three horizontal bands of a
dull metal, each a handspan wide, crossed the doorway and were bolted to both
door and frame.
No one had been through this portal
since the ancients had sealed it.
Sam forced himself to breathe.
Whatever lay past the locked door was more than just a passage to a
subbasement. Whoever had sealed it had intended to protect and preserve
something of enormous value to their society. Beyond this portal lay secrets
hidden for centuries.
Ralph finally broke the silence.
“Damn thing’s sealed tighter than Fort Knox!”
His words broke the door’s spell on
Sam. He finally noticed Maggie seated cross-legged before the portal. She
leaned an elbow on one knee and rested a cheek in her palm. Her eyes were fixed
on the door, studying it. She did not even acknowledge their presence.
Only Denal, the thirteen-year-old
Quechan boy who served as camp translator, greeted them with a small nod as
they entered. The youth had been hired off the streets of Cuzco by Sam’s uncle.
Raised in a Catholic missionary orphanage, Denal was fairly fluent in English.
He was also respectful. Slouching against a wooden support to the right, Denal
held a cigarette, unlit, between his lips. Smoking had been outlawed in the dig
for the sake of preserving what was uncovered and protecting the air quality in
the tunnels.
Sam glanced around and noticed
someone was missing. “Where’s Philip?” he asked. When the professor had left
for the States, Philip Sykes, the senior grad student, had been assigned to
oversee the dig. He should have been there, too.
“Sykes?” Maggie frowned. A hint of
her Irish brogue shone through the tightness in her voice. “He took a break.
Left over an hour ago an’ hasn’t been back.”
“His loss,” Sam mumbled. No one
argued about fetching the Harvard graduate student for the moment. After
assuming the title of team leader, Philip’s haughty attitude had rubbed
everyone raw, even the stoic Quechans. Sam approached the door. “Maggie, Ralph
mentioned writing on the doorway. Is it legible?”
“Not yet. I’ve cleared the mud, but
I’ve been afraid to scrape at the surface and risk damaging the engraving.
Denal sent one of the workers to fetch an alcohol wash kit for the final
cleaning.”
Sam leaned closer to the archway.
“I think it’s polished hematite,” he said as he rubbed the edge of one of the
bands. “Notice the lack of rust.” He backed away so Norman could take a few
photos of the untouched door.
“Hematite?” Norman asked as he
measured the room’s light.
Ralph answered while the journalist
snapped his pictures. “The Incas never discovered the art of smelting iron, but
the mountains around here were rich with hematite, a metallic ore from old asteroid
impacts. All the Incan tools found to date were either made of plain stone or
hematite, which makes the construction of their sophisticated cities all the
more amazing.”
After Norman had taken his photos,
Maggie reached a finger out to the top band of metal, her finger hovering over
its surface, as if she feared touching it. With her fingertip, she traced the
band where it was fastened to the stone arch. Each bolt was as thick around as
a man’s thumb. “Whoever built this meant to keep whatever is inside from ever
seeing the light of day.”
Before anyone could respond, a
black-haired worker pushed into the chamber. He bore vials of alcohol and
distilled water along with a handful of brushes.
“Maybe the etchings will reveal a
clue to what lies within,” Sam said.
Sam, Maggie, and Ralph each took
brushes and began painting the diluted alcohol solution across the bands.
Norman looked on as the students labored. Working on the center band, Sam’s
nose and eyes burned from the fumes as the alcohol worked upon the dirt caught
in the metal’s inscriptions. A final dousing with distilled water rinsed the
alcohol away, and clean rags were passed to the three students so they could
wipe away the loosened debris.
Sam gently rubbed the center of his
band in small buffing circles.
Maggie worked on the seal above
him, Ralph on the band below. He heard a slight gasp from Ralph. Maggie soon
echoed his surprise. “Sweet Mary, it’s Latin,” she said. “But that…that’s
impossible!”
Sam was the only one to remain
quiet. Not because his band was blank, but because what he had uncovered
shocked him. He stepped away from his half-cleaned band. All he could do was
point to its center.
Norman bent closer to where Sam had
been working. He, too, didn’t say a word, just straightened, his jaw hanging
open.
Sam continued to stare at what he
had uncovered. In the center of the band was a deeply etched cross on which was
mounted the tiny figure of a crucified man.
“Jesus Christ,” Sam swore.
Guillermo Sala sat on a stump at
the jungle’s edge, a rifle leaning against his knee. As the sun crept closer to
the horizon behind him, young saplings growing at the ruin’s edge spread their
thin shadows across the ground, stretching toward the square pit fifteen meters
away. From the hole’s opening, lamplight glowed out into the twilight,
swallowing the shadows as they reached toward the shaft. Even the hungry
shadows knew what lay below, Gil thought. Gold.
“We could slit their throats now,”
Juan said at his elbow. He nodded toward the circle of tents where the
scientists had retreated to study the engravings on the tomb’s door. “Blame it
on grave robbers.”
“No. The murder of gringo s always draws too much fire,” Gil said. “We stick
to the plan. Wait for night. While they sleep.” He sat patiently as Juan fidgeted
beside him. Four years in a Chilean prison had taught Gil much about the price
of haste.
Juan swore under his breath, while
Gil merely listened to the awakening rain forest around him. At night, the
jungle came alive in the moonlight. Each evening, games of predator and prey
played out among the black shadows. Gil loved this time of the evening, when
the forest first awoke, shedding its green innocence, revealing its black
heart.
Yes, he could wait, like the
jungle, for the night and the moon. He had already waited almost a year. First,
by ensuring that he was assigned as security for this team, then putting the
right men together. He came to guard the tomb and did so dutifully—not for the
sake of preserving the past for these Yankee scientists, but to safeguard the
treasures for himself.
These maricon
Americans galled him with their stupidity and blindness to the poverty around
them. To raid a country’s tombs for the sake of history when the smallest
trinket below could feed a family for years. Gil remembered the treasures
discovered in 1988 at Pampa Grande, in an unmolested Moche tomb. A flow of gold
and jewels. Peasants, trying to snatch a crumb from the harvest of wealth, had
died at the hands of guards just so the treasures could languish in foreign museums.
Such a
tragedy will not occur here, he
thought. It was our people’s heritage! We should be the
ones to profit from our past!
Gil’s hand strayed to the bulge in
his vest. It was one of the many gifts from the leftist guerrillas in the
mountains who had helped Gil in this venture. Gil patted the grenade in his
pocket.
It was meant to erase their tracks
after the raid on the tomb, but if these pelotudo
American scientists tried to interfere…well, there were always quicker ways to
die than by a knife’s blade.
Maggie O’Donnel despised Latin. Not
a simple distaste for the dead language, but a heartfelt loathing. Educated in
strict Catholic schools in Belfast, she had been forced to study years of
Latin, and even after repeated raps across her knuckles from sadistic nuns,
none of it had sunk in. She stared now at the charcoal tracings of the door’s
inscription spread across the table in the main tent.
Sam had a magnifying lens fixed
over one of the filigreed etchings from the top band. A lantern swung over his
head. He was the best epigrapher of the group of students, skilled at
deciphering ancient languages. “I think this says Nos
Christi defenete, but I wouldn’t stake my eyeteeth on it.”
The journalist, Norman Fields, hung
over Sam’s shoulder, his camera ready on his hip.
“And what does that bloody mean?”
Maggie asked sourly, feeling useless, unable to contribute to the translation.
Ralph Isaacson, who was just as weak in his Latin skills, at least knew how to
cook. He was outside the tent struggling to light the campstove and get dinner
started.
Ever since the professor had left,
the team had struggled to efficiently clear the ruins and catalog as much as
possible. Each had their assigned duties. Every evening, Ralph did the cooking,
leaving cleanup to Norman and Sam, while Maggie and Philip tediously entered
the day’s reports into the computer log.
Sam interrupted her reverie. He
scrunched up his nose as he tried to read the writing. “I think it says ‘Christ
preserve them,’ or ‘Christ protect them,’ ” he said. “Something like that.”
Philip Sykes, the senior grad
student, lay sprawled on a cot, a cold rag across his eyes. His irritation at
being left out of the discovery still clearly rankled him. “Wrong,” he said
bitingly, not moving from where he lay. “It translates, Christ protect us. Not them.” He followed his
assessment with a disdainful noise.
Maggie sighed. It was no wonder
Philip knew Latin so well. Just another reason to hate the dead language. He
was forever a font of trivial knowledge, ready at any instance to correct the
other students’ errors. But where he excelled in facts, he lagged in on-site
experience—hence, the team was burdened with him now. He needed to clock dig
hours before he could earn his Ph.D. After that, Maggie suspected the wanker would
never leave the ivy halls of Harvard, his alma mater, where his deceased
father’s chair in archaeology surely awaited him. The Ivy League was still one
big boys’ club. And Philip, son of an esteemed colleague, had a key.
Stretching her shoulders, she moved
closer to Sam. A yawn escaped her before she could stop it. It had been a long
day topped by fervid activity: photographing the door, getting a plaster cast
of the bands, charcoal etching the writing, logging and documenting everything.
Sam gave her a small smile and
shifted aside the etching of the middle band. It contained only the single
crucifix carved into the metallic hematite. No other writing. Sam lowered his
magnifying glass on the third and final onionskin tracing. “Lots of writing on
this one. But the script is much smaller and isn’t as well preserved,” he said.
“I can only make out part of it.”
“Well then, what can you read?”
Maggie asked, sinking into a folding chair near the table. A seed of a headache
had started to grow behind her right temple.
“Give me a few minutes.” Sam cocked
his head to the side as he squinted through his lens. His Stetson, usually
tilted on his head, rested on the table beside him. Professor Conklin had
insisted on a bit of common courtesy out here in the jungle. When inside the
tents, hats had to come off, and Sam still maintained the protocol, even though
his uncle was not present. Sam had been raised well, Maggie thought with a
small hidden grin. She stared at the professor’s nephew. Sam’s dusky blond hair
still lay plastered in place from the Stetson’s imprint.
Maggie resisted the urge to reach
over and tousle his hair back to a loose mop. “So what do you think, Sam? Do
you truly think the Spanish conquistadors etched these bands?”
“Who else? The conquistadors must
have searched this pyramid and left their mark.” Sam raised his head, a deep
frown on his face. “And if the Spanish were here, we can kiss good-bye any
chance to find the tomb intact. We can only hope the conquistadors left us a
few scraps to confirm Doc’s theory.”
“But according to the texts, the
Spanish never discovered any cities in this region. There is no mention of the
conquistadors ever reaching their thieving hands this far from Cuzco.”
Sam merely pointed to the table
laden with Latin etchings. “There’s the proof. We can at least walk away with
that. The conquistadors that arrived here must never have made it back to their
battalions at Cuzco. The natives must have killed them before they could make
it down out of the mountains. The discovery of this city died with them.”
“So maybe they didn’t get a chance
to loot this tomb,” Maggie insisted.
“Perhaps…”
Maggie knew her words did little to
convince anyone. She, too, knew that if the conquistadors had the time to etch
the bands, then they had more than enough time to raid the temple. She didn’t
know what else to say, so she simply slumped in her seat.
Sam spoke up. “Okay. This is the
best I’m able to pick out of this mess. Domine sospitate
something something hoc sepulcrum caelo relinquemeus.
Then a few lines I couldn’t make out at all, followed by ne
peturbetur at the end. That’s it.”
“And what does that mean?” Maggie
asked.
Sam shrugged and gave her one of
his wise-ass smiles. “Do I look like a Roman?”
“Oh my God!” Philip exclaimed,
drawing Maggie and Sam’s attention. He bolted upright. The rag dropped from his
face to his lap.
“What?” Sam lowered his magnifying
lens.
“The last part translates, We leave this tomb to Heaven. May it never be disturbed.”
Ralph suddenly pushed through into
the tent, his hands full with four mugs. “Who wants coffee?” He paused when he
saw them all frozen with eyes wide. “What happened?”
Sam was the first one able to
speak. “How about we break out the champagne instead? Toast a few ol’
conquistadors for protecting our investment here.”
“What?” Ralph asked, his face
scrunched with confusion.
Philip spoke next, his voice edged
with reserved excitement. “Mr. Isaacson, our tomb may still be intact!”
“How do you—?”
Maggie picked up one of the
onionskin tracing sheets. She held it toward him. “By Jesus, you gotta love
Latin.”
Sam could barely contain his
excitement as he waited for his computer to connect to the university’s
internet site via the satellite hookup. He sat in the communication tent with
the other students gathered around behind him. The tent was weathertight and
insulated against the elements, protecting the delicate equipment from the
eternal mists of the jungle heights.
Sam checked his watch for the
hundredth time. Two minutes shy of ten o’clock, the time each evening when Sam
or Philip updated the professor on their progress on the dig. That night,
though, was the first time the team had exciting news for his uncle. Sam jabbed
hurriedly at the keys as the connection was made. He initiated the video feed.
The small camera fixed to the top of the monitor blinked on its red eye. The
video satellite link had been a gift from the National Geographic Society.
“Smile everyone,” Sam muttered as he finished calling up his uncle’s internet
address.
The computer whirred through its
connections and a small flittering picture of Henry appeared in the upper right
hand corner. Sam tapped a few keys and the picture filled the entire screen.
The video feed was jittery. When his uncle waved a hand in greeting, his
fingers stuttered across his face.
Sam pulled the microphone closer.
“Hi, Doc.”
His uncle smiled. “I see everyone
is with you tonight. You must have something for me.”
Sam’s face ached from the wide grin
still plastered to his lips, but he wasn’t going to give up the team’s prize
that easily. “First give us the lowdown about the mummy. You said yesterday
that the CT was scheduled for this morning. How’d it go?” Sam regretted his
question as soon as he saw his uncle’s face cloud over. Even from three
thousand miles away, Sam could tell the old man didn’t have good news. Sam’s
smile faded away. “What happened?” he asked more soberly.
Henry shook his head, again it was
a jittering movement, but the words flowed smoothly through the receiver. “We
were correct in judging the mummy as non-Inca,” he began, “but unfortunately,
it was European.”
“What?” Sam’s shock was shared by
the others.
Henry held up a wavering hand. “As
near as I can tell, he was a Dominican priest, probably a friar.”
Maggie leaned toward the
microphone. “And the Incas mummified one of their hated enemies—a priest of a
foreign god?”
“I know. Strange. I plan to do a
little research here and see if I can trace this friar’s history before
returning. It’s not what I wanted to prove, but it is still intriguing.”
“Especially in the light of our
discovery here,” Sam added.
“What do you mean?” Henry asked.
Sam explained about their discovery
of the sealed door and the Latin inscriptions.
Henry was nodding by the end of
Sam’s description. “So the conquistadors truly did find the village. Damn.”
Henry slowly took off his glasses and rubbed at the small indentations on his
nose. His next words seemed more like he was thinking aloud. “But what happened
here five hundred years ago? The answer must lie behind that door.”
Sam could almost hear the gears
whirring in his uncle’s mind.
Philip grabbed the mike. “Should we
open the door tomorrow?”
Sam interrupted before his uncle
could answer. “Of course not. I think we should wait until Doc returns. If it’s
a significant find, I think we’d need his expertise and experience to explore
it.”
Philip’s face grew red. “I can
handle anything we discover.”
“You couldn’t even handle—”
Henry interrupted, his voice stern
and tight. “Mr. Sykes is right, Sam. Open the door tomorrow. Whatever lies hidden
beyond the sealed portal may aid my research here in the States.” His uncle’s
eyes traveled over the entire group. “And it is not just Philip I trust. I am
counting on all of you to proceed as I’ve taught you—cautiously and
meticulously.”
Even with these last words, Sam
noticed the gloating expression on Philip’s face. The Harvard grad would be
unbearable from there on out. Sam’s fingers gripped the table’s edge with
anger. But he dare not question his uncle. It would sound so petty.
“Sam,” his uncle continued, “I’d
like a few words in private.” Henry’s words were severe and scolding in tone.
“The rest of you should hit your pillows. You’ve a long day tomorrow.”
Muttering arose from the others as
they said their good-byes and shuffled off.
Henry’s voice followed them from
the tent. “And good work, folks!”
Sam watched the others leave.
Philip was last to slip out of the tent, but not before shining a tight smile
of triumph on his lips. Sam’s right hand balled into a fist.
“Sam,” his uncle said softly, “are they
all gone?”
Forcing his hand to relax, Sam
faced his uncle again. “Yeah, Uncle Hank,” he said, dropping to a more familiar
demeanor.
“I know Philip can rankle everyone.
But he is also a smart kid. If Philip can grow to be half the archaeologist his
father was, he’ll be a fine scholar. So cut him some slack.”
“If you say so…”
“I do.” Henry slid his chair closer
to the computer. His shaky image grew on the screen. “Now as to the reason I
wanted to speak to you in private. Though I voiced my support of Philip, I need
you to be my eyes and ears tomorrow. You’ve had a lot more dig experience, and
I’m counting on you to help guide Philip.”
Sam could not suppress a groan.
“Uncle Hank, he’ll never listen. He already thinks he’s the big buck at the
salt lick.”
“Find a way, Sam.” Henry replaced
his eyeglasses, ending the matter. He stared silently at Sam as if weighing
him. “If you are to be my eyes and ears, you’ll need to know everything I know,
Sam. There are some items I’ve kept from the others. To properly evaluate what
you discover tomorrow, you’ll need to be fully informed.”
Sam sat straighter. His irritation
at Philip vanished in a single heartbeat. “What?”
“Two items. First, something odd
happened to the mummy here at Johns Hopkins.” Henry explained about the
explosion of the mummy’s skull and the brilliant golden discharge.
Sam’s eyebrows were high on his
forehead. “Christ, Uncle Hank, what the hell happened?”
“The pathologist here hypothesized
a possible burst of trapped methane from sudden thawing. But after four decades
in the field, I’ve never seen its like before. And that discharge…Dr. Engel is
researching what it is. I may know more in a few days, but until then, I want
you to keep your eyes open. The mystery as to what occurred in this village
five centuries ago may be answered when you open that door.”
“I’ll watch out for any clues and
proceed with care, even if I have to force an iron bit and reins on Philip.”
His uncle laughed. “But remember,
Sam, experienced riders know it’s best to control a willful horse with only the
lightest touch on the reins. Let Philip think he is leader and all will go
well.”
Sam frowned. “Still…why the
secrecy, Uncle Hank?”
Henry sighed, a slight shake of his
head. He suddenly seemed much older, his eyes tired. “In the world of research,
secrets are important.” Henry glanced up at Sam. “Remember the looters. Even in
the remote wilds of the Andes, a few loose lips drew the scavengers like flies
to horse droppings. The same can occur in the research community. Loose lips can
sink grants, fellowships, and tenures. It’s a hard lesson I don’t like
teaching.”
“You can trust me.”
Henry smiled. “I know, Sam. I trust
you completely. I would have been glad to share all I know with you, but I
didn’t want to burden you with secrets. Not yet. You’ll find how it weighs on
your heart when you can’t speak openly with your own colleagues. But matters
now force me to shift my burden onto your shoulders. You must know the last
piece of the puzzle, the reason I am sure an older tribe built this city.”
Henry leaned closer to the screen. “I believe I may even know who it was.”
“What are you talking about? Who?
This site has the Incas’ stamp all over it.”
His uncle held up a hand. “I know.
I never disputed that the Incas eventually took over this site. But who was
here before them? I’ve read tales, recorded oral histories spread from ancestor
to ancestor, of how the first Incan king went to the sacred mountains and
discovered a bride in a wondrous city. Returning with her, he started the Incan
empire that would last hundreds of years. So even in their ancient tales, the
Incas admit that a foreign tribe shared their roots. But who? It’s the mystery
I’ve been investigating for decades. My research into this matter led to the
discovery of these ruins. But the answer to the question—who
built this city?—that I only discovered last
month.”
Speechless, Sam’s mind spun at the
prospect of how much his uncle had kept hidden. “Y…you truly know who built
this city?”
“Let me show you.” Henry reached to
his own keyboard and mouse and began manipulating files. “I wish I could claim
it was a brilliant piece of research on my part, but in actuality it was one of
those fortuitous events that always seem to push archaeology forward.”
His uncle’s image shrank to the
corner of the screen and a three-dimensional schematic of the current dig
appeared. Colored lines marked off the various levels of the dig. The detail of
the computer-generated landscape and surmounting ruins amazed Sam. Using the
mouse, Henry manipulated the pointer, and the screen zoomed into an aerial
close-up of the ruins atop the Sun Plaza. A small black square marked the
entrance tunnel to the ruins below.
“Here is our site. The tunnel into
the underground structure.”
“I know,” Sam said, “but what does
this have to do with—?”
“Patience, my boy.” Henry cracked a
wry smile from the corner of the screen. “Last month, a bit of luck occurred—I
received a CD-ROM from a fellow researcher from Washington University in St.
Louis. It contained computer-generated maps of several Moche pyramids currently
under excavation at Pampa Grande along the coast. Six hundred miles away.”
“Moche sites?” Sam remembered his
lessons on this region. Many centuries before the Incan civilization arose, the
Moche were a tribe that lived along a two-hundred-mile stretch of Peruvian
coast. Pyramid builders and masters of intricate metalwork, their tribes had
prospered between A.D. 100 and 700.
Then for no known reason, their civilization vanished.
Henry tapped a few more keys, and
Sam’s computer screen split into two images, side by side. On the left was the
aerial map of their ruins. On the right was a new computer schematic of a
flat-topped pyramid. His uncle pointed a finger at it. “Here is the pyramid at
Pampa Grande.” He zeroed the image onto the tip of the Moche structure.
“Oh Lord!” Sam gasped.
“Now you know my little secret.”
The two images merged together, overlapping one another. It was a perfect
match. “The Sun Plaza is actually the tip of a buried Moche pyramid. Our
underground ruins are actually the remains of a subterranean pyramid. One of
their sacred temples.”
“My God, Uncle Hank! Why are you
keeping this a secret? You should announce your discovery!”
“No. Not until I have further
physical proof. I had hoped the researchers here at Johns Hopkins would be able
to correlate genetic markers in the mummy to a Moche lineage, thus
substantiating my claims. But…” Henry shrugged. “It looks like the mysteries of
this jungle ruin just grow with each new piece we add to the puzzle.”
“The Moche,” Sam said, stunned with
too much information. Mummified priests, exploding skulls, buried pyramids,
strange warnings scrawled in Latin…how would they tie it all together?
As if reading his thoughts, his
uncle spoke, “The answers to all these mysteries may lie beyond that door, Sam.
I can almost feel it. So be careful.”
Guillermo studied the dark camp.
Midnight beckoned. The group of young scientists and the Quechan laborers had
all retired to their tents. The only lights left were those positioned around
the dig.
Raising his rifle, Gil signaled
Juan and Miguel.
Juan, his skeletal frame barely
discernible under the eaves of the surrounding forest, nudged his companion.
Broad of back but squat in height, Miguel stepped out from the jungle’s edge,
his back bowed with a large canvas bag. It contained the tools they would need
to crack through the tomb door. Juan followed, a pickax over his shoulder.
Gil waved them toward the highest
terrace. He knew they would have to be quick, but Gil did not complain. Sufficient
hours until daybreak still remained, and the news that the tomb had a good
chance of being intact had buoyed Gil’s hopes for a significant strike.
He joined Juan and Miguel by the
entrance to the shaft. “Keep it quiet, you hijos de putas,”
he hissed to them. Gil threw the switch that sped current from the generator in
the camp to the lamps below. He nodded for Juan to lead, followed by Miguel.
Gil kept a watch on the camp as
they climbed down. The surrounding rain forest, its edges lit up by the four
spotlights positioned at the compass points around the ruins, echoed with the
hoots and occasional screeches of the night. The jungle noises and the chugging
rattle of the camp’s generator should mask their efforts.
Satisfied, Gil hooked his rifle
over his shoulder and climbed down the ladder to join the others.
“Ai, Dios mio,
it’s a fucking maze down here,” Juan whispered sourly.
Miguel just grunted, spitting out a
jawful of hoja de coca. The coca leaves splattered
against the granite stonework.
Neither had been down into the
ruins. Only Gil had intimate knowledge of the tunnels and rooms of the buried
building. Crouching, he led them through the maze to the last chute that led to
the sealed door.
Juan continued to grumble behind
him until the thin man stepped fully into the chamber and saw the door. “Jesu Christo!”
Gil allowed himself a small grin.
The arched doorway set in quarried stone spoke of ancient times and hidden
treasures. Its bands glowed in the glare of the single sodium lamp. The writing
and crucifix were a dark blemish against the silvery metal.
“We don’t have all night,” Gil
snapped.
They knew what had to be done.
Miguel dropped his bag of tools to the floor with a clanking clatter and fished
through its contents. Juan swung his pickax in precise swings, loosening the
rock around the bolts. Miguel then used his crowbar and hammer to free the
bolts. Within minutes, the top band fell to the mud and rock underfoot.
Juan wiped sweat from his brow, his
grin wide. Miguel’s shirt clung to him like he had just climbed from a river.
Even Gil, who did nothing more than oversee the labors, found himself mopping
his face with a handkerchief. The eternal dampness of the tombs seemed to cling
to them, as if claiming the three as its own.
In short order, the other two bands
soon joined the first in the mud. Rock dust sifted through the room, stinging
eyes and irritating noses raw. Juan sneezed and swore a stream of vulgarities.
Gil clapped him on the shoulder. “A
little respect for our ancestors, ese. They are
about to make us rich.” He wiped a smudge of mud from Juan’s cheek with his
thumb. “Filthy rich.”
With a swing of his arm, Gil waved
his two companions aside. He grabbed the crowbar and approached the unfettered
block of stone. “Let’s see, mamita, what you’ve been
hiding for so long.”
Gil worked the edge of the crowbar
between rock and arch, then leaned his weight against the bar, his shoulder and
back muscles straining. The door held firm against his efforts. He dug his toes
in and pushed harder. Suddenly a loud grinding crack erupted from the door, and
the stone shifted.
Gil stepped back, his face still
ruddy from the struggle. He nodded to Juan and Miguel. “Put your backs into
it.”
The two leaned their shoulders to
the loosened stone door and shoved. The block of stone toppled forward. Dust
bloomed like a shrouded phantom from the mouth of the burial chamber, and a
muffled thud echoed through the room as the stone struck the floor of the
tomb’s entrance.
Waving the cloud of dust from his
face, Gil strode to the door. “Hand me one of those lights,” he said, bending
by the entrance.
Miguel tossed him a flashlight from
his canvas bag. Gil caught its long silver handle.
“Stinks in there,” Juan said as he
joined Gil and stared over his shoulder.
“It’s a grave,” Gil said, clicking
on the light. “What did you expect from—” Words died in his mouth as the light
lanced into the dark depths of the tomb, illuminating the passage ahead. Beyond
a short entry hall lay a huge chamber, about thirty meters along each side. Gil
had expected to discover piles of bones and scattered pottery, but what his
handlamp actually revealed was a sight he could never have imagined—not even in
his most drunken dreams.
“Dios mio!”
he exclaimed in a voice hoarse with awe.
His partners gathered to either
side, speechless.
Ahead, the right and left walls of
the square chamber were plated with sheets of gold. The beam of Gil’s
flashlight reflected and sparked off the mirrored surfaces, a brilliance that
almost blinded after the dim tunnels of the excavation. But Gil ignored all
this, his light still fixed on a single object resting against the far stone
wall of the chamber, directly opposite the gathered trio.
“We are all going to be filthy
rich, mi amigos.”
Across the open chamber stood a six-foot
golden idol, a figure of an Incan king outfitted in ritual mantle and crown,
bearing a staff topped by a stylized sun. The detail work was so lifelike that
the figure’s stern face seemed ready to shout a warning at any moment. But no
word of protest was raised. The Incan king, sculpted of gold, stood silent as
Gil led the others into the chamber.
Bending, Gil ducked through the
threshold. He did not wait for the others. He pushed forward down the short
hallway, the gold drawing him on. Past the doorway, he was able to stand
straight again. Gil held his breath at the sight. Both the roof and floor were
also covered in precious metals, an intricate pattern of gold and silver tiles,
each about a meter wide. The roof’s pattern was a mirror image of the floor. At
the feet of the idol were piled tools and weapons, also sculpted of precious
metals and bejeweled with rubies, sapphires, amethysts, and emeralds. Gil shook
his head. The sheer amount of wealth was too large to comprehend.
Juan finally moved forward to stand
beside Gil. He shifted uneasily, intimidated by their find. When he spoke, he
tried to act undaunted, but his voice cracked. “S…so let’s get hauling.”
Miguel had joined them by now and
made the sign of the cross, eyeing the golden king.
“He’s not one of your dead
relatives, Miguel,” Juan jibed at his compadre. “Lighten up.”
“This place is cursed,” Miguel
mumbled, eyes wide as he searched the room. “We should hurry.”
“Miguel is right,” Gil said. “We
must move fast. Grab what we can tonight and store it in the jungle. We’ll
return before daybreak and take care of the americanos
and their scrawny Indian laborers. Once they’re out of the way, we can call in
the additional men, those we can trust, to help clear this lot out.”
Juan started across the tiled
floor, his bootheels echoing oddly in the hollow chamber. He nodded toward the
mound of precious items left at the foot of the idol. “I say we collect all the
small stuff. Leave the lugging and toting of the heavier objects to the others.
Make them earn their share.”
Gil followed, with Miguel hovering
at his heels. “When we’re done here, there’ll be plenty for everyone. A hundred
men couldn’t spend this wealth in a lifetime.”
Juan glanced back, a wide grin on
his face. “Oh yeah? Just watch me.”
Halfway across the chamber, the
trap was sprung. Juan stepped on a silver tile, and the corresponding gold tile
in the roof above snapped open. A cascade of silver—thousands of tiny
chains—swept over Gil’s companion. Gasping, Juan ducked as his form was
instantly drenched in the fine chains. Once fallen, the chains draped from the
open panel, like a frozen waterfall of silver. They clinked brightly as Juan
danced among them, shocked but clearly unharmed. His motions only succeeded to
enmesh himself further.
“What the—?” Juan started to say,
reaching to shove aside the tangling links of silver. His hand darted back.
“Shit, they got hooks all over them.”
Gil finally noticed the hundreds of
glinting centimeter-long barbs sprouting along the lengths of chain. Their
points were all curved upward, hinged, so they caused no harm when they fell
from the ceiling.
Gil froze in mid-reach. Fuck, he thought as he suddenly realized the danger. A
warning rose too late on his lips.
Suddenly the cascade of chains spun
viciously around Juan, ripping upward at the same time. The man screamed, an
animal’s cry of panic and fear. Juan was lifted two meters off the ground by
the barbed chains, writhing in their hooked grips, before his weight finally
dropped him to the floor.
Juan pushed himself onto his hands
and knees. Most of his clothes had been ripped from his body, along with large
swaths of skin. He raised his face toward Gil. His left ear was gone; his scalp
lay torn and flapped over to one side. Both eyes were bloody ruins. Blind, all
Juan could do was howl. Even now, Gil saw Juan’s skin begin to blacken where
the hooks had dug in.
Poison.
Still Juan wailed in agony,
crawling, dragging himself slowly across the floor. He didn’t make it far. The
poisons reached his heart, and he collapsed to the gold and silver tiles. The
scream ending in mid-rattle.
Miguel went to check on his friend.
Gil grabbed a fistful of Miguel’s
shirt and pulled him to a stop. The two men shared a single gold tile on the
floor. With their friend’s cries echoing away to nothing, Gil now heard the
tick and grind of massive gears hidden behind the tiles and walls all around
them. They had walked into a massive booby trap.
Gil glanced around. They stood on
the single tile that centered the room. He studied the gold under his feet. “It
must have been built to activate only after someone fully entered the room.” He
eyed the tiles that led toward the golden idol and those that led back toward
the entrance. The ticking of the gears sounded from all around. He suspected neither
path was now safe.
Miguel moaned beside him.
Gil scowled at the enormous wealth
around him. Knowing death lurked behind its beauty, the luster faded from the
gold. “We’re trapped.”
Nestled in his sleeping bag atop a
camp cot, Sam awoke to the noise of some animal snuffling by his tent door. At
night, opossums and other curious nocturnal creatures were always wandering
from the rain forest’s edge to investigate the camp. But whatever was out there
now was large. Its shadow, cast by the camp’s spotlights, blotted out a good
section of the tent flap. Sam tried to remember if he had snapped the fasteners
after zipping up the door against mosquitoes. His first thought was jaguar. A
few of the large cats had been spotted along the Urabamba River, which ran through
the jungle below the ruins.
As silently as possible, Sam
reached for his Winchester rifle, a legacy from his grandfather, passed from
father to son through the Conklin family, dating back to 1884. Sam didn’t go
anywhere without it. The rifle had not been fired for years, more a keepsake
and good-luck charm than a weapon. But right now, unloaded, it might serve as a
good club.
His fingers slipped over the wooden
butt of the rifle.
Whatever was outside rattled the
flap near his toes. Damn, he had forgotten to fasten
the door! Sam sprang up in his sleeping bag and snatched the rifle up in his
fist.
As he swung the rifle back, the
flap was torn open.
“Sam, are you awake?” Maggie peeked
her head under the flap and made a halfhearted effort to knock on the canvas
side of the tent.
Sam lowered the rifle to his lap,
his heart still pounding in his ears. He swallowed hard to clear his throat and
forced his voice into a nonchalant tone. “Yeah, I’m up, Maggie. What’s the
matter?”
“I couldn’t sleep and got to thinking
about those etchings. I needed to run something by you.”
Sam had some fantasies of Maggie
sneaking to his tent in the dead of night, but none of them involved discussing
ancient Latin etchings. Still, any nighttime visit from Maggie was welcome.
“Okay. Give me a sec’.”
Rolling out of his sleeping bag, he
slipped his Wranglers over his boxers. With a night this muggy, he wouldn’t
normally bother with a shirt, but with Maggie out there, modesty more than
comfort mattered. Sam pulled a leather vest over his shoulders.
Grabbing his Stetson, he pulled
down the zipper to the tent and pushed through into the night. Silver glow from
a full moon washed over the camp, paling the four spotlights at the camp’s
periphery. He swiped his disheveled hair back from his forehead and trapped it
under his hat.
Maggie stepped back. She still wore
the same khaki pants with a matching vest over a blood-red shirt. The only
indication that Maggie had made any effort at relaxing this night was that she
had untied her hair from its usual ponytail. Cascades of auburn curls, frosted
silver by the night, flowed over her shoulders.
Transfixed by the play of moonlight
across Maggie’s cheeks and lips, Sam had to search for his voice. “So…what’s
up?”
As usual, her eyes didn’t seem to
see Sam. “It’s that writing on the last band. The bottom one. Those missing
words an’ lines. Latin’s a weird language. A single word can change the entire
meaning of the message.”
“Yeah?”
“What if we’re not reading it
right? What if one of those missing words or lines negates our translation?”
“Maybe it might…but tomorrow we’ll
know the truth anyway. When we crack the tomb in the morning, it’ll be intact
or it won’t.”
A hint of irritation entered her
voice. “Sam, I want to know before we open the tomb.
Don’t you want to know what the conquistadors really meant to communicate on
those bands?”
“Sure, but the words are
illegible.”
“I know, Sam…but that was with just
alcohol cleaning.” She looked at him meaningfully.
Suddenly Sam knew why Maggie had
roused him. He kept his lips clamped tight. Two years ago, he had presented a
paper on the use of a phosphorescent dye to detect and bring out the faint
written images worn by time on rock and metal. He had been uniformly scoffed at
for his idea.
“You packed your stuff, didn’t
you?” Maggie said.
“I don’t know what you’re talking
about,” Sam mumbled. He had told no one, not even his uncle, that he had
refused to abandon his theory, spending years researching the various
viscosities of different dyes and ranges of UV light. He had kept his studies
under close wrap, not wanting to humiliate himself until he could test it in
the field, try it when no one else was around to ridicule him. Suddenly he
realized he was not unlike his uncle in keeping secrets.
Maggie’s eyes glowed in the dark.
“I read your paper. You found a way to make it work, didn’t you, Sam?”
He just stood, unblinking. How had
she known? Finally, the shock faded enough for him to speak. “I think I solved it. But I haven’t had a chance to put it
through a field trial.”
Maggie pointed toward the ruins.
“Then it’s about time. The others are already waiting for us by the entrance to
the excavation.” She turned to leave.
“Others?”
Glancing back over her shoulders,
Maggie frowned. “Ah sure, Sam…Norman and Ralph. They should be in on this.”
“I suppose.” Sam rolled his eyes,
preparing himself to be humiliated if he should fail. At least, Philip had not
been invited. Sam could not have tolerated failing in front of Mr. Harvard.
“Let me grab my bottles and UV light.”
As Sam reached for his tent flap,
the jungle suddenly erupted in a cacophony of screeches and calls. A thousand
birds burst from the canopies around the camp and took to the air.
Maggie took a step closer to Sam.
“What the hell…?”
Sam glanced around, but the rain
forest quickly settled back down. “Something must have spooked them.” He
listened a bit longer, but only the humming of the generator reached his ears.
The jungle lay silent, like a dark stranger staring toward them. Sam studied
the forest a moment more, then turned back to his tent. “I’ll get my stuff.”
He pushed through the flap and
collected the satchel that held his dyes and special ultraviolet handlamp. As
he was leaving, his eyes settled on the old Winchester. Instinctively, he
grabbed it and slung it over his shoulder, but not before quickly loading a few
44/40 cartridges into the rifle’s magazine and pocketing a cardboard box of
spare shells. After years of overnight camps in the Texas wilderness, Sam had
learned to be prepared.
Crawling out of the tent, he found
Maggie’s back to him. She searched the edges of the jungle. “It’s still so
bloody quiet,” she said. “It’s like the forest’s holding its breath.”
“If we want to test this,” Sam
said, anxious to be under way, “we’d better hightail it. Dawn is only a few
hours away.”
Maggie nodded, reluctantly pulling
her gaze away from the jungle.
Sam led the way toward the terraced
ruins. With the rain forest so subdued, their footsteps on the granite stones
seemed unusually loud. Sam found himself walking carefully, afraid of
disturbing the silence, as though they were strolling through a graveyard at
midnight. He was glad when they finally reached the summit of the Sun Plaza.
Light shone up from the excavated shaft.
Limned in the light were two
shadowy figures—one thin and one wide. Norman and Ralph. They stood apart from
one another.
The ex-linebacker raised a hand in
greeting. He pointed toward the shaft. “Who left the lamps on?”
Maggie shook her head as she
climbed onto the flat-topped plaza. “I know I switched them off.” She surveyed
the ruins around them. “That feckin’ Guillermo probably turned them on during
his rounds and left ’em on. Where is he anyway? I thought he was supposed to be
guarding this place.”
“He’s probably in the forest
watching out for those looters from last night. Maybe he was the one who
spooked all those birds.”
The jungle remained deathly still.
Norman eyed the black forest. “I never liked the dark. I get the willies alone
in my darkroom at home.”
Ralph teased him with a remarkable
rendition of the Twilight Zone theme. Norman
pretended not to hear.
Sam climbed down first while Maggie
and the others followed. Once at the bottom of the ladder, he helped Maggie off
the rungs.
She turned to him, her head
slightly bent, her palm still resting in his. “Did you hear something just
then?”
Sam shook his head. All he could
hear was his own pounding heart. He found his hand squeezing hers.
Ralph and Norman joined them.
Maggie pulled her hand away,
listened for a moment more, then shrugged and took the lead. “Must be those
Incan ghosts,” she muttered.
“Thanks, Maggie,” Norman said
sourly. “That’s just what I wanted to hear when crawling through the ruins at
midnight. I already got a bad enough feeling about this.”
Ralph again started his Twilight Zone theme.
“Bite me, Isaacson,” Norman
snapped.
“I don’t lean that way, Normie.”
“Are you sure? You were a football
player, weren’t you? What’s with all that ass slapping and piling on one
another?”
“Shut up.”
“Jesus,” Maggie exclaimed. “Enough
from the both of you. I can’t hear a feckin’ thing.”
Following behind Maggie, Sam
ignored them all, lost in appreciating how Maggie moved as she climbed. Through
the thin cotton khakis, her legs were muscled and firm and their shapeliness
drew his eyes up her curves. Sam swallowed hard and wiped the dampness from his
brow with a handkerchief. She’s a colleague, he had
to remind himself. Like the army, his uncle frowned on fraternization while in
the field. Unwanted attentions among members could strain a small site.
Still, it never hurt to look.
As they traversed to the second
level of the dig, Sam marveled at his uncle’s revelation. This was once a Moche
pyramid! It was hard to believe. Sam ran a palm along the granite stone walls.
Ahead, Maggie stopped again,
pausing with her hand on the ladder that led to the third level. “Now I know I
heard something,” she whispered. “Words…and somethin’ knocking…”
Sam strained to hear, but he still
heard nothing. He glanced to Ralph and Norman. Both men shook their heads.
Norman’s eyes were huge behind his eyeglasses. Sam swung back to Maggie, ready
to dismiss her worry, when a scream burst from below, blowing past them like a
frightened bird.
Maggie turned wide eyes toward Sam.
Sam swung the Winchester from his
shoulder.
Gil studied the metal tiles all
around him. The gears of the hidden mechanism ticked and groaned behind the
walls.
Miguel shared the gold square with
him, crowding Gil’s right side. The squat man’s eyes were wide with fear, and
words of prayer whispered from his lips.
Gil ignored him. No gods would
protect them there. Survival was up to them. But Gil was not only interested in
survival. His eyes kept drifting to the wealth at the feet of the golden idol.
Counting, Gil noted that fifteen rows of tiles lay between him and the statue
of the Incan king, and fifteen rows lay behind him. Fifteen meters either way.
Too far to jump.
He scowled at the trap, sensing
that there must be some key to crossing this floor. He turned in a slow circle.
The tiles’ pattern was not that of a checkerboard but a complicated
crisscrossing pattern of gold and silver squares. It was not unlike some of the
geometric patterns found in the work of Incan tapestries and clothing. There
was an order, a clue perhaps to a safe course. But what was it?
Juan’s corpse lay upon a
neighboring gold tile, where he had managed to drag himself before dying. Blood
pooled under his silent form. No new trap had been triggered when Juan had
crawled off the silver tile that had originally sprung the trap. Could that be
the answer? Were the gold tiles safe and the silver a danger?
There was only one way to find out.
Gil unslung his short rifle and
poked it into Miguel’s ribs. “Move,” he ordered.
Miguel glanced from the rifle’s
barrel to Gil’s face. “¿Que?”
“Hop over to that gold square,” Gil
nodded toward a tile beyond the neighboring silver one. The direction led
toward the golden idol. If they were to risk their lives, Gil wanted something
to show for their efforts.
Miguel still stood frozen,
disbelief and horror on his face.
“Go. Or die right here.” Gil shoved
his rifle harder against Miguel.
His squat companion stumbled back a
step, his heels just inside the square. “Please, ese,
don’t make me do this.”
“Do as I say, or I’ll use your
corpse to test the tiles.”
Miguel trembled, gaze swinging
between the rifle and Juan’s corpse. Finally, his shoulders sagged. He turned
to face the deadly pattern, made the sign of the cross, and jumped. His legs
were so wobbly from fear that he barely managed to leap the short distance. He
landed hard and fell to his hands and knees on the gold tile.
Gil saw that the man’s eyelids were
squeezed tight as he froze in place, expecting the worse. But nothing happened.
Slowly, Miguel opened his eyes and pushed shakily to his feet. He turned toward
Gil, a feeble smile on his lips.
Gil called to him, relieved to find
his theory proving true. “The gold tiles are safe. Stick to them and we can get
in and out of here.” Still, Gil was taking no chances on being wrong. He waved
his rifle. “Go on to the next, and I’ll follow.”
Miguel nodded. The next gold tile
adjoined the tile he occupied. He merely had to step onto it. He did so slowly.
Again nothing happened. The ancient mechanism just continued its continual
creaking from beyond the walls and ceiling. Miguel moved onto the next golden
tile, again having to leap a silver one. Still safe.
As Gil followed, he saw Miguel’s
attitude grow more relaxed, though his lips still moved silently in continuous
prayer. The pair slowly worked their way across the chamber. Tile by tile, row
by row, they neared the golden idol. At last they reached the last tier that
stood between them and the treasure. The tiles were all silver. The only gold
tile was the one upon which the idol and the treasure rested.
Miguel turned to Gil, his
expression clearly asking what now?
Gil studied the Incan king. Against
the backdrop of black granite, the statue’s gold eyes seemed to stare back,
mocking him. Gil bristled. He would not be thwarted by a bunch of idol
worshipers. Not when he was so close.
He moved beside Miguel, again
sharing his tile. Neither dared cross that silver river of tiles to the
treasure beyond, but that did not mean he could not pilfer the piled wealth at
the statue’s feet. Holding his rifle by its butt, Gil reached out with his
weapon, stretching his arm across the silver toward the statue.
The tip of his rifle just reached
the hoard. Gil nudged a few of the items, searching. He held his breath as he
did so. What if there was another booby trap there? His straining ears seemed
to pick up a slight change in the cadence of the mechanism’s gears. He cringed,
but nothing happened.
Gil swore under his breath. The
rifle bobbled in his extended grip. He was getting too jumpy. He took a
steadying breath, then concentrated on his task, refusing to fail. He ground
his teeth and ignored the growing burn from his straining shoulder. Finally,
his efforts paid off. A pair of twin goblets was exposed, one gold, one silver,
each embedded with rubies and emeralds in a serpent pattern. But the feature
that most attracted Gil was the arched handles on the cups.
Something he could hook!
Slipping his rifle’s barrel through
the handle of one, he lifted it free of the pile. He tilted the weapon, and the
silver goblet slid down the barrel to rest against its wooden stock. Gil pulled
the weapon back and stood. He shook the treasure off his weapon and passed it
to Miguel. “For your bravery, mi amigo.”
Miguel held the goblet in trembling
fingers. There was enough wealth in that single token to set up the squat man
and his family for the rest of their lives. Miguel whispered a prayer of
thanks.
Gil frowned and turned away. His
companion should be thanking him, not his God. Gil knelt again and stretched
his rifle to retrieve the golden cup. The second goblet was soon in his hands.
Here was his reward. He knew a dealer in stolen antiquities that would pay
triple the price of the gold in the cup for any intact Incan artifacts. Gil
shoved the goblet into his jacket and turned his back on the statue.
He plotted what he had to do next.
He patted the grenade in his vest. He had to protect the rest of the wealth
here until he could bring in a demolitions team to neutralize the booby trap.
Once the cursed apparatus was disabled, he and his team could collect the rest
of the riches at their leisure. In his mind, he pictured the only other
obstacle to his plans: the group of americanos
sleeping snugly in their tents. He gripped his rifle. They must never see the
dawn.
With his plan set, Gil waved Miguel
on toward the exit. His companion needed no further coaxing, clearly glad to
escape with his single small treasure. Miguel hopped to the next gold square.
It shot up under him with a scream
of gears and pulleys. The tile, with Miguel atop it, flew toward the ceiling,
borne up by a thick trunk of wood. Overhead, the corresponding silver tile in
the ceiling slid back. Silver spikes thrust downward.
Miguel saw his death and tried to
roll off the tile, taking his chance on the fall below—but he was not quick
enough. His legs, from the knees down, were pinned by the spikes, driven
through muscle and bone. Miguel screamed. Bones snapped like broken twigs as he
thrashed in the grip of the spikes.
The gold tile then descended,
sliding smoothly back to its place in the floor’s pattern. Smeared with blood,
it was empty. Gil looked up. Miguel still hung by his spiked legs from the
roof.
Blood rained down from Miguel’s
ruined legs. He thrashed, arms pushing against the stakes. He finally won his
freedom and fell the two stories to the metal floor. Again the crack of bones
sounded with the impact.
Gil had glanced away when Miguel
fell. He turned back. Miguel lay broken upon the tiles. Only one limb was still
intact. The man tried to push up on his good right arm, but the pain was too
much. He collapsed again. Too weak, too shocked to scream, only a low moan
escaped his lips. He stared at Gil with begging eyes.
Gil could not save him.
Raising his rifle, Gil whispered,
“I’m sorry, ese.” He shot Miguel through the
forehead, the rifle’s blast deafening in the enclosed space. Miguel’s moaning
stopped. Blood dribbled from the small hole in his forehead.
Gil studied the tiles once again. A
gold one had killed Miguel! Why were they no longer safe? Was his theory wrong
to begin with—or had the rules changed? He remembered the shift in the
mechanism’s cadence as he had fished through the treasure. Something had
altered. Gil stared. Miguel had landed on a silver square with no repercussion.
Were the silver tiles now the safe ones? Gold when one approached, silver as
one left. Could it be that easy?
Gil had no other cohort to bully
into taking the risk. He would have to test his theory himself. Cautiously, he
reached with his rifle and tapped its butt on the next tile—a silver one.
Nothing happened. But did that prove anything? Maybe it would take his full
weight to spring the trap. Slowly, he reached a booted foot and placed it on
the square. Holding his breath, he leaned his weight onto this leg, ready to
leap back with any shift in the tile or change in the gear’s timbre. Soon he
stood with one leg on the new silver tile and one on the gold tile. Still,
nothing changed.
Cringing, Gil pulled his other leg
over onto the silver. He stood motionless. No harm came to him. Safe.
Sighing out his trapped breath, he
wiped the sweat from his eyes. Tears ran down his cheeks. He did not know when
they had begun to flow.
He stood on the silver tile. The
next one would require leaping a gold square. Before he could lose his nerve,
he leaped, rifle in hand and landed roughly on the silver tile. He froze but
remained safe.
Grinning, he straightened and
glanced back to the king. “I beat you, you bastard!”
He turned toward the exit and
worked his way cautiously, but more rapidly, across the floor. It was his speed
that saved his life. He hopped from one silver tile to its neighbor, just
leaping off the first as it opened under him. From the shift in his footing as
he jumped, he fell hard to the next tile. Overhead, a spray of water jetted
from small openings that appeared in the corresponding roof tile. It showered
into the newly opened pit behind him. Gil rolled around. A bit of the mist from
the spray struck his exposed cheek; it burned with a touch of fire. Gil shoved
away. Acid!
He touched his flaming cheek. His
skin already lay blistered and oozing.
Gil shivered at the thought of
being trapped in that pit below when the shower of acid struck. His death would
have been long and painful.
The burning rain ended and the
silver tile slid closed over the pit. Death had come within a breath of
claiming him. Trembling, he struggled to his feet.
He stared at the traitorous silver
tile. Silver! He had been wrong all along. Only pure luck and chance had
carried him this far.
With this horrible realization
dawning, he swung to face the exit. Escape lay three rows away—about three
meters. He now knew he could trust none of the tiles. He would have to risk
jumping. If he dived, he might just make it.
Gil stared at his rifle. He could
not chance its weight. He dropped it along with the ammunition belt slung over
his chest to the floor. Taking out the heavy golden goblet, Gil stared at it a
moment, then returned it to inside his vest. He would rather die than lose this
treasure. He shrugged out of his boots instead. Besides, if he was barefooted,
he had a better grip on the tile’s silver surface anyway.
Once ready, he backed to the far
edge, giving himself as much of a running start as possible. But he had only
two short steps at most. Girding himself, Gil closed his eyes, and for the
first time in decades, he prayed to his God for strength and luck. Prepared, he
opened his eyes and clenched his fist. “Now or never,” he mumbled.
Leaning forward, he dashed two
quick steps, then flung himself headfirst with all the strength in his legs. He
flew across the rows of tiles and landed hard upon the stone floor, ducking
enough to take the brunt of the collision on his left side. Something snapped
in his shoulder as he rolled into the short passage and came to rest against
the toppled stone door.
With a grimace, Gil shoved to his
feet. He ignored the shooting pain in his neck. He had made it! Fingering his
shoulder, he realized he had most likely broken his collarbone. Not a big deal.
He had once taken three bullets in the chest. In comparison, this was nothing
more than a scratch.
Gil pulled free the precious
goblet. One of its lips was slightly bent from the weight of his fall. But,
like Gil, it had sustained no real harm.
Stepping to the edge of the deadly
pattern, Gil raised the chalice and spat toward the distant Incan king, the
gold idol bright against the black stone. “I’ll come back and rape you yet!” he
cursed.
With that promise, he turned on a
heel and fled.
Maggie knelt by the top of the
ladder that led down to the third level of the ruins. “Someone’s coming!” she
whispered, pushing Sam back from her shoulder.
An instinct told her they needed to
hide. Raised on the streets of Belfast, Maggie knew to listen to that inner
voice of hers. Surviving among the constant gunfire and bombings between the
warring Irish factions and the British military had taught Maggie O’Donnel the
value of a good hiding place.
“C’mon,” Maggie urged, pulling Sam
with her. Norman and Ralph followed.
Sam resisted, raising his rifle.
“Maybe it’s looters. We should stop them.”
“And get us all killed, you stupid
git? You don’t know how many are down there, or how well they’re armed. Now
let’s go!”
Norman agreed. “She’s right. The
leftist guerrillas around here, the Shining Path, are well equipped. Russian
AK-47s and the like. We should leave any investigation to the security team.”
Sam stared back to the ladder, then
shook his head and followed Maggie. She led the group to a side chamber. No
sodium lamps lit the room. Darkness swallowed them.
“Stay low,” Maggie warned. “But be
prepared to run on my signal.”
Sam muttered as he hunkered down
beside her, “Maggie O’Donnel, combat archaeologist.”
Maggie could just make out Sam’s
form as a darker shadow among the others, but she could imagine his sarcastic
smile.
“You know,” Ralph added in a
whisper, “it’s probably just Gil or one of his men.”
“And the scream?” Maggie said.
“I’m sure that—”
Maggie reached a hand to his knee
to quiet the large man. She could hear the creaking wood as someone mounted the
ladder from below. Whoever climbed was in a hurry. She could hear his panting
breath and his scrambled flight. Lowering herself closer to the stone floor,
Maggie watched the climber’s head rise from the shaft.
She recognized the lanky black hair
and the spidery white scar on his bronze cheek. Guillermo Sala. The
ex-policeman frantically crawled from the ladder, his feet almost slipping.
Maggie allowed a breath of relief to escape her throat. Ralph was right. It was
just the camp’s guard.
She started to stand when she
spotted the large burn blistered on his cheek. It cracked and bled. Gil swiped
a hand to his wounded face and smeared the blood across his shirt. His eyes
were wide, the whites of which almost glowed in the lantern near the ladder.
His lips were thin with hatred—but she also sensed fear and shock emanating
from him.
Maggie knew that expression. A
childhood friend, Patrick Dugan, had worn the same shocked face when caught by
a stray bullet during a firefight back in Belfast. He had raised his head too
soon from their shared hiding place in a roadside drainage ditch. Maggie had
known better. Even as Patrick’s body collapsed atop her, she hadn’t moved.
Danger lay in haste. Having learned her lesson, Maggie stayed hidden and kept
the others back with a hand.
What had happened below? What could
frighten a man as hard and tough as Gil?
As on that noon day in the streets
of Belfast, Maggie knew safety still lay in the shadows. She peered from the
room’s edge as Gil reached to his vest and fingered an object bulging in a
pocket. It seemed to center the panicked man, as a crucifix would reassure an
old woman.
Then, from another pocket, he
pulled free what looked like a green apple with a handle. It took Maggie a
heartbeat to recognize the armament, so out of place in an ancient Incan ruin.
Bloody hell! A grenade!
With a final glance at the shaft,
Gil scrabbled to his feet and raced down the tunnel.
Listening to his fading footsteps,
Maggie found she could not move. In her mind’s eye, the grenade still loomed
large—a familiar weapon in the war on the streets of her home. Buried childhood
panic swelled, threatening to choke her. Her hands trembled. She clenched her
fists, refusing to succumb to the panic attack that verged. Her vision swam
slightly as her breath became stilted.
Sam must have sensed her distress.
“Maggie…?” He reached to her shoulder.
His touch ignited her. She sprang
to her feet. “Och, we need to get out of here,” she said, her words rushed.
“Now!”
Sam pulled his Stetson firmer on
his head. “Why? It’s only Guillermo.”
Her face fierce, Maggie swung
toward Sam. The Texan had not seen the grenade. Sam backed a step from whatever
he saw in her eyes. She did not have time to explain her fears. “Go, you bloody
wanker!” she hollered, the panic thickening the Irish brogue on her tongue. She
shoved Sam toward the tunnel and waved the others after him.
Sam’s long legs ate up the
distance. Maggie followed, keeping one eye on their back trail. Ahead, Ralph
kept up with Sam, but Norman, burdened with his cameras, had slipped behind.
“Hurry,” she urged the journalist.
Norman glanced back. His face was
stark white in the glow of the lamps. But he fought for more speed and closed
the distance as the two quicker men reached the ladder to the next level of the
dig.
Ahead, Sam flew up the wooden rungs
with Ralph at his heels. Norman went next. Maggie stood at the foot of the
ladder, her ears straining for any danger behind them. Far away, echoing up
from below, she thought she could just make out a deep ticking, like a large
watch winding down.
“Maggie, c’mon!” Sam whispered
urgently to her from above.
Maggie turned to find the ladder
clear. For a moment, time had slipped away from her. It was one of the signs of
a pending attack. Not now! She flew up the ladder. Sam helped her off the last rung,
hauling her up with his arms. The ladder to the surface lay only a handful of
meters away. On her feet, Maggie led the way.
She followed the zigzagging line of
lanterns, lights flickering past as she ran. As she spotted the ladder’s base,
she heard a low grunting coming from the shaft to the surface. It was Gil. It
sounded like he had almost reached the plaza above.
With her goal in sight and a
freshening breeze from above encouraging her, Maggie sped faster.
Suddenly, words echoed down to her:
“Swallow this, you hijo de puta!”
Maggie froze as a hard object
pinged and bounced down the shaft to land at the foot of the ladder. She stared
in disbelief at the green metallic cylinder. It rested in the mud beside the
wooden beam that acted as the main shaft support. The grenade!
Maggie cartwheeled back toward Sam.
He grunted as she fell against his chest. “Back…back…back…” she chanted.
The group tumbled, tangled in each
other’s arms, away from the ladder.
“What—?” Sam said in her ear.
With adrenaline fierce in her
veins, she shoved Sam and the others into a side chamber.
The blast caught them at the
entrance. The concussion and explosion of air propelled them all across the
room. They struck the far wall and fell to the stone floor in a pile of limbs.
With the lamps flickering around
them, Maggie rolled up to her knees. Past her ringing ears, she heard Ralph
groan beside her. Maggie took stock of her own injuries. She seemed to be
unscathed, but as she viewed the damage done by the grenade through the settling
dust, a moan escaped her throat, too.
They were trapped!
The passage that led to the last
ladder was now a tumble of rock and dirt. The grenade had collapsed the tunnel
to the surface, taking out a good section of the first level’s ceiling. Stones
lay in a jumble from the triggered landslide.
Around her, the remainder of the
ruins grumbled and groaned with the shift in stresses. Thirty feet of earth
pushed to collapse more of the subterranean ruin.
What were they going to do?
Then the lights flickered a final
time and died. Blackness swallowed them up.
“Everyone okay?” Sam asked numbly,
his voice exaggerated by his deafened ears.
Norman answered, “Fine. I’m buried
thirty feet underground…in a tomb. But otherwise, I’m fine.”
“Okay here, too, Sam,” Ralph added,
his usual bravado dimmed.
Sam coughed on the thick dust in
the air. “Maggie?”
She could no longer answer. She
felt her limbs stiffen and begin the first of the characteristic tremors. She
fell back upon the stone floor as the seizure grabbed her body and dragged her
consciousness away.
The last she heard was Norman’s
strangled cry. “Sam, something’s wrong with Maggie!”
Gil fled from the blast in the pit,
the roar ripping through the quiet jungle. Smoke and debris, sweeping up into
the night, chased him down the slope to the floor of the camp. Though the loose
stones cut his bare feet, he scrambled down the stairs, cursing himself for
abandoning his boots below. Why hadn’t he tossed his footwear and rifle free of
the booby trap before he jumped? But he knew the answer. He had panicked.
Overhead, a flock of frightened
parrots scattered across the beam of one of the nearby spotlights. The blaze of
blue-and-red plumage across the black night startled him. As the single
explosion echoed away, the jungle answered the grenade’s challenge with bird
screeches and monkey calls.
The jungle had awakened—as had the
camp below.
Lights swelled within several of
the workers’ cheap tents. Shadows already moved inside as the sleepers
awakened. Even one of the students’ tents blossomed with the warm glow.
Weaponless and with no companions,
Gil dared not try to take the camp alone. He would have to gather other men and
return quickly to eliminate the americanos and their
workers. At least the grenade had managed to bring down the only entrance to
the subterranean ruins. The bounty below should be protected until he could
return with men and construction tools to dig it free. Not concerned about
“damaging the fragile site,” his team could have the treasure hoard plucked in
short order. A day or two at the most.
Yet, before Gil could gather more
men, he had one more mission to complete here at the camp. Reaching the cluster
of tents, he slipped into the darker shadows between two of the workers’ rough
shelters. Faces began to peek out of tent flaps. Their eyes were surely on the
plume of dirt still smoking from the excavation site.
No one spotted Gil.
As he slipped behind the tents, the
whispered squabble in the guttural Quechan tongue could be heard from the
neighboring tent. A shrill voice also called from where the students kept their
more expensive shelters. “Guillermo! Sam! What happened?” It was the pompous
leader of these maricon students.
Gil ignored the growing exchange of
voices. From a pile of stacked work tools, he silently removed a pickax and
shearing knife. Crossing to the rear of one of the shelters, Gil used the knife
to slice a new entrance. His sharp blade hissed through the thick canvas.
Slipping through the hole, Gil entered the tent with his pickax.
He studied his quarry—the satellite
communication system. Luckily, he did not need to wreak havoc on the entire
assembly. It had a weak link. The small computer itself. Much of the other
equipment had spare parts, but not the CPU. Without it, the camp would be cut off
from sounding the alarm or calling for help.
Gil raised the pickax over his
shoulder and waited. His fractured collarbone protested the weight of the iron
tool—but he did not have long to pause. Again Philip Sykes’s angered voice
barked frantic orders from his tent flap, clearly scared to leave the safety of
his shelter: “Sala, where the hell are you?”
As the student yelled, Gil drove
the ax’s spike into the center of the computer. Cobalt sparks bloomed in the
shadowed interior of the tent, but they quickly died away. Gil did not bother
hauling the pickax free or checking to see if his sabotage had been noticed. He
simply ducked back through the sliced rear of the tent and darted away.
With all eyes turned toward the
smoking tunnel on the plaza above, Gil slipped into the jungle fringe unseen,
knife in hand and revenge in his heart.
He clenched the blade’s hilt in a
white-knuckled fist.
No one bested Guillermo
Sala—especially not an ancient Incan idol!
“Hurry, Sam!” Norman’s voice was
frantic in the darkness.
In the stygian darkness of the
temple ruins, Sam dug through his bag of research tools. None of them had
thought to bring a flashlight. He would have to improvise. Blind, his fingers
sifted through the clinking bottles. His palm finally settled on his buried
Wood’s lamp. It was the ultraviolet light source used to illuminate his
deciphering dyes. Pulling it free, Sam clicked it on.
Under the glow of ultraviolet
light, an eerie tableau appeared. Dust, which still hung in the air from the
explosion, fluoresced like snow in the odd purplish light but did little to
obscure the others. The teeth, whites of the eyes, and pale clothing of his
companions all shone with an unnatural brightness.
Norman Fields knelt beside Maggie.
She stared at the ceiling, her back arched off the stone, her heels drumming on
the ancient floor. Norman held her shoulders, while Ralph hovered over them
like a dark phantom. Norman glanced up at Sam. “She’s having some type of
seizure.”
Sam scooted beside them. “She must
have hit her head. Maybe a bad concussion.” He lifted his lamp to examine her
eyes, but the ultraviolet light did little to illuminate her pupils. Under the
glow, her facial muscles twitched and convulsed; her eyelids fluttered. “I
can’t tell for sure.” Sam examined his companions’ faces.
None of them knew what to do.
Small noises of strangulation
escaped Maggie’s throat.
“Aren’t you supposed to keep her
from swallowing or biting her tongue or something?” Ralph said, uncertain.
Sam nodded. Already Maggie’s face
had taken on a vaguely purplish hue. “I need a gag.”
Norman reached to his back pocket
and extracted a small handkerchief. “Will this work?”
Sam had no idea, so he simply took
the scrap of cloth and twisted it into a rope. He hesitated as he reached
toward Maggie, uncertain what to do. A small sliver of saliva trailed from the
corner of her mouth. Though slipping an iron bit in his horse’s mouth was
second nature to him, this was different. Sam fought back his fear.
Gently he tried to push Maggie’s
chin down, but her jaw muscles were clenched and quivering. It took extra force
to pry her mouth open, more than he would have imagined. Finally, he used a
finger to roll the tip of her tongue forward. Her mouth was hot and very wet.
He cringed but worked the handkerchief back between her molars, pinning her
tongue down and keeping her from gnashing.
“Good job,” Norman congratulated
him.
Already, Maggie’s breathing seemed
more even.
“I think it’s ending,” Ralph said.
“Look.”
Maggie’s heels had stopped their
drumming, and her back relaxed to the floor.
“Thank God,” Sam muttered.
After a few more seconds, Maggie’s
trembling stopped. An arm rose to bat weakly at the empty air. She blinked a
few times, her eyes glazed and blind. Then her gaze settled on him, and
suddenly Sam knew Maggie was back. She stared at him, her anger bright.
Her fingers found Sam’s hand, the
one holding her gag in place. She shoved him away and spat out the gag.
“Wh…what are you trying to do?” She rubbed roughly at her lips as she sat up.
Norman saved Sam from having to
explain. “You were having a seizure.”
Maggie pointed to the saliva-soaked
handkerchief. “So you all tried to suffocate me? Next time just roll me on my
side.” She waved away their explanations. “How long was I out?”
Sam found his voice. “Maybe two
minutes.”
Maggie frowned. “Damn.” She crossed
to the wall of tumbled stone and clay that blocked the way out of the buried
temple.
From her lack of surprise or
concern at the seizure, it dawned on Sam that her attack was not from a blow to
the head. He found his voice, his own anger freeing his tongue. “You’re an
epileptic.”
Throwing back her hair, Maggie
turned on him. “Idiopathic epilepsy. I’ve had attacks periodically since I was
a teenager.”
“You should have told someone. Does
Uncle Hank know?”
Maggie looked away. “No. The
attacks are so infrequent that I’m not even on medication. And it’s been three
years since I’ve had a seizure.”
“Still you should have told my
uncle.”
Fire edged her words. “And be
kicked off this dig? If Professor Conklin knew about my epilepsy, he would
never have let me come.”
Sam met her heat with his own.
“Maybe you shouldn’t have. Not only is it unsafe for you, but you’ve put my
uncle at risk. He’s both responsible and liable for this dig. He could be sued
by your relatives.”
Maggie opened her mouth to argue,
but Norman interrupted. “If you’re done debating medical histories and the
finer points of tort law, might I point out that we are now buried under thirty
feet of unstable rock?”
As if to emphasize his words,
stones groaned overhead, and a slide of dirt hissed from between two large
granite slabs and trailed to the floor.
Ralph moved forward. “For once I
agree with Norman—let’s get our butts out of here.”
“My point exactly,” Norman added.
Sam frowned at Maggie once more.
Emotions warred in his chest. He did not regret his words—Maggie had a
responsibility to tell someone—but he wished he could go back and erase the
anger from his outburst. He had been frightened for her, his heart squeezed
into a tight ball, but he had been unable to voice such a thing aloud. So
instead, he found himself snapping at her.
Sam turned away. In truth, a part
of him understood her desire to maintain her secret. He, too, would have done
anything to remain on this dig—even lie.
He cleared his throat. “Philip and
the others must have heard the explosion. When they find our tents empty,
they’ll know we’re down here and come looking. They’ll dig us out.”
“Hopefully they’ll do so before we
run out of air,” Norman added.
Ralph moved to join the group now
huddled before the collapsed section of the tunnel. “I hate putting my life in
Philip’s hands.”
Sam agreed. “And if we survive,
we’ll never live it down.”
In the dead quiet of the tomb,
stones could be heard creaking and groaning overhead. Sam glanced up, raising
his lamp. Dirt trickled from between several stones. The explosion had clearly
destabilized the ruins of the pyramid. Reexcavating this site to rescue them
might bring the entire temple down around their ears, and it was up to Philip
Sykes to realize this.
Shaking his head, Sam lowered his
lamp. He could not imagine a worse situation.
“Did you hear something?” Norman
asked. The photographer was staring now, not at the blockage of debris, but
back behind them, deeper into the temples.
Sam listened. Then he heard it too
and swung around. A soft sliding noise, like something being dragged along the
stone floor of the ruins. It came from farther into the maze of tunnels and
rooms. Beyond the edge of his light, from the total darkness, the noise seemed
to be coming closer.
Maggie touched his arm. “What is
it?”
With her words, the noise abrubtly
stopped.
Sam shook his head. “I don’t know,”
he whispered. “But whatever it is, it now knows we’re here.”
Philip Sykes was hoarse from
yelling. He stood in his bare feet at the flap of his tent, robe snugged tight
to his slim figure. Why was no one answering him? Outside the tent, the camp
was in turmoil after the explosion. Men ran across the shadowy ruins, some
armed with bobbing flashlights, others with work tools. No one seemed to know
what had happened. Spats of native Indian dialect were shouted from the top of
the Sun Plaza, where the cloud of dust was finally dissipating. But Philip
understood only a smattering of Quechan words. Not enough to decipher the
frantic calls and answers.
He looked at the luminous dial of
his watch. It was after midnight, for Christ’s sake. Various scenarios played
in his head. The looters from the previous day had returned with better arms,
and they were attacking the camp. Or maybe the Quechan laborers themselves, a
swarthy and suspicious lot, had mutinied. Or maybe one of the three generators
had just exploded.
Philip clutched the collar of his
robe tight to his neck. Where were his fellow students? Finally, fear and
irritation drove him barefooted from the flap. He took a quick peek around the
edge of his tent. Farther back, the three other shelters were dark humps
huddled against the night. Why hadn’t the others been roused? Were they hiding
in the dark?
Stepping back to his own tent,
Philip’s eyes grew wide. Maybe he should do the same. His own lamplit shelter
was surely an illuminated target for any aggressor. He darted inside and blew
out the lamp. As he turned back to the tent’s entrance, a huge black shadow
filled the doorway. Philip gasped.
A flashlight blinded him.
“What do you want?” he moaned, his
knees weak.
The light shifted to illuminate the
face of one of the Quechan workers. Philip could not say which of the many
laborers stood at his tent flap. They all looked the same to him. The man
garbled some words of Quecha, but Philip understood none of it. Only the wave
of the man’s hand, indicating Philip should follow, was clear.
Still, Philip hesitated. Did the
man here mean him harm or was he trying to help? If only Denal, the filthy
urchin from Cuzco who had acted as their translator, were there. Unable to
communicate, Philip felt defenseless, isolated, and trapped among these
foreigners.
Again the shadowy figure waved for
Philip to follow, then stepped back and turned to leave. Philip found himself
skittering after the man into the darkness. He did not want to be alone any
longer. Barefooted still, he hurried to keep up.
Outside the shelter of his tent,
the night wind had grown a crisp edge to it. It sliced through Philip’s robe to
his bare skin. The man led him to the other students’ tents. Once there, he
threw back the flap to Sam’s tent and flashed the light inside for Philip to
see. Empty!
Philip backed up a step and
surveyed the ruins. If the bastard was out there, why hadn’t Conklin answered
his calls? His Quechan guide showed him the other tents. They were empty, too.
Sam, Maggie, Ralph, even the photographer Norman, had disappeared. Panic, more
than the cold breezes from the mountaintops, set Philip’s limbs to shaking.
Where were they?
The worker turned to him. His eyes
were dark shadows. He mumbled something in his native tongue. From his tone,
the Indian was just as concerned.
Edging farther away, Philip waved
an arm behind him. “We…we need to call for help,” he mumbled from behind
chattering teeth. “We need to let someone know what’s going on.”
Philip turned and hurried toward
the communication tent. The Quechan worker followed with the flashlight.
Philip’s shadow jittered across the path ahead of him. He needed to alert the
authorities. Whatever was happening, Philip could not handle it himself.
At the tent, Philip worked the
zipper and snaps with fumbling fingers. Finally the flap was open, and he
crawled within. The worker remained at the entrance, pointing the flashlight
inside. In the beam of light, Philip stared wide-eyed at their communication
equipment. A pickax was embedded in the heart of the central computer.
Philip slid to his knees with a
moan. “Oh, God…no.”
Sam held the Winchester pointed
toward the dark corridor that led to the heart of the ruins. A furtive scuffing
and shuffling moved toward them through the darkness.
Beside him, Ralph held Sam’s
ultraviolet lamp out toward the darkness. Its illumination did little to pierce
the well of shadows. What lay within the blackness remained a mystery.
Maggie and Norman stood behind the
two men. Leaning forward, Maggie whispered in Sam’s ear, her breath hot on his
neck. “Gil was running from something. Something that scared the hell out of
him.”
Sam’s arms trembled with her words,
his grip on the rifle slipping. “I don’t need to hear this right now,” he
hissed back at her, steadying his hand.
Ralph had heard her words, too. The
ex–football player swallowed audibly and raised the lamp higher, as if that
would spread the glow farther. It didn’t.
Sam tired of this game of silences.
He cleared his throat, and called out, “Who’s there!”
His answer was instant and
blinding. Light flared up from the dark corridor, so bright it stung the eye.
The group tumbled backward. Sam’s finger twitched on the rifle’s trigger, but
only instinct drilled into him from hunting trips with his uncle kept him from
firing off a round: you never shoot what you can’t see.
Sam kept his rifle pointed, but he
eased back on the trigger.
A squeaky voice, timid and frosted
with terror, echoed up from behind the blinding light. “It’s me!” The light
suddenly tilted away from their gathered faces to play across the ceiling. A
small figure stepped forward.
Sam lowered his weapon, silently
thanking his uncle for his training in restraint. “Denal?” It was the young
Indian lad who acted as their translator. The boy’s face was ashen, his eyes
glowing with fear. Sam shouldered his rifle. “What the hell are you doing down
here?”
