The Babylon rite - Tom Knox 32 стр.


Oh, of course. But

But what?

He seemed to shiver. Do you mind if we step outside?

Stepping outside meant a short, muddy crawl through the zigzagging adobe corridors into the wider tomb which had contained the insect corpses and the coral headdresses, only some of which had been removed. The ground was now carefully latticed with strings, marking out square-metre grids. A low wooden bench had been brought into the tomb, where the archaeologists could have lunch and talk. They both sat down. The great mud tomb was otherwise empty.

The child sacrifices make nonsense of it all, Dan said at last.

Sorry?

The pottery in the antechamber with the children is precisely datable. By style.

Jessica was perplexed. And?

It is not coincident with any El Nino event. There were no El Nino events which might have, eh, triggered these sacrifices.

With his hard hat taken off, Dans hair hung lank and lifeless. Jess stared away, embarrassed somehow. She looked along the lamplit tomb, where the princess had been laid out. The princess who cut off her own feet during her life, for no reason at all.

Dan remained quiet, so Jess reached out a hand and squeezed his hand. Which means your theory is wrong.

Yep. Which means that my damn theory is wrong. Ive been wrong all along. And you were right, Jessica, the Moche were just they were just

Evil?

Perverse. Deviant. Wicked. Psychotic. Maybe downright evil. I dont know. Whatever you like. He ran tired fingers through his hair. Im not sure I want to do this any more.

But youve made a major discovery! Jess could feel her lovers anguish. It was unjustified. He was beating himself up too much. Dan, come on. Dont say this. So you found something that changes the paradigm, but you still found it. You! You did it.

And the guy with the gun? Dan looked at her. And Casinelli? And now you in Chiclayo? This may embarrass you, Jessica but I dont care. You know that I have strong feelings for you. Heck, you know I love you. Dont you? And I know you dont love me but there it is. And I cannot put you in any more danger. He talked over her protests, and continued, Whatever this is weve somehow strolled into, weve stirred up something we dont understand. Im not risking lives any more. And Im not telling lies any more.

Jess caught the word. And examined it. And asked, Lies?

He rubbed some dust off his shirt, another hockey team T-shirt now stained red with adobe mud, like unwashable old blood from a horrible fight.

What lies, Dan?

McLintock. When that the gunman asked me about him, I knew exactly who he meant. I knew very well.

Sorry?

Daniel Kossoy could barely bring himself to look her in the face. But he tried. Archibald McLintock was a Scottish historian. He visited me, very discreetly, in Zana about a year and a half ago. Long before you came. No. Wait. He lifted a hand to halt her questions. Wait, Jess. Let me finish. He wanted, eh, to know about the Moche, everything. Especially the ulluchu: he was fascinated by the mythos of the ulluchu, the blood of the gods.

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Why?

He had a theory. That there isnt just an unknown Moche god: he thought there was an unknown, ultimate god, underlying all pre-Columbian American cultures. A god that unites the Aztecs and the Hopi and the Moche, the Anasazi, the Chavin, the Nazca and Apache and Cahokians, all of them, which explains why they were all so obsessed with cruelty, and ritualized violence, and sacrifice.

So he had a theory, so what, why did you lie?

Because he paid me money. Dans eyes were shining with guilt. At first I said to him I was busy and didnt have time to talk, which was true, but then he offered me money, and TUMP needed money, and the money was eh very good, ten thousand US, enough for a few months digging, but I knew it was probably illegal, not going through the proper channels, and anyway McLintock swore me to secrecy, so that was the deal. So I took the cash, and said nothing. And I gave McLintock a secret tour of the site, and told him everything, even the stuff we havent published. And then he disappeared, went to Lima, I think. I dont know.

And you never told anyone?

An agonized shrug. I never told a soul, Jess. But now you know. You. The person who means more to me than anything. But its over now. Theres too much violence. Even this McLintock guy is dead. I have no idea what is happening but Im gonna hand in my notice, if TUMP want to continue and they probably will, now weve found all these poor kids then they can appoint someone else. Thats if the police dont close us down, which they might, because we are disturbing the locals. He spat out the words. Damn it all, Jess. Just damn it to hell. Ill be glad to get out of here, out of this disgusting place.

Jessica couldnt find the words. What to say?

The irony is, Dan went on, I believe McLintock may have been on to something. A proto-god. A uniting mythology, underneath it all. It makes a kind of sense. There are too many sinister similarities between all these American cultures. Something unites them. A god, a hidden god, a terrible god, the god of death and of blood. He laid a gentle hand on her arm, lifted her wrist, and kissed her chastely on the hand. There. Jessica Silverton, sweetheart. If you want to be famous, pursue that, make that your thesis. You are young and bold. I am not. I am done. But be careful. Beware the demons of the Moche.

