by Lyn Hamilton
“You’ll kill me, no doubt, just as you killed Don Hernan”—and then, taking a deep breath, I added— “and Luis Vallespino.”
“Regrettably, yes.”
The figure behind him shifted in an angry movement. Then I knew who it was.
“And Montserrat,” I said. “Does she steal from her own father, or is he part of this, too?”
“Steal his beloved art? I hardly think so. Loves it too much. Prepared to go down the tubes financially, but wouldn’t sell a single one of them. Wouldn’t ask his fancy-pants wife for money either. His shipping company was useful, though, for getting the stuff out of the country. You might as well take off the balaclava, love, she’s figured out who you are,” he said, turning slightly to the figure behind him.
“Fortunately for him, and of course for me, his daughter has no such inhibitions. And she’s good at math, too. Figured out that if she stole the art, her father would collect on the insurance, and she and I could keep the proceeds from the sale. Worked out well for the whole family.”
Montserrat Gomez.
Under different circumstances, I would have found my own stupidity laughable. I had assumed that because so many trails led to the Gomez Arias household, it was he who was the guilty party. It had simply never occurred to me that what applied to him applied equally to her. If he was in trouble financially, then so was she. Wasn’t she a director of all his enterprises, vice-president of the investment company, manager of the hotel?
“Can’t she speak for herself?” I asked bitterly.
“I’m sure she can. What else would you like to know, since it’s not the amount you know, only that you know anything at all about our plans that is problematic under the circumstances?”
“Why didn’t you save yourselves a lot of time and trouble and just steal a Picasso or a Matisse?”
But I knew the answer even as I asked it. A Picasso or a Matisse is easily recognized, and possibly traced. And Jonathan and Montserrat would not have had the unwitting help of their erstwhile accomplices, the self-named and essentially self-deluded Children of the Talking Cross.
“How did she… you,” I said, addressing the retiring figure in the rear, “convince Alejandro Ortiz and Ricardo and Luis Vallespino to get involved in this?”
The figure to the rear whipped off the balaclava, dark hair tumbling across her face.
“Stupid, sentimental children! They never even knew who was directing them. Spent more time deciding on the name of their organization than they did actually accomplishing anything,” she said. “They thought they were stealing these art pieces for the cause, for the revolution. They saw the Zapatistas negotiating with the government and quarreling among themselves, and decided that it was they who were the true champions of the oppressed. But Luis wasn’t part of this.”
“So why did you kill him?”
“Ricardo was stupid enough to boast to his brother about his exploits. Luis headed right for Castillo to tell him about it. He’d heard Castillo give a lecture at the museum about how the museum and the indigenous communities could work together to preserve Maya heritage, thought this might be a better way to go. Castillo wasn’t there, of course, but there was no point in waiting for Luis to come to his senses,” she said very matter-of-factly.
“And Don Hernan? Figured it out, too, did he?”
“Not him. He just figured out about the codex, and was determined to get it before my father did. He was just a silly old man who got in the way. The fact that he knew there was a codex just complicated things for us. He might have figured out that too many things were disappearing from Jonathan’s digs.”
“So you killed him here and shipped his body back to the museo in the artifact crates, hid it in the museum until it closed, then dumped his body in his office.”
“So clever of you to figure it out,” she replied sarcastically.
I realized as she was speaking that I had made an error in thinking she was Jonathan’s assistant in all this. I could tell by the way she was speaking, and the way that he deferred to her, that she was in fact the leader. The aggressive, stubborn Gomez character gone bad.
“And Martinez?”
“Just another corrupt cop on the take. Thought he saw a pattern, got himself assigned to these robberies, and figured a couple of things out. Seemed to think that entitled him to part of the proceeds. No one will miss him, I can assure you.
“I think you’ve covered just about everybody now, Senora McClintoch. Except that Jonathan may have to have another go at smothering that Dona Josefina person if she ever comes to. Take care of her, sweetie, and do it right this time,” she said, tapping her scarlet fingernails on Jonathan’s shoulder and gesturing in my direction.
I looked at this man I was wondering forty-eight hours ago if I was in love with, and said incredulously, “Do you mean to tell me you have killed three people now over a book?”
“Four,” he said, turning to me and cocking the pistol.
I suppose no one knows what they will think in the split second before they die. Some, no doubt will worry about the quality of their underwear; others, more philosophical, will wonder if they hugged their kids enough.
I had this ludicrous image of my parents, Alex, Clive, and the Ortiz family gathered in a cemetery around a headstone that read: LARA MCCLINTOCH, THE WORLD’S WORST JUDGE OF MEN.
It was just too embarrassing!
In a fury I hurled the box and its priceless contents in the general direction of Jonathan and the stream just seconds before he fired. The shot was so loud in these close quarters that it almost deafened me, and I felt a spray of rock fragments as it hit the wall above me.
Time seemed to stand still for a moment, the three of us forming a horrified tableau as the box and the codex hurtled relentlessly toward the ground. It hit the stone floor of the cave with a crack that echoed the sound of the gun. But the box landed upright, its contents still intact. As the other two moved toward it I hurled myself into the water and swam frantically for the cenote outside.
I surfaced and started scrambling up the bank, but it was very slippery and they were faster than I was. They must have climbed up the shaft and made for the edge of the cenote immediately. I felt strong hands pushing my head back under the water and holding me there.
Then suddenly the pressure ceased, and I rose to the surface, gagging on the water in my throat and nose. I stumbled up the side of the cenote and saw, coming out of the forest, a semicircle of flashlights and torches, maybe twenty of them.
Jonathan and Montserrat had seen them, too, and were making a run for it. As the row of lights broke into the clearing around the pyramid, I could see the leader. It was Lucas.
