Tears of the Jaguar

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Tears of the Jaguar Page 1

by Hartley, A. J.




  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious.

  Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Text copyright © 2012 by A.J. Hartley

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published by Thomas & Mercer

  P.O. Box 400818

  Las Vegas, NV 89140

  ISBN-13: 9781612183800

  ISBN-10: 1612183808

  Dedication

  For my family, and for all those friends and readers without whose support this book would never have been finished. Thank you.

  AJH

  Contents

  Part 1

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Part 2

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Part 3

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Part 4

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Chapter Fifty-Five

  Chapter Fifty-Six

  Chapter Fifty-Seven

  Chapter Fifty-Eight

  Chapter Fifty-Nine

  Chapter Sixty

  Chapter Sixty-One

  Chapter Sixty-Two

  Chapter Sixty-Three

  Part 5

  Chapter Sixty-Four

  Chapter Sixty-Five

  Chapter Sixty-Six

  Chapter Sixty-Seven

  Chapter Sixty-Eight

  Chapter Sixty-Nine

  Chapter Seventy

  Chapter Seventy-One

  Chapter Seventy-Two

  Chapter Seventy-Three

  Chapter Seventy-Four

  Chapter Seventy-Five

  Chapter Seventy-Six

  Chapter Seventy-Seven

  Chapter Seventy-Eight

  Chapter Seventy-Nine

  Chapter Eighty

  Chapter Eighty-One

  Chapter Eighty-Two

  Chapter Eighty-Three

  Part 6

  Chapter Eighty-Four

  Chapter Eighty-Five

  Thanks, Acknowledgments, and Some Details of the Hazy Line Between Fact and Fiction

  About the Author

  PART 1

  Chapter One

  Deborah Miller lay under the mosquito netting listening to the distant thunder.

  Please God, she thought, don’t let it rain.

  It was June eighteenth, and like every other day in the Yucatan jungle village, it had started with a frenzy of birdcalls the moment the sky lightened. Roosters crowed and grackles shrieked, and Deborah had lain there, watching the flicker of lightning, dreading the sound of rain. There had been too much rain already; more and the site would become unstable.

  With the window still dark, she rose, splashed lukewarm water on her face at the stone basin by her bed, brushed and tied her hair back, then pulled on a khaki shirt covered in pockets and voluminous shorts. They were the longest she had been able to find but still didn’t reach her knees, and they flapped wide of her skinny legs like flags. She pulled them up, then pushed them down onto her hips, then sighed at her reflection in the mirror. Well, it didn’t matter. At least her outfit was practical for the Ek Balam site, where the work was hot and muddy. It wasn’t like she was going to meet a tall, handsome stranger out here in the jungle. She smiled wryly to herself. Most guys aren’t taller than I am, anyway, she thought.

  Deborah smoothed her shorts reflexively as she walked under the coconut palms and bougainvillea to the breakfast buffet, served under the palm-thatched patio. She glanced back toward her cabana through the tropical foliage. Dark clouds had moved in fast and now looked threatening. There was an eerie calm, no sounds of traffic noise or people talking. She heard nothing beyond the clatter of Adelita in the kitchen. Even the birds had gone quiet.

  Adelita Lucia del Carmen Lacantun lived down the street with her parents. She was eleven and the granddaughter of Eustachio, the Ek Balam site foreman, who had been on every dig in the area for the last thirty years. They were Mayan through and through: short, stocky as they aged, their skin brown as teak, their noses strong and hawkish. Adelita was rail thin, like all the girls round here, though she would probably turn more or less square in middle age. She had big, black, intelligent eyes that made her look birdlike, and she worked constantly, moving with speed and purpose from one adult task to the next.

  Adelita came into the seating area with a vast urn of coffee, dressed in a worn turquoise T-shirt, tie-dyed skirt, and flip-flops. Her feet were tough and scarred, her hands calloused with work, but when she smiled—peering at Deborah over the top of the urn—her face radiated her true age.

  “There’s a storm coming,” said the girl, eyeing the sky, shrewd as a farmer. “Again.”

  Deborah registered the wind that was coming in stiff across the garden and agreed in her ponderous Spanish.

  “One of the dogs got out,” Adelita said, rolling her eyes. “The gray one. The boy. He ran after Mrs. Uk’s pig and I had to chase it all the way to the church.”

  “How did he get out?”

  “Someone left the gate open,” said Adelita significantly, glancing toward the wrought-iron arch that separated the stucco walls of the house from the roughly paved street beyond.

  “One of the tourists?”

  The girl shrugged, her head on one side, then checked there were none around.

  “Probably,” she whispered. “I’ll get the eggs and chaya. There are fresh tortillas on the counter.”