The boy hurried forward, keeping
the flashlight he bore pointed down now. Words in fractured English rushed from
him. “I…I see Gil sneakin’ down here with Juan and Miguel. With bags of stuff.
So I follow ’em.”
Maggie pushed beside the trembling
boy and put an arm around him. “What happened?”
Denal used his free hand to slip a
cigarette to his lips. He did not light it, but its familiar presence seemed to
calm him. He spoke around the cigarette. “I no know…not sure. After they broke
the sealed door—”
“What!” Sam gasped out. Even in their
dire situation, such a betrayal shocked him.
Denal merely nodded. “I no see
much. I stay out of sight. They crawl through door…and…and…” Denal glanced up
to Sam, his eyes frightened. “Then I hear screaming. I run. Hide.”
Maggie spoke, “Goddamn. The feckin’
bastard was going to loot the place right out from under our noses.”
“But obviously something went
wrong,” Norman added tensely, glancing back at the wall of rubble behind them.
He turned back around. “What about the other two? Juan and Miguel?”
“I no know.” Denal seemed to see
the blockage for the first time. He crossed to the cascade of boulders and
clay. “Guillermo run out…I wait. I scared others might catch me. But no one
come out. Then big boom. Stones fall…I run.” Denal raised a hand toward the tumbled
section of the temple. “I should no come down alone. I should tell you instead.
I so stupid.”
Sam took the Wood’s lamp from Ralph
and turned off its ultraviolet glow. “Stupid? You at least thought to bring a
flashlight.”
Maggie moved closer to Sam. “What
are we going to do?”
“We’ll just have to wait for Philip
to realize we’re down here.”
Norman scowled at Sam’s side.
“We’ll be waiting a long time.”
Denal crossed back to them. “Why no
call him on walkie-talkie?”
Sam frowned. “Like the flashlight,
that’s another thing none of us thought to bring.”
Denal reached to a back pocket and
pulled free a small handheld unit. “Here.”
Sam stared at the walkie-talkie. A
smile grew on his face. “Denal, don’t ever call yourself stupid again.” He took
the pocket radio. “If you’re stupid, what does that make all of us?”
Denal stared gloomily back at the
rubble. “Trapped.”
Philip still knelt in the
communication tent when the camp’s radio erupted with static. The loud noise
drew a gasp from the startled student. Garbled words flowed between screeches
of static: “…stones collapsed…someone pick up the line…”
It was English! Someone he could
talk to! Philip scrambled for the receiver. He stabbed at the transmission
button and spoke into the receiver. “Base camp here. Is anyone out there? We
have an emergency! Over!”
Philip waited for a response.
Hopefully whoever was there would be able to send help. Static was his only
answer for a few strained heartbeats; then words formed again. “Philip?…It’s
Sam.”
Sam? Philip’s heart sank. He raised
the receiver. “Where are you? Over.”
“We’re trapped down in the temple
ruins. Gil blew the entrance.” Sam explained about the security chief’s
betrayal. “The whole structure is unstable now.”
Philip silently thanked whatever
angel had been watching over him and kept him from being buried down there with
the others.
“You’ll need to send an S.O.S. to
Machu Picchu,” Sam finished. “We’ll need heavy equipment.”
Eyeing the pickax in the damaged
CPU, Philip groaned softly. He clicked the transmit button. “I have no way of
reaching anyone, Sam. Someone took out the satellite system. We’re cut off.”
There was a long pause as Philip
waited for a response. He imagined the string of expletives flowing from the
Texan’s lips. When Sam next spoke, his voice was angered. “Okay, Philip, then
at first light send someone out on foot. Someone fast! In the meantime, you’ll
need to survey the damage on the surface when the sun’s up. If you and the
workers could begin a cautious excavation—at least get started—then when help
arrives you can move quickly. I don’t know how long the air will hold out down
here.”
Philip nodded, even though Sam
could not see. His mind dwelt on other concerns—like his own safety. “But what
about Gil?” he asked.
“What about him?” Sam’s voice had a
trace of irritation.
“He’s surely long gone.”
“But what if he comes back?”
Again a long pause. “You’re right.
If he blew the place and sabotaged the communications, he must be planning to
return. You’d better post guards, too.”
Philip swallowed hard as the
growing danger he faced dawned on him. What if Gil returned with more bandits?
They had only a few hunting rifles and a handful of machetes. They would be
sitting ducks for any marauders. Philip glanced to the single Quechan Indian
who still held the flashlight at the tent’s entrance. And who among these
swarthy-skinned foreigners could he trust?
A squelch of static drew Philip’s
attention back to the radio. “I’m gonna sign off now, Philip. I have to
conserve this walkie-talkie’s battery. I’ll check back with you after sunrise
to get an update on how things look from above. Okay?”
Philip held the receiver with a
hand that now shook slightly. “Okay. I’ll try to reach you at six.”
“We’ll be here. Over and out.”
Philip settled the receiver back to
the radio unit and stood up. From outside the tent, the worst of the commotion
from the riled camp seemed to have died down. Philip crossed to the tent’s flap
and stood beside the small Quechan Indian.
Barefoot, wearing only his robe,
Philip stared out at the black jungle and the smoking ruins. The chill of the
night had settled deep into his bones. He hugged the robe tight to his frame.
Deep in his heart, a part of him wished he had been trapped down in the temple
with the others.
At least he wouldn’t be so alone.
Tuesday, August 21, 7:12 A.M.
Regency Hotel Baltimore,
Maryland
As early-morning
sunlight pierced the gaps in the heavy hotel curtains, Henry sat at the small
walnut desk and stared at the row of artifacts he had recovered from the mummy:
A silver ring, a scrap of faded illegible parchment, two Spanish coins, a
ceremonial silver dagger, and the heavy Dominican cross. Henry sensed that
clues to the priest’s fate were locked in these few items, like a stubborn
jigsaw puzzle. If only he could put it all together…
Shaking his head, Henry stretched a
crick from his back and rubbed at his eyes under his glasses. He must look a
mess. He still wore his wrinkled grey suit, though he had tossed the jacket on
the rumpled bed. He had been up all night studying the items, managing only a
short catnap around midnight. The artifacts kept drawing him back to the
hotel-room desk and the array of books and periodicals he had borrowed from the
library at Johns Hopkins. Henry simply could not quit working at the puzzle,
especially after his first discovery.
He picked up the friar’s silver
ring for the thousandth time. Earlier, he had gently rubbed the tarnish from
its surface and uncovered faint lettering around a central heraldic icon. Henry
raised his magnifying lens and read the name on the ring: “de
Almagro.” The surname of the Dominican friar. Just this one piece to the
puzzle brought the man to life in Henry’s mind. He was no longer just a mummy. With a name, he had become flesh and blood again.
Someone with a history, a past, even a family. So much power in just a name.
Laying the magnifier down, Henry
retrieved his pen and began adding final details to his sketch of the ring’s
symbol. A part of it was clearly a family crest—surely the de Almagro coat of
arms—but a second image was incorporated around the family heraldry: a crucifix
with a set of crossed sabers above it. The symbol was vaguely familiar, but
Henry could not place it.
“Who were you, Friar de Almagro?”
he mumbled as he worked. “What were you doing at that lost city? Why did the
Incas mummify you?” Chewing his lower lip in concentration, Henry finished the
last flourishes on his drawing, then picked the paper up and stared at it.
“This will have to do.”
He glanced to his watch. It was
almost eight o’clock. He hated to call so early, but he could not wait any
longer. He swiveled his chair and reached for the phone, making sure the
portable fax unit was hooked in properly. Once satisfied, he dialed the number.
The voice that answered was
officious and curt. “Archbishop Kearney’s office. How may I help you?”
“This is Professor Henry Conklin. I
called yesterday to inquire about gaining access to your order’s old records.”
“Yes, Professor Conklin. Archbishop
Kearney has been awaiting your call. One moment please.”
Henry frowned at the receptionist’s
manner. He had not expected to reach the archbishop himself, but some minor
clerk in their records department.
A stern but warm voice picked up
the line. “Ah, Professor Conklin, your news about the mummified priest has
caused quite a stir here. We’re most interested in what you’ve learned and how
we might be of help.”
“Thank you, but I didn’t think the
matter would require disturbing Your Eminence.”
“Actually, I am quite intrigued.
Before entering the seminary, I did a master’s thesis in European history. A
chance to participate in such a study is more of an honor than a bother. So,
please, tell me how we can be of assistance.”
Henry smiled inwardly at his luck
in finding a history buff among these men of the cloth. He cleared his throat.
“With Your Eminence’s help and access to Church archives, I had hoped to piece
together the man’s past, maybe shed light on what happened to him.”
“Most certainly. My offices are
fully at your disposal, for if the mummy is truly a friar of the Dominican
order, then he deserves to be sanctified and interred as befits a priest. If
descendants of this man still survive, I would think it fitting that the
remains be returned to the family’s parish for proper burial.”
“I quite agree. I’ve tried to glean
as much information as I can on my own, but from here, I’ll need to access your
records. So far, I’ve been able to determine the fellow’s surname—de Almagro.
He was most likely a friar in the Spanish chapter of the Dominicans dating back
to the 1500s. I also have a copy of the man’s family coat of arms that I’d like
to fax you.”
“Hmm…the 1500s…for records that
old, we might have to search individual abbeys’ records. It might take some
time.”
“I assumed so, but I thought to get
started before I headed back to Peru.”
“Yes, and that does give me an idea
where to start. I’ll forward your records to the Vatican, of course, but there
is also a very old Dominican enclave in Cuzco, Peru, headed by an Abbot Ruiz, I
believe. If this priest was sent on a mission to Peru, the local abbey there
might have some record.”
Henry sat up straighter in his
chair, excitement fueling his tired body. Of course! He should have thought of
that himself. “Excellent. Thank you, Archbishop Kearney. I suspect your help
will prove invaluable in solving this mystery.”
“I hope so. I’ll have my secretary
give you our fax number. I’ll be awaiting your transmission.”
“I’ll forward it immediately.”
Henry barely paid attention while he was passed back to the receptionist and
given the fax number. His mind spun on the possibilities. If Friar de Almagro
had been in Peru long, surely there might even be some of the man’s letters and
reports at the abbey in Cuzco. Perhaps some clue to the lost city might be
contained in such letters.
Henry replaced the receiver with
numb fingers and slid his sketch of the ring into the fax machine. He dialed
out and listened to the whir and buzz as the fax engaged.
As the drawing was forwarded, Henry
forced his mind to the other mystery that surrounded the mummy. He had spent
the night pursuing this fellow’s past, but with such matters out of his hands,
he allowed himself to speculate on the last puzzle concerning the mummy.
Something he had not related to the archbishop. Henry pictured the explosion of
the mummy’s skull and the splatter of gold.
What
exactly had happened? What was that substance? Henry knew the archbishop could shed no new light on that matter. Only
one person could help him, someone whom he had been looking for an excuse to
call anyway. Since meeting her again for the first time in almost three
decades, he could not get the woman out of his mind.
The fax machine chimed its
completion, and Henry picked up the phone. He dialed a second number. It rang
five times before a breathless voice answered. “Hello?”
“Joan?”
A puzzled voice. “Yes?”
Henry pictured the pathologist’s
slender face framed by a fall of hair the shade of ravens’ wings. Time had
barely touched her: just a hint of grey highlights, a pair of reading glasses perched
on her nose, a few new wrinkles. But her most delightful features remained
unchanged: her shadowy smile, her amused eyes. Even her quick intelligence and
sharp curiosity had not been dulled by years in academia. Henry suddenly found
it difficult to speak. “Th…this is Henry. I’m…I’m sorry to disturb you so
early.”
Her voice lost its cold dispassion
and warmed considerably. “Early? You just caught me arriving home from the
hospital.”
“You worked all night?”
“Well, I was reviewing the scans of
your mummy, and…well…”—a small embarrassed pause—“I sort of lost track of
time.”
Henry glanced down at his own
wrinkled clothing and smiled. “I know what you mean.”
“So have you learned anything new?”
“I’ve put together a few things.”
He quickly related his discovery of the friar’s name and his call to the
archbishop. “How about yourself? Anything new on your front?”
“Not much. But I’d like to sit down
and go over some of my findings. The material in the skull is proving most
unusual.”
Before Henry could stop himself or
weigh such a decision, he pushed forth. “How about lunch today?” He cringed as
the words came out. He had not meant to sound so desperate. His cheeks grew
heated with his awkwardness.
A long pause. “I’m afraid I can’t
do lunch.”
Henry kicked himself for being so
unprofessional. Surely she saw through his words. Ever since Elizabeth had
died, he had forgotten the knack of approaching a woman romantically—not that
he’d ever had much of a desire to do so before now.
Joan continued, “But how about
dinner? I know a nice Italian place on the river.”
Henry swallowed hard, struggling to
speak. Dare he hope that she was suggesting more than just a meeting of
colleagues? Perhaps a renewal of old feelings? But it had been so long. So much
life had passed between their college years and now. Surely whatever tiny spark
that had once flared between them had long gone to ash. Hadn’t it?
“Henry?”
“Yes…yes, that would be great.”
“You’re staying at the Sheraton,
yes? I can pick you up around eight o’clock. That is, if a late dinner is okay
with you?”
“Sure, that would be fine. I often
eat late, so that’s no problem. And…and as a matter of fact, um…” Henry’s
nervous blathering was thankfully interrupted by the beep of an incoming call.
He awkwardly coughed. “I’m sorry, Joan. I’ve got another call. I’ll be right
back.”
Henry lowered the receiver, took a
long calming breath, then clicked over to the other line. “Yes?”
“Professor Conklin?”
Henry recognized the voice. His
brow crinkled. “Archbishop Kearney?”
“Yes, I just wanted to let you know
that I received your fax and took a look at it. What I saw came as quite a
surprise.”
“What do you mean?”
“The emblem of the crossed swords
over the crucifix. As a former European historian, it’s one I’m quite familiar
with.”
Henry picked up the friar’s silver
ring and held it to the light. “I thought it looked familiar myself, but I
couldn’t place it.”
“I’m not surprised. It’s a fairly
archaic design.”
“What is it?”
“It is the mark of the Spanish
Inquisition.”
Henry’s breath caught in his throat.
“What?” Images of torture chambers and flesh seared by red-hot irons flashed
before his eyes. The black sect of Catholicism had long been disbanded and
vilified for the centuries of deaths and tortures it had inflicted in the name
of religion.
“Yes, from the ring, it seems our
mummified friar was an Inquisitor.”
“My God,” Henry swore, forgetting
for a moment to whom he was speaking.
An amused chuckle arose from the
Archbishop. “I thought you should know, but I must be going now. I’ll forward
your information to the Vatican and to Abbot Ruiz in Peru. Hopefully we’ll
learn more soon.”
The archbishop hung up. Henry sat
stunned, until the phone rang in his hand, startling him. “Oh, God…Joan.” Henry
clicked back to the pathologist he had left on hold. “I’m sorry that took so
long,” he said in a rush, “but it was Archbishop Kearney again.”
“What did he want?”
Henry related what he had learned,
still shaken by the revelation.
Joan was silent for a moment. “An
Inquisitor?”
“It would appear so,” Henry said,
collecting himself. “One more piece to an expanding puzzle.”
She replied, “Amazing. It seems
we’ll have even more to ponder over dinner tonight.”
Henry had momentarily forgotten
their supper arrangements. “Yes, of course. I’ll see you tonight,” he said with
genuine enthusiasm.
“It’s a date.” Joan quickly added
her good-byes, then hung up.
Henry slowly returned the receiver
to its cradle. He did not know what surprised him more—that the mummy was a
member of the Spanish Inquisition or that he had a date.
Gil climbed the stairs of the only
hotel in the jungle village of Villacuacha. The wooden planks creaked under his
weight. Even in the shadowed interior of the inn, the late-morning heat could
not be so easily escaped. Already a sweltering warmth wrapped itself around Gil
like a heavy blanket. He swiped the dampness from his neck with the cuff of his
torn sleeve and swore under his breath. The night-long flight through the
jungle had left him scratched and foul-tempered. He had managed only a short
nap after arranging this meeting.
“He had better not be late,” Gil
grumbled as he climbed to the third landing. After fleeing the campsite of the
Americans, Gil had reached a dirt track in the jungle just as the sun finally
rose. Luckily, he stumbled upon a local Indian with a mule and a
crooked-wheeled wagon. A handful of coins had bought him passage to the
village. Once there, Gil had telephoned his contact—the man who had arranged
for Gil’s infiltration onto the Americans’ team. They had agreed to a noon
meeting at this hotel.
Gil patted the golden cup secured
in his pocket. His contact, a dealer in antiquities, should pay a tidy sum for
such a rare find. And this broker in stolen goods had better not balk at Gil’s
price. If Gil had any hopes of hiring a crew to return to the dig and
commandeer the site, he would need quick funding—all in cash.
Gil ran a hand over the long knife
at his belt. If it came down to it, he would persuade the fellow to meet his
price. He would let nothing stand between him and his treasure, not after how
much it had cost him already.
Atop the stairs, Gil pushed the
taped bandage covering his burned cheek more firmly in place. He would be
rewarded for his scarring. That he swore. Teeth gritted with determination, Gil
walked down the narrow corridor. He found the right door and rapped his
knuckles on it.
A man’s firm voice answered. “Come
in.”
Gil tried the door. It was
unlocked. He pushed his way into the room and was instantly struck by two
things. First, the refreshing coolness of the room. Overhead, a ceiling fan
turned languidly creating a gentle stir to the air that seemed to wash away the
humidity. A double set of French doors were swung wide open upon a small
balcony overlooking the hotel’s shaded garden courtyard. From somewhere beyond
the steamy warmth of the jungle, a cool breeze flowed through those open doors
into the room. White-lace curtains drifted in the gentle breezes, while thin
mosquito netting around the single bed billowed softly like the sails of a
ship.
But more than the breezes, the
room’s occupant struck Gil as the source of the room’s coolness. It was the
first time Gil had ever met his contact in person. The tall man sat in a
cushioned rattan chair, facing Gil, his back to the open double doors. Dressed
all in black, from shoes to buttoned shirt, the fellow sat with his legs
casually crossed, a drink clinking with ice in one hand. From his burnished
complexion, he was clearly of Spanish descent. Dark eyes stared at Gil,
appraising him from under clipped black hair. A thin mustache also traced the
man’s upper lip. He did not smile. The only movement was a flick of the man’s
eyes toward the other chair in the room, indicating Gil should sit.
Still wearing his ripped and
sweat-stained clothes, Gil felt like a peasant before royalty. He could not
even manage to roil up a bit of righteous anger at the man’s attitude. He
sensed a vein of hardness in the man that Gil could never match, nor dare
challenge. Gil forced his tongue to move. “I…I have what we talked about.”
The man merely nodded. “Then we
need only discuss the price.”
Gil lowered himself slowly to the
chair. He found himself perched just at the edge of the seat, not comfortable
enough to lean back. He suddenly wanted nothing more than to be done with this
deal, no matter what the price. He longed to leave the chill of the room for
the familiar swelter of the bustling town.
Gil could not even meet the other
man’s eyes. He found himself staring out the window at the town’s church
steeple, the thin white cross stark against the blue sky.
“Show me what you found,” the man
said, his drink still clinking as he gently rocked his glass, drawing back
Gil’s attention.
“Yes, of course.” Swallowing the
dry lump in his throat, Gil fished out the dented chalice and placed it on the
table between them. Rubies and emeralds flashed brightly against the gold
setting. Gil felt a resurgence of his resolve as he eyed the jeweled dragon
wrapped around the thick gold cup. “And…and there’s more,” Gil said. “With
enough men and the right tools, by week’s end, I could have a hundred times as
much.”
Ignoring Gil’s words, the man
lowered his drink to the table and reached to the Incan cup. He picked up the
chalice, raised it to the sunlight, and examined its surface for an
excruciatingly long time.
Gil’s hands wrung in his lap as he
waited. He stared at the dent along the cup’s lip as the man studied the
workmanship on the chalice. Gil feared such a blemish might significantly
reduce the price. The fellow had insisted any artifacts be brought to him intact.
As the man finally lowered the cup
back to the table, Gil dared meet his eyes. He saw only anger there.
“The dent…it…it was already there,”
Gil stammered quickly.
The man stood silently and crossed
to a small bar behind Gil. Gil listened as the man added more ice to his glass.
He then stepped behind Gil.
Gil could not bring himself to
twist around. He just stared at the treasure atop the table. “If you don’t want
it, I…I will not hold you to any obligation.”
Without turning, Gil knew the man
leaned toward him. The small hairs on the nape of his neck quivered with the
instinct of his cave-dwelling ancestors. Gil then felt the man’s breath at his
ear.
“It is only ordinary gold.
Worthless.”
Sensing the danger too late, Gil’s
hand snapped toward the knife at his belt. His fingers found only an empty
sheath. Before Gil could react, his head was yanked back by the hair; he saw
his own knife gripped in the man’s hand. He did not even have time to wonder
how the the blade had been snatched from his side. A flick of the man’s wrist,
and the dagger sliced open Gil’s throat, a line of fire from ear to ear. Gil
was tossed forward and fell to the floor as his blood spilled across the
whitewashed planks.
Rolling to his back, Gil saw the
man return to the bar for his abandoned drink while Gil choked on his own
blood. “P…Please…” he gurgled out, one arm raised in supplication as the light
in the room began to dim. The man ignored him.
Eyes filled with tears, Gil again
turned to the open window and the bright crucifix in the blue sky. Please, not like this, he prayed silently. But he found no
salvation there either.
Finished with his drink, the man
eyed the still form of Guillermo Sala. The pool of blood appeared almost black
against the white floor. He felt no satisfaction in the killing. The Chilean
had served his purpose and was now more a risk than a benefit to his cause.
Sighing, he crossed the room,
careful not to foul his polished shoes with blood. He retrieved the Incan
treasure from the table and weighed it briefly, judging its worth once the gems
had been pried free and the cup melted into a brick. It was not the discovery
his group had hoped to find, but it would have to do. From Gil’s description of
the underground vault, there was still a chance of a more significant strike.
Stepping back to the room’s bed, he collected the small leather satchel and
secured the cup inside.
He studied the room. It would be
cleaned up by nightfall.
Satchel in hand, he left the room
and its cool breezes for the moist heat of the narrow corridor and the stairs.
Sweat quickly broke across his forehead. He ignored it. He had grown up in
these moist highlands and was well-accustomed to the swelter. Born of mixed
blood, Spanish and local Indian, he was a mestizo, a
half-breed. Neither Spanish nor Quechan. Despite carrying this mark of dishonor
among the highland people, he had managed to fight his way to a place of
respect.
Once through the hotel’s small
lobby, he crossed into the midday sunlight. The steps outside were blinding in
the bright light. Shading his eyes against the glare, he worked his way down
the steps and almost stumbled over an Indian woman and her babe near the foot
of the stairs.
The woman, wearing a rough-spun
tunic and shawl, was as startled by him as he excused himself. But she fell to
her knees before him, snatching at his pant leg and raising her baby, wrapped
in a brightly colored alpaca blanket, toward him. She beseeched him in her
native Quecha.
He smiled benignly at her and
nodded in answer. Placing his bag on the last step, he reached to his throat
and slipped out his silver pectoral crucifix. It stood stark against his black
raiment. He raised a hand over the babe’s head and gave a quick benediction.
Once done, he kissed the baby on the forehead, collected his bag, and continued
down the village street toward his church, the steeple overhead guiding him
home.
The small Indian woman called after
him, “Gracias! Thank you, Friar Otera!”
In the darkness of the collapsed
temple, time stretched. Maggie was sure entire days had passed, but if her
watch was accurate, it was only the following morning, close to noon. They had
been trapped for less than half a day.
Arms across her chest, Maggie
studied the others as she stood a few paces down the main corridor. With his rifle
slung over a shoulder, Sam stood by the rockfall, the walkie-talkie glued to
his lips. Since dawn, the Texan had been in periodic contact with Philip,
conserving the walkie-talkie’s battery as much as possible but trying to aid
their fellow student in his appraisal of the ruined site.
“No!” Sam yelled into the
walkie-talkie. “The debris pile is all that is holding up this level of the
dig. If you try to excavate the original shaft, you’ll drop the rest on top of
us.” A long pause where Sam listened to Philip’s response. “Shit, Philip!
Listen to me! I’m down here. I can see how the support walls are leaning on the
blockade of stone. You’ll kill us. Find where those looters had been tunneling
into the dig. That’s the best chance.”
Sam shook his head at the
walkie-talkie. “The bastard is spooked up there,” he told her. “He’s looking
for the quickest fix as usual.”
Maggie offered Sam a wan smile.
Personally, she was looking for the quickest fix, too.
Ralph and Norman were huddled
around their only light source, Denal’s flashlight. Ralph held it for Sam to
survey the destruction and the state of their crumbling roof. Norman had
snapped a few photographs after the short naps they had managed overnight. He
now stood with his camera hanging by a strap, clutched to his belly. If they
survived this, Norman was going to produce some award-winning footage of their
adventure. Still, from his pale face, Maggie was sure the photographer would
gladly trade his Pulitzer for the chance to escape alive.
“Watch out!”
The call from behind startled
Maggie. She froze, but a hand suddenly shoved her off her feet. She stumbled a
couple steps forward just as a large slab of granite crashed to the stones
behind her. The entire temple shook. Dust choked her for a few breaths.
Waving a hand, Maggie turned to see
a dusty Denal crawling to his feet. The chunk of loosened rock stood between
them. Maggie was dumbstruck by how close she had come to being crushed.
Sam was already beside her. “You
need to keep an eye on the ceiling,” he admonished her.
“No feckin’ kidding, Sam.” She
turned to the boy as he clambered over the slab. Her voice softened with
appreciation. “Thank you, Denal.”
He mumbled something in his native
tongue, but he could not meet her eyes. If the light were better, Maggie was
sure she’d find him blushing. She lifted his chin and kissed him on the cheek.
When she pulled away, his eyes had grown wider than saucers.
Maggie turned to spare Denal
further embarrassment. “Sam, maybe we should retreat down another level.” She
waved a hand to the fallen rock. “You’re right about the instability of this
area. We might be safer a little farther away.”
Sam considered her suggestion,
taking off his Stetson and finger-combing his hair as he studied the ceiling.
“Maybe we’d better.”
Ralph stepped forward, raising the
light toward the ceiling. “Look how all the roof slabs are out of alignment.”
Maggie studied the roof. Ralph had
keen eyes. Some of the square stones were tilted a few centimeters askew from
the others, displaced by the explosion. As they watched, one of the stones
shifted another centimeter.
Sam must have seen it, too. His
voice was shaky. “Okay, everybody, down another floor.”
Ralph led the way with the
flashlight.
Norman followed. “Right now, I’d
love a large glass of lemonade, filled to the brim with ice.”
Sam nodded his head. “If you’re
taking orders, Norm, I’ll take something with a bit of a head on it. Maybe a
tall Corona in a frosted mug with a twist of lime.”
Maggie wiped the dust and sweat
from her forehead as she followed. “In Ireland, we drink our pints warm…but
right now, I’m even willin’ to bow to your crass American custom of drinkin’ it
cold.”
Ralph laughed as they reached the
ladder. “I doubt the Incas left us a cooler down there, but I’m willing to
search.” Ralph waved his flashlight for Maggie to mount the ladder first while
he lit the way.
Maggie’s smile faded from her lips
as she climbed away from Ralph’s light and into the gloom of the next level.
Their banter in the face of their predicament did little to fend off the true
terror; the darkness beyond the brightness was always there, reminding them how
precarious their situation was.
As she awaited the others, she
considered Ralph’s last words. Just what had the
Incas left them down there? What lay within the chamber beyond the sealed door,
and what had happened to Gil’s two companions?
By the time the others had
regrouped at the foot of the ladder on the second level, Maggie’s curiosity had
been piqued. Also by focusing on these mysteries, her fear of being buried
under fifty feet of collapsing temple could be somewhat allayed. If the anxiety
grew too intense…
Maggie shook her head. She would
not lose control again. She watched Sam climb down the ladder with a twinge of
guilt. After her attack last night, she had not been totally honest with him.
She had failed to explain that the onset of her “seizures” had begun after
witnessing the death of Patrick Dugan in the roadside ditch in Belfast.
Afterward, the doctors had not been able to find any physiological cause for
her attacks, though the consensus was the seizures were most likely a form of
severe panic. She shoved back the growing guilt. The details were not Sam’s
business. After the initial entrapment, she had come to grips with their
situation. As long as she could keep herself distracted, she would be okay.
Nearby, Sam tried his
walkie-talkie. The radio still worked, but the static was a bit worse this much
deeper. He let Philip know about their repositioning.
Once he was done, Maggie crossed to
Sam. She wet her lips. “I’d like to borrow your ultraviolet lamp.”
“What for?”
“I want to go see what damage Gil
and the others did to the dig.”
“I can’t let you go traipsing about
on your own. We need to stick together.” He began to turn away.
She grabbed his shoulder. “It
wasn’t a request, Sam. I’m going. It’ll only take a few minutes.”
Denal stood a few steps away. “I…I
go with you, Miss Maggie.”
Sam faced them and seemed to
recognize her determination. “Fine. But don’t be gone longer than fifteen
minutes. We need to conserve our light sources, and I don’t want to be hunting
you both down.”
Maggie nodded. “Thanks, Sam.”
“I’m coming with you two,” Norman
said, snugging his camera around his shoulder.
Ralph also had a gleam of interest,
but Sam squashed it. “The three of you go on. Ralph and I will go through this
level with the flashlight and assess the structural integrity.” He dug his lamp
out of his pocket and held it toward Maggie, but he did not release it without
a final word of caution. “Fifteen minutes. Be careful.”
She heard the worry in his stern
voice, and that dulled the annoyance in her own response. “I know, Sam,” she
said softly, taking the Wood’s lamp from him. “You needn’t worry.”
He grinned, then returned to his
walkie-talkie and ongoing argument with Philip.
Maggie clicked on the ultraviolet
light and signaled for her two companions to follow her to the next ladder. As
they abandoned the brighter light, the darkness of the temple wrapped close
around them. Ahead, the purplish glow lit up the quartz in the granite blocks,
creating a miniature starscape spreading down the passage. Maggie led them
onward, the others sticking closer to her side.
As they traversed the series of
ladders to the deepest level of the dig, Maggie’s heart began thudding louder
and louder in her own ears. Soon her heartbeat seemed almost to be coming from
beyond her chest.
“What’s that noise?” Norman asked
as he stepped off the rung of the last ladder.
Denal answered, his voice a
whisper. “I hear it before. After Señor Sala crawled through that doorway.”
Maggie realized the beating in her
ears wasn’t her own heart but the external thudding of something deeper in the
temple. It even reverberated through the stones under her feet.
“It sounds like a big clock
ticking,” Norman said.
Maggie raised her light. “Let’s
keep going.” Compared to the sonorous beat from below, her own voice sounded
like the squeak of a mouse.
Winding past the last of the
tunnels, Maggie soon stood before the violated doorway. Broken bolts marked
where the seals had been shattered. In the dirt to the sides of the threshold,
the three bands of etched hematite lay discarded, all of them cracked and
chipped from the crowbar used to pry them loose. The offending tool still
leaned against the wall.
Denal bent and picked up the
crowbar, hefting it in his grip. He glanced to Maggie. She did not begrudge him
a weapon.
The doorway ahead lay partially
blocked by the toppled stone that had once sealed the section of the temple
ahead. Norman knelt a couple spaces back from the opening. He nudged his
glasses higher on his nose and tried to peer inside. “I can’t see anything.”
Maggie moved beside him. Neither
seemed willing to draw closer to the door. She remembered the terror in Gil’s
eyes and the bloody blistering across his cheek. What lay ahead?
Norman exchanged a glance with her.
She shrugged and stepped forward, the lamp held before her like a pistol. She
paused just at the edge of the doorway, then extended her arm through the
threshold. The glow stretched down the throat of a short passage. The deep
ticking sounded much louder there. Maggie spoke quietly. “There seems to be a
large room just ahead. But the light doesn’t quite reach it.” She glanced over
her shoulder back to Norman.
“Maybe we’d better wait for the
others,” the photographer whispered.
Maggie was about to suggest exactly
the same thing, but since Norman suggested it first, she now balked. She could
picture Sam’s smug expression if she didn’t at least take a peek. They had
wasted the battery of the Wood’s lamp to come this far; they should at least
have something to show for the expenditure. “I’m going in,” she said, moving
forward before fear slowed her. She would not be ruled by the paralyzing terror
of her childhood.
“Then we’d better all go,” Norman
said, closing in to crowd her rear as she began to crawl over the toppled stone
door.
Maggie scrabbled over the
obstruction and stood in the hall. Norman and Denal joined her. “Look,” she
said, pointing her lamp. “There’s somethin’ ahead, reflecting back the glow.”
Intrigued, she crept ahead slowly.
“Wait,” Norman said. “Let’s see
what’s out there first.”
Maggie turned to see the
photographer raise his camera.
“Don’t look at the flash directly,”
he warned.
She swung back around just as the
camera exploded for a briefest second. She gasped. After so long, such
brightness stung. But her shocked response wasn’t all due to the pain. Blazed
for just a fractured second, an image of the room had branded her retinas.
“D…Did you see that?” she asked.
Denal mumbled something in his
native tongue, clearly awed.
Norman coughed to clear his throat.
“Gold and silver everywhere.”
Maggie raised her own light, its
purplish glow now seeming so feeble. “And that statue…did you see it? It had to
be at least two meters tall.”
Norman moved next to her as Maggie
edged forward again. Denal kept to their side with his crowbar. Norman
whispered, “Two meters. It couldn’t have been gold, too. Could it?”
Maggie shrugged. “When the Spanish
first arrived here, they described the Temple of the Sun found in Cuzco. The Coriancha. The rooms were said to have been plated with
thick slabs of gold and, in the innermost temple, stood a life-size model of a
cornfield. Stalks, leaves, ears, even the dirt itself…all of gold.” By now,
they had reached the room’s entrance. Maggie knelt down and ran a hand gently
over the gold plate at her feet. “Amazing…we must have uncovered another Sun
Temple.”
Norman stood still. “What’s that
out there? Out on the floor.”
Maggie pushed back up. “What do you
mean?”
He pointed to a dark shadow at the
edge of her light’s reach. She raised her lamp. Its glow reflected across the
gold and silver like moonlight spilling on a still pond. Some dark island lay
out there, a ripple on the pond. Maggie began to step closer with her light, one
foot on the edge of the metal floor.
Denal stopped her, holding his
crowbar across her path. “No, Miss Maggie,” he murmured. “Smells wrong here.”
“He’s right,” Norman said. “What’s
that reek?”
Now brought to her attention,
Maggie noticed an underlying stench that penetrated through the cloying scent
of wet clay and mold. She nodded to the camera. “Do it again, Norman.”
Nodding, the photographer raised
his camera as Maggie turned her eyes back to the floor. The flash exploded out
into the room. Maggie swore and stumbled away from the tiles. “Sweet Jesus!”
She covered her mouth. She had been
staring at the dark island on the room’s floor when Norman’s flash had burst
forth. The tortured face still blazed in her mind’s eye. The torn and twisted
body, the eyes wide with death, and the blood…so much blood. Another body lay
beyond the first, close to the far wall.
“Juan and Miguel,” Denal mumbled.
There was a long stretch of
silence.
“Gil didn’t do that to them, did
he?” Norman asked. “Murder them for the gold?”
Maggie slowly shook her head.
Juan’s mutilated form had become just a shadowed lump again. As she stared, the
thudding heartbeat of some great beast still echoed across the treasure room.
She now recognized it for what it was—the ticking of large gears behind the
walls and floor of the room.
The warning etched on the chamber’s
seals suddenly wormed through Maggie’s skull: We leave this
tomb to Heaven. May it never be disturbed.
“Maggie?”
She turned to Norman. “No. Gil
didn’t murder them. The room did.”
Before Norman could react, the
chamber shuddered violently, throwing them all down. Maggie landed hard upon
the edge of the plated floor, knocking the wind from her chest. Gulping air,
she scrambled back, sensing the danger.
“What was that?” Norman yelled.
Maggie swung her lamp around.
Through the entrance to the tomb, a thick cloud of dust rolled toward them. She
fought to speak. “Och! Jesus! Up…up…!” Maggie urged them all.
“What’s going on?” Norman pressed,
panic edging his voice.
Maggie pushed him toward the exit.
“Goddamm it! Move, Norman! The bloody temple is collapsing!”
Sam checked on Ralph. The large
black man pushed groggily up on his arms. His scalp had been clipped when a
section of the roof had given way. Luckily a grinding from above had warned
them before the sky came crashing down. “Are you okay?” Sam asked, dusting off
his Wranglers.
Ralph rolled to his knees. “Yeah, I
think.” He gingerly touched a bloody bump on his forehead. “I never been
tackled by a slab of granite before.”
“Don’t move,” Sam warned. He
collected the flashlight from where it had fallen. “I’m gonna check on what
happened.”
Ralph scowled and climbed to his
feet. “Like hell. We stick together.”
Sam nodded. Truthfully, he didn’t
want to investigate on his own. This level of the temple was now almost a solid
cloud of drifting silt and dust. Sam coughed, covering his mouth and nose with
the crook of his elbow. “This way,” he mumbled. He led them back to the shaft
leading up to the first level of the temple.
Ralph groaned as the remains of the
shattered ladder came into view ahead. “This can’t be good.”
And it wasn’t. The way up was
blocked by a jumbled pile of hewn boulders, like tumbled children’s blocks.
“The first level must have entirely collapsed,” Sam said.
Sam’s walkie-talkie squelched
static at his waist. He collected it and heard Philip’s frantic voice. “…okay?
Report, goddamm it! Over!”
Sam pressed the transmitter.
“Philip, Sam here. We’re okay.” Overhead, the roof moaned ominously; dirt
drizzled down. “But I don’t know for how long. How’re you coming with tunneling
in a new entrance from the base of the hill?”
Static…then…“…just found the
looter’s shaft. It’s barely begun…at least two days…sent for help, but don’t
know how long…” Static overwhelmed the tinny voice of their fellow student, but
Sam had still heard the panic.
“Shit, two days…” Ralph grumbled.
“The temple will never last that long.”
Sam tried to get more information
from Philip, but only snatches of words made it through. “I’ll try to
reposition for better reception,” Sam yelled into the radio. “Stand by!”
He slipped the walkie-talkie away.
“Let’s find the others. Make sure they’re safe.”
Ralph nodded. “Maybe it’s best if
we holed up in the lowest level anyway.” Another small groan sounded overhead.
“It looks like this place is going to crumble one level at a time.”
Sam led the way through the
corridors. “Let’s just hope we’re rescued before we run out of levels.”
Ralph had no rebuttal and followed
in silence.
Just as they reached the ladder
that led down to the third level, Sam saw Norman pop out of the shaft, his eyes
wide in the flashlight. The photographer held a hand against the glare. “Thank
God, you’re okay!” Norman said in a rush. “We didn’t know what we’d find.”
Denal came next. Sam noted the
crowbar in the teenager’s hand, but didn’t comment on it.
Maggie climbed out last. “What
happened?” she asked tersely, clicking off the Wood’s lamp.
“The top level collapsed,” Sam
said, and quickly recounted their narrow escape. “With the upper levels so
shaky, we thought it best to shelter in the fifth level. Just in case.”
“So we keep our heads as low as we
can,” Maggie said.
Norman eyed the ladder. “That means
back down again.”
Sam saw a worried glance pass
between Maggie and Norman. “What is it?”
“We found Juan and Miguel down
there,” Norman said.
Sam knew from his tone and manner
that the men were not alive. “What happened to them?”
Maggie answered, “You’d better see
for yourself.” She turned away.
In silence, the group clambered
down the ladders to the deepest level of the temple. Sam soon found himself
staring at the scattered seals of the door. “The bastards…” he mumbled under
his breath as he bent by the doorway.
“They’ve paid for their crimes,
Sam,” Maggie said dourly. “Come on.” She ushered him into the next room, then
followed herself, sticking close to his side.
With his flashlight, Sam quickly
took in the scene in the next chamber. He did not let the light’s beam linger
too long on either broken body. For a moment, he had a sudden flash-back to
seeing his own parents’ bloody bodies being carried away on stretchers. Safely
buckled into the backseat of the family Ford, Sam had escaped the fatal crash
with only a broken arm. He rubbed his forearm now. “Wh…what happened to them?”
“The tomb’s booby-trapped,” Maggie
said, then nodded ahead. “Listen to the winding of winches under the floor.
Some bloody contraption meant to catch looters.”
“I didn’t think the Incas had such
technology.”
“No, but some of the coastal
Indians were fairly advanced in pulley construction for their irrigation
systems. If they helped here…?” She shrugged.
Sam’s light beam focused on the
gold Incan king as it stood against the wall of black granite. “Either way,
there’s the lure. One look at that prize and who wouldn’t rush over.” Sam
played his light over the pattern of gold and silver tiles. He knew a trap when
he saw one. “Here’s a game I wouldn’t want to play.”
The stones rumbled underfoot, and a
grinding roar echoed down from the levels above. “We may be forced to,” Maggie
said. “Buttressed by the trap’s machinery, this may be the safest room if the
rest of the temple collapses.”
Ralph’s voice called back to them
from the threshold. “Sam, try to reach Sykes again! Light a fire under him!
This place is coming apart!”
Sam unhooked the walkie-talkie and
switched it back on. Static screeched from the speakers. It was silenced as Sam
hit the transmitter. “Philip, if you can hear me, come in. Over.”
White noise was his only answer,
then a few words came through: “…trying to widen the shaft so more workers can
dig…will work around the clock…”
“Speed it up, Philip!” Sam
insisted. “This place is a shaky house of cards.”
“…doing the best…damn workers don’t
understand…” A long stretch of static followed.
“This is useless,” Sam mumbled to
himself with a shake of his head. He raised the radio to his lips. “Just keep
us informed on the hour!” He switched the walkie-talkie off and turned to
Maggie. “We’ve a long wait ahead of us.”
Maggie stood with her head cocked,
listening to the moans of the strained temple. “I hope we have a long time,”
she said with clear worry. Sam tried to put an arm over her shoulders, but she
shrugged it off. “I’m okay.”
Sam watched Maggie retreat from the
room. With a final pass of his light over the deadly chamber, Sam turned to
follow, but the pattern of gold and silver fixed in his mind. It was no plain
checkerboard, but a complex mix of zigzagging steps with two patches of
rectangular gold islands, one at the upper left of the room, and one at the
lower right.
Sam stopped, pondering the pattern.
It was naggingly familiar. He turned back to the floor, shining his light
across it.
“What’s wrong?” Maggie called back
to him.
“Just a sec,” Sam stepped to the
edge of the chamber. He stood silently, letting his mind calm. There was a clue
hidden here. He just knew it. The two men’s corpses had distracted him, shocked
him from noticing before. “My god,” Sam mumbled.
Maggie had returned cautiously to
his side. “What?”
Sam waved his light across the
thirty rows of yard-wide tiles. “You were right about other Peruvian Indians
being involved here. This isn’t Incan.”
“What do you mean?” Maggie asked.
“That statue sure looks Incan.”
“I don’t mean the statue. The Incas
probably added that later. I meant the floor, the room itself. The booby trap.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Look at the pattern. It’s so large
that I almost missed it.” Sam pointed with his flashlight’s beam. “The various
tribes in ancient Peru—the Paracas, the Huari, the Nasca, the Moche, even the
Incas—none of them had a written language. But their pictographs and ideograms,
found in drawings and woven in their textiles, were elaborate and unique to
each tribe. Look at this pattern. The two golden rectangles at opposite corners
connected by snaking zigzagging lines. Where have you seen that before?”
Maggie took a step closer. “Sweet
Jesus, you’re right. It’s a huge pictograph.” She turned to face Sam, eyes
bright with excitement. “It is Moche, not Inca.”
“It’s just like Uncle Hank had
figured,” Sam mumbled, his voice awed. “We’re in a Moche pyramid.”
“What? When did Professor Conklin
mention anything about the Moche?”
Sam realized he had misspoken,
letting out his uncle’s secret. Sam sighed. Considering their circumstances,
any secrets now seemed ludicrous. “Listen, Maggie, there’s something my uncle’s
kept from you all.” Sam quickly recounted how the professor had discovered that
the Sun Plaza here matched the tip of a Moche pyramid found along the coast.
“He made the discovery just before he left with the mummy.”
Maggie frowned. “So I wasn’t the
only one keepin’ secrets…”
Sam blushed, remembering his own
lambasting of Maggie for keeping facts hidden. “I’m sorry.”
A long stretch of silence ensued.
Maggie finally spoke. “It makes rough sense. Considering the complexity of the
room, the Moche were better at metallurgy than the Incas. They also built
elaborate canals and irrigation systems for their lands, with crude pumps and
gearwork. If any of the tribes was capable of constructing this trap in
precious metals, it would be the Moche.” Maggie nodded toward the pattern.
“You’re the expert epigrapher. What does it mean?”
Sam explained, using his flashlight
as a pointer. “See how the stair-step pattern connects the two gold rectangles.
It depicts the rising of a spirit from this world to the realm of spirits and
gods.” Sam turned to Maggie. “It basically means this is the gateway to
Heaven.”
“Jesus…”
“But that’s not all.” Sam shone his
light on the ceiling, where an inverted image of the floor’s pattern was
depicted in tile. “Each gold tile on the floor has a matching silver tile above
it and vice versa. The Moche…and the Incas for that matter…believed in dualism.
In the Quechan language, yanantin and yanapaque. Mirror imagery, light and dark, upper and
lower.”
“Yin and yang,” Maggie mumbled.
“Exactly. Dualism is common in many
cultures.”
“So what you’re saying…” Maggie
found her eyes drifting to the two mutilated corpses.
Sam finished her statement, “Here
also lies the gateway to Hell.”
From across the ruins, Philip
stared at the collapsed hilltop. The entire roof of the subterranean temple had
caved in on itself, leaving a clay-and boulder-strewn declivity ten feet deep.
A smoky smudge still hung over the sunken summit like some steaming volcano,
silt forever hanging in the moist air.
Philip remained near his post by
the communication tent, but he wasn’t due to contact Sam for another half hour.
Philip hugged his arms around his chest. The Quechan workers were all but
useless. Pantomiming and drawing out his instructions were the only ways to
communicate with the uneducated lot—and still, they often mistook his orders.
However, Philip was beginning to
suspect some of their “misunderstandings” were deliberate, especially after he
had insisted the Indians attempt to redig the original shaft, defying Sam’s own
warnings. The Texan’s assessment had quickly proven valid; the temple had
collapsed further when some of the laborers attempted to pry loose a
particularly large slab of granite. One of the Indians had broken his leg when
the roof gave way. Ever since, the Quechans had grown sullen and slow to
respond to his orders.
Upon reaching Sam earlier, Philip
had deliberately sidestepped mentioning his own culpability for their near
tragedy. Luckily, poor communications had saved him from having to explain in detail.
Philip glanced to the jungle’s
edge. If nothing else, at least the workers had discovered the partially
excavated tunnel of the looters near the foot of the jungle-shrouded hill. From
his calculations, he estimated another forty feet of tunnel would have to be
dug before reaching the temple itself—and at the current pace, it would take
closer to four days, rather than the two-day estimate he had given Sam.
“That is, unless help arrives
first,” he grumbled. If not, the others were doomed. Even if the temple
remained standing, which was doubtful, water would become more and more
crucial. Even in this humidity, death by dehydration posed a real danger. Help
must come. He would not have the deaths of the others on his hands—or his
résumé. If such a scandal broke with his name associated with it, he risked
losing any chance of a future position at Harvard.
Philip shadowed his eyes against
the late-afternoon sun. A pair of workers had left at dawn to seek help,
running on long, lean legs. The two young men looked capable of maintaining
their pace all day long. If so, they should be reaching the tiny village of
Villacuacha and a telephone anytime, and with an expedient response, a rescue
operation could be under way within the next two days.
Philip pinned all his plans on this
one hope—rescue. With others around, he would be relieved of any direct
culpability. Even if the other students died, it would not be his sole
responsibility. Shared blame could weaken the blemish on his own record.
But there was one other reason he
prayed for the appearance of rescuers. The sun was near setting, and Philip
feared another long black night with the forest screeching around him.
Guillermo Sala was out there somewhere, surely waiting for the proper time to
attack.
Staring off toward the distant
village of Villacuacha, Philip sent a whispered prayer to the two Indian
runners. “Hurry, you bastards.”
Along a jungle trail, Friar Otera
glanced toward the setting sun, then pulled the cowl of his robe higher over
his head, shadowing his features. They should be at the ruins by midday
tomorrow. “Come,” he ordered, and led the way.
Behind, a row of five brown-robed
monks kept pace with him. The brush of their robes was the only sound
disturbing the twilight forest. The jungle always grew strangely quiet as the
sun began to set, hushed as if the creatures of the forest held their breath
against the dangers of the approaching night. Soon the dark predators would be
loose again for the hunt.
It was this pregnant silence that
allowed the black-haired friar to hear the snap of a branch and the ragged
huffing breath of someone approaching. He cocked his head. No, two men
approached. Friar Otera held up an arm and, without a word, the others stopped.
The Church had trained them well.
Soon two bare-chested Indians
appeared along the trail ahead. Sweat shone off their sleek bodies as if they
were aglow in the last rays of the sun. On closer inspection, it was clear the
two, thorn-scratched and shaky of limb, had traveled far and at a hard pace.
Within his cowl, the friar’s lips
drew to hard lines of satisfaction. Though he hated his poor upbringing here
among the Indians, it now proved useful. As a boy, he had been chased and
tormented because he was of mixed blood, a half-bred mestizo.
The shadowy jungle trails became his only sanctuary from the constant ridicule
and he knew these jungle trails as well as any. He also knew any attempt to
call for help must travel this trail—and he had his orders. Friar Otera raised
a palm in greeting.
The first of the Indians seemed
wary of the group of strangers. Wisely so, since the jungles were the haunts of
many guerrillas and marauders. But soon recognition of their robed raiments and
silver crosses filled the Indian’s eyes. He dropped to his knees, chattering his
thanks in guttural Quecha.
Friar Otera bowed his head,
crossing his wrists within the long folds of his sleeves. One hand reached the
dagger’s hilt in his hidden wrist sheath. “Fear not, my child. Calm yourself.
Tell me what has happened.”
“Friar…Father, we have run far.
Seeking help. We are workers for some norte americanos
high in the mountains. There was an accident. A horrible accident.”
“An accident?”
“An underground tomb has collapsed,
trapping some of the americanos. They will die
unless we hurry.”
Friar Otera shook his head sadly.
“Horrible indeed,” he muttered in his native Quecha, though inwardly it galled
him to do so. The old language, a crude derivation of the Incan language called
runa simi, was so plain and base, the language of
the poor. And he hated to be reminded of his own roots by speaking it so
fluently. A spark of anger rose in his heart, but he kept it hidden within the
shadows of his robe. Friar Otera listened in silence as the frantic Indian
finished explaining about the explosion and the damaged satellite phone. He
just nodded in understanding.
“So we must hurry, Father, before
it’s too late.”
Friar Otera licked his lips. So
only one of the americanos was still loose among the
ruins. How fortuitous. “Yes, we must hurry,” he agreed with the panting Indian.
“You have done well bringing us this news, my child.”
The Indian lowered his head in
thanks and relief.
Friar Otera slipped past the
kneeling Indian and approached the second fellow. “You have done well, too, my
child.”
This other Indian had remained
silent during the exchange and had not knelt. His dark eyes had remained wary.
He backed up a step now, somehow sensing the danger, but he was too late.
Friar Otera lashed out with the
long blade hidden at his wrist, slicing cleanly. The man’s hands flew to his
slashed throat, trying to stanch the flow of blood. A spraying spurt struck the
friar’s robe as the Indian fell to his knees. Too late to
pray now, heathen. With a scowl, Friar Otera used his booted foot to
topple the gurgling man backward.
Stepping over the body, Friar Otera
continued on his way down the trail. He had not even heard a sound as the other
monks dealt with the first Indian. He nodded in satisfaction.
The Church had certainly trained
them well.
Joan tried the wine. It was a
decent vintage Merlot, not too dry, with a sweet bouquet. She nodded, and the
waiter filled her glass the rest of the way. “It should accent the porterhouse
nicely,” she said with a shy smile.
Across the candlelit table, Henry
returned her smile. “A forensic pathologist and a wine connoisseur to boot.
You’ve grown to be a woman of many surprises. As I recall, you used to be a
beer-and-tequila woman.”
She stifled a short laugh. “Time
has ways of refining one’s taste. As does a stomach that can no longer tolerate
such excesses.” She eyed Henry. He still filled his dark suit well, a
double-breasted charcoal jacket over a crisp white shirt and pale rose tie. The
colors accented perfectly the salting of silver-grey in his dark hair.
Clean-shaven and impeccably attired, it was hard to believe this fellow had
been tromping through the Peruvian jungles just last week. “And I must say
you’re full of surprises, too, Henry. Your years in the field have done you no
harm.”
Henry, fork in hand, glanced up
from the remains of his Caesar salad. He wore a roguish grin, an expression
that took Joan back to her college years. “Why, Dr. Engel,” he teased, “if I
didn’t know better, I’d say you were trying to pick me up?”
“It was a simple compliment,
Professor Conklin. That’s all. Just a professional courtesy. I say it to all
the visiting doctors.”
“Ah…so that explains your current
academic popularity.” Henry stabbed a crouton, hiding a smile.
Joan feigned insult and snapped her
napkin toward his hand.
“Ow.” Henry rubbed his knuckles as
if they stung. “Okay, okay…then I guess we’d best stick to business.”
“Maybe we should,” she said with a
tired smile.
Thus far, their evening had been
spent catching up on each other’s pasts. Joan had nodded when Henry mentioned
the death of his wife from cancer. Joan had heard the news from mutual friends.
It was about the same time her own marriage had ended in a bitter divorce.
Afterward, it seemed both had immersed themselves completely in their
respective professions, becoming renowned in their fields. During this time,
neither had sought out any intimate relationships, still shy from their wounded
hearts. It seemed pain was pain, no matter what the circumstance.
“Have you learned anything new
about the gold debris found inside the mummy’s skull?” Henry asked more
soberly.
Joan sat straighter, switching to
her more professional demeanor. “Not much. Just that it’s certainly not gold.
It’s more of a dense viscid liquid. At room temperatures, it’s moldable, like
warm clay. I suspect it’s some type of heavy metal amalgam, perhaps mercury
mixed with something else.” She shrugged.
Henry’s brows furrowed, and he
shook his head slightly. “It doesn’t make sense. The Incas’ skill with metals
was not considered advanced. Even smelting iron was beyond them. I find it
strange they could create a new amalgam.”
“Well, they must have learned
something. They filled the mummy’s skull full of the odd metal.”
“Yes, I suppose…”
“But why do you think they did
that?” she asked. “Fill his skull?”
“I can only theorize. The Incas
revered the braincase as a source of power. They even made drinking mugs from
their slain enemies’ skulls. My guess is that the Incas feared the friar’s Christian
god and performed this odd rite to avoid the wrath of this foreign deity.”
Joan curled her nose. “So they
drilled holes in the man’s skull, removed the brain, and filled the space with
the amalgam as an offering to the stranger’s god?”
Henry shrugged and nodded. “It’s a
theory. The Incas seemed to have a fascination with trepanation. If you took
all the skulls from around the world, they would not equal the number of Incan
skulls found with such mutilations. So I wager there must be a religious significance
to the act. But it’s only a theory so far.”
“And not a bad one, I suppose,” she
said with a smile. “But perhaps tomorrow I’ll have more answers for you about
the amalgam itself. I contacted Dr. Kirkpatrick at George Washington
University, a metallurgy specialist. He owes me a favor. He’s agreed to come by
tomorrow and take a look at the substance.”
Henry brightened with her words,
his eyes glinting. “I’d like to be there when he examines the material.”
“Sure…” Joan was momentarily
flustered. She had been considering some way to arrange a meeting with Henry
again before he left, and here he was dropping it in her lap. “Th…that would be
wonderful…your company would be welcome anytime.” Joan mentally struck her
forehead with the heel of her hand. Why was she acting like a tongue-tied
adolescent? She was forty-eight years old, for Christ’s sake. When would these
games between men and women ever grow more comfortable?
Joan found Henry smiling at her.
“I’d enjoy working beside you again, too.”
She blushed and wiped her hands on
her napkin in her lap. She was saved from having to speak by the server’s
arrival with two platters of sizzling steaks. The two waited silently as dishes
and silverware were exchanged. Once the waiter left, Joan spoke up, “So what about
your end of the deal? Anything new on this Friar de Almagro?”
Henry’s voice was subdued. “No…I’m
still waiting to hear back from the archbishop’s people.”
She nodded. “When I was working on
the metal, I got to thinking about the Dominican cross you found. I was
wondering if it was really gold, or maybe another amalgam like the debris in
the skull.”
Henry glanced up quickly. “By God,
I never considered that!”
She enjoyed his surprise and the
look of admiration in his eyes. She continued, “Maybe it wasn’t the Incas who
created this metal. Perhaps it was their Spanish conquerors.”
Henry nodded. “Now that’s something
I could more easily believe. The Spanish conquistadors! Maybe when this
metallurgist reviews the material, we can at least put this part of the mystery
to rest.”
Joan grinned at his enthusiasm.
There was nothing more attractive than a man who could share her passion for
the mysteries of science—especially one as handsome as Henry.
“First thing when I get back to the
Sheraton,” Henry continued, “I’m gonna take a closer look at the cross again.”
Joan tested her steak. It was a
perfect medium rare. The chefs here never disappointed. “If you do, I’d like to
know what you think as soon as possible.”
“In that case…if you’d like, since
you’re dropping me off at the Sheraton, why don’t you come up to the room and
see for yourself. After working with the amalgam all day, you’d be the better
one to judge it anyway.”
Joan looked up from her steak to
see if there was more of an invitation behind his words. She was not one to bed
any man who happened to pique her interest, even an old friend…but she wouldn’t
mind extending their evening together.
Henry was working at his own steak
with studied concentration. He glanced at her from above his glasses, his eyes
questioning her hesitation.
Joan made her decision. “Why…yes,
I’d love to take another peek at the cross.”
Henry bobbed his head, returning to
his steak. “Excellent.”
Joan saw how his smile widened. She
found her own grin growing brighter. They might as well be two teenagers out on
a first date.
With the matter settled, both
turned their attention to the table and the quality of the dinner. The
remainder of the conversation consisted of the simple pleasantries of two
diners: a review of the meal, shared stories of their different professions,
even a discussion on the pending stormfront aiming at the coast from the Great
Lakes. By the time dessert was served—a delightfully rich vanilla crême brûlée
shared with two spoons—both had grown out of their awkwardness and into a
comfortable warmth.
“Whatever happened to us back at
Rice?” Joan finally asked, feeling comfortable enough to broach an awkward
topic. “Why didn’t we work out?”
Henry fingered his cup of coffee.
“I think there was too much life ahead of us. You wanted to pursue medicine. I
wanted to get my masters at Texas A&M. I think at the time there was not
much room for anything else, especially not a committed relationship.”
“The woes of the career-driven,”
she mumbled. Joan’s thoughts drifted to her own husband. It was his common
complaint about their marriage. She was never home, never there for him.
Henry sipped his coffee. “Maybe. I
suppose. But then eventually I met Elizabeth and you met Robert.” Henry
shrugged.
“Hmm…”
Henry sighed and set his cup down.
“Maybe we should be going. It is getting near time for me to contact the team
in Peru.”
Joan glanced at her watch. It was
almost ten o’clock. Where had the time gone? “And I’ve got an early day
tomorrow myself. If we’re to take a peek at that cross tonight, we ought to be
going.”
Henry insisted on paying the bill
after a mild protest from Joan. “It’s the least I can do after all you’ve
done,” he said, pulling out his wallet. “Besides, the tab will be coming out of
my research grant anyway.” He offered her a quirked grin.
Joan held up her palms,
relinquishing any claims on the check. “If the government is paying, it’s all
yours.”
Shortly thereafter, following a
short car ride, Joan found herself sharing an elevator with the professor. A
degree of nervousness set in again as silence enveloped them. Henry fidgeted
with the buttons on his suit. The doors chimed open on the seventh floor, and
the two crossed down to Henry’s hotel room.
“Excuse the mess,” he said as he
keyed open the door. “I wasn’t expecting company.” Henry held open the door for
Joan to step through.
Joan stared at the ruins of the
professor’s hotel room. The bed had been overturned and the mattress shredded.
Every drawer had been pulled and dumped; even the television lay on its side on
the rug, its back panel unscrewed.
“My God!” Henry exclaimed, stunned.
“You said it was a mess, but I
wasn’t expecting this,” Joan said in a halfhearted attempt at a joke.
Henry dashed into the room, giving
it all a quick glance around. He sifted through some papers by the toppled desk
and uncovered his laptop. He picked it up and tested it. A beep as it turned on
revealed it had been undamaged. A sigh of relief escaped him. “All my
research…thank God.”
Joan cautiously entered the room.
“You shouldn’t touch too much. I’ll call hotel security. Whoever burglarized
the room might still be around.”
Henry righted the desk and put the
computer down. “Why didn’t they take my laptop?”
Dialing the front desk, Joan spoke,
“I suspect they were after bigger game. I wager that reporter’s piece in the Baltimore Herald this morning caught the eyes of some
petty thieves.”
Henry seemed to jolt with her
words. “The cross!” He strode across the room.
“Tell me you left it in the hotel
safe,” Joan said.
Shaking his head, Henry moved to
one of the sconces on the wall. “After traveling through so many foreign
countries, I’ve developed my own system of security.”
As Joan related the burglary to the
front desk, Henry used a Swiss army knife to unscrew the fixture from the wall
and reached to the niche behind it. He retrieved a small velvet pouch, heavy
with whatever was inside. He spilled out the large Dominican cross and silver
ring into his palm.
Joan replaced the phone. “Security
is on its way. You were lucky this time, Henry. Next time use the hotel’s
safe.”
Henry looked around the room. “I
think you’re right. These thieves were damned thorough.” Joan stayed silent as
Henry examined the disheveled room. “Welcome back to America,” he muttered
sourly.
Joan’s eyes strayed to a suit box
from Barney’s tossed in a corner. A register receipt was still taped to its
cover. She eyed Henry’s handsome suit. So it seemed the professor had done some
last-minute shopping for their “date.” She forced down a small smile and
silently cursed the thieves that had ruined their evening.
Soon two large men in blue suits
appeared at the open door. They flashed identification and entered. “We’ve
called the police. They’ll be here in a moment to take a statement. Another
room is already being prepared for you.”
Henry turned to Joan. “Why don’t
you head home. I can take care of matters here.”
“I suppose I’d better. But tomorrow
bring the crucifix with you to the lab. I’ll have Dr. Kirkpatrick look it over.
He’ll know for sure if it’s gold or not.”
Henry looked about the room with a
forlorn expression. “Thanks, I’ll do that.”
She moved to leave, but he stopped
her with a touch on her arm. She turned to find him smiling at her. “As weird
as this may sound considering the state of my room, I had a nice night.”
She squeezed his hand and held it a
fraction longer than professionally necessary. “I did, too.” She returned his
smile, if only a bit more shyly. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
He nodded, and as she stepped from
the room, he added softly, “I look forward to it.”
Joan didn’t turn, pretending not to
have heard, when actually she feared her reddening face would reveal too
plainly her heart. Only when she was safely in the elevator and the doors had
closed did she let out a long sigh of relief. “Get ahold of yourself,” she
warned the empty elevator. “He’s an old friend. That’s all.”
Still as the elevator headed down,
a small shiver of pleasure passed through her. Tomorrow could not come soon
enough.
As another tumble of rocks echoed
down from above, Sam glanced up from where he knelt. His eyes flicked to the
others gathered around the three bands of hematite. Norman stared up toward the
roof with a small flinch of his shoulders. Ralph only grumbled and continued
swathing the yellow dye across his band with a small paintbrush. Denal sat to
one side, running his hands slowly up and down the crowbar in his lap.
Only Maggie met his eyes. “The
second level must be collapsed by now,” she whispered.
Sam nodded with a deep sigh. None
of them wanted to consider what that meant. He glanced to his watch. It was a
little after ten in the evening. At this rate, there was little chance the
pyramid would remain intact for another two days. To distract from the weight
of rock slowly crumbling down upon them, they had attempted to keep busy. Sam’s
suggestion that they test his experimental dyes on the hematite bands had been
grudgingly accepted.
“Now what?” Ralph asked. He
stretched a kink from his back where he bent over his band.
Sam scooted closer. “Next you need
to sponge the excess dye gently away with this lipophilic agent.” He passed
Ralph a dry sponge and a jar of clear solution.
“I’m ready, too,” Maggie said, and
reached for a second sponge.
With Sam directing, the other two
students soon had the bands prepped for deciphering. Sam lifted the black
Wood’s lamp and switched it on. “Okay, extinguish the flashlight.”
Once done, darkness suddenly
collapsed tighter around them. A pool of purplish light was all that stood
between them and absolute blackness. Bathed within the glow, the two bands
fluoresced a soft green. The group clustered tighter.
“Amazing,” Maggie exclaimed.
Under Sam’s ultraviolet lamp, the
ancient writing stood in stark relief, the green lettering glowing brightly, as
crisp as the day it had been etched into the metal.
“Cool,” Ralph said, patting Sam on
the shoulder.
Holding back his own whoop of
pride, Sam ran a finger along the lettering, carefully reading the writing on
the first band. “Nos Christi defenete. Malum ne fugat.”
Sam concentrated intently as he translated the scrawled Latin. “ ‘Christ
protect us. May the evil never escape.’ ” A chill passed down Sam’s spine.
“Not the words you want to hear
trapped in a collapsed tomb,” Ralph said.
“Especially when we’re sitting
right outside the cursed chamber,” Norman added, eyeing Sam. “What was that you
said about the pictograph in the next room? The gateway to Heaven, the gateway
to Hell?”
Sam waved the photographer’s fears
away. “That’s just a rough interpretation from a Judeo-Christian viewpoint. The
ancient Peruvians didn’t believe in a biblical heaven or hell, but in three
distinct levels of existence: janan pacha, the upper
world; cay pacha, our world; and uca pacha, the lower or interior world. They believed
these three worlds were closely linked, and that certain sacred areas, named pacariscas, were where the three worlds came together.”
Sam glanced over his shoulder. “From the pictographs next door, I suspect that
chamber was revered and protected as a pacariscas.”
Norman stared toward the open
doorway to the booby-trapped chamber. “A gateway to both the lower and upper
worlds.”
“Exactly.”
Maggie elbowed Sam. “Enough
already! Get on with the second band.”
Sam cleared his throat and bent
over the etched hematite, this time translating as he ran a finger along the
Latin scribblings. “ ‘Lord above, keep us safe. We beseech you. We leave this
tomb to Heaven. May it never be disturbed. Beware…’ ” Sam read the last two
lines and his breath caught in his throat. He leaned away. “Oh, God!”
Maggie leaned nearer. “What?”
Sam glanced at the others. “
‘Beyond lies the workings of Satan, the will of the Devil. I seal this passage
against the Serpent of Eden, lest mankind be damned forever.’ ”
Five pairs of eyes turned to the
open doorway.
“The Serpent of Eden?” Norman asked
nervously.
Maggie explained, voice hushed.
“Genesis. The corrupter of mankind, a tempter of forbidden knowledge.”
“It’s signed,” Sam said, returning
their attentions to the hematite bands. “Friar Francisco de Almagro, servant of
our Lord, 1535.”
Ralph glanced over Sam’s shoulder.
“Didn’t your uncle say he thought the mummy was probably a Dominican friar?”
Sam nodded. “Yeah. This may be the
fellow’s last written testament. After sealing the tomb here, he must’ve been
killed for some reason. But why?” Sam knelt back upon his heels. “What happened
here? What was it about the next room that scared the man so much? It couldn’t
have just been the booby traps. Not with that reference to the Serpent of
Eden.”
Maggie nodded toward the open
doorway. “Whatever the answer, it lies in there somewhere, maybe something the
Moche discovered and the conquering Incas usurped. Something that spooked the
bejesus out of our dead friar.”
“I wish my uncle were here,” Sam
muttered. “We could use his expertise.”
More boulders shifted overhead,
grinding like old bones. “I don’t think your uncle would share that wish,”
Norman said, eyeing the roof.
Maggie suddenly stood up and
collected the flashlight. “I want to see that chamber again.”
Sam noticed how her legs trembled
for a second before she was able to take a step away. He suspected most of her
stated curiosity was just a desire to move, to keep busy and distracted. He
pushed to his feet. “I’ll go with you.”
Ralph stood up, too. “Norman and
I’ll go check the next level up.”
Norman’s eyes widened. “I will?”
Ralph glowered at the photographer.
“Quit being such a pantywaist.”
Norman scowled and rolled to his
feet. “Oh, all right.” He fished out the second flashlight. Denal had found the
extra handlamp among the bag of tools abandoned by Gil’s gang.
“Be quick,” Sam warned. “It’s not
safe up there, and we need to conserve the batteries.”
“Trust me,” Norman said. “Between
Ralph’s company and falling slabs of granite, I’ll be damned quick.”
Denal also stood. He moved
alongside Sam and Maggie, making his own decision on where to go.
With a wave, Norman and Ralph set
off.
“C’mon,” Maggie said behind him.
Sam and Denal followed her as she
ducked through the doorway. Sam noticed Denal quickly touch his forehead and
make the sign of the cross, a whispered prayer on his lips, before passing
through the threshold.
In silence, the trio returned to
the edge of the tiled floor. Gold and silver reflected their light brightly.
The Incan king stood bright as a yellow star against the black granite
stonework. The ticking of the machinery echoed in muffled time to Sam’s own
heartbeat. Tilting his Stetson, he studied the pictograph, tracing the
flashlight’s beam from the golden rectangle that represented the physical
world, cay pacha, to the distant square that
represented the upper world, janan pacha. A zigzag
of gold tiles connected the two bases. “Well?” he asked. “What now?” Sam
purposely kept the light away from the two bodies upon the floor.
Like a caged lioness, Maggie
stalked back and forth before the puzzle. “There has to be a way across,” she
muttered. “Solve that and whatever prize lies here will most likely be
revealed.”
“The Serpent of Eden?” Sam asked.
Maggie turned to him, eyes bright
in the reflected glow. “Don’t you want to know what he meant?”
“Honestly, right now I’d just
prefer to get our butts out of here.”
“Well, until then…” Maggie swung
back to the tiled pictograph. “I’m going to keep working.” Without another
word, Maggie stepped upon one of the gold tiles that made up the rectangle of
gold at this edge.
“No, Miss Maggie!” Denal shouted.
Sam reached for her at the same
time, but Maggie stepped onto a neighboring gold tile, out of his reach. “What
are you doing?” he yelled.
She turned back—not to Sam, but the
boy. “What’s the safest path, Denal?”
Sam glanced to his side. The young
Quechan stood trembling by the edge of the floor, eyes wild. “Maggie, what are
you talking about?” Sam asked. “He doesn’t know.”
“He knows,” she said. “He warned me
from stepping on the floor the first time here.” She stared intently at the
boy. “I saw a look of recognition on your face, Denal.”
The boy backed a step away.
Maggie continued. “I’ve solved part
of the riddle. I stand on the section of the pictograph that represents our
world.” She pointed a hand toward the distant rectangle of gold on the far side
of the room. “And I must reach janan pacha, the
upper world. Isn’t that so? But how do you move across the floor safely? The
gold path is too obvious.”
Denal just shook his head
vehemently.
Sam lowered his flashlight.
“Maggie, Denal can’t know—”
Maggie’s face hardened, and she
swung away. She moved to step on one of the gold tiles that stair-stepped
toward the distant rectangle.
“No!” Denal called out suddenly.
Tears in his eyes. “I’ll tell you.”
Stunned, Sam stared at the teenager.
He seemed to sag under his gaze.
“The old amautas of my people. They speak stories of
a bad place like this. Very old stories. I no know for sure. But they say that
life be balanced between janan and cay. To walk between them, you must balance the sun and
the moon.”
“The sun and moon?” Maggie said.
She turned to the floor. “Ah sure! Of course.” Maggie stepped onto a
neighboring silver tile.
“Maggie! Don’t!”
She ignored Sam and moved back to a
gold square. “To follow the gold staircase of tiles, you have to alternate each
step with a silver one. Balance the silver an’ gold, the moon an’ the sun.”
Sam called out. “You can’t know
that for certain.”
“I’m sure.” Maggie continued across
the room, stepping from silver to gold and back to silver again. She spoke
hurriedly as she worked across the pattern. “Gold was considered by the Incas
to be the sweat of the sun, while silver was the tears of the moon. Sun an’
moon…gold an’ silver…”
Sam stood at the edge of the floor,
unable to breathe.
Denal mumbled in his native tongue,
fear strong in his voice. “She goes…she no come back.”
Sam barely heard him, his heart in
his throat.
He tugged on Sam’s arm. “Miss
Maggie must stop,” he beseeched. “The amautas say
who travels to janan pacha can never return. She
must stop!”
The boy’s warning finally sank into
Sam. He jerked as if he had touched flame. “Maggie!”
The surging panic in his voice drew
her gaze.
“Denal says that if you cross the
room, you can’t come back!”
Maggie glanced toward the far wall,
then back at Sam. She still stood on the same tile, but her voice shook.
“Th…that makes no bloody sense. Why would the room be one-way?”
“I don’t know. But now is not the
time to test it.”
Maggie sighed. “Maybe you’re
right…” She stepped back onto the silver tile she had just vacated.
“No!” Denal yelled.
The boy’s scream saved Maggie’s
life. Flinching, she yanked back her leg just as the silver tile hinged open
under her boot.
“Watch out!” Sam yelled. “Above
you!” He had spotted the corresponding gold tile on the roof drop open. A thick
rain of spears shot out, whistling, and disappeared into the pit opened under
the silver tile.
Maggie had backed from the cascade
of blades, legs trembling fiercely. She fell to her knees as the silver tile
swung closed again. “Sam…?”
Gesturing wildly, Denal explained,
“She must no come back. If starts, Miss Maggie must finish.”
The woman’s eyes were wide with
fear as she stared back at Sam across the six yards of floor. Sam could see a
glaze of panic beginning to set in. What was he to do?