He dropped his flashlight and started after Jonathan. I went after Montserrat. I caught up with her just as she was coming to the outer edge of the giant courtyard, and we went down, slipping and sliding in the mud.
She was smaller than I, and maybe not as strong on a good day. But she was a lot younger, and after what I had been through in the last few days, I could feel myself tiring almost immediately. She also had longer fingernails, which she used to real advantage. We sloshed around in the mud in the closest thing to women’s mud wrestling I ever hope to be involved in, and she soon had me lying on my stomach, her knees in my back, pummeling me as hard as she could.
I managed to turn my head to the side, and said in as close to a conversational tone as I could muster under the circumstances, “Did I mention to you that Dona Josefina is probably your grandmother?”
She hesitated for only a second, but it was enough. I rolled to one side and swatted her as hard as I could on the side of the head. She gasped and fell back, and I was able to get back on my feet.
Then we both froze. Jonathan, framed by the lights and followed by Lucas, was scrambling up the side of the ruined pyramid. Why he chose that route, I will never know. Maybe it was the only one left to him as the lights from the forest closed in on him.
He reached the summit,
Lucas about twenty feet below him. But the rain and the winds of the previous day had made the pyramid unstable. A terrible sound, an unearthly groan, was heard as the stones of the temple on the summit gave way under his weight. Lucas scrambled quickly out of the way. Jonathan was not so lucky.
As we all watched in horror he fell, caught in the vines and stones, his body sliding down with the temple lintel and doorposts until he reached the bottom. He lay there, half-buried in mud and stone, his head at an unnatural angle.
Lucas ran to him, knelt beside him for a few seconds, then rose, shaking his head. The Lords of Xibalba had claimed one of their own.
By this time two of the other pursuers, both of whom I thought I recognized from the pickup truck earlier in the day, caught up with me, and Montserrat was led away.
I sank to my knees in the mud, too exhausted to move.
Lucas crossed the several yards between us, and also sank to his knees facing me. He put both hands on my shoulders, looked me straight in the eye, and said, “You are one tough woman to keep tabs on!”
EPILOGUE
Maya followers of the talking cross predict a coming cataclysm of mythic proportions. According to the prophecy, a new leader will arise at Chichon Itza. Creatures of a former creation, along with a petrified feathered serpent, will come back to life and destroy all the creatures of this creation, the fourth of Maya mythology.
In the meantime, I suppose, we all soldier on as best we can.
Alejandro Ortiz spent several months in a Mexican jail awaiting trial for his part in the theft of the statue of Itzamna in the Ek Balam. In the end his sentence was reduced to time already served, and he returned to his family and his studies, a much-chastened young man.
Montserrat Gomez will probably not be so lucky. It will be interesting to see what her sentence will be under a justice system that has no presumption of innocence, and no guaranteed right to a trial by jury.
From what I’ve heard, her defense will be that Jonathan was the murderer, she the unwilling accomplice whose only role was to arrange the export of the pre-Columbian artifacts through her father’s shipping company. I expect to be called as a witness for the prosecution, and I suppose I will do my best to see that she is convicted.
Diego Maria Gomez Arias has, to all intents and purposes, lost a daughter, but was reunited with his mother and reconciled with his wife. Sheila Stratton Gomez showed the stuff of which she is made and stood by her husband, bailing him out financially and providing the emotional support he needed through this period. She told me, last time I saw her, that she realized that Diego had married her because she resembled some subconscious image of the mother he had lost, but that she felt, in time, he would come to love her for what she is. She has not, she told me, had a drink in six months.
Told that her son wanted to see her, Dona Josefina awoke from her semicoma, and contrary to all medical predictions is back ensconced in her room at the Casa de las Buganvillas, imperious as ever. I think she must have recognized Don Diego as her long-lost son when he first returned to Merida, but perhaps because of her colorful past, was afraid to approach him. Now she and her son have been reunited after all these years, and are slowly piecing together the past.
I did not return to my studies. Real life had intervened in a significant way. Sarah Greenhalgh, the woman who had purchased McClintoch and Swain, approached me about buying back a share of the company. She felt, she said, that she did not have the eye for the merchandise or the wanderlust necessary to make such a business succeed.
Initially I declined, telling her about the warning from my lawyer to stay away from business for a while so that Clive couldn’t come after me for more money.
Then Clive did me a favor, although he may not have seen it that way. He found himself a wealthy widow, wooed her, and married her in short order. The wedding was, I am told, the social event of the season. I gave it a pass.
But the minute the union was legal, I called Sarah and asked if the offer was still open. It was. I took it. The new Greenhalgh and McClintoch sign was in place a month or two later, all traces of Clive erased. Alex comes in for a couple of hours every day to help us out.
Lucas has agreed to be our temporary agent in Mexico until I can find a replacement for Don Hernan. I’m in no hurry to do so. Every three or four months I fly to Merida to see what Lucas has found for us. In between we meet in Miami about once a month for a long weekend together.
It was Lucas who first found Don Hernan’s body at the museo, after days of searching for him, not knowing that Don Hernan had journeyed, as I would later on, to the very spot where Lucas was working. And it was he who put the jade bead in the dead man’s mouth. He hadn’t been able to save the old man, he told me, but at least he felt he was able to give him something for the journey through the next life.
In many ways my relationship with Lucas is perfect for right now. I’m not interested in marriage again, not yet anyway, and he is a gentle and considerate friend and lover.
It is an interesting question, though, isn’t it, as to whether it is possible to have a truly trusting and intimate relationship with someone who keeps something very important from you.
He has not told me who the men who followed him through the forest are, or what his involvement with the guerrillas might be.
Even more important, I will never ask, nor do I expect he will ever tell me, what he did with Smoking Frog’s codex. Knowing him as well as I do, I can only assume it will not be used for evil purposes.