  Deborah had eaten chaya—a traditional Mayan vegetable like spinach—every day since coming to Ek Balam. Raw it was poisonous, but cooked, they said, it was a miracle plant, loaded with healthy properties.

  Adelita turned and took a step, then froze as a thunderclap split the air, loud as an artillery shell. Deborah ducked instinctively, and before she was back up, the rain had started.

  It had rained every other day since Deborah had arrived, sometimes for a couple of hours, but always a steady patteri
ng shower. This was no shower. The rain came down in sudden shafts, great wet bullets that turned the garden gray and hazy. In seconds the gravel was swimming in water and the trees were leaning perilously. Deborah stood up, moving farther under the sheltering roof, but the wind still drove the rain at her. It was getting heavier by the second and she could no longer see the swimming pool through the trees. Deborah turned to Adelita and the child’s black eyes were wide, her grown-up manner gone. She looked scared.

  Deborah, accustomed to what they called popcorn thunderstorms in Atlanta, offered her hand and took a step back toward the wall that bordered the street. In the same instant, a lightning flash tore through the air like a flare in front of her face, so that for a second after it had gone, she couldn’t see. The thunder followed right on top of it, like a great mace beating the earth, and Adelita slapped her hands to her ears. The wind tore paper napkins from the table and shot them across the lobby. A glass shimmied to the edge of the table, fell, and shattered—almost soundless under the drumming of the rain—and then the table itself began to move.

  This was no popcorn storm. It was big and it wasn’t going to just blow through. Another flare of lightning lit the sky like a bomb and Deborah ducked. The rain was spraying them like surf, even though they had backed up to the wall. Looking up, Deborah could see the thatch flapping with the wind, filaments of palm tearing out and hurtling like shrapnel. The garden was already submerged, and through the gate Deborah could see a fast, brown river where the street had been. It got deeper and swifter as she watched, and bore part of a log fence away like a raft. She looked up, considering the sheltering roof, and wondered just how bad things could get out at the site.

  If the water washes away the ground beneath the structures? Pretty bad.

  She couldn’t see out to the garden, but heard something heavy fall and burst in that direction. She looked up again in time to see the lightning flash through a hole in the thatch, wincing at the bark of the thunder, and when she straightened up again, still holding Adelita’s tiny, hard hand, she could smell burning.

  Deborah looked wildly around to see where the fire was, and then—as if the physical laws of the universe had temporarily been suspended—the ground buckled and dropped. Adelita screamed. Deborah grabbed the girl’s hand and threw herself backward, scrambling to firm ground as the hole spread in all directions like a mouth opening in the earth. The table where they had been sitting plummeted with a clatter of crockery and silverware, and then the boiling gash in the ground spread wide and, with a great, tearing crash, the perimeter wall sagged. Adelita pulled at Deborah’s hand dragging her out into the rain and, in the same instant, the masonry exploded as the wall collapsed into the sinkhole, and the thatched roof came thundering down.

  Even as it did, a single despairing thought screamed through Deborah’s head:

  Oh God, the site. The site!

  Chapter Two

  Eustachio Lacantun, the Ek Balam dig’s sixty-seven-year-old site foreman, was lying in his blue nylon hammock in the cabana he had built with his own hands from local ya wood when the storm hit. He recognized it for what it was right away and rolled out easily—his left leg dragging slightly on the dirt floor—stepping out into the rain to look at the sky. He knew that Adelita had already gone to work at Oasis, but he checked her bedroll anyway, then limped over to the cinderblock house, calling to his son.

  Across the street he heard a creak and a splintering crash. One of the cabanas had collapsed. Eustachio turned, half crouching, one hand raised protectively over his head, but he couldn’t see what had happened, and by then Juan was appearing in the doorway, his pregnant wife behind him.

  Eustachio moved into the dim, square concrete room, lit by the greenish light of a flickering TV set—some braying game show with that woman who was all teeth and tits—sidestepping a pile of laundry. Ten years ago, no one in the village had a TV. Now they all did, and the infernal machines seemed to be on constantly. The game-show host laughed and the audience applauded and then there was a little pop and the TV died.

  The three of them stood in the darkness, and Eustachio watched the roof critically. The cinderblock houses had been the government’s gift after the hurricane of 2005, built by high-altitude Mexico City bureaucrats who never paused to think what a structure like that would be like in the hundred-degree summer of a place only a few meters above sea level where no one had air-conditioning. He called them los hornos: the ovens.

  Juan sat Consuela down. She had her hands on her belly, shielding, and her eyes were alert but composed.

  “Get over there,” said Eustachio to his son, nodding over the street. “Something fell. Make sure the Uks are OK.”

  The Uks were in their sixties and the only elderly couple in the village without grown-up children living close by.