Suddenly the entire room shook
violently. A thunderous roar accompanied it. Sam was thrown to the floor.
Maggie ducked, covering her head with her arms. Two metal tiles dislodged from
above and crashed with loud clangs.
Only Denal managed to keep his
feet. The Quechan boy glanced toward the room’s entrance. Dust and clouds of
silt rolled toward them. “The temple! It falls!”
Sam rolled back to his feet as the
floor settled. “Oh, God…Norman and Ralph…”
As if hearing his call, two figures
suddenly burst through the cloudy silt. Coughing, Ralph skidded to a stop
beside Sam. From head to foot, the large black man was grey with granite dust,
as was Norman behind him. The photographer sneezed loudly.
Ralph was out of breath. “It’s all
coming apart!”
The groan of shifting stones seemed
to come from all around them. Occasional loud crashes still erupted regularly,
as close as the antechamber next door.
Norman wiped his nose on his
sleeve. “There’s nothing above us now.”
Ralph pulled Sam to the neighboring
wall of the short passage. “Feel.”
Sam placed his hand on the wall of
stacked granite stones. It trembled under his palm as the stresses from the
tons of granite blocks and clay strained these last bulwarks. “All that’s
holding this place together is a lick and a promise,” Sam realized aloud.
Norman suddenly drew their
attention with an urgent call. He pointed toward the patterned floor. “Maggie!”
Sam swung around. Across the tiles,
he spotted the Irish student sprawled on her side on the same gold tile. Her
limbs twitched and spasmed. She was having another seizure.
“What the hell is she doing out
there?” Ralph asked angrily.
“I don’t have time to explain.” Sam
unslung his rifle and passed it to Ralph. “Stay here!” He darted onto the gold
tiles.
Denal yelled a warning, but Sam
ignored the boy. Sam danced from silver to gold as he climbed the staircase
pattern toward janan pacha. Reaching Maggie’s tile,
he knelt beside her and cradled her head in his lap. His touch seemed to calm
her slightly. Using this cue, he stroked her hair and called to her softly. Her
trembling limbs quieted. “Maggie…if you can hear me, come to me. Follow my
voice.”
A small moan escaped from her lips.
“C’mon, Maggie…we need you…this is
no time to be napping.”
Her eyelids fluttered, and then she
was staring at him. “Sam…?”
He leaned down and hugged her
tightly. The smell of her hair and sweat sharp in his nose. “Thank God!”
Maggie pushed from his embrace and
quickly took in the scene. “You shouldn’t have come out here,” she scolded, but
there was no heat in her voice, only relief. “The temple?”
“It’s comin’ down around our ears.
This is the last level intact.”
Maggie glanced up at Sam, an
unspoken question in her eyes.
Sam answered, “An hour at most, I’d
guess.”
“What are we to do?”
Helping her to her feet, Sam stood.
Maggie had to lean on his arm for support, her legs still weak. Her palms were
hot on his bare skin. “You got me thinking earlier. Just why did the Moche or Incas build this room so it was one-way
only?”
Maggie shook her head.
Sam glanced to the far wall. “It
makes no sense…unless…unless there was another way out.”
“A secret passage?”
“There must be more than just this
booby-trapped room. Why the dire warning from the mummified friar? There’s
nothing here. Something must lie beyond this chamber.”
“But if you’re right, where’s the
entrance?”
Sam pointed to the large statue of
the Incan king. It seemed to glower at them, gold against the dark stones. “If
anybody would know, he would. A clue must lie with him.” Sam met Maggie’s eyes.
“So we’ll have to cross over
there,” she said, swallowing hard. She offered Sam a wavery half smile. “One
last puzzle.”
The roof again rumbled ominously.
“Right. We either solve it, or we kiss our asses good-bye.”
Ralph called over to them. “What’re
you two doing? We’re running out of time!”
Sam quickly related what they
planned to do.
“That’s insane! You’re risking your
lives on pretty thin guesses!”
Sam nodded toward the roof. “I’d
rather take my chances than just wait for the sky to fall.”
Ralph had no answer. He just shifted
from foot to foot nervously. “Okay, boss, but be careful,” he finally conceded.
Denal stepped onto the tile floor,
his face ashen. “I come with.”
“No!” Maggie and Sam called out in
unison.
Denal just continued onward. “I
know old stories. I help. I no die without a fight, too.” He followed their
path to join them. He glared up at Sam. “My mama, before she die, she teach me
to be brave. I no shame her.”
Sam stared for a moment, then
clapped the boy on the shoulder. “Thanks, Denal.”
He smiled weakly, but his eyes kept
flicking between the Incan king and the patterned floor. With shaky fingers, he
fished out a bent cigarette from a pocket and slipped it between his lips. He
caught Sam eyeing the unlit cigarette and stared back defiantly. “Let’s go.”
Sam turned to leave. “You know
those things will stunt your growth.”
“Not if I don’t light them,” Denal
said sourly.
“You find a way out of here,” Sam
said, “and you can smoke your lungs black.”
Maggie trailed behind them. “Keep
moving. This roof isn’t goin’ to last forever.”
Sam continued in silence. Each step
onto a new tile brought an ever-growing sense of dread. But nothing happened.
Between Maggie and Denal, they seemed to have solved the riddle of the tiles,
but what then?
Sam came to the midpoint of the floor
and froze.
Maggie called from a couple rows
back. “Why’ve you stopped?”
He stepped aside so she could see.
“Oh.”
Sam was extra careful proceeding
onto the next gold tile. The blood made the surface slick. He was mindful not
to touch the torn and fouled body of Juan that shared the tile. The dead man’s
eyes seemed to track him as he passed. Sam glanced away, but the smell was
strong this close, the metallic tang of blood mixed with the more earthy smell
of decay. He continued on, sighing loudly once he stepped onto the next tile.
For a few rows, he sped faster,
glad to escape the dead man. Neither of the other two spoke as they followed.
Only the scuff of boots indicated they continued behind him. Farther across the
room, he could hear Ralph and Norman mumbling nervously, but their words were
too quiet to make out.
At last Sam stepped onto the four
gold tiles that made up the pictograph of janan pacha.
Bending in relief, Sam leaned his hands on his knees. He closed his eyes and
thanked the heavens for his safe passage.
Maggie and Denal joined him.
“You both okay?” Sam asked,
straightening.
Maggie could only nod. Her face
shone with a sheen of sweat. Denal’s cigarette trembled between his lips, but
he bobbed his head, too.
Sam glanced to the wall. They were
now grouped at the upper left of the pictograph. The last row of tiles was all
silver. Only the statue itself, in the middle of the wall, stood upon a gold
tile amid a small pile of gold and silver trinkets and offerings. “Now what?
How do we reach the statue from here?”
Maggie turned in a slow circle.
“Listen.”
Sam frowned. “What—?” Then he
realized what she meant.
Denal did, too. “It stopped.”
Sam cocked his head. There was no
trace of the ticking machinery that geared the booby trap.
“It ended as soon as we arrived
here,” Maggie said.
Sam nodded. “Our following the path
correctly must have deactivated it.”
“So it should be safe to follow the
silver tiles to the statue?” Maggie asked, glancing toward Denal.
The Quechan boy shrugged. “I no
know.”
Sam took a girding breath and
stepped off the gold tiles and onto the row of silver. He cringed for a
heartbeat, but nothing happened. He glanced to Maggie.
“The gears are still silent,” she
said, meeting his eyes. “It must be okay.”
Sam continued tile by tile to the
golden statue. The others followed. Soon they stood before the Incan warrior.
He seemed to be glaring down at them from under a headdress. The three studied
their adversary.
The statue stood almost a full two
yards taller than most men, posted with his back to a narrow silver archway in
the granite wall. He bore a staff in one hand and a typical Incan bola in the
other, three stones slung on llama tendon.
“Look at his llautu
crown,” Sam said, pointing to the figure’s braided headdress topped by three
parrot feathers and a fringe of tassels. “It definitely marks this one as a
Sapa Inca. One of their kings.”
“Yes, but the facial detail an’
depiction of realistic musculature is unlike the Incas’ usual stylization,”
Maggie whispered. “It’s as perfect a work as Michelangelo’s David.”
Sam leaned closer to study the
ancient king’s face. “Strange. Whichever Sapa Inca is represented here was
clearly worshiped as no other.”
A step away, Denal cleared his
throat. “The wall…it is not stone.”
Sam turned away from the statue.
The boy’s gaze was not on the golden idol, but the black wall behind it. Sheer
granite spread all around. “What do you mean?”
Maggie gasped. “Denal means it’s
not stonework. Look there are no seams or joints.
It’s not stacked stone blocks like the temple.”
Sam moved to the rock and ran a
palm along it. “It’s a wall of solid granite.”
A voice called from across the
room. “Did you find anything?” It was Norman.
Sam turned his head and yelled, “We
found the mountain!” Sam arched his neck and examined the wall. “The pyramid
must have been built at the base of this cliff face.”
“But why?” Maggie asked.
Sam thought out loud. “The Incas
revered mountains. But why build a huaca, or holy
place here? What was so special about this cliff?”
Maggie answered after a moment,
“Wh…what if there was a cave?”
Sam slapped his hand against the
granite wall. “Of course. Caverns were considered to be pacariscas,
mystical places joining the three worlds of their religion. They were often
used as places of ritual. It makes sense!”
“But where’s the entrance?” Maggie
asked.
“I don’t know, but the statue must
be a key. Did you notice the silver archway behind the statue? It’s large
enough to cover a narrow opening.”
Maggie and Sam returned to the
statue. Sam leaned his shoulder against it and tried to shove the idol aside.
“Be careful,” Maggie warned.
Denal stood with one fist clenched
at his throat.
But nothing happened. The statue
could not be budged. “Damn it,” Sam swore, taking off his Stetson and swiping
his damp hair back. “The thing must weigh close to a ton.”
Maggie frowned at him. “Brute force
isn’t the answer. With the complexity shown here, there has to be a mechanism
to unlock the pathway.” She elbowed Sam aside and approached the statue.
Stretching on the tip of her toes, she examined it closely, her nose only
inches from the golden surface. Slowly she worked her way down the statue’s
physique.
Sam grew impatient, especially when
the floor began to tremble again. “This place isn’t going to stand much
longer,” he mumbled.
“Aha!” Maggie exclaimed. She turned
to Sam, her face at the Incan king’s waist. “Here’s the answer.” She pointed to
the statue’s belly button.
“What are you talking about?”
Maggie reached and pushed her
finger through the hole. Her entire finger was swallowed up. “The Incas
considered the navel to be a place of power. They believed the umbilicus once
joined the physical body of man to the gods of creation.”
Sam crouched with Denal. “Another
fusion of worlds.”
Maggie slipped her finger out.
“It’s a keyhole. Now we just need to find the key.”
Sam straightened, thinking aloud.
“The navel links the gods of janan pacha to mankind
in the physical world…to cay pacha. If this chamber
is a point where all three worlds unite…then the key
must be something from the lower world, from uca pacha.”
Maggie clutched his elbow in
understanding. “By inserting the key into the navel lock, then all three worlds
would be united.”
“Yeah, but where do we find such a
key?”
Denal nudged Sam. He pointed to the
statue’s feet, to where a small mound of gold and silver offerings were piled.
“Uca pacha lies at bottom of feet.”
“Och! We’ve been feckin’ fools for
sure.” Maggie dropped to her knees and began sifting through the objects. “The
lower world! Sometimes it’s best to hide somethin’ in plain sight.”
Sam joined her. Working through the
pile, he held up a golden figurine of a panther with ruby eyes, then cast it
aside. “There’s enough wealth here to finance a small nation.”
“And it’ll do us not a nit of good
if we don’t survive.”
As if to remind them further, the
temple rumbled and shook as another section gave way. The tiles overhead
trembled and clanged. One of the booby traps sprang on its own, triggered by
the roof’s shaking: a huge granite block carved with a demon’s face crashed to
the floor and embedded itself in the silver tile below.
Maggie and Sam eyed each other
grimly.
Ralph called from behind them,
coughing slightly. “That’s it! We’re sealed in, folks! If there’s another way
out, I suggest you find it damn quick!”
Maggie whispered, “The structure of
the floor and trap is coming apart. If Norman and Ralph are goin’ to join us—”
“You’re right. Keep searching.” Sam
stood up. “Ralph! Norman! Come on over! Now!” The two other students were
obscured in a cloud of granite dust. But Ralph waved his flashlight in
acknowledgment and started toward them.
Sam returned to Maggie. “They’re
coming. Any luck?”
She shook her head; her hand
trembled as she picked through the pieces. “I can’t think clearly. What if I
miss a clue? We won’t have a second chance.” A small sob escaped her throat.
Sam knelt beside her. “We’ll get
out of here.” He put an arm around her shoulders and held her tight.
She leaned into his embrace, silent
for several heartbeats. Then a final shudder passed through her, and she seemed
to relax again. Slipping from under his arm, she turned to Sam, her dusty face
marred by trails of tears. She wiped at her cheeks and mumbled, “Thanks, Sam.”
No words were needed. He nodded and
returned to his own search alongside her. They worked as a team, sifting
through the pile of objects. Sam almost tossed aside their salvation, but
Maggie stopped him, grabbing his wrist.
Sam held a foot-long golden dagger
with a silver handle. “What?”
“Look at the carving on the hilt.”
Sam raised it into the beam of the
flashlight Denal was holding. It bore the figure of a man with prominent fangs.
Sam recognized the figure from ancient ceramic pottery. “It’s the fanged god
Aiapaec.”
Maggie nodded. “A god of the Moche
tribes!”
Sam remembered his uncle’s assessment
of this buried pyramid. It was clearly Moche. Here was more proof. “This will
make Uncle Hank happy…that is, if we get out of here to show it to him.” He
began to place the dagger aside.
Maggie stopped him again. “Wait,
Sam. Some scholars say that the Incas may have incorporated the Moche god,
Aiapaec, into their own pantheon of gods. But the Inca’s renamed
him—Huamancantac!”
“The god of guano…bat dung?” Sam
stared at her as if she were mad. What was her point? Then understanding dawned
on him. “The god of bats…and caverns! A spirit from
the lower world, uca pacha!”
Sam sprang to his feet, dagger in
hand.
“It must be the key!” Maggie
exclaimed.
Just then Ralph and Norman joined
the trio by the statue. “I don’t know what you’re all excited about, but I’d
suggest we get out of here.” He pointed toward the rear of the chamber.
Sam turned. There was no rear of the chamber. With the dust settling from
the last of the major rumbles, the back of the room was a tumbled pile of
blocks. “Christ!” Overhead, a quarter of the heavy roof tiles hung crooked or
tilted. And in the background, the continual groan of tons of granite sounded
from above their heads.
Norman’s voice was a squeak.
“There’s no place else to run.”
“Maybe there is,” Sam said. He
turned and stabbed the dagger into the statue’s belly. It sank to the level of
the hilt.
Nothing happened.
Norman shifted his feet, staring at
the impaled knife. “Okay, Brutus, you’ve stabbed Caesar. What now?”
Sam tried turning the knife like a
key, but it refused to move. He pulled the dagger back out, his eyes on Maggie.
“I was sure you were right.” He held the gold dagger between them, clutching it
tightly. “Th…this has to be the key!” he said between clenched teeth,
frustration trembling his voice. “It must be!”
As he spoke the last word, the
dagger shifted in his hands. The length of gold blade molded itself into a
jagged lightning bolt. It shone brightly in the beam of the flashlights. Sam
almost dropped the knife, but his left hand steadied his right, both palms now clutching
the hilt. “Did anyone else see that? Or did my mind just snap?” Sam ran his
fingers over the knife, searching for the catch that had triggered the
transformation. He found nothing.
Another cascade of rock tumbled
behind them. It was the chamber’s roof collapsing, taking out half of the roof
tiles. The clang of rock and metal echoed sharply. Death rolled toward them in
a gnash of rock, but none of them moved.
Instead, Maggie raised her hands
toward the dagger, then lowered them back again, clearly afraid of disturbing
the miracle. “It’s now the symbol of Pachacamac. The Incan god of creation.”
She met Sam’s wide eyes. “Use it!”
Sam nodded and turned back to the
statue. With the tip of the dagger trembling, Sam edged the knife into the
belly of the Incan king. It took a bit of rocking back and forth to insert the
jagged blade fully, but with one final push, the knife slid home.
A cracking grind of gears exploded,
loud enough to vanquish the crash of boulders behind them.
As Sam held tight to the hilt of
the dagger, the Incan statue split neatly in half, from crown to feet, a seam
appearing from nowhere. The two halves pulled apart from the dagger’s hilt,
along with the silver archway behind it. Beyond the statue, a natural fissure
in the rock was revealed.
Sam stood frozen before the split
statue, the knife still in his grip, the blade now pointing toward the cavern
entrance. “Holy shit!”
Stunned, Sam raised the dagger. It
was once again just the straight blade he had first found. He let his arm drop
and turned to the others. A blinding flash of Norman’s camera caught him off
guard. Sam rubbed at his eyes with the heel of his hand. “Warn a guy next
time,” he complained.
“And ruin that natural expression
of awe,” Norman answered. “Not a chance.”
The others all began talking at
once—amazement, wonder, and relief ringing brightly. Ralph shone his flashlight
down the throat of the fissure. It delved deep into the cliff face, beyond the
reach of Ralph’s light. “I hear what sounds like running water,” he said. “The
cavern must be plenty deep.”
“Good,” Sam said. He finally held
up his dagger, getting the others’ attention. “I have no idea what just
happened here, but let’s get our asses out of this temple before it crushes us
flat as pancakes.”
With more of the roof falling
behind them, no one argued. They filed quickly past Sam and into the coolness
of the natural cavern.
As Ralph slid by, he returned Sam’s
Winchester. “I have my own now,” the large man said, lifting a snubby
lever-action rifle.
Sam recognized it as Gil’s weapon.
“Where?”
Ralph jerked his thumb back at the
tile floor. “I picked it up when Norm and I crossed. Gil must have run off in
too big a hurry, abandoning it.” Ralph hefted an ammo belt from his shoulder.
“His loss…our gain.”
“Hopefully we won’t need either,”
Sam said.
Ralph shrugged and continued into
the tunnel.
“You’d better try one last time to
reach Philip,” Maggie said, glancing back at the crumbling room. “Let him know
we’re safe and not to give up on us. With water and shelter, we should be able
to survive until help arrives.”
“You’re right. In the caves, I
might not be able to reach him.” Sam had forgotten all about Philip Sykes. He
pulled the walkie-talkie free, stepped away from the threshold, and switched it
on. Static immediately squealed when Sam hit the transmitter. “Sykes, can you
read us? Over?”
The answer was immediate and
choppy. “…alive? Thank God…the whole hill is gone…We’re…as fast as we can!
Over.”
Sam smiled. He quickly summarized
their discovery and the miracle of the dagger. “So we’re gonna hole up in the
caves here until you can free us. Did you get all that? Over.”
The answer was scratchier as the
walkie-talkie’s battery weakened. “…caves? Don’t wander too far. I’ll try and…”
Static drowned the rest.
Sam turned to stare at the pale
faces of his friends. “Just hurry your ass, Philip!” he yelled into the
walkie-talkie. “And get word to Uncle Hank as soon as possible!”
Static was his only response. The
battery was too weak to send a signal through all the jumble of rock and clay
overhead. Sam swore under his breath and turned off the walkie-talkie,
conserving the little juice that was left. He prayed Philip had got all that.
Biting his lower lip, he joined the
others. Beyond them lay a well of darkness. Though Sam was relieved at the
escape from the crumbling pyramid, Friar de Almagro’s warning still echoed in
his head: The Serpent of Eden…may it never be disturbed.
Sam motioned them toward the black
caverns. “Let’s go.”
The path through the rock was
tight, so they proceeded single file. Ralph took the lead, and Sam brought up
the rear. In the cramped space, Sam felt as if the rock were squeezing closed
around him. At one point, they had to slide sideways, crushed between two walls
of granite. Once through the jam, they could hear the echoing sound of rushing
waters growing. The sound whetted Sam’s thirst. His tongue felt like dry burlap
in his mouth.
Ralph called back from the lead. “I
think it opens up just ahead. C’mon.”
Sam hurried forward, stepping
almost on Maggie’s heels. They had been climbing and scraping their way through
the passage for close to an hour by then. At last, Sam felt a stirring of the
air. He sensed a large space ahead. It coaxed them all to a faster clip.
The passage widened at last. The
team could now proceed as a group. Ralph, a step ahead of the rest, held one of
the flashlights. “There’s something ahead,” he mumbled.
Their pace slowed as the passage
came to an end. Ralph raised his flashlight. “I don’t believe it!” he gasped.
Sam agreed. The others stood silent
beside him. Ahead lay an open chamber, a cavern with a river channel worn
through the center of the floor. But that was not what triggered the stunned
reactions from the others. Pillars linked roof to floor, their lengths carved
with intricate images and fantastic creatures. In the stone, embedded silver
reflected the flashlight, eyes from thousands of carved figures, sentinels from
an ancient world.
Ralph lowered the light. “Look!”
Across the floor of the dark cavern, a path of beaten gold wound from the
passage’s opening over to the rumbling river and followed the course deeper
into the warren of caves. The bright path disappeared around a curve in the
cavern wall.
“Amazing,” Sam said.
Ralph spoke at his shoulder. “The
other chamber must have been a decoy, a trap protecting what lies ahead.”
Sam stepped forward, tentatively
placing a boot on the gold path. “But what have we discovered?”
Maggie moved to his side as Norman
snapped a few pictures. “We’ve found a place to rest. And that’s enough for now.”
The others mumbled their agreement,
thirst and exhaustion overwhelming wonder and mystery.
Even Sam agreed. The mysteries
could wait ’til morning. Still, as the others moved forward down the curving
gold path toward the river, Sam could not help but notice how the shining track
bore a distinct resemblance to a winding snake.
A golden
serpent.
Henry sat by his computer and
watched the on-screen phone connections whir through their internet nodes, the
modem buzzing and chiming in sync. “C’mon, Sam, pick up the damn phone,” he
muttered to himself. It was at least the tenth time he had tried to reach the
camp in Peru.
Various scenarios played in his
head—from the mundane, such as a glitch in the site’s satellite feed, to the
more frightening scene of an armed attack on the camp by looters. “I should
never have left.”
Henry glanced to the clock in the
upper right-hand corner of his laptop’s screen. It was after eleven. He took a
deep breath, calming his war of nerves. There might even be a simpler reason for
the lack of response. Because of the burglary and the ensuing paperwork with
hotel security, Henry had been over twenty minutes late in making his call. The
students probably gave up on him and were already sound asleep in their bunks.
Still, Henry waited one last time
for the line to feed through to Peru. He watched the screen icon appear,
indicating the satellite had been reached. The signal leaped for the metal
transmitting dish at the Andean site. Henry held his breath. But again the
signal died, no connection.
“Damn!” Henry slammed his fist on
the desk as the modem switched off. Though there were a thousand other excuses
for the lack of connection, Henry knew in his heart something was wrong. A
creeping dread. Once before, he had experienced a similar fear, the day his
brother Frank—Sam’s dad—had died in the car crash. He recalled that phone call
at four in the morning, the cold sensation of terror as he had reached for the
receiver. He now felt a similar dread.
Something had happened down in
Peru. He just knew it.
Henry reached for the computer once
again, but before his hand touched a key, the phone beside the laptop rang
loudly, startling him. His heart in his throat, he stared at the receiver,
flashing back to that horrible morning years ago. He clenched his fist. “Get
ahold of yourself, Henry,” he said, forcing his fingers to relax. Closing his
eyes and girding himself, he picked up the phone and raised it to his ear.
“Hello?”
A woman’s voice answered. “Henry?
It’s Joan.”
Though relieved it was just his
colleague, Henry recognized the stress in her voice. This wasn’t a casual call.
“Joan, what’s wrong?”
His sudden worry must have caught
her off guard. She stuttered for a moment, then spoke. “I…I just thought you
should know. I dropped by my office after our date…um, evening together…and
discovered someone had tried to break into the morgue where the mummy’s remains
are stored. The security guard startled them off, but he was unable to catch
them.”
“The mummy?”
“It’s fine. The thieves never even
got through the door.”
“It seems that Herald
reporter’s story drew more flies than we suspected.”
“Or maybe the same ones,” Joan
added. “Maybe after failing to find anything in your hotel room, they came here
next. What did the police say?”
“Not much. They didn’t seem
particularly interested since nothing was stolen.”
“Didn’t they dust for prints or
anything?”
Henry laughed. “You’ve been
watching too many cop shows. The only thing they did was check the tapes from
the security cameras in the hallway.”
“And?”
“No help. The camera lenses had
been spray-painted over.”
Joan was silent for several
breaths.
“Joan?”
“They did the same here. That’s how
the guard was alerted. He noticed the blacked-out monitor.”
“So you think it was the same team
of thieves?”
“I don’t know.”
“Well, hopefully the close call
with the security guard will keep them from any further mischief.” But Henry
was not convinced.
Joan sighed loudly. “I hope you’re
right. I’m sorry I bothered you.”
“It was no bother. I was up.” Henry
avoided telling her about his inability to reach Sam. Though it made no sense
at all, Henry had a feeling that tonight’s events were somehow intertwined: the
burglary at the hotel, the attempted break-in at the morgue, his difficulty in
reaching Sam. It was nonsense, of course, but the small hairs on the back of
Henry’s neck stood on end.
“I should let you go,” Joan said.
“I’ll see you in the morning.”
Henry frowned in confusion, then
remembered his schedule to meet with Joan at the lab. After the night’s hubbub
and his nagging worry over his nephew, Henry had momentarily forgotten about
the planned rendezvous with Joan. “Yes, of course. I’ll see you then. Good
night.” Just before he hung up the phone, he added a quick, “Thanks for
calling,” but the phone line was already dead.
Henry slowly hung up the receiver.
He stared at his computer screen,
then clicked it off. There was no further reason to keep trying to reach the
camp. He knew he would fail. Snapping shut the laptop, he made a whispered
promise to himself. “If I can’t reach the camp by tomorrow night, I’m on the
first red-eye out of here.” But even that decision did not calm his twanging
nerves.
Wednesday, August 22, 6:03 A.M.
Caverns
Andean Mountains, Peru
Sam studied the
dagger’s gold blade in the feeble light cast by the single flashlight. He had
the last guard shift of the night. The others lay sprawled behind him, curled
on the flat rock of the cavern floor, pillows made from rumpled shirts and
packs. Ralph snored softly, but at least the big man was sleeping. Earlier, Sam
had been unable to drowse, except for a brief catnap fraught with terrifying
images of falling rocks and unseen monsters. He had been relieved when Norman
had nudged him to take his shift.
Sam raised his eyes from the dagger
and glanced about the cavern. All around him, silver eyes studied Sam from the
dozens of carved pillars, creatures that were half-human, half-animal. Incan
gods and spirits. Nearby, the golden path reflected the meager light, a bright
vein in the dark rock. Sam imagined the generations of Incan Indians that must
have walked this trail. The footpath continued along the river’s bank deeper
into the series of caves, and Sam longed to follow it. But the consensus of the
group was to make camp there, near a water source and the fissure opening, and
await rescue. Exploration could come later.
Glancing at his watch, Sam
suspected the sun was just now rising above the Andean mountains. Down there,
however, the blackness seemed to grow deeper and more endless. Time lost all
meaning; it stretched toward eternity.
Though Sam tried to ignore his
hunger, his stomach growled loudly. How long had it been since any of them had
anything to eat? Still, he shouldn’t complain. At least, with the stream, they
had water.
He just needed to keep himself
distracted.
Sam fingered the blade of the
dagger, pondering the mystery of its mechanism. How had yesterday’s
transformation occurred? He couldn’t even fathom the trigger that unfolded the
dagger into a jagged lightning bolt. It had done so with such smoothness and
lack of mechanical friction, appearing to melt into the new form. The trick was
too damned convincing. How intricate was the technology developed here? Friar
de Almagro’s warning of the Serpent of Eden suggested a source of forbidden
knowledge, a font of wisdom that could corrupt mankind. Was this an example of
it?
A cough drew his attention.
Barefoot, Maggie sidled toward him. Even disheveled, she was striking. Covered
only by a thin blouse, buttoned loosely, her breasts moved under the fabric.
Sam’s mouth grew dry. He dropped his eyes before he embarrassed himself, but
his gaze only discovered the soft curves of waist and leg.
“You must quit fondling that thing,
Sam,” she said quietly. “People are goin’ to start talking.”
“What?” Sam asked, shocked,
glancing up at her.
Maggie offered him a tired smile
and nodded toward the dagger.
“Oh…” He tucked it away. “So…so you
couldn’t sleep?”
She shrugged, sitting beside him.
“Rock doesn’t make such a great mattress.”
Sam nodded, allowing her this tiny
falsehood. He suspected her restlessness was the same as his: bone-deep worries
and the omnipresent press of the darkness around them. “We’re going to get out
of here,” he said plainly.
“By trusting in good ol’ Philip
Sykes?” she said, rolling her eyes.
“He’s an ass, but he’ll pull us
through.”
She stared up at a neighboring
pillar and was silent. After a time, she spoke, “Sam, I wanted to thank you
again for coming out on the tiles when I had that last…that last seizure.”
He began to protest that no such
thanks were needed.
She stopped him with a touch to his
hand. “But I need you to know something…I think I owe you that.”
He turned to face her more fully.
“What?”
“I am not truly epileptic,” she
said softly.
Sam scrunched his face. “What do
you mean?”
“The psychologists diagnosed it as
post-traumatic stress syndrome, a severe form of panic attack. When tension
reaches a certain level”—Maggie waved a hand in the air—“my body rebels. It
sends my mind spinning away.”
“I don’t understand. Isn’t that a
war-trauma thing?”
“Not always…besides there are many
forms of war.”
Sam didn’t want to press her any
further, but his heart would not let him stay silent. “What happened?”
She studied Sam for a long breath,
her eyes judging him, weighing his sincerity. Finally, she glanced away, her
voice dull. “When I was twelve years old, I saw a schoolyard friend, Patrick
Dugan, shot by a stray bullet from an IRA sniper. He collapsed in my arms as I
hid in a roadside ditch.”
“God, how awful…”
“Bullets kept flying. Men and women
were screamin’, cryin’. I didn’t know what to do. So I hid under Patrick’s
body.” Maggie began to tremble as she continued the story. “His…his blood
soaked over me. It was hot, like warm syrup. The smell of a slaughterhouse…”
Sam slid closer to Maggie, pulling
her to him. “You don’t have to do this…”
She did not withdraw from him but
neither did she respond to his touch. She gazed without blinking toward the
darkness, lost in a familiar nightmare. “But Patrick was still alive. As I hid
under him, he moaned, too low for others to hear. He begged me to help him. He
cried for his mama. But I just hid there, using his body as a shield, his blood
soaking through my clothes.” She turned to Sam, her voice catching. “It was
warm, safe. Nothin’ could make me move from my hiding place. God forgive me, I
forced my ears not to hear Patrick’s moans for help.” A sob escaped her throat.
“Maggie, you were only a child.”
“I could have done something.”
“And you could’ve been killed just
as well. What good would that have done Patrick Dugan?”
“I’ll never know,” she said with
the heat of self-loathing tears on her cheek. She struggled away from Sam’s arm
and turned angry, hurt eyes toward him. “Will I?”
Sam had no answer. “I’m sorry,” he
offered feebly.
She wiped brusquely at her face.
“Ever since then, the goddamn attacks occur. Years of pills and therapy did
nothing. So I stopped them all.” She swallowed hard. “It’s my problem,
something I must live with…alone. It’s my burden.”
And your
self-imposed punishment for Patrick’s death, Sam thought, but he kept silent. Who was he to judge? Images of his
parents’ crumpled forms being yanked like sides of beef from the smashed car
while he sat strapped in the backseat, watching it all, tumbled through his
mind. Survivor’s guilt. It was a feeling with which he was well acquainted. He
still often woke with his bedsheets clinging to his damp skin, cold sweat
soaking his body.
Maggie’s next words drew him back
to the black cavern. “In the future, Sam, don’t risk yourself for me. Okay?”
“I…I can’t promise that.”
She stared angrily at him, tears
brightening her eyes.
“Maggie—?”
They were interrupted by the
appearance of Norman. “Sorry, folks, but I must talk to a man about a horse,”
the photographer grumbled, hair sticking up in all directions. He crossed over
the gold path and headed for a nearby boulder, seemingly oblivious to the
tension between the pair.
Sam turned to Maggie, but she would
not meet his eyes. She pushed to her feet. “Just…just don’t risk your life…” As
she stepped away, Sam heard her mumble something else. The words had been meant
only for herself but the cavern acoustics carried the words to him. “I don’t
want another death on my hands.”
Leaning forward, ready to follow
and console her, Sam paused, then relaxed back down to his seat. There was
nothing he could say. He himself had heard all the platitudes before, after his
parents had died. Don’t blame yourself. There was nothing
you could do. Accidents happen. No words had helped him then either. But
at least Sam had had his Uncle Henry. Having just lost his own wife, Uncle Hank
had seemed to sense that some things had to be faced alone, worked out in
silence, rather than probed and prodded for an answer. It was this silence more
than grief that had bound nephew to uncle, like two raw-edged wounds healing
and scarring together.
Sam watched Maggie walk away,
shoulders slumped. She had been right. It was her burden. Still, Sam could not
suppress the urge to rush over to her, to take her in his arms and protect her.
Before he could act, a shriek drew
him around. He flew to his feet, pulling out the dagger. He stepped to where
his grandfather’s Winchester leaned against a rock.
Norman came running around the
boulder’s edge, zipping up his fly, and glancing in panic behind him.
“What’s wrong?” Sam asked as Norman
stumbled to his side.
The photographer could not catch
his breath for a moment. One arm kept gesturing back at the boulder as he
gasped and choked. “B…Behind…”
Ralph drew beside them, bleary from
his sudden awakening. He rubbed sleep from his eyes, Gil’s lever-action rifle
held in his other hand. “Goddammit, Norman. You scream like a girl.”
Norman ignored Ralph’s jibe, too
panicked to care. “I…I thought they were just…just patches of lichen or spots
of lighter rock. But something moved out there!”
“Who? What are you talking about?”
Sam asked.
Norman shuddered, then finally
seemed to collect himself. He waved them all back toward the boulder. By then,
Maggie and Denal hovered a few steps away. “I’m not sure.” He led them back,
but this time stayed well away from the rock and whatever lurked behind it.
Sam remained at the photographer’s
side. The dark stone on the far side of the rock lay in shadows. Streaks of
quartz or white gypsum ran in streams up the nearby cavern wall. “I don’t see
anything.”
Norman reached a hand back toward
the others. “Gimme one of the lights.”
Denal moved up and passed the
second flashlight to the photographer. Norman clicked it on; light speared the
inky gloom.
Sam twitched back in shock. It was
not veins of quartz or gypsum that ran down the walls. These pale streaks
flowed, streaming down the walls to pool at its foot. Even now, rivulets
started spreading across the floor toward the gathered party. Sam shifted his
own lantern. “Spiders…” Each was as pale as the belly of a slug and had to be a
hand-spread wide. There had to be hundreds…no thousands of them.
Ralph stepped back. “Tarantulas.”
“Albino tarantulas,” Maggie moaned.
The army continued its scurried
march. Scouts skittered to either side of the boulder. A few paused where the
rock was damp and steamed slightly from Norman’s morning relief, clearly drawn
to the warmth.
“It’s our body heat,” Sam said.
“The damned things must be blind and drawn by noise and warmth.”
Behind him, Denal started gibbering
in his native Quecha.
Sam swung around. The young Indian
was gesturing in the opposite direction, toward the far side of the gold path.
Norman turned his flashlight to where Denal pointed. As another flank of the
army streamed down the other wall on pale, hairy legs, Sam suddenly had an
awful sensation crawl up his back.
Sam arched his neck, raising his
lantern high.
Overhead, the roof was draped by a
mass of roiling bodies, crawling, mating, fighting. Thousands of pendulous egg
sacs hung in ropy wombs of silk. The students had stumbled into the main nest
of the tarantulas…and the army of predators was hunting for prey. They were
already moving down the pillars, as if the carved figures were giving birth to
them.
The group scattered from under the
shadow of the monstrosity, fleeing back to their campsite.
As they retreated, Sam studied the
huge spiders. Dependent upon the meager resources found in these caves, the
tarantulas had clearly evolved a more aggressive posture. Instead of waiting
for prey to fall into webs, these normally solitary spiders had adapted a more
cooperative strategy. By massing together, they could comb the caves more
successively for any potential sources of a blood meal, taking down larger prey
by their sheer numbers—and Sam had no intention of being their next course.
“Okay, folks, I think we’ve
overstayed our welcome,” he said. “Gather our gear and let’s get the hell out
of Dodge.”
“Where to?” Maggie asked.
“There’s a path through these
caves, right? Those Indians who forged it must have done so for a reason. Maybe
it’s a way out. Anyone object to finding out?”
No one did. Five sets of eyes were
still on the encroaching tarantulas.
Sam slipped the gold dagger into
his vest and collected his grandfather’s rifle. He gestured to the others to
collect their few possessions. “One flashlight only,” he said, as he led the
way down the path. “Conserve the other. I don’t want to run out of illumination
down here.” A shiver passed through Sam at the mere thought of being trapped,
blind, with a pale army of poisonous predators encircling him. He tightened his
grip on his rifle but knew it would do him little good if the lights went out.
Norman followed with the
flashlight, glancing frequently behind him.
“As long as we keep moving, the
spiders won’t get you, Norman,” Ralph said with a scowl.
The photographer still kept an eye
on their backtrail. “Just remind me…no more bathroom breaks. Not until I see
the light of day.”
Sam ignored their nervous chatter.
It was not what lay behind them that kept Sam’s nerves taut as bowstrings, but
the trail ahead. Just where in the hell would this path take them?
Unfortunately there was only one
way to find out.
As they proceeded, Norman mumbled
behind him. “Lions and tigers and bears, oh my…”
Sam glanced back, his brow furrowed
in confusion.
Norman nodded to the gold path.
“Sort of reminds me of the yellow brick road.”
“Great,” Ralph groused. “Now the
fruit thinks he’s Dorothy.”
“I wish I was. Right now I wouldn’t
mind a pair of ruby slippers to whisk me home,” Norman grumbled. “Or even back
to a farm in Kansas.”
Sam rolled his eyes and continued
onward.
The remainder of the long morning
stretched into an endless hike, mostly at a steady incline. Legs and backs
protested as the cavern system led them higher inside the Andean mountain. If
not for the lack of food and the growing exhaustion, Sam might have better
appreciated the sights: towering stalagmites, cavernous chambers with limpid
pools that glowed with a soft phosphorescence, cataracts that misted the gold
trail at times with a welcome cooling spray, even a side cave so festooned with
lacy crystals that it looked as if the chamber was full of cotton candy. It was
a wonderland of natural beauty.
And everywhere they went, the
carved pillars marked their way as grim sentinels, watching the group pass with
unblinking silver eyes.
But as amazing as the sights were,
the memory of what lay behind them never fully vanished. Breaks to drink from
the stream were often accompanied by worried glances toward the rear. So far
there had been no sign of pursuit by the tarantula army. It seemed they had
left the spiders far behind.
Slowly, the morning wound to
afternoon. The only highlight was a brief lunch to split a pair of Milky Way
bars found stashed in Norman’s camera case. Chocolate had never tasted so good.
But even this small taste of heaven was short-lived, and only succeeded in
amplifying everyone’s hunger. Tempers began to grow short and attitudes sullen
as they marched through the afternoon.
To make matters worse, a sharp
pungency began to fill the cavern’s normally crisp air. Noses wrinkled.
“Ammonia. Smells like the ass end of a skunk,” Sam commented.
“Maybe the air is going bad,”
Norman said with a worried expression on his haggard face.
“Don’t be a fool,” Ralph snapped.
“The air would have been worse when we were deeper.”
“Not necessarily,” Maggie said. Her
eyes had narrowed suspiciously, squinting at the darkness beyond the light.
“Not if there was a source giving off the noxious fumes.”
Ralph still scowled, clearly tired
and irritated. “What do you mean?”
Instead of answering, Maggie turned
to Sam. “All those tarantulas. From the look of them, they were well fed. What
do the feckin’ things eat down here?”
Sam shook his head. He had no
answer.
“Oh God!” This came from Norman,
who had taken the lead with the flashlight. The gold path led over a short rise
into a neighboring cavern. From the echo of his exclamation, the chamber was
large.
The others hurried to join him.
Maggie stared at the scene ahead,
holding a hand over her mouth and nose. The sting burned their eyes and noses.
“There’s the answer. The source of the tarantulas’ diet.”
Sam groaned. “Bats.”
Across the roof of the next cave,
thousands of black and brown bats hung from latched toes, wings tight to
bodies. The juveniles, squirming among the adults, were a paler shade, almost a
coppery hue. Sharp squeaks and subsonic screeches spread the warning of
intruders across the legion of winged vermin. Hundreds dropped from their
perches to take flight, skirting through the air.
The source of the odor was
immediately clear.
“Shit,” Ralph swore.
“Exactly,” Norman commented
sullenly. “Bat shit.”
The floor of the cavern was thick
with it. Carved pillars, fouled with excrement, speared upward through the
odorous mess. The reek from the aged droppings was thick enough to drive them
all back with a stinging slap.
Norman tumbled away, choking and
spitting. Bent at the waist, he leaned on his knees, gagging.
Ralph looked as if his dark skin
had been bleached by the corrosive exposure. “We can’t cross here,” he said.
“We’d be dead before we reached the other side.”
“Not without gas masks,” Maggie
agreed.
Sam was not going to argue. He
could barely see, his eyes were watering so fiercely. “Wh…what are we going to
do then?”
Denal spoke up. He had hung back
from the cavern’s opening and so had borne the least of the exposure. Even now,
he was not facing ahead, but behind. He had an arm pointed. “They come again.”
Sam turned, blinking away the last
of the burn. He took the flashlight from the incapacitated Norman. Several
yards down the gold trail, three or four white bodies scurried across the rocky
landscape. Scouts of the tarantula army.
“To hell with this,” Ralph said,
voicing all their concerns.
“What now?” Maggie asked.
Sam glanced forward and backward.
Everyone began talking at once. Sam raised the light to get everyone’s
attention. “Stay calm! It won’t do us any good to panic!”
At that moment, Sam’s flashlight
flickered and died. Darkness swallowed them up, a blackness so deep it seemed
as if the world had completely vanished. Voices immediately dropped silent.
After a long held breath, Norman
spoke from the darkness. “Okay, now can we panic?”
Joan ushered Henry into her lab.
“Please make yourself at home,” she offered, then glanced at her wristwatch.
“Dr. Kirkpatrick should be here at noon.”
Behind her, Henry had paused in the
dooway to her suite of labs, his eyes wide. “It’s like a big toy store in here.
You’ve done well since our years at Rice.”
She hid a smile of satisfaction.
Slowly, Henry wandered further into
the laboratory, his gaze drifting over the plethora of equipment. Various
diagnostic and research devices lined the back of the room: ultracentrifuge,
hematology and chemistry analyzer, mass spectrograph, chromatograph, a gene
sequencer. Along one wall was a safety hood for handling hazardous substances;
along the other stood cabinets, incubators, and a huge refrigerated unit.
Henry walked along the row of
machines and glanced into a neighboring room. “My God, you even have your own
electron microscope.” Henry rolled his eyes at her. “To book any time on our
university’s, it takes at least a week’s notice.”
“No need for that here. Today, my
lab is at your full disposal.”
Henry crossed to a central U-shaped
worktable and set down his leather briefcase, his eyes still drifting
appreciatively around the room. “I’ve had dreams like this…”
Chuckling to herself, Joan stepped
to a locked stainless-steel cabinet, keyed it open and, with two hands,
extracted a large beaker. “Here’s all the material we collected from the walls
and floor of the radiology lab.”
She saw Henry’s eyes widen as she
placed the jar before him. He leaned over a bit, pushing his glasses higher on
his nose. “I didn’t realize there was so much,” he said. The yellowish
substance filled half of the liter-sized beaker. It shone brightly under the
room’s fluorescent lights.
Joan pulled up a stool. “From the
amount, I judge it must have filled the skull’s entire cranium.”
Henry picked the beaker up. Joan
noticed that he quickly grabbed it with his other hand. The stuff was heavier
than it appeared. He tilted the jar, but the unknown substance refused to flow.
Replacing the beaker on the table, he commented, “It looks solid.”
Joan shook her head. “It’s not.”
She grabbed a glass rod and thrust it into the material. It sank but not
without some effort, like pushing through soft clay. Joan released the rod, and
it remained standing straight in the jar. “Malleable, but not solid.”
Henry tried to move the glass rod.
“Hmm…definitely not gold. But the hue and brilliance are a perfect match. Maybe
you were right before, a new amalgam or something. I’ve certainly never seen
anything like it.”
Joan glanced at him, eyebrows
raised. “Or maybe you have. Let’s compare it to the gold cross. You brought it
with you, yes?”
He nodded. Twisting back to the
table, Henry dialed the lock on his briefcase and snapped it open. “I figure
it’s safer with me than at the hotel.” He removed the ornate Dominican cross
and held it toward her.
The workmanship was incredible. The
Christ figure lay stretched and stylized upon a scrolled cross; the pain of his
agony sculpted in the strain of his limbs, yet his face was full of passionate
grace. “Impressive,” she said.
“And solid…so I doubt it’s made of
the same amalgam.” Henry placed the crucifix beside the beaker. The strange
material and the cross glinted and shone equally.
“Are you sure?”
Henry met her eyes over the rim of
his spectacles. He shrugged his brows. “I’ll leave the final assessment to your
expert.”
She reached for the crucifix. “May
I?”
“Of course, Joan.”
Her hand hesitated for a heartbeat
when Henry used her name. The intimacy and surroundings brought back sudden
memories of when the two were lab partners during a semester in undergraduate
biology. How strange and vivid that recollection was at the moment. More than
just déjà vu.
Without meeting his eye, Joan took
the cross from the table. The past was the past. She hefted the crucifix in her
palm. It, too, weighed more than it appeared—but didn’t gold always seem that
way? She held the crucifix up to the light, tilting it one way, then the other,
studying it.
Henry theorized aloud while she
examined the relic. “It’s definitely the work of a Spanish craftsman. Not Incan
work. If the cross is confirmed to be composed of the same amalgam, then we’ll
know for sure the Spanish brought the substance to the New World, rather than
the other way around…”
He continued talking, but something
had caught Joan’s attention. Her fingers felt small scratches on the crucifix’s
back surface. She reached to a pocket and slipped out her reading glasses.
Putting them on, she turned the crucifix over and squinted. It was not the
artist’s signature or some piece of archaic scripture. Instead it seemed to be
row after row of fine marks. They covered the entire surface of the crucifix’s
back side.
“What is this?” Joan asked,
interrupting Henry.
He moved closer, shoulder to
shoulder with her. Joan noticed the faint scent of him, a mix of aftershave and
a richer muskiness. She tried to ignore it.
“What are you talking about?” he
asked.
“Here.” With a fingernail, she
pointed to the marks.
“Ah, I noticed those. I think
they’re a result of the cross rubbing against the friar’s robe, slowly abrading
the soft gold over the years.”
“Mmm, maybe…but they seem too
symmetrical, and some of the marks are quite deep and irregular.” She turned
slightly to Henry, almost nose to nose. His breath was on her cheek, his eyes
staring deep into hers.
“What are you suggesting?”
She shook her head, stepping away.
“I don’t know. I’d like to get a closer look.”
“How?”
Joan led him around the corner of
the table where sets of microscopes were positioned. She moved to a bulky
binocular unit with a large glass tray under it. “A dissection microscope.
Normally I use it to study gross tissues more closely.”
She placed the cross facedown on
the tray and switched on the light source. Illuminated from above, the gold
glowed with an inner fire. Joan adjusted the light so it shone obliquely across
the crucifix. Bending over the eyepiece, she made fine adjustments in the
lenses. Under the low magnification, the surface of the cross filled the view.
The marks on the crucifix were in stark relief, appearing as deep gouges in the
metal, long valleys, clearly precise and uniform. The scratches composed a
series of repeated tiny symbols: rough squares, crude circles, horizontal and
vertical squiggles, hash marks, nested ovals.
“Take a look,” Joan said, moving
aside.
Henry bent over the scope. He stared
a few moments in silence, then a low whistle escaped his lips. “You’re right.
These are not random scratches.” His gaze flicked toward her. “I think there’s
even silver embedded in some of the grooves. Perhaps traces of the tool used to
scratch these marks.”
“For such painstaking work, there
must be some reason to go through all that effort.”
“But why?” Henry’s lips tightened
as he pondered this new mystery, his eyes slightly narrowed. Finally, he
expelled a breath. “It may be a message. But who knows for sure? Maybe it’s
just an ordinary prayer. Some benediction.”
“But in code? And why on the back
of the cross? It must mean something more.”
Henry shrugged. “If the friar
notched it as a message while imprisoned, it may have been the only way he
could keep it secure. The Incas revered gold items. If the cross was with him
when he died on the altar, the Incas would have kept the crucifix with the
body.”
“If you’re right, who was his
message meant for?”
Henry shook his head slowly, his
gaze thoughtful. “The answer may lie in this code.”
Joan moved back to the scope. She
slid a legal pad and a pen from a drawer, then sat down and positioned herself
to copy the marks on her paper. “Let’s check it out. I’ve always liked dabbling
with cryptograms. If I don’t have any luck, I can also run it by someone in the
computer department, pass it through a decryption program. They may be able to
crack it.”
Henry stood behind her as she
recorded the writing. “You’ve grown into a woman of many talents, Dr. Joan
Engel.”
Joan hid her blush as she
concentrated on her task, copying the marks carefully. She worked quickly and
efficiently, not needing to look up as she jotted what she saw. After years of
making notes while studying a patient’s sample under a microscope, she had grown
skilled at writing blind.
In five minutes, a copy lay on the
table beside her. Row after row of symbols lined the yellow paper. She
straightened from her crouch, stretching a kink from her neck.
“Hold still,” Henry said behind
her. He slid a hand along her shoulder and gently lifted the cascade of hair
from the back of her neck. His knuckles brushed her skin.
She suppressed a shiver. “Henry…?”
“Don’t move.” His fingers reached
to knead the muscles of her strained upper shoulders. At first, his skin was
cool against her own, but as he worked, heat built under his strong fingers,
warming her sore muscles.
“I see you’ve not lost your touch.”
She leaned into his fingers, remembering another time, another place. “So if I
tell you to stop, ignore me,” she said, feigning a nonchalance that the
huskiness of her voice betrayed.
“It’s the least I can do after all
your help.” His own words were heavier than usual.
A sharp rap on the laboratory door
interrupted the moment.
Henry’s hands froze, then pulled
back.
Joan shifted from her chair, her
shoulders and neck still warm from his touch. She glanced at her watch. “It
must be Dr. Kirkpatrick. He’s right on time.”
Henry cursed the metallurgist’s
impeccable timing. He rubbed his palms together, trying to wipe away the memory
of Joan’s skin. Get ahold of yourself, man. You’re acting
like a smitten teenager.
He watched Joan walk away. One of
her hands reached to touch her neck gently. Then she brushed her hair back into
place, a midnight flow against her white smock. Mysteries or not, right now all
he wished for was a few more moments alone with her.
Joan crossed to the door, opened
it, and greeted the visitor. “Dale, thanks for coming over.”
Dale Kirkpatrick, the metallurgy
expert from George Washington University, stood a good head taller than Henry,
but he was waspishly thin with an elongated face that seldom smiled. He tried
to do so now with disastrous results, like a coroner greeting the bereaved.
“Anything for a colleague.”
Henry sensed the red-haired man had
shared more with Joan than just a professional relationship. The pair’s eyes
met one another awkwardly, and the welcoming handshake was a touch longer than
custom dictated. Henry instantly disliked him. The man wore an expensive silk
suit and shoes polished to a glowing sheen. His heels tapped loudly as he was
invited into the room. In his left hand, he carried a large equipment case.
Henry cleared his throat.
Joan swung around. “Dale, let me
introduce you to Professor Henry Conklin.”
Kirkpatrick held out his hand. “The
archaeologist.” It was a statement not a question, but Henry scented a trace of
dismissal in his voice.
They shook hands, briefly and
curtly.
“I appreciate your help in this
matter,” Henry said. “It’s posed quite a mystery. We can’t make heads or tails
of this amalgam or whatever it is.”
“Yes…well, let me just take a
look.” The man’s attitude was again polite, but a touch haughty, as if his mere
presence would bring light to darkness.
“It’s over here,” Joan said,
guiding him to the worktable.
Once presented with the enigma,
Kirkpatrick cocked his head, studying the strange substance in silence. Joan
began to speak, but the specialist held up a finger, quieting her. Henry had an
irrational urge to break that finger. “It’s not gold,” he finally declared.
“We sort of figured that out,”
Henry said sourly.
The man glanced back at him, one
eyebrow held high. “Undoubtedly, or I wouldn’t have been called in, now would
I?” He turned back to the beaker and reached for the glass rod still embedded
in the material. He fiddled with it. “Semisolid at room temperature,” he
mumbled. “Have you ascertained a true melting point for the substance?”
“Not yet.”
“Well, that’s easy enough to do.”
He told Joan what he would need. Soon they were gathered around a ceramic bowl warming
over the low purple flame of a Bunsen burner. A sample of the metal filled the
bottom half of the bowl with a thermometer embedded in it.
The metallurgist spoke as the
material slowly heated under the hazards hood. “If it’s an amalgam of different
elements, the constituent metals should separate out for us as it melts.”
“It’s already melted,” Henry said
with a nod toward the bowl.
Dale swung his attention back,
frowning. “That’s impossible. It’s only been warming for a few seconds. Even
gold doesn’t melt at such a low temp.”
But Henry’s observation proved
true. Using tongs, Dale jostled the bowl. The substance now appeared as loose
as cream, only golden in color. He looked up to Joan. “What’s the temperature?”
Joan’s face was bunched in
consternation. “Ninety-eight degrees Fahrenheit.”
Henry’s eyes widened. “Body
temperature.”
Away from the heat source, the bowl
quickly cooled and the metallic substance grew turgid as the trio pondered the
result.
Henry spoke first. “I didn’t see
any breakdown into component metals like you said. Does that mean it’s not an
amalgam?”
“It’s too soon to say.” But Dale’s
voice had lost its edge.
“What next?”
“A few more tests. I’d like to
check its conductivity and its response to magnetism.”
In short order, they molded a sample
of the soft metal into a cube and inserted two electrodes into it. Dale nodded,
and Joan engaged the battery hookup. As soon as the current flowed, the cube
melted into a sludge that ran across the worktable.
“Switch it off!”
Joan flipped the toggle. The
material instantly solidified again. Dale touched the metal. “It’s cool.”
“What just happened?” Henry asked.
Dale just shook his head. He had no
answer. “Bring me the magnets from my case.”
Henry and Joan positioned the two
shielded magnets on either side of a second sample cube. Dale fastened a
potentiometer on its side. “On my signal, raise the shields.” He leaned closer
to the meter. “Now.”
Joan and Henry flicked open the
lead dampers. Just as with the flow of electricity, the cube melted like ice in
an oven, running across the table.
“Shield the magnets,” Dale ordered.
Once done, the substance instantly
stopped flowing across the tabletop, freezing in place. Dale again fingered the
solidified metal. He now wore a worried expression.
“Well?” Henry asked.
“You said the substance exploded
out of the mummy’s skull when exposed to the CT scanner.”
“Yes,” Joan said. “It blew across
the entire room.”
“Then even the CT scanner’s X rays
affect the metal,” Dale mumbled to himself, tapping a pen on the table’s edge.
“Interesting…”
Henry packed away the magnets.
“What are you thinking?”
Dale’s eyes cleared and focused. He
turned to them. “The substance must be capable of using any radiant energy with
perfect efficiency—electric current, magnetic radiation, X rays. It absorbs
these various energies to change state.” He nudged a trickle of the solidified
metal. “I don’t think there’s even any heat given off as it changes form. It’s
an example of the perfect consumption of energy. Not even waste heat! I’ve…I’ve
never seen anything like this. It’s thermodynamically impossible.”
Henry studied the contents of the
beaker. “Are you suggesting the scanner’s X rays triggered the mummy’s
explosion?”
He nodded. “Bombarded by that
amount of concentrated radiation, some of the material might have changed
state—this time from liquid to gas. The sudden expansion could have caused the
violent explosion, expelling the liquefied metal. Once away from the radiation,
it changed back to this semisolid state.”
“But what is it?” Joan asked.
He held up that irritating finger
again. “Let me try one more thing.” Taking another sample cube of the soft
metal, he squeezed it like a lump of clay. “Has it ever completely solidified?”
Joan shook her head. “No. I even
tried freezing it, but it remained malleable.”
Dale swung on his seat. “Professor
Conklin, could you pass me one of the magnets’ insulating sleeves?”
Henry had been wrapping the last of
the heavy magnets in a copper-impregnated cloth. He undid his work and passed
the wrap to Dale.
“The sleeve blocks the magnet’s
effects…so I don’t accidentally damage some expensive electronics in passing.
It shields almost all forms of radiation.”
Henry began to get an inkling of
the metal expert’s plan.
Dale took the gold cube and wrapped
it in the black cloth. Once it was totally shielded, he placed the shrouded
cube back on the table. He then took a chisel and hammer from his case.
Positioning the chisel’s edge on the cube, he struck the tool a resounding blow
with the mallet. A muffled clang was the only response. The cube resisted the
chisel.
Quickly unwrapping the cube, Dale
revealed the unblemished surface. He took the chisel again, and only using the
force of his thumb, he drove it through the exposed cube. He explained these
results. “All around us is low ambient radiation. It’s always present—various
local radio waves, electromagnetic pulses from the building’s wiring, even
solar radiation. This substance uses them all! That’s why it remains semisolid.
Even these trace energies weaken its solidity.”
“But I don’t understand,” Joan
said. “What type of metal or amalgam could do this?”
“Nothing that I’ve ever seen or
heard about.” Dale suddenly stood up, carefully lifting the soft cube in steel
tongs. He nodded toward the neighboring room, to the electron-microscope suite.
“But there’s a way to investigate closer.”
Henry soon found himself trailing
the other two into the next room. He carried both the beaker of the strange
metal, now sealed with a rubber stopper and the mummy’s Dominican crucifix.
Already, Joan and Dale were bowed head-to-head as they prepared a shaving of
the metal to use in the electron microscope.
Henry crossed to a small table off
to the side, setting down the beaker and the cross. The large electron
microscope occupied the rear of the room. Its towering optical column reached
for the room’s ceiling. A bank of three monitors was crowded before it.
Joan warmed up the unit, flipping
switches and quickly checking baseline calibrations. Dale finished prepping the
sample, locking it into place on the scanner’s tray. He gave Joan a thumbs-up.
Henry, all but forgotten, scowled
and sank to a stool by his table.
Across the small room, the optical
column began to hum and click as its tungsten hairpin gun bombarded the sample
with an electron beam. Dale hurried to Joan’s side before the monitors. The
pathologist jabbed at a keyboard, and the screens bloomed with a grey glow in
the dim room. The words STAND BY could be seen even from where Henry sat.
“How long will this take?” Henry
called over.
Joan glanced at him, her face a
mixture of surprise and embarrassment. She must have finally realized how
little she had acknowledged him. “Not long. The EM will need about ten minutes
to compile and calculate an image.” Joan offered Henry a weak, apologetic
smile, then turned away.
Henry swung away himself, turning
his attention back to the crucifix. He tapped its brilliant surface with a
finger. After testing the unknown substance, the friar’s cross was clearly
composed of the real thing. “Mere gold,” Henry muttered to himself. At least
one mystery was solved, but that still left another enigma.
Grasping the crucifix, Henry
flipped it over to study its back side and the rows of small scratches. What
was Francisco de Almagro trying to say? Henry ran a finger along the marks. Was
this some last message? If so, what was so important? As Henry fingered the
cross, he felt a twinge of misgiving, similar to the one the previous night
when his attempt to communicate with the camp failed. He pushed aside such
irrational worries. He was being paranoid. But for the hundredth time that day,
his thoughts drifted to Sam and the other students. How were they faring with
the buried pyramid? Had they perhaps already discovered the answers to these
puzzles?
Henry palmed the crucifix between
his two hands, resting his forehead on his fingertips. So many oddities
surrounded the dig. Henry sensed there was a connection, some way to bring all
these strands together: mummified priests, mysterious metals, sealed crypts.
But what was the connection? Henry felt the crucifix’s outline pressed into his
palms. A cross of gold and a coded message. Could this be the answer?
He imagined the young friar,
crouched over his cross, etching it with some sharp tool. Painstaking work
while his death neared. In Henry’s hands were perhaps the last words of this
man. But what did he want to say? “What was so important?” Henry whispered.
The image of the cross crystallized
in Henry’s mind, turning slowly before his inner eye.
Joan suddenly gasped behind him,
pulling him out of his reverie. He twisted around. She faced his direction, but
her eyes were not fixed on Henry. He followed the path of her gaze to his right
elbow.
The beaker rested on the tabletop
where Henry had placed it. His breath caught when he saw its contents.
“Henry…?”
The beaker no longer contained a
pool of the raw metal. Inside, leaning against the glass side, was a crude copy
of the Dominican gold cross. Roughly cruciform in shape, the detail was
blurred. The Christ figure was no more than a blunt suggestion upon its
surface.
Joan and Dale moved closer.
“Did you do that?” Dale asked.
Henry glanced at the man as if he
were mad. He pointed to its sealed stopper. “Are you kidding?”
As they all watched, the cross
seemed to lose some of its detail. The edges became less sharp, and the figure
slid from the cross to pool at the bottom of the beaker. Still, the cross
itself persisted in its general shape.
Henry tried to explain, “I was just
thinking about it when—”
A sharp chime rang from nearby, loud
in the small room.
They all turned to see the monitors
waver, then blink into greyscale images.
“Maybe we’re one step closer to an
answer,” Dale announced tacitly. He stepped back toward the bank of monitors.
Henry and Joan followed. Their eyes
met briefly. Henry could see the consternation and something that looked like
fear in her eyes. Before he knew what he was doing, he reached out and gave her
hand a quick reassuring squeeze. She acknowledged the gesture by moving a few
inches closer to Henry’s side.
With a final worried glance toward
the cross in the jar, Henry joined the others at the monitors.
Dale stood bent over the keyboard,
one finger tracing along the screen. Upon the monitor was an unearthly
landscape, a rough terrain of oddly shaped peaks and valleys, as if someone had
taken a black-and-white photo of the surface of Mars. “This is impossible,”
Dale said. He pointed to a section of screen that magnified a corner of the
landscape. “Look. The metal is actually an aggregation of tiny particles. See
how they’re latched and interlinked.”
On the screen, the cross-sectional
view revealed tiny octagonal structures hooked to one another by six
articulated legs. Each miniscule structure was joined to its surrounding
neighbors in a dense tetrahedral pattern.
Joan reached to touch one of the
grey particles displayed on the monitor. “They appear almost organic, like
viral phages, or something.”
The metallurgist grumbled, one hand
indicating the general landscape across the rest of the screens. “No, definitely
not viral. From the fracturing and internal matrix, the substance is distinctly
inorganic. I’d almost say crystalline in structure.”
“Then what the hell is it?” Henry
finally asked, growing irritated with the man. “Metal, crystal, viral,
vegetable, mineral?”
Kirkpatrick’s gaze flicked toward
the cross in the beaker, then he shook his head. “I don’t know. But if I had to
guess, I’d pick all of the above.”
From the edge of the communication
tent, Philip Sykes watched the sun begin to sink toward the mountains. This was
the second day of his vigil by the collapsed ruins. What once had been a
jungle-shrouded hill that hid the buried temple was now a cratered and broken
ruin. Edges of toppled granite boulders and slabs from the temple jutted from
the churned dark soil like exposed broken teeth.
If Philip had not gotten that call
from Sam, informing him of the students’ discovery of a natural cavern system,
he would have thought them all dead. For the past half day, the mound no longer
shifted or sagged. The noise from grinding rocks no longer groaned up from the
earth. The dig site lay as silent as a grave. The temple had collapsed fully.
But Sam had
called.
Philip clenched a fist. A part of
him wished the arrogant Texan hadn’t. It would have been easier to call them
all dead; then Philip would be free to abandon the site, leave these cursed
Indians to their black jungle. Every hour that Philip remained there he risked
an attack from Guillermo Sala. Philip clutched his arms around himself as a
chill breeze blew down from the mountaintop. Who would get there first—the
rescue party called in by the pair of Indians or Gil’s henchmen returning to
finish their work?
The tension ground at Philip’s
nerves. “If only I could leave…” But he knew he couldn’t, not before the rescue
tunnel was completed. Philip stared toward the jungle’s edge.
Nearby, the calls and low singing
from the Quechan workers echoed up from the obscured work site on the far side
of the mound. The looters’ tunnel had been excavated a full fifteen yards that
day. Though the Indians still shot him dark looks and muttered sharp words,
Philip could not fault their hard work. The crew had split into three shifts
and dug with pickax and shovel all night long and into the day.
It was even possible that Philip’s
estimation of two days to dig the others free might not turn out to be too far
off the mark.
But would that be soon enough?
A sudden commotion rose from
farther back in the jungle, where a few of the Indians were taking a break in
the shade of the trees. Philip stood straighter, as if an extra inch of height
would pierce the shadows of the forest. He held his breath.
An Indian, one of the workers,
burst from the tree line. He waved an arm at Philip in the universal gesture to
come. Philip refused to move; he even took a step back. As he hesitated, the
Indians’ voices grew more distinct as other workers gathered beyond the
forest’s edge. From the happy and relieved noises, Philip gathered that
whatever new discovery had been made must not be a threat.
Philip girded himself with a firm
breath, then stomped down from the height of the campsite toward the forest.
Even the short exertion of crossing the clearing soon had Philip sucking for
breath through his teeth. Tension and exhaustion had weakened his ability to
handle the thin air. A seed of a headache bloomed behind his right temple by
the time he neared the forest’s edge.
Before he reached the eaves, a flow
of excited Indians flocked into the clearing from the trees. They roiled
around, grinning wide, teeth bright in the late afternoon sunshine. Soon the
press of workers broke around Philip, like a rock in a stream. The way finally
parted enough for Philip to see who the Indians were leading into camp.
Six figures, robed in mud brown
attire and leather sandals, stepped from the trees, faces warm and open as they
threw back the cowls from their heads. They too wore smiles upon their faces,
but not the toothy grins of the crude Indians, only simple, kind countenances.
One of the robed men was clearly
the leader. He stood a bit taller than the others and was the only one with a
prominent silver pectoral cross.
“Monks…” Philip muttered in
amazement.
Some of the Indians dropped to
their knees at the feet of these religious men and bowed for a blessing. While
the other monks placed palms atop heads and whispered prayers in Spanish, the
head of this group approached Philip.
The man shrugged back his own cowl
to reveal a strong handsome face framed by black hair. “We have heard of your
time of need, my son,” he said simply. “My name is Friar Dominic Otera, and
we’ve come to offer what aid we can.”
Philip blinked. English! The man
had spoken English! He suppressed an urge to step over and hug the friar.
Instead, he tried to compose himself enough to speak. “How…how did you—?”
The monk held up a hand. “On our
journey among the small nearby villages, we came upon the Indians you sent for
help. I’ve sent them on to Villacuacha to alert the authorities, but in the
meantime, we’ve come to offer prayers and consolation in the tragedy here.”
Philip felt himself sag as his
burden was finally eased. There were now others—others who spoke English—who
could share his anxiety. Philip found himself blathering, unable to form a
clear thought, blurting out a mixture of heartfelt thanks interspersed with his
own worries. None of it made sense.
Friar Otera crossed to Philip and
placed a cool palm upon his cheek. “Calm yourself, my son.”
His touch centered Philip.
“Yes…yes…where are my manners? You’ve all traveled far and must be thirsty and
famished.”
The monk lowered his face. “The
Lord is all the sustenance we need, but as travelers we would be remiss in
refusing your hospitality.”
Philip bobbed his head like a fool;
he could not help himself, so giddy with relief was he. “Then, please, come to
my tent. I have juice, water, and can put together some quick sandwiches.”
“That is most gracious. Then
perhaps, out of the harsh sun, you can tell me what has befallen your group.”
Philip led the monks toward the
cluster of tents, though he noticed that three lagged behind, continuing their
ministrations among the workers.
The friar noticed that Philip had
paused. “They will join us later. The Lord’s work must always come first.”
Swinging back around, Philip
nodded. “Of course.” In short order, Philip and the friar were ensconced in his
personal tent upon camp chairs. Resting between them was a platter of hard
cheeses and sliced meats. The other two monks had shyly accepted glasses of
fresh guava juice and had retired outside in the shadow of the tent, leaving
Friar Otera and Philip in peace.
After sampling what Philip offered,
the friar leaned back in the canvas chair with a sigh of gratitude. “Most
delicious and kind.” He placed both palms upon his knees, studying Philip. “Now
tell me, my son, what has happened here? How can we help?”
Philip sipped his juice and
collected himself. The simple duties as host had calmed his nerves, but he
found himself unable to meet the friar’s gaze. In the dim tent, the man’s eyes
were dark, penetrating shadows, wells that seemed to see into his soul. Philip
had been raised Presbyterian but had never been particularly religious. Yet, he
could sense power in this quiet figure who sat opposite him, and his initial
relief had slowly changed to a mild trepidation in the presence of the man. He
knew he could not lie to him; the monk would know his true heart.
Setting down his glass, Philip
began his story of Gil’s betrayal and subsequent sabotage. “…and after the
explosion, the temple continued to collapse in on itself, driving those trapped
deeper and deeper. There was nothing I could do to help them.”
Friar Otera nodded his head, once,
like a benediction. “Be at peace, Philip. You’ve done all you could.”
Philip drew strength from these
words. He had done all he could. He sat up
straighter as he continued relating how the Indians were attempting to dig a
rescue shaft, and how Sam and the others had discovered a secret tunnel behind
a golden idol. He found himself going on and on. He even described Sam’s
discovery of the statue’s key. “A gold knife that somehow transformed.”
The friar’s eyes grew wide at this
last bit, slowing Philip’s tale. The monk interrupted, “A gold knife and a
hidden tunnel into the mountain?” The man’s voice had grown strangely dark and
deep.
“Yes,” Philip said tentatively.
The friar was silent a moment, then
returned to his normal even demeanor. “Thank the Lord for their salvation. At
least your friends found a safe shelter. The Lord always opens a way for those
of good heart.”
“I hope to have the rescue shaft
completed in two days or so. But if the Indians I sent can fetch more help—?”
Friar Otera suddenly stood. “Fear
not. The Lord will watch over all those here. In his eyes, we are all his
beloved sheep. No harm will come.”
Philip quickly pushed from his own
chair, meaning to accompany the friar.
The man waved him back down. “Rest,
Philip, you’ve earned it. You’ve done the Lord’s work here protecting your
friends.”
Sinking back into his chair, Philip
sighed as Friar Otera bowed his way from the tent. “Thank you,” he called as
the monk departed.
Alone in his tent, Philip closed
his eyes for a moment. He believed he could sleep. The burden was no longer his
own, and the onus for his questionable actions had been absolved.
Philip stared at the closed flap of
his tent. He remembered the smoldering power he had sensed in the man.
Friar Otera must be a truly religious man.
Well away from the tents, at the
edge of the forest, Friar Otera met with one of his fellow monks. Otera forced
his fingers to stop trembling. Could it be true? After so long?
The monk fished through his
shoulder pack and passed Otera the radio. Stepping a few paces away under the
forest’s eaves, Otera dialed the proper channel and called to his superior.
He reverted to Spanish. “Contact has
been made. Over.”
A short burst of static, then a
quick response. “And your assessment?”
“Favorable. The site appears
golden. I repeat golden.” Friar Otera gave a terse summary of what he had
learned from the pasty-faced student.
Even across the airwaves, Friar
Otera heard the mutter of shock and the whispered words in Spanish, “El Sangre del Diablo.”
Friar Otera shuddered with the mere
mention of that name. “And your orders?”
“Befriend the student. Earn his
trust. Then light a flame under these workers. Dig a way to that tunnel.” A
long pause, then his final order. “Once contact is made, clean the
site…thoroughly.”
For the first time that day, Friar
Otera smiled. He fingered the dagger in its wrist sheath. The haughty student
here reminded him of those youths who had once spat upon Otera’s poor
upbringing, his mixed blood. It would be a pleasure to see this americano beg for his life. But more important, if what he
suspected was true, there were even larger victories at stake. He had waited
for so long, borne too many indignities from these Spanish missionaries who
thought themselves his superior. No, if he was right, he would show them their
mistake, their blindness. He would no longer be shunned and glanced over. Otera
raised the radio to his hard lips, playing the good soldier. “Confirm contact
and clean the site. I understand. Over and out.”
Otera stepped back from the forest
and returned the radio to the monk who stood guard. “And?” the fellow asked,
packing away the radio.
Friar Otera straightened his
pectoral crucifix. “We have a green light.”
The other monk’s eyes grew aghast.
“Then it’s true!” The man made the sign of the cross. “May the Lord protect
us.”
Friar Otera trudged back toward the
camp. The words from the radio still echoed in his head.
El Sangre
del Diablo.
Satan’s Blood.
Maggie fumbled with the second
flashlight, her fingers trembling. She thumbed the switch, and light flared out
into the black caverns, blinding her for a second. The pale faces of her fellow
students and the young Indian boy stared back along the trail. In that minute
of darkness, more of the tarantula scouts had scurried onto the gold trail. To
the side, more spiders approached, their albino limbs like pale-legged starfish
against the black rock.
Sam glanced back toward the toxic
bat cavern. “I…I don’t know. The place will be swarming with tarantulas in a
few minutes, but we can’t trudge through waist-deep guano in the next cavern
without dying from the fumes. There’s got to be another way.”
Maggie strode off the Incan footpath
toward the nearby underground stream. It gurgled in its narrow channel, casting
up a fine cool mist. “We swim,” she said matter-of-factly, pointing her light
at the rapidly flowing water.
“Swim?” Norman asked, his voice
cracking. “Are you mad? That water’s from snowmelt. We’ll die of hypothermia.”