He didnt even say goodbye. He just switched off the tomb lights, turned and crouched, and began the long crawl back to the huaca entrance, through the dark adobe tunnels.

Jessica followed him, churning with emotion. Suddenly, and to her own surprise, she wanted to tell Dan about her father, and about the doctor: she had to tell someone, she had to share and divide her anxieties, and he was the only man she could really trust. Maybe she even loved him back; her sudden feelings were stronger than she had suspected. She didnt want to lose him.

Strapping her hard hat on her head, and turning on her headtorch, Jess crawled urgently through the narrow, claustrophobic, zigzagging tunnels. Dan was so eager to get out he was twenty metres ahead, a barely glimpsed glow of receding light.

The final corner turned: and now Dan was gone, hed stepped out into the fresh air.

Jessica urged herself on, to confess and to share, but then she halted, her heart straining with fear, in the last yards of darkness, looking towards the grey light outside.

She could hear voices. Curt, laconic, contemptuous voices. And it wasnt Larry or Jay. It sounded like the intruder in the lab, the same man, the same accent. The same violent sneering voice.

This time there was no argument, no preamble, no chance for Dan to escape his fate. The sullen gunshot echoed down the adobe passageway. Another shot confirmed the horror: they had shot Dan! Jess could actually see his body, fallen at the entrance, blood trickling into the dust.

She gazed, paralysed by terror.

Then a torchbeam pierced the dark of the passage. Jessica pressed herself flat against the mud walls, trying to hide. A figure was kneeling at the adobe entrance, peering in, pointing the torch up the tunnel.

Marco! Creo que hay alguien aqui. I think someone is in there.

They were going to search the huaca.

Jessica began to back up the passage. Crawling with infinite and painful slowness, away from the light.

But the torchbeam followed her.

33

Clapham, south London

DCI Mark Ibsen gazed around the clean white flat. It was decorated with framed photographs. Some foreign locations, some sombre, monochrome photo portraits.

Its been a week now. How is she? Where is she?

The young journalist, Adam Blackwood, nodded at a closed door to the left. Sleeping, she sleeps in the day and she doesnt sleep at night. She cries at night.

You?

Blackwood waved a hand across a weary face. Im OK. I sleep on the sofa.

Ah.

Its not like that, Detective. Not me and Nina. Not that this really bloody matters.

I understand. And please, call me Mark.

Blackwood stood and walked to a bookshelf that was dedicated mainly to bottles of whisky rather than books. He took a bottle of Macallan, unscrewed the top, poured a good measure into a tumbler and glugged down the amber-dark Scotch.

You?

Im on duty. Your friend is generous.

You mean lending me the flat? Or letting me drink his good Scotch?

Both.

Adam Blackwood shrugged. He poured himself another, and drank some more of that with a faintly trembling hand. Jasons a photographer, he works with me a lot, very good mate. Ironically, he was working with me the day this all started, in Rosslyn, when all this lunacy began. Now hes on assignment in Spain at the moment, some story. He said we could stay here as long as we wanted. Obviously we cant stay at my place in case they whoever they are are still looking for us.

Im glad you took my advice. Well have cars outside, twenty-four/seven. Theres one on the corner by the Common, another at the junction with Nansen Road.

You got the guy, didnt you? You shot him

We cornered him in Barnsbury Square. An hour later. He went down fighting, refused to surrender. A marksman took him down.

But who was he? Why did he want to kill us all?

Ibsen looked at Adams brave but frightened face. Cammorista.

Italian gangs? But he was American, he had an American accent.

Hes half-Puerto Rican, brought up in California. But hes been in Europe a long time, and he had strong links with southern Italian gangs, especially the Camorra, in Calabria, in Italy.

And-

They are known for people-trafficking: Moldovan girls, Romanian girls, sex slaves, high-class hookers.

He was a pimp?

Sometimes, yes. Sometimes drugs. High-level crime. He was a definite pro, with psychopathic tendencies. As we have seen.

Adam whirled the whisky, his journalistic mind churning through the facts. Computing the puzzle. So that explains the sex. The girls, I mean. Ritter imported whores, poor girls so thats how he hooked up with the sex party crowd, the rich kids?

Ibsen nodded. Yes. We believe so. Probably he supplied girls for the sex parties, for the millionaire swingers, or what you might call them. Thats how he got an in. To those elite circles.

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Ibsen nodded. Yes. We believe so. Probably he supplied girls for the sex parties, for the millionaire swingers, or what you might call them. Thats how he got an in. To those elite circles.

You know, if I wasnt the bloody target of mad Puerto Rican sex-murderers this would be a bloody great story. Christ, why are they trying to kill us, Mark? Why did he kill Hannah McLintock? Like that?

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