  Juan’s eyes flashed to his wife, who shaded her eyes with one floury hand as she looked at him and nodded.

  “She’s fine,” said Eustachio. “I’ll stay with her.”

  Juan nodded and took a breath, as if about to dive underwater, then ran out into the storm. Eustachio watched him pick his way across the road, avoiding the deepest potholes and stepping around a frightened turkey and it was only then—amazingly—that Eustachio thought of the site.

  The site. It was normally the first thing he thought of the moment he opened his eyes, a constant lurking anxiety at the back of his mind as it had been for his father and his father’s father.

  He was struck by an impulse to run, to get his bicycle and ride over. He had to make sure. But he had said he would stay with Consuela. His eyes flashed back to her, sitting in the corner, her eyes on the street. The thunder roared and the rain drummed on the roof, but she looked serene as ever. Maybe he should have sent her to check on the Uks. She was the level head in the household, the strong one, pregnant or not. Juan watched too much TV.

  Well, he wouldn’t be doing that for a while.

  Who knew how long they would be without electricity? It wouldn’t make any difference to Eustachio, who had no fridge, TV, or air conditioner. He looked out through the door, as if imagining he could see the pyramid through the rain that sheeted the pueblo, and his neck prickled with unease. He needed to be there, to make sure it was secure. That was his charge, his purpose in life, a trust handed down through generations.

  “You should go,” said Consuela.

  He gave her a questioning look, trying to look confused and innocent.

  “To the site,” she said. “You should go. Everything here will be all right.”

  He thought for a second, then nodded, grateful.

  “I’ll come back as soon as...”

  His voice trailed off and she held his eyes. He nodded once, then ducked outside.

  Shuffling through the mud and pooling water where the hard earth had been only moments before, he hobbled back to his cabana where the old black Mercurio had been propped unlocked against the wall. It had blown over, but he got it upright and maneuvered himself onto the seat.

  He pushed off without looking at Consuela, who he knew was watching him from the door of the concrete house, and as he turned onto the road he thought he heard her call. He raised a hand in acknowledgement but didn’t look back, bending low against the wind and the rain as he began to pedal through the village.

  Sixteen years before, Eustachio had been working on a peripheral site near Chitchen-Itza, when a barrow full of tooled stone had overturned, crushing his left ankle. He had been taken to hospital in Valladolid, and they had saved his foot—and his life, he supposed, given the amount of blood he had lost—but he had never regained full use of it. Nerve damage, they said. On his bicycle, he did almost all the work with his strong right leg, pushing hard so the heavy machine surged forward, coasting as his feeble left took over, then pressing on with his right. It wasn’t easy, and if he didn’t time it right he could lose momentum and stall, but it worked pretty well most of the time.

  When it wasn’t raining like Chaak himsel
f had set a new task for Noah.

  Eustachio always thought like that, the threads of his Catholicism interweaving with the ancient Mayan beliefs that the Spanish had tried vainly to eradicate, like different colors in a complex hammock. Tales of trickster rabbits coexisted with the crucified Christ and the shiny televisions, though the influence of both the ancient Mayan and the Christian were, he suspected, fading.

  He could see faces in the doorways as he cycled down past the cabanas—their roofs flapping alarmingly in the wind—past the school and the church, and then he left the village behind. He pressed on, dodging by memory the submerged potholes, and pedaled through the flat jungle scrub that lined the road and concealed patches of crop fields: some agave, mostly the corn that kept the village alive. They had built the fancy new blacktop road to connect the ancient site to the 180, but hadn’t bothered to resurface the road to the village itself. The dead of Ek Balam got asphalt and road markings; the living got dust and potholes deep enough to drown a pig.

  Well, that was just the way it was.

  The past was their future, it seemed, and not just for Eustachio, whose interest was particular and secret. The villagers needed to keep that past alive or they may as well sell off the land to be planted with sugar cane or the stuff they made into diesel, and move to the city. No one wanted that. The kids went to school in the village, and church in the village. They worked at home, and most would do so forever. Eustachio wondered about Adelita. She was bright, did well in school. But her family needed close to two hundred of the handmade, fist-sized tortillas a day, and the necessary grinding, shaping, and cooking took most of Adelita’s time. Consuela knew it. He caught her watching the girl as she worked and he felt the division in her heart. She didn’t know what she wanted most, to keep the child with her till she married and moved to a cabana down the street, or to push her away. Eustachio hated to see children leave the village, but Adelita was special. She could work in Valladolid or even Merida and be close enough to visit. She might even go to college...

  The rain ran in his eyes, but he blinked it away and pushed forward, the bike a foot deep in brown, fast water. It wasn’t like riding, he thought. More like sailing, the front wheel the prow of a boat. He felt it push at him, threatening to turn him off, but he adjusted and rode on.

 

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