Maggie swung around. “The current
is swift but relatively smooth through this section of the caverns. We jump in
and let the water shoot us through the bat cave and away from the spiders.” She
waved a hand across the river’s fine mist. “This may even insulate us a bit
from the worst of the toxic fumes.”
Sam approached her side and glanced
at her with appreciative eyes. “Maggie’s right. It might work. But we need to
stick together for this one. Once past the bats, we’ll need to haul our asses
out of this stream ASAP. If the current doesn’t kill us, the cold may.”
Denal sidled to the edge of the
river’s carved stone bank. The waters flowed about a meter below the lip. “I go
first,” he said, looking back. “Make sure it be safe.”
“No, Denal,” Maggie said and
reached for him.
He stepped beyond her reach. “I be
strong swimmer. If I make it to the far side, I yell.” He glanced at the other
faces. “Then you all come. If no call, then no come.”
Sam moved toward the boy. “I’ll do
it, Denal,” Sam said, patting the side pocket of his vest. “I have my Wood’s
lamp to light the way.”
Denal pulled the lamp from his own
pocket and flicked on the purplish light. “I no ask. I go.” The boy then turned
and jumped over the lip’s edge.
“Denal!” Sam yelled, rushing to the
river.
Maggie stopped Sam from leaping in
after him. She followed the boy’s path in the current. He bobbed in the water
as it thrust him back and forth in the narrow channel, but he managed to keep
the lamp thrust above the water, its purplish glow a beacon in the dark cave.
Then the river carried him past a curve in the wall and down a tunnel.
“Damn kid picked my pocket,” Sam
muttered, a mixture of respect and worry in his voice.
“He’ll make it,” Maggie said.
The waiting quickly grew
intolerable. None dared speak lest they miss Denal’s call.
Only Ralph hung back at the foot
path, keeping an eye on the spiders. “Here comes the main army,” he warned.
Maggie swung around. It was as if a
foaming white surf crested just at the edge of their light’s reach. “C’mon,
Denal, don’t let us down.”
As if the boy had heard her, a
sharp distant cry echoed from farther in the caves. Denal had made it.
“Thank God,” Sam sighed. “Let’s get
out of here.”
Norman quickly finished packing his
gear into a waterproof case while Ralph climbed over to join them, eyes still
on the tarantulas.
Sam unslung the Winchester and
nodded for Ralph to do the same with his rifle. “Try to keep your gun above
water. The rifles could probably survive a short dip, but I’d rather keep them
dry.”
Ralph finally turned and eyed the
water with a sick expression. “To hell with the rifle, I just hope I can keep
my own head above water.” He raised his face to the other three. “I can’t
swim.”
“What?” Sam exclaimed. “Why didn’t
you tell us that before?”
Ralph shrugged. “Because Maggie was
right. The river’s the only way out of here.”
Norman shoved up next to them.
“I’ll stick with Ralph. I did a stint in water rescue in the army.”
Ralph frowned at him, disbelieving.
“You were in the army?”
“Three years at Fort Ord, until I
was discharged during a witch-hunt at my base.” Norman’s face took on a bitter
cast. “So much for don’t ask, don’t tell.”
Ralph shook his head. “I’ll take my
chances on my own.”
The photographer’s face grew
fierce. He snapped at Ralph, “Like hell you will, you brain-addled jock. Quit
this macho posturing and accept some help. It’s not like I’m gonna try to cop a
feel. You’re not even my type!” Norman shoved his camera case at Ralph, his
voice serious. “It’s insulated with foam. It’s meant to float after a raft
capsizes. Keep the damn thing clutched to your chest, and I’ll do the rest.”
Ralph took the case reluctantly.
“What about this?” He held up Gil’s rifle.
Sam reached for it. “I’ll manage
both.”
He reached for the gun, but Maggie
snatched it first. “Two guns will weigh you down, Sam. The flashlight is
waterproof and doesn’t weigh nary a bit.”
Sam hesitated, then nodded. “At the
first sign of trouble, toss the rifle away. We need the light more than we need
a second gun.”
She nodded at his advice. “Let’s
go. The spiders aren’t gonna like their meal escaping.”
Sam waved for Norman and Ralph to
go first, just in case of trouble. Sam and Maggie would follow.
Norman slid down to a small spit of
rock just above the waterline, arms cartwheeling for balance. “Now,” he called
up to Ralph.
The large football player bit his
lower lip, clutched the camera case to his chest, and jumped in before his fear
of the water drove him away.
Maggie kept her light focused on
them. Norman dived in smoothly, his lithe form coming up beside the floundering
black man. “Lie on your back!” Norman yelled as the current dragged the two
away. “Hug the case tight to your chest!”
Ralph fumbled around a bit more,
coughing water and kicking frantically.
“Don’t fight it!”
Ralph finally obeyed, rolling to
his back.
Norman swam at his side, one hand
snarled in the neck of Ralph’s shirt, keeping the man’s head above water. As
the two drifted away, Norman admonished the big man with one final warning.
“Keep tight to that case,” he sputtered. “Lose my cameras, and I’ll let you
drown!”
“We’re next,” Sam said, shoving his
Stetson into his pack. “You ready?”
Maggie took a deep breath and
nodded.
“You gonna be okay?” he said,
straightening and meeting her eyes.
Maggie knew he was referring to her
panic attacks more than the threat from the water. “It was my idea, wasn’t it?
I’ll be fine.”
“You first then,” he said.
She opened her mouth to argue when
she felt a tickle on her leg. Glancing down, she saw a tarantula as large as a
fist climbing up her khakis. Gasping in disgust, she knocked it away with her
flashlight. Raising Gil’s snub-nosed rifle above her head, she jumped
gracelessly into the water.
Her back and bottom crashed into
the water with a resounding splash. The brief sting of the impact was
immediately replaced with lung-constricting cold. Her head burst above the
water with a silent scream of shock. All her muscles cramped tight. She had to
force her limbs to move. The cold burned through her clothes and froze the
breath in her lungs.
Sam splashed just behind her.
Before she could turn or speak, the
current grabbed her and started sweeping her down the channel. Maggie floated
on her back, legs thrust before her so she could bounce off any unseen obstacles.
She kept the flashlight above the water and used the stock of the rifle as a
paddle to help her stay afloat.
Just at the edge of her light’s
reach, she saw Norman and Ralph disappearing down the throat of the river
tunnel.
Sam called to her. “How you holding
up?”
Maggie frowned. Now was not the
time for a conversation. She spat out a mouthful of cold water after a sudden
splash had caught her by surprise. The icy water froze even the fillings in her
mouth. “Fine!” she sputtered.
Then the current dragged her into
the black maw of the tunnel. The low roof flew by overhead, low enough that the
tip of the rifle dragged along the rock above. Small sparks spat out where
steel and rock rubbed. The scraping sound was eerily loud in the tight space.
Just as suddenly they were out of
the tunnel and into the bat cave. Maggie’s eyes instantly stung; her nose
burned. Overhead, circling bats dove and glided through the edge of the
flashlight’s beam, still disturbed and wary of the two-legged intruders. A
small sliver of sunlight lightened one corner of the arched roof. The bat’s
doorway. Too high and too small to do them any good.
But Maggie had little time for
sight-seeing. The current had grown even swifter through this chamber, a mixed
blessing. Though the swift waters churned a cloud of mist that washed away the
worst of the guano fumes, the faster waters also frothed and tossed her body
more vigorously.
Maggie’s limbs grew leaden as the
cold tried to freeze the marrow of her bones. Breathing became laborious. She
gave up trying to keep the rifle above water and used it as a rudder to keep
her from bouncing too hard against the jagged rocks on either side. She
concentrated on just keeping the flashlight pointed forward.
Now nearly blind from the fumes and
with her nose on fire, Maggie gasped and choked. Something suddenly scrabbled
at her upraised arm, weighting it down, digging at her skin. Blinking, Maggie
saw a huge bat perched on her arm, tiny claws scratching at her, leathered
wings batting wildly. Sharp fangs glinted in the glow of the flashlight. She
let out a strangled gasp. Wide eyes and huge ears swung toward the sound.
Crying out, she shoved her arm underwater, taking her chances that the
flashlight was insulated enough to take a short dunk. She was in luck; the
flashlight shone brightly under the water, and the shock of the cold stream
dislodged the bat.
It rolled through the water,
bumping against her shoulder as it passed.
Maggie lifted the flashlight from
the water, paddling fiercely.
Then the bat was on her again.
Maggie felt a small tug on her hair trailing in the water. Like a hooked fish,
the bat had snatched at this purchase. Now twisting and rolling, it climbed the
tangled strands. Maggie felt tiny claws scratch at her scalp. The bat screeched
wildly, almost in her ear.
The creature’s distress call was
answered from above. The cavern erupted with squeaks and supersonic piping,
like fingernails dragged across a blackboard. Overhead, the roof seemed to drop
lower as the entire massed colony took flight, diving toward the screeching bat
tangled in Maggie’s hair.
Oh, God! She beat at the winged creature with her flashlight,
trying to club it away, but only succeeded in snarling it further. Claws ripped
across her cold cheek, a line of fire.
Suddenly a hand appeared, pushing
back her flashlight. “Hold still!”
It was Sam. He grabbed the
squirming bat and ripped it from its nest in her hair, tearing out hundreds of
roots along with the foul creature. He tossed it away. The bat hit the far bank
with a wet smack.
“Here they come!” Sam yelled.
Maggie barely had time to see the
dark cloud descend toward them, and even less time to take a breath, before Sam
shoved her head underwater. Maggie would have panicked, but Sam held tight to
her, his body close to hers, his touch the only warmth in the icy stream. She
released control to him, letting him carry her as she held her trapped breath.
Soon the channel straightened, and
the current grew swift and smooth. Maggie risked opening her eyes. The
flashlight still glowed under the water, illuminating Sam’s face. His blond
hair, normally plastered under his Stetson, wove like fine kelp across his
face. His eyes met hers. She drew strength from his solid gaze. He pulled her
tighter to him. She didn’t resist.
The current dragged them swiftly
away, tumbling them to and fro. Maggie’s lungs cried for air. Unable to hold
out any longer, she wiggled slightly from Sam’s grasp and pushed toward the
surface. She would only risk a quick breath.
As her head popped from the water,
she gulped air into her frozen lungs. She was ready to duck back down, when she
noticed two things—the air had cleared of the burning sting and just ahead a
small purplish glow lit the left bank.
Sam surfaced beside her with a
whoosh of expelled air.
Maggie lifted her flashlight and
pointed. “There!”
Sam twisted around. As they neared
the site, Maggie spotted Norman helping Ralph from the water. The huge football
player crawled on hands and knees. Atop the bank, Denal was limned in the eerie
light of the Wood’s lamp. His teeth shone a whitish purple as he waved the lamp
overhead, signaling to them.
Together, Maggie and Sam kicked
toward the shore, but they didn’t have to struggle far. The channel curved with
a deep natural eddy at the bend. The current tossed Maggie and Sam into the
sluggish pocket. With limbs deadened by cold and clothes waterlogged, it was an
effort to climb from the water. Like Ralph, Maggie found herself crawling onto
the bank and collapsing on her back.
Sam threw himself across the rock
beside her, tossing his Winchester up higher on the stony bank. “So much for
keeping the guns dry.”
Norman stepped beside Maggie. His
teeth chattered as he spoke. “Y…you both need to keep moving. And…and get out
of those wet clothes.” He tugged off his own soaked shirt.
Maggie noticed Denal had already
stripped to his skivvies, and Ralph was slowly kicking off his clinging pants.
“We’re not out of danger yet,”
Norman continued. “That water was near freezing. We’ll die unless we can get
dry and warm.”
Maggie found her limbs beginning to
tremble. Sam glanced at her. “It’s j…just the cold,” she said, knowing what he
was thinking.
“Up with the both of you,” Norman
said sternly.
Groaning, Sam pushed up as the
photographer offered Maggie his arm. Too exhausted to object, she took Norman’s
hand and let him help her to her feet.
“Now strip,” he said.
Maggie’s fingers were numb and blue
in the flashlight beam. She fumbled at her buttons and shrugged out of her
shirt, too cold and exhausted to worry about exposing herself. Hell, she thought, yanking her zipper down, a good blush would be welcome right now.
Soon she stood in nothing but her
wet bra and panties.
The others kept their eyes politely
turned, except Denal who stared widely at her. Once the boy realized he was caught
gaping, he quickly looked away.
Maggie scowled to cover her grin.
She slapped Sam on his damp boxers as she stepped past him. “Norman says to
keep moving. We have to stay warm.”
Maggie could feel Sam’s eyes on her
back as she moved away. The Texan mumbled behind her, “Oh, don’t worry. Keep
walking ahead of me dressed like that, and I’ll be plenty warm.”
This time she couldn’t hide her
smile.
“Th…this must lead somewhere,” Sam
said, trying to control his chattering teeth, as he pointed out the gold path
that continued along the river.
No one answered, busy as they were
shivering and rubbing frigid limbs. The icy water had lowered everyone’s core
body temperature and, with no way to start a fire, they were all at risk of
hypothermia. They needed to find a dry, warm place…and soon.
Sam, who had moved ahead of them,
suddenly called out. With his flashlight pointed over a rise in the trail,
Sam’s half-naked form was striking, limned in the back glow. Maggie had not
realized just how fine a physique her fellow colleague had hidden under his
baggy clothes. From broad shoulders down to his narrow waist and strong legs,
Sam struck a handsome pose.
“Come see this!” Sam exclaimed, a
broad grin on his face.
Maggie saw Norman grab for his
camera case as she climbed to join the others.
Before her, spreading across a
cavern as large as her university’s soccer stadium, was a small dark city.
Sam’s light was the only source of illumination, but its dim glow was enough to
light up the entire chamber. Houses of brick, some three stories high, dotted
the floor, while up the walls climbed tier after tier of stacked granite homes,
like a jumble of toy blocks. Empty windows stared back at them. Throughout the
city, brighter splashes of gold and silver decorated many of the abodes. But
what caught all their eyes was what stood in the town’s center. Across the
chamber, a massive gold statue stretched toward the ceiling, towering over the
buildings. It was similar to the one that guarded the entrance to the cavern,
but it was too distant and dark to make out any details.
“My God,” Norman said, “it’s a huge
subterranean village.”
As Maggie crossed to Sam’s side,
the mustiness of the chamber suddenly caught her attention, and she knew
Norman’s assessment was wrong. She recognized this smell—dusty decay mixed with
the spiced scent of mummification herbs. “It’s not a village,” she corrected
Norman, “but a necropolis. One of the Incas’
underground cities of the dead.”
Rubbing his arms and stamping his
cold feet, Sam agreed. “A burial tomb…but I’ve never heard of one this
extensive or elaborate.”
Norman’s flash exploded as the
photographer snapped a series of rapid pictures. The added light froze the city
in stark relief. “Maybe we can hole up in one of those houses and get warm.
Pool our body heat like the Aleuts do in their igloos.”
Maggie again noticed the deep ache
from her cold limbs. “It’s worth a try.” She led the way toward the town’s
outskirts, following the gold path that ended at the city’s edge.
Sam trailed behind. “I may have a better
idea.” But he did not elaborate when Maggie glanced over her shoulder. He just
waved her ahead.
Maggie turned back, but not before
noticing the purplish tinge to the Texan’s lips. Behind Sam, the others fared
no better. Ralph’s limbs quaked and trembled as he followed. The big man seemed
to fare the worst of all of them. He had swallowed a lot of icy water while
traveling the stream and did not look well.
Hurrying, Maggie led the group
quickly down the series of golden switchbacks to the cavern floor. She reached
the town’s edge, and the smell of earthy decay, like aged compost, filled her
nostrils. She stared down the streets of this city of the dead. The tombs of
the necropolis had been built like homes to keep the spirits of the deceased
happy, reminding them of their prior lives, surrounding them with the familiar.
Doorways bore sculpted lintels depicting various fanciful creatures, both
mythological and zoomorphic—a mix of man and animal.
Just like the pillars that had
marked the path.
Maggie touched one, a cross between
a panther and a woman. “They depict the gods of uca pacha,
protectors of the dead.”
Across the avenue, Sam studied a
brightly painted fresco on the side of a two-story building. He pointed. “And
here are various mallaqui…spirits of the
underworld.”
Norman moved up to them. “I hate to
interrupt your art history lecture, but Ralph is not looking so good.”
Maggie glanced back. Ralph leaned
against one of the doorways, head hanging. Even supported, his huge frame
swayed slightly. “We need to find shelter. Get him warm.”
Sam turned to Denal. “Are your
matches still dry?”
The boy nodded. He pulled out a
plastic-wrapped bundle from within his armful of damp clothes. It was the boy’s
extra box of cigarettes wrapped with a small box of matches. He passed the
matches to Sam.
Maggie moved to Sam’s side. “A
fire? But what about kindling?”
As answer, Sam swung away and
ducked into one of the neighboring abodes. From within, she heard shifting and
sliding and realized in horror what Sam was planning. Sam backed out through
the doorway, dragging something with him. With a grunt, he swung around,
tossing his burden into the street. Bones cracked and clattered, and dust
billowed up. It was a linen-wrapped mummy.
“They make good kindling,” Sam said
simply.
“Ugh!” Norman responded with
disgust, and covered his mouth.
Having caught his breath, Sam
crossed to the mummy and pulled free Denal’s box of matches. Sam struck a match
and soon had the linen wrap smoldering. Small flames grew as the old bones and
leather inside fueled the fire. Orange flames spat higher and higher.
Maggie, while aghast at the source
of kindling, still drew nearer the welcoming heat.
Sam, leaning on a wall now, jerked
his arm at the surrounding necropolis. “If nothing else, we’ll never have to
worry about running out of wood.”
Ralph sat as near to the flames as
possible. After an hour, the heat had finally reached his cold bones. As he
sat, he tried to ignore the source of the combustion. A mummified hand sprawled
from the flames, quivering slightly from the heat. He glanced away.
Across the fire, Sam had taken
apart both rifles and carefully cleaned and dry-fired them. Maggie half dozed
in the warmth nearby, one arm around Denal. The Quechan boy stared into the
flames, eyes wide and glazed. The day had taken its toll on all of them. Norman
stood a few paces off. He had taken a couple of photographs, but Ralph could
tell the photographer, as tired as he was, was itching to move deeper into the
underground city. But not alone. The blackness, even with the fire, was like a
physical presence, a dark stranger at their shoulders.
Norman seemed to catch Ralph
studying him. He moved nearer. “How’re you feeling?” Norman asked.
Ralph glanced away. “Better.”
Norman settled on the stone floor
beside him.
Before he could restrain himself,
Ralph scooted an inch away.
Norman noticed the subtle shift.
“Don’t worry, big fella, I’m not making a move on you.”
Ralph inwardly kicked himself. Old
patterns were hard to erase. “Sorry…” he said softly. “I didn’t mean anything.”
“Yeah, right. Can’t be caught
sittin’ next to the faggot.”
“It’s not that.”
“Then what is it?”
Ralph hung his head. “Okay, maybe
it was. I was raised strict Southern Baptist. My uncle Gerald was even a
minister with the Church. We get that sort of thinkin’ drilled into us.”
“So what else is new? My parents
were Mormon. They weren’t too thrilled to learn I was gay either.” Norman
snorted. “Neither did the army for that matter. I was kicked out of both
families.”
Ralph could not face Norman. While
he had experienced prejudice during his life, Ralph at least had his family
around him for support.
Norman stood up, camera in hand.
Ralph suddenly reached out and
gripped Norman’s hand. The thin photographer flinched. “Thanks. For back at the
river.”
Norman pulled his hand free,
suddenly and uncharacteristically awkward. “No problem. Just don’t try and kiss
me. I’m not that type of girl.”
“That’s not what I heard,” Ralph
said.
Norman turned away. “Oh, man,
Ralph, the comedian. I miss the bigoted jock already.”
By the early evening, Henry felt
even more out of place. He now trailed behind Joan and Dale as they marched
through the deserted halls of Johns Hopkins. At this point in the evening, they
were the last ones around. After the endless battery of tests in Joan’s lab,
they were retiring to her office to plan the next day’s experiments.
As they walked, the two researchers
were still deep in conversation about the mysterious material. “We’ll need a
complete crystallography assay of Substance Z,” the gangly metallurgist said in
an excited rush, using his new name for the strange element.
Henry sensed the man was already
planning in which research journals to publish his findings.
“And I’d like to see how the
material reacts in the presence of other radiation, especially gamma rays.”
Joan nodded. “I’ll check with the
nuclear lab. I’m sure something can be arranged.”
As Henry followed behind them, he
lifted the beaker of the material and studied the crude replica of the
Dominican cross. Substance Z. The other two scientists weren’t seeing the
forest through the trees. Here was the bigger mystery. The chemical and
molecular attributes of the material, though intriguing, were nothing compared
to the fact that the material had transformed on its own.
Neither of the other two seemed to
place much weight on that fact. The metallurgist had attributed the
transformation to the proximity of the material to the gold cross itself,
theorizing some transfer of energy or electrons that made the material churn
into its new form. “All metal gives off a unique energy signature,” Dale had
explained. “With the sample’s acute sensitivity to various radiation, the
material must have responded to the gold, changing its crystalline matrix to
match the signature. It’s amazing!”
Henry had disagreed, but had
remained silent. He knew the answer lay elsewhere. He remembered how he had
been pondering the code on the crucifix when the transformation had occurred.
It was not the proximity to the cross that had
changed Substance Z, but the proximity to Henry.
Something had happened, but Henry was not ready to voice any wild speculations
aloud—at least not yet. It was not his way, not until he had more information.
One of the first lessons he taught his students—proceed with knowledge, not speculation.
To Henry, the only thing certain about Substance Z was that it should not be
dabbled with lightly. But the other two scientists were deaf to his rumblings
of caution.
His right hand fingered the
Dominican crucifix resting in the pocket of his sports jacket. Friar Francisco
de Almagro knew something, something he had wanted to tell the outside world,
his final testament. Henry suspected that the answers to the mysteries of
Substance Z would not be found in nuclear labs or research facilities, but
instead, in the crude scratches on the back of the friar’s cross. Yet, before
Henry dared to voice his own opinions or conduct his own experiments, he first
planned to decipher this ancient code. And Henry knew exactly where to start.
Tomorrow he would again consult the archbishop. Perhaps some old records might
mention a code among the Dominican friars.
“Here we are,” Joan announced. She
jingled her keys from a pocket and went to open the door. Grabbing the knob,
the door gave way under her touch. “That’s odd. It’s unlocked. Maybe I forgot—”
She began to push the door open
when Henry suddenly stopped her. “No!” He grabbed the pathologist by the elbow.
Remembering that Joan had locked the door earlier, he yanked her away from the
open doorway, tripping over a janitor’s bucket behind him. He barely kept his
balance.
“Henry!” she yelled in shock.
Dale scowled at him as if the
archaeologist had gone mad. “What are you doing?”
Henry did not have time to explain.
Danger signals reverberated up and down his spine. “Run!”
But it was too late.
Behind Dale’s shoulder, a dark
figure appeared in the doorway to Joan’s office. “Don’t move,” the trespasser
ordered coldly.
Startled, Dale swung around, his
face draining of color. He backed several quick steps in the opposite direction
from Henry and Joan.
The man moved forward into the
hall. He wore a charcoal suit over a black shirt and tie; his skin was coppery
with Spanish features, ebony hair, dark eyes. But what drew most of Henry’s
attention was the large pistol, outfitted with a thick silencer, in his right
fist. He brandished it back and forth, covering both sides of the hallway.
“Which of you has the gold crucifix? Relinquish it and you’ll live.”
Dale quickly pointed to Henry.
The assailant swung the barrel in
his direction. “Professor Conklin, do not make me shoot you.”
At that moment, the metallurgist’s
courage ran out. With the gunman’s back turned, Dale made a run for it. His
expensive shoes betrayed him, hard heels striking loudly on the waxed linoleum.
The gunman did not even turn. He simply pointed his pistol back and fired; the
shot was muffled by the silencer—but its effect was not. The force of the
bullet knocked Dale off his feet. He went flying headfirst to the floor,
skidding several feet before stopping, leaving a trail of blood across the
white tiles. He tried to push up once, then collapsed back down, a dark pool
spreading under him.
“Now, Professor Conklin,” the
burglar said, holding out his free hand. “The cross, please.”
Before Henry could respond, a second
dark-suited man stepped from Joan’s office. He glanced at the fallen
metallurgist, then back to the shooter. He spoke rapidly in Spanish, but Henry
understood. “Carlos, I’ve destroyed all the paperwork and files.”
The leader, Carlos, glanced to the other
man. He lowered the pistol slightly. “And the computer?”
“The hard drive has been wiped and
purged.”
Carlos nodded.
Henry used the momentary
distraction of the newcomer to slip the Dominican crucifix from his jacket
pocket and flip it into the toppled janitor’s bucket. Only Joan noticed. Her
eyes were huge with fear.
Raising the pistol, Carlos turned
to Henry. “I’m losing patience, Professor. The cross, please.”
Henry stepped forward, placing
himself between the shooter and Joan. He held out the beaker with the crude
cross. He hoped the shape and the color would fool these thieves. He refused to
lose the ancient relic.
The man’s eyes narrowed
suspiciously. He took the beaker and held it before him. Even distracted, the
pistol never wavered from where it pointed, straight at Henry’s heart.
The shooter’s accomplice stood at
the man’s shoulders. “Is it…?”
Carlos ignored the man, still
staring at the mock-up of the original crucifix. Whispered words of a Spanish
prayer flowed from his lips, a benediction. Then the cross in the beaker
changed, melting before the man’s gaze into a perfectly symmetrical pyramid.
Henry gasped.
The second man fell to his knees. “Dios mio!”
Carlos lowered the beaker, his hand
shaking. “We’ve found it!” Exultant, he turned to his captives.
Henry backed into Joan. She
clutched his hand fiercely. Henry sensed he had made a grave miscalculation.
The thieves hadn’t been after the Dominican crucifix because it was gold, but because they had suspected it was made of Substance Z. Henry had inadvertently handed them the very
prize they had sought. Who were these people?
Carlos nodded toward Henry and
Joan, but his brusque orders were for his companion. “Silence them.”
The second man stood, pulling his
own gun, much larger and more intimidating than the leader’s weapon.
“Wait!” Henry begged.
Ignoring him, the man aimed his
pistol at Henry and fired. Henry’s chest exploded with fire. Joan screamed.
Henry fell to his knees, his hand slipping from Joan’s. He glanced up in time
to see the man twist the gun toward Joan.
“No!” he moaned, raising one hand
futilely.
Too late. A muffled shot.
Joan clutched her own chest and
fell. She turned stunned eyes to Henry, then glanced down. Henry followed her
gaze. Her fingers pulled out a feathered barb from between her breasts, then
she fell backward.
Henry glanced to his own chest.
There was no bleeding bullet hole, only a red-feathered spot of agony.
Tranquilizing darts?
Words, in Spanish, floated around
him as the drug took effect.
“Get the men up here now.”
“What about the dead one?”
“Leave him in the office along with
the janitor’s body.”
Carlos’s face suddenly bloomed
close to Henry’s. His wavery dark eyes were huge. Henry felt lost in them.
“We’re going for a short ride, Professor. Pleasant dreams.”
Henry slumped, but not before
noticing the tiny silver cross dangling from a chain around the man’s neck. He
had seen it before. It was an exact match to the one found on the mummified
friar.
A Dominican cross!
Before he could ponder this newest
mystery, the black grip of the drug hauled him away.
Thursday, August 23, 7:45 A.M.
Caverns
Andean Mountains, Peru
Sam awoke on the
stone floor of the cavern as someone nudged his side with a toe. Now what?
Groaning a protest, he rolled away from the fire and found Norman standing
nearby, staring out at the dark necropolis. The photographer had pulled the
last guard shift. Even though the bat cave stood between them and the tarantula
army, no one had been willing to take any chances.
“What is it?” Sam asked groggily,
rubbing his eyes. After yesterday’s labors and near deadly swim in the icy
stream, he wished for nothing more than another half day beside the warmth of
the crackling flames. Even the smell was rather pleasant, considering the source
of the fuel—almost a burnt cinnamon. From the heart of the bonfire, a charred
skull glared through the flames at him. Stretching, Sam pushed up. “Why did you
wake me?”
Norman kept staring at the shadowed
tombs of the Incan dead. “It’s getting lighter in here,” he finally said.
Sam frowned. “What are you talking
about? Did someone throw another log on the fire?” He glanced to the three
bundled mummies stacked nearby like cords of wood, waiting to stoke the flames.
Norman swung around; he held a
small device in his palm. It was his light meter. “No. While on guard, I
checked a few readings. Since five o’clock this morning, the meter has been
reading rising footcandles.” Norman’s glasses reflected the firelight. “You
know what that must mean?”
Sam was too tired to think this
early, not without at least a canteen of coffee. He pushed to a seated
position. “Just spill it already.”
“Dawn,” Norman said, as if this
made it all clear.
Sam just looked at him.
Norman sighed. “You really aren’t a
morning person, are you, Sam?”
By now the others were stirring
slowly from their makeshift beds. “What’s going on?” Maggie asked around a wide
yawn.
“Riddles,” Sam said.
Norman shot Sam a sour look and
stepped closer to encompass the entire group as he spoke. “My light meter’s
been registering stronger and stronger signals since dawn.”
Maggie sat up straighter. “Really?”
She glanced beyond the firelight at the dark cave.
“I waited a couple hours to be
sure. I didn’t want to give anyone false hope.”
Sam pushed to his feet. He wore
only his pants. His vest still lay drying beside the fire. He had been using it
as a pillow. “You’re not suggesting—?”
Maggie interrupted, her words laced
with excitement. “Maybe Norman’s right. If the readings are stronger as the
morning progresses, then sunlight must be getting down here from somewhere.”
She clapped Norman on the shoulder and shook him happily. “By Jesus, there must
be a way out nearby!”
Her words sank into Sam’s
consciousness. A way out! Sam stepped to the pair.
“You’re sure the meter is not just registering flare-ups in the campfire?”
Norman frowned as Ralph and Denal
edged around the fire to join the group. “No, Sam.” He lifted his device. “It’s
definitely picking up sunlight.”
Sam nodded, satisfied with the
photographer’s expertise. Norman was no fool. Sam squinted at the dark cavern.
Firelight basked the walls and reflected off the monstrous gold statue in the
center of the city. Sam prayed Norman was correct in his conclusions. “Then
let’s find out where that light’s coming from. Can you use the meter to track
the source?”
“Maybe…” Norman said. “If I keep it
shielded from the torches and widen the f-stop…” He shrugged.
Ralph volunteered a suggestion. He
seemed back to his old self since yesterday’s trials, only perhaps slightly more
subdued. “Maybe Norm and I could circle the camp and search out where the light
reads the strongest. It should give us a direction to start.”
Sam nudged the photographer when he
did not immediately respond. “Norman?”
The thin man glanced at the wall of
darkness at the edge of the fire’s pool of light. He did not look like he cared
for Ralph’s idea, but he finally admitted reluctantly, “It might work.”
“Good.” Sam rubbed his hands and
put a plan together. “While you reconnoiter, we’ll finish breaking down the
camp. Take the flashlight. You can click it on and off as you take your
readings. But be careful, the batteries on this one are wearing down, too.”
Ralph took the flashlight and
tested it, thumbing the switch. “We’ll be careful.”
Norman glanced to the fire, then
back to the darkness. “If we’re gonna do this, we’d better hurry. There’s no
telling when we might lose the sunlight. Even passing clouds could block the
footcandles stretching down to us.” Contrary to his own words, Norman still
hesitated, his face tight.
Sam noticed the photographer’s
tension. “What’s wrong?”
Norman shook his head. “Nothing.
I’ve just seen too many cheap horror movies.”
“So?”
“Splitting up the group. In horror
movies, that’s when the killer starts knocking off the college co-eds.”
Sam laughed, believing the
photographer was cracking a joke—but Norman wasn’t smiling. Sam’s laughter
died. “You don’t seriously think—”
Suddenly something huge crashed
into the bonfire. Flaming bits of wrap and bone exploded outward, stinging bare
flesh and rattling across the stone floor. Smoke billowed, and darkness
threatened to consume the group as the campfire was scattered. Luckily, a large
flaming brand landed a t o p the stacked mummies nearby and set them on fire,
returning the light. Shadows from the various pyres danced across the walls of
the tombs.
Sam spun around, pulling Maggie
behind him. Amid the ruins of their original fire rested a large square block,
clearly a hewn-granite brick from one of the structures. He glanced up. There
was no overhanging cornice from where the huge block could have fallen.
Ralph voiced Sam’s own thoughts.
“That was no accident.” The Alabama football player clicked on his flashlight
and stabbed its beam into the darkness beyond the reach of the fires.
“Get the guns,” Sam said. “Now.”
Ralph nodded, tossing the light to
Norman, then grabbed the rifle leaning against the stone wall. Sam bent and
retrieved his own Winchester from beside his makeshift bed. Maggie kept close
to his side, Denal at her hip.
Beyond the occasional crack and
snap from the fire as dried bones burst from the heat, nothing could be heard.
Yet all around them, Sam could sense movement. Shadows danced in the firelight,
but some of the pools of darkness seemed to slink and slide. Something was out
there, closing in on them.
“Ghosts come for us,” Denal
mumbled.
Maggie put her arm around the boy’s
shoulder. She comforted the lad, but no one argued against his words. The
spread of the necropolis, limned in flame and thick with shifting shadows, made
even their worst nightmares seem possible.
But what moved through the
necropolis was much worse.
Norman’s flashlight caught one of
the slinking interlopers in his beam. It froze for a heartbeat like a deer in
headlights—but this was no doe or buck. As pale as the albino tarantulas, it
stood on two legs, naked, hunched, knuckling on one long, thickly muscled arm.
Sam’s first thought was ape, but the creature was hairless, bald-pated.
It hissed at the light—at them—huge
black eyes narrowed to angry slits, teeth pointed and sharp. Then it flew from
the light, disappearing into the gloom, moving faster than Sam would have
thought possible.
It had appeared and vanished so
quickly that none of the group had time to comment. Sam had not even thought to
raise his rifle; neither had Ralph. Norman’s beam jittered as the
photographer’s arm trembled.
“What in bloody hell was that?”
Maggie finally whispered.
Sam positioned his Winchester to
his shoulder. In the distance, faint echoes could be heard all around them: the
scrape of rock, strangled hisses, guttural coughs, even one piercing howl,
clearly a challenge being trumpeted. It sounded as if scores of the creatures
had them trapped, surrounded, but the cavern acoustics were deceptive. Ralph
met Sam’s gaze, fear glinting bright in the big man’s eyes.
“What are they?” Maggie repeated.
“Mallaqui,”
Denal answered. Spirits of the underworld.
“And you wanted Ralph and me to go
out there alone,” Norman said, voice squeaking, flashlight trembling. “Let’s
take a lesson from horror flicks. We stick together from here on.”
No one argued. In fact, no one said
a word.
All eyes stared into the dark heart
of the necropolis.
Henry woke and wished he hadn’t.
His head ached and throbbed as if someone had been using his temples for a drum
solo. His mouth was full of sour acid and as sticky as Elmer’s glue. He groaned
because that was all he was capable of doing for the moment. Taking several
breaths, he concentrated on making out his surroundings. The only light came
from a slitted window high up the rear wall of the tiny room.
Memories of the attack in the halls
of Johns Hopkins returned. One of his hands crawled across his chest to finger
a tender spot in its center. The feathered barb was gone. Slowly he pushed up
to find himself lying atop a frame bed, poorly cushioned by a worn mattress. He
still wore his same clothes—Levi’s and a grey shirt, only his Ralph Lauren
sports coat was gone. Tossing aside a thin wool blanket, Henry pushed himself
up.
The room was spartan. Besides the
bed, the only other pieces of furniture were a wormwood desk huddled in the
back corner and a prayer bench set before a plain wooden crucifix. Henry stared
at the cross, its deep cherry stain stark against the whitewashed plaster.
Before his mind’s eye, he again pictured the silver Dominican cross hanging
from around his attacker’s neck. What the hell was going on?
He swung his feet to the floor,
causing his ears to ring and his vision to dim for a fraction of a second. He
took a deep breath, but not before noticing a strong, familiar smell from the
tattered blanket on the bed. He fingered the coarse wool which was slightly
greasy. He raised it to his nose and sniffed. Llama. Wool from the llama was
the poorest quality of the textiles produced in South American countries, used
by the peasants only. It was seldom exported.
Understanding slowly dawned. South
America?
Henry quickly stood, wobbling for a
moment on his weak legs, then quickly regaining his strength. “No, it can’t
be!”
He stepped to the only door,
short-framed but solid. He tested the latch. Locked, of course. Moving to the
room’s center, he stared up at the high window. Birds whistled in some nearby
tree, and a warm breeze stirred the dust motes in the stream of sunlight. Too
bright. Henry sensed that this was not the same day when he had been shot by
the tranquilizer dart. How long had he been out? The thin breeze smelled of
frying oil, and in the distance rose the vague noises of a market, its strident
voices hawking wares in Spanish.
Henry’s heart sank as he realized
the truth. He had been abducted, whisked out of the country. Another face
appeared to him: straight fall of midnight hair, bright eyes, full lips. His
breath caught in his throat as he remembered Joan pulling the feathered dart
from between her breasts and slumping to the floor. Where was she?
More worried about Joan than
himself, Henry stepped to the door and pounded his fist, shaking the planks in
their frame. Before he could even call out, a small peekhole slid open near the
top of the door. Dark eyes stared at him.
“I want to know what—!”
The peephole slammed shut. Muffled
words, too low to hear distinctly, were exchanged a few paces down the hall.
Someone left in a hurry. Henry pounded the door again. “Let me out of here!”
He had not truly expected a
response; he had only been venting his frustration. So he was shocked when
someone responded to his call. A voice called to him from down the hall.
“Henry? Is that you?”
Relief flooded his chest, cooling
his hot blood. “Joan!”
“Are you okay?” she yelled back.
“Fine. How ’bout you?”
“Sore, sick, and mad as hell.”
Henry heard a lot of fear in her
voice, too. He didn’t know what to say. Apologize for getting her in this
trouble? Offer false promises of rescue? He cleared his throat and called back.
“Sorry…that wasn’t much of a second date, was it?” he called out.
A long pause…then a soft chuckle.
“I’ve had worse!”
Henry pressed both palms against
the door. He longed to wrap his arms around her.
From outside the cell, the sound of
someone approaching suddenly echoed down the hall. Joan must have heard, too;
she grew quiet. Henry held his breath. Now what? A voice, firm and curt, spat
just outside his door. Henry recognized the cadence of an order.
The grate of a sliding bolt
sounded, then the door to his cell swung open. Henry did not know what he had
expected, but he was shocked when he discovered two robed monks outside his
cell. Their cowls were tossed back and prominent crucifixes hung from beaded
chains around their necks.
Henry stepped away as his gaze
fixed on the familiar face of the taller monk. It was the gunman from Johns
Hopkins, the one named Carlos. Once again, the man held a pistol in his grip,
but this time there was no silencer. “Be cooperative, Professor Conklin, and
all will go well.”
“Wh…where am I? What do you want
with us?”
Carlos ignored him, instead
signaling his companion. The guard crossed to another door down the hall and
freed the bolt. Swinging the door open, he barked in Spanish and pulled a gun
from a slit at the waist of his robe. He waved its muzzle, signaling the
occupant to vacate the room.
Joan stepped out cautiously, her
eyes instantly finding Henry’s. He saw the clear relief in her gaze. Tears
glistened. She wiped brusquely at her face and needed no further prodding from
the guard to join Henry and Carlos. Her eyes flicked a moment to the pistol in
the taller monk’s hand, then back to Henry. “Why are we here?” she whispered.
“What do they want?”
Before Henry could answer, Carlos
spoke. “Come. Your questions will be answered.” Turning on his heel, the tall
monk led them down the hall. The other monk, gun in fist, followed.
Joan slipped her hand into Henry’s.
He squeezed as much reassurance into her grip as possible. If these men had
meant them dead, they wouldn’t have drugged them and dragged them all the way
here. But where was here? And what did they want? There was only one way to
find out.
Henry followed Carlos. He studied
the swish of the gunman’s robe, sandals tapping quietly on the flagstone floor.
And why these damnable disguises?
As they were led down a maze of
halls and up two flights of stairs, Joan remained silent at his side. Her gait
was stiff. They passed only one other monk in the hallway, a cowled figure,
head bowed. He stepped aside to let the procession pass without raising his
face. Henry heard a mumbled prayer upon the man’s lips as he walked past. He
never looked up.
Henry glanced back; the monk
continued down the hall, either unaware or uncaring about the guns and
prisoners.
“Strange,” he mumbled.
At last, Carlos stopped before a
set of large double doors, polished and waxed to a brilliant sheen. African
mahogany, Henry guessed, and expensive. Carved in relief upon the doors was a
mountain range with villages dotting the slopes. Henry knew the view. He had
seen it many times while visiting Peru. It was a well-known region of the
Andean mountains.
Henry frowned at the door as Carlos
knocked.
A deep voice answered, “Entrada!”
Carlos swept open the doors on
oiled hinges and revealed a room as handsome as the mahogany doors. An ornate
prayer altar, adorned in silver and gold leaf, stood in the corner, while
underfoot, an elaborate woven alpaca rug cushioned Henry’s steps as he entered.
To either side, shelves lined with dusty volumes filled the walls from floor to
ceiling. In the center of the room, a massive desk rested, with an incongruous
computer stationed at one end.
Behind the immense desk, a large
man, elderly but still vigorous, pushed to his feet with a squeak of his chair.
His size made even the desk seem small.
But Henry ignored the man and room,
his eyes drawn to the wide windows beyond. Outside rose the steeple of a
stately colonial church, towering above the surrounding town. Henry gaped at
the view, shocked. He instantly recognized the landmark structure, knew with
certainty where he was—Cuzco, Peru. Beyond the windows stood the Spanish Church
of Santo Domingo, a Dominican church built atop the ruins of the Incas’ Temple
of the Sun.
Henry glanced back to the room at
hand. Knowledge of where they had been imprisoned suddenly dawned. The monks,
the view, even the figure now standing behind the wide desk, grinning a
welcome…
Oh, God.
Henry stepped forward, eyes coming
to rest on the large man, his captor. His features were distinctly Spanish,
almost aristocratic. Henry recalled his conversation with the archbishop back
in Baltimore. The bishop had promised to pass on the archaeologist’s questions
to a Dominican colleague in Peru. Henry remembered the name that the Archbishop
had mentioned. “Abbot Ruiz?” he said aloud.
The huge man bowed his head in
greeting. “Professor Conklin, welcome to the Abbey of Santo Domingo.” He seemed
unperturbed by Henry’s recognition. Abbot Ruiz’s girth matched his height. His
chest and belly swelled his cassock and black robe. His large size did not seem
soft, more like a man who had once been solid with muscle, but whose shape had
become bulky with age.
Henry faced his adversary. He had always
considered himself a good judge of character, but the abbot confounded him. His
manner was open and friendly. Silver-haired, he seemed a kindly grandfather.
But Henry knew, considering the circumstances, that this judgment could not be
further from the truth.
Joan shifted beside Henry. “You
know this man?”
Henry shook his head. “Not
exactly.”
Abbot Ruiz waved them toward a pair
of overstuffed chairs. “Professor Conklin and Dr. Engel, please make yourselves
comfortable.”
Henry stepped nearer the desk. “I’d
prefer to stand until I get some answers.”
“As you wish,” he said, wearing a
wounded expression. The abbot returned to his own seat, sinking into it with a
sigh.
Joan joined Henry at the desk.
“Just what do you want with us, goddammit?”
The abbot frowned, the false warmth
melting from his face. “This is a holy place of our Lord. Refrain from
blasphemies here.”
“Blasphemies?” Henry said angrily.
“Your man over there killed a colleague of ours, then drugged and kidnapped us.
Just how many Commandments, let alone international laws, did he break?”
“We care not for secular laws.
Friar Carlos is a warrior in the Lord’s army and above any international rules.
As for Friar Carlos’s soul, do not fear. He has been absolved in Holy
Confession, his sins forgiven.”
Henry scowled. They were all mad.
Joan spoke up. “Fine…everyone’s
soul has been cleaned, pressed, and folded. Now why the heck
have you kidnapped us?”
The abbot’s face remained tight,
angered—the kindly grandfather persona long gone. “Two reasons. First, we wish
to learn more of what Professor Conklin has discovered at the ruins in the
Andes. And second, what both of you have learned in the States from the mummy.”
“We’ll not cooperate,” Henry said
sternly.
Ruiz fingered a large seal ring on
his right hand, twisting it around and around the digit. “That is yet to be
seen,” he said coldly. “Our order has grown skilled over the centuries at
loosening tongues.”
Henry’s blood chilled at the man’s
words. “Who are you?”
Ruiz clucked his tongue. “I ask the
questions here, Professor Conklin.” The abbot reached to a desk drawer and
pulled it open. He lifted a familiar object from within and placed it upon his
desk. It was the laboratory beaker containing Substance Z. The golden material
was still in the shape of the small pyramid. “Where exactly did you find this?”
Henry pictured the mummy’s head
exploding. He sensed he had better not lie, not until he figured out how much
these others knew. Still, he refused to give away the complete truth. “We found
it…in Friar de Almagro’s possession.”
Joan glanced sharply at him.
The abbot’s eyes opened wider. “So
our old colleague was successful in his mission. He had
discovered the source of el Sangre del Diablo.”
Henry’s brows bunched as he
translated the abbot’s words. “The blood of the Devil?”
Ruiz studied Henry in silence for
several moments, then steepled his fingers before him and spoke slowly. “I
sense you know more than you’re voicing, Professor Conklin. And though we’ve
refined our tools over the centuries, I think simple honesty may gain your
cooperation more easily and fully. You are, after all, a man of science and
history…and curiosity may win out where threats fail. Would you hear me out?”
“As if I had any choice…”
Abbot Ruiz stood again. He
collected the beaker and made it vanish within the folds of his vestments. “All
men have free will, Professor Conklin. It is what damns us or saves us.” The
abbot stepped around his desk and waved for the monk named Carlos to lead the
way. “The Sanctum,” he ordered.
Henry noted the friar’s shocked
expression, then the quick nod and the turn of a heel. Carlos opened the office
door and led them out.
Ever the
good soldier of the Lord, Henry thought.
“Where are you taking us now?” Joan
asked, sticking to Henry’s side.
Ruiz marched beside them as they
reentered the hallway. “To reveal the truth in the hopes that you will be
equally open.”
“The truth about el Sangre del Diablo?” Henry asked, prying for more
information. “How do you know about it?”
The abbot sighed loudly, seeming to
weigh whether or not to answer. Finally, he spoke. “The metal was first
discovered by the Spanish conquistadors here in Cuzco.” The abbot waved a hand.
“It was found in the Incas’ sacred Temple of the Sun.”
“The ruins under the Church of
Santo Domingo?” Henry asked. The temple had first been described by historian
Pedro de Cieza de Leon as among the richest in gold and silver to be found
anywhere in the world. Even the walls of the Incan temple had been plated with
inch-thick slabs of gold—until the Spanish had ransacked and stripped it,
tearing the structure down to the foundations to build their God’s church atop
it.
“Exactly,” Ruiz said with a sigh.
“The temple must have been a wondrous sight before it was pillaged. A shame
really.”
“And this Devil’s blood?” Joan
pressed. “Why that name?”
The group reached a long winding
staircase leading deep into the heart of the Abbey. The abbot moved slowly down
the steps, his great bulk hindering him. He wheezed slightly as he spoke. “The
Incas had colorful names for silver and gold—the moon’s tears, the sun’s sweat.
When the Spanish conquerors first learned of this other metal and witnessed its
unearthly properties, they declared the material blasphemous, naming it just as
colorfully el Sangre del Diablo. Satan’s Blood.”
Henry found himself being drawn
into this story. This was his field of expertise, but he had heard no such
stories. “Why are there no records of this discovery?”
The abbot shrugged. “Because the
Church was summoned and agreed with the conquistadors. The metal was studied,
its unusual properties noted, and was declared by Pope Paul III in 1542 to be
an abomination in the eyes of our Lord. The work of Satan. The Dominicans who
had accompanied the Spanish confiscated all such samples and returned them to
Rome, for purification. All records of the metal’s discovery were destroyed. To
speak of it or write of it was deemed the same as communing with the Devil.”
The abbot glanced to the walls as they followed Friar Carlos. “Several
historians were burned when they resisted the Pope’s decree, here in this very
building. It was our order’s burden to preserve the secrecy.”
“Your order…you keep saying that as
if you’re separate from the Catholic Church.”
Ruiz frowned. “We are most
definitely a part of the Holy Roman Church.” The abbot glanced away, almost
guiltily. “Unfortunately, most of Rome has forgotten us. Except for a handful
of men in the Vatican, none still know this order’s true mission.”
“Which is?” Henry asked.
Ruiz shook his question away. “Come
and you will see.”
They had reached the bottom of the
long staircase. Henry estimated they had to be at least fifty feet underground.
A string of raw lightbulbs lit the way ahead. Henry glanced to the walls and
was startled to see the characteristic work of the Incas—massive blocks of
granite stacked and jigsawed together with immense skill.
The abbot must have noticed as
Henry ran his palm along the wall. “We are now under the Abbey. Like the Church
of Santo Domingo, the Abbey also rests on ancient Incan foundations. These
passages actually merge and connect to the Temple of the Sun.”
“Are we going there?” Joan asked.
“To this temple?”
“No…we’re going somewhere even more
astounding.”
With Carlos still leading, the
group traveled the maze of passages. Henry noted the occasional wooden
footbridge straddling open sections of the stone floor. At first, he attributed
them to regions where the ancient Incan stonework had succumbed to earthquakes
or simple wear. Then, as he crossed another of these bridges, he realized they
were too regular and the pits too square. He suddenly suspected where the group
traveled.
“This is the place of the pit!”
Henry blurted out, staring back at the warren of hallways with their many
twists and turns.
“So you’ve heard of this place?”
Ruiz said with a smile.
“Place of the pit?” Joan asked.
“An underground labyrinth. A
hellhole where Incan rulers tossed their most hated enemies. It was fraught
with booby-trapped pitfalls lined by razored flint. They’d also throw in
scorpions, spiders, snakes, even injured pumas, to torment the prisoners.”
Joan studied the walls around them.
“How awful…”
“It was one of the Incas’ most
infamous torture chambers. The Spanish conquistadors wrote extensively of it.
It was supposed to be here in Cuzco, but it was believed long destroyed.” Henry
turned to the abbot. “Apparently it wasn’t.”
Carlos stopped at a bend in the
corridor. He stood stiffly by a bare section of stone wall, almost at
attention. From his narrowed angry eyes, the friar plainly did not agree with
the abbot’s decision to bring the captives here.
Abbot Ruiz stepped beside Carlos.
“We’ve reached the center of the labyrinth. The Sanctum of our order.”
Henry glanced up and down the
corridor. All he saw were stacked granite blocks. There was no sign of a door.
The abbot approached the bare wall
and pressed his large ruby ring against a small stainless-steel plate embedded
in a shadowed cubbyhole. Then he stepped back as the grind of gears sounded
from behind the bricks.
Henry tensed, not knowing what to
expect.
Suddenly a section of the granite
wall slowly dropped away, sinking into the floor. Bright light blazed from
within, its effect almost blinding after the dimness of the dark hallways. With
a groan, the section dropped fully away.
As the glare faded, Henry stared
openmouthed.
Joan gasped beside him.
Ahead lay a large chamber, the size
of a small warehouse. Starkly white and shining with stainless steel, it was an
extensive state-of-the-art laboratory. Beyond the windows and vacuum-sealed
glass doors, a legion of figures, dressed in sterile suits, labored at various
stations. Muffled by the glass walls, the strains of Beethoven floated out from
the laboratory.
Henry glanced back to the Incan
stonework labyrinth, then back to the technologically advanced laboratory.
“Okay, you’ve got my attention.”
The expected attack never came. A
full hour had passed by the time Sam stepped away from the large bonfire, rifle
held tight to his shoulder. The dark necropolis rose to shadowed heights all
around them. Firelight splashed across the nearest tombs, but most of the city
of the dead was shrouded by an inky blackness. Only the towering gold statue at
the center of town reflected the flames, a blazing pillar of brightness in the
midnight cavern.
Nothing moved out there.
“Maybe they left,” Norman
whispered.
Sam disagreed. “They’re still out
there.”
“It’s the flames,” Maggie finally
said, her voice sharp but quiet, drawing the men’s eyes momentarily from the
tense vigil of the necropolis. “They tried to destroy the first campfire,
hurling that big rock. But it was only chance that lit the stack of other
mummies by accident. If the fire had failed us completely, we’d all be bloody
dead.”
“What do you mean?” Norman asked.
“They fear the flames,” Sam said,
realizing Maggie was right. He looked at her with renewed respect. “That’s
what’s holding them back.”
She nodded. “From the lack of
pigment on the one we saw, it’s clearly not a creature of sunlight. Most likely
a cave dweller.”
“But what was
it?” Ralph asked.
“I don’t know,” Maggie snapped. The
tension was making everyone edgy. She pulled Denal to her side. The boy’s eyes
were huge with fear, both real and superstitious. “But whatever it was, it was
no spirit. No mallaqui. It was flesh an’ blood. I
don’t know…maybe it’s some type of bald gorilla or something.”
Ralph shook his head, repositioning
his own rifle slightly. Sam could guess the large man’s arm was getting as
tired as his own. “There are no large apes reported on the South American
continent.”
“But many parts of the Andes still
remain unexplored,” Maggie countered. “Like this place.”
“But it looked almost human,”
Norman said.
Sam would not have used that term
to describe the misshapen and bent-backed creature that had been caught in the
flashlight’s beam. He again pictured the beastly face armed with razored teeth.
Definitely not human.
Maggie persisted. “All across the
world, people report seeing strange hidden creatures in highland haunts—the
Sasquatch of the Sierras, the Yeti of the Himalayas.”
Ralph snorted. “Great. And we’ve
discovered the abominable snowmen of the Andes.”
The camp grew quiet again, the
pressure of their situation discouraging any further talk. Total silence fell,
except for the occasional pop or crackle from the fire. After a while, Sam
began to hope Norman’s first statement was true. Maybe the strange creatures
had left.
Then, from deep in the cavern, a
sharp bark erupted, followed by a guttural grunting from all around.
Everyone tensed. Sam fingered the
trigger of his Winchester.
“The natives are growing restless,”
Norman whispered.
The coarse calls and gibbering
escalated, echoing throughout the cavern. It sounded like hundreds of the
creatures surrounded them.
Sam’s eyes tried to pierce the
darkness. “Fire or not, they may be gathering courage to attack.”
“What should we do?” Norman asked.
“Two options,” Sam answered. “One,
we hole up in one of the tombs. Light a huge bonfire near the entrance and wait
them out. Hold them off if they attack.” Sam jiggled his pocket. “I’ve got
maybe a dozen shells. And Ralph has around thirty.”
Maggie glanced to the narrow
entrance of one of the neighboring tombs. From her pinched expression, it was
clear she did not care for that idea. “We’d be trapped in there. We could be
swamped with no means of escape. And I’m afraid their fear of the firelight may
wane.”
“And what if the fire goes out?”
Norman asked. “If we run out of mummies while holed up in there, who’s going to
go wandering out for more?”
Sam nodded at their concerns.
“Exactly, not a great choice. So there is also option number two: We try to
find that way out. We use Norman’s light meter to guide us. We go armed and
bearing torches. If flames scare them, then wielding burning brands may hold
them off—at least long enough to get our asses out of here.”
Ralph stood with his head cocked,
listening to the growing howls. “Whatever we decide, we’d better hurry.”
“Like I said before, they’re
growing more confident because we aren’t doing anything,” Maggie said. “But if
we began moving, taking the fire with us, that ought to spook them again. Also
maybe this cavern is their home. If it’s a territorial thing, by moving,
showing them that we’re leaving, they may not attack.”
“That’s a lot of maybes,” Ralph
countered.
Maggie shrugged. “I’d rather keep
movin’ than pin ourselves down. I don’t think it’s wise to stay in one spot too
long. I vote for leaving.”
“Me too,” Denal quickly added, his
voice small and scared.
Norman nodded. “We’ve overstayed
our welcome here.”
Sam eyed Ralph.
The large ex-football player
shrugged. “Let’s break camp.”
“I’m for that.” It heartened Sam to
hear a unanimous decision, but he prayed it was the correct one. “Ralph and I
need our arms free with the rifles. Everyone else grab a torch.”
As the beasts shrieked and
screeched, Ralph and Sam maintained a watch on the black necropolis. The others
hurriedly worked at constructing torches. Another mummy was dragged from a
nearby tomb, and its limbs were broken off, one each for Denal, Maggie, and
Norman.
Norman stepped back, brandishing a
thin mummified leg. “I’ve heard of pulling someone’s leg, but this is
ridiculous.” His face shone with sweat from exertion and tension. The
photographer crossed to the bonfire and lit the foot in the flames. “Something
tells me I’m going to Hell for this.” He glanced around the necropolis. “But
then again, maybe I’m already there.”
Ignoring his nervous chatter,
Maggie and Denal followed his example. Soon each held aloft a flaming limb.
“I’ve got a spare torch just in
case,” Maggie said, pointing her thumb to the broken arm protruding from under
the straps of her shoulder bag. “We can collect more on the way as we need
them.”
“If worse comes to worst,” Norman
said, “I also have a strobe flash on my camera as a last resort.”
“Then let’s head out,” Sam said.
“I’ll take the lead. Norman’s with me. We’ll need his meter to guide us.
Maggie, can you manage both your torch and the flashlight?”
She nodded.
“Then you follow us with Denal.
Ralph will guard our rear. We’ll cut through town first. We know there’s no
exit behind us…so our best bet is to move forward.” Sam stared at the others.
No one voiced any objections to his plan. “Let’s go.”
The team set off. The avenues
between the necropolis’s tombs were wide enough for them to cluster together.
Norman walked to one side of Sam, reading his meter, shielding the unit from
the torchlight with his body. Maggie marched on Sam’s other side, her
flashlight pointed forward. Denal kept to Maggie’s hip. Only Ralph did as Sam
had instructed earlier. He hung back and watched their rear.
As they tackled the maze of
streets, heading toward the distant wall of the cavern, Maggie’s earlier
assessment proved only somewhat valid. The cacophony of howls did die down. The
creatures were clearly shaken by the shifting firelight—but unfortunately not
as completely as they had hoped. Cries and grunts still echoed around them, and
even worse, the calls sounded closer.
Suddenly a huge blast of rifle fire
exploded behind them. Sam spun around, heart in his throat, his Winchester
ready at his shoulder. Ralph stood a couple yards back, the barrel of his rifle
smoking.
“Damn!” Sam yelled, his ears still
ringing from the blast. “Did you see something?”
Ralph shook his head and scowled at
the shadowed necropolis. “Just a warning shot. If the fire didn’t completely scare
’em, I thought the rifle might get their attention.”
“Jesus, you nearly gave me a heart
attack!” Maggie exclaimed. “Warn us before you do that again.”
Ralph glanced back, his face
growing sheepish. “Sorry. I just needed to do something. Those cries were
crawling up my spine.”
Norman picked himself up from the
stony floor where he had ducked. “Do that again, and you’re gonna owe me a new
pair of undershorts.”
Denal still stood by Maggie.
“Listen,” he said. “It quiet now.”
With the ringing in his ears fading,
Sam realized the boy was right. If nothing else, Ralph’s rash act had subdued
the howling. The cavern grew deathly still.
“Maybe that scared them away,”
Norman said hopefully, dusting off the seat of his pants.
“Don’t count on it,” Sam said.
“Let’s go.”
The team continued into the maze of
avenues and streets. Whoever had laid out the necropolis hadn’t been much of a
municipal planner, Sam decided. There was not a straight thoroughfare to be
found, and many of the streets ended blindly. Their progress, as Sam judged by
their proximity to the central golden statue, was slow, a snail’s creep,
requiring plenty of backtracking and stops to consult the light meter.
“We’re gonna get ourselves lost in
here,” Norman complained at one point, hunched over the meter, cupping its
aperture against the torchlight.
“There’s got to be a way out,” Sam
argued.
The group grew more and more
nervous—not because of any howling or signs of the creatures, but because the
quiet had begun to chafe nerves. Without any clue to the beasts’ whereabouts,
every shifting shadow or scrape of rock made Sam twitch. Though no one said
anything, they all knew the creatures were still out there, some primeval
instinct that warned of hidden predators. The feeling of eyes staring at them,
the sense of something breathing in the darkness.
As they continued, the silence
pressed heavier. No one spoke anymore; even Norman’s complaints died away. Sam
glanced to the heights around them, wishing the howling would start again.
Anything was better than this damnable quiet.
A growled scream sounded from
overhead. Maggie stabbed her light to the roof of a neighboring tomb. Pale
faces stared back at them. Huge black eyes reflected the light; lips pulled
back in a keening cry, slashing teeth exposed.
“Back!” Sam screamed, shoving Denal
and Maggie behind him.
Then the beasts leaped, heaving
over the roof’s edge toward them.
Ralph’s rifle blasted. One of the
misshapen creatures twisted in midair. Blood plumed out from its wounded neck.
It spun and crashed to the stone floor, rolling and howling.
Sam herded the others back,
retreating down the street. He sighted down the Winchester’s long barrel. One
of the creatures rose up from where it crouched on the street. Sam got his
first good look at one of the beasts. It was as pale and hairless as the one
spotted earlier, but this one was skinnier, emaciated. Each rib could be seen
through the stretched skin. Even its limbs were just long bone and pale sinew,
almost stretched like taffy. But it was its face that gave Sam pause. It was
slightly muzzled like a bear, with teeth that seemed all fangs. Clearly a
carnivore. But even more disconcerting were the huge black eyes. Sam sensed a
rudimentary intelligence in its gaze: curiosity mixed with fury. A lethal
combination.
But Sam recognized caution, too.
The emaciated creature glanced back at its wounded companion, still writhing on
the ground. When it turned around, its black eyes had narrowed into wary slits.
It hissed at Sam. Then in a flash
of long pale limbs, it vanished down a side street, moving too fast for the eye
to follow. Sam could not even shift his rifle sight in time. It was a blurred
white ghost.
Damn, it moved fast.
Other of its brethren roiled from
every opening, crawling from black windows, creeping from narrow doorways. As
they moved, Sam noted subtle differences among them. Some were smaller,
dwarfish models of the one he had just studied. Others were thicker-bodied.
Some even bore what looked like vestigial wings sprouting from where the
scapulas would be on a human. The only clear constants among them were the
penetrating, hungry black eyes and the translucent skin.
“Sam…on your left!” Maggie called.
He spun. One creature, a squat
brute bearing a huge brick above its head, raced toward them atop bowlegged limbs.
Sam had a heartbeat to aim.
Instinct from years of pheasant and duck hunting served him well now. He
sighted his target and squeezed the trigger. The bullet hit the beast square in
the chest; the force of the collision stopped the creature’s rush. It tripped
to one knee, skidding slightly. Blood, black as oil against white skin, spilled
down its bare chest. The stone brick toppled from its fingers, followed quickly
by the bulk of the beast.
Another rifle shot drew his
attention back to the right. By now, Ralph stood a few paces away. Sam saw
another beast crumple to the floor. Ralph backed, waving an arm. “Keep going!”
A scream warned Sam again, but not
from Maggie’s throat this time. One of the bent-backed creatures, a female with
pendulous breasts flat as pancakes, howled a ululating cry of attack. In her
pale hands was a raised club.
He struggled to twist the rifle
around.
“Sam!”
The club swung toward him, slicing
faster than he had expected. He tripped back a step. But he was not fast
enough. The club struck the Winchester’s barrel with a resounding clang. The
rifle tore from his grip and clattered onto the stone.
Sam’s hand stung from the blow. The
club circled back, toward his head this time. The female beast screamed her
triumph. Off balance, Sam could not even duck.
Then his left ear suddenly flamed
with pain. He yelped, both in distress and surprise.
“Sorry,” Maggie gasped, shoving her
flaming torch farther past his shoulder and into the attacker’s face.
The beast’s eyes widened in terror
at the fire. Its triumphant scream changed in mid-peal to a cry of horror. The
club fell from its trembling fingers as it shielded its face with an arm.
Maggie came around Sam’s side and
jabbed the torch.
The creature darted away, swinging
around, and scrambled up the side of a tomb and away. Again moving with
preternatural speed.
Maggie swung on Sam, frowning
fiercely. “Grab your rifle!” She turned to Norman. “Use the torches.” She
jabbed an arm toward Ralph as another rifle blast echoed through the cavern.
The black man was surrounded on all sides. “Go help him! I’ll stick with Sam
and Denal. We need to watch each other’s backs as we retreat.”
Norman started toward the embattled
ex–football player, harrying away a pair of brutish forms with his flaming
limb. “Retreat to where?” he called back.
“Anywhere but here!” Maggie
answered.
Norman nodded, as if that were
answer enough, and hurried forward, entering the fray around Ralph. More rifle
fire and a swinging torch quickly cleared a space around the tall black man.
To the left, Sam heard Denal gasp.
Swinging around with his rifle, Sam saw the small Quechan lad backing away from
a trio of smaller creatures, miniature versions of the ones who had attacked
Sam. They shuffled across the floor, knuckling on one forearm, remarkably
reminiscent of small apes.
Using his free hand, Sam pulled
Denal behind him, then raised his rifle. He aimed at the closest of the three,
almost at point-blank range range, and blew away the back of the creature’s
skull. Splatter sprayed upon the other two, giving them reason to pause.
“Get back!” Sam yelled, drawing
Maggie and Denal into a side street as the remaining pair approached. Another
creature clawed at Maggie from a rooftop, but a swipe of her torch drove it
away.
Then the pair of scuttling monsters
on the street howled and leaped—but not at the humans. The pair tore into their
fallen companion, ripping with teeth and claws, burrowing bloody muzzles into
its flesh.
Sam, Maggie, and Denal continued
their retreat.
“What the hell are those things?”
Maggie mumbled, horrified.
Sam had no answer.
More and more creatures joined the
meal, drawn by the scent of blood. Without the torches near, they boiled from
every niche and shadowed alcove. They were all ravenous. Whatever tenuous
neutrality had governed the creatures ended with the scent of fresh meat and
blood.
A booming voice called out from
around the corner. “Sam! Maggie!” It was Ralph. “We can’t get to you now!
There’re too many!”
Sam watched the carnage. Driven by
their wild bloodlust, Sam feared that fire would fail to cow these creatures
now. “Don’t try to reach us!” Sam yelled back. “We’ll keep going this way! Head
for the gold statue! Rendezvous there!”
More rifle fire exploded from
around the corner.
Maggie shone her flashlight behind them.
The way was momentarily clear. The feast in the other street had drawn the pack
like moths to flame. “Hurry,” Maggie urged. “Who knows how long the buggers
will be satisfied with local fare?”
Sam needed no further
encouragement. Herding Denal and Maggie before him, he urged them to speed down
the avenues. Blindly, they took any turns that seemed to head toward the
towering golden idol. All around, the screams of the monsters yowled and
echoed, urging them forward. Sam reloaded his rifle on the fly, fingers
fumbling shells into place. Once done, he shouldered the gun and closed the
distance with Maggie.
“How’re you holding up?” he wheezed
between tight lips.
She glanced at him, her face pale
and bright with sweat in the torchlight. “Okay,” she said. “But ask me again
when we stop running.”
Sam reached and squeezed her elbow.
He knew what she meant. While fighting and fleeing, the depth of their terror
was held in check by adrenaline. True shock at their situation had yet to sink
in fully.
Maggie patted Sam’s hand. “I’ll be
okay.”
Sam offered her a weak smile.
“We’ll get out of here.”
She nodded—but he knew she didn’t
necessarily believe him. Neither of them was a fool. The creatures here were
obviously scavengers and cannibals. From their pale skin and large eyes, they
had been cave dwellers for generations. Maybe for millennia. Interbreeding,
mutating…who knows what they once were? Maybe an unknown species of large ape,
maybe even some prehistoric man. But if there was truly a way out of these
caverns, why hadn’t the beasts left?
Sam’s mind ground on this puzzle,
keeping his thoughts away from panic. Maybe Denal had been correct. Maybe these
beasts were mallaqui, spirits of the underworld. If
the Incas had come upon this trapped tribe of beasts, they could have believed
they were beings of the uca pacha, the lower spirit
level. Is that why they built such an extensive necropolis down here? Did they
believe these monsters would protect their dead? Considering the attack upon
Sam’s group, the demonic beasts had proved themselves great guard dogs.
Sam shook his head, unsure of his
own conclusions. A small part of him sensed that a vital piece of this puzzle
was still missing—for the moment, there would be no further answers.
Sam, Maggie, and Denal ran on. In
the distance, occasional blasts of rifle fire cut through the caterwauling
screams, marking Ralph’s and Norman’s presence across the necropolis. But it
was rare, startling Sam each time the blast echoed within the cavern.
“I hope they’re doing all right,”
Maggie gasped after a volley of rapid rifle shots. She leaned against the sill
of a window, catching her breath.
“They’ll make it. With Ralph’s
strength and Norman’s wit, how could they fail?”
Maggie nodded. She leaned forward
to peer around the next corner. “By Jesus, there it is!” she said, stepping
forward. She waved for Sam and Denal to follow.
Sam stepped around the corner and
stared down the next street. It was long and straight, the first such
thoroughfare in the cursed maze. Down the tomb-lined avenue, the base of the
huge statue could be seen. This close, the statue was clearly an Incan king, a
Sapa Inca, like the one that guarded the secret entrance to the caverns. The
sculpture stood with its arms raised. Its palms touched the distant ceiling, as
if supporting the roof over their heads.
Denal stared, mouth hanging open.
“It’s the same king,” Maggie said.
She lifted her flashlight. It had to be at least twenty stories tall.
Sam followed where she pointed.
Under a feathered and tasseled llautu crown, the
king seemed to stare down at them, a slight scowl on his aristocratic face. It
looked like the same king being honored here, too. “You’re right. He must’ve
been the Sapa Inca who had conquered the original Moche tribe, the ones who
built the buried pyramid. I’d wager this was his way of placing his stamp upon
this mountain citadel.”
Maggie craned her neck. “Not a
subtle guy.”
“Well, let’s go introduce
ourselves.” Sam led the way, still wary of attack from the denizens of the
necropolis. Though he kept his rifle at the ready, this street seemed truly
dead. No scrabbling sounds. The keening howls far away.
Sam, hurrying, meant to keep them
that way.
The street proved much longer than
it first appeared. The towering statue made the distance seem deceptively shorter.
To either side, the tombs also grew in size and stature as they progressed
toward the central plaza, further tricking the eye’s assessment of distance.
The group’s initial run eventually
died down to a tripping walk on exhausted legs.
Maggie’s flashlight played across
the ornamentation of these elaborate mausoleums. Some stood four stories high,
gilded with gold-and-silver designs, encrusted with rubies and emeralds.
Fanciful creatures—dragons, winged leopards, human/animal hybrids—adorned the
facades. She ran a finger along an elaborate mosaic depicting a ceremonial
procession. “The tombs here must be of the kapak,
the higher classes,” she said, panting.
Sam nodded. “Clustered around the
feet of their god, the Sapa Inca. Notice the position of his palms. Another
symbol of how their king was a physical link between the upper world and this
one.”
Finally, the row of tombs ended,
and the plaza beyond stretched to the gold feet of the statue. Sam glanced up.
The statue climbed to the very roof of the chamber. “Wow…”
Maggie was not as impressed. She
stood with her back to the sight, staring at the dark necropolis. Howls of the
beasts echoed sporadically in the distance. “What the devil are those beasts?”
she mumbled.
Sam crossed to her. “I don’t know.
But I think they bear some rudimentary intelligence. A few were using tools to
attack. Rocks and clubs.”
“I noticed, but they were only the
thicker-limbed ones,” Maggie said. “Did you notice that?”
Sam frowned and lifted his rifle.
“I was sort of busy holding them off.”
“Well, it’s true. The others just
fought with tooth and nail. It was almost like the pack was divided into four
distinct classes. Each with its own function and abilities.”
“Like bees? Workers, drones, and
queen?”
“Exactly. First, there were those
thin, lanky ones.”
“Yeah, I saw one of those. They
move as quick as cheetahs.”
“But did you notice they never
fought?”
“Yeah, now that you mention it. The
skinny ones appeared first, then just sort of hung around at the fringes.” Sam
glanced to Maggie. “But what are they? A type of scout?”
Maggie shrugged. “Probably.”
Sam pondered her theory in silence.
He pictured the battle again in his mind. “What about those pitbull-looking
things? The ones that weren’t scared of the flames.”
“Another class. Did you notice the
lack of genitalia on them?”
“I really wasn’t looking down
there. But if they were sexless, I can guess what you’re thinking—drones, just
like the bees.”
Maggie nodded. “Infertile workers
of limited intelligence. Their fearlessness of the flames was probably more
from stupidity than bravery. But who knows?”
“And the ones with the weapons?”
Sam asked. “Those bigger ones with the muscles and weird vestigial wings. Let
me guess. Soldiers.”
Maggie shook her head. “Or maybe
just laborers. I don’t know. But did you see that gigantic fellow who hung back
and seemed to bark orders? I’m sure he’s some type of pack leader. I saw no one
bigger than he.”
“That’s a lot of conclusions and
suppositions on only a brief glimpse.”
“It’s what your uncle taught us to
do. Extrapolate. Take the tiny shards of an ancient people and construct a
civilization.”
“Still, without more information,
I’d be hard-pressed—”
Denal suddenly tugged on Sam’s free
arm.
He glanced back down to the boy.
Denal stared into the dark necropolis.
“Mister Sam, I hear no gunshots.”
Sam turned, so did Maggie. She wore
a deep frown. “Denal’s right,” she said. “We haven’t heard any rifle fire for a
while.”
Sam studied the city, searching for
any sign of Norman and Ralph. Echoing screams still rattled over the dark city.
“Maybe they’ve outrun them.”
Maggie swung in a slow circle,
scanning the spread of tombs. From this point, the necropolis rose in a wide
bowl around them. Seven avenues led out like spokes into the surrounding maze
of tombs. “I don’t see any sign of Norman’s torch out there.”
Sam stepped beside her. Silent.
Where were they? Had they been caught? Fear for his friends knotted his
stomach.
“They must be out there somewhere,”
he said quietly. “They must be.”
Harried by a mob of beasts, Norman
and Ralph backed through a tomb’s doorway, ducking under its low lintel. The
musty stench and odor of cinnamon filled the narrow space. It accentuated the
cloying closeness of the cramped tomb. Beyond the doorway, pale creatures
mewled and growled from hungry throats.
Swinging the flaming torch, now
burnt down to the knobbed knee of the mummified leg, Norman drove back the
scrabble of creatures from the doorway. So far the flames, feeble as they were,
kept them at bay. “C’mon, Ralph,” Norman begged. He risked a glance backward,
his glasses sliding down his sweat-slick nose.
Deeper in the tomb, Ralph fought
his rifle, struggling with the bolt. “Goddamn worthless piece of shit,” he
swore. “Still jammed.”
“Well, unjam it!” Norman cried.
“What the hell do you think I’m
trying to do?” Ralph attacked the rifle with more vigor, his muscles bunching
in his thick arms, but with no better success. When Ralph raised his face, his
expression was answer enough.
“Fuck.” Norman poked his torch into
a pale face that got too near. With a wail, the foul visage vanished. “What
now? I’m running out of leg!”
“Hold on.” A rustling and heaving
sounded from behind. Norman dared not look back. The beasts were getting bolder
and making grabs for his torch as the fear of the flames waned. Ralph appeared
at his side, voice strained. “Move out of the way!”
Norman stepped aside as the large
man dropped a bundle at the doorway. It was a desiccated mummy, wrapped in a
fetal position. “Light it,” Ralph ordered.
Norman brought his flaming brand to
the dry wool bandages. Smoke billowed, filling the narrow space. The bright
flames, like the light of salvation, bloomed upon the mummified corpse. More
smoke choked the chamber. Norman’s eyes stung; he coughed coarsely.
“Stand back,” Ralph warned, then
kicked the flaming bundle through the entryway. It skidded to a stop right
outside the doorway and blazed brighter.
The creatures scattered, squealing
like startled swine.
Norman backed a step, sighing in
relief. That should buy them a bit more time. “Can you get the rifle working?”
“I don’t know. There’s a shell
jammed tighter than shit. I can’t jimmy it free.” Ralph shook his head as he
stared at the flames. “Our only hope is that the others see the fire and come
investigate.”
“But they won’t know the fire means
we’re in trouble. What if we tried screaming for help?”
Ralph glanced back, hopelessness in
his expression. He shook his head. “Wouldn’t do us any good. The acoustics in
this place will only bounce the noise all around.” Ralph glanced to Norman.
“But I’m open to any other bright ideas.”
Norman chewed his lower lip,
turning in a slow circle, looking for some answer among the scattered pottery
and tokens of the dead. “I think I do have a bright
idea,” he exclaimed, passing his torch to Ralph, then fishing through the
camera bag slung across his back. He hefted out the flash unit and held it up.
“A really bright idea!”
“What are you thinking?”
Norman waved away the question. “I
need to get to that window slit.” He pointed to a narrow gap in the brickwork
near the ceiling. It was much too small for the beasts to get through, but it
would suit his needs fine. “I need a boost. How strong are you?”
Ralph frowned. “I could lift four
of your scrawny asses.”
“One scrawny ass will do.” Norman
settled his camera bag on the floor. “Gimme a knee up.”
Crouching, Ralph helped Norman
climb from knee to shoulder.
“Now up,” Norman said, kneeling
atop Ralph’s shoulders and balancing with one hand braced on Ralph’s head.
With an explosive exhalation, Ralph
heaved straight up, shoving Norman toward the high roof. Once his feet were
steady, he hissed at Norman, “Hurry up with whatever you’re doing.”
Norman pulled up to the window’s
sill and peered outside. The view stretched all the way to the gold statue.
Perfect.
“Hurry!” Ralph said from below.
Norman felt his balance shift under
him. He grabbed the window’s edge to keep from falling. “Steady there, big
boy!”
“Get going! You’re not as light as
you look.”
“Are you saying I’m fat?” Norman
said with feigned offense.
“Enough wisecracks already. You’re
not funny!”
Norman grumbled, “Everyone’s a
critic.” He freed his flash from his vest pocket. Holding the flash up, he
triggered the bright light in quick bursts—three short, followed by three long
flashes, ending again with three short. Then Norman waited a few seconds and
repeated the signal.
The incandescent light was blinding
as it reflected off the surrounding tomb walls. Norman squeezed out one more
sequence of signals, then switched off the lamp, conserving the bulb. It would
have to do.
With a final glance at the gold
statue so tantalizingly close, Norman dropped back.
“What were you doing?” Ralph asked
as Norman awkwardly hopped from his perch. Ralph rubbed his bruised shoulders.
“Making a 911 call.” Norman pushed
his flash unit back into his pack. “An old-fashioned S.O.S.”
Ralph glanced up at the hole.
“Smart,” he mumbled.
“You’re welcome,” Norman answered,
proud of his ingenuity. He straightened, slinging his camera bag over his
shoulder. “Now if only someone spotted my signal.”
Norman suddenly felt something
squirm in his hair. He ducked and batted at it; his wrist hit something solid.
Squeaking with shock, Norman rolled to the side and spun around.
One of the creatures continued to
paw at him through the open window near the roof, its arm stretched toward him.
Norman backed away. A leering face, wide with teeth, appeared upside down at
the opening and growled at them. It seemed Norman’s clever ploy had attracted
someone—unfortunately not who he had hoped.
“Shit!” Norman whispered.
Overhead, scratching and scraping
sounds began to echo from the rooftop. It sounded like a hundred crows
scrabbling up there. In the back corner, one of the slab sections of the stone
roof suddenly shifted an inch with a cracking grind of granite.
Both Norman and Ralph spun in
horror to stare at the gap in the slabs. “They’re forcing their way in!” Ralph
groaned.
“How fucking strong are they?”
“With enough of ’em, they could
probably tear this place apart.”
The scrape of claws and the ominous
grind of stone reverberated through the high, narrow chamber.
Norman stepped away, then glanced
toward their only exit. Flames from the burning mummy blocked the doorway. They
were trapped in a snare of their own making.
“Me and my bright ideas,” he moaned.
Maggie was the first to spot the
strobe of Norman’s flash. “Over there!” she yelled, drawing the attention of
Sam and Denal. “Sweet Jesus, they’re alive.” She had noticed a red glow a
moment ago among the maze of tombs. At first, she wasn’t sure it was them. Now
she knew!
Sam sidled next to her. He had been
circling the statue’s base, searching, too. “Where?”
As answer, a second series of
flashes exploded through the necropolis. It was not far, just past the end of
one of the avenues that spoked away from the central plaza. “They must be in
trouble,” Sam said.
“What do you mean?” Maggie asked,
her jubilation waning to worry.
“That’s old Morse code. An S.O.S.
signal.”
Maggie stared toward the dark
necropolis. “What are we going to do?”
Sam glanced at her. “I have to try
and help them.” The flare of flashing light blazed again, then died away. “They
must be pinned down.”
Denal spoke up, raising his torch a
bit higher. “I go, too.”
“And I sure as hell am not staying
here alone,” Maggie said. “Let’s go.” She started toward the avenue that led
most directly toward the trapped students. A hand pulled her back.
“No,” Sam said, “you and Denal stay
here.”
Maggie swung around, shaking out of
his grip. “Like bloody hell! I’m not puttin’ up with any of your chauvinistic
bullshit, Sam.”
“And I’m not asking you to. If I
get the others free, we’re gonna be running like scared rabbits with a pack of
wolves on our heels. We’re gonna need a hole to hide in.” Sam stepped back to
the statue. He raised his rifle and tapped its butt against the gold ankle. A
dull clang reverberated up the leg.
“It’s hollow,” Maggie said, amazed.
“And a good place to hide,” Sam
said. “When I was circling around, I found a doorway on the far side. In the
left heel of the idol.” Sam reached to his waist and slipped out the gold
dagger. He held its hilt out toward Maggie. “I need you to pick that lock
before I get back with the others.”
Maggie accepted the dagger and the
responsibility. “My da’ was once a thief in his youth…here’s hoping there’s a
genetic predisposition.”
Sam smiled at her. “I always
suspected there was something criminal about you.”
She returned his smile. “I’ll get
the bloody door open. You just bring back the others.” She held out her torch.
“And be careful.”
He stepped closer to accept the
flaming brand. In the torchlight, she could see the intensity smoldering in his
blue eyes. Grabbing the torch, he let his hand linger on hers. “You, too,” he
said, his voice a touch huskier. He hesitated another breath.
Maggie raised her face toward him.
For a moment, she thought he was going to kiss her, but then he stepped away.
“I’d better get going.”
She nodded. Somewhere deep inside
her, in a place that seldom stirred, she felt disappointment and turned
slightly to keep from betraying her feelings. “Don’t you do anythin’ stupid,”
she implored.
Denal spoke up from a pace away. “I
see no more flashes. They stop.”
Sam swung around…whatever tenuous
moment they had shared faded away like scattered embers. He studied the spread
of the necropolis. “That can’t be a good sign,” he said quietly.
“Hurry, Sam.”
Nodding, the Texan raised his rifle
toward the cavern roof. “Cover your ears.”
She and Denal did so, but even with
their palms clamped tight to the sides of their heads, the rifle blast was
deafening.
After the ringing died away, Sam
lowered the rifle. “Hopefully, that’ll let them know the cavalry is coming.”
Maggie frowned as Sam started down
the avenue.
And will
let the creatures know, too, she
thought dourly.
“That had to be Sam!” Ralph said.
“He must have seen your signal!”
Norman eyed the gap in the slabs
overhead. After the single rifle blast, pale fingers had returned to tug and
push on the granite, widening the space another inch. Black eyes stared in at
the trapped pair. Norman jabbed his torch at the faces, but to little effect.
The roof was too high. They simply backed away, then quickly returned.
“Sam won’t make it here in time,”
Norman mumbled. “Not unless we find some way to chase these roof rats away.”
Ralph turned from the doorway. “I may
have an idea.”
Norman watched as Ralph shrugged
the ammo belt from his shoulder. “With the rifle jammed, we won’t need this any
longer.” He held up the strap of leather with over twenty intact shells still
on it, then stepped toward the entrance.
Norman began to get an inkling of
Ralph’s plan. “That might just work.”
“And it might blast a way out of
here for us, too.” Ralph tossed the belt into the flames. In half a heartbeat,
the shells began exploding like popcorn on a skillet, sputtering and cracking.
Outside, ricochets pinged off the neighboring tomb walls. The mummy underneath
the belt was riddled to shreds, and bits of it were scattered across the stone.
Overhead, beasts fled in a
squealing rush from the noise and the cascade of flaming debris. Norman stepped
nearer the gap to be sure they had actually fled. He raised his torch high
toward the crevice in the roof. It was empty. No more peering faces or
scrabbling fingers. He grinned. “It’s working—”
“Get back!” Ralph hollered.
Fire suddenly tore into Norman’s
leg. Dropping his torch, he crumpled to the floor as bolts of agony shot all
the way up into his belly. He cried out, mouth open for a moment in a silent
scream, then a high-pitched whine escaped his lips: “Shhhiiittt!”
Ralph was instantly at his side,
dragging him back toward the shadowed wall. “Goddammit, Norm, what did you
think you were doing?”
Norman was not in the mood for a
discussion of his shortcomings. With teeth clenched against the pain, he stared
down at his right leg. A thick wetness soaked through the knee of his khakis.
The room began to spin.
“You caught a ricochet,” Ralph
explained. He pulled off his shirt. “Why did you step from cover?”
Norman groaned and waved an arm
toward the gap in the roof slabs. “I wanted to be sure—oh, the hell with it—I
wasn’t thinking.” His face squeezed tight as Ralph gently examined the wound.
“It’s not like I tossed handfuls of bullets into campfires when I was a kid.
But I guess with my army training I should’ve known better than to break
cover.”
“I don’t think it hit any major
arteries,” Ralph said. “I don’t see any spurting, but your knee is all shot to
hell. I’m gonna have to wrap it tight to support it and to restrict any further
seeping.” Ralph took his own shirt, a thick flannel, and shredded it into
strips. Taking a scrap, he touched Norman’s leg. “This will hurt.”
“Then let’s not
do it,” Norman said sourly, grimacing.
Ralph frowned at him.
Norman sighed and waved him closer.
“Oh, go ahead. Just do it.”
Nodding, Ralph took his leg and
bent it up. Norman’s knee exploded with pain, like a stick of dynamite going
off inside. But worse was the sick grate of bone on bone. Norman gasped, tears
in his eyes. “Do you even know what you’re doing?”
Ralph just continued to work,
ignoring his agony. He wrapped his scraps of flannel shirt several times around
Norman’s knee from thigh to mid-shin. “Back at the University of Alabama,
football players were always banging up their knees. If nothing else, I know
how to place a quick support wrap.” Ralph finished his handiwork with a final
firm tug, cinching the wrap tight.
Norman’s fists clenched; he writhed
slightly. It felt like something with huge claws had clamped his knee. Then it
was over.
His torturer scooted back. “That
should keep you from dying.”
Norman wiped the tears from his
eyes. The pain subsided. “Great bedside manner, Doc.”
Ralph eyed him a moment, worry
creasing his brow as he studied the photographer. Finally, he glanced back
toward the entryway. It was quiet. The bullets had long since stopped popping
in the fire. “Now the bad news. We need to get out of here. My stunt’s not
going to keep those monsters away for long.”
Norman glanced to the doorway.
Pieces of the shredded and scattered mummy smoldered beyond the threshold,
while distantly, spats of flames still dotted the stone floor. But at least the
exit was open. He nodded and raised an arm. “Help me up.”
Ralph stood, then used a muscled
forearm to pull Norman from the floor.
Gasping from the movement, Norman
was careful to keep his weight off his injured leg. Once up, he tentatively
leaned on his heel, gauging the amount of pressure he could withstand. Pain
throbbed, but the support wrap kept his knee immobilized. Norman hobbled a few
steps, leaning heavily on Ralph’s wide shoulder.
“Can you make it?”
Norman glanced up. Sweat beaded his
forehead from this small exertion. He felt queasy from the continual throbbing
in his leg. He offered Ralph a sick grin. “Do I have any choice?”
Overhead, something stirred. Claws
again scrabbled on the rock. It sounded as if one of the beasts had hidden up
there, but now with the streets quiet again, it was slinking off. The two men
stood immobile, straining to listen, waiting to be sure the beast had moved
away. Silence for ten full counts.
They dared not wait any longer.
Where there was one, others might soon follow. “Let’s get out of here,” Norman
said.
Ralph collected the torch from the
floor. He fanned its embers into a brighter flame, then stepped beside Norman.
“Grab my shoulder. Lean on me.”
Norman didn’t argue, but he held
the man back for a moment. His voice serious for a moment. “If we get in
trouble…leave me.”
Ralph did not answer.
He squeezed the larger man’s
shoulder harder. “Did you hear me?”
“I don’t listen to fool’s talk.”
Ralph raised a palm toward Norman’s face.
“Oh, don’t go Oprah on me, Ralph.
I’m not talkin’ to the hand.” Norman pushed Ralph forward. They stumbled
together toward the door. Norman kept speaking to distract himself from his
pain. “I’m not saying you should throw me to the monsters as bait and hightail
it away. I’m just saying…let’s be practical. If we get in trouble, leave me in
some cubbyhole and run. Put those ex–football player legs of yours to use.”
“We’ll cross that bridge when we
come to it,” Ralph muttered. He helped Norman ease through the low door.
Norman straightened, and the pair
cautiously entered the street. The avenue was strewn with flaming bits of
cloth. It looked like a war zone. “That was more of a show than I expected.”
“But at least it helped chase those
things off,” Ralph said.
Norman glanced up and down the
street. Ralph was right. There was no sign of the monsters. “Thank God.” For
the moment, they were safe.
“C’mon,” Ralph said. “Let’s get the
hell away from here.”
“Anything you say, boss.”
Ralph set off with Norman in tow,
their pace slow but steady. Soon they had left the smoldering remains of the
mummy behind. Only a small pool of light cast by the stubby torch marked their
progress. Norman had wriggled free his flash and held it ready, prepared to
scare off any stragglers with the blinding light if necessary. At one-minute
intervals, he also strobed a quick series of flashes to indicate their current
location for Sam or any of the others to follow.
Of course, the flashes of light
also gave away their position to the cave beasts, but it was a calculated risk.
With Norman injured, they needed help, as in big guns, and that required a
signal.
Norman lifted his flash and spat a
series of blinding bursts toward the ceiling. “I feel like a goddamn firefly.”
Ralph frowned, discouraging any
conversation. They were already enough of a target.
Norman frowned at his companion’s
unspoken scolding but stayed silent, biting back a quip. He knew Ralph was
growing more and more nervous. The large man had begun to pause, glancing
quickly over his shoulder, as if he sensed something was tracking them.
Norman never heard anything, but
his head now pounded continually. Still, he knew Ralph was mistaken about one
thing. If they were being tracked, it wasn’t a few whispered words that drew
the creatures. Norman studied his leg. Blood seeped slowly from between the
folds of the wrap. Considering the lack of light, he suspected the beasts’
other senses were keen. I’m a meal on the run,
Norman thought morosely.
Silently they continued onward,
aiming for the gold statue. No attack came, but the cavern had grown strangely
quiet. Only the occasional howl sounded from somewhere within the depths of the
cavern. Ralph’s shoulder became more and more hunched and tight under Norman’s
grip.
Finally, Norman slowed. By now, his
skull felt two sizes too small, and his steps had become dizzied. “I need a
rest break,” he whispered.
“Already?” Ralph hissed, eyes wide
on the surroundings.
Norman let go of Ralph’s shoulder
and hopped to a nearby tomb wall. “Just for a few moments.”
Ralph scowled and swung the torch
closer to Norman. The frustration in the large man’s face waned to worry.
“Shit, Norman, you look like crap.”
“Good, because that’s exactly how I
feel.” Norman slid down the cool stone wall and sat on his rump.
Ralph crouched beside Norman, his
eyes back to surveying the length of the street. “It can’t be much farther.”
Norman bit his lower lip, then
spoke the words he had been trying not to say for the past few minutes. “Ralph,
you need to go on alone.”
He shook his head—but not before
hesitating a moment, Norman noticed. “I can’t leave you here.”
“Yes, you can.” Norman forced as
much false cheer into his voice as possible. “I’m gonna crawl into this tomb,
cuddle up with the homey here, and wait for you to fetch that Texan with that
big rifle of his.”
Sighing, Ralph pondered his words.
“Maybe…” He shoved to his feet. He even took a step away. Then he suddenly
swung back. “Fuck that! You didn’t leave me back at the river, and I’m not
leaving you now!” Ralph held out his torch. “Take it!”
Norman grabbed the flaming brand.
“What are you—?”
Ralph bent down and scooped up
Norman under both arms, ignoring his squawk of protest. “I’ll carry your ass
out of here if I have to.”
Norman squirmed a moment, then relented.
“Let me down…if you’re that determined, I can manage a little longer.”
Lowering him back to his feet,
Ralph hissed in his ear. “I don’t want to hear anything else about abandoning
you.”
Norman grinned, inwardly relieved
that Ralph had refused to leave. “And I didn’t think you cared.”
Ralph’s brows bunched. “Just get
your crippled ass moving.”
Norman hopped a step forward, while
Ralph’s grip held him steady. “I hope you’re right that it isn’t far to the
statue.” Moving another painful step forward, Norman noticed Ralph hesitate.
Ralph’s hand remained clamped to Norman’s upper arm, but he wasn’t following.
Ralph’s grip spasmed tighter for a
moment, then relaxed.
Norman turned. “What’s the holdup?”
His hand fell limply from Norman’s
shoulder. Ralph fingered weakly at his thick neck, disbelief on his face. Blood
poured over Ralph’s fingers. The large black man reached for Norman with his
other hand, pleading. “R…run!” Ralph gurgled.
Norman was unable to move. He
stared transfixed by the spear of sharpened white bone protruding like a branch
from the side of his friend’s neck.
Ralph crashed to his knees.
“G…Goddammit! Run!”
From behind Ralph, a tall, pale
creature rose on spindly limbs. Their tracker had come out of hiding. Huge
black eyes glared at Norman as the creature lifted a second spear of bone and
leaped toward him, bounding high over Ralph’s back.
Norman danced backward but was too
slow on his injured leg. The beast plunged toward him, bone spear raised.
Ducking, Norman braced for the
impact.
But Ralph suddenly bellowed with
rage and lunged forward. He snatched the ankle of the creature as it flew past,
a lineman grabbing a fumbled pass. He yanked the beast clear of Norman and
swung the startled creature through the air, swatting it against the neighboring
wall.
Its skull shattered like eggshells.
As its carcass collapsed in a
tangle of limbs, so did Ralph. He struck the floor hard, too weak to break his
own fall.
Norman rushed to his side, ignoring
the pain as he fell to his hands. “Don’t move! I’ll get help! Sam can’t be
far.” Norman gently turned his friend’s face upward.
Glazed eyes stared back. Empty.
Norman’s hand flinched back. Ralph
was already gone. He crawled back, tears blurring his vision.
Around him, the cavern echoed again
with the yammering howls and gibbering cries of the beasts. More trackers. They
detected fresh blood and were drawn by their ravenous hunger.
Norman pressed his forehead against
the cool rock and took several deep breaths. He was too tired to run, but he
forced himself up. He would not let Ralph’s sacrifice be for nothing. Glancing
at Ralph’s body, he stood unsteadily, torch in hand.
He turned on his good heel and
swung around. Only three yards away crouched another of the foul creatures:
squat, with thick arms and bent back. It growled at Norman.
Norman’s eyes narrowed with rage.
He shoved his torch high. “Fuck you!” he screamed, fists clenched and
trembling. He put all his hate and sorrow into his cry, as tears rolled down
his cheek.
Like those of a frightened deer, the
beast’s eyes flared wide, clearly startled by the unusual reaction of its
injured prey. Disconcerted, it crept back, then scampered down a side street.
Norman’s cry ended with a choking
sob. He wiped at his face, then shoving his glasses higher on his nose, he
limped forward. “You-all sure as hell better not get in my way! I’m not in the
fuckin’ mood!”
Maggie knelt by the door in the
heel of the great statue. It was a long and narrow silver inset, about half a
meter wide and two meters tall, flush almost with the surrounding gold walls.
She was surprised Sam had even spotted it.
While Denal shone the flashlight,
she once again worked the tip of the golden dagger into the narrow slot in the
door’s center. It had to be a keyhole, but so far no amount of manipulation of
the gold dagger’s tip would release the catch.
“Miss Maggie,” Denal said quietly
behind her, the flashlight’s beam jittering. They rarely spoke, and only in
whispers, afraid to attract the ears of the predators out there. “Mister Sam
gone a long time.”
She pictured Sam sneaking around
the necropolis, alone, and pounded her fist against the unyielding surface in
frustration. “I know that, Denal!” she hissed. Besides a flurry of rifle shots,
sounding like an asthmatic machine gun, and one screamed shout, there had been
no indication that anyone but the creatures still moved out there.
The boy mumbled a meek apology.
Sighing, Maggie leaned back,
resting the dagger on her lap. “I didn’t mean to snap at you, Denal. I’m the
one who should be sorry. It’s…it’s just that I can’t get this damn thing open,
and they’re counting on me.” Maggie felt near tears.
He placed his hand on her shoulder.
Even that small bit of solace went
a long way to calm her frayed nerves. She took a shuddering breath, forcing herself
to calm down. Glancing at Denal, she patted his hand. “Thanks.” She stared into
the boy’s scared eyes, then returned to study the door. “Denal, I’m sorry for
getting you into this mess.”
“No sorry. It were my choice to spy
on Gil. I wanted to help you. My mama, before she die, she say I must help
others. Be brave, Denal, she tell me.”
“Your mother sounds like a
wonderful woman.”
Denal sniffed back tears. “She
was.”
Well, by
Jesus, she thought silently, I’m not going to let that wonderful woman’s boy die down here.
With renewed determination, she
raised the gold dagger; the foot-long blade glittered in the flashlight beam.
She remembered Sam’s trick at transforming the dagger. She tilted the knife and
examined its sculpted hilt, the fanged god Huamancantac. She ran her fingers
along its contoured handle. She found no catch to trigger the change. “How did
you do that, Sam?”
Maggie glanced to the door, then
back up to the statue. She needed to think. Why a door in the back of the heel?
The Greek myth of Achilles came to mind. The invincible warrior’s only weak
spot was his heel. But there was no such corresponding myth among the Incas or
any of the Peruvian tribes.
Still, the coincidence kept nagging
her. Could there be some connection? Many myths crossed cultures and
continents. Just because she had never heard of such an Incan myth did not mean
it did not exist. Without a written language, much of Incan heritage had been
lost over the ages—perhaps tales of the Incan equivalent of Achilles had been
lost, too.
Lifting the dagger, she recalled
the Greek myth. The great Achilles was finally brought down by a blow to his
heel. But it wasn’t a knife that slew the magically protected warrior. It had
been an arrow. She shook her head at this useless train of thought.
If only
you were an arrow, she wished at
the dagger.
In her hands, the hilt grew
suddenly cool and the golden blade stretched and thinned, blossoming at its tip
into a sharp arrowhead.
“Jesus!” Maggie blurted out,
popping to her feet. She turned to Denal, holding out the transformed knife.
“Look!”
Denal, though, was staring the
other way, gaping out at the necropolis. He backed toward her, raising an arm.
“Miss Maggie…?”
With her gaze, she followed where
he pointed. At the shadowed edge of the tombs, pale, monstrous shapes crouched.
They had crept up on them so silently, even now not a growl or yowl escaped
them. Maggie noticed several of the faces stared up at the gigantic statue—but
not all of them. Several pairs of hungry eyes stared directly at them.
As if knowing they had been
spotted, the creatures began to slink, crawl, and waddle out from the
necropolis’s edge. Silent, like twisted shadows. There had to be at least two
dozen of them.
Maggie pulled Denal back with her
into the small cubby between the two heels of the Incan king. Denal had a
flashlight, and the remains of their one torch. It would not hold the hordes
off. They needed help. She risked a step forward and yelled with all the wind
in her lungs. There was no reason to hide in silence any longer. “Sam! Help!”
Her call echoed throughout the large cavern.
A pair of the nearest beasts,
angered by the noise, rushed toward her. They were of the soldier class of the
pack, loping on muscular legs, eyes narrowed to black slits, fangs bared. They
resembled hairless bears, muzzles stretched wide as they attacked.
Maggie brandished her only weapon,
the dagger now shaped like an arrow. If she could kill one of them…
The nearest of the two raised up
from its crouched run, ready to lash out at her, then its eyes flicked toward
her only weapon. The beast howled as if struck and fell back, colliding with
its partner. The two tangled together, claws raking each other as they fought
to back away. Slitted eyes had widened in raw panic. Whining, they fled back to
the others.
Maggie stepped farther from her
hiding place. She lifted her weapon high. A squeal of fear ran through the
massed beasts. Like a school of startled fish, they spun and darted away.
Lowering the transformed knife, she
frowned at the gold arrow. What had just happened? She ran a finger down the
shaft of the arrow. She glanced back at the locked door. More from the beasts’
reaction than her own insight, Maggie suspected she truly held the key to the
Incan statue. They had obviously feared it. But why? Did the beasts recall some
frightening memory of the Incas who had once traveled here with this strange
knife. If so, how? It had been so long ago, at least five centuries. Was it
some type of collective memory, a genetic instinct among this diverse pack?
Stepping toward the silver door,
she was determined to test her theory. Crouching, she slid the slender arrow
through the slit. If this proved to be the key, then it also suggested the
Incas had shared some common myths with the Greeks. This fact alone could be
worth an entire doctoral thesis. Holding her breath, Maggie slid the arrow
home.
Asmall click
sounded—and the door swung open.
A dark chamber lay beyond.
Maggie hung back. She glanced to
her hand. With the door open, the gold dagger had returned to its original
shape. The long blade glinted in the light. Holding the weapon toward the
doorway, she recalled the booby traps in the other chamber. Still, there was
only one way to proceed. Without turning, she waved her free hand toward Denal.
“Bring me the flashlight.”
Shining the light forward, she
noticed that beyond the doorway lay a small, unadorned chamber, its floor of
gold matching the statue. It was plenty large enough to house all of them. She
leaned forward and cast the light up. There was no ceiling. The beam climbed
into the hollow heart of the gold statue. It seemed to go on forever.
Pushing back out, she ran her light
along the length of the Incan king. Overhead, his raised gold palms held up the
roof of the cavern. For a hiding place, it was not exactly unobtrusive.
Maggie turned to face the dark
necropolis. But where the hell were the others?
Sam froze when he heard Maggie’s
cry for help. He stared forward for a heartbeat into the maze of streets. For
the past half hour, there had been no further sign of Ralph and Norman. The
last he had heard was an explosive “fuck you,” then nothing else. The streets
lay silent.
Where the
hell are you guys?
Sam had to accept the possibility
that both were lost. He apologized silently if he was wrong and swung around.
He headed back toward the statue at a dead run. No longer having to blindly
track the two men, Sam could move faster. He knew the way back to the statue,
knew which were the proper turns and which were dead ends.
Sam reached the last street, the
straight avenue that aimed for the central plaza. From there, he even spotted
the glow of Maggie’s torchlight highlighting the statue’s base. Tugging his
Stetson snugly across his brow, he started down the street.
Before he had taken two steps, a
cry of pain drew his attention to the right. Sam twisted around, rifle raised.
Down a short side street, a figure slid along the left wall, hunched and
feeble. The shape was too dark to be one of the cavern predators.
Sam raised his torch and, in turn,
was blinded by a sudden explosion of light. Someone screamed at him: “Get away,
you fuckin’ shithead!”
Blinking back the glare, Sam
lowered his rifle. “Norman?”
The figure had stopped a few yards
back; a quieter, meeker voice answered. “Uh, Sam?” Norman lowered the flash
which he had used to blind the Texan.
Sam let out a whoop and hurried to
Norman’s side. His joy quickly deflated when he took in the photographer’s
injury. “Where’s Ralph?”
Norman pocketed his flash and just
shook his head. He would not meet Sam’s eyes. Instead, he asked, “How about
Maggie and Denal?”
“At the statue,” Sam said, his
voice subdued. The loss of Ralph was like a deadweight in his chest—but now was
not the time to mourn. He straightened and reached to pull Norman under an arm.
“We need to hurry. They may be in trouble.”
Norman backed away, shoving at
Sam’s arm. Tears welled up. “I won’t get anyone else killed.”
“Bullshit, it’s just your leg.” Sam
bullied up to Norman and scooped the photographer’s shoulder under one arm.
“How good were you at a three-legged race?”
Norman opened his mouth, clearly
meaning to protest, but a fierce growling rose behind them from deeper down the
street. They both glanced back; then Norman leaned more heavily on Sam. “Let’s
find out.”
Sam nearly carried the injured
photographer, but he was not going to leave the man behind. They returned to
the main thoroughfare and headed out at a fast clip, limping and hopping. The
yowling rose all around them now. It seemed to be paralleling their track.
“It’s…it’s my leg,” Norman moaned
at his ear. He started to lean away. “The blood is attracting them. If you
leave me here, they might—”
“Sorry, no meals on this flight,”
Sam answered, pulling Norman closer, refusing to let the man sacrifice himself.
They hurried forward amid the
escalating cries of the predators. The statue grew too slowly in front of them.
“We’re not going to make it,”
Norman said, nodding toward a handful of pale forms leaping along the rooftops
behind them, moving with incredible speed. One paused to howl at the cavern
roof.
“Scouts,” Sam said. “They’ve
spotted us and are calling for reinforcements.” Sam kept going, swinging his
Winchester backward, and fired off one round. It was a blind shot. The bullet
rebounded off the wall and bounced between the tomb walls to either side.
Something yelped past the reach of their light.
Norman mumbled with grim
satisfaction, “You’ve really got to watch those damn ricochets.”
Shouldering the rifle, Sam hauled
the photographer with him. The Winchester had only one shot in the chamber,
then Sam would have to reload—which meant stopping. They would not survive the
delay.
A voice called from down the
street, drawn by his rifle blast. “Sam! Hurry! I have a way inside the statue!”
It was Maggie. He spotted her small form at the end of the street, outlined in
torchlight.
“Then get inside! Now!” Sam
hollered back.
“Just move your asses! Don’t worry
’bout me!”
Norman glanced at the mass of
beasts upon their tail. “Personally I was worrying more about them,” he said
sourly.
Lungs on fire, legs burning, Sam
forced them to a faster pace. He fought to close the distance with Maggie. He
was now close enough to see her eyes widen at the sight of the company pursuing
them.
“Holy shit,” she said. “Hurry!” She
ran toward them.
“Get back!” Sam gasped.
But she ignored him. She raced
toward them with Denal at her heels. As Maggie drew near, she waved the gold
dagger overhead and whistled a piercing note, a sheepherder calling his dogs.
What the hell did she think she was
doing?
Sam glanced anxiously behind him.
The forefront of the pale legion tumbled from the rooftops onto the street,
almost at his heels. Sam shoved Norman forward and swung to face the coming
onslaught with the single shell in his Winchester.
Maggie appeared at Sam’s side. “Don’t!”
She shoved his rifle down and stepped forward. She brandished the long blade.
“Maggie!” But to Sam’s shock, the
squabble of creatures skidded to a stop, claws scraping rock. Black eyes were
fixed on the knife. Even overhead, the scouts backed from the roof’s edge,
retreating. Those caught on the street crouched against the sight of the blade.
They scrabbled slowly away.
Maggie indicated their party should
do the same. “I don’t know how long their fear will overwhelm the hunger for
fresh meat.” Maggie glanced at their group with concerned eyes. “Where’s
Ralph?”
“Dead,” Norman said softly.
“Oh, God, no…” Maggie muttered,
returning to guard the group with the dagger.
Sam kept at Maggie’s shoulder. He
glanced between the knife and the huddled pack. “Why do they fear it?”
“I don’t know,” Maggie answered
tightly, voice strained with the news of Ralph. “Right now, all I care is that
it works.”
Sam agreed with her, but he could
not keep his mind from working on the beasts’ odd reaction. He remembered his
earlier assessment that the creatures might be some inbred line of ape or
prehistoric man, cave creatures the Incas had discovered down here and had
revered as mallaqui, underworld spirits. But why
would they fear this old Incan dagger?
Sam frowned, sensing he was still
far from the true answer to the mysteries here. But as Maggie had said, the
first thing a good researcher did when investigating something strange was to
survive.
To either side, the line of tombs
suddenly vanished. They had reached the central plaza.
“Around here,” Maggie said, finally
turning her back on the mass of creatures crouched down the street. She quickly
led them to the door he had noticed earlier. Skirting around the heel, Sam saw
the way now lay open.
“How did you manage to unlock it?” Sam
asked.
Maggie passed him back the dagger.
“It seems the weapon is also an all-purpose skeleton key. It changed to match
this lock, too.”
“You’re kidding?” Sam flipped the
dagger back and forth, examining it. “How did you get it to work?”
Maggie’s brows furrowed. “That’s
the thing. I don’t truly know.”
Panting and wheezing, Norman pushed
beside them, leaning on Denal now like a human crutch. “We’ve got company!” he
gasped out, pointing back.
Sam turned. The pale beasts had
begun to creep again from the shadowed streets and into the central plaza. Low
growls began to flow. Sam herded everyone through the doorway in the golden
heel. “It seems their hunger is winning out.”
Maggie ducked in. “Hurry, Sam! Help
me with the door!”
Without turning from the slathering
pack, Sam backed to the narrow entry. As he struggled through, his rifle’s
strap caught on the door’s hinge. Sam yanked on it, but only jammed the leather
strap tighter. “Goddammit!”
Sensing his distress, one of the
creatures bounded forward, growling and snarling, all teeth and claw. A
soldier. As it neared, it hissed at Sam, drool foaming from its mouth, and
swiped a razored claw at his throat.
Ducking back, Sam parried the
attack with the gold dagger. The knife struck pale flesh, but it was a pinprick
in a bull. The creature heaved up, screaming its rage. Blood splattered Sam
from the injury, while he fought to unhook the rifle.
“Leave it!” Maggie yelled.
“It’s our only weapon!” With one
hand on his rifle, Sam kept the gold dagger between himself and his adversary.
Other pale beasts squealed and cried behind the injured one. They had smelled
the blood.
Sam met the eyes of the creature
looming over him. In those black wells, Sam sensed a dark intelligence. It
raised its injured arm, red blood drizzling down its pale flesh from the knife
wound. A low growl of hate seeped from its throat. Sam tensed for the blow.
But instead the beast suddenly
jerked away as if it were a marionette directed by some unseen hand. The raised
arm blackened, starting from the clawed hand, then spreading down the arm like
a flaming poison. Wisps of smoke trailed up from the limb. Howling in pain, the
creature crashed backward into its brethren. Its arm, now charred, crumbled and
fell away to ash, but still the burning spread. The beast rolled on the stone
floor. In mere seconds, its pale torso and other limbs blackened to match the
granite beneath it. Smoke swirled around the writhing figure; even spats of
flame shone through cracks in its flesh.
Sam knew what he was witnessing. The
rare phenomenon had been documented in the past, but never witnessed: Spontaneous combustion.
Stunned, Sam backed away, his rifle
forgotten. Without him tugging any longer, the gun simply clattered to the
floor. He left it where it fell, brandishing the dagger instead.
Beyond the doorway, the pale
creatures retreated from their charred brother. The large beast lay unmoving, a
sculpture of ash upon the stone floor.
Maggie crouched and grabbed the
Winchester’s stock and dragged it into the small chamber with them. “Help me
with the door.”
Sam nodded dully. He glanced at the
gold dagger, then slipped it carefully into his belt. With his hands free, he
joined Maggie in hauling the heavy door closed. Once shut, it snapped tight,
the lock clicking in place.
Maggie leaned against the silver
entry. “We should be safe now.”
Suddenly the floor under them
rumbled. Everyone tensed.
“Great, you had to say that,”
Norman whined, his eyes on the floor.
Under their feet, a deep-throated
gurgling arose. It sounded like the rush and churn of a mighty river beneath
the floor. The sound grew deafening, echoing up the hollow statue overhead.
“What the hell is that?” Maggie
asked.
“Another trap!” Sam yelled.
“This way,” Abbot Ruiz said,
turning and walking down the long, sleek hallway.
Henry hung back as the abbot
continued their tour of the research complex beneath the Abbey of Santo
Domingo. Joan, her street clothes now masked in sterile white laboratory
coveralls, walked alongside the large man, while Henry marched beside the
stoic-faced Friar Carlos, who watched the group from under lowered lids,
suspicious and vigilant. The foursome, now all dressed in matching white lab
suits, seemed part of the research team that manned the suites of laboratories.
Only the 9mm Glock carried in Carlos’s tight fist suggested otherwise.
For the better part of the
afternoon, Abbot Ruiz had passed from lab to lab, highlighting the advanced
studies being done here: everything from botanical sciences to nuclear
medicine, even a huge computer lab devoted to the human genome project. Henry
did a mental calculation. Hidden within the heart of an Incan labyrinth, the
honeycomb of laboratories must encompass the entire heart of the abbey. Henry
could not believe this complex had been kept secret for so long.
Joan spoke up as Abbot Ruiz
continued down the hallway, asking the very question that had been nagging him,
too. “Why show us all this?”
Ruiz nodded, clearly expecting the
question. “As I said before, to gain your cooperation. But also to impress upon
you the significance of the level of commitment here, so that what I show you
next will be viewed within the proper context.” The abbot turned a perspiring
face toward Henry and Joan. “While I may operate from faith in my religion, I
suspect you will need more concrete evidence. I suspect, like the Apostle
Thomas, you will need to place your fingers in the wounds of Christ before you
believe the miracle you are about to witness.”
Henry edged closer to Joan,
speaking for the first time in over an hour.
“Miracles? That’s the first
religious reference I’ve heard you utter while down here. Just what are you
truly doing here?” Henry waved an arm to encompass the complex as they
continued down the hall. “Discounting the murders and kidnappings, how is this
all an undertaking of the Catholic Church?”
The abbot nodded knowingly. “Come.
The answer lies just ahead.”
Even with the 9mm Glock pointed at
his kidneys, Henry was oddly intrigued. As a scientist and historian, whatever
mystery lay hidden here, Henry needed no gun to keep him following. Just what
had he stumbled onto?
Joan reached and took his hand as
they approached the end of the hall. Though her eyes were also bright with
curiosity, Henry could tell she was nervous. Her palm was hot in his. He gently
drew her to his side.
Blocking the way ahead was an
immense stainless-steel wall. In the center was a huge door, large enough for
an elephant to pass through. Massive bolts secured the door tight. Off to one
side was an electronic palm lock and keypad. It was obvious that before them
stood the centermost chamber of the complex, the Inner Sanctum.
Without turning, Ruiz spoke. “None
but the most devoted have ever stepped foot within this chamber. What lies
ahead is mankind’s hope for salvation and redemption.”
Henry dared not speak, his
curiosity too keen. He did not want to say anything that would dissuade the
abbot from opening the vault. A man had been murdered to keep this secret, and
Henry meant to find out what it was.
Joan did not have as much devotion
to the mystery. “Why let us see?” she asked.
Ruiz still did not turn. His eyes
were fixed on the doorway, his voice husky with reverence. “All answers lie
within.” He took his signet ring and pressed it into a niche. The palm pad lit
up, and the abbot placed his left palm upon its surface; then with his other
hand hidden by his bulk, he tapped a code to open the way.
Thick locks released with the roll
of heavy bearings, and the bolts slid smoothly back, freeing the door. As Abbot
Ruiz backed away, the massive door swung open toward them. It had to be at
least two feet thick. From the opening, the perfumed scent of incense wafted
out. After the sterility of the labs, the fragrance was cloying. A chill breeze
carried the scent, as if the room beyond were refrigerated.
But neither the incense nor the
chill seemed to bother Abbot Ruiz. The rotund man raised his arms in
supplication as the door slowly opened.
Once the door was fully open, the
abbot crossed himself solemnly and led the way forward. He spoke not a word, and
Henry sensed that to speak would blaspheme the moment. He kept his lips
clamped, but his eyes widened with anticipation.
As Abbot Ruiz stepped carefully
through the entrance, sensors within the vault switched on a flood of halogen
lights. The room burst with brightness, like a subterranean sunrise.
Joan gasped. From her vantage
point, she had spotted what lay ahead. Henry had first to maneuver around the
eclipsing form of the abbot to see what mystery the chamber contained. As he
climbed over the threshold, his hand fell away from Joan’s. He stumbled numbly
into the room.
The chilly chamber was twenty yards
square. At each corner, a small brazier smoked with a thin trail of incense.
Upon each of the titanium walls hung monstrous silver crosses, each as tall as
a man. An even larger crucifix hung from the ceiling three stories overhead.
But as stunning as all this was, it
was nothing compared to what lay below the hanging cross. In the center of the
room, upon an ornate silver altar, lay a life-size sculpture of a man. Henry
moved nearer. The figure rested as if asleep, dressed in flowing robes,
pillowed by his long hair, hands crossed upon his belly as if he lay at peace.
The visage was relaxed in slumber. A profound peace emanated from the figure.
Henry drifted to the side to view the face better.
Upon the figure’s brow rested a
crown of thorns.
Oh, God!
It was the figure of
Christ—sculpted of solid gold!
No, not gold…Henry did not have to
step any closer to recognize his mistake. The halogen spotlights blazed upon
the figure of the sleeping Christ. The metal seemed almost to flow under the
light. No, this was not gold! It was el Sangre del Diablo.
The entire life-size sculpture had been molded from Satan’s Blood.
Henry felt his knees grow weak.
Words escaped him. The chill of the room crept into his bones. No wonder the
room was refrigerated. At room temperature, the soft metal would likely loose
its fine detail, like the cross had at Joan’s lab back in Johns Hopkins.
Abbot Ruiz crossed to a plain
wooden prayer bench that stood before the altar and knelt upon its hard
surface, lips moving in silent worship. Once done, he climbed back to his feet,
zippered open his sterile lab suit, and withdrew the beaker containing the
golden sample from Joan’s lab. The substance still retained the rough pyramidal
shape. Abbot Ruiz kissed the tips of his fingers, then unstoppered the jar and
reached within the beaker to remove its contents. Gently, the man’s large hands
dislodged the metal from the glass and lifted it free. Leaning forward, he
reverently placed the pyramid atop the sculpture, near the folded hands of the
Christ figure.
“Come,” the abbot said solemnly,
returning to his prayer bench. “It was your discovery, your gift, Professor
Conklin. You should share in this.”
Ruiz knelt again, bowing his head
in prayer. Henry crossed to the abbot’s shoulder with Joan at his side. Carlos
still stood near the door, gun held steady, face hard.
Abbot Ruiz prayed, his words
mumbled, face covered humbly with his hands.
Henry studied the figure, the room.
He did not know what to expect. Still, what happened shocked him; Henry had to
blink a few times to make sure it was not some optical illusion.
The pyramid composed of Substance Z
melted and flowed across the sculpture. The folded hands parted enough to allow
the molten metal to flow under them. As the golden fingers settled again, the
flow of Substance Z formed a perfectly shaped lily, a redolent bloom and
slender stem, grasped within the golden fingers of Christ.
The abbot sighed and lowered his
hands, a beatific smile on his features. He pushed to his feet.
“What just happened?” Joan mumbled.
“Your sample has been added to
ours…bringing us one step closer to our goal.” The abbot backed from the altar,
drawing the others with him.
“How did you do that?” Henry asked,
nodding toward the statue.
“You have witnessed why the metal
was thought demonic by the Vatican. It is the most unique property of el Sangre del Diablo.” Ruiz turned to Joan. “We’ve read
your notes and reports. Like you, we’ve learned over the years that the metal
is responsive to any external source of energy: electricity, X rays, radiation,
thermal. It uses any and all forms of energy with perfect efficiency, changing
state from solid to liquid. But what you had yet to discover was the property
the Incas demonstrated to the Dominican friars who first arrived.”
“And what is that?” Henry asked.
Abbot Ruiz’s gaze flicked toward
Henry. “It also responds to human thought.”
“What?” Joan gasped.
Henry, though stunned, remained silent.
In his mind, he remembered how the sample had tried to form a replica of the
Dominican cross when he had been holding and pondering the crucifix.
The abbot continued, “With focused
concentration, it will respond to a brain’s alpha waves just as it will to X
rays or microwaves. It will melt and flow into whatever form is fixed in the
supplicant’s mind.”
“Impossible…” Joan mumbled, but her
voice held no force.
“No, not impossible. The brain can
produce significant emanations. Quantifiable and measurable. Back in the early
seventies, experiments in both Russian and CIA think tanks demonstrated that
certain unique individuals could manipulate objects or influence photographic
film with nothing but the strength of their minds.” Ruiz glanced back at the Christ
figure. “But in this case it is not the individual that is unique, but the substance. It is attuned to the emanations of the human
brain, the very thoughts of man.”
Henry found his tongue, almost
choking. “But this is an amazing discovery. Wh…why the secrecy?”
“To preserve mankind’s hope for
salvation,” Abbot Ruiz stated solemnly. “Upon the Holy Edict of Pope Paul III
in 1542, our Spanish sect of the Dominicans was given the mantle to pursue any
end to keep the demonic metal from corrupting mankind. To keep its existence
secret and to sanctify it.”
Henry’s eyes narrowed. “You keep
saying that—your sect. What do you mean by that? Who
exactly are you?”
The abbot stared at Henry as if
judging whether or not he was worthy of a response. When he spoke it was low
and with an undercurrent of threat. “Who are we? Our order is one of the
Dominican’s oldest, founded in the thirteenth century. We were once called the
Keepers of the Question. It was our order that first accompanied the
conquistadors into the New World, into the land of heathens. As discoverers of el Sangre, we were granted the task of confiscating every
ounce of the demonic metal and putting everyone associated with its discovery
to the Question, until knowledge of the el Sangre
vanished into the folds of the Church.”
Understanding slowly dawned in
Henry. He remembered the symbol of the crossed swords on Friar de Almagro’s
ring. “Oh, God,” he mouthed.
Abbot Ruiz straightened, unashamed.
“We are the last of the Inquisitors.”
Henry shook his head, disbelieving.
“But you were disbanded. Rome disavowed the Spanish Inquisition in the late
nineteenth century.”
“In name only…the Holy Edict of
Pope Paul III was never revoked.”
“So you fled here?” Henry asked.
“Yes, far from prying eyes and
closer to the source of el Sangre del Diablo. Our
order considered our mission too vital to abandon.”
“Mission to do what?” Joan asked.
“Surely with all your research here, you don’t still believe the metal to be
tainted by the devil?”
Her words drew a patronizing smile
from the abbot. “No. On the contrary, we now believe el
Sangre to be blessed.” A smile grew at their consternation. “For the
metal to be able to divine the mind of man and turn his thoughts into physical
reality, the hand of God must be involved. Within our labs, our sect has worked
for centuries to refine the material and to expand the metal’s receptivity to
pure thought.”
Henry frowned. “But to what end?”
The abbot spoke matter-of-factly.
“So we can eventually reach the mind of God.”
Henry could not hide his shock.
Joan moved closer to him, reaching for his hand.
Ruiz continued, “We believe that
with enough technologically refined ore, we can build a vessel sensitive enough
to receive the mind or spirit of our Holy Lord.”
“You must be joking,” Joan gasped.
The abbot’s expression was somberly
stoic.
“And what then?” Henry asked,
sensing something was being left unsaid.
The abbot cocked his head.
“Professor Conklin, that’s our most guarded secret. But if we are to win your
cooperation, I suppose I must show you everything. The final revelation.” Ruiz
stepped toward the altar. “Come. You must understand.”
Henry sensed that the abbot, though
he might whisper of guarded secrets, actually enjoyed this little dog-and-pony
show for his guests. In some ways, it worried Henry. To reveal these secrets so
openly suggested that the sect had no real concern that Joan or Henry would
ever be sharing such knowledge with the world. The abbot’s confidence and
willingness to talk, more than anything, made Henry edgy.
Once at the altar, Abbot Ruiz waved
an arm over the golden figure. “Here is our ultimate goal.”
“I don’t understand,” Joan said.
Henry shared her confusion.
The abbot touched the sculpture
with a single trembling finger. “Here is an empty vessel, responsive only to
our thoughts. But with enough raw material, we hope to reach the spirit of God
Himself. To bring his will into physical form.”
Henry stared at the sleeping figure
of Christ. “You’re not suggesting—”
“We believe it was by providence
that el Sangre was delivered into the hands of the
Church when first discovered in the New World. It was a challenge to our faith.
A test of God. If we bring together enough of this divine substance, God’s mind
will reach out and enter our vessel here, bring it to life.” Abbot Ruiz turned
to Henry, his eyes bright with zeal. “Our goal is to bring a living God back to
this earth.”
“You’re talking about initiating
the Second Coming!” Joan exclaimed.
Abbot Ruiz nodded, turning to stare
across the golden figure. “Christ born again here on Earth.”
Henry shook his head. This was
insane. “So why us? Why do you need us?”
Ruiz smiled and drew them away.
“Because you discovered the remains of Friar Francisco de Almagro, one of our
predecessors. In the sixteenth century, he was sent to search for a rumored
deposit of el Sangre, a strike so large that it was
said by the Incas to ‘flow from the mountaintops like water.’ He never returned
and was assumed killed. But when I received word from Archbishop Kearney in
Baltimore, our hope was renewed. Maybe our ancestor had discovered the mother
lode, only to die before he could bring back the knowledge.” He glanced at the
slumbering Christ figure. “We pray, Professor Conklin, that you’ve stumbled
upon our means to reach God.”
“You truly think this mythical mother
lode is at my dig?”
The abbot raised his eyebrows.
“Word has reached us from our agent on-site there. Signs look promising. But
after that accident at the underground temple, it’ll take us a while to—”
Henry tensed. “What accident? What
are you talking about?”
Ruiz’s face grew grim. “Oh, yes,
that’s right. You would have no way of knowing about the collapse.” The abbot
quickly related what had happened at the ruins.
The blood drained from Henry’s
face.
“But fear not, though the students
are trapped, their last transmission suggested that they’d found a natural
cavern in which to take shelter.”
“I need to get up there! Now!”
Henry blurted out, pulling from Joan’s grasp. All interest in anything here
died to cold ash. Oh, God…he had forgotten all about Sam. He had not even
considered that his nephew might be in danger, too.
“There is nothing you can do. I’m
in contact with my men up there. Any change, one way or the other, and I’ll
tell you immediately.”
Henry’s blood, which had drained
from his face, rushed back. “You’ll get no cooperation from me! Not until I
know my nephew is safe!”
“Calm yourself, Professor Conklin.
I’ve already sent a team of mining experts to assist in the rescue.”
Henry wrung his hands together.
Joan stepped nearer, drawing an arm around his shoulders. He stood stiffly in
her embrace. After the death of his wife and brother, Sam was his only family.
Henry had no room for anyone else. If he had not been so enamored of his old
college flame, Henry might have been thinking more clearly and avoided this
whole mess. Stepping out of Joan’s embrace, Henry spoke to the abbot through
clenched teeth. “If any harm comes to Sam from this, I will kill you.”
Abbot Ruiz backed up a step, while
Friar Carlos moved in with his Glock, warning Henry off. The abbot’s voice
trembled slightly. “I’m sure your nephew is safe.”
Another booby trap!
As the gold floor trembled
underfoot, Sam pulled Maggie to his side. She had been attempting to unlock the
statue’s door, but it had locked tight behind them. “Brace yourselves!” Sam
yelled above the growing roar of rushing water below. “Be ready to act!”
Through his bootheels, the reverberations thrummed up his legs and tingled his
ribs and spine.
A step away, Denal supported
Norman; the young Quechan’s eyes were huge saucers.
The rumble below grew deafening in
the small space, and the floor bucked under Sam’s boots. “Hang on!”
Suddenly the roar filled the space
around them; the floor trembled as if holding back an immense pressure. Then
the loud knock of catches releasing echoed all around them. The platform shot
upward under them. Norman fell to his hands and knees, crying out in pain as
his injured limb struck the metal floor. No one else spoke, hushed with fear,
frozen in tense postures.
The platform rocked and jolted, but
continued on its upward course—slowly at first, then faster, spinning slightly
as it ascended the shaft. Underfoot, the floor continued to tremble with
whatever force propelled it.
“Hydraulics!” Norman cried out over
the roar. He was helped to his feet by Denal.
“What?” Sam asked.
Maggie pushed free of Sam’s embrace
and studied the floor. “They must’ve tapped into an underground river, perhaps
a tributary of the one we swam in yesterday. It’s a bloody hydraulic lift!”
Sam stared up into the throat of
the passage above. “But where is it taking us?”
Maggie frowned. “If they wanted to
kill intruders, this is an overly elaborate way to do it,” Maggie said, eyeing
the flow of smooth walls. “I think it’s taking us all the way up.”
“To the roof?” Sam said,
remembering the stance of the Incan king, arms raised up, palms on the ceiling
as if supporting the ceiling of the cavern. He pictured the statue’s form. It
was a straight shot up.
“Hopefully not just to crush us up
there,” Norman said sourly. “That would ruin an otherwise perfectly good day.”
“I don’t think so,” Maggie
answered, her voice unsure.
Denal suddenly cried out. He
pointed overhead. “Look!”
Maggie swung her flashlight up, but
there was no need. Far above them the end of the passage came into sight, a
dome of gold, the interior crown of the statue’s skull. Light streamed from
regularly spaced cracks in the roof’s surface. Then like the petals of a
flower, six sections of the roof peeled fully open. Bright sunlight flowed down
toward them.
“It’s a way out!” Sam exclaimed. He
whipped off his Stetson and let out a whoop of joy. “We’ve made it!”
Norman added more quietly, “Some of
us, that is.”
Sam’s smile faded. He replaced his
hat, picturing Ralph’s face. Norman was right. It was inappropriate to cheer
their own salvation when one of their friends was not beside them.
Maggie moved nearer to Sam. Her
eyes were bright with both relief and sadness. She craned her neck to study the
opening dome.
Sam put his arm around her. “I’m
sure Ralph would be glad we escaped.”
“Maybe…” she mumbled softly.
He hugged her tighter. “The dead do
not begrudge the living, Maggie—not Ralph, not even your friend Patrick Dugan
back in Ireland…” And to this list, Sam silently added his own parents.
Maggie leaned into him, her voice
tired. “I know, Sam. I’ve heard it all before.”
Holding her, he gave up on words.
He knew that sometimes forgiving yourself for living was harder than facing
death itself. It was something you had to do on your own.
Slowly now, the elevator climbed toward
freedom, and the platform pushed up into the opened dome. Finally, it settled
to a stop. The six sections of the dome had retracted fully. Underfoot, the
click of latches bumped the floor, locking the platform in place once again.
Below them, the whoosh of water receded, flushing down the shaft.
“We’re home,” Norman said.
After the dimness of the cavern,
the late-afternoon sunlight was blinding, even when filtered through the heavy
mists that seemed to cloak the skies overhead.
“But where the hell are we?” Sam
asked, stepping forward. He craned his neck all around.
They appeared to be in some deep
wooded valley. Towering steep walls of reddish black rock surrounded them on
all sides, impossible to scale without mountaineering equipment and
considerable skill. Overhead, mists roiled and obscured the sunlight to a
bright haze.
“What’s that smell?” Norman asked.
The air, thin and warm, was tainted
by the odor of rotten eggs. “Sulfur,” Maggie said. She turned in a slow circle,
then pointed an arm. “Look!”
Near the north wall of the valley,
a plume of steam shot skyward from a crack in the rock near its base. “A
volcanic vent,” Sam said. This region of the Peruvian Andes was still
geologically active, riddled with volcanic cones, some cold and silent, others
still steaming. Earthquakes rattled through the mountains almost daily.
Maggie waved an arm. “This is no
rift valley. We’re in some type of volcanic caldera.”
Norman limped closer, eyes on the
rock walls. He frowned. “Great. Why is the phrase ‘out of
the frying pan, into the fire’ coming to mind right now?”
Ignoring the photographer’s dour
words, Sam studied the heights around them. “If you’re right, Maggie, we must
be among that cluster of volcanic peaks east of our camp.” He nodded his head
to a dark shadow to the south. Another cone, its rocky silhouette masked in
steam, seemed to climb from the south wall itself, towering over their volcanic
valley. “Look how many there are.”
Maggie nodded. “You’re probably
right. This region’s never been explored. Too steep and dangerous to trek
through.”
Denal spoke up, sticking close to
Norman’s side. He wiped his brow with a shirtsleeve. “Warm in here,” he
muttered.
Sam agreed, taking off his Stetson
and swiping back his damp hair. At this altitude, wearing only his vest, he
should be chilled as twilight approached, but instead the breeze was warm,
almost balmy.
“It’s the steam vents,” Maggie
explained. “They’re keeping this place heated and humid.”
“Like some tropical greenhouse,”
Norman said, his eyes on the jungle surrounding the gold dome. “Look at all
this growth.” He struggled to free his camera.
Around them spread a dense forest.
Draped with vines, the tangle of trees spread in all directions. From their
vantage point higher in the valley, they could spot a few open meadows, breaks
in the jungle canopy, mostly near the ubiquitous volcanic vents. Otherwise,
within the walls of the volcanic cone, the forest appeared undisturbed. Under
its insulating canopy, a profusion of wild growth flourished. Giant ferns, with
fronds longer than a man was tall, obscured the forest floor, while hundreds of
orchids with fist-sized yellow blooms hung from the crooks of trees. Even some
form of jungle rose climbed on thorny creepers along limbs and vines.
Norman snapped a few photographs,
while the others wandered along the forest’s edge.
Within this verdant and flowered
splendor, birds whistled and piped in alarm, disturbed by their presence. A
small flock of blue-winged parrots darted across the misty skies. Closer, the
barking calls of monkeys warned them away, echoing off the rock walls. Their
tiny bodies darted and flew among the trees and vines, flashes of fiery fur and
whipping tails.
Beyond this wall of greenery, the
babble of water over rock promised the presence of some spring-fed creek
nearby.
“It’s like some lost Eden,” Norman
said.
Sam nodded, though a seed of worry
took root. He remembered the Latin warning etched on the hematite bands by
Francisco de Almagro: Beware the Serpent of Eden.
A similar thought must have passed
through Maggie’s mind. Her lips were pinched sternly, and her eyes narrowed in
suspicion. “We’ve got company,” she suddenly whispered.
Sam tensed, eyes instantly on the
alert. “What?”
Maggie stood immobile, only her
eyes moved, indicating a direction in which to look.
Behind them, a sudden grind of
metal sounded. The dome was closing back up, their only means of retreat from
the volcanic caldera vanishing.
Sam searched the section of jungle
Maggie had indicated. Finally, he spotted a small face in the shadows, staring
back at him. The figure must have known he had been spotted and rose from his
crouch. He stepped from the dense thicket at the jungle’s edge. From other
spots, seven more men slipped into the clearing around the gold dome.
Mocha-skinned and dark-eyed, the
men were clearly of Quechan heritage. They stood only to about Sam’s shoulder,
but bore spears a good head taller than the Texan. They wore traditional Indian
garb: unadorned haura trousers and shirts fancifully
decorated with parrot and condor feathers.
The leader, wearing a crimson
headband, stepped forward and spoke sternly in his native tongue.
Denal translated, face scrunched.
“He wants us to follow him.”
The small hunter turned and stepped
back to the forest’s edge. He pushed aside the giant frond of a tree fern to
reveal a hidden path. The man ducked under the leafy growth and started down
the trail. The other hunters hung back to ensure Sam’s group followed.
Without any reason yet to fear
them, Sam waved. “Let’s go…maybe they know a way back to the dig.” Still, as he
eyed their long weapons, Sam cinched his Winchester more snugly over his
shoulder. If trouble should arise, he wanted to be ready.
Denal touched Sam’s elbow. The
boy’s eyes were narrowed in suspicion, too. He seemed about to say something,
then shook his head and fished out a bent cigarette from a pocket. He mumbled
something in his native tongue as he slipped the filter to his lips.
“What is it, Denal?”
“Something no right,” he grumbled
but said nothing more. Ahead, the boy helped Norman under the frond and onto
the path.
Sam followed last with Maggie
beside him. As the jungle swallowed them up, they proceeded in silence for
several minutes.
“What do you make of them?” Maggie
finally whispered.
“They’re obviously a Quechan tribe.
Hundreds like them live as hunter-gatherers out in the wilds.”
Maggie pointed a thumb back toward
the clearing. “And they just ignore a dome made of beaten gold?”
Sam pondered her words. She was
right. The hunters had seemed more shocked to see them than the wealth at their
backs. Denal’s consternation also nagged at him. What was wrong here?
He studied the Indians as they
marched onward. They moved silently, spears carried comfortably, pushing vines
from their way. Soon the path crossed a small stream forded by a series of
large stone blocks set in the flow. Who were these hunters?
The answer to his question appeared
around a bend in the path.
The thick jungle opened, and a
village appeared as if by magic. The cluster of stone homes surrounded a
central plaza and spread in terraced steps up into the jungle itself; almost
all of the homes were half-buried in the growth, shadowed by the high canopy.
Jungle flowers festooned stone rooftops and grew in planted yards. The fragrant
blooms negated the sulfurous smell of the volcanic vents.
Sam stared, his mouth gaping open.
Llamas and small pigs moved around the narrow streets, while men and women came
to doorways and windows to gawk equally at the four strangers. There had to be
over a hundred inhabitants here, dressed in poncholike cushmas,
or sleeved shirts with small capes, or long Indian anacu
tunics.
The homes were as equally decorated
as their inhabitants: lintels and window edges were sculpted elaborately, while
silver and gold adornments glinted in the setting sun’s haze.
Norman limped ahead, leaning on
Denal’s shoulder. From a doorway, one of the younger women, dressed in a wool llikla shawl, nervously approached Norman. She held out a
loose wreath of blue flowers woven with yellow parrot feathers. The thin
photographer smiled and bowed down. Taking the opportunity, the woman darted
forward and slipped the handwoven adornment over the photographer’s head.
Norman straightened as she giggled, a hand over her lips, and danced away.
Norman turned to Denal, fingering
the gift with an embarrassed grin. “Does this clash with my shirt?” he asked,
and limped onward. The photographer seemed oblivious to what they had stumbled
upon.
Sam and Maggie, though, stood
frozen at the village’s edge. In his mind, Sam stripped away the jungle growth
from the homes and erased the people and animals from the streets. He
recognized the layout of this town. The central plaza, the spoked avenues, the
terraced homes…it was the same spread as the necropolis below!
Maggie grabbed his elbow. “Do you
know what this place is?” she whispered, staring up at Sam with huge eyes.
“This is not some Quechan tribe, eking out a fist-to-mouth existence.”
Sam nodded. “These are Denal’s
ancestors,” he said, coming to the same conclusion as Maggie, his voice numb
with shock.
They had stumbled upon a living Incan village!
As the sun set, Philip heard a
noise he had not thought to hear: the rasp of static from the camp’s radio. He
jolted to his feet, knocking over the camp stool on which he had been sitting.
Friar Otera and the other Dominicans were all down at the excavation site. A
pair of experienced miners had arrived just past noon today and were helping
direct the Quechan laborers.
Philip tore open the communication
tent’s flap and dived into its shadowed interior. He snatched up the receiver.
“Hello!” he yelled into the handpiece. “Can anyone hear me?”
Static…then a jittery response.
“…ilip? It’s Sam! The walkie-talkie’s battery…We made it out of the caves…”
Garbled static flared up.
Philip adjusted the radio’s
antennae. “Sam! Come back! Where are you?”
Words fought through the static.
“We’re in one of the volcanoes…east, I think.”
Philip’s heart sang. If the others
were safe, there was no further reason to continue to excavate the shaft. It
was all over! He’d be able to leave soon! He pictured his own apartment back at
Harvard, where his books, computer, and papers were all neatly organized and
cataloged. He glanced down at his torn shirt and filthy pants. After this
expedition, he was done with fieldwork forever!
His glee made him miss some of
Sam’s last words, but it no longer mattered. “…helicopters or some other aerial
surveillance. We’ll set up a signal fire on the ridge. Search for us!” Sam
asked one final question. “Have you got word to Uncle Hank yet?”
Philip frowned and hit the
transmitter. “No, but I’m sure word’s reached Cuzco by now. Help’s arriving
here already. It shouldn’t be long.”
A squelch of static erupted when
Philip released the button.
Sam’s voice was more faded. “You
won’t believe what we’ve found up here, Philip!”
He rolled his eyes. Like he really
gave a damn. But Sam’s next words drove away even his profound apathy: “We’ve
found a lost Incan tribe!”
Philip hit the transmit button.
“What?”
“…too long a story…battery
weak…call same time tomorrow.”
“Sam, wait!”
“Search for our signal fire!” Then
the static ground away all further communication.
Philip tried for another few
minutes to raise Sam again, but to no avail. Either the battery had grown too
weak, or the bastard had switched off his walkie-talkie. Philip slammed the
receiver in place. “Fucker!”
Suddenly the slap of canvas drew
his attention around. The slender figure of Friar Otera slid within the tent.
The tall monk straightened by the doorway, outlined by the setting sun behind
him, his face masked in shadows. “Who were you talking to?” the man
asked—harshly.
Philip guessed the monk was
fatigued by the day’s efforts at digging. Standing, Philip welcomed him further
inside. “It was Sam!” he said excitedly. “He and the others made it out of the
caverns!”
Philip was pleased to see the man’s
shocked expression. “How? Where are they?”
After quickly retelling Sam’s
story, Philip concluded, “We’ll need some way to spot his signal fire…a
helicopter or something.”
The friar nodded, eyes hooded.
“That’s good,” he mumbled.
“But that’s not even the biggest
news,” Philip said smugly, as if the discovery had been his own. “Sam thinks
he’s found an actual group of Incas up there, some lost tribe.”
Friar Otera’s eyes flicked toward
the student.
Philip gasped at what he glimpsed
in those hard eyes, something feral and dangerous. He stumbled back a step,
tripping over a discarded mug. By the time he caught himself, Friar Otera was
already at his side, gripping his elbow tightly.
“Are you all right?” the man asked.
Cringing, Philip glanced up.
Whatever he had seen in the friar’s eyes had vanished. Only warmth and concern
shone in the monk’s face. It must have been a trick of the light before. Philip
cleared his throat. “I…I’m fine.”
Friar Otera released his elbow.
“Good. We wouldn’t want anything to happen to you.” He turned away. “I must
share your good news with the others,” he said, then bowed out of the tent.
Philip let out a long sigh of
relief. He didn’t know what it was about Friar Otera that made him so edgy. The
guy was only a dirt-water monk after all. Still, Philip had to rub the goose
bumps from his arms. Something about that man…
Sitting with Maggie on the stairs
at the edge of the plaza, Sam stared at the firelit celebrations below. Torches
and fires dotted the open space in the center of the Incan village. Musicians
bore instruments of every size and shape: drums made of llama skin, tambourines
ringing with tiny silver cymbals, trumpets made of gourds and wood, flutes
constructed of reeds or various lengths of cane, even several pipes fashioned
from the large pinions of the mountain condor. All across the town, voices sang
in celebration at the arrival of the newcomers.
Earlier, before the sun had set,
the village shaman, or socyoc, had tossed his
mystical chumpirun, a set of small colored pebbles,
upon the ground to tell their fortune. The grim-faced, tattooed man had studied
the stones, then risen up, arms high, and declared Sam’s group to be emissaries
of Illapa, the god of thunder. He had ordered this
night’s celebration in their honor.
Against their objections, the small
group had been bustled off and treated like visiting royalty. Washed, groomed,
and dressed in clean native wear, the team had regathered for the night’s feast
and celebration. The dinner had been endless, course after course of local
fare: roasted guinea pig, bean stew with bits of parrot meat, a salad made of
spinachlike amaranth leaves chopped with a type of native carrot called arracacha, and herbed pies made from oca,
a relative of the sweet potato. After not eating for so long, the group had
stuffed themselves, refusing nothing offered lest it offend their hosts.
Only Norman had eaten sparingly. He
had started to run a fever from his injuries and retired early to the
stone-and-mud hut assigned them. Denal had gone shortly thereafter, not sick,
just sleepy-eyed and exhausted, leaving Sam and Maggie to oversee the remainder
of the night’s celebration alone.
Yawning, Sam ran a hand over the
knee-length beige tunic he now wore and readjusted the short, knotted yacolla cape that he had slung over one shoulder.
Unwilling to part with his Stetson, he tugged the hat lower over his brow.
Once comfortable, he leaned back on
his hands. “How could these folks have remained hidden here for so long?” he
mumbled.
Maggie stirred beside him. “Because
they wanted it that way.” She was decked out in a long sienna tunic that
reached to her ankles. It was secured by an ivory white sash and matching
shawl. She fingered the gold dragon pin holding the shawl in place. “Did you
notice that most of the village is purposefully hidden in the jungle? Almost
camouflaged. I doubt even satellite scans could pick out this hidden town,
especially with all the geothermal activity around here. It would confound any
thermal scans.”
Sam stared at the misted night
skies. Few stars could be seen. “Hmm. You may be right.”
Maggie changed the tack of the
conversation. “So, Sam, how does it feel to be a messenger of the thunder god?”
He smiled lazily. “Prophetic
pebbles or not, I think that shaman must have heard echoes of our rifle blasts.
I think that’s why he associated us with Illapa.”
Maggie glanced quickly at him. “I
never even considered that. It’s a great theory.”
Sam enjoyed the praise, grinning
slightly.
“But what about the necropolis down
below? How does that fit in? It’s almost a mirror image of this place.”
Sam frowned. “I don’t know. But
considering its location, it may have something to do with the Incas’ three
levels of existence. If this village was considered to be part of the middle or
living world—of cay pacha—then the village below
this one would certainly be thought of as uca pacha,
the lower world.”
“The world of the dead.”
“Exactly…a necropolis.”
Maggie’s brows drew together in
thought. “Hmm…maybe. But if your theory is sound, where’s the third village?”
“What do you mean?”
“The Incas were very structured. If
they built matching cities in the lower and middle worlds, where’s the village
of the upper world, of janan pacha?”
Sam shook his head, growing tired.
“I don’t know. But we’ll get more answers tomorrow. For now, let’s just enjoy
the celebration in our honor.” He raised his mug of chicha,
a fermented corn drink, and took a long sip. He grimaced at the bitter taste.
Maggie settled back. “Not to your
liking,” she teased.
“It’ll never replace a cold bottle
of Bud. But, sheesh, this brew packs quite a kick.” Sam found himself becoming
a little light-headed. By then, the celebration had run long into the night.
Even the moon had set.
Maggie smiled and leaned into him a
bit. He took a chance and put his arm around her. She did not pull away or make
a joke of it. Sam took another swig of the corn beer. He hoped the moment’s
warmth was not all from the fermented brew.
Before them, a new group began an
elaborate dance around the central fire pit. The celebrants, both men and
women, wore gold or silver face paint and danced in precise rhythm to a tune
played on the skull of some jungle deer, the horns of which acted as a flute.
“It’s beautiful,” Maggie said.
“Like a dream. Stories we’ve read come to life.”
Sam pulled her closer to him. “I
only wish Uncle Hank were here to see it.”
“And Ralph, too,” Maggie said
softly.
Sam glanced at the woman in his
arms. She was staring into the firelight, her eyes ablaze, the warm glow
bathing her face.
She must have sensed his scrutiny.
She turned to him, their faces close, too close. “But you were right, Sam,” she
said softly. “Before…when you said the dead don’t begrudge the living. You were
right. We’re alive…we’re here. And we mustn’t waste this gift with guilt an’
sorrow. That would be the true tragedy.”
He nodded. “It’s wrong to live a
life as if you were dead.” His voice was just an exhaled whisper. Sam
remembered the years following the loss of his parents. He and his uncle had
shared their sorrow together, leaning on each other. But in truth, the two of
them were not unlike Maggie. In part, they, too, had barred outsiders, using
their shared tragedy as a barrier against getting close to others. He didn’t
want to do that any longer.
Sam dared to inch a little nearer
to Maggie.
She stared up into his eyes, her
lips slightly parted.
He leaned nearer, his heart
thundering in time with the drums—then suddenly the music ended. A heavy
silence descended over the plaza.
Maggie glanced away at the
interruption, ending the intimate moment. “It seems the party’s over.”
Sam’s heart squeezed tight in his
chest. He could not trust his voice. He swallowed hard, freeing his tongue.
“I…I guess it is,” he choked out.
A figure crossed toward them. It
was the shaman, whose name they had learned was Kamapak. On his tattooed face,
he wore a wide smile as he approached, climbing the stairs. Sam and Maggie rose
to greet him. He babbled in his native tongue, arms lifted in both thanks and
farewell, clearly wishing them a good night’s rest. Already the fires around
them were being extinguished.
Standing, Sam’s head spun slightly
with the effects of the chicha beer. Steadying
himself for a breath, he stared at the fading flames, a mirror of his own inner
hopes and passions. He turned away. It hurt too much to look.
Chaperoned by the shaman, Sam and
Maggie drifted back toward the rooms assigned them. The Inca still talked
excitedly as he led them.
Sam wished Denal were still there
to translate for them, but he was able to discern a few familiar words.
Something about one of their mythic gods, Inkarri. Not understanding, Sam just
smiled and nodded in the universal manner of the nonfluent.
When they reached the row of homes
bordering the square, Kamapak finally grew quiet and patted Sam on the
shoulder. The shaman bowed his head, then whisked away to oversee the end of
the celebration.
Maggie paused, watching him leave.
Her room was separate from the men’s. Sam stood awkwardly, wondering if that moment
ago could be rekindled, but Maggie’s next words doused cold water on those
embers. “What was all that about Inkarri?”
Sam shrugged, recalling the Inca’s
epic story. Supposedly, Inkarri was the living son of Inti, the Sun, and the
last god-king of his people. It was said he was captured by the Spanish
conquerors and beheaded, but his decapitated head did not die. It was stolen
away and hidden in a sacred cave—where, to this day, it had supposedly been
growing a new body. When the body was complete, Inkarri would rise again and
restore the Incas to their former splendor.
But this was, of course, just plain
myth. The last leader of the Incas had been Atahaulpa. He had been garroted to
death by the Spanish army led by Pizarro in 1533, and his body cremated. Sam
shook his head. “Who knows what the shaman was suggesting? Maybe in the morning
we could have Denal talk to him.”
Maggie frowned. “It’s still
strange. I’d always thought that myth originated when tales of the Spanish
conquest were mixed with Biblical stories brought by missionaries, stories of
Christ’s resurrection. It’s odd to hear the socyoc
of this isolated tribe recounting the same tale here.”
“Well, whatever the source, he sure
as hell seemed excited.”
Nodding, Maggie continued to stare
out at the terraced village as the campfires were extinguished and the torches
ground into the sand. Darkness spread across the stone homes, swallowing them
away. Finally, she sighed and turned away. “I guess I’d better turn in. We have
a long day tomorrow. Good night, Sam.”
He waved her off, then turned to
the reed mat that hung over his own door. As he pushed aside the barrier,
stories of Incan gods faded into the background, replaced by the memory of
Maggie staring up a him, eyes bright with the promise of passion. Sam’s chest
still ached at the untimely interruption.
Maybe he had read too much into
that fiery moment. Still, he knew the memory of her lips would haunt his dreams
this coming night.
Sighing, he ducked into his room.
Friday, August 24, 6:30 A.M.
Cuzco, Peru
Joan had not
slept all night. She sat at the small desk in her cell, a tiny oil lamp
illuminating her work. The crinkled sheet of yellow legal paper was spread upon
the wormwood desk. The sliver of a pencil in her hand was now worn dull, the
eraser rubbed down to its metal clasp. Still, she worked at deciphering the row
after row of symbols. It was her handwritten copy of the coded message found on
the back of Friar Francisco de Almagro’s crucifix. Nobody had thought to confiscate
the paper from her, but why would they? No one but she and Henry knew the
significance of the scrawled symbols.
Joan tapped the pencil against her
lips. “What were you trying to warn us about?” she mumbled for the thousandth
time since returning to her cell after dinner last night. She had been unable
to sleep, her mind fraught both with worry over her imprisonment and curiosity
about the revelations in the Abbey’s laboratory.
And her fellow prisoner down the
hall had offered her no solace.
After learning of his nephew’s
danger, Henry had grown distant from her, his eyes hard and angry, his manner
closed. He had not spoken a single word over dinner. As a matter of fact, he
had hardly touched his lamb chops. Any attempt of hers to allay his fears was met
with a polite rebuff.
So Joan had returned to her cell,
tense and anxious. At about midnight, she had begun working on the code after
her failed attempt at slumber.
Joan stared at her night’s work.
Large sections of the message had been translated, but many gaps still existed.
Her success so far was mostly due to the one large clue provided by Abbot Ruiz
himself: the name el Sangre del Diablo. From the
wide variety of runelike symbols, Joan had already estimated each mark
corresponded to a letter of the alphabet, a simple replacement code. So it was
just a matter of finding a matching sequence of symbols that would correspond
to the same sequence of letters in el Sangre del Diablo.
She had prayed that somewhere in the cryptogram the friar would mention the
name.
And he had!
With that handful of symbols now
assigned specific letters, it was just a matter of trial and error to decipher
the rest of the cryptogram. But it was still difficult. She was far from fluent
in Spanish. She wished Henry had been there to help her—especially since it was
so disconcerting to realize that the tidbits she had deciphered so far were
glimpses into a man’s last words, his final warning to the world.
She held the paper up. A chill
passed through her as she read: Here is my last willed
words. May God forgive me…the Serpent of Eden…pestilence…. Satan’s Blood
corrupts God’s good work…Prometheus holds our salvation…pray…may the Serpent
never be loosed.
Sighing, Joan laid down her pencil
and paper, then rubbed her tired eyes. This was the best she could accomplish.
Friar de Almagro had been either insane or scared witless, but after what she
had witnessed in the vault below, Joan could not be sure his ravings didn’t
hold some kernel of truth. Whatever he had found, it had terrified him.
The sound of approaching footsteps
echoed down the hall, interrupting her reverie.
Quickly, she folded the yellow
paper and pocketed it again. If she had a private moment with Henry, she would
get his feedback…that is, if he would listen to her. She remembered how
stubborn Henry had been as a youth, full of deep moods that she could never
touch back then. But she wouldn’t let that stop her now. Even if she had to
twist his arm, she would make him hear her out. Francisco de Almagro had feared
something up in the mountains, something associated with the mysterious metal.
If Henry’s nephew was in the thick of things up there, Henry had best listen to
her.
A sharp knock on her door was
followed by a voice. “The abbot wishes to see you both.” The curt voice was
Carlos’s. Joan swung around as a jangle of keys unlocked her door.
Now what?
Henry sat once again in the abbot’s
study. Rows of books lined the walls, and the wide windows were cracked open
upon a view of the Church of Santo Domingo, its cross bright in the morning
sunlight. Behind him, another monk stood guard, pistol in hand.
But Henry saw none of it as he sat
huddled in on himself. In his mind’s eye, he pictured Sam buried under piles of
rubble and tons of granite blocks. His fists clenched. It was his fault. What
had he been thinking when he left the excavation site to a handful of
inexperienced students? He knew the answer. He had been blinded by the
possibility of proving his theory. Nothing else had mattered. Not even Sam’s
safety.
The creak of heavy doors announced
the arrival of someone else. Henry glanced back over his shoulder to see Joan
escorted in by the dark-eyed Carlos. Her eyelids were puffy, and from the
wrinkled state of her blouse and pants, it looked like any attempts at sleep
had failed her, too.
Joan offered Henry no smile when
she entered the room. But why should she? She was yet another person whose life
had been threatened by Henry’s folly. He had reentered her life only to
endanger it.
“Sit down,” Carlos ordered the
woman roughly. “Abbot Ruiz will be joining you shortly.” The friar then mumbled
something in Spanish to the other guard, his words too rushed and quiet for
Henry to make out. Then Carlos left.
Joan sank into the other cushioned
chair before the wide mahogany desk. “How are you holding up?” she asked.
Henry did not feel like talking,
but she deserved at least the courtesy of a response. “Okay. How about you?”
“The same. It was a long night.”
Joan glanced toward the guard and leaned a little closer. She touched Henry’s knee,
feigning intimacy, just two lovers consoling one another. Her words were no
more than soft breaths. “I think I’ve deciphered most of the code on your
mummy’s crucifix.”
Despite his despair, Henry was
jolted. “What?”
His startled reaction drew the eye of
the guard. The monk glared at him, lifting his pistol higher.
Henry lowered his voice, then
reached and touched Joan’s cheek. It did not require much acting to play the
lover of this woman. “What do you mean?” he whispered. “I tossed the cross away
back at the lab.”
Joan reached to a pocket in her
blouse and pulled out the corner of a yellow sheet of paper. “My copy.”
Henry’s eyes grew wide. Here he had
been wallowing all night in his own guilt and anger, and Joan had spent the
hours laboring at the crucifix’s cryptogram. Shame flushed his cheeks. But why
should her action surprise him? She had always been so resourceful.
Joan continued in hushed tones, “It
warns that this mysterious metal is dangerous. His last words seemed to be a
garbled warning about some disease or pestilence associated with Substance Z.
Something I think his order knew nothing about…and still doesn’t.”
Henry found himself drawn into the
mystery. He could not help Sam directly from here, but knowledge could be a
powerful weapon. “What was he afraid of?”
Joan shrugged her face. “I couldn’t
decipher it all. There are gaps missing and strange references: the Serpent of
Eden, the Greek myth of Prometheus.” She stared intently at Henry. “I need your
help in figuring it out.”
Henry’s gaze flicked toward the
guard. He wanted to get a peek at her translation, but there was no way with
the guard looking on. “The Serpent of Eden is surely a reference to the tempter
of forbidden knowledge in the Bible, a metaphoric reference to something that
both tantalizes and corrupts.”
“Like Substance Z, perhaps.”
Henry’s brows lowered. “Maybe…”
“But what about the Prometheus
reference?”
Henry shook his head. “I don’t see
that connection at all. He was one of the mythic Titans who stole fire from the
gods and brought it to mankind. He was punished by being chained to a rock and
had his liver eaten out by a huge vulture each day.”
Joan frowned. “Strange…why mention
that?”
Henry leaned back into his chair
and silently pondered the mystery. It was better than uselessly worrying over
Sam. He took off his glasses and rubbed at his eyes. “There must be a reason.”
“That is assuming the man was still
sane when he etched the cross.”
“I don’t know. Let me think about
this. According to Abbot Ruiz, Francisco was pursuing the mother lode, the true
source of el Sangre. He already knew of its
transformational property, so I think your earlier assumption was correct. He
discovered something up in the mountains, something that changed his mind about
the metal.”
“And something that scared the hell
out of him.”
Henry nodded. “But he was also
eventually executed and mummified, suggesting he had been captured by the Incas
after making this discovery. If he wanted to get a warning out to his order, a
message on the cross was a smart move on his part, a calculated chance. He must
have known that the Incan shamans would have left unmolested any personal
items, especially gold, on the body of the deceased. It was his one chance of
getting his message out, even if he did not. He must have hoped his body would
be returned to the Spaniards, rather than mummified and buried like it was.”
“So what does all this suggest?”
Henry turned to Joan, worry in his
eyes. He had no answer.
Any response from Joan was cut off
as the door opened again. Abbot Ruiz marched into the room, his face red from
either exertion or excitement. Carlos followed in his wake and took up a
station beside the other guard. Ruiz continued to his desk, sighing as he eased
his large bulk into his seat. He eyed Henry and Joan for a few silent moments.
“I have good news, Professor Conklin. Word from the mountains reached us early
this morning.”
Henry sat up straighter. “Sam and
the others?”
“You’ll be pleased to hear they’ve
made it out of the buried temple. They’re safe.”
Henry swallowed back a sob of
relief. Joan reached a hand out to him, and he clutched it gratefully. “Thank
God.”
“Indeed you should,” Ruiz said.
“But that is not all.”
Henry raised his eyes. Joan still
held his hand.
“It seems you’ve trained your
nephew well.” Ruiz wore a broad smile.
“What do you mean?” Henry asked,
his voice hard.
“He and his fellow students have
made an astounding discovery up in the mountains.”
Henry’s eyes narrowed.
The abbot leaned back in his chair,
clearly enjoying the suspense. “He’s found a lost Incan tribe, a village
nestled high in a volcanic cone.”
“What?” Shocked, Henry clutched
Joan’s hand harder. He did not know what to make of this pronouncement. Was it
some trick of the abbot’s? But Henry could think of no motive. “Are…are you
sure?” he asked, dismayed.
“That is what we are going to
verify,” Ruiz said. “I’ve spent all morning making arrangements and getting
everything in order for our journey.”
“Our
journey?”
“Yes, both you and I. We’ll need
your expertise up there, Professor Conklin. We’ll also need your presence to
convince your nephew to cooperate fully with us.” Abbot Ruiz quickly told of
Sam’s radioed message and of the students’ escape through caves to the hidden
site of the village. “So you see, Professor Conklin, we don’t know exactly
where this volcano is. There are hundreds in the area. Your nephew has proposed
signaling us by a set of bonfires, and with you alongside us, I’m sure he’ll do
so posthaste.”
Henry sat stunned by the news. It
was too much to assimilate at once. Sam was safe—but if Henry got involved, if
he went along with Ruiz’s plan, then he could put Sam into more danger. On the
other hand, out in the field, perhaps he’d have a chance to warn his nephew,
stop whatever Ruiz schemed. Imprisoned here, he had little chance of doing
anything to help his nephew.
Joan squeezed his hand, clearly
sensing his distress. He found comfort in her grip.
Abbot Ruiz stood up. “We’re set to
leave by helicopter in ten minutes,” he said. “Time is critical.”
“Why?” Henry asked, taking strength
from Joan.
Ruiz stared Henry down. “Because we
have come to believe your nephew has uncovered more than just an Incan tribe.
He may have unearthed the site of el Sangre del Diablo’s
mother lode. Why else would a small clan of Incas still be hiding up there?
Unless they were guarding something.”
Joan and Henry exchanged concerned
glances.
“We must hurry.” The abbot waved to
Carlos, who shuffled forward in his robe, his 9mm Glock again in his hand.
“Move,” the guard said harshly,
jabbing his gun into Henry’s throat.
The abbot seemed oblivious to his
aide’s rough manner. As if washing his hands of the matter, he circled around
the desk and headed to the door.
At gunpoint, Henry and Joan stood.
“Not you,” Carlos said, indicating
Joan. “You’re staying here.”
Joan’s brows crinkled with fear.
Still holding her hand, Henry
pulled her closer. “She comes with me, or I don’t leave.”
By the door, the abbot paused at
the commotion. “Fear not, Professor. Dr. Engel simply remains here to ensure
your cooperation. As long as you obey our orders, no harm will come to her.”
“Fuck that! I’m not going!” Henry
said fiercely.
A nod from the abbot and Carlos
struck faster than Henry could react. The large man swung his arm and slapped
Joan a resounding blow across her face. She fell to the floor, a surprised cry
on her lips.
Henry was instantly at her side,
kneeling beside her.
She lifted her hands from her pale
face. Her fingers were bloody, her lip split.
Henry turned to take in both Ruiz
and Carlos. “You god-damned bastards! There was no need for that!”
“And there is no need for profanity
either,” Ruiz said calmly from the doorway. “The lesson could’ve been much
worse. So I’ll invite you again, Professor Conklin, please come with me. Do not
disobey again, or Carlos will not be so lenient next time.”
Joan nudged Henry away. “Go,” she
said around her tears, her voice shaky. “D…Do as they say.”
He leaned closer to her. He knew he
had to leave. Still…“I can’t abandon you here.”
She pushed to her knees and swiped
at the blood trailing down her chin. “You have to,” she said tremulously, near
to sobbing. Joan then reached out and hugged him, falling into his arms. She
whispered in his ears, her voice instantly dropping from its frightened
demeanor to a firmer tone. “Go, Henry. Help Sam.”
Henry was stunned by the
transformation, suddenly realizing the “shrinking violet” act was for the
benefit of their captors.
Joan continued, “If the bastards
are right about the mother lode being up there, you’re the only one who knows
of Francisco’s warning. So go. I’ll manage what I can from here.”
Henry could find no words to match
this woman’s strength. “But—?”
She hugged him tighter, faking a
sob, then hissed into his ear, “Oh, quit this chauvinistic crap. I thought you
were better than that.” She leaned her cheek against his own. Her voice grew
louder again for the benefit of Carlos and Ruiz. “Oh,
please, do…do whatever they ask of you. For my sake. Just come back to me!”
Even considering the circumstances,
Henry could not hold back a tight grin. He buried his expression in the folds
of her thick raven hair. “Okay, now you’re laying it on a bit too thick.”
She kissed him gently by the
earlobe, her breath hot on his neck, her voice a whisper again. “I meant every
word. You had better come back for me, Henry. I won’t have you disappearing
from my life like you did after college.”
They held each other for a few
silent seconds. Then she shoved him brusquely away. “Go!”
Henry rose to his feet, his neck
still warm from her kiss. He saw new tears in Joan’s eyes that he suspected
were not faked. “I’ll be back,” he said softly to her.
Carlos grabbed his elbow. “Come
on,” he spat sourly, and yanked him away.
Henry did not resist this time. He
turned to the door, but not before catching Joan as she mouthed one final
warning, her bloody fingers touching her breast pocket.
As Henry was led away, Joan’s last
message echoed through his thoughts—both a mystery and a warning.
Beware
the Serpent.
Two things struck Sam when he awoke
the next morning and crawled out of his bed of straw. First, amazement that he
could have slept at all. Around him, scattered throughout the stone room were
countless examples of Incan handiwork: pottery with enameled designs, woven
tapestries hung upon the walls depicting gods in battle, simple wooden utensils
and stone tools. He really was in a living Incan village! He could not believe
the dream from last night was still real.
Second, he realized that the Incas’chicha beer had created the most brain-splintering
hangover he’d ever had. His head pounded like one of the drums from last night,
and his tongue felt as furry as a monkey’s tail. “God, I didn’t even drink that
much,” he groaned. He stretched, adjusted the loincloth he’d donned the day
before, and rolled to his feet. “It must be the altitude,” he decided aloud.
Searching for his tunic, he found
it in a corner and slipped into it. Rounding up his Stetson, he headed toward
the door. He noticed Denal and Norman were already up and about. Their beds
were empty.
Shoving aside the reed mat that
hung across the doorway, Sam blinked against the painful glare of late-morning
sunlight. Too bright for his bleary eyes. Nearby, birds sang from the treetops,
and a scent of lavender almost overpowered the ever-present reek of sulfur from
the volcanic vents. Sam groaned at the morning.
“About time,” Maggie said from
nearby. Norman and Denal were at her side. “You’ll be happy to know the Incas
also developed a form of coffee.”
Sam raised both hands and ambled
toward the sound of her voice. “Give me!”
His eyes slowly adjusted to the
light, and he found his three companions, dressed in matching tunics, gathered
around two women who were working at a small brick stove with an open baking
hearth beneath it. The trio smiled at his sorry state.
He hobbled over to them. Thick
earthenware pots rested on small openings atop the stone oven, bubbling warmly
with morning porridges and stews. The smell of baking bread arose from the
oven, along with another odor he could not place.
Sam bent and took a deep whiff from
the oven, clearing his head of the cobwebs.
“Llama dung,” Maggie said.
Sam straightened. “What?”
“They use llama dung to fuel their
ovens.”
Taking a step back, Sam frowned.
“Delightful.”
The pair of young Incan women who
were cooking chattered amongst themselves, skirting quick glances toward the
strangers. One of them was pregnant, her belly swelling hugely. Sam knew the
work ethic of the Incas was severe. Everyone worked. They had a saying: Ama sua, ama lulla, ama quella. Do not steal, do not lie,
do not be lazy. The only nod toward pampering the pregnant women was the
presence of a low wooden stool, or duho, providing
them with the opportunity to settle their weight while they worked. It was one
of the few pieces of furniture the Incas built.
Sam accepted a mug of a thick
syrupy brew from Maggie and looked at it doubtfully.
“It helps,” Maggie said with a wan
smile. It seemed she had not completely escaped the aftereffects of the wicked
brew either.
Sam sipped at the Incan coffee. It
tasted nutty with a hint of cinnamon. Satisfied that it tasted better than it
looked, he settled in with his drink. He sipped quietly for a few precious
moments. Maggie was right. The Incan coffee helped clear his head, but his
thoughts remained fuzzy at the edges. He swore off chicha
forever. Finally, he lifted his face from the steam of his mug. “So what’s the
morning’s plan?”
Norman answered. “Morning? It’s
almost noon, Sam. I’m ready for a short siesta.” His words were jaunty, but his
pale face gave him away. Sam hadn’t noticed at first, but the photographer’s
skin had a sickly sheen to it. Sam saw how he had to lean heavily on Denal as
he limped away from the wall.
“How’s the leg?” Sam asked.
Norman hiked up the edge of his
tunic. His knee was bandaged, but it was obviously swollen.
One of the women leaned closer,
studying Norman’s leg. She babbled something in Inca. Three pairs of eyes
turned to Denal.
He translated. It was lucky his
Quechan language was so similar to the native Inca from which it was derived.
Otherwise, the group would be hard-pressed to communicate there. “She says
Norman needs to go to the temple.”
“Temple?” Sam said.
“I’m not gonna have some witch
doctor work on me,” Norman said, dropping the edge of his tunic. “I’ll tough it
out until help arrives. Speaking of which, have you tried to reach Philip at
the camp?”
Sam shook his head, worry for the
photographer crinkling his eyes. “I’ll do it now. If we can’t get a helicopter
up here tonight, maybe you’d better consult the witch doctor. The Incas were
known for their proficiency at natural medicines. Even surgery.”
Norman rolled his eyes. “I don’t
think my HMO will cover the costs.”
Sam waved him back to the shelter.
“Then at least go lie down. I’m going to call Sykes right now.”
Denal helped Norman back to the
room. Sam followed to get his walkie-talkie from the pack. He cast a concerned
look at Norman when the man gave out a soft cry as he settled atop the straw
bed. “Make sure he drinks plenty today,” Sam said to Denal. “Once you’ve got
him settled, join me. I’ll need your help in some translation with the
natives.”
Sam then slipped through the reed
covering and stepped a few paces away, clicking on the walkie-talkie. The
battery indicator was in the red range. It would not last much longer without a
recharge. “Sam to base. Sam to base. Over.”
Maggie came over to listen in.
The response was almost immediate.
“About time, Conklin!” Philip whined at him. Static frosted his words.
“Any luck arranging a rescue up
here? Norman’s injured bad, and we need a quick evac.”
The excitement in his fellow
student’s voice could not be completely masked by white noise. “Your uncle’s
coming! The professor! He’s just leaving Cuzco! He should be here with a
helicopter and supplies by dawn tomorrow.”
Maggie clutched Sam’s elbow
excitedly.
Philip continued, “I didn’t get to
speak to him. Radio’s still out. But word passed from Cuzco, to the nearby town
of Villacuacha, then to our base by a makeshift walkie-talkie network some
monks set up this morning. Word just reached us this past hour!”
Sam’s emotions were mixed. Uncle
Hank was coming! But still a frown marred his lips. He had hoped for rescue today, but such a hope was not realistic. They were
hundreds of miles away from anyplace with even a crude form of airport. He
clicked the transmit button. “Great news, Philip! But get that helicopter up
here as soon as possible. Light a fire under Uncle Hank if you can. We’ll keep
a fire burning here all night long, just in case he’s able to arrive any
earlier.” The red light on his battery indicator began blinking ominously. “I
gotta go, Philip! I’ll call you at sunset for an update.”
Static ate most of Philip’s
response. The scratchy white noise began tweaking Sam’s residual headache. He
cursed and clicked the walkie-talkie off. He hoped his last message reached
Philip.
“Dawn tomorrow,” Maggie said,
relief clear in her voice. She turned to stare at the village. “It’ll be great
to have Professor Conklin here.”
Sam stepped next to her. “I’m still
worried about Norman. I really think we should talk to Kamapak, the shaman. See
if the Incas here at least have the equivalent of aspirin or a pain reliever.”
Off to the side, Denal bowed
through the reed mat. He crossed toward them. “Norman sleeps,” the boy said as
he joined them, but his lips were tight with concern.
“Maybe we’d better find that
shaman,” Maggie said. “Can you help us, Denal?”
The youth nodded, and turned toward
the village. “I ask.” He hesitated before going, squinting at the homes. “But
something no right here.”
“What do you mean?”
“There no children,” Denal said,
glancing up at them.
Maggie and Sam frowned at each
other, then stared out at the spread of stone homes. “Sure there are…” Sam
started to say, but his voice died away. They had not noticed any youngsters
when they had arrived yesterday, but the sun had been close to setting. The
celebration had run late into the evening, so the lack of children had not
struck Sam as odd enough to notice.
“He’s right,” Maggie said. “I’ve
been up for at least an hour, and I’ve seen no wee ones either.”
Sam pointed toward where the two
women still worked at the ovens. “But she’s pregnant. The children must be
somewhere. Maybe they’re hiding them from us as a precaution.”
Maggie scrunched up her nose,
unconvinced. “They seemed to accept us so readily. No guards or anything.”
“Let’s go ask,” Sam said, nodding
toward the pregnant Incan woman.
He led the others back to the oven.
Sam nudged Denal. “Ask her where the children are kept.”
Denal stepped closer and spoke to
the woman. She seemed uncomfortable so near the boy. She guarded her belly with
a hand. Her answer was clearly agitated, involving much arm movement and
pointing.
Sam glanced to where she indicated.
She was pointing toward the neighboring volcanic cone that overlooked this
caldera.
Denal finally gave up and turned
back to Sam. “There no children. She say they go to janan
pacha. Heaven.” Denal nodded to the towering volcano.
“Sacrifices, do you think?” Maggie
said, stunned. Infanticide and blood rites with children were not unknown in Incan
culture.
“But all
their children?”
Maggie crossed to the woman. She
cradled her arms and rocked them in the universal sign of baby. “Wawas…wawas…?” she asked, using
the Quechan word for baby. Maggie then pointed to the woman’s large gravid
belly.
The woman’s eyes widened with
shock, then narrowed with anger. She held a hand pressed to her belly. “Huaca,” she said firmly, and spoke rapidly in Quecha.
“Huaca.
Holy place,” Denal translated. “She say her belly be home now only to gods, no
longer children. No children here for many, many years. They all go to temple.”
The woman turned her back on them,
dismissing them. Clearly offended by their line of questioning.
“What do you suppose she’s talking
about, Sam?” Maggie asked.
“I don’t know. But I think we have
another reason now to seek out that shaman.” Sam waved Denal and Maggie to
follow him. “Let’s go find Kamapak.”
Their search ended up being harder
than Sam had thought. Most of the men had gone to work the fields or hunt,
including the shaman. Denal managed to glean some directions from a few of the
villagers who had duties within the town’s limits. Sam’s group soon found
themselves trekking down a jungle path. They passed groves of fruit and avocado
trees being harvested and pruned. And a wide plowed meadow where fields of
grainlike quinoa alternated with rows of corn, chili pepper plants, beans, and
squash. Both men and women worked the fields. In an unplanted area, men were
using tacllas, or foot plows, to turn the soil,
while women helped, using a simple hoe called a lampa.
Maggie and Sam paused to watch them labor, amazed to see these ancient Incan
tools at work.
“I can’t believe this,” Sam said
for the hundredth time that day.
Denal nudged Sam. “This way,” he
said, urging them on.
Sam and Maggie followed, still
looking over their shoulders. They reentered the jungle and within a short time
came upon a clearing. The shaman stood with a handful of other men. Cords of
hewn wood were stacked on sleds. The gathered Incas could have been brothers,
all strong, muscular men. Only the shaman’s tattoos distinguished him from the
others. Kamapak, at first, was startled by their appearance, then smiled
broadly and waved them all forward. He spoke rapidly.
Denal translated. “He welcomes us.
Says we come in time to help.”
“Help with what?”
“Hauling wood back to town. Last
night, at the feast, the many campfires burned their stores.”
Sam groaned, his head still
pounding slightly from his hangover. “Emissaries of the gods, or not, I guess
we’re expected to earn our keep.” Sam took up a position beside Kamapak, taking
up one of the many shoulder straps used to haul the sled. Denal was beside him.
Maggie walked ahead, helping to
clear chunks of volcanic stone and make a path.
With six men acting as oxen,
dragging the sled proved easier than Sam expected. Still, one of the men passed
Sam a few leaves of a coca plant. When chewed, the cocaine in the leaves helped
offset the altitude effects…and his hangover. Sam found his head less achy. He
wondered if the leaves might help Norman’s fever and pain.
Feeling better now, Sam conversed
with the shaman as he hauled on the sled. Denal translated.
Sam’s inquiry about children was
met with the same consternation. “The temple receives our children from our
women’s bellies. This close to janan pacha”—again a
nod to the towering volcanic cone to the south—“the god, Con, has blessed our
people. Our children are his children now. They live in janan
pacha. Gifts to Con.”
Maggie had been listening and
glanced back. Sam shrugged at her. Con was one of the gods of the northern
tribes. In stories, he had epic battles with Pachacamac, creator of the world.
But it was said that it was the god, Con, who created man upon this earth.
“This temple,” Sam asked, speaking
around his wad of bittersweet leaves. “May we see it.”
The shaman’s eyes narrowed. He
shook his head vehemently. “It is forbidden.”
From the man’s strong rebuff, Sam
did not pursue the matter. So much for being emissaries of
the god of thunder, he thought. It seemed Illapa was not high on this
village’s totem pole.
Maggie slipped back to Sam’s side.
She whispered, “I was thinking about Denal’s observation about the missing
children and got to thinking about the village’s makeup. There is another
element of this society that is missing, too.”
“Who?”
“Elders. Old people. Everyone we’ve
seen has been roughly the same age…give or take twenty years.”
Sam’s feet stumbled as he realized
Maggie was right. Even the shaman could not be much older than Sam. “Maybe
their life expectancy is poor.”
Maggie scowled. “Life is pretty
insulated here. No major predators, unless you count those things down in the
deep caves.”
Sam turned to Kamapak and, with
Denal’s help, questioned him about the missing old folk.
His answer was just as cryptic.
“The temple nurtures us. The gods protect us.” From the singsong way the words
were spoken, it was clearly an ancient response. And apparently an answer to
most questions. When Maggie made her own inquiries—into health care and illness
among the members—she received the same answer.
She turned to Sam. “It seems the
old, the young, the frail, and the sick end up there.”
“Do you think they’re being
sacrificed?”
Maggie shrugged.
Sam pondered her words, then turned
to Denal, trying a different tack on this conversation. “Try describing those
creatures we saw in the caves.”
The boy frowned, tiring of his role
as translator, but he did as Sam asked. The shaman’s brows grew dark with the
telling. He called a halt to the sled. His words were low with a hint of threat
as Denal translated. “Do not speak of those who walk through uca pacha, the underworld. They are mallaqui,
spirits, and it is ill to whisper of them.” With those words, the shaman waved
the sled on.
Sam glanced at the volcanic
mountain to the south. “Heaven up there, and hell below us. All the spiritual
realms of the Inca joined in this one valley. A pacariscas,
a magical nexus.”
“What do you think it means?”
Maggie said.
“I don’t know. But I’ll be glad
when Uncle Hank arrives.”
Soon the team of haulers and their
load of wood reached the village’s edge. By now it was well past noon, and the
workers tossed off their harnesses and began meandering into the village
proper. The spread of homes once again was full of chattering and happy people.
It seemed even the workers in the field had returned for a midday rest.
Sam, Maggie, and Denal wandered
back to their own shelters. Ahead, Sam noticed that the women who had been
cooking at the stove were now spooning out roasted corn and stew into stone
bowls. He smiled, suddenly realizing how hungry he was.
“We should wake Norman,” Maggie
said. “He should try an’ eat.”
Denal ran ahead. “I get him,” the
boy called back.
Maggie and Sam took their places in
line before the stove. Other ovens around the village also steamed into the
air, like mini volcanic vents. Like most Incan townships, this village was
broken into distinct ayllu, extended family units or
groupings. Each ayllu had its own open-air kitchen.
Among the Incas, meals were always eaten outdoors, weather permitting.
Reaching the head of the line, Sam
was handed a bowl of steaming stew topped by a ladle of mashed roasted corn.
Poked into it was a small chunk of dried meat, charqui,
jerked llama steak.
Sam was sniffing at it when Denal
burst from the nearby doorway and hurried toward them, his boyish face drawn
and serious.
“What is it?” Maggie asked.
“He gone,” Denal glanced around the
area. “I find his blanket and straw all messed up.”
“Messed up?” Sam asked.
Denal swallowed hard, clearly
worried and scared. “Like he fighting someone.”
Maggie glanced to Sam. “Before we
panic,” he said, “let’s simply ask.” Sam waved Denal back to the pregnant women
dishing stew. The boy interrupted her serving.
Denal spoke rapidly. The woman
nodded, a smile growing on her face. When Denal turned to Sam, he was not
sharing her smile.
“They take Norman to the temple.”
By late afternoon, Joan found
herself ensconced with a young monk in one of the many laboratory cubicles deep
in the heart of the Abbey. Faithful to his word, the abbot had left orders that
Joan be treated as a guest. So her request to observe the Abbey’s researchers
at work was grudgingly allowed—though her personal guard dog was never far
away. Even now, Joan could see Carlos through the observation window. He rested
one palm on his holstered pistol.
A young monk named Anthony drew
back her attention. “Of course, we all have our own personal theories,” he said
matter-of-factly, his English fluent. “It is not as if we let our faith cloud
our experimentation. The abbot always says our faith should withstand the
vigors of science.”
Joan nodded and leaned a bit closer
to the man. They now stood before a bank of computers and monitors. Several
technicians worked a few cubicles down, dressed the same as they were, in
sterile white lab suits, but otherwise they were alone.
Anthony logged onto the computer.
Near his elbow was a tray of minute samples of the Incan metal, row after row
of miniscule gold teardrops embedded in plastic wells. Fresh from the freezer,
a slight fog of dry ice still clung to the tray. She had learned the lab was
trying to learn the nature of the metal in an attempt to accelerate their
desired goal of bringing Christ back to earth. They had already developed
methods to rid the metal of contaminating impurities, heightening the
miraculous abilities of the substance.
Joan studied the teardrop samples.
To test her own theory, she needed one of those pearls of gold. But how? The
samples were so close, but with so many eyes watching, the tray might as well
have been locked behind iron bars. Joan tightened her fists, determined not to
fail in her mission. She needed just a moment’s distraction. Taking a deep
breath, she readied herself.
“I’m almost set,” the young monk
said, working at the keyboard.
And so was she.
Joan leaned her left breast more
firmly against his shoulder as she peered at the tray. She had picked Anthony
as her guide because of the youth’s age; clean-shaven and dark-haired, he could
not be much older than twenty. But besides his impressionable age, she had
selected him from all the others for another reason. When she had first entered
the labs, guarded by Carlos, Joan had noticed how the young man’s eyes had
widened in appreciation. She saw how his gaze had settled upon her breasts,
then darted away. Back at Johns Hopkins, she had taught enough undergraduates
to recognize when one seemed interested in more than just a scholarly
education. Usually, she gently rebuffed any advances, but now she would exploit
these feelings. Cloistered here among the monks, Joan suspected this youth
could be easily unnerved by the attentions of a woman—and from the youth’s
reaction now, she had been proven right.
Anthony swallowed hard, his cheeks
reddening. He pulled away slightly from her touch.
Joan took the advantage. She slid
onto the neighboring stool, one hand crossing to rest on the youth’s knee. “I’d
be most interested in hearing your own theories, Anthony. You’ve been here a
while. What do you think of el Sangre del Diablo?”
She squeezed his knee ever so slightly.
Anthony glanced back to the glass
partition, toward Carlos. Her hand was hidden from view by their bodies. The
young monk did not pull away this time, but his face was almost a shade of
purple. He sat frozen, stiff as a statue. If Joan’s hand had wandered any
higher up his leg, she expected she would have discovered exactly how stiff the
young man was.
She had spent the entire afternoon
brushing against him, touching him, whispering close to his ear. With gentle
cajoling and urging, she had finally guided him to this last lab, where actual
samples of the mysterious metal were being analyzed. Now the truly tricky part
began.
Joan tilted her head, attentive to
the young monk. “So tell me, what do you think the metal is, Anthony?”
He almost choked on his words,
“Maybe nan…nanobots.”
Now it was Joan’s turn to startle,
her hand slipping away from his knee. “Excuse me?”
Anthony nodded rapidly, relaxing
slightly, now able to discourse on familiar territory. “Several of us…the
younger researchers among us…think maybe the metal is actually some dense
accumulation of nanobots.”
“As in nanotechnology?” Joan said.
She had read a few theoretical articles that had discussed the possibility of
building subcellular machines—nanobots—that could manipulate matter at the
molecular or even atomic level. A recent article published in Scientific American described a crude first attempt to
construct such microscopic robots by scientists at UCLA. In her mind, she
remembered her own electron microscope scan of the metal: the tiny particulate
matrix linked together by hooklike appendages. But nanobots? Impossible. The
youth here had obviously been reading too much science fiction.
“Come see,” Anthony said, suddenly
excited to be able to show off for his audience. He reached to the tray and
lifted one of the pellets of metal with a pair of stainless-steel tweezers. He
fed it into the machine before him. “Electron crystallography,” he explained.
“It’s our own design here. It can isolate one unit of the metal’s crystalline
structure and construct a three-dimensional picture. Just watch.” He tapped a
monitor screen with the tweezers.
Joan leaned closer, fishing out her
eyeglasses, forgetting for the moment her seduction of the young monk. When she
had asked Anthony to show her the metal, she hadn’t meant such a close look. But now the scientist in Joan was intrigued.
An image appeared on the screen, in
crisp detail, rotating slowly to show all surfaces. Joan recognized it. A
single microscopic particle of the metal. It was octagonal in shape with six
threadlike appendages: one on top, one on bottom, and four radiating out from
midsection. At the end of each were four tiny clawed hooks, like sparrow’s
talons.
Anthony pointed to the screen with
the tip of a pen. “In overall shape and architecture, it bears a clear
resemblance to a hypothesized nanobot proposed by Eric Drexler in his book Engines of Creation. He theorized a molecular machine in
two sections: computer and constructor.
The nanobot’s brain and brawn, so to speak.” He tapped at the central octagonal
core. “Here’s the central processor, its programmed brain, surrounded by six
nodes, or constructors, that manipulate the arms.” The young monk moved his
pointer along to the thin talonlike hooks. “Here is what Drexler called its
molecular positioners.”
Joan frowned. “And you think this
thing can actually manipulate matter at the molecular level?”
“Why not?” Anthony said. “We have
enzymes in our bodies right now that act as natural organic
nanobots. Or take the mitochondria inside our cells…those organelles are no
more than microscopic power stations, manipulating matter at the atomic level
to produce ATP, or energy, for our cells. Even the thousands of viruses in
nature are forms of molecular machines.” He glanced to her. “So you see, Mother
Nature has already succeeded. Nanobots already exist.”
Joan slowly nodded, turning back to
the screen. “This thing looks almost viral,” she mumbled. Joan had seen blowups
of attacking viral phages. Under the electron microscope, they had appeared
like lunar modules landing on cell membranes, more machine than living
organism. This image reminded her of those viral assays.
“What was that?” Anthony asked.
Joan tightened her lips. “Just thinking
out loud. But you’re right. Even the prions that cause mad cow disease could be
considered nanobots. They all manipulate DNA at the molecular level.”
“Yes, exactly! Organic
nanobots,” he said, his face flushed with excitement. He pointed back at the
screen. “Some of us think this may be the first inorganic
nanobot discovered.”
Joan frowned. Maybe it was
possible. But to what end? she wondered. What is its purpose? She remembered Friar de Almagro’s
warning etched on the crucifix. He had been frightened of some pestilence
associated with the metal. If the monk was correct, was this a clue? Many of
the natural “organic” nanobots she had mentioned to Anthony—viruses,
prions—were disease vectors. She sensed that with more time she could unravel
the mystery. Especially with the use of this facility, she thought, glancing
around the huge laboratory.
But first, she had one experiment
to perform. Before handling disease vectors, it was always best to have a way
of sterilizing them. And the dead friar had hinted at a way in his cryptogram: Prometheus holds our salvation.
Prometheus, the bearer of fire.
Was that the answer? Fire had
always been the great sterilizer. Joan remembered the assessment made by Dale
Kirkpatrick, the metallurgist. He had noted that Substance Z used energy with
perfect efficiency. But what if the metal received too much heat, like from a
flame? Maybe as sensitive as it was, it couldn’t handle such an extreme.
Joan had come down here to test her
theory, to steal a sample of metal on which to experiment. She risked a quick
glance back at Friar Carlos. Her guard dog was clearly bored, too confident in
the defenses of the Abbey to be worried about a mere woman.
Casually, Joan removed her glasses,
then leaned more tightly into Anthony as he reached for a pen. The young man
flinched at the sudden contact and jerked his arm back. His elbow knocked
Joan’s glasses from her hands. She made sure her eyewear landed atop the tray
of precious samples. Small gold droplets danced and rolled across the desktop,
like spilled marbles.
Anthony jumped up. “I’m sorry. I
should have watched what I was doing.”
“That’s okay. No harm done.” Joan
scooted off her stool. She quickly palmed two of the rolling teardrops. Others
tumbled to the floor. Technicians scurried forward to help Anthony gather the
stray samples. Joan backed away.
Carlos appeared suddenly at her
side, gun at the ready. “What happened?”
Joan pointed with one hand, while
quickly pocketing her pilfered samples with the other. She nodded toward the
flurry of activity. “It seems not even this blessed lab can escape Murphy’s
Third Law.”
“And what’s that?”
Joan turned an innocent face toward
Carlos. “Shit happens.”
Carlos scowled and grabbed her by
the elbow. “You’ve been down here long enough. Let’s go!”
She did not resist. She had what
she had come for—and more.
From where he knelt on the
laboratory floor, Anthony raised an arm in farewell. She graced him with a
smile and a wave. The young man deserved at least that.
Carlos quickly led her back through
the underground labyrinth. She thought it fitting that the dregs of the Spanish
Inquisition should end up holing themselves in the equivalent of an Incan
torture chamber. She wondered if the choice of location was purposeful. One
torturer taking up residence after another.
Soon Joan found herself before the
door to her own cell.
Carlos nodded for her to enter.
But Joan hesitated, turning to him.
“I don’t suppose you have a cigarette on you.” She didn’t smoke, but he didn’t
know that. She scrunched up her face in feigned discomfort. “It’s been two
days, and I can’t stand it any longer.”
“The abbot forbids smoking in the
abbey.”
Joan frowned. “But he’s not here,
is he?”
An actual smile shadowed his lips.
He glanced up the hall, as a packet of cigarettes appeared in his hands.
Nothing like the communal secrecy of a closet smoker. He shook out two. “Here.”
She pocketed one and slipped the
other to her lips. “Do you mind?” she mumbled around the filter, leaning toward
him for a light.
The perpetual scowl returned, but he
reached to his robe and removed a lighter. He flamed the tip of her cigarette.
“Thanks,” she said.
He just nodded toward the door of
her cell.
She backed up, pulled the latch,
and entered her cell.
“Those things will kill you,”
Carlos mumbled behind her, closing and locking the door.
Joan heard his footsteps retreat,
then leaned against the door with a long sigh, smoke trailing from her lips.
She held back a wracking cough. She had done it. After allowing herself a few
moments to savor her victory, she pushed off the door and set to work. The
missing samples might be discovered.
She crossed to the small desk and
sat down. Removing the cigarette from her lips, she carefully rested it on the
edge of the table. Suddenly fearing hidden cameras, Joan hunched over her desk
and slipped out the few abstracts and articles on nanotechnology that the young
monk had sent her. She planned on reading more about the young monk’s theory.
As she scooted the papers aside, a highlighted sentence from a personal paper
caught her eye: We have come to believe that each
particulate structure of the metal may actually be a type of microscopic
manufacturing device. But this raises two questions. To what purpose was it
designed? And who programmed it?
Joan straightened slightly, pondering
these last two questions. Nanotechnology? She again
pictured the nanobot’s crystalline shape and hooked appendage arms. If the
young researcher was correct, what the hell was the purpose of this strange
metal? Had Friar de Almagro long ago discovered the answer? Was this what
terrified him?
Leaning over the desk to cover her
subterfuge, Joan slipped out one of the two gold droplets. Regardless of the
answer, she knew one thing for sure. The metal had terrified the mummified
friar, and he had possibly hinted at a way to destroy it.
Joan rolled the gold tear across
the oak tabletop. Now warmed, the metal was like a piece of soft putty. She had
to handle it carefully. Using her pen, she scooped a tiny bit onto the pen’s
tip and wiped it on the desktop. She had to be frugal. The test sample was
about the size of a small ant.
Once done, she retrieved her
cigarette, knocked off the ash, and lowered its glowing tip toward the metal.
“Okay, Friar de Almagro. Let’s see if Prometheus is our salvation.”
Licking her lips, she touched the
gold.
The reaction was not loud, no more
than a firm cough, but the result was fierce. Joan’s arm was thrown back. The
cigarette flew from her fingers. Woodsmoke curled into the air. Her own gasp of
surprise was louder than the explosion. She waved a hand through the smoke. A
hole had been blown clear through the oak desktop.
“My God,” she said, thanking her
stars that she hadn’t used the entire teardrop of metal. It would have taken
out the entire desk and probably the wall behind it.
She glanced to the door, listening
for footsteps. No one had heard.
Grimly, she stood and stepped to
the door. She touched the lock, a plan coming to mind. She fingered the
remaining golden samples, weighing them, calculating. She must get word out—especially
to Henry.
But did she have enough of the
volatile metal to blast her way to freedom? Probably not…She stepped away from
the door. She would bide her time until the right moment.
She must wait, be as patient as
Friar de Almagro. It had taken him five hundred years to get his message out.
Joan stared at the smoldering hole in the desk—but someone had finally heard
him.
As the sun set, Henry waited while
the large helicopter refueled at the jungle-fringed landing strip. The abbot’s
crew of six men worked to load the final supplies into the cargo bay. Henry
stood off to the side, at the edge of the dilapidated runway. Rotorwash
scattered empty oil cans and trash across the hard-packed dirt strip. Nearby,
in the shadow of a wooden shack, Abbot Ruiz, who had discarded his robes and
stood dressed in a khaki safari outfit, argued with the pinched-face Chilean
mechanic. It seemed the price of petrol was a heated debate.
Henry turned his back on them. Off
to his left, two of the abbot’s armed acolytes stood guard over him, ensuring
that he, a sixty-year-old professor, did not make a break for the jungle. But
the guards were unnecessary. Even if he could disarm the guards and bolt, Henry
knew he would not survive ten steps into that jungle.
Beyond the edge of the forest,
Henry had caught flashes of sunlight on metal, guerrillas hidden from sight,
protecting their investment. This weed-choked strip was clearly a base for drug
and gun smugglers. Henry also noted the crates of Russian vodka stacked by the
side of the shack. Black-market central, he judged.
He resigned himself to his fate.
They had traveled all afternoon from Cuzco to this unmarked landing strip. From
there, he estimated it would be a four-hour hop to another secret refueling
stop near Machu Picchu, then another three to four hours to reach the ruins.
They should arrive just as the sun rose tomorrow.
He had until then to devise a way
to thwart the abbot’s group.
Henry recalled his brief contact
with Philip Sykes. The student had clearly sounded relieved, but fear also
traced his voice. Henry cursed himself for getting not only his own nephew into
this jam, but all the other students, too. He had to find some way to protect
them. But how?
A voice called out from near the
helicopter. The tanks were topped and ready for the next leg of the journey.
“Finish loading!” Ruiz yelled back
over the growl of the rotors. The abbot passed a fistful of bills to the
tight-lipped Chilean. It seemed a price had been set.
Beside the helicopter, the last
crates of excavation and demolition equipment still waited to be loaded. Among
the gear, Henry noted four boxes with Cyrillic lettering burned into the wooden
side planks. Clearly Russian contraband: grenades, AK-47 assault rifles,
plastique. Lots of armament for an archaeological team,
Henry thought sourly.
The abbot waved for Henry’s guards
to herd him back toward the pair of helicopters. Henry was under no delusions.
He was just one more piece of equipment, another tool to be used, then
discarded. Once the abbot had what he wanted, Henry suspected he would end up
like Dr. Kirkpatrick back at Johns Hopkins, lying facedown, a bullet in the
back—as would Joan, Sam, and the other students.
Henry was led back to the
helicopter. He knew better than to resist. As long as Joan was captive, he had
to wait, alert for any opportunity that might arise. As Henry crossed the hard
dirt runway, he thought back to their last moment together. He remembered the
scent of her hair, the brush of her skin as she whispered in his ear, the heat of
her breath on his neck. His hands grew clammy thinking about the danger she
faced. No harm must come to her. Not now, not later. He would find a way to
free her.
Abbot Ruiz was all smiles when
Henry reached the waiting helicopter. “We’re off, Professor Conklin,” he
hollered, and climbed into the cabin. “Up to your ruins.”
Frowning at the man’s jovial
manner, Henry was nudged by a guard to follow. Once inside, Henry strapped
himself into the seat beside the abbot.
Leaning his large bulk forward,
Ruiz talked to the pilot, their heads together so they could hear each other.
The pilot pointed to his radio headpiece. When Ruiz turned back to Henry, his
smile had faded away. “There seems to be more trouble up there,” he said.
Henry’s heart beat harder in his
chest. “What are you talking about?”
“Your nephew had brief contact with
the student at the ruins. It seems that the National
Geographic photographer has got himself into a bit of a bind.”
Henry remembered Philip’s
description of Norman’s injury. He had not been allowed to talk long enough to
get any details, other than that the photographer was hurt and needed medical
attention. “What’s the matter?”
The abbot was climbing back out of
the helicopter. “Change in plans,” he said with a deep frown. “I need to haggle
for more fuel, enough to take us directly to the ruins. No more stops.”
Henry grabbed Ruiz’s arm. “What’s
happening?”
One of his guards knocked Henry’s
hand away, freeing the abbot. But Ruiz answered, “Your nephew seems to think
the Incas are going to sacrifice the photographer.”
Henry looked startled.
Abbot Ruiz patted Henry’s knee.
“Don’t worry, Professor Conklin. We might not be able to rescue the
photographer. But we’ll get up there before the others are killed.” Then the
large man ducked under the idling rotors, holding his safari hat atop his head.
Henry leaned back into his seat,
clenching his fists. Bloodrites. He had not even imagined that possibility but,
considering the Incan religious ceremonies, he should have! Sam and the others
were now trapped between two bloodthirsty enemies—the disciples of the Spanish
Inquisition and a lost tribe of Incan warriors.
From outside the window, Henry saw
the abbot give the pilot a thumbs-up as lackeys of the guerrillas rolled two
spare fuel tanks toward the waiting helicopter.
Narrowing his eyes, Henry suspected
it was not altruism on the abbot’s part that motivated this change in plans. It
was not to save the other students’ lives, but to protect Ruiz’s stake in what
might lie up there. If Sam and the others were killed, the site of the Sangre mother lode might be lost, possibly for centuries
again. Abbot Ruiz was not taking any chances. Another two fistfuls of bills
passed to the now-smiling Chilean.
Under the carriage of the
helicopter, Henry felt the bump and scrape as the spare fuel tanks were loaded
in place. The abbot crossed back toward the helicopter, hurrying.
Henry leaned his head back, a soft
groan escaping his throat.
Time was running out—for all of
them.
Maggie watched Sam stalk back and
forth across the stone room, like a prodded bull awaiting the ring. He held his
Stetson in a white-knuckled grip, slapping it repeatedly against his thigh.
With their own clothes clean and dry, he had changed back into his Wrangler
jeans and vest. Maggie suspected his change in dress was a reflection of Sam’s
anger and frustration with the Incas.
Though she understood Sam’s
attitude, she and Denal still wore the loose Incan wear, not wanting to offend
their hosts.
Sam had tried all afternoon to get
the shaman to allow them access to the temple or to bring Norman back.
Kamapak’s answer was always the same; Sam could translate it himself by now:
“It is forbidden.” And with no way of knowing where this sacred temple was
hidden, they could not plot any rescue. The forested valley easily covered a
thousand acres. They were at the mercy of the Incas.
“I contacted Philip and let him
know the situation,” Sam said, speaking rapidly, breathless, “but he’s no
help!”
Maggie stepped forward and stopped
Sam’s pacing with a touch to his arm. “Calm down, Sam.”
Sam’s eyes were glazed with guilt
and frustration. “It’s my fault. I should’ve never left him alone. What was I
thinking?”
“They’d welcomed us as part of
their tribe, accepted us warmly. There was no way you could’ve anticipated
this.”
Sam shook his head. “Still, I
should have taken precautions. First, Ralph…now Norman. If only I had…if I had
just—”
“What?” Maggie asked, now grabbing
Sam’s arm in an iron grip. She was going to make him listen. His ranting and
breast-beating was doing them no good. “What would you have done, Sam? If you
had been there when the Incas came to take Norman, what do you think you could
have done to stop them? Any resistance would probably have gotten us all
killed.”
Sam shuddered under her grip, the
glaze clearing from his eyes. “So what do we do? Wait while they pick us off
one at a time?”
“We use our heads, that’s what we
do. We need to think clearly.” Maggie let Sam go, trusting him to listen now.
“First, I don’t think they’re going to pick us off. Norman was injured, so he
was taken to the temple. We aren’t hurt.”
“Maybe…” Sam glanced at Denal, who
stood by the reed mat that covered their doorway, peeking out. Sam lowered his
voice. “But what about him? They take children there, too.”
“Denal is past puberty. To the
Incas, he’s an adult. I doubt he’s at risk.”
“But did you see how they stare at
him when he passes? It’s like they’re curious and a little confused.”
Maggie nodded. And
fearful, too, she added silently. But she did not want to set Sam off again.
Denal spoke up from the doorway.
“People come.”
Maggie heard them, too. Those who
approached were not being secretive. The chattering of many excited voices
sounded from beyond their shelter. Some were raised in song.
Sam crossed to join Denal. “What’s
going on?”
Denal shrugged, but Maggie saw his
hands tremble a bit as they held the reed mat open. Sam placed a protective
hand on the boy’s shoulder and took up his Winchester in the other. Armed now,
Sam pulled back the covering. The Texan stepped out, his back straight,
confrontational.
Maggie hurried to join them. She
didn’t want Sam doing anything rash.
Outside, the sun had fully set.
Night had cloaked the terraced village while they had discussed Norman’s
plight. Throughout the spread of homes, a scatter of torches bloomed, bright as
stars in the darkness, while the full moon overhead served as the only other
illumination.
As they watched, the neighboring
plaza filled with a growing number of Incas. Some bore torches, while others
held aloft pieces of flint, striking them together and casting sparks like
fireflies into the night. Across the plaza, a rhythmic drumbeat stirred a
handful of Incan women to dance, their tunics flaring around their legs. In the
center of the square, a fire suddenly flared.
“Another celebration,” Maggie said.
One of the men with the flints
neared, smiling white teeth at them. He sparked his stones, matching the drums’
rhythm. Flutes and pipes joined the chorus.
“It’s like the fuckin’ Fourth of
July,” Sam muttered.
“Definitely a party of some sort,”
Maggie agreed. “But what are they celebrating?” From Sam’s stricken expression,
Maggie suddenly wished she had remained silent. She stepped closer to him,
knowing what he was thinking. Maggie had studied the Incan culture, too. A village
would always celebrate after a blood ritual. A sacrifice was a joyous occasion.
“We don’t know this has anything to do with Norman,” Maggie reasoned.
“But we don’t know it doesn’t,” Sam
grumbled.
Denal, who had been keeping close
to the doorway, suddenly pushed forward. “Look!” he said, pointing.
Across the plaza, the mass of
bodies entering the square parted. A lone figure wandered through them, dressed
in an umber-colored robe and black yacolla cape
knotted at one shoulder. He seemed dazed and walked with a slight drunken sway
to his step.
Sam’s voice matched the man’s
confusion. “Norman?”
Maggie grabbed Sam’s elbow. “Sweet
Mary, it’s him!”
The two glanced at each other
before rushing toward Norman. Around them, the celebrants were in full swing.
The music grew louder, the chanting and singing along with it. Before they
could reach Norman’s side, Kamapak appeared from the crowd, blocking their
path. In the firelight, the shaman’s tattoos were spidery traces on his cheeks
and neck: abstract symbols of power and strange feathered dragons.
Sam started to raise his rifle, but
Maggie pushed the barrel down. “Hear him out.”
The shaman spoke grandly. Denal
translated. “Your friend has been accepted as worthy by the gods of janan pacha. He is now ayllu,
family, with the Sapa Inca.”
“The Sapa Inca?” Maggie asked,
still holding the barrel of Sam’s rifle. “Who?”
But the shaman was already turning
away, inviting them forward to Norman’s side. The photographer finally seemed
to spot them. He waved a weak arm and stumbled in their direction. His face was
still pale—not the ashen complexion of fever or illness, but more of shock. Sam
hurried to his side. Maggie and Denal stayed beside the shaman.
Kamapak witnessed the reunion with
clear pleasure. Maggie repeated her question with Denal’s help. “I don’t
understand. Sapa Inca?” Maggie had never thought this small village had any
distinct leader, let alone one of the revered god-kings of the Incas. “Who is
your Sapa Inca?”
The shaman frowned when Denal
translated her words, then spoke slowly. Denal turned to her. “He say he gave
you the name of the Sapa Inca before. It be Inkarri. He live at the Temple of
the Sun.”
“Inkarri…?” Maggie remembered the
mention last night of the beheaded warrior king. Her brows bunched together.
Any further inquiry was interrupted
by Sam’s reappearance with Norman. “You are not going to believe this,” Sam
said as introduction. He nodded to Norman. “Show her.”
Norman reached to his robe and
parted it enough to reveal his bare knee. For a single heartbeat, Maggie
frowned, leaning a bit forward but saw nothing out of the ordinary. “I don’t
see—” Then it struck her like a dive into a cold lake on a hot day. “Jesus,
Mary, and Joseph!”
Norman’s knee was healed. No, not
healed. There was absolutely no sign of the bullet damage. No puckered entry
wound, no scar. It was as if Norman had never been injured.
“But that’s not the most amazing
thing,” Norman said, drawing both Maggie’s and Sam’s attention.
“What?” the Texan asked.
Norman raised his palms to his face.
“My eyes.”
“What about them?” She noticed the
photographer’s thick eyeglasses were missing.
The photographer glanced around the
plaza, his voice awed. “I can see. My vision is a perfect twenty-twenty.”
Before either student could react,
Kamapak raised his arms and voice. His words, booming off the stone walls and
stretching across the square, were meant not just for them, but for the entire
gathered Incan tribe.
“What’s he saying?” Sam asked Denal
as he shouldered his rifle.
Before the boy could answer, Norman
spoke dully. “He says this night, when the moon rises to its zenith, the Sapa
Inca will come. After many centuries, he will descend from his gold throne and
walk among his people.”
Kamapak pointed to the group of
students.
Norman finished, wearing a
surprised look on his face, “ ‘Here stands the future of our tribe. They will
take Inkarri back to cay pacha, the middle world.
The reign of the Incas will begin again.’ ”
A roaring cheer rose from the
gathered Incas.
Only their group remained silent. Sam
stared with his mouth hanging open. Maggie found no words either, so awed was
she. How could Norman have known what the shaman had said?
Denal moved closer to Maggie, his eyes fearfully locked on Norman.
Shrugging, Norman said, “Hey, don’t
look at me for an explanation, guys. I failed first-year Spanish.”
As the celebration continued, Sam
sat with Norman on the steps of the plaza. He wanted answers. “So tell us what
happened. What is this Temple of the Sun?”
Norman shook his head. He ran a
finger over his knee. “I don’t know.”
“What do you mean?” Maggie asked.
She sat on Norman’s far side, while Denal rested on a lower step, his eyes on
the continuing celebration. The boy was smoking one of the last of his precious
cigarettes. Its tip flared like a torch with each long inhalation. After the
terrors of the day, Sam could not begrudge Denal this one vice. “What did the
temple look like?” Maggie persisted.
Norman turned to her, his eyes both
worried and angry. “That’s just it…I don’t know.”
“Then what do
you know?” Sam asked.
Norman turned away, his face aglow
in the reflected firelight. “I remember being snatched from my bed in our room.
I tried to struggle, but I was too weak to offer more than a couple of good
kicks at my kidnappers. Soon I was being carried, none too gently, I might add,
between two warriors along a path heading south. After about three-quarters of
an hour, we hit the south wall of the cone, with that other big black volcano
hanging over us. There was a steep climb, and then I saw a sudden dark cut in
the rock. A tunnel opening, right through the side of the volcano.”
“Where did it go?” Sam asked,
drawing Norman’s gaze.
“I don’t know. But I saw daylight
at the end of the tunnel. I’m sure of it.”
“Maybe it connects to the other
volcano,” Maggie said. “A path to the Incas’janan pacha.”
“What else?” Sam asked the
photographer.
Norman slowly shook his head. “I
remember being carried a good way down the shaft until a side cavern appeared
ahead. Torchlight was coming from it. As we neared, someone stepped out,
greeting my kidnappers with a raised staff.” The photographer glanced away and
frowned.
“And?”
“And after that, my mind’s a blank.
The next thing I recall is being led back out of the tunnel, the last rays of
the setting sun blinding me.” Norman picked at the robe he wore. “And I was
wearing this.”
Maggie leaned back on her stone
seat, digesting Norman’s story. “And you could understand the Incan language…”
She shook her head. “Maybe some hypnotic learning process. It could explain the
memory lapse. But the level of healing—your knee, your eyes—this is far beyond
anythin’ even Western medicine could do. It’s…it’s almost miraculous.”
Sam frowned. “I don’t believe in
miracles. There’s an answer here. And it lies in that temple.” He met Norman’s
gaze. “Could you find your way back there?”
Norman pinched his lips for a
moment, then spoke. “I believe so. The trail was clear, and there were these
stone trailside markers every hundred yards or so. The warriors would stop and
quickly spout a few mumbled words and go on.”
“Prayer totems,” Sam mumbled. At
least he was relatively certain he could find this Temple of the Sun if
necessary. He would have to be satisfied with that for now. Tomorrow Uncle Hank
would arrive, and Sam could leave these strange mysteries to his uncle’s
expertise. As worrisome and frightening as the day had been, Sam was just
relieved Norman had been healed, no matter how or why.
Across the plaza, the raucous drums
died away, and the dancers slowed and stopped. A single Incan woman climbed
atop a stone pedestal and began to sing softly, her voice lonely in the fiery
night. Soon, the gathered throng solemnly joined in her song, their hundred
voices rising like steam toward the midnight sky. Nearby, Denal began softly
singing along. Though the words were not translated, Sam sensed joy mixed with
reverence, almost like a Christian hymn.
Maggie’s words played through his
mind. Miracles. Had the Incas stumbled upon some
wondrous font of healing? The equivalent of Ponce de Leon’s mythic fountain of
youth. Sam’s mouth grew dry at the thought of discovering such a find.
Listening to the crowd quietly
sing, Sam looked over the square; he again was stunned that there were no
children, no babes in arms or toddlers clinging to their mothers’ hems. Nor
were any elders mixed with these younger men and women. All the faces singing
up at the full moon overhead were too uniform, all near the same age.
Who were these people? What had
they discovered? A sudden shiver, that had nothing to do with the cooling
valley, passed through Sam.
Finally, a hush spread like a wave
over the square. Sam’s eyes were drawn to the plaza’s south side as the
celebrants all fell to their knees. The small woman who had led the singing
climbed off her pedestal and knelt, too. Soon only a solitary figure remained.
He stood on the far side, unmoving, tall for an Inca, at least six feet. He
bore a staff with a sunburst symbol at its top.
Maggie urged them all to kneel,
too. “It must be the Sapa Inca,” she whispered.
Sam settled to his knees, not
wanting to offend this leader. Any cooperation would depend on this fellow’s
good graces.
The man slowly moved through the
crowd. Men and women bowed their foreheads to the stones as he passed. No one
spoke. Though not borne atop the usual golden litter of the Sapa Incas, the man
wore the raiments of kings: from the llautu crown of
woven braids with parrot feathers and red vicuna wool tassels, down to a long
robe of expensive cumbi cloth decorated with
appliqués of gold and silver. Even his sandals were made of alpaca leather and
decorated with rubies. In his right hand, he bore a long staff, as tall as the
man himself, topped by a palm-sized gold sunburst.
Norman mumbled, “The staff. I
remember it. From the tunnel shaft.”
Sam glanced at the photographer and
saw the man’s nervous fear. He touched Norman’s shoulder in a gesture of
support.
As the king neared, Sam studied his
features. Typical Incan: mocha-colored skin, wide cheeks, full strong lips,
dark eyes that pierced. In each earlobe was a disc of gold stamped with a
sunburst icon that matched his staff’s headpiece.
The Sapa Inca stepped to within
three yards of the kneeling trio. Sam nodded in a show of respect. It was not
fitting to stare directly at Incan rulers. They were the sun’s children, and as
with the sun itself, one’s eyes must be diverted from the brightness. Still,
Sam refused to touch his head to the stones of the plaza.
The Incan king did not seem to take
offense. His gaze was intense but not hostile. With a look of burning curiosity,
he took one more step toward them. His shadowed face was now aglow in the fiery
light from a nearby torch, forging its ruddy planes into a coppery gold.
Maggie gasped.
Sam’s brow crinkled at her
reaction, and he dared stare more openly at the man—then it struck him, too.
“My God…” he mumbled, stunned. This close, there could be no mistaking the
resemblance, especially with the torch bathing the king’s countenance in a
golden light. They had all seen this man before. He matched the figure sculpted
in gold back in the caverns, both the life-size idol guarding the booby-trapped
room and the towering statue in the center of the necropolis.
The Sapa Inca took one step closer.
With the torchlight gone from his face, he became just a man again. He studied
them all for several silent moments. The plaza was as quiet as a tomb. Finally,
he lifted his staff and greeted them. “I am Inca Inkarri,” he said in English,
his voice coarse and guttural. “Welcome. May Inti keep you safe in his light.”
Sam remained kneeling, too stunned
to move.
The king tapped his staff twice on
the stone, then raised it high. On this signal, warbling cheers rose from a
hundred throats. Men and women leaped to their feet, the drums thundered,
flutes and tambourines added their brightness.
The Sapa Inca ignored the commotion
and lowered his staff.
Kamapak appeared like a ghost from
the dancing crowd. The shaman’s face beamed with radiant awe, his tattoos
almost glowing against his flushed skin. “Qoylluppaj Inkan,
Inti Yayanchis,” he intoned, bowing slightly at the waist, and continued
to speak. Even without any translation, Kamapak was obviously begging some boon
from this king.
Once the shaman was finished, the
Sapa Inca grunted a terse answer and waved Kamapak away. The shaman’s smile
broadened, clearly having obtained a favorable answer, and stepped back. The
king nodded soberly at Sam’s group, his eyes lingering a moment on Denal; then
he swung back around and followed the shaman through the clusters of
celebrants.
“I guess we passed muster,” Sam
said, breathing again.
“And were summarily dismissed,”
Maggie added.
Sam turned to Norman. “What were
they saying?”
The photographer leaned back on his
heels, his eyes narrowed. “Kamapak wanted to talk in private with the
king”—Norman faced Sam—“about us.”
Sam frowned. “What about us?”
“About our future here.”
Sam did not like the sound of that.
He watched the shaman and the king cross the plaza toward a large two-story
home to the left of the square. “What do you make of this Sapa Inca fellow?” he
asked Maggie.
“He’s obviously had some exposure
to the outside world. Learned a little English. Did you notice his face? He
must be a direct descendant of that ancient king of the statues.”
Sam nodded. “I’m not surprised at
the similarity. This is a closed gene pool. No outsiders to dilute the Incan
blood.”
“Until we arrived, that is,” Norman
said.
Sam ignored the photographer’s
words. “But what about him claiming to be the mythic Inkarri?”
Maggie shook her head.
“Who’s this Inkarri?” Norman asked.
Maggie quickly explained the story
of the beheaded king who was prophesied to rise again to lead the Incas back to
glory.
“The Second Coming, so to speak,”
Norman said.
“Right,” Maggie said, frowning
slightly. “Again clear evidence of Christian influence. Further proof of some
Western intrusion here.”
Sam was less convinced. “But if
they’ve been out of the valley, why do they continue to hide?”
Maggie waved a hand toward Norman.
“They obviously discovered something here. Something that heals. Avolcanic
spring or something. Maybe they’ve been protecting it.”
Sam glanced at Norman, then back to
the Incan king who disappeared into the home along with Kamapak. All the
mysteries here seemed to start and end at the temple. If only Norman could
remember what had happened…
“I’d love to be a fly on the wall
during their conversation,” Maggie muttered, staring across the plaza.
Norman nodded.
Sam sat up straighter. “Why don’t
we?”
“What?” Maggie asked, turning back
to him.
“Why not eavesdrop? They have no
glass on their windows. Norman can understand their language. What’s to stop
us?”
“I don’t know,” Norman said sourly.
“Maybe a bunch of men with spears.”
Maggie agreed. “We shouldn’t do
anything to make ’em mistrust us.”
Sam, though, continued to warm to
his idea. After a day spent wringing his hands over Norman’s fate, he was tired
of operating in the dark. He cinched his Winchester to his shoulder and stood.
“If the shaman and king are discussing our fate, I want to know what they
decide.”
Maggie stood, reaching for his elbow.
“We need to talk about this.”
Sam stepped away from her grip.
“What do you say, Norman? Or would you rather be dragged to the altar in the
morning? And I don’t mean to be married.”
Norman fingered his thin neck and
stood. “Well, when you put it that way…”
Maggie was now red-faced. “This
isn’t the way we should be handling this. This is stupid and a risk to all our
lives.”
Sam’s cheeks flushed. “It’s better
than hiding in a hole,” he said angrily, “and praying you’re not killed.”
Maggie stepped away from him,
blinking in shock, a wounded look on her face. “You bastard…”
Sam realized Maggie thought he had
been referring to her incident in Ireland, using her own trauma to knock aside
her arguments. “I…I didn’t mean it that way,” he tried to explain.
Maggie pulled Denal to her side and
turned her back on Sam. Her words were for Norman, dismissive. “Don’t get
yourself killed.” She stalked off toward the row of homes.
Norman stared at her back. “Sam,
you’ve really got to watch that mouth of yours. It’s no wonder you and your
uncle are bachelors.”
“I didn’t mean—”
“Yeah, I know…but still…next time
think before you speak.” Norman led the way around the edge of the plaza. “Come
on, James Bond, let’s get this over with.”
Sam watched as Maggie ducked into
her room; then he turned to follow Norman. His heart, on fire a moment ago, was
now a burned cinder in his chest. “I’m such a jackass.”
Norman heard him. “No argument
here.”
Sam scowled and tugged at the brim
of his Stetson. He passed Norman with his angry stride. “Let’s go.”
As the celebration raged around
them, they reached the squat two-story home. It was clearly the abode of a kapak, the nobleman of the Incas. The windows and door
were framed in hammered silver. Firelight blazed from the uncovered windows,
and muffled voices could be heard from inside.
Sam searched around to ensure no
one was watching, then he pulled Norman into the narrow alley beside the home.
It was cramped, allowing only enough room for them to move single file. Sam
crept along first. Ahead, flickering light could be seen coming from a
courtyard which was closed off by a shoulder-high wall. As they neared, Sam
spotted small decorative holes piercing the walls: star-shaped and crescent
moons. A perfect place from which to spy.
Waving Norman onward, Sam slunk up
to one of the holes and peeked through. Beyond was a central garden courtyard,
rich with orchids and climbing flowering vines. Sleeping parrots rested on
perches, heads tucked under wings. Amid the riotous growth, a fire pit blazed
in the center of the courtyard.
Two figures stood limned against
the flames: Kamapak and Inkarri.
The shaman touched one of his
tattoos with a fingertip, mumbling a prayer, then opened his chuspa pouch and cast a pinch of powder upon the fire. A
spat of blue flames chased embers higher into the sky. Kamapak spoke to the
king as he stepped in a circle around the fire, tossing more powder into the
flames.
Norman, positioned at a neighboring
spy hole, translated. His lips were near Sam’s ear, his words breathless.
The shaman spoke. “As I told you,
though they are pale-skinned and came from below, they are not mallaqui, spirits of uca pacha.
They are true people.”
The king nodded, pensively staring
into the flames. “Yes, and the temple has healed the one. Inti accepts them.”
Inkarri stared back at Kamapak. “Still, they are not Inca.”
Kamapak finished whatever ritual he
had been performing and crossed to one of the reed floor coverings and folded
himself smoothly to the floor, legs crossed under him. “No, but they do not come
with murder in their hearts either…like the others long ago.”
The king sat on a woven mat beside
the shaman. His voice was tired. “How long has it been, Kamapak?”
The shaman reached to a pouch and
pulled out a long string of knotted rope. He spread it on the stones of the
courtyard. Sam recognized it as a quipu, an Incan
counting tool. Kamapak pointed to one knot. “Here is when we discovered the
Mochico in this valley, when your armies first came here, five hundred and
thirty years ago.” He moved his fingers down several ropes. “And here is when
you died.”
Sam pulled back and stared
quizzically at Norman. Died? The photographer
shrugged. “That’s what he said,” Norman mouthed.
Frowning, Sam started to return to
his eavesdropping when a shouted bark startled him. Torches flared at either
end of the alley. Sam and Norman froze, caught red-handed. Harsh orders were
yelled at them.
“Th…they want us to come out,”
Norman said.
Sam touched the rifle’s stock, then
thought better of it. He’d wait first to see how this all played out. “C’mon.”
He pushed past Norman and slid down
the alley toward the waiting guards. Angry faces met them at the plaza. A
circle of men, some bearing torches, all bearing spears, surrounded them. The
music had stopped. Hundreds of sweating bodies stared in their direction.
From the doorway, the shaman and
the king appeared. A spatter of words were exchanged between the guards and the
shaman. The king stood stoically at the doorway.
Finally, the Sapa Inca lifted his
staff, and all grew silent. Turning to Sam, he spoke in strained English, “At
the temple, Inti whispered your tongue in my ear so I could speak to you. Come
then. Learn what you seek in dark corners.” He turned and reentered the stately
abode.
Kamapak frowned, clearly
disappointed with them, and waved them both inside the same courtyard upon
which they had eavesdropped.
The Sapa Inca gestured to woven
rugs on the floor.
Sam and Norman sat.
The king strode to the fire,
speaking to the flames. “What be it that you seek?” he asked.
Sam sat straighter. “Answers. Like
who you really are.”
The Sapa Inca sighed and slowly
nodded. “Some now call me Inkarri. But I will speak my true name to you, my
first name, my oldest name, so you will know me. My birth name be Pachacutec.
Inca Pachacutec.”
Sam furrowed his brows. Pachacutec
was a name he knew. He was the ancient founder of the Incan empire, the leader
who expanded the Incas from their sole city of Cuzco to a dominion encompassing
all the lands between the mountains and the coast. “You are a descendant of the
Earth Shaker?” Sam asked, using the Incan nickname for their founder.
The king glowered. “No, I am the Earth Shaker. I am
Pachacutec.”
Sam frowned at this answer.
Impossible. Clearly this man had the delusions of all kings—that they were the
embodiment of their ancestors, the dead reincarnated in the living.
Kamapak spoke up in his native
tongue. The shaman’s hands were very animated. He picked up the length of
knotted rope, the quipu, from where it had been
left. He shook it at them.
Norman translated, “Kamapak claims
everyone here in the valley is over four hundred years old. Even their king.”
“So this Sapa Inca believes he’s
the original Pachacutec.”
Norman nodded. “The real McCoy.”
Sam shook his head, dismissing all
this Incan mysticism. But in a small corner of his mind, he pondered Norman’s
cure and new abilities. Something miraculous was definitely going on, but could
this tribe have lived for that long? He remembered his own thoughts about a
fountain of youth. Was it possible?
Sam asked the question that had
been nagging him since arriving here. “Tell us about this Temple of the Sun.”
Pachacutec glanced to the sunburst
symbol on the staff in his hand, then to the bonfire. His face suddenly took on
a tired look, his eyes so old that for a moment Sam could almost believe this
man had lived five hundred years. “To understand, I must tell stories I hear
from other mouths,” he whispered. “From the Mochico who first came to this
sacred place.”
Sam’s heart clenched. So the Moche
had been here first! Uncle Hank had been right.
The Sapa Inca nodded to the shaman.
“Tell them, Kamapak, of the Night of Flaming Skies.”
The shaman bowed his head in
acknowledgment and crossed to the fire’s edge. His voice took on a somber tone.
Norman translated. “Sixty years before Inca Pachacutec’s armies conquered this
valley, there came a night when the skies were ablaze with a hundred fiery
trails, bits of flaming sun chasing each other across the black skies. They
fell from janan pacha and crashed into these sacred
mountains. The Mochico king ordered his hunters to gather these bits of the
sun, finding them in smoking nests throughout the mountains.”
Sam found himself nodding. Clearly
this was a description of a meteor shower.
Kamapak continued, “This gathered treasure
was brought back to the Mochico king. He named the pieces, the Sun’s Gold, and
ensconced his treasure in a cave here in this secret valley.”
Pachacutec interrupted, “But then I
come with my armies. I kill their king and make the Mochico my slaves. I force
them to take me to this treasure. I must kill many before the way be opened.
Here I find a cave full of sunlight you can touch and hold. I fall to my knees.
I know it be Inti himself. The god of the sun!” The king’s eyes were full of
past glory and wonder. It seemed to revitalize him.
The shaman continued the story, as
Norman translated. “To honor Inti and to punish the Mochico for imprisoning our
god, Pachacutec sacrificed every Mochico in this valley and the village below.
Once done, Pachacutec prayed for seven days and seven nights for a sign from
Inti. And he was heard!”
The shaman opened his bag and, with
a mumbled prayer, tossed a bit of purplish dust on the fire; blue flames flared
for a heartbeat. Then he continued, “As reward for his loyalty, a wondrous
temple grew in the cave, a huaca constructed from
this hoard of Mochico sun gold. In this sacred temple, Inti healed the sick and
kept death from those who honored the sun god.”
Sam had to force himself to
breathe. Had these ancient Indians truly discovered some otherworldly fountain
of youth? Sam only had to stare at Norman, healed and translating, to begin to
believe.
“Pachacutec gave up his crown to
his son and retired to this valley, leaving the governing of the Incan empire
to his descendants. He and his chosen followers remained here, worshiping Inti,
never dying. Soon, even the children born in the valley were made into gods by
the temple’s power and given as gifts to janan pacha.”
With these words, the king’s eyes
flicked toward the south, where the tall neighboring volcano loomed. A certain
brooding look grew in his eyes.
Sam had to admit a perverse
internal logic to the story. If these valley dwellers never died, then
sacrificing children was good population management. The resources of this
volcanic valley were not unlimited and continued births would soon overwhelm
the resources. The tale also succeeded in explaining the lack of elderly
residents. No one aged here.
Pachacutec interrupted again, his
tone bitter. “But the time of peace ended. A hundred seasons passed, and men in
tall ships came, men with strange beasts and stranger tongues.”
“The Spanish,” Sam mumbled to
himself.
“They kill my people, drive them
from their homes. Like the jaguar, there be no escaping their teeth. They come
even here. I speak to them. Tell them of Inti. I show them the temple and how
it protects us. Their eyes grow hungry. They kill me, meaning to steal Inti
from us.”
“They killed you?” Sam blurted out
before he could stop it.
Pachacutec rubbed the back of his
neck, as if kneading out some stubborn pain. He waved his other hand at
Kamapak, motioning him to continue.
The shaman’s words grew dour as
Norman translated. “The Spanish came with lust in their hearts. And as
Pachacutec had slain the Mochico king, the foreigners slew our king. Pachacutec
was taken to the center of the village.” The shaman waved toward the plaza
beyond. “And his head was cut from his body.”
Sam’s excitement about discovering
the fountain of youth dried in his chest. This last story was clearly
preposterous. And if this was false, then all of the others probably were, it.
too. Just fireside fables. Whatever cured Norman had nothing to do with these
stories. Still, Sam was compelled to listen ’til the end. “But you live now.
How is that?”
The shaman answered, glancing
almost guiltily down. “The night the Sapa Inca was slain I heard the Spanish
speak of burning his body. Such a cruelty is worse than death to our people. So
I sneaked out and stole my king’s head from where he lay dead. With the Spanish
in pursuit, I took my king to the temple and prayed to Inti. Again the god
heard and proved his love.” The shaman threw another pinch of dust on the fire,
a clear obeisance to his god.
Pachacutec continued the last of
the tale. “The temple carried me back from death. I opened my eyes as my head
lay on the altar. From my bloody mouth, I warned the strangers of Inti’s anger.
This show of Inti’s strength made warriors into women. They screamed, wailed,
tore at their hair, and ran away. The dogs sealed the lower entrance, but word
of my death be already flying. The killers were captured, and their shaman
sacrificed.”
Sam frowned. He knew one way to
test the veracity of these stories. “What was the name of this Spanish shaman?”
Kamapak answered, voice tight with
old hatred, hands balled into fists: “Francisco de Almagro.”
Pachacutec scowled at the name and
spat into the fire. “We had this shaman dog captured for his blasphemies. But
he fled like a coward and fouled a sacred site with his own blood. After his
death, we made holes in his skull and drove out his god with ours.”
Sam sat shocked. He remembered his
uncle’s story of the golden substance that exploded from the mummy’s skull. The
ancient and modern stories seemed to match. But what these two were
describing—immortality—how could it be true?
As Sam’s mind roiled, the shaman
finished the story as Norman continued to translate the ancient Inca language.
“After the foreigners fled, the temple slowly grew Pachacutec another body.
Inti warned our king that these strange men from across the sea were too strong
and too many, and Inti must be protected. So the path here was left sealed. We
allowed ourselves to be forgotten. But Inti had promised Pachacutec that there
would come a day when the path would reopen, a time when the Incan dynasty
would begin again. When that day came, for our loyalty, our people had been
promised not only their own lands back, but also the rest of the world.”
Pachacutec’s eyes blazed with fire
and glory. “We will rule all!”
Sam nodded. “Inkarri reborn from
his secret cave.”
Pachacutec turned his back on the
fire and them. “So my people have named me after my rebirth. Inkarri, child of
the sun.”
“When does this path to the world
below reopen?”
“When the gods of janan pacha are ready to leave,” Pachacutec answered,
waving an arm toward the south. “Until then, we must live as the temple tells
us. All who threaten Inti must be sacrificed.”
The shaman turned his back, too.
Norman quietly translated, color draining from his face. “You have shown your
deceit this night, hiding your shame in the cloak of night.” His last words
came out pained. “At dawn, when the sun rises and Inti can see our loyalty, you
will be sacrificed to our god. Your blood will stain the plaza.”
The shaman signaled with his right
hand.
Sam shot to his feet, but he was
too late. Incan warriors swarmed from adjacent rooms and swept over them. Sam
fought, but with no success. His rifle was knocked to the stones. Disturbed
parrots screamed in the trees.
“No!” Sam yelled, but neither the
shaman nor the king would face them as they were dragged away.
Dressed in her own khakis and
shirt, Maggie huddled in the shadow of the courtyard wall. Holding her breath,
afraid to move, she watched Sam and Norman being dragged away. Sweet Jesus, what was she going to do? She silently cursed
the mule-headed Texan. He had to go charging blindly into danger. She turned
and leaned her back on the stone wall. Hiding as still as a mouse, she had
heard most of Pachacutec’s and Inkarri’s stories and knew there was no way to
talk them out of this jam.
At least, she had hid Denal before
coming here.
Earlier, she had heard the music in
the plaza stop abruptly. She had peeked out and watched as Sam and Norman were
seized. While instinct had told her to run with Denal as far and fast as
possible, she had fought against it. The other two were her friends, and she
could not abandon them without trying to help. So she had whisked Denal into
the jungle’s edge and told him to stay out of sight. Then she had sneaked back
here to discover the fate of her friends.
Now she knew. Maggie peeked through
a crescent-shaped hole in the courtyard wall. It was empty. Even the king and
the shaman were gone. Maggie stared at the sole reason she still tarried here.
Sam’s Winchester rifle lay on the granite cobblestones of the courtyard. If a
rescue was going to succeed, she would need that weapon.
Listening for voices, she studied
the surrounding rooms for any sign of motion. It seemed clear. Her hands
trembled with fear at what she was about to attempt. She bit her lip, refusing
to let panic into her heart. Sam and Norman were depending on her. Taking a
final deep breath, she grabbed the top of the wall, pulled herself up, and
hooked a leg over the edge. She struggled for a few moments, then managed to
boost herself over.
With her heart thundering in her
throat, Maggie dropped into the courtyard. A blue-and-gold macaw ruffled its
feathers, watching her, still tense from the excitement a few moments ago.
Maggie willed the bird to remain quiet and crept to the foliage’s edge. The
rifle lay only ten meters away. She just needed to dash across the open space,
grab the rifle, then flee back over the wall.
It sounded easy until Maggie’s legs
began to tremble under her. She knew she would have to act now or lose herself
to panic. Clenching her fists, she pushed from the shadows of the trees and ran
across the cobbles. Her hands settled upon the stock of the rifle just as
voices sounded behind her. Someone was returning! She froze like a deer in
headlights, fear paralyzing her. She could not move, could not think.
Suddenly, a log in the fire popped,
loud as the blast from a starter’s gun.
It was what she needed. A gasp of
fear escaped her throat, releasing her. She snatched the rifle and ran, not
caring who might hear her. Terror gave her legs. She flew through the foliage
and over the wall in a heartbeat.
She sank gratefully into the
shadows, rifle clutched to her chest.
The voices behind her grew louder.
Gulping air as silently as she could, she turned and peeked into the courtyard.
It was Kamapak and Pachacutec returning. She watched the tattooed shaman cross
to the yard’s center and throw a handful of powder into the fire. Azure flame
danced to the rooftops, then died back down.
The two men spoke in their native
tongue. The only word decipherable was the name Inkarri.
The king seemed reluctant to do what the shaman wanted, but finally his
shoulders sagged, and he nodded.
Straightening and stepping near the
fire, Pachacutec reached to his shoulder and pulled the gold tupu pin that held his robe. The fine cloth fell like a
flow of water from his body to pool around his ankles. The Sapa Inca stepped
free of his robe, naked of all except his llautu
headpiece and his staff.
A hand flew to Maggie’s lips,
clamping away her cry of shock. But something must have been heard. The king
glanced to the courtyard wall, staring for a long breath, then turned away.
Maggie’s stomach churned with acid.
But she knew better than to move. She could not risk the scuff of stone
alerting them further to her presence. She stared.
From the neck up, the king’s skin
was the familiar mocha brown of the Andean Indians, but from the neck down, his
skin was as pale as something found under a rock. It reminded Maggie of the
beastly predators that haunted the caverns below. But Pachacutec’s skin was
even paler, almost translucent. Vessels could be seen moving blackish blood
under his skin; bones appeared as buried shadows. The man’s belly and chest
were flat, hairless. Not even nipples or a navel marred the smooth surface. He
was also sexless, completely lacking external genitalia.
Sexless and unnaturally smooth.
Maggie found one word coming to mind as she stared at this strange apparition. Unformed. It was as if the king’s body were a blank slate
waiting to be molded, like pale clay.
Oh, God. The realization dawned on her.
The story
of Inkarri was true!
Saturday, August 25, 4:48 A.M.
Andean Mountains, Peru
Henry stared out
the window as the helicopter banked over the jungle-stripped ruins. He had not
slept all night. Worries and fears had kept him awake as their bird flew over
the midnight jungles. He had yet to come up with any plan to thwart his
captors. And without the additional stop to refuel, their flight from the
guerrilla airstrip had been shortened. Time was running out.
Below, the campsite was still dark.
The sun had yet to rise. Only a set of work lights near the base of the buried
pyramid illuminated the dig. Apparently, even after the news of the students’
escape, work continued to open the temple. The abbot’s people sought every
scrap of their precious el Sangre del Diablo.
The abbot, wearing a radio
headpiece, yelled over the roar of the rotors. “We’re here, Professor Conklin!
I assume that I do not need to remind you what will happen if you fail to
cooperate fully!”
Henry shook his head. Joan. She was still being held hostage at the Abbey. Any
punishment for failings on his part would be exacted against her. Henry cleared
his throat and pointed to the abbot’s radio headpiece. “Before we land, I want
to speak to Dr. Engel. To make sure she’s unharmed.”
The abbot frowned, not in anger but
in disappointment. “I am faithful to my word, Professor Conklin. If I say she
will remain safe, she will.”
Only
until you have what you want, Henry
thought dourly. His eyes narrowed. “Excuse me if I doubt your hospitality. But
I would still like to speak to her.”
Abbot Ruiz sighed and shrugged his
large bulk. He slipped his headset off and passed it to Henry. “Be quick. We’re
landing.” The abbot nodded toward a cleared square not far from the students’
tents.
The helicopter righted its banking
turn and began to settle toward the flat stone plateau. Below, Henry spotted
men with flashlights positioned at the periphery of their landing site, guiding
the chopper down. Henry did not fail to notice the mud brown robes the
flashlight-bearers wore. More of the abbot’s monks.
Henry pulled the headpiece in place
and positioned the microphone.
The abbot leaned forward and was
talking to the pilot, pointing to the radio. After a minute of static, a
scratchy voice filled his earphones. “Henry?”
It was Joan! He held the microphone
steady. “It’s me, Joan. Are you okay?”
Static blazed, then words trailed
through. “…fine. Have you reached the camp?”
“Just landing now. Are they
treating you well?”
“Just like the Hyatt here. Only the
room service is a little slow.”
Despite her light words, Henry
could hear the suppressed tension in her voice. He pictured those tiny crinkled
lines that etched her eyes when she was worried. He had to swallow hard to
speak. He would not let anything happen to her. “Slow room service? I’ll see
what I can do from here,” Henry said. “See if I can light a fire under hotel
management.”
“Speaking of fire, Henry, remember
back at college we shared that classical mythology class together. I was in the
Abbey’s library today. They have the professor’s book here. Can you believe
that? Even that chapter I helped him write about Prometheus.”
Henry’s brows drew together. “Small
world, isn’t it?” he answered blandly, going along with her ploy. Back at Rice
University, the two had never shared such a class.
Clearly Joan was trying to get a message to him. Something about the myth of
Prometheus, a definite reference to Friar de Almagro’s etched warning.
He heard the heightened tension in
her voice. “Remember the difficulty we had in translating the line Prometheus holds our salvation?”
Henry chuckled with false mirth.
“How could I forget it?” He clenched his hands in his lap. What was Joan
hinting at? Something about fire. But what? What
does fire have to do with salvation? And time was running short. The helicopter
was about to land.
Joan must have sensed his
confusion. She spoke rapidly, practically just blurting it out. “Well, I also
reread the section where Prometheus slays the great Serpent. Do you remember
that? Where fire was the final solution?”
Henry suddenly tensed as he
realized what she was saying. The Great Serpent. The
Serpent of Eden. Understanding dawned in him. She was offering him a way
of destroying el Sangre del Diablo. “Sure. But I
thought that event was said to be done by Hercules. Are you sure your
interpretation is accurate?”
“Definitely. Prometheus packed a
vicious punch. You should have seen the picture in the book. Think plastic
explosive.”
“I…I understand.”
A shudder suddenly shook through
the helicopter’s frame. Henry jumped in his seat, startled. Outside, the
helicopter’s skids bumped on the granite stones, then settled to a stop.
The abbot’s face appeared before
Henry’s, yelling to be heard above the slowing rotors. “You’ve talked long
enough. We’ve landed!” He turned to the pilot and made a slashing motion across
his neck.
Henry was about to be cut off.
“Joan!”
“Yes, Henry!”
He clutched his microphone tightly,
struggling with words he thought he’d never speak to another woman. “I just
wanted to tell you that…that I—” Static blasted in his ears as the radio
contact suddenly ended.
Wincing, Henry stared at the radio.
What had he wanted to say to Joan? That he was falling in love with her? How
could he presume she shared any deeper feelings than mere friendship?
The radio was taken from his numb
fingers.
Either way, the chance was gone.
As two Incas stood guard, Sam
struggled with the woven grass ropes that bound his hands behind his back, but
he only succeeded in tightening them.
Beside him, Norman sat on the
stones of the plaza, shivering slightly. The photographer had long given up
trying to free himself, resolved as he was to the inevitability of their
deaths.
Already the skies paled to the
east, heralding the approach of dawn, but the village still lay cast in grays
and blacks. Once the sun fully rose and the streets were bathed in golden
light, the two would be sacrificed to the sun god, Inti.
But at least, it was just the two of them.
Maggie and Denal had managed to
escape. All night long, men had been searching the terraced village and
surrounding jungle, but with no luck. Maggie must have heard the commotion from
Sam’s capture and run off with the boy, disappearing into the dark jungle. But
how long could the two remain hidden once the sun was fully up? Sam prayed
Denal and Maggie could avoid capture until his uncle arrived with help. But
when would that be? He had no way of knowing. His walkie-talkie was still
inside his vest, but with his arms bound behind him, there was nothing he could
do.
He yanked on his bonds. If he could
only free a hand…
A rifle blast suddenly pierced the
quiet dawn. The crack echoed over the valley, but it clearly came from the
east. Maggie! She must have been discovered.
Both guards turned in the direction
of the rifle shot. They spoke hurriedly as more men poured into the square, led
by Kamapak. With much chattering, the group of barefooted hunters took off
toward the forest’s edge. The tattooed shaman waved even the two guards away to
aid in the search.
Bound tight, Sam and Norman were
not a threat.
Once the square was empty, Kamapak
crossed to them. He wore a worried expression.
Sam suspected the shaman feared his
god’s wrath if all these foreigners were not slain
at dawn.
In his hands, Kamapak bore small
bowls of paint. He knelt beside Norman and spoke to the photographer as he
placed down his dyes, then slid a long narrow flint knife from his sashed belt.
As the man spoke, Sam stared
hungrily at the shard of sharpened stone. How he longed to grab that weapon.
Norman groaned after the shaman
finished his explanation.
“What is it?” Sam asked.
“It seems the shaman has come to
prepare us for the sacrifice,” Norman said, meeting Sam’s eye. He nodded to the
dyes. “Marks of power are to be written on our bodies.”
The shaman dipped a finger in the
red dye, intoning a prayer loudly, then picked up the splinter of flint.
Norman’s gaze followed the blade,
his face paling. He glanced sidelong at Sam, but he kept one eye on Kamapak.
“What else?” Sam asked, sensing
something unspoken.
“Before the sun rises, he also
plans to cut out our tongues…so our screams don’t offend Inti.”
“Great…” Sam said sourly.
Kamapak raised his knife toward the
growing dawn. As he continued his chanted prayer, the bright edge of the sun
rose above the eastern lip of the volcanic cone. Like an awakening eye, Sam
thought. For a moment, he understood the Incas’ worship of the sun. It was like
some immense god peeking down on their lowly world. Kamapak sliced his thumb
with his knife, greeting the sun with his own blood.
Even though Sam’s own life was
threatened, a small part of him watched the ritual with clear fascination. Here
was an actual Incan sacrificial rite, a dead tradition coming to life. He
studied the tiny pots of natural dyes: red from rose madder, blue from indigo,
purple from crushed mollusks.
As Kamapak continued his prayers,
Norman suddenly stiffened beside the Texan. Sam glanced up from his study of
the dyes to see a figure break from the cover of a nearby doorway. He almost
gasped as he recognized the figure: It was Maggie.
Behind Kamapak’s back, she dashed
across the stones, barefooted like the hunters—but, also like the warriors, she
was armed. In her right hand was a long wooden
cudgel.
Kamapak must have sensed the
danger. He began to turn, but Maggie was already there. She swung the length of
hardened wood and struck a fierce blow to the side of the shaman’s head. The
blow sounded like a softball struck by a Louisville Slugger. Kamapak was
knocked to his hands, then fell to his face, unmoving. Blood welled through the
man’s dark hair.
Sam stared, too shocked to react
for a few seconds. He turned to face Maggie. She seemed equally stunned by her
act. The cudgel fell from her limp fingers to clatter on the granite cobbles.
“The knife,” Sam said, drawing her
gaze from the limp form of the shaman. He nodded toward the sliver of flint and
twisted around to indicate his roped wrists.
“I’ve got my own,” Maggie said,
alertness returning in a rush. She glanced around the plaza and drew forth the
gold dagger from her belt. She hurriedly sliced Sam’s lashed wrists.
Sam jumped to his feet, rubbing his
wrists. He stepped over to check on Kamapak. The shaman lay unmoving, but his
chest did rise and fall. Sam let out a relieved breath. The man was just
unconscious.
Maggie passed Sam the gold dagger
after freeing Norman, then helped pull the photographer to his feet. “Can you
both run?”
Norman nodded weakly. “If I have
to…”
Voices sounded from nearby.
Somewhere a woman’s voice was raised in alarm. “It looks like you’ll have to,”
Maggie said.
In unison, they all turned to run,
but they were already too late.
Around the square, armed men and
women entered from streets and alleys. Sam and the others were herded to the
center of the plaza and surrounded.
Sam noticed Norman had the shaman’s
shard of flint gripped in one fist. The photographer lifted it. “If they mean
to take my tongue, they’re gonna have to fight me for it.”
“Where’s Denal?” Sam whispered.
“I left him with the rifle,” Maggie
answered. “He was supposed to lead the others away so I could try and free you.
We were to rendezvous in the jungle.”
“I don’t think that plan’s gonna
work,” Norman said. He pointed his flint knife. “Look.”
Across the square, one of the
hunters held Sam’s Winchester in his grip. He handled the weapon as if it were
a poisonous snake. The man sniffed slightly at the barrel’s end, crinkling his
nose.
“Denal…” Maggie mumbled.
There was no sign of the boy.
Agruff voice sounded behind them.
They turned.
Pachacutec pushed through the
crowd. He was in full raiment, from feathered crown to fanciful robe. He lifted
his staff. The golden sunburst caught the first rays of the rising sun and
glinted brightly.
The king spoke slowly in Inca,
while Norman translated. “We have captured the strangers in our midst. Inti
rises for his sacrifice. Revive Kamapak so the gods can be honored.”
Off to the side, a trio of women
worked on Kamapak. They bathed his face in cold water and rubbed his limbs
while chanting. Slowly Kamapak’s arms began to move. Then his eyes flickered
open. He seemed blind for a moment until the memory of his assault returned.
Anger shone in his gaze. Weakly pushing away the women, he shoved to his feet.
He wobbled a bit, but one of the hunters helped steady him.
Kamapak ambled shakily toward his
king.
Pachacutec spoke again, this time
in English, drawing the eyes of the students. “It be an honor to give blood to
Inti. You disgrace our god with your fighting.”
By now, the sun had risen enough
that the center of the square was bathed in sunlight. Sam brandished his
dagger, bright in the morning light. Disgrace or not, he wasn’t going to give
his blood without drawing the same from his attackers. He raised the knife
higher, wishing he had a more intimidating weapon, something to strike terror.
With this thought, the handle of
the dagger grew warm and the length of gold blade shimmered and twisted,
spreading and curving, until the form of a striking snake sprouted from the
hilt. Sam froze, afraid to move, unsure what had just happened.
He stared at the transformed
dagger. Gold fangs were open to the sun, threatening the gathered throng.
Pachacutec had taken a step back
when the transformation had started. He now took a step nearer, eyes wide with
awe.
Sam did not know how the
transformation had occurred, but the miracle of the dagger was clearly
something the Incas had never seen. Sam raised the golden asp high.
Pachacutec lifted his staff,
mimicking Sam’s pose. His eyelids lowered slightly, as if in prayer. Suddenly
the golden sunburst symbol atop his staff flowed and transformed to match the
serpent. Two snakes stared each other down.
Now it was Sam’s turn to back away.
Pachacutec met the Texan’s gaze. Sam no longer saw anger in the man’s eyes, but
tears.
To the king’s side, Kamapak fell to
his knees, bowing his head toward Sam. The gathered throng followed suit.
Foreheads pressed to the stones.
Pachacutec lowered his staff. He
stepped toward them. Arms wide. “Inti has blessed you. The sun god of the
Mochico listens to your dreams. You be one of the chosen of Inti!” The king
crossed to stand before Sam. He offered his hand. “You be safe in our house.
All of you!”
Sam was too confused to react. The
sudden change in the Incas was unnerving. But he could not quite trust the
transformation, any more than he could understand what had happened to the
dagger.
Maggie pushed beside Sam. “What
about Denal?”
Pachacutec heard her. “The boy. He
be not fourteen years. Too young for huarachicoy.”
He smiled as if this explained it all.
Sam frowned. Huarachicoy
was the ceremonial feast where a boy was accepted as a man into a tribe, when
he was given his first huara, the loincloth of an
adult tribesman. “What do you mean ‘too young’?”
Kamapak raised his face and spoke.
Norman translated. “It was decided that the boy, like all the tribe’s children,
was to be taken to the temple. He was to be gifted directly to the gods.”
Maggie turned to Sam. “Sacrifice,”
she said with fear.
“When?” Sam asked. “When was this
to be done?”
Pachacutec glanced to the rising
sun. The bright disk was fully above the volcanic edge. “It be done already.
The boy be with the gods.”
Sam stumbled backward. “No…”
The Texan’s reaction confused the
king. The Sapa Inca’s bright smile faltered. “Be this not Inti’s wish?”
“No!” Sam said more forcefully.
Maggie grabbed Sam’s elbow. “We
need to go to that temple. Maybe he’s still alive. We don’t know for sure that
he’s dead.”
Sam nodded at her words. There was
a chance. He faced Kamapak and Pachacutec. “Take us to the temple.”
The king bowed his head, offering
no argument to one of the chosen. Instead, he waved, and the shaman stood.
“Kamapak will guide you.”
“I’m coming with you,” Maggie said.
“Me too,” Norman added, swaying a
bit on his feet. Clearly the transformation and the long stressful night had
taken its toll on him.
Sam shook his head. “Norman, you
need to stay here. You can speak the local lingo. Get the Incas to light a
signal fire on the highest ridge so the evac helicopter can find us.” Sam
reached to his vest pocket and pulled out the walkie-talkie. “Here. Contact
Sykes and get a status report. But more importantly…get Uncle Hank up here
ASAP!”
Norman looked worried with the burden
of his assignment, but he accepted the walkie-talkie with a slow nod. “I’ll do
what I can.”
Sam clapped the photographer on the
shoulder, then he and Maggie hurried away, stopping only to collect Sam’s
Winchester.
“Be careful!” Norman called to them.
“There’s something strange up there!”
Sam didn’t need to be told that.
All he had to do was look at the golden viper mounted on the dagger’s hilt in
his hand.
Bright sunlight glinted off its
sharp fangs.
He shivered. Old words of warning
rang in his head: Beware the Serpent of Eden.
Henry trudged toward the collapsed
subterranean temple. Even from here, he saw how the crown of the hill had
fallen in on itself. Sodium lamps highlighted the excavation on the lee side of
the slope, where workers still struggled to dig a rescue shaft into the buried
ruins.
As Henry walked, Philip’s litany of
the events of the past few days droned on: “…and then the temple started to
implode. There was nothing I could do to stop it…” Philip Sykes had come
running up to Henry as soon as the professor had cleared the helicopter’s
rotors, wearing a smile that was half panicked relief and half shame, like a
dog with his tail tucked between his legs. Henry ignored his student’s
ceaseless explanation. The theme was clear from the start: I’m
not to blame!
Henry finally touched Philip’s
shoulder. “You’ve done a great job, Mr. Sykes. Considering the circumstances
and confusion here, you’ve managed admirably.”
Philip bobbed his head. “I did,
didn’t I?” He ate up the praise with a big spoon…and then thankfully grew
quiet, content at being absolved for any of the tragedy. Henry, though, knew
the student was hiding more than he was telling. Henry had heard the
disparaging comments whispered from some of the Quechan workers as they passed.
He knew enough of the local Indian dialect to tell that the laborers resented
Philip. Henry suspected that if he questioned the workers, a different view of
the events of the past few days would come to light…and that Philip would not
come out looking so squeaky clean.
But right now, Henry had more
important concerns.
He eyed the two guards who flanked
them. They no longer brandished their guns, but they kept their hands on
holstered pistols. Abbot Ruiz marched ahead of them, wheezing through nose and
mouth. The altitude and exertion in climbing through the ruins were clearly
taxing the heavy man.
As they finally reached the site
where a black tunnel opened into the side of the buried temple, a man dressed
in the brown robes of a friar stepped toward them. He was darkly handsome with
cold eyes that seemed to take in everything with a sharp glance.
Abbot Ruiz stared hungrily at the
tunnel opening. “Friar Otera, how do things fare here?”
The monk remained bowed. “We should
reach the temple ruins by noon, Your Eminence.”
“Good. Very good. You have done
brilliantly.” He stepped past the bowing man without a glance, dismissing him.
Henry, though, caught the glint of
white-hot anger in the monk’s eyes as he straightened, the man’s face settling
back to passive disinterest. But Henry knew better. A few words of faint praise
were not going to satisfy this man as they had Philip. Closer to him now, Henry
noted some Indian features mixed with his Spanish heritage: a deeper
complexion, a slightly wider nose, and eyes so deep a brown they seemed almost
black. Friar Otera was clearly a mestizo, a
half-breed, a mixture of Spanish and Indian blood. Such men had hard lives here
in South America, their mixed blood often a mark of humiliation and ridicule.
Henry followed the abbot, but
remained attuned to the friar’s movements. He knew he had better keep a close
watch. There were dangerous layers to this man that had nothing to do with the
abbot’s schemes. Henry noticed how even Philip gave the man a wide berth as the
student clambered up the loose soil toward the tunnel opening.
Friar Otera took up a pace behind
Henry.
As they reached the excavated
tunnel, the sun climbed fully into the sky. The clear blue skies promised a hot
day to come.
Suddenly a crackle of static drew
their eyes toward Philip. The student reached inside his jacket and pulled free
a walkie-talkie. “It must be Sam,” Philip said. “He’s early.”
Henry stepped nearer. His nephew
had said he would contact base around ten o’clock. The call was a few hours
ahead of schedule.
“Base here,” Philip said, lips
pressed to the receiver. “Go ahead, Sam.”
Static and interference whined for
a few seconds, then…“Philip? It’s not Sam. It’s Norman.”
Philip glanced over the radio to
the others, brows raised. Henry understood the Harvard student’s shock. From
Sam’s last radio message, Norman had been at risk of being sacrificed last
night. Thank God, he was still alive!
Norman continued, speaking rapidly.
“When do you expect the helicopters? We need them up here now!” Panic etched
his voice.
“They’re right here!” Philip yelled
back. “As a matter of fact, Professor Conklin’s with me.” Philip held out the
walkie-talkie.
Henry took it, but not before noticing
the narrowing of Abbot Ruiz’s eyes. A warning against any slip of the tongue.
Henry raised the radio. “Norman, it’s Henry. What’s going on up there?”
“Denal’s in danger! Sam and Maggie
have gone to rescue him. But we need help up here ASAP. Within the hour,
several signal fires should be blazing near the cone’s western ridge. They
should be visible through the mists. Hurry!”
Henry eyed the Abbot. He was
already waving some of his men back toward the helicopter. They had thought to
have a few hours until Sam called, but clearly Abbot Ruiz was more than happy
to accelerate the schedule, especially with Norman’s next words.
“There’s something strange up
here…borders on the miraculous, Professor. Must see to…” The static was growing
worse, eating away words.
The abbot met Henry’s gaze, his
eyes bright with religious hope. Ruiz nodded for Henry to question the
photographer.
“Does it have anything to do with a
strange type of gold?” Henry asked.
Norman seemed not to have heard,
cutting in and out, “…a temple. I don’t know how…heals…no children though.”
The choppy transmission was
clouding any clear meaning. Henry gripped the walkie-talkie firmly and pressed
it closer to his lips. If he had any hope of warning Sam and the others, it
would have to be now. “Norman, sit tight! We’re coming! But tell Sam not to do
anything rash. He knows I don’t trust him to act on
his own.”
Beside him, Philip startled at his
words. Henry prayed Norman would be as equally shocked by such a statement. The
entire team knew Henry held his nephew in the highest esteem and would never
disparage Sam or any of them in this manner, but Abbot Ruiz didn’t know that.
Henry pressed the receiver again. “I mean it. Do nothing. I don’t trust Sam’s judgment.”
“Professor?” Norman’s voice was
full of confusion. Static raged from the unit. Any further words dissolved
away.
Henry fiddled with the radio but
only got more static. He thumbed it off. “Batteries must have died,” Henry said
morosely. He prayed Norman had understood his veiled warning, but if not, at
least no harm had been done. Abbot Ruiz seemed oblivious of Henry’s attempt at
a secret message. He handed the radio back to Philip.
Philip returned the walkie-talkie
to a pocket, then opened his mouth. “What do you mean you don’t trust Sam,
Professor. Since when?”
Henry took a step forward, trying
to signal the Harvard grad to shut up.
But Abbot Ruiz had already heard.
He swung back to Henry and Philip. “What’s all this about?” he asked, his face
narrowed with suspicion.
“Nothing,” Henry answered quickly.
“Mr. Sykes here and my nephew have an ongoing rivalry. He’s always thought I
favored Sam over him.”
“I never thought that, Professor!”
Philip said loudly. “You trusted all of us!”
“Did you now?” Ruiz asked, stalking
up to them. “Trust seems to be something that all of us are losing at this
moment.”
The abbot waved a hand, and Friar
Otera appeared behind Philip with a bared blade.
“No!” Henry yelled.
The thin man grabbed a handful of
the student’s hair and yanked Philip’s head back, exposing his throat.
Philip squawked but grew silent
when he saw the blade. He stiffened when the knife touched his throat.
“Is another lesson in order so
soon?” the abbot asked.
“Leave the boy be,” Henry begged.
“He doesn’t know what he’s saying.”
The abbot stepped beside Philip,
but his words were for Henry. “Were you trying to pass a warning up there? A
secret signal perhaps?”
Henry stared Ruiz full in the face.
“No. Philip just mis-spoke.”
Ruiz turned to the terrified
student. “Is that so?”
Philip just moaned, closing his eyes.
The abbot leaned and spoke in
Philip’s ear. “If you wish to live, I expect the truth.”
The student’s voice cracked. “I…I
don’t know what you’re asking.”
“A simple question. Does Professor
Conklin trust his nephew?”
Philip’s eyes flicked toward Henry,
then away again. “I…I guess.”
The abbot’s face grew grim, clearly
dissatisfied by the vague answer. “Philip,” he intoned menacingly.
The student cringed. “Yes!” he
gasped out. “Professor Conklin trusts Sam more than any of us. He always has!”
The abbot nodded, and the knife
left the student’s throat. “Thank you for your candor.” Ruiz turned to Henry.
“It seems a further lesson is needed to convince you of the value of
cooperation.”
Henry felt ice enter his veins.
“For your deception against the
path of God, a severe punishment is in order. But who should it be exacted
upon?” The abbot seemed to ponder the question for a moment, then spoke. “I
think I shall leave this up to you, Professor Conklin.”
“What do you mean?”
“You get a choice on who will bear
the burden of your sins: Philip or Dr. Engel?”
“If you’re going to punish anyone,”
Henry said, “then punish me.”
“We can’t do that, Professor
Conklin. We need you alive. And making this choice is punishment enough, I
imagine.”
Henry blanched, his knees weakening.
“We have no need for two hostages.
Whoever you choose—Philip or Dr. Engel—will be killed. It is your choice.”
Henry found Philip’s eyes upon him,
begging him for his life. What was he to do?
“Make your decision in the next ten
seconds or both will die.”
Henry closed his eyes. He pictured
Joan’s face, laughing and smiling over their dinner in Baltimore, candlelight
glowing on her cheeks. He loved her. He could no longer deny it, but he could
also not dismiss his responsibility here. Though Philip was often a thoughtless
ass, he was still one of his students, his responsibility. Henry bit his lips,
tears welling. He remembered Joan’s lips at his ear, her breath on his neck,
the scent of her hair.
“Professor?”
Henry opened his eyes and stared
angrily at the abbot. “You bastard…”
“Choose. Or I will order both of
them slain.” The abbot raised a hand, ready to signal the friar. “Who will die
for your sins?”
Henry choked on the words, “D…Dr.
Engel.” He sagged after he spoke Joan’s death sentence. But what other choice
did he have? Though many years had passed since their time together at Rice,
Joan had not changed. Henry still knew her heart. She would never forgive Henry
if he preserved her life at the cost of Philip’s. Still, his decision cut him
like a huge jagged dagger in his chest. He could hardly breathe.
“So be it,” Abbot Ruiz stated
mildly, turning away. “Let it be done.”
Sam followed Kamapak as the shaman
trotted out of the jungle’s fringes and into the brightness of the morning sun.
Even with the cloak of mist overhead, the sun’s brilliance was painful after
the dim light of the shadowed jungle.
Shading his eyes, Sam stumbled to a
stop. Maggie pulled up beside him. Both were winded from the high-altitude jog.
A headache rang in Sam’s skull as he surveyed the land beyond the jungle’s
edge.
A hundred yards away rose an almost
vertical wall of bare volcanic stone, a cliff of crenellated rock, knife-sharp,
and as coppery red as fresh blood. Above it loomed the black cone of the
neighboring volcanic mountain, imposing in its heights.
Ahead, a thin trail zigzagged up
the wall to the opening of a tunnel seventy yards above the valley floor. It
looked like a hard climb. Two men could be seen working their way down the
slope from the opening. Sunlight flashed off the spears they carried. Denal was
not with them.
“C’mon!” Sam said, pointing his
transformed dagger toward the men.
Maggie nodded, too winded to speak.
Adjusting Sam’s rifle over her shoulder, she cinched it higher and followed.
Kamapak led the way through a small
field of wild quinoa, a type of highland wheat, along the forest’s edge. Beyond
the green fields, at the base of the cliff, lay a wide apron of scraggled scrub
and tumbled volcanic rock. A handful of vents steamed nearby, collared with
yellow stains of sulfur. The air was humid and warm, a foul-smelling sauna.
They met the other two Incas at the
trailhead that led up to the tunnel above. As Kamapak spoke to the guards, Sam
studied the spears the two men brandished. Their blades were gold like his dagger.
But more importantly, the weapons appeared unbloodied. Sam tried to listen to
the conversation, but he could understand none of it. Finally, the shaman waved
the men back toward the village and began the steep climb, leading them upward.
Sam stopped Kamapak with a touch to
his shoulder. “Denal?” he asked.
The shaman just shook his head,
pointed up, and continued the journey.
“What do you think?” Maggie asked.
“I don’t know. But apparently the
answer lies up there.”
Maggie glanced worriedly toward the
opening far above. “At the temple?”
Sam nodded grimly, and the two
followed Kamapak up the series of switchbacks that climbed the wall. Any
further talk was cut off by the need to breathe. Sam’s grip on his knife grew
slick. He heard Maggie panting behind him. The muscles of his legs began to
protest from the exertion.
Only Kamapak seemed unaffected.
Acclimated to the altitude and moist heat, the shaman seemed unfazed by the
climb. He reached the opening before they did and waited for them. He spoke as
they approached. The only word recognizable to Sam was Inti,
the god of the sun.
Sam glanced behind him and surveyed
the spread of valley. Below, the village, half-covered in jungle, was barely
discernible. Then suddenly a series of small fires climbed the rocky ridge off
to the left, reaching to the lip of the volcanic cone. The signal fires. “Good
going, Norman,” he wheezed quietly.
Maggie joined him. “Let’s hope your
uncle gets here soon,” she said, eyeing the fires. Then she nudged Sam toward
the tunnel. “Let’s get going.”
Kamapak struck a torch to flame and
led the way inside. The tunnel was wide enough for four men to walk abreast and
seemed to stretch straight ahead. No curves or turns. The walls around them
were smooth volcanic stone.
“A lava tube,” Maggie said,
touching the stone.
Sam nodded and pointed ahead. The
darkness of the tunnel had seemed at first impenetrable. But as Sam grew
accustomed to the gloom, he noticed a vague light coming from far ahead.
Sunlight. “Norman was right,” he said. “The tunnel must connect either to
another valley or a cavern open to the sky.”
Before Maggie could respond,
Kamapak stopped ahead. The shaman lit two torches embedded in the right wall.
They framed a small cave that neither Sam nor Maggie had noticed in the darkness.
Kamapak knelt before the entrance.
As flames blew forth, a glow from
the side chamber reflected back the torchlight into the main tunnel. Drawn like
moths, Sam and Maggie moved forward.
Sam reached the entrance first. He
stumbled to a stop as he saw what lay in the side chamber. Maggie reached his
side. She tensed, then grabbed the Texan’s upper arm. Her fingers dug in
tightly.
“The temple,” she whispered.
In the neighboring cave stood a
sight to humble any man. The space was as large as a two-car garage, but every
surface was coated with gold—floor, ceiling, walls. It was a virtual golden
cavern! And whether it was a trick of the light or some other property, the
golden surfaces seemed to flow, whorling and eddying, sliding along the exposed
surfaces but never exposing the underlying volcanic rock. In the center of the
room’s floor was a solid slab of gold, clearly an altar or bed. Its top surface
was contoured slightly, molded to match the human physique. Above the altar,
hanging like a golden chandelier, was a fanciful sphere of filigreed gold,
strands and filaments twined and twisted into a dense mesh. It reminded Sam of
a spider’s egg sac, more organic than metal. Even here the illusion of flowing
gold persisted. The entwined mass of strands seemed to wind and churn slowly in
the flickering torchlight.
“Where’s Denal?” Maggie asked.
Sam shook his head, still too
shocked to speak. He pointed his serpent-shaped knife at the central altar. “No
blood.”
“Thank God. Let’s—” Maggie jumped
back a step.
A small spiral of gold filament
snaked out from the mass above the altar and stretched toward Sam. “Don’t
move,” Sam mumbled, freezing in place himself.
The thread of gold spun through the
air, trailing like a questing tentacle. It seemed drawn toward Sam’s extended
dagger. Finally it stretched long enough to brush against the gold serpent,
touching a fang. Instantly, the golden sculpture melted, features dissolving
away, surfaces flowing like warm wax. The hilt grew cold in Sam’s grip as heat
was absorbed from it. Then the gold reshaped itself, stretching and sharpening,
into the original dagger.
The questing filament retreated,
pulled back into the main mass like a reeled in fishing line.
Sam held the dagger before his
eyes. “What the hell just happened?”
Maggie found her tongue, crossing
into Sam’s shadow, keeping his wide shoulders between her and the gold cave,
the temple. “It’s not gold. It can’t be. Whatever your blade is made of, it’s
the same as the temple. What the Mochico called sun gold.
Some metal culled from meteors.”
“But it almost seems alive,” Sam
said, backing away with her.
Kamapak rose to his feet, eyes full
of awe for Sam. He mumbled something at Sam, then bowed his head.
“I don’t think we should tinker
with it, Sam. Let’s find out what happened to Denal, and leave this until more
experienced scientists arrive.”
Sam nodded dully. “This is what
Friar de Almagro saw. It’s what must have scared the man into sealing off this
caldera. The Serpent of Eden.”
“That an’ the decapitated head of
Pachacutec,” Maggie mumbled.
Sam turned to her. On the way to
the temple, Maggie had told him how she had eavesdropped on Norman and Sam’s
fireside conversation, knew the fabricated story of Inkarri. “You don’t buy
into that nonsense of the beheaded king, do you?”
Maggie glanced down. “There’s
something I didn’t tell you, Sam.”
“What?”
“I wanted more time to think about
what I saw before speaking.” She glanced up at him. “I sneaked into the
courtyard after you an’ Norman were dragged away. I saw Pachacutec without his
robe. His body was…was wrong.”
“What do you mean?”
“It was like—”
A scream suddenly echoed down the
passage, cutting off the conversation. Sam and Maggie froze.
“Denal!” Maggie gasped out as the
cry echoed away.
“He’s alive!”
Sam stepped farther down the
tunnel, toward the point where the vague glow of sunlight could be seen coming
from ahead. “But for how much longer? Let’s go.”
Kamapak raised an arm to block
them. He shook his head fiercely, babbling clear words of warning. The only
understandable syllables were janan pacha. Incan
Heaven. Sam recalled how the children of the villagers were said to be given as
gifts to the gods at janan pacha. It was where they
must have taken Denal! Kamapak stared defiantly at Sam, forbidding them
passage.
“Fuck this!” Sam mumbled angrily.
He brandished his dagger before Kamapak. “We’re going, buddy. So either move or
I’ll carve a door in you.”
The tone of his voice must have
breached the language barrier. Kamapak backed away, fear in his eyes at the
dagger. Sam did not wait for the shaman to change his mind. He led the way at a
fast clip. Kamapak, though, trailed behind them, muttering prayers under his
breath.
Soon they were at the exit of the
tunnel. It emptied onto the floor of another volcanic caldera. But the mists there
were thicker, the sunlight filtered to a twilight glow. Even drapes of heavy
fog obscured the forested jungle ahead. The reek of sulfur was strong enough to
burn the eyes, and the heat was stifling. A clear path led into the jungle.
“We must be in the neighboring
caldera,” Maggie whispered.
Sam nodded and continued into the
valley. Maggie followed, and after a moment’s hesitation, so did Kamapak. The
shaman’s posture was slightly hunched, his eyes on the strange skies, like he
feared something would reach out and grab him. Clearly, the shaman had never
been there. Some strong taboo.
“Not exactly my idea of heaven,
that’s for sure,” Sam said as he led the way into the jungle, wiping the sweat
from his brow. Under the canopy, twilight became night.
Around them, the jungle was quiet.
No bird calls or the rustle of animals. In the gloom, Sam did spot a few
monkeys hidden in the canopy overhead, but they were motionless, quiet. Only
their eyes tracked the strangers in their midst.
Maggie already had the rifle
unslung, and Sam hoped she was the experienced marksman she claimed to be.
Especially since their only other weapon was Sam’s dagger.
No one dared even whisper as they
followed the path to where the jungle opened ahead. As they reached the
brighter light, Sam crouched and held up a hand, halting them. They needed a
plan. He glanced to Maggie. Her eyes were wide with fear and worry. Kamapak
huddled behind her, wary.
Then another scream erupted,
piercing the jungle like an arrow. It came from just ahead. “Help me!” The
terror was clear in the boy’s voice.
“To hell with caution,” Sam
blurted, and stood. “C’mon!” He raced down the last of the path, Maggie at his
heels.
They burst from the jungle cover
into the outskirts of another Incan village. There, too, terraced stone homes
climbed the gentle slopes and lay half-hidden in the fringes of the jungle. But
that was the only similarity. The jungle had encroached on the village,
claiming it. Everywhere weeds and bits of forest grew from between the slabs of
granite, sprouting as if from the stone itself. Nearby, a tree grew from one of
the cracked rooftops, spreading its limbs to envelop the house.
But as unkempt as the village was,
the smell was even worse.
The streets were full of refuse and
offal. Old animal bones lay scattered like broken glass in an alley, many with
pieces of hide or fur still clinging to them. Underfoot, shattered shards of
pottery crumbled.
“Jesus,” Maggie said, covering her
mouth. “It’s the third city.”
“What?” Sam whispered.
“Remember from the celebration the
first night. You guessed the necropolis was built as a city of uca pacha, the lower world, while the other village was of
cay pacha, the middle world. Well, here’s the third village. A city of the upper world, of janan pacha.”
Sam glanced at the fouled and
ruined streets in disgust. This was no heavenly city. But he dared not stop to
ponder the mystery. Waving them on, Sam led them down the avenue.
As they ran, Kamapak stared at the
ruined village with horror, eyes wide with disbelief.
Obviously
this is not his idea of Heaven either, Sam thought.
Ahead noises began to be heard:
grunting and soft angry squeals. But through the noise, one sound drew them on.
Sobbing. It had to be Denal.
Sam slowed as the street emptied
onto the village’s main square. He peeked around the corner, then fell back.
“Damn…”
“What?” Maggie whispered. She crept
to the corner and looked.
Sam saw her shoulders tense. He
joined her at the corner, forcing back his initial shock. Stripped naked as a
newborn, Denal stood in the center of the square, dazed and terrified.
And with clear reason.
Around him, the square was crammed
with pale creatures. Some as large as bulls, others no bigger than muscled
calves. Sam recognized the sickly forms. These were the same beasts that had
haunted the necropolis below. They circled the boy, sniffing, snuffling at his
heels. Occasional fights broke out, sudden hissed screams and slashes of
razored claws. They had yet to decide what to make of the boy.
But one thing was clear. They were hungry.
Saliva drooled from almost all their lips. They looked near starved. All
knobbed bones and skin.
One of the nearest creatures
suddenly spun in their direction. It was one of the spindly-legged beasts. One
of the pack’s scouts. Sam and Maggie barely slid back into hiding before being
spotted.
Sam nudged Maggie back.
The tattooed shaman looked just as
confused and horrified. Clearly he had never suspected what his janan pacha had truly hidden. Before Sam could stop him,
Kamapak stepped around the corner, arms raised. With tears in his eyes, the
shaman lifted his voice in song, bright with religious fervor. Kamapak strode
toward the pack of creatures.
The beasts on the square grew
quiet.
Sam pulled Maggie farther back. He
whispered in her ear. “We need to circle around. Take advantage of the shaman’s
distraction. See if we can free Denal.”
She nodded, and the pair took off
at a run, diving down a cross street that paralleled the plaza. They heard
Kamapak’s song droning on. Sam tried to race as quietly as possible, avoiding
bones and pottery.
“This way!” Maggie hissed and
darted into an alley between two homes.
Sam followed and soon found himself
crouched again before the square, but this time, Denal lay directly ahead of
them. The boy had not noticed them; he had fallen to his knees, his eyes fixed
on where the shaman stood.
The beasts had also been attracted
by the singing. The monstrous throng had drifted away from the terrified boy
and toward the new oddity. A path lay open.
If they were to rescue Denal, it
was now or never.
Sam took a deep breath, then crept
out, keeping low to the ground. Maggie followed, rifle at her shoulder.
Across the plaza, Sam spotted the
shaman, now surrounded by the beasts. A few of the dwarfish members of the
pack, the sexless drones, picked at the robe Kamapak wore. Others, the taller,
more muscled hunters kept back warily, heads cocked, studying the newcomer,
listening to the singing. But how long would his song keep the monsters cowed?
Sam immediately had his answer. One of the hunters raced forward and clubbed
the shaman to the stones of the plaza. Sam took a step toward Kamapak, but
Maggie restrained him with a grip on his elbow.
Kamapak slowly pushed up and
touched his bloody forehead. The pack stared as the shaman raised his red
fingers. Then the beasts caught the scent of his blood and all else was
forgotten. The pale forms surged and leaped forward, scrambling and swamping
the shaman. Kamapak screamed in terror and pain. Screeches and howls
accompanied the attack. Even from where he stood, Sam could hear bones snap and
flesh rip.
Denal turned away from the horrible
sight and finally spotted Sam. He struggled to his feet and ran toward the pair
on wobbly legs. The boy’s eyes were puffy from tears, his face pale with terror.
He opened his mouth to speak, but Sam raised a finger to his own lips. Denal
clamped his mouth closed but could not stop a small whimper from escaping.
Sam and Maggie were soon at his
side. As Sam pulled the boy to him, the growls and hisses began to die down
across the plaza. Kamapak’s own screams had already been silenced.
“We need to get clear of here!”
Maggie whispered.
Across the square, handfuls of the
beasts had settled to the stones with their meals. Bits of torn robe were
everywhere. Blood lay in a trampled pool on the stones. But Kamapak himself was
gone, shredded apart and torn by the claws and teeth of the creatures. All that
remained were bloody gob-bets being gnawed and fought over.
But, unfortunately, there was not
enough of the thin shaman to go around. Several of the beasts now searched,
sniffing, for another source of food. Their feral eyes fell back upon the boy.
Their group was spotted.
“Damn it,” Sam muttered.
Screeches rose again from the
remaining creatures. Even those with fresh meat raised bloody muzzles to see
what else might be claimed.
“Denal, how’d you get down here?”
Sam asked, retreating across the square, no longer needing to be quiet. “Is
there another way out?”
The boy shook his head. “The guards
took me to the temple. Made me lie down on the altar. Then I wake up…I here,
dizzy, no clothes.” Denal’s voice cracked. “Th…then these things come!”
“What the hell are they?”
Denal stuttered. “Th…their gods.”
One of the nearest beasts lunged at
them. Maggie eyed it through the rifle’s sight and fired. The creature flew
back, half its skull blown away. “Well, these feckin’ gods bleed.”
The dead beast was set upon by some
of its brethren. More meat for the feast. But it did not slow the others down;
bloodlust and hunger had driven them into a near frenzy.
Sam, Denal, and Maggie continued to
retreat until new growls arose behind them. Sam swung around. More of the
creatures shambled and crept into the back of the square, late-comers to the
party, drawn by the fresh blood and screams. From the rooftops all around,
other pale beasts clambered and howled their hunger.
“I think the dinner bell’s just
been rung,” Sam said dourly.
Joan worked in her cell. She had
spent the morning poring over various journal articles, abstracts, and typed
notes on the theory of nanotechnology supplied to her by the earnest young
monk. She was especially intrigued by the paper on the theory of biomimetic
systems, the idea of constructing microscopic machines by imitating already
existing biological models, such as mitochondria and viruses. The article by a
Dr. Eric Drexler proposed using proteins and nucleic acids as the building
components of a micromachine, or nanobot. The article expounded on how
present-day biology could inspire the generation of “synthetic, nonbiological
structures.”
Joan leaned back, picturing the
microscopic octagonal units that composed Substance Z. Their shape had struck
her as familiar, almost an imitation of viral phages. Were these units actual
examples of biomimetic constructs?
Reaching to the tabletop, Joan
rifled through her papers until she came across a printout from the scanning
probe microscopy analysis. It broke down the component parts of the strange
unit.
SPM analysis:
utilizing phase imaging, force modulation, pulsed forced microscopy (results
cross referenced with mass spectrograph analysis #134B8)
Shell architecture: |
macromolecules of Si (silicon)
and H(hydrogen), specifically cubosiloxane (H8S18O12)
plus tectosilicates |
Articulated arms: |
Si (silicon) nanotubes interfaced
with Au(gold) |
Core: |
Unable to analyze |
Joan tapped at the sheet of paper.
So the arms of the nanoparticle contained gold, hence the hue of Substance Z.
But what intrigued her more was the shell composition. It was mostly silicon.
In nature, almost all biologic building blocks were based on
hydrocarbons—molecules of hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon.
But here was a construct that replaced carbon with silicon.
“Hydrosilicons,” she mumbled,
naming this new class of molecule. Though hydrocarbons made up most of biology,
in geology, it was silicon that made up the dominant
element in the earth’s crust. Could this structure be some link between biology
and geology? Or as the young monk had proposed, was this the first inorganic nanobot to be discovered.
Lastly, her eyes rested on the last
line of the report. The composition of the core. Unable to
analyze. Here was the crux of the mystery. The exterior was known and
quantifiable, but the inner workings were still an enigma. This brought her
back to the ultimate question raised by the young monk in his own personal
papers: What is the purpose of this microscopic machine?
And who had programmed it?
Before Joan could ponder the
mysteries any deeper, she heard the scrape of heel on stone from down the hall.
She glanced to her watch and furrowed her brow. It was much too early for
anyone to be fetching her lunch. She bit her lower lip. Whoever approached
probably had nothing to do with her, but she could not take that risk.
Joan hurriedly straightened up the
contents of her desktop. She shifted the research papers into a neat pile, then
folded the worn sheet of legal paper with Friar de Almagro’s code and stuffed
it in a pocket. Next she slid the single book allowed in her room, a King James
Bible, over the ragged hole she had blown through the oak desktop, hiding the
result of her experimentation last night.
Finally, she rolled the cigarette
she had bummed from Friar Carlos off the desk and tucked it into her breast
pocket. She surveyed her handiwork, satisfied that no sign of her secret
experiment with Substance Z had been discovered.
And luckily she did. The footsteps
stopped right outside her door. Joan tensed. A key was fitted into the lock and
turned.
She swung around as the door was
pulled open. It was Friar Carlos with his 9mm Glock. She stood, brows raised in
question. “What is it?”
“Out,” he said brusquely, waving
his pistol. “Come with me.”
Joan hesitated; fear that she had
been caught iced her blood.
“Now!” Carlos barked.
Nodding, Joan stepped forward and
through the door. One hand fingered the collar of her blouse. On the underside
of the removable plastic stay of her collar were the two teardrop-sized pearls
of Substance Z. She could not risk leaving the samples in her cell. The room
might be searched, or she might be reassigned to a new cell. So she had devised
this way to keep the golden drops hidden and in her possession.
Carlos nodded her forward. She
followed his directions. She expected him to lead her down to the labs, but
instead he herded her to a new section of the Abbey. She frowned at the
unfamiliar surroundings. “Where are we going?”
“You’ll see when you get there.”
The friar, never a warm fellow, was
even more tight-lipped today. His tense attitude heightened her nervousness.
What was going on? This wing of the Abbey was spartan. Plain stone floors with
a string of bare bulbs illuminated the way. There were no lines of small doors
opening into tiny domiciles. Joan glanced up and down the long hall. They had
not passed a single of the Abbey’s denizens since entering this wing.
“Is th…there something wrong?” she
asked, unable to keep the tremble from her voice.
Friar Carlos did not answer. He
simply guided her to a small staircase at the end of the hall. It was only six
steps and led to a thick oak door banded in iron. A small crucifix etched in
silver marked the door. Above the crucifix was a pair of crossed swords.
Joan remembered Henry remarking on
such a symbol found on Friar de Almagro’s heraldic ring. She remembered its
meaning. It was the mark of the Inquisition.
Nervousness became a clammy fear as
Carlos backed her to the side at gunpoint and knocked on the door. His rap was
clearly a code. A latch was slid open from inside, the grate of iron on wood
loud in the empty, bare hall.
Carlos stepped back as the door was
swung open. Joan felt the heat of the next room flow out like the breath of a
dragon. She was not allowed to back away. The 9mm Glock was pressed firmly into
her side.
A heavy figure, his bared chest gleaming
with sweat, stood in the doorway. He had shrugged his monk’s robes from his
shoulders and let it hang from his sashed belt. He ran a hand over his bald
pate, which was also gleaming, and spoke in clipped Spanish. Carlos answered.
The big monk nodded his head and waved them inside.
“Go,” Carlos ordered.
With no other choice, Joan
followed. The next room was something from old horror movies. To the left was a
row of barred cells, straw-floored, with no beds. To the right was a wall upon
which were hung neatly coiled chains. A row of leather whips hung from pegs. In
the center of the room was a brazier, red hot with flickers of flames. Amid the
glowing coals, three long iron poles were embedded.
Branding
irons.
Joan glanced around the room. She
was in a mock-up of a medieval dungeon. No, she
corrected herself. She could smell a familiar scent. Something from her days at
the emergency room. Blood and fear. This was no
mock-up, no wax museum set. It was real.
“Why…why am I here?” Joan asked
aloud, but in her heart she already knew the answer. Henry had made some
mistake. As frightening as her surroundings were, Joan felt a twinge of worry
for Henry. What had happened to him? She faced Carlos. “Am I to be punished?”
“No,” the friar said, his words as
casual as if speaking of the weather. “You are to be killed.”
Joan felt her knees weaken. The
heat of the room suddenly sickened her. She could hardly breathe. “I…I don’t
understand.”
“And you don’t need to,” Carlos
answered. He nodded to the large monk.
Using a pair of leather gloves, the
thick man judged his irons. He pulled them from the coals and eyed their
glowing tips. He pursed his lips, content, then spoke in Spanish.
Carlos raised his pistol. “Move to
the far wall.”
Joan did not trust her legs. She
glanced around the room, then back to Carlos. “Why all this? Why this way?” She
weakly pointed at his gun. “You could have killed me in the room.”
Carlos’s lips grew grimmer. He
studied the tools of interrogation, the tools of the Inquisition, and answered,
“We need the practice.”
Maggie stared down her rifle and
squeezed the trigger. The pale face flew back, the mouth a bloody ruin.
Pivoting on her toe, Maggie swung the barrel at her next target. The blasts of
the Winchester had deafened her by now to the screeches and howls. She operated
on instinct. She fired again, blowing back one of the pale scouts that had
wandered too near. Its high-pitched squeal as it was set upon by its brethren
managed finally to slice through her numb ears.
She lowered her rifle, wheezing
between clenched teeth. The five beasts she had slain so far were at least
keeping the throng momentarily occupied.
Something touched her shoulder. She
butted the rifle’s stock at it.
“Whoa!” Sam yelled in her ear.
“Hold on! It’s me!” He gripped her shoulder more firmly.
Maggie licked her dry lips, shaking
slightly. “What are we going to do?” she moaned. The beasts still had them
boxed in the center of the plaza and were not backing down. She had made no
headway in blasting a path to freedom. For every creature she shot down, more
would leap and scramble to fill the gap.
Sam released his grip. “I’ve been
counting. You have only one more round left.”
Maggie glanced at the rifle.
“Jesus!” She raised the weapon. Her last shot had better be good. She forced
her hands not to tremble.
Sam pushed her gun down. “Let me
try.”
“With what?” she hissed at him.
He raised his gold knife. “Remember
the creatures at the necropolis?”
“Sam, you’re gonna have to let them
come damn close,” she argued, pulling the rifle free of his grip.
“Maybe not.” Sam stepped in front
of her. Taking off his Stetson, he lifted the gold dagger high and waved his
hat with his other hand. He screamed a raw bellow of challenge.
Hundreds of eyes lifted from their
meals and growled back at Sam.
The Texan replaced his hat, leaving
only the dagger held in an upthrust fist. The growls from the massed throats
died down as gazes flicked to the gold knife. A trickle of whimpering sounded
to one side. Sam seemed to have heard it, too. He swung toward the noise, the
weak spot in the throng. He waved his dagger with long sweeping motions,
repeating his bellow of anger.
The wall of pale forms began to
pull back from him, breaking apart.
“Stick to my back,” Sam whispered
at Maggie and Denal.
Maggie waved the naked boy ahead,
then covered their rear with the Winchester. One bullet,
she kept reminding herself.
Sam began a slow approach toward
the throng, brandishing his dagger, jabbing, swiping, growling.
With bleating cries, several of the
beasts galloped out of his path. The standoff broke down. More and more of the
beasts fled, dragging off the bloody chunks they had managed to scavenge.
“I think it’s working,” Sam said.
Suddenly, something lunged at Sam.
Vestigial wings beat on its back, identifying it as one of the hunters. Sam
stumbled back, tripping over Denal.
Maggie danced away, keeping her
feet and swinging her rifle.
But she was too slow.
Sam fell atop the boy as the
creature leaped atop them. Denal screamed in terror. Sam shoved his only weapon
up. The dagger. The screeching beast impaled itself
on the blade. It seemed a small weapon compared to the hooked claws and
shredding fangs of the attacker—but the effect was anything but small.
The tiny wings of the beast seemed
suddenly to work. The creature appeared to fly straight up off Sam’s blade,
squealing a noise that made even Maggie cringe. It rolled to the stones of the
plaza and lay belly up. Small flames could be seen lancing from between the
clawed fingers that clutched its wounded abdomen.
Around them, the pale throng froze
and became silent, eyes wide, unblinking.
The flames spread from the beast’s
belly. Like a wildfire in dry grass, the blaze blew through the creature. It
arched and writhed; jaws stretched wide in a silent scream of agony. Flames
shot out of its throat, flickering like some fiery tongue, and then its head
was consumed. The creature’s bulk collapsed to the stone, dead. Flames still
danced along its blackened form, a sick pyre.
Sam and Denal were already on their
feet. “Let’s go,” Sam said.
The Texan threatened again with his
dagger, but this time, there was no challenge. The remaining beasts in his path
cleared out. Huddled in a tight group, they crossed toward the exit. All three
held their breath.
Maggie stared at the smoldering
form of the attacker. Spontaneous combustion. She
tried to add this piece to the growing puzzle. She shook her head. Now was not
the time.
She turned her attention forward.
Sam continued to threaten the few
beasts who still hovered at the edges of their path. An especially large
monster, all muscle and bone, still glared from one side. Its eyes were
narrowed with wary hatred. Of all the creatures there, this one appeared well
fed. It hunched on one knuckled fist, like some silverback gorilla, but naked and
pale. Maggie recognized it as one of the rare “leaders” of the pack. She
noticed it lacked any external genitalia. Like Pachacutec’s
body, she realized.
One of Maggie’s eyes twitched as a
horrible realization began to dawn. She was so shocked that she failed to
notice what the hulking beast held in its other clawed fist. “Sam!”
The creature swung his arm and
threw a boulder the size of a ripe pumpkin at the Texan. Sam glanced over but
could not move in time. The chunk of granite struck Sam’s fist. The dagger flew
from his grip. It landed in the middle of a clutch of the beasts.
The giant stone-thrower roared in
triumph, raising on its legs and striking its barreled chest with one of its
gnarled fists. Its triumphant bellow was echoed by others all across the plaza.
Without the dagger, they had no defense now.
Maggie raised her rifle toward the
howling gorilla. “Shut up, asshole!” She pulled the trigger, and the monster
fell backward, crashing to the stones. Its legs tremored in death throes for a
breath, then grew still.
As the echoes of her rifle blast
died down, silence returned to the plaza. No one moved. With the death of the
leader, the pack was momentarily cowed.
Finally, Maggie hissed, “Sam, that
was my last shell.”
“Then I’d say we’ve overstayed our welcome
here.”
As if hearing him, the creatures
began to creep slowly toward them again.
The Texan turned to Denal. “How
fast can you run?”
“Just watch me!” Denal flew down
the empty street ahead.
Sam and Maggie took off after the
boy, racing together through the fouled village.
Angry screeches and hungry howls
erupted behind them. The chase was on. With the prey on the run, the pack
abandoned their wariness. Bloodlust overcame fear. Scouts ran along neighboring
streets, white blurs between homes, tracking them. Behind them, hunters gave
chase, howling their challenge.
Maggie struggled to keep up with
Sam, fighting to get the Winchester over her shoulder.
“Leave it,” Sam yelled back.
“But—?”
Sam slowed and grabbed the rifle
from her. He whipped it over his head and threw it behind them. The prized
Winchester clattered and skittered across the rock. “I’d rather save you, than
a damned rusted rifle.”
Unburdened and strangely energized
by Sam’s words, Maggie increased her pace. They ran side by side, matching stride.
Soon they were out of the village and onto the jungle path. Trees and whipping
branches strove to slow them down, but they pushed onward, scratched and
bloodied.
Denal was a few meters ahead of
them, leaping and running naked through the woods.
“Make for the tunnel!” Sam called
ahead.
“What tunnel?” Denal called back,
almost tripping.
Maggie realized Denal had no memory
of getting here. She yelled. “Just stick to the trail, Denal. It leads right to
it!”
The boy increased his stride. Sam
and Maggie struggled to follow. Behind them, they could hear the snap of
branches and the yipping barks of the hunters.
Gasping, neither tried to speak any
longer. Maggie’s vision narrowed to a pinpoint and, as she ran, her legs
spasmed and cramped. She began to slow.
Sam’s arm was suddenly under her,
pulling her along.
“No…Sam…go on.” But she was too
weak even to fight him.
“Like hell I will.” He hauled her
with him. The chase seemed endless. Maggie did not remember the trail being
this long.
Then finally sunlight returned. The
jungle fell behind them. Ahead, the black eye of the tunnel lay only a handful
of meters ahead. Denal was already there, hovering at the entrance.
Sam half carried her up the short
slope to the entrance. “Get inside!” he called to the boy.
Maggie glanced over her shoulder.
Pale forms burst through the jungle foliage, ripping away clinging vines. Some
loped on two legs, some ran on all fours.
“Get inside! Now, Denal!”
“I…I can’t!” the boy whined.
Maggie swung forward. Denal still
crouched by the entrance. He would take a step toward the shadowed interior,
then back away.
Sam and Maggie joined him. The
Texan pushed her toward the tunnel. “Go!”
Maggie stumbled into the entrance,
her vision so dimmed that the gloom of the tunnel was blinding. She twisted
around to see Sam pull Denal into his arms.
The boy screeched like a butchered
pig as Sam leaped into the tunnel beside her. Denal writhed and contorted in
the man’s arms.
“What’s wrong with him?” Maggie
asked, as she and Sam limped deeper down the throat of the tunnel.
Denal’s back arched in a tremored
convulsion. “I think he’s having a seizure,” Sam said, holding the boy tight.
Behind them, the screeches of the
beasts echoed up the passage. Maggie glanced over her shoulder. The beasts
piled up at the entrance, twisted forms limned in the sunlight. But none
entered. None dared pursue their escaping prey into the tunnel. “They won’t
come in here,” Maggie muttered. She frowned as she swung around. Like Denal, she added silently.
Sam finally fell to his knees,
exhausted, legs trembling. He laid Denal down. The boy’s eyes were rolled
white, and a frothing saliva clung to his lips. He gurgled and choked.
“I don’t understand what’s the
matter with him,” Sam said.
Maggie glanced back to the writhing
mass of beasts at the tunnel’s opening. She slowly shook her head.
Finally, Denal coughed loudly. His
body relaxed. Maggie reached toward the boy, thinking he was expiring. But when
she touched him, Denal’s eyes rolled back. He stared at her, then sat up
quickly, like coming out of a bad dream. “Que paso?”
he asked in Spanish.
“I had to drag you inside,” Sam
said. “What was wrong?”
Denal’s brows pinched together as
he struggled back to English. “It would not let me come inside.”
“What wouldn’t?”
Denal pressed a finger against his
forehead, eyes squeezed shut. “I don’t know.”
Maggie suspected the answer. “It
was the temple.”
Sam glanced over the boy’s head at
her. “What?”
Maggie stood. “Let’s get out of
here.”
Sam helped the boy up. They
followed her as she slowly trudged back toward the distant exit. Ahead, the two
torches that framed the golden alcove, the Incan’s Temple of the Sun, could be
seen flickering from their notches in the wall.
As Maggie drew abreast of the cave,
she slowed and stopped, studying the golden altar and the webbed mass of golden
filaments above it.
Sam drew up to her, but his eyes
were still cautiously watching their backtrail for any renewed sign of pursuit.
He mumbled as he joined her, “If that was Incan Heaven back there, I hate to
see their idea of Hell.”
Maggie nodded toward the golden
temple. “I think it’s right here.”
Denal hung back, keeping as far
from the shining room as possible.
Sam stepped beside her. “I know.
It’s hard to believe the Incas would feed their children to those monsters.”
“No, Sam. You don’t understand.
Those monsters are their children.” Maggie turned
toward Sam. She ignored his incredulous look. She needed to voice her theory
aloud. “They told us the temple takes their children, turns them into gods, and
sends them to janan pacha.” Maggie pointed back
toward where the last of the beasts still cavorted and whined at the entrance.
“Those are the missing children.”
“How…why…?”
Maggie touched Sam’s shoulder. “As
I tried to tell you before, I saw Pachacutec without his king’s robes. His body
was hairless, pale, with no genitalia. His body looked just like one of those
beasts. Like that big creature I shot. One of the pack’s leaders.”
Sam’s brows bunched; his eyes shone
with disbelief. He glanced to the temple. “You’re saying that thing actually
grew him a new body?”
“As well as it was able. As Sapa
Inca or king, it gave him the body of a pack leader.”
“But that’s impossible.”
Maggie frowned. “As impossible as
Norman’s healed knee?” she asked. “Or his repaired eyesight? Or his ability to
suddenly communicate with the Incas? Think about it, Sam!” She nodded to the
temple. “This thing is some biological regenerator. It’s kept the Incas alive
for hundreds of years…it grew their leader a new body. But why? Why does it do
that?”
Sam shook his head.
Maggie pointed once again toward
the beastly caldera. “That’s the price for eternal life here. The children! It
takes their offspring and…and I don’t know…maybe experiments with them. Who
knows? But whatever the purpose, the temple is using the Incas’ children as
biologic fodder. The villagers are no more than cattle in a reproductive
experiment.”
“But what about Denal?” Sam asked.
She glanced to the boy. He was
unchanged…mostly. She remembered his reluctance to enter the tunnel. “I think
the temple needs more malleable material, earlier genetic cells, like from
newborns. Denal was too old. So it did to him like it does to all its
experiments. Once finished, it instilled some mental imperative to cross to the
next caldera and implanted phobic blocks on returning. You saw Denal’s
inability to enter here, just like the creatures’. I suspect those beasts we
found at the necropolis two days ago had migrated from the caldera through
other tunnels, perhaps looking for another way out, and became trapped down
there. I think the beasts are allowed to go anywhere except
into the villagers’ valley. That is forbidden.”
“But why?”
“Because the temple is protecting
its investment from its own biologic waste products. It can’t risk some harm
coming to its future source of raw genetic material. So it protects the
villagers.”
“But if these creatures are a risk,
why doesn’t it just destroy the experiments once it’s done with them? Why let
them live?”
Maggie shrugged. “I’m not sure.
Maybe the neighboring caldera is a part of the experiment, some natural testing
ground for its creations. It monitors how they adapt and function in a real
environment.”
“And what about the way they burn
up when I stabbed them?”
“Spontaneous combustion. A
fail-safe mechanism. Did you notice how Denal’s guards had spears made of the
same gold? A blow from one of these weapons, even a scratch, must set off some
energy cascade. It’s just another level of protection for the villagers.”
Sam stared at the temple, horror
growing in his eyes. “It still sounds crazy. But considering what happened to
Norman, I can’t deny that you might be right.” He turned to Maggie. “But, if
so, why is the temple doing all this? What is its ultimate goal? Who built it?”
Maggie frowned. She had no answer.
She began to shake her head when a new noise intruded into the tunnel.
…whump, whump,
whump…
Sam and Maggie both turned toward
the tunnel’s other end. It was coming from the valley beyond.
“C’mon,” Sam said excitedly. He led
them at a fast clip toward the bright sunlight.
As they reached the end, squinting
at the late morning’s glare, Sam pointed. “Look! It’s the cavalry!” Circling
through the mists overhead was a dark shadow. As it descended farther, the
green-black body of a military transport helicopter came into sight. “It’s
Uncle Hank! Thank God!”
Maggie also sighed with relief.
“I’ll be glad to get the professor’s take on all this.”
Sam put his arm around her. She
didn’t resist.
Then deeper down in the valley, a
new sound challenged the beat of the rotors. A more rapid thumping: drums! It seemed the Incas had also spotted the strange
bird entering their valley. The sharp clangs of beaten gongs began to ring
through the valley, strident and angry.
Maggie glanced at Sam. “War drums.”
Sam’s arm dropped from her shoulder;
his grin faded. “I don’t understand. Norman should’ve warned the Incas not to
fear the professor or the others.”
“Something must’ve gone wrong.”
Sam now wore a deep frown. “I’ve
got to reach my uncle and warn him.” He began to lead the way down the steep
switchbacks.
Below in the valley, the helicopter
descended toward the flat field of quinoa planted at the jungle’s edge. The
shafts of the plants were beaten flat by the rotor’s wash.
Maggie followed. “But what about
Norman?” she yelled over the roar of the helicopter.
Sam did not answer, but his pace
increased.
Norman hid in the fringes of the
jungle as the helicopter landed in the green meadow beyond. He kept tucked
behind the leaves of a thorny bush; tiny green ants marched down a frond before
his eyes, too busy to be bothered by the thumping beat of the helicopter as its
skids settled into the field.
Norman, though, felt every thudding
whump deep in his chest. Cringing, he prayed he was
wrong and hoped he had misinterpreted Professor Conklin’s words. “After all
that’s occurred this last week,” he mumbled to himself, “maybe I’m just being
paranoid.” Still, Norman remained hidden as the passenger compartment of the
chopper slid open. A part of him knew that he was not
wrong. Professor Conklin had been trying to warn Norman about something. But
what?
The answer was soon apparent. A mix
of men, some dressed in fatigues and jungle camouflage, others dressed in the
brown robes of monks, clambered from the helicopter. The men, even the monks,
moved too efficiently to be just a rescue team. Crated gear was off-loaded from
a hatch and cracked open. Norman saw assault rifles passed from hand to hand.
Several of the men knelt and attached grenade launchers to their weapons.
Norman hunkered down even lower.
Oh, God! He hadn’t been paranoid enough.
From deeper in the jungle, the
drums and clanging gongs that had sounded from the Incan village fell silent.
Norman held his breath. He was glad he had warned Pachacutec to prepare the
village. If there had been no danger, the plan was for Norman to accompany the
professor back to the village, halting any bloodshed and making introductions.
Norman considered returning to the
village now. The Incas were prepared for hostilities, but not for this. He
should warn them to flee. But Norman knew Pachacutec never would. The two had
shared a long talk this morning, and it was clear the Incan king would brook no
challenge to the tribe’s autonomy. Pachacutec would not run.
So Norman remained hidden, peering
through the fronded branches of his lookout post. The leader of the men, a
rotund fellow outfitted in a safari suit and matching hat, barked orders and
aligned his men for a march to the village. The men were quick to obey. In only
ten minutes from the time the skids hit the ground, the assault team was under
way. They operated with military precision.
A pair of men took the point.
Crouching, they ran from under the blades of the helicopter and raced to the
trailhead that led to the village. From their reconnaissance in the air, Norman
was sure the twisted trails to the village had been mapped. The other four men
followed more slowly, cautiously, guns at the ready. The large leader,
red-faced and covered in a sheen of sweat, moved behind them, armed with a
pistol and flanked by a single guard for protection.
Norman waited until the entire
troupe had vanished into the jungle to finally breathe. He sat hunched, unsure
what to do. He had to get word to Sam. Trying to peer toward the cliff face
that contained the temple’s tunnel, he could determine nothing about their
fate. The jungle blocked his view.
If he could maybe work his way
through the jungle…
He started to shift when new voices
froze him in place. He trembled, half-crouched. From the far side of the
helicopter, two other men climbed from the helicopter. Norman instantly
recognized the professor. He was unshaven, and his clothes looked like they had
been slept in for a few days, but there was no mistaking his proud demeanor.
Henry stumbled a step forward,
shoved at gunpoint by a tall dark man dressed in a monk’s robe. The gunman had
dark black hair and an even darker scowl. A silver cross glinted on his chest.
Norman did not understand all this
religious garb. Clearly it was some ruse.
Voices reached him as the pair
stepped farther away from the helicopter. “You will cooperate with us fully,”
the dark man said, “or the student at the dig will suffer the same fate as the
woman friend of yours.”
Norman saw Henry’s shoulders slump
slightly, defeated. He nodded.
From his hiding place, Norman
clenched his fists in helpless frustration. The gunman had to have been
referring to Philip. The Harvard student must be held hostage back at the camp.
“The collected prisoners will be
questioned,” the man continued. “You will help in the interrogation.”
“I understand,” Henry snapped back.
“But if my nephew or any of the others are harmed, you can all go fuck
yourselves.”
The man’s countenance grew even
darker, but he just stepped back. He used his free hand to slip out a
cigarette.
Norman shifted his crouched
position, his right hand landing upon a chunk of volcanic rock. He clutched the
rock and stared back at the sole man holding the professor captive. Norman
worked the red rock free. If he sneaked along that ridge of basalt, it would
put the helicopter between him and the guard. Norman already began to move,
sidling along the jungle’s edge. He knew even the chopper’s pilot had left with
the assault team, leaving only the single guard. It was a risk, but one that
could save them all. If he could free the professor, they could flee together
and join Sam’s group.
Norman reached the folded ridge of
volcanic basalt, took a deep breath, then broke from cover and dashed across
the open few yards to reach the cover of the ridge. He dived back into the
welcome shadows, waiting for bullets to pepper the slope behind him, sure he
had been seen. Nothing happened. He leaned a moment on the rough rock. He
raised the chunk of volcanic stone, suddenly questioning how smart this was.
Before fear could immobilize him, he pushed onward, scuttling like a crab in
the shadow of the basalt ridge.
Once he was sure he had gone far
enough, he risked a quick peek over the ridge. He was right. The bulk of the
helicopter stood between him and the gunman. Norman climbed over the ridge as
quietly as possible. The soft scrape of rock sounded explosively loud, but
Norman knew it was all in his head. Besides, he was committed. Out in the open.
He ran with the rock clutched to
his chest, his heart pounding so loudly that even the Incas at the village
could probably hear it. But he made it to the shadow of the helicopter. He
knelt and spotted the feet of the two men on the far side. They seemed unaware
of his presence.
Crawling under the helicopter,
Norman moved around the extra fuel tanks. Strands of quinoa tickled his arms as
he sneaked to the far side of the chopper. Ahead, both the professor and the
gunman stood, their backs to him. The pair stared toward the jungle. The robed
guard exhaled a long trail of smoke.
Holding his breath and biting his
lip, Norman slipped free. He could either creep slowly, thus avoiding any
obstacles…or simply make a mad dash toward his quarry. But Norman didn’t trust
his shaky legs with speed. So he stepped cautiously, placing one foot after the
other, edging toward the gunman.
He was only an arm’s length away
when all hell broke loose.
Explosions suddenly rocked the
valley. The center of the jungle ripped far into the sky, flaming shards
raining down.
Norman gasped at the sight, unable
to stop his surprised response.
Hearing him, the gunman twisted on
a heel and dropped to a crouch.
Norman found himself staring at the
business end of a pistol. “Drop it!” the man ordered.
There was no need for words. The
rock in Norman’s hand was already falling from his numb fingers.
From the jungles, screams and yells
echoed forth. Gunfire rattled like a cupful of teeth.
Over the man’s head, Norman spotted
Henry. He wore a look of hopelessness and defeat.
Norman slumped, matching the
expression. “I’m sorry, Professor.”
Sam stumbled to a stop when the
first explosion tore through the valley. He crouched slightly at the rain of
flaming debris. “What the hell—?”
Denal crouched down, too.
Maggie was at Sam’s shoulder, her
eyes wide. “They’re attacking the village!”
Sam stayed low. “Uncle Hank would
never do that.”
“What if it’s not the professor,”
Maggie said. “Maybe someone else saw the signal fires. Thieves. Huaqueros. Maybe even the same bastards who tried to
tunnel into our dig last week. Maybe they intercepted our radio messages an’
beat Uncle Hank here.”
Sam sank to the slope. “What are we
going to do?”
Maggie’s eyes were fierce. “Stop
them.” She nodded toward where the helicopter rested in the field,
half-obscured by a peninsula of jungle. “Take that out, and these thieves aren’t
going anywhere. Then call the professor and warn him to come with the police or
army.” She turned to Sam. “We can’t let them murder and steal what we found
here.”
Sam was nodding with her words.
“You’re right. We have to at least try.” He stood up. “I’ll go and reconnoiter
the site. See what’s up.”
“No,” Maggie argued. “We remain
together.”
Sam frowned, but Maggie’s
expression did not budge.
Even Denal nodded his head. “I go,
too.” Sam caught the way the boy glanced up at the tunnel entrance. Denal was
not being heroic; he just didn’t want to be left alone…especially naked and
weaponless.
Sam stood and surveyed the valley.
Automatic gunfire echoed up from
the jungle. Other explosions would occasionally erupt, tossing trees and rocks
into the sky. Amidst the weapons fire, whispers of Incan war cries mixed with
the screams of the dying. Smoke billowed up and through the jungle.
“Okay,” Sam said. “We all go. But
stick together and keep quiet. We’ll sneak to the jungle’s edge and creep as
close to the chopper as possible. Find out if there are any guards.”
Maggie nodded and waved him
forward.
Sam hurried down the last of the
switchbacks and led them through the escarpment of volcanic boulders and scrub
bushes. Soon the shadows of the jungle swallowed up the trio. Sam raised a
finger to his lips and guided them with hand signals. Within the embrace of the
forest, the sounds of warfare grew muffled.
Crouching, Sam picked a path
through the foliage. They had to get to the helicopter before the thieves
finished subduing the village. Sam prayed that there were some backup weapons
in the helicopter. If they were to hold the valley until Uncle Hank got there,
they would need their own fire-power.
The shadowy jungle grew brighter
ahead. It was the forest’s edge. Sam slowed his approach. Now was not the time
to be caught. He signaled the others to hang back. Sam alone crept the last of
the way. Just as he was fingering away a splayed leaf of a jungle fern, a
familiar voice reached him.
“Leave the boy alone, Otera! There’s
no reason to hurt him.”
Uncle
Hank!
Sam pulled back the leaf to view
the open meadow beyond. The large military helicopter squatted like some
monstrous locust upon the field of quinoa. But closer still was a sight that
froze Sam’s blood. His uncle stood before a man dressed in a monk’s habit, but
the man was no disciple of god. He bore in his right fist a large pistol. Sam,
familiar with guns, recognized it as a .357 Spanish Astra. It was a weapon
capable of stopping a charging bull—and it was pointed at his uncle’s chest.
Over his uncle’s shoulder, Sam
spotted a third member of this party. It was Norman! The photographer’s face
was pale with fear.
The man named Otera glared at Sam’s
uncle. “Since when are you the one giving orders here?” He suddenly swung his
gun and viciously struck Norman across the face. The photographer fell to his
knees, blood welling from a cut on his brow.
“Leave him alone!” Uncle Hank said,
stepping around to shield Norman.
Otera, his back now slightly turned
to Sam, raised his pistol. “I think you’ve outlived your usefulness, old man.
From the messages, these students know where the gold is hidden. So with this
fellow here, I see no need to keep you around.” Sam distinctly heard the gun
cock.
Oh, God! Frantic, Sam slid from his hiding place and ran
across the wet field.
The motion drew his uncle’s
attention. Henry’s eyes widened in surprise. Sam saw his uncle struggle to
stifle any further reaction—but even this small response was noticed.
Otera pivoted around just as Sam
reached him, gun at chest level. Sam yelled and leaped at him, then an
explosion of gunfire stung his ears. Sam was flung backward, away from his
uncle’s captor. He landed in the meadow on his back.
“No!” he heard his uncle yell.
Sam tried to push to his elbows, but
he found he could not move. Not even breathe. It felt as if some huge weight
sat on his chest. Pain lanced out in all directions. From the corner of his
eye, he saw his uncle leap on the back of the robed gunman, tackling and
crushing him to the ground.
Sam smiled at the old man’s
fierceness. Good for you, Uncle Hank.
Then all went black.
From a couple meters away, Maggie
had spotted Sam suddenly burst from his hiding place and out into the open.
What was the damned fool doing? She hurried forward with Denal beside her. As
she reached Sam’s hiding place, the crack of a single gunshot sounded from
beyond the leafy fern.
Panicked, Maggie ripped away the
fronds. She saw Sam collapsed in the flattened meadow, his arms twitching
spastically. Even from her hiding place, she could see a gout of blood welling
from a huge chest wound. Blind to all else, she ran from cover. She would no
longer hide in a ditch while a friend died. “Sam!”
As she ran, she finally noticed the
struggle beyond the Texan’s body. It made no sense. The professor sat on the
back of a struggling monk. The gun, still smoking in the wet grass, was just
beyond the man’s reach. Suddenly, as if in a dream, Norman appeared out of
nowhere. He bore a huge red rock over his head. He brought it down with a
resounding blow atop the pinned man’s head. The man went limp, and Professor
Conklin climbed off him.
It was then a race to see who could
reach Sam first.
Sam’s uncle won. He fell to his
knees beside his nephew. “Oh, no…oh, God!”
Norman and Maggie reached him at
the same time.
Falling to his hands and knees,
Norman reached and checked for a pulse. Maggie sank more slowly. She saw the
glassy way Sam stared up at the skies. She knew no one was there; his eyes were
empty.
Norman just confirmed it. “He’s dead.”
At gunpoint, Joan crossed toward
the wall of chains. She knew if she allowed herself to be bound to that dungeon
wall that she was a dead woman; any hope of escape would be gone. Her mind spun
on various plans and scenarios. Only one idea came to mind.
As she was prodded by Friar
Carlos’s pistol, her fingers clutched her collar. She slipped out the plastic
stay that held her collar stiff and scraped one of the soft teardrop samples of
Substance Z into her palm. She had to time this right.
On the way toward the wall, she
sidled near the large, bare-chested monk who still stoked the flaming brazier.
He leaned over his handiwork, stirring the glowing coals with one of the iron
brands. Joan noted the slight bubble of drool at the corner of his lips. The
thick-limbed brute clearly lusted to test his irons on her flesh. He caught her
staring and grinned, a flash of desire.
Joan suddenly felt no guilt for
what she was about to do.
Nudging past him, she flicked the
pebble of metal into the brazier, then turned her back and ducked—and lucky
that she did. The explosion was more forceful than she had expected. She was
thrown forward, crashing to the stone floor, and skidded on hands and knees.
Her back burned. The smell of singed silk struck her nose. She rolled around,
twisting her sore back to the cool stone.
Behind her, the brazier was a
twisted ruin. The iron brands were scattered; one was even impaled through a
wooden support pillar. The echo of the explosion slowly died in her ears, the
ringing replaced with a pained howling. Her gaze shifted to the large monk. He
lay on his back several meters away. His bare chest was charred and blistered.
A hand rose and knocked a coal from his belly with a groan. The man sat up, one
side of his face blackened. At first, Joan thought it was just soot; then the
man cried out, and his burned skin split open, raw and red. Blood ran down his
neck.
Oh, God. She turned her face away.
Carlos, unharmed, was already on
his feet. He crossed to a telephone on the wall and barked in Spanish. A call
for help. Once done, he slammed the receiver down and stepped over the wounded
man. The monk clutched at Carlos’s pant leg, but the friar shook him loose and
crossed to Joan.
He pointed his gun. “Get up.”
Joan pulled to her feet, gasping as
her singed shirt peeled from her back. Carlos frowned and forced Joan around so
he could view her injuries. “You’ll live,” he said.
“But for how long?” Joan asked with
a sour look. “Until the next time you decide to kill me?” Joan waved a hand
around the room. “What just happened?”
Carlos scowled at the man still
moaning on the floor. “An apprentice. It seems he has much to learn still.”
Joan bowed her head, hiding her
grim satisfaction. Carlos blamed the monk for the explosion. Good. Now for the
next step in her plan. At her collar, she scraped a second dollop of gold under
a fingernail, then reached to her pocket. She fingered out the cigarette Carlos
had given her yesterday. With trembling fingers, she brought it to her lips.
“Do you mind?” she asked, raising her face.
He frowned harshly at the moaning
monk. “Go ahead. We’ve got a few minutes until someone comes for him.” He
reached out, and a lighter appeared in his fingers.
Bending, she lit the cigarette,
then nodded her thanks. She took a long drag, sighing appreciatively and
loudly. “That’s better,” she said heavily, exhaling in Carlos’s direction.
Joan saw him eye the glowing tip of
her cigarette. His pupils dilated at the scent of nicotine.
She took a second drag, then passed
him the cigarette, sighing out the smoke languidly. “Here. Thanks. But that’s
enough for me.”
He accepted her offering with a
tight smile. “Afraid for your health?”
She shrugged, too tense to trust
her voice. She spotted the glint of gold on the underside of the cigarette, a
quarter inch from its glowing tip. “Enjoy,” she finally said.
Carlos held up the cigarette in a
salute of thanks. Then he grinned and drew it to his lips. Joan took a small
step away, turning her shoulders slightly.
She watched the friar take a long
drag on the cigarette. Its end grew red hot as it burned toward the filter.
Joan swung away as the white paper flamed toward the smear of gold.
The explosion this time was not as
severe.
Still, it threw her to her knees.
Joan twisted around, her head
ringing with the blast. Carlos still stood, but his face was a cratered,
smoking ruin. He fell backward, landing atop the burned monk, who now screamed
in horror.
Joan rolled to her feet and
recovered the friar’s Glock from the floor. She crossed to the wailing monk.
Crouching, she roughly checked his burns. Third degree over sixty percent of
his body. He thrashed from her touch, crying out. She stood. He was a dead man,
but didn’t know it yet. He would not survive these burns. “Not so fun playing
with fire, is it?” she mumbled.
She raised her pistol and aimed
between his eyes. The monk stared at her in terror, then fainted away. Sighing,
she lowered the Glock. She couldn’t do it, not even to give him a quick end.
She moved away.
Time was crucial. She had a gun and
a remaining sliver of gold. Nothing must stop her from escaping. She hefted the
pistol and stepped clear of the two prone bodies. She eyed the friar’s corpse
for a moment.
“You were right, Carlos,” she said,
turning to the door. “Smoking kills.”
Maggie touched Henry’s shoulder as
he knelt over his nephew’s body. His shoulders were wracked with painful sobs.
Maggie knew no words could ease his pain. Her years in Belfast had taught her
that much. On both sides of the fighting, Irish and English, Catholic and Protestant,
there were just grieving mothers and fathers. It was all so stupid. So insane.
Behind her, gunfire continued to
bark throughout the jungle, though by now it had died to sporadic fits. The
most intense fighting had already ended. The Incas had no prayer against such
armament.
She stared at Sam, unable to look
at the ragged wound, the blood. She found her gaze resting on his face. His
Stetson had been knocked off when he fell. He seemed almost naked without it.
His tousled sandy hair was mussed and unkempt, like he was just sleeping. She
reached and touched a lanky lock, tucking it behind an ear. Tears she had been
holding back finally began to flow. Her vision blurred.
Henry reached to her hand, sensing
her pain, needing support himself. His cold fingers wrapped around hers. Where
words failed, simple human contact soothed. She leaned into the professor’s
side. “Oh, Sam…” her voice cracked.
Norman knelt across from Sam’s
body. Behind him, Denal stood quietly. The naked boy was now covered in
Norman’s poncho, leaving the photographer only a pair of knee-length breeches.
Norman cleared his throat. “Maggie, what about the temple?” he said softly.
“Maybe…maybe it could…” He shrugged.
Maggie raised her teary eyes.
“What?”
Norman nodded to Sam’s body.
“Remember Pachacutec’s story.”
Horror replaced sorrow. Her eyes
widened. She pictured the Sapa Inca’s pale body and remembered what lay in the
neighboring valley. She slowly shook her head. The temple held no salvation.
She could not imagine giving Sam’s body over to it.
Henry spoke, his voice coarse with
tears. “Wh…what temple?”
Norman pointed toward the volcanic
wall. “Up there! Something the Incas found. A structure that heals.” Norman
stood and exposed his knee. He told of the injury he sustained.
The professor’s face grew
incredulous. He turned to Maggie for confirmation.
She slowly nodded her head.
“But Sam’s d…dead,” Henry said.
“And the king was beheaded,” Norman
countered. He looked to Maggie for support. “We owe it to Sam at least to try.”
Henry stood as another grenade
exploded, and gunfire grew heated again. The weapons fire sounded much closer.
“We can’t risk it,” he said sternly. “I need to get you all into hiding. It’s
our only hope of surviving.”
Maggie had stopped listening after
the word hiding. A part of her wanted to agree with
the professor. Yes, run, hide, don’t let them catch you.
But something new in her heart would not let her. She stared at Sam’s still
face. A single tear sat on his cheek. She reached with a finger and brushed it
off. Patrick Dugan, Ralph, her parents…and now Sam. She was done hiding from
death.
“No,” Maggie said softly. She
reached and took Sam’s Stetson from where it had fallen in the damp grass, then
swung to face the others. “No,” she said more forcefully. “We take Sam to the
temple. I won’t let them win.”
“But—”
Maggie shoved to her feet. “No,
Professor, this is our choice. If there is even a chance of saving Sam, we
attempt it!”
Norman was nodding. “I saw a
stretcher in the helicopter when I got the rope to tie up the monk.”
Maggie glanced to where the man who
had shot Sam still lay unconscious in the grass. His breath was ragged, his
pallor extreme. He would probably die from the blow to the skull, but as an
extra precaution, they had lashed his legs and arms. They stopped at gagging
him, mostly because of his labored breathing. Her chest tightened with anger at
the sight of him. She glanced away, to the helicopter. “Get the stretcher!”
Norman and Denal hurried to the
chopper’s open door.
Henry stepped to her side. “Maggie,
Sam’s dead. Not only is this wrong, it’s likely to get everyone killed.”
Maggie stood up to the professor.
“I’m done hiding in ditches,” she said. She remembered Sam’s scathing words
last night when she resisted eavesdropping on the shaman and the king. She had
tried to justify her reluctance, but Sam had been closer to the truth. Even
then, fear had ruled her—but no longer. She faced
Henry. “We’re doing this,” she said firmly.
Norman and Denal arrived with a
khaki-colored army stretcher, ending further discussion. Henry frowned but
helped lift Sam onto the stretcher. Soon they were under way. Henry stopped
only to grab the monk’s pistol from the weeds and stuff it into his waistband.
With the four of them, Sam’s weight
was manageable. Still, the climb up the switchback seemed endless. Maggie’s
nagging fear and the need for speed stretched time interminably. Once they
reached the tunnel, she checked her watch. Only twenty minutes had passed. But
even that was too long. The jungle gunfire had grown ominously silent.
“Hurry,” Maggie said. “We need to
be out of sight!”
With straining arms and legs, they
trundled into the gloom of the passage.
“It’s just a nit farther,” she
encouraged. “C’mon.”
Ahead, the torches still glowed at
the entrance to the gold chamber, though now they just sputtered. As they
pulled even with the temple, Maggie heard the professor gasp behind her. She
turned, helping to lower Sam.
Henry gaped at the chamber, his
face a little sick. “It’s el Sangre del Diablo,” he
mumbled, setting Sam down.
Maggie knew enough Spanish to frown
at his words. “The blood of the Devil?”
“It’s what the abbot’s men have
come searching for. The mother lode—”
Norman interrupted, “We need to get
Sam in there. I’m sure there’s a time factor involved in this resurrection
business.”
Henry nodded. “But what do we do?
How do we get it to work?”
They all looked at each other. No
one had an answer.
The photographer pointed into the
chamber. “I don’t have an operator’s manual. But there’s an altar. I’d say
first thing is to get Sam on it.”
Henry nodded. “Let’s do it.”
They hauled Sam up, each person
grasping a limb, and eased him onto the gold altar. Maggie’s skin crawled as
she stepped into the chamber. It was like a thousand eyes were staring at her.
Her fingers brushed against the altar’s surface as she placed Sam down. She
yanked her hand away. The surface had felt warm, like something living.
With a shudder, she retreated from
the room, along with the others. Standing in the passage, they all stared,
transfixed, waiting for something to happen, some miracle to occur. It never
did. Sam’s body just lay on the altar. His blood dripped slowly from his chest
wound and down the side of the altar.
“Maybe we waited too long,” Maggie
finally said, breaking the room’s spell.
“No,” Norman said. “I don’t think
so. Kamapak took half a day to get Pachacutec’s decapitated head here, and the
temple still grew him a new body.”
“Sort of,” Maggie countered. She
turned to Norman. “What did Kamapak do after bringing the head here? Was there
any clue?”
Norman answered sullenly, “All he
said was that he prayed to Inti, and the god answered.”
Maggie frowned.
Henry suddenly stiffened beside
her. “Of course!”
She turned to the professor.
“It’s prayers! Concentrated human
thought!” Henry stared at them as if this was answer enough. “This…this gold,
Devil’s blood, whatever the hell it is…it responds to human thought. It will
mold and change to one’s will.”
Now it was Maggie’s turn to lift
her brows in shock, but she remembered the transformation of Sam’s dagger. It
had changed as their needs dictated. She remembered how it had transformed in
her own hands, when she had been so desperate for a key to the necropolis’s
gold statue. “Prayers?”
Henry nodded. “All we have to do is
concentrate. Ask it…beg it to heal Sam!”
Norman dropped to his knees,
drawing his palms together. “I’m not above begging.”
Henry and Maggie followed suit.
Maggie closed her eyes, but her thoughts were jumbled. She remembered the pale
beasts in the next chamber. What if something like that happened to Sam? She
clenched her fists. She would not let that happen. If prayers worked, then
she’d let the others pray for healing. She would concentrate on keeping the
temple from making any additional “improvements” in the man.
Bearing down, she willed it to heal
Sam’s injuries, but only his injuries. Nothing else! She strained, knuckles whitening. Nothing else, damn you! Do you hear me?
Denal suddenly gasped behind her
shoulder. “Look!”
Maggie cracked open her eyes.
Sam still lay upon the altar, unmoving,
but the ball of webbed strands above the bed began to unwind, to spread open.
Thousands of golden stands snaked and threaded from the nest to weave and twine
in the air. Tips of the strands split into even tinier filaments, then these
split again. Soon the threads were so fine, the room seemed filled with a
golden fog. Then, like a heavy mist settling, the golden cloud descended over
Sam’s body. In a few seconds, his form was coated from crown to toes with the
metal, making him a sculpture in gold. And still the gold seemed to flow. Like
some shining umbilical cord, a thick twined rope connected the golden statue of
Sam to the node above the altar. The cord writhed and pumped like a living
structure.
Maggie felt slightly sickened at
the sight. She stood up; Henry and Norman soon followed.
“What do you make of it?” Henry
asked. “Will it work?”
No one answered.
“How long it will take is the
better question,” Norman said. “I don’t think the army down there is going to
give us all day to hang around.”
Henry nodded. “We need to think
about setting up a defense. Is there another way out?” The professor glanced
down the tunnel toward the other caldera.
“Not that way,” Maggie said.
Henry turned back around and rubbed
at his tired eyes. “Then we’ll need weapons,” he mumbled. “I spotted an extra
case of grenades in the helicopter, but…” The professor shook his head sourly.
Norman spoke up. “Grenades sound
good to me, Doc. Preferably lots of them.”
“No,” Henry said dismissively.
“It’s too risky to go back down there.”
“And it’s too risky not to,” Norman argued. “If I’m quick and careful…”
Denal added, “I go, too. I help
carry. Box heavy.”
Norman nodded. “Together, it’ll be
a cinch.” He was already stepping away with the boy.
“Be careful,” Maggie warned.
“Oh, you can count on that!” Norman
said. “The National Geographic doesn’t offer combat
pay.” Then he and the boy were off, hurrying down the corridor.
Henry returned to staring at the
temple. He mumbled, “The structure must be using geothermal heat as its energy
source. This is amazing.”
“More like horrible. I can see why
Friar de Almagro called this thing the Serpent of Eden. It’s seductive, but
beneath its charms lies something foul.”
“The Serpent of Eden?” Henry
furrowed his brows. “Where did you come by that expression?”
“It’s a long story.”
The professor nodded toward the
temple. “We have the time.”
Maggie nodded. She tried to
summarize their journey, but some parts were especially painful to recount,
like Ralph’s death. Henry’s face grew grim and sober with the telling. At the
end, Maggie spoke of the beasts and creatures that haunted the neighboring
valley. She explained her theory, finishing with her final assessment. “I don’t
trust the temple. It perverts as much as it heals.”
Henry stared down the long corridor
toward the distant sunlight. “So the friar was right. He tried to warn us of
what lay here.” Now it was Henry’s turn to relate his own story, of his time
with the monks of the Abbey of Santo Domingo. His voice cracked with the
mention of the forensic pathologist, Joan Engel. Another death in the
centuries-long struggle to possess this strange gold. But Maggie read the
additional pain behind the professor’s words, a part of the story left
unspoken. She didn’t press.
Once done, Henry wiped his nose and
turned to the temple. “So the Incas built here what the abbot dreamed. A
structure large enough to reach some otherworldly force.”
“But is it the coin of God?” she
asked, nodding toward Sam. “Or the blood of the Devil?” She glanced to the next
caldera. “What is its ultimate goal? What is the purpose of those creatures?”
Henry shook his head. “An
experiment? Maybe to evolve us? Maybe to destroy us?” He shrugged. “Who knows
what intelligence guides the temple’s actions. We may never know.”
Muffled voices and the scrape of
heel on rock drew their attention around. It was too soon for Norman and Denal
to be returning. Flashlights suddenly blinded them from the tunnel’s entrance.
An order was shouted at them: “Don’t move!”
Maggie and Henry stood still. What
else could they do? There was no escape behind them. But in truth, neither was
willing to abandon Sam. They waited for their captors to approach. “Do whatever
they say,” Henry warned.
Like hell
I will! But she remained silent.
A huge man, who from the
professor’s story could only be Abbot Ruiz, crossed to the professor. Maggie
was given only the most cursory glance. “Professor Conklin, you’ve proven
yourself as resourceful as ever. You beat us here.” He frowned at Maggie. “Of
course, the tongues you needed to free were a little easier than ours, I
imagine. These Incas proved themselves quite stubborn. Ah, but the end result
is the same. Here we are!”
The abbot stepped past them to view
the chamber. He stood, staring for a moment at the sight. Then his large form
shuddered, trembling all over. Finally, he fell to his knees. “A miracle,” he
exclaimed in Spanish, making a hurried sign of the cross. “The sculpture on the
table appears to be Christ himself. Like in our vault at the Abbey. It is a
sign!”
Maggie and Henry glanced at each
other. Neither corrected the abbot’s misconception.
“See how it trickles down from the
roof. The old Incan tales spoke of the mother lode. How it flowed like water
from the mountaintops! Here it is!”
Maggie edged closer. She knew,
sooner or later, the abbot would discover his mistake. She could not let these
men interfere with Sam’s healing. She cleared her throat. “This chamber is just
a trinket,” she said softly.
The abbot, still kneeling, turned
to her. His eyes still shone with the gold. “What do you mean?”
“This is just the temple, the
entrance,” she said. “The true source lies in the next valley. The Incas call
it janan pacha.”
“Their heaven?” the abbot said.
Maggie nodded, glad the man had
some knowledge of the Incan culture. She glanced to Henry. He wore a deep
frown, clearly guessing her plot. He didn’t approve, but he remained silent.
Maggie returned her attention to the abbot. “This temple is just a roadside
prayer totem. A gateway to the true wonders beyond.”
The abbot shoved to his feet. “Show
me.”
Maggie backed a step. “Only for a
guarantee of our safety.”
Abbot Ruiz glanced down the
corridor. One eye narrowed suspiciously.
“Heaven awaits,” Maggie said, “but
without my help, you’ll never find it.”
The abbot scowled. “Fine. I guarantee
your safety.”
“Swear it.”
Frowning, Abbot Ruiz touched the
small gold cross hanging from his neck. “I swear it on the blood of Jesus
Christ, Our Savior.” He dropped his hand. “Satisfied?”
Maggie hesitated, feigning
indecision, then finally nodded. “It’s this way.” She headed down the corridor.
“Wait.” The abbot hung back a
moment. He waved to one of his six men. “Stay here with the good professor.” He
crossed toward Maggie. “Just to keep things honest.”
Maggie felt a sick tightness in her
belly. She continued down the passage, forcing her legs to stop trembling. She
would not give in to her fear. “Th…this way,” she said. “It’s not too far.”
Abbot Ruiz stuck close to her
shoulder, all but breathing down her neck. He wheezed, his face as red as a
beet. Prayers mumbled from his lips.
“It’s just through there,” she
said, as they neared the exit to the tunnel.
The abbot pushed her aside,
marching forward, determined to be the first through. But when he reached the
exit, he hesitated. His nose curled at the stronger stench of sulfur here. “I
don’t see anything.”
Maggie joined him and pointed to
the trail in the jungle ahead. “Just follow the path.”
The abbot stared. Maggie feared he
would balk. She was sure he could hear her heart pounding in her throat. But she
maintained a calm demeanor. “Janan pacha lies just
inside the jungle. About a hundred meters. It is a sight no one could put into
mere words.”
“Heaven…” Abbot Ruiz took a step
into the caldera, then another—still he was cautious. He waved his five men ahead
of him. “Check it out. Watch for any hostiles.”
His men, rifles at shoulders now,
scurried ahead. The abbot followed, keeping a safe distance back. Maggie was
forced to leave the tunnel to maintain the ruse. She held her breath as she
reentered the foul nest of the creatures. Where the hell were the monsters?
She took a third step away from the
entryway when she heard a rasp of rock behind her. She swung around. Perched
over the rough entrance to the tunnel was one of the pale beasts. One of the
scouts. It clung by claws, upside down. It knew it had been spotted. A hissing
scream burst from its throat as it leaped at her.
Maggie froze. Answering cries
exploded from the forest’s edge. It was a trap, and here was the sentinel.
Maggie ducked. But the scout was too quick, lightning fast. The beast hit her.
She fell backward and used the attacker’s momentum to fling it down the short
slope behind her. She did not wait to see what happened. She scrambled to her
feet and dived for the tunnel.
Behind her, spats of gunfire
exploded; screams of terror and pain accompanied the weapons fire. But over it
all, the wail and shriek of the beasts.
In the safety of the tunnel, Maggie
swung around, facing the opening. She saw the abbot level his pistol and fire
point-blank into the skull of the beast that had attacked her. It flopped and
convulsed on the ground. The abbot glanced to the forest’s edge, where his men
still fought for their lives. He turned his back on them and ran toward the
passageway, toward Maggie. He spotted her; hatred and anger filled his eyes. No
one thwarted the Spanish Inquisition.
Maggie backed down the tunnel as
the abbot pulled up to the entrance. Heaving heavily, the obese man struggled
to breathe. He gasped out, “You bitch!” Then he leveled his pistol and stepped
inside.
Jesus! There was nowhere to run.
“You will suffer. That I guarant—”
Suddenly the abbot was yanked backward with a squawk of surprise. His gun went
off, the shot wild. The bullet ricocheted past Maggie’s ear.
A scream of horror erupted from the
man as he was dragged from the tunnel and flung around. A hulking pale monster,
another pack leader, had his expensive safari jacket snagged in a clawed fist.
The other hand grabbed the abbot by the throat. More beasts soon appeared, more
razored fists snatching at the choice meal. His gun was knocked from his grip.
The abbot’s scream became strangled as he was dragged away from the tunnel’s
entrance. A pale face, mouth bloodied, appeared at the tunnel opening. It
hissed at her, then dived to the side, joining in the feeding frenzy.
She swung away and turned her back
on the slaughter.
Behind her, a sharp screech of pain
died into a wet gurgle. She hurried farther down the passage, toward the
torchlight, away from the howling.
At the temple’s entrance, she saw
the lone guard. He stepped toward her, gun pointed. “Que
hiscistes?” he barked in Spanish, asking her what she had done. She saw
the terror in his eyes.
Suddenly, Henry stepped behind him
and pressed the barrel of a pistol to the back of the guard’s head. It was the
weapon the professor had taken from the monk by the helicopter. “She was taking
out the garbage.” He pressed the barrel more firmly. “Any problem with that?”
The man dropped his rifle and sank
to his knees. “No.”
“That’s better.” Henry crossed in
front of the man and kicked the rifle toward Maggie. “You know how to use
that?”
“I’m from Belfast,” she said,
retrieving the gun. She cocked it, checked the magazine, and lifted it to her
shoulder.
Henry turned to his prisoner. “And
you? Do you know how to fly the helicopter?”
The man nodded.
“Then you get to live.”
Suddenly a groan sounded from the
next room. Henry and Maggie swung around. They watched the golden umbilicus
spasm and the gold coating begin to slide from Sam’s body. Like a large siphon,
it drew the metal from his skin, then coiled up on itself, churning and slowly
twisting overhead.
Another groan flowed from Sam.
The guard stared into the temple,
mouth gaped open in surprise. He crossed himself hurriedly.
“He’s breathing,” Henry said. He
stepped toward the entrance.
Maggie grabbed his elbow. “Be
careful. I don’t know if we should interfere yet.” Her words were strained,
speaking while holding her breath. Dare she hope…?
Sam pushed to one elbow. His eyes
were unfocused. His other arm rose to swipe at his face, as if brushing away
cobwebs. He moaned slightly, wincing.
Henry reached a hand out. “Sam?”
He seemed to focus on the voice,
coughing to clear his lungs. “Un…Uncle Hank?” Sam shoved up, weaving slightly.
His eyes finally seemed to focus. “God…my head.”
“Move slowly, Sam,” Maggie urged.
“Take it easy.”
Sam swung his feet to the floor
with another groan. “I could use a bucketful of aspirin.” He finally seemed to
realize where he was. He craned his neck and stared up at the twined ball of
golden strands. “What am I doing here?”
“You don’t remember?” Maggie asked,
concerned. He sounded lucid, but was there some sustained damage?
Sam frowned at his chest. The
fingers of his right hand trailed to his bullet-torn vest. He stuck a finger
through the hole, then pulled open his vest. There was no wound. “I was shot.”
His statement had the edge of a question.
Maggie nodded. “You died, but the
temple cured you.”
“Died?”
Both Maggie and Henry nodded.
Sam pushed to his feet, stumbled a
step, then caught himself. “Whoa.” He moved more slowly, deliberately,
concentrating. “For a dead man, I guess I shouldn’t complain about a few aches
and pains.” He crossed toward them.
Henry met Sam at the entrance and
pulled his nephew to him. Their embrace was awkward due to the pistol in the
professor’s right hand. “Oh, God, Sam, I thought I lost you,” he said, his eyes
welling with tears.
Sam hugged his uncle fiercely,
deeply.
Maggie smiled. She wiped at her own
cheeks, then knelt by the stretcher and retrieved Sam’s Stetson.
Henry pulled away, rubbing at his
eyes. “I couldn’t face losing you, too.”
“And you don’t have to,” Sam said,
swiping a hand through his hair.
Maggie held out his hat. “Here. You
dropped something.”
He took it, wearing a crooked
smile, awkward, half-embarrassed. He slipped it to his head. “Thanks.”
“Just don’t die again,” she warned,
reaching and straightening the brim.
“I’ll try not to.” He leaned toward
her as she adjusted his hat, staring into her eyes.
She didn’t pull away from him, but
she didn’t move closer either. She was too conscious of the professor’s
presence and the weight of the rifle over her left shoulder. They stared for
too long, and the moment began slipping away. Maggie gritted her teeth. To hell
with her fears! She reached toward him—but Sam suddenly turned away.
A new voice suddenly barked from
the darkness behind them, “Drop your weapons!” A figure stepped into the edge
of the torchlight. He held Denal in his arms. The boy’s mouth was clamped
tightly shut, a long military dagger at his throat. The stainless-steel blade
reflected the glow of the torches. The boy’s eyes were wide with terror.
“Otera!” Henry hissed.
Norman fled through the jungle,
crashing through the underbrush. His vision was blurred by tears. He attempted
halfheartedly to keep his flight quiet, but branches snapped and dried leaves
crunched underfoot. Still, he stumbled on—in truth, he did not care who heard
him any longer.
Again he pictured the friar leaping
to his feet from the grassy meadow. The bastard had been playing possum, lying
in wait for Norman and Denal as the pair had crossed toward the helicopter. The
friar had grabbed the boy before Norman could react, twin blades flashing out
from wrist sheaths. Norman’s response was pure animal instinct. He had leaped
away from his attacker, diving into the jungle and racing away.
Only after his panicked heart had
slowed a few beats did Norman recognize the cowardice of his act. He had
abandoned Denal. And then he’d not even attempted to free the boy.
Logically, in his mind, Norman
could justify his action. He had no weapons. Any attempt at rescue would surely
have gotten them both killed. But in his heart, Norman knew better. His flight
had been pure cowardice. He recalled the terror in Denal’s wide eyes. What had
he done?
Fresh tears flowed, almost blinding
him.
Suddenly the jungle fell away
around him. The gloom of the forest broke into brightness. Norman stumbled to a
stop, brushing at his eyes. When his vision cleared, he gasped in horror at the
sight.
A small clearing had been blasted
into the jungle by grenade and gunfire. Bodies lay strewn all around, torn and
broken. Both men and women. All Inca. The smell gagged him as he stumbled back:
blood and excrement and fear.
“Oh, God…” Norman moaned.
Flies already lay thick among the
corpses, buzzing and flitting around the clearing.
Then suddenly on his left, a huge
shape rose up, looming over him, the dead coming to claim him. Norman spun to
face the new threat. He would no longer flee. He could
no longer flee. Exhausted and hopeless, he fell to his knees.
He raised his face as a huge spear
was lifted in threat, its golden blade shining in the brightness overhead.
Norman didn’t flinch.
I’m
sorry, Denal.
Henry stepped toward Otera, gun
raised. “Let him go!”
The trapped boy’s limbs trembled as
the knife was pressed harder to his tender throat. A trickle of blood ran down
his neck. “Don’t try it, Professor. Get back! Or I cut this boy open from neck
to belly.”
Fighting back a curse, Henry
retreated a step.
The friar’s eyes were wild and
fierce. “Do as I say, and everyone lives! I don’t care about you or the boy.
All I care about is the gold. I take it with me, and you all stay here. A fair
bargain, yes?”
They hesitated. Henry glanced to
Maggie, then to Sam. “Maybe we should do as he says,” he whispered.
Maggie’s eyes narrowed. She stepped
to the side and spoke to the friar, her voice fierce. “Swear on it! Swear on
your cross that you’ll let us go.”
Scowling, Otera touched his silver
crucifix. “I swear.”
Maggie studied the man for a long
breath, then carefully placed down her weapon. Henry did the same. The group
then backed a few steps away.
Otera crossed to their abandoned weapons,
then shoved Denal toward them.
The boy gasped and flew to Maggie’s
side.
The friar returned his long dagger
to a hidden wrist sheath. Henry now understood how the man had managed to
escape his ropes. He mentally kicked himself. None of them had thought to
search the unconscious man.
Grinning, Otera crouched and
retrieved his pistol. He passed the rifle to the guard who still knelt to the
side of the passage. But the man refused to take it. He just stared numbly into
the temple, lips moving in silent prayer.
Otera stood and finally swung to
face the room himself. He froze, then stumbled back, overwhelmed. His face
glowed in the golden light. A wide smile stretched his lips. “Dios mio…!” When he turned back to them, his eyes were
huge.
“Impressive, isn’t it?” Sam said.
The friar squinted against the
torches’ glare. He finally seemed to recognize the Texan. “I…I thought I killed
you,” he said with a frown.
Sam shrugged. “It didn’t take.”
Otera glanced to the cave of gold,
then back to them. He leveled his gun. “I don’t know how you survived. But this
time, I’ll make sure you die. All of you!”
Maggie stepped between the gunman
and Sam. “You swore an oath! On your cross!”
Otera reached with his free hand
and ripped off the silver crucifix. He tossed it behind him. “The abbot was a
fool,” he snarled at them. “Like you all. All this talk of touching the mind of
God…pious shit! He never understood the gold’s true potential.”
“Which is what?” Henry asked,
stepping beside Maggie.
“To make me rich! For years, I have
endured the abbot’s superior airs as he promoted others of pure Spanish blood
above me. With this gold, I will no longer be half-Indian, half-Spanish. I will
no longer have to bow my head and play the role of the lowly mestizo. I will be reborn a new man.” Otera’s eyes shone
brightly with his dream.
Henry moved nearer. “And who do you
think you’ll become?”
Otera leveled his pistol at Henry.
“Someone everyone respects—a rich man!” He laughed harshly and pulled the
trigger.
Henry cringed, gasping and falling
back.
But the shot went suddenly awry,
striking the roof and casting blue sparks.
As the gun’s blast died away, a new
noise was heard. “Aack…” Otera choked and reached for his chest. A bloody
spearhead sprouted from between his ribs. The friar was lifted off his feet.
Gouts of blood poured from his mouth as he moaned, mouth opening and closing
like a suffocating fish. His pistol fell with a clatter from his fingers.
Then his head slumped, lolling atop
his neck, dead.
His limp body was tossed aside by
the spear-bearer.
From behind him, a large figure
stepped into view. He wore singed and torn robes.
“Pachacutec!” Sam cried.
The man suddenly stumbled forward,
falling to his knees before the Incan temple. Tears streaked his soot-stained
face. “My people…” he mumbled in English. “Gone.”
A second figure appeared out of the
darkness behind the man.
“Norman!” Maggie ran up to the
photographer. “What happened?”
Norman shook his head, staring at
the impaled form of the friar. “I ran into Pachacutec on the trail, amid the
slaughter. He was coming to the temple, chasing after those who would violate
his god. I convinced him to help.” But there was no satisfaction in the
photographer’s voice; his face was ashen.
Norman’s eyes flicked toward Denal.
The photographer wore a look of shame. But the boy crossed to Norman and hugged
him tightly. “You saved us,” he mumbled into the tall man’s chest.
As Norman returned the boy’s
embrace, tears rose in his eyes.
Off to the side, Pachacutec
groaned. He switched back to his native tongue as he bowed before the temple,
rocking back and forth, praying. He was beyond consolation. Blood ran from
under his robes and trailed into the golden chamber. He looked near death
himself.
Henry crossed closer to the king.
If Maggie’s story was true, here knelt one of the founders of the Incan empire.
As an archaeologist who had devoted his entire lifetime to the study of the
Incas, Henry found himself suddenly speechless. A living Incan king whose
memories were worth a thousand caverns of gold. Henry turned to Sam, his eyes
beseeching. This king must not die.
Sam seemed to understand. He knelt
beside Pachacutec and touched the king’s robe. “Sapa Inca,” he said, bowing his
head. “The temple saved my life, as it once saved yours. Use it again.”
Pachacutec stopped rocking, but his
head still hung in sorrow. “My people gone.” He raised his face toward Sam and
the others. “Maybe it be right. We do not belong in your world.”
“No, heal yourself. Let me show you
our world.”
Henry stepped forward, placing a hand
on Sam’s shoulder, adding his support. “There is much you could share, Inca
Pachacutec. So much you can teach us.”
Pachacutec pushed slowly to his
feet and faced Henry. He reached a hand to the professor’s cheek and traced a
wrinkle. He then dropped his arm and turned away. “Your face be old. But not as
old as my heart.” He stared into the temple, his face shining. “Inti now leads
my people to janan pacha. I wish to go with them.”
Henry stared over the king’s
shoulder to Sam. What could they say? The man had lost his entire tribe.
Tears ran down Pachacutec’s cheeks
as he slid a gold dagger from inside his robe. “I go to join my people.”
Henry reached toward the Sapa Inca.
“No!” But he was too late.
Pachacutec plunged the dagger into
his breast, bending over the blade like a clenched fist. Then he relaxed; a
sigh of relief escaped his throat. He slowly straightened, and his fingers fell
away from the blade’s hilt.
Henry gasped, stumbling back, as
flames jetted out from around the dagger impaled in the king’s chest. “What the
hell…?”
Pachacutec stumbled into the
temple’s chamber. “I go to Inti.”
“Spontaneous combustion,” Sam
whispered, stunned. “Like the cavern beasts.”
Maggie nodded. “His body’s the same
as the creatures’.”
“What’s happening?” Henry asked, staring
at the flames.
Maggie explained hurriedly, “The
gold sets off some chain reaction.” She pointed to Pachacutec. Flames now wound
out from the dagger and coursed over his torso. “Self-immolation.”
Henry suddenly recalled Joan’s
urgent message to him in the helicopter. She had warned him of a way to destroy
Substance Z. The gift stolen by Prometheus. Fire!
Turning, Henry saw Pachacutec fall
to his knees, his arms lifted. Flames climbed his raised limbs.
Oh, God!
Henry grabbed Sam and Maggie and
shoved them toward the tunnel’s exit. “Run!” he yelled. He kicked the kneeling
guard. “Go!”
“What? Why?” Sam asked.
“No time!” Henry herded them all
onward. Denal and Norman ran ahead, while Henry and Maggie helped Sam on his
wobbly legs. As they fled, Henry recalled Joan’s final warning: Prometheus packs a vicious punch! Like plastic explosive!
Her words proved too true. As they
reached the tunnel’s end, a massive explosion rocked the ground under their
feet. A blast of superheated air rocketed the entire group down the path,
tumbling, bruising. The passage behind them coughed out smoke and debris.
“On your feet!” Henry called as he
bumped to a stop. “Keep going!”
The group obeyed with groaned
complaints, limping and racing onward. The trail continued to tremble under
their heels. “Don’t stop!” Henry called.
Boulders crashed down from the
volcanic heights. The shaking in the ground grew even worse. Below, hundreds of
parrots screeched and flew out of the jungle canopy.
What was
happening?
As Henry reached the escarpment
below the cliffs, he risked a glance back up. A monstrous crack in the rock
face trailed from the tunnel straight up the side of the cone.
Sam leaned on Maggie, both catching
their breath. The others hovered nearby. Sam’s eyes suddenly grew wide. “Oh,
God!” he yelled. “Look!” He pointed across the valley.
Henry stared. The original steam
vents had become spewing geysers of scalding water. New cracks appeared
throughout the valley, belching more foggy steam and water into the sky. One
section of the volcanic cone fell away with a grinding roar. “It’s coming
apart!” Henry realized.
Maggie pointed behind them, toward
the volcanic peak to the south. Black smoke billowed skyward. The scent of
sulfur and burning rock filled the valley.
Sam straightened. “The explosion
must have triggered a fault. A chain reaction. Hurry! To the helicopter!”
Norman chimed in with even more
good news. “We’ve got company, folks!” He pointed to the smoking tunnel.
From the heart of the enveloping
blackness, pale shapes leaped forth like demons from hell. The creatures piled
and writhed from the opening, screeching, bellowing. Claws scrabbled on rock.
“The explosions must have panicked
them,” Maggie said. “Overcoming their fear of the tunnel.”
From the heights, black eyes swung
in their direction. The keening wail changed in pitch.
“Run!” Henry bellowed, terrified at
the sight. “Now!”
The group fled across the rough
terrain. Chunks of basalt now rattled upon the quaking ground, sounding like
the chatter of teeth. It made running difficult. Henry fell, scraping his palms
on the jagged stone. Then Sam was there, pulling him to his feet.
“Can you make it, Uncle Hank?” he
asked, puffing himself.
“I’m gonna have to, aren’t I?”
Henry took off again, but black spots swam across his vision.
Sam lent him an arm, and Maggie
suddenly appeared on his other side. Together, they helped Henry across the
rough terrain to the flat meadow. Ahead, Norman was already pulling Denal and
the abbey guardsman into the belly of the chopper. The photographer’s eyes met
theirs across the meadow. “Hurry! They’re at your heels!”
Henry made the mistake of looking
back. The quicker of the pale creatures already flanked them. Not far behind,
larger creatures bearing clubs and stones bore down upon them.
Henry suddenly tripped and almost
brought them all down. But as a group, they managed to keep their feet and
continued running. Henry found himself beginning to black out here and there.
Soon he was being carried between Sam and Maggie.
“Let me go…save yourselves.”
“Yeah, right,” Sam answered.
“Who does he think we are?” Maggie
added with forced indifference.
Everything went black for a few
seconds.
Then hands were pulling Henry into
the helicopter. He felt the rush of wind and realized the helicopter’s rotors
were already twirling. A loud metallic crash sounded near his head.
“They’re lobbing boulders,” Norman
called out.
“But they’re not coming any
closer,” Maggie added from the doorway. “The helicopter has them spooked.”
A second ringing jolt struck the
helicopter’s fuselage. The whole vehicle shuddered.
“Well, they’re damn close enough!”
Norman turned and hollered to the pilot. “Get this bird off the ground!
Henry struggled to sit as the door
slammed shut. “Sam…?”
He felt a pat on his shoulder as he
was hauled into his seat and strapped in. “I’m here.” He turned to see Sam
smiling at him, Maggie at his shoulder.
“Thank God,” Henry sighed.
“God? Which one?” Norman asked with
a grin, settling into his seat.
The helicopter suddenly shuddered
again—not from the bombardment of boulders, but from a hurried liftoff. The
bird tilted, then rose slowly. A final crash on the underside rocked the
chopper.
“A parting kiss,” Norman said,
staring out the window at the cavorting and gamboling throng down below.
The helicopter then climbed faster,
beyond the reach of their stones.
Henry joined the photographer in
staring over the valley. Below, the jungle was on fire. Smoke and steam almost
entirely obscured the view. Fires lit up patches of the dense fog. A view of
Dante’s Hell.
As Henry stared, relief mixed with
sorrow in his heart. So much had been lost.
Then they were over the cone’s lip
and sweeping down and away.
They had made it!
As the helicopter dived between the
neighboring peaks, Henry stared behind them. Suddenly a loud roar exploded
through the cabin; the helicopter jumped, rotors screamed. Henry flew backward.
For a few harrowing moments, the bird spun and twisted wildly.
The pilot swore, struggling with
his controls. Everyone else clutched straps in white-knuckled grips.
Then the bird righted itself and
flew steady again.
Henry dragged himself up and
returned to his observation post. As he looked out, he gasped, not in fright
but in wonder. “You all need to come see this.”
The others joined him at the
window. Sam leaned over, a palm resting on his uncle’s shoulder. Henry patted
his nephew’s hand, squeezing his fingers for a moment.
“It’s strangely beautiful,” Maggie
said, staring out.
Behind the helicopter, two twin
spires of molten rock lit up the afternoon skies, one from each volcano. It was
a humbling sight.
Henry finally leaned back in his
seat. Closing his eyes, he thought back to Friar de Almagro and all his
warnings. The man had given his own life to stop the evil here.
Henry whispered softly to the
flaming skies, “Your dying prayer has been answered, my friend. Rest in peace.”
Sunday, August 26, 3:45 P.M.
Cuzco International Airport
Peru
The small,
single-engine plane, an old Piper Saratoga, dipped toward the tarmac. The city
of Cuzco spread below the wings in a tangle of streets, a mix of gleaming
high-rises and old adobe homes. Though it was a welcome sight, Sam turned from
the window. It had been a long day of flights and plans.
En route from the volcanic caldera,
his uncle had used the helicopter’s radio to alert the authorities and to warn
the base camp of the erupting volcanoes. Philip had sounded panicked over the
radio. It seemed the Quechan Indians were already evacuating. Henry had ordered
the Harvard graduate to go with them; their helicopter’s fuel was too low for
another landing and takeoff. Almost crying, Philip had begged for rescue, but
Henry had been adamant about getting back to Cuzco as soon as possible.
His uncle had then arranged for a
change of aircraft at a small commercial airfield near Machu Picchu, hiring the
single-engine plane and pilot for the hop to Cuzco.
Still, for all the expedient
planning, the flight there had taken almost an entire day.
As the plane shed altitude for its
final approach, Sam sat up straighter in the cramped cabin, careful not to
disturb Maggie, who leaned on his shoulder, asleep like everyone else on board.
Sam envied their ability to rest. Slumber had been impossible for him. His mind
still dwelt on the last twenty-four hours.
He had
died.
It was a concept that he could not
yet fully grasp. As much as he had struggled, he could not recall anything from
that missing hour of his life. He recalled no white light nor heavenly choir.
All he remembered was blacking out in the field of quinoa, a bullet wound in
his chest, then waking atop the gold altar. The rest was a big blank.
Sam frowned. He could not begrudge
the fates for this small mental lapse. He was alive—and moreover, he had a
gorgeous redheaded Irish archaeologist sleeping beside him. He glanced over and
gently fingered a loose curl from Maggie’s face as she slept. He should wake
her. They were about to land. But he hated to do it. It was nice to have her
this close to him. Even if he was just a convenient pillow. He let his fingers
drop from her hair, dismissing any further thoughts. From here, there was no
telling where any of them would end up.
The small plane landed with a bump
onto the tarmac of the airport.
The jostling and the whine of the
hydraulic brakes had the cabin passengers startling awake. Bleary-eyed faces
bent to peer out tiny windows.
“We’re already here?” Maggie said,
stifling a yawn. “I would swear I just fell asleep.”
Sam rolled his eyes. The flight had
been interminable for him. “Yep. Welcome to Cuzco.”
The mumble of the pilot to the
tower could be heard as they taxied toward the tiny terminal. Uncle Hank
unbuckled from his seat, stretched a kink, and worked his way forward between
the press of seats.
More
plans and arrangements, Sam thought.
Earlier, Sam had questioned his uncle’s
urgency in getting to Cuzco, but Sam had been gently rebuked. When he had tried
to persist, Maggie had warned him away with a shake of her head. “Leave him
be.”
Sam glanced to Maggie now. She
stared at his uncle with pained eyes. What was wrong? What was being left
unsaid?
“Who are all those people out
there?” Norman asked behind them.
Sam leaned back to the window.
Beside the terminal walkway, a small crowd had gathered. Half wore the khaki
uniforms of local police, rifles at their shoulders. A few news cameras were
carried on other shoulders, microphones ready. The others were a mixture of
locals and men wearing suits too warm for the climate. These last had the stamp
of government officials.
It seemed his uncle’s calls had
stirred up a hornet’s nest of activity.
The plane pulled near, and the
pilot unhooked himself from the cockpit, then crossed to the door. Henry bent
his head in discussion with the pilot, then the slender fellow cranked the door
open and kicked the latch to release the stairs.
Even from here, Sam heard the
machine-gun clicks of camera shutters and the chatter of voices.
His uncle paused at the opening and
turned back to them. “Time to face the press, folks. Remember what we
discussed…how to answer any questions for now.”
“No comment,” Norman quipped.
“Sin comentario,”
Denal echoed in Spanish.
“Exactly,” Henry said. “Until we
get things cleared up, we speak only to those in authority.”
Nods passed all around. Especially
Sam. He had no desire to discuss his resurrection with the international press.
“Then let’s go.” Henry bowed his
head, and the others all followed.
As Henry stepped from the plane, he
winced. Even in the brightness of the afternoon, the splash of video lights and
the strobe of flashbulbs were near blinding. Voices called to them: English,
Spanish, Portuguese, and French. The throng was held in check by a line of
police.
Henry stumbled forward, eyes
searching the crowd. Joan. A part of him had
secretly hoped his frantic call to the authorities in Cuzco might have been in
time. He had only heard scraps of reports over the radio during the flight
there, but they had been sketchy: the military raid on the Abbey, followed by
an intense firefight. Many had died, but the details afterward were muddled.
Henry held his hands in clenched
fists as he crossed the tarmac. He continued to scan the crowd of reporters,
government officials, and onlookers. Not one familiar face.
Henry forced back tears. Please. Not again. As he searched futilely for Joan, an
ache grew in his chest, a burn of bile and guilt. It was a familiar pain. He
had felt it before—when Elizabeth had died. He had thought he had reconciled
his wife’s death long ago, but his fear for Joan had awakened it all again. In
truth, it had never gone away. He had just walled it off, cemented and bricked
it over with his need to care for Sam.
But what now?
His heart was ash and cinder.
Joan was not there.
A man in a conservative grey suit
stepped forward, blocking his view, hand held out. “Professor Conklin, I am
Edward Gerant, protocol officer with the U.S. embassy. We have much to
discuss.”
Henry forced his fist to relax and
raised his hand.
Then a voice rose from the throng,
cutting through the background chatter: “Henry?”
He froze.
Edward Gerant reached for the
professor’s hand, but Henry pulled away, stepping to the side. He saw a slender
figure push through the barricade of police.
Henry’s voice cracked. “Joan…?”
She smiled and approached, slowly
at first, then as tears flowed, more hurriedly. Henry met her with open arms.
They fell into each other, lost in their embrace. Never thinking to feel such
joy again Henry murmured, “Oh, God, Joan…I thought you had been killed. But I
had prayed…hoped…”
“Uncle Hank?” a voice said behind
him. It was Sam. His nephew knew nothing about Joan. Henry had been too guilty
to discuss aloud the choice he’d been forced to make earlier. Guilt and fear
had kept him silent until he could discover Joan’s fate himself.
As Sam came up to them, Joan and
Henry pulled slightly apart, but Henry would not take his eyes from her…never
again. Without turning away, he introduced his nephew to Dr. Joan Engel. She
smiled warmly and gripped Sam’s hand. Once they had shaken hands, Henry again
laid claim to her palm. “But what about you?” Henry asked. “What happened?”
Joan’s smile faded a few degrees.
“I escaped just as the police raid began. And lucky I did. As the authorities
breached the Abbey, the monks triggered a fail-safe mechanism built into their
laboratory. The entire facility was incinerated, including the vault of el Sangre.” She pointed toward the distant horizon.
Henry stared along with Sam. Smoke
as thick as that of another volcano climbed into the sky.
“The resulting explosion took out
the entire Abbey. It’s still smoldering. All that remains are the Incan ruins
beneath.”
“Amazing,” Sam commented.
Henry leaned closer to Joan. “But
thank God, you escaped. I don’t know if I could have lived with—”
Joan snuggled into his embrace.
“I’m not going anywhere, Henry. You drifted away from me once in my life. I
won’t let that happen again.”
Henry grinned and tugged her
tighter to him. “Neither will I.”
Sam stepped away, smiling sadly,
giving them their privacy. He had never seen his uncle lose himself so fully in
someone else—and clearly the feeling was mutual. While he was happy for his
uncle, Sam felt oddly hollow as he backed away from the couple.
Nearby, Norman was talking to the
jilted embassy official, relating some part of their story. The photographer’s
boyish laugh carried far over the tarmac. To the side, Denal hung in Norman’s
shadow. Norman had offered to sponsor the boy as an intern for the National Geographic—and with the death of his mother,
Denal had nothing holding him here but a life of poverty. The two had already
made plans to return to New York together.
Across the tarmac, cameras
continued to flash.
Sam wandered farther back, near the
wing of the plane, away from the crowds. He needed a moment to think. Ever
since his folks had died, he and Uncle Hank had been inseparable. Their grief
had forged bonds that had tied their two hearts together, allowing no one else
inside. Sam glanced over to his uncle. That is, until now.
And Sam was not sure how he felt
about it. Too much had happened. He felt unfettered, loosed from a mooring that
had kept him safe. Adrift. Old memories intruded: the screech of tires,
crumpled metal, breaking glass, sirens, his mother, one arm dangling, being
hauled from the wreckage on an ambulance’s backboard.
Tears suddenly sprang up in his
eyes. Why was he dredging all this up now? He could not stop his tears.
Then he sensed a presence behind
him.
He turned. Maggie stood there,
staring up at him.
Where he expected ridicule or some
scathing retort at his reaction, he found only concern. One of the paramedics
had given her a bright yellow rescue blanket. Maggie stood wrapped in it
against the cool afternoon breeze. She spoke softly. “It’s your uncle and that
woman, isn’t it? You feel like you’re losing him.”
He smiled at her and wiped roughly
at his eyes. “I know it’s stupid,” he said, his throat constricted. “But it’s
not just Uncle Hank. It’s more than that. It’s also my parents, it’s Ralph…it’s
everything death steals.”
Sam struggled to put into words
what he was feeling, staring up at the sky. He needed someone to listen. “Why
was I allowed to live?” He waved an arm toward the distant Andes. “Up there…and
back with my parents in the car wreck…”
Maggie now stood before him, almost
touching toes. “And me in a ditch in Belfast.”
He leaned into her and knew that
Maggie could understand his pain more than anyone. “Wh…why?” he asked quietly,
choking back a sob. “You know what I’m talking about. What’s the answer? I even
goddamn died and was resurrected! And I still don’t have a clue!”
“Some questions have no answers.”
Maggie reached up and touched his cheek. “But in truth, Sam, you didn’t escape
death. None of us can. It’s still out there. Not even the Incas could escape it
in the end.” She drew Sam closer. “For years, I’ve tried to run from it, while
you stood back-to-back with your uncle against it. But neither way is healthy,
because Death always wins in the end. We end up the worse for trying.”
“Then what do we do?” He begged her
with his eyes.
Maggie sighed sadly. “We strive to
live as fully as we can.” She stared up into his face. “We simply live, Sam.”
He felt new tears. “But I don’t
understand. How—?”
“Sam,” Maggie interrupted, reaching
a finger to his lips. The rescue blanket fell from her shoulder with a soft
rustle.
“What?”
“Just shut up and kiss me.”
He blinked at her words, then found
himself leaning down. Guided by her hands, he discovered her lips. He sank into
the softness and heat of her, and he began to understand.
Here is
the reason we live.
He kissed her tenderly at first,
then more passionately. His blood rang in his ears. He found his arms pulling
her closer to him, while she reached hands to the back of his neck, tangling in
his hair and tumbling his Stetson from atop his head. They struggled toward one
another, leaving no space between them.
And in that moment, Sam’s heart
soared as he understood.
In this kiss, there was no grief…no guilt…no death.
Only life—and that was enough for
anyone.
Two years later
Thursday, October 19, 10:45 P.M.
Institute of Genetic Studies
Stanford, California
Three floors
beneath the main research facility, a man wearing a long white lab coat
approached the palm pad to a suite of private laboratories. He pressed his hand
flat on the blue pad and watched the pressure-sensitive reader flash across his
fingers. The light on the panel changed to green. His name appeared in small
green letters on the reader: DR. DALE KIRKPATRICK.
The sound of tumbled bolts
announced his acceptance by the computerized monitoring station. He removed his
palm and pulled the handle. The vacuum seal cracked with a slight whoosh of air, like a short inhaled breath. The
middle-aged scientist had to tug harder to pull the door open against the
slight negative pressure of the neighboring rooms, a built-in safeguard to keep
biologic contaminants from possibly escaping the lab. No expense had been
spared on this project. A government think tank, backed by the Pentagon, had
invested close to a billion dollars in this project. A good portion of which,
he thought with a wry smile, went directly into his personal salary.
His shoulder protested with a sharp
twinge as he pulled the door fully open. Wincing, he entered the lab and let
the door reseal behind him. He rubbed the tender spot alongside his rotator
cuff. The bullet wound he had suffered in the halls of Johns Hopkins had
required four surgeries to repair. Though he still had occasional pain, he
could hardly complain—not only had he survived the attack, he had come away
with a small quantity of Substance Z, the test samples used in the electron
microscope assay.
Once word of his find reached the
right circles, Dr. Kirkpatrick was allowed to vanish. His death was reported,
and he was whisked to the West Coast, to the Institute of Genetic Studies at
Stanford. He was granted the lab, and a staff of fourteen with the highest
government clearance.
Dale continued down to his office,
past the rows of laboratories. As he passed the computer suite, he heard the
whir of the four in-line Cray computers as they crunched the day’s data
collected by the gene sequencer. The Human Genome Project was a child’s puzzle
compared to what his lab was attempting. He estimated it would take four more
years to figure out the exact code, but he had the time. Whistling to break the
silence of the empty lab, Dale used a keycard to unlock the door and enter his
personal office.
Shrugging out of his lab coat, he
hooked the garment on a coat rack, then loosened his tie and rolled up his
sleeves. He crossed to his desk and settled into the leather chair with a sigh.
He wanted to dictate the last of
his annual review, so Marcy could type it up tomorrow for his inspection. He
opened a drawer and removed his personal dictation device. Thumbing it on, he
brought the microphone to his lips.
“Status Report. Conclusions and
Assessments,” he dictated, then cleared his throat. “Nanotechnology has always
been a theoretical science, more a field of conjecture than hard science. But
with the discovery of Substance Z, we are now prepared to bring the
manipulation of atoms into the practical sphere of science and manufacturing.
For the past two years, we have studied the effects of the ‘nanobiotic’ units
found in Substance Z on early embryonic tissue. We have discovered the
manipulation has proven most effective at the blastula stage of the human
zygote, during which time the cells are the most undifferentiated and pliable.
By observing these nanobots at work, and through a process of reverse
engineering, we hope to be able to construct the first prototypes in the near
future. But for now, we have made a significant discovery of our own, the first
step in making nanotechnology a reality: We now know the programmed goal of the
nanobots found in Substance Z.”
Frowning, Dale switched off the
recorder and stretched a kink from his neck. He was proud of his research, but
a nagging doubt still itched at his conscience. Carrying the dictation device,
he crossed to the sealed window.
Once there, he pressed a button and
louvered blinds swung open, revealing the contents of the incubation chamber in
the next lab. A yellowish broth bubbled and swirled. Small sparks of gilt
floated like fireflies in the mix. Flakes of nanobot colonies. Substance Z.
But it was not the special nutrient
broth that had drawn Dale here.
Hanging from two racks were the
twelve developing human fetuses. He leaned slightly forward studying them. The
pair in the second trimester were already developing their wing buds. Heads,
bulbous and too large for the tiny frames, seemed to swing in his direction.
Large black eyes stared back at him, lidless for now. Small arms, doubly
jointed, slowly moved. One of the fetuses sucked its tiny thumb. Dale spotted
the glint of sharp teeth.
He raised the recorder again and
switched it on. “I have come to believe that the gold meteors discovered by the
Incas were, in fact, some form of extraterrestrial spore. Unable to transport
themselves physically, an alien civilization seeded these nanobot probes
throughout the stars. Like a dandelion gone to seed, the probes spread through
space, hoping to find fertile ground among the countless planets. Responsive to
the patterns of sentient life, the gold probes would attract the curious with
their shapeshifting nature and lure in their prey. Once caught, the nanobots
would manipulate this “raw material” at the molecular level, ultimately
consuming a planet’s sentient biomass and rebuilding their own alien race from
it, thus spreading their civilization among the stars.”
Dale clicked off the recorder. “But
not here,” he muttered.
Leaning forward, Dale studied the
largest of the developing fetuses. It seemed to sense his attention and reached
tiny clawed fists toward him. Sighing, Dale rested his forehead against the
glass tank. What will we learn from each other? What will
we discover? The lips of the tiny figure pulled back in a silent hiss,
exposing its row of sharp teeth. Dale ignored the infantile display of aggression,
content with the success of his handiwork. He rested one palm on the glass.
“Welcome,” he whispered to the
newcomers. “Welcome to Earth.”
This novel would
not have been possible without the invaluable help of both friends and
colleagues. First and foremost, I wish to express my gratitude to Lyssa Keusch,
my editor, and Pesha Rubinstein, my literary agent. It was their determination,
skill, and labor that helped hone this story into its present form. But I also
would be remiss without acknowledging and thanking a group of friends who
helped pick apart and polish the first draft: Inger Aasen, Chris Crowe, Michael
Gallowglass, Lee Garrett, Dennis Grayson, Debra Nelson, Dave Meek, Chris Smith,
Jane O’Riva, Judy and Steve Prey, and Caroline Williams. And the most heartfelt
thanks to Carolyn McCray and John Clemens for standing by me through the ups
and downs of this past year.
For technical assistance, I must
also acknowledge Frank Malaret for his knowledge of Peruvian history and Andie
Arthur for her help with the Latin translations. I wish also to thank Eric
Drexler, PhD., whose book Engines of Creation was
the inspiration for the science behind this story.