Age of Aztec

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Age of Aztec Page 9

by James Lovegrove

No. Try again. Try harder.

  Will Wood. No. Will Wilson. No. Wilson Willing.

  Concentrate.

  There was Mick Land. No, no such person. She was thinking of Mictlan. There was Stuart Land. No, not Land. But Stuart someone, definitely. There was Chal Wooding. Yes. Chal. Full forename Chalchiuhtotolin, after an aspect of Quetzalcoatl.

  Him?

  No. Cold blue. Hazy. Like a far-off view of mountains. Not him.

  Keep trying. Go on.

  She fought to keep the names orderly, in shape. She forced herself to pay attention only to the hot ones, the clear ones, that ones that proclaimed themselves more loudly than the rest. She beckoned them towards her like cats, charmed them like snakes, banana-bribed them like monkeys.

  One of you. It’s one of you.

  And now she could feel the honeyed psilocybin wearing off. The magic mushrooms were losing their abracadabra. Gross physicality was setting in, the blood rush and lung heave and wet digestiveness of the body. Her kimono’s cotton grated coarsely on her skin. The sounds around her – and yes, the couple upstairs were in the throes of full-throttle nookie – were deafening. Could a humble candle really shine as brilliantly as the sun?

  One of you.

  It hovered close. The name. Oh, that name. She must make a grab for it, snatch it now, otherwise it would recede, fade, be gone for good.

  One of...

  A desperate mental lunge. A clawing at a thing that was almost vanished. A grasping at vapour.

  ...you.

  She had it. She had it!

  The name in her mind’s hand.

  Mal snapped back into the world, fully awake.

  Gotcha.

  SEVEN

  9 Rain 1 Monkey 1 House

  (Friday 30th November 2012)

  “MR RESTON? THERE’S someone in the lobby for you. A Miss Malinalli Vaughn.”

  “I don’t know any Malinalli Vaughn. Does she have an appointment?”

  “Nothing down in the diary, sir, but she says you’ll want to see her. A matter of some urgency, she says.”

  “I’ve a lot on my plate. Book her in for another time, Helen, whoever she is.”

  “Of course, sir.”

  Stuart resumed his perusal of the papers relating to the CCMM buyout. The owners of the Mount Etna lode were pushing for some kind of share swap deal with Reston Rhyolitic. This would materially advantage them but not him, and he was loath to accept it. He was already offering a decent price, well above market value, and what with that and the bribes for local officials he didn’t feel obliged to throw in any more sweeteners. If Signor Addario’s employers weren’t happy with the terms of the contract as it stood, all Stuart had to do was tear it up and walk away. Let them find another buyer with the financial leverage and pre-existing infrastructure he had. Good luck with that.

  The intercom on his desk buzzed again.

  “Sir. Sorry to trouble you.”

  “What, Helen?”

  The receptionist coughed and lowered her voice. “This Miss Vaughn. She’s very insistent. She’s, erm, she’s a Jaguar Warrior. Plainclothes. Says she’ll make a fuss, rather loudly, if she doesn’t see you immediately.”

  “Jaguar? You’re sure?”

  “She has a badge.”

  “Did she mention what this is in connection with?”

  “No, sir. Should I ask?”

  “No. No, don’t. Just send her up.”

  “Very good, sir.”

  Stuart shunted the CCMM papers aside. He straightened his tie and smoothed down the lapels of his jacket. He clenched and unclenched his fists, then flexed all his fingers, like a concert pianist warming up to play some complex étude.

  It could be nothing. Routine Jaguar business. They liked to poke their noses into other people’s affairs every now and then, just because they could. Rummage about. Throw their weight around. Remind everyone who was boss.

  But if it wasn’t that...

  He could front it out. Easily. They had nothing on him. He’d left no tracks.

  At worst, this was a fishing expedition. And the Vaughn woman could dangle her line all she liked, she wouldn’t be getting so much as a nibble.

  His PA, Tara, escorted the Jaguar Warrior from the lift, through her own antechamber office and into her boss’s much larger and plusher office. She enquired if she could fetch anyone anything. Drink? Snack? Stuart dismissed her.

  “Mal Vaughn. Detective chief inspector, Metropolitan Jaguar CID.”

  “Mind if I see credentials?”

  “Of course not.” She showed him a gold badge in a wallet – the yowling cat’s head – with her photograph and warrant number on a card next to it. “Satisfied?”

  “Looks authentic enough.”

  “Believe me, Mr Reston, the person who carries a forged one of these is living on borrowed time.”

  Chief Inspector Vaughn was broad-shouldered, short-necked, perhaps running to fat a little, but with a bosom and bum like hers that was no sin. She had fulsome lips and a close-cropped bob with a severe fringe. Her eyes were large and round, the irises steel grey. From first impressions she was, Stuart thought, his type. Intelligent without being cerebral, slightly dissolute, physically assured, in control of herself and well able to keep her neuroses in check. She was the polar opposite of Sofia, whom he had loved dearly and should never have married.

  As he sized her up, he could see her doing the same to him. Her job demanded she look unimpressed, but she didn’t quite manage to pull it off.

  “Nice place,” she said, glancing around. “Triple aspect. Amazing views. You’re a lucky man, Mr Reston.”

  “I had a good start in life, but it’s my own acumen that’s kept me and my company on top. Luck’s had nothing to do with it.”

  “Good thing obsidian is so popular with the regime. Where would we all be without it?”

  “You wouldn’t have a sword, for starters.”

  “True. Not that I carry one in the normal course of duty.”

  “You leave that to the uniforms.”

  “Right. I only wear mine on special occasions. Like, for instance, when I’m hot on the trail of a felon.”

  “Pleasing to note you’re swordless right now.”

  “Why would you assume I think you’re a felon, Mr Reston? Guilty conscience?”

  “On the contrary. I’m merely pointing out that, by your logic, your lack of armament indicates that you don’t suspect me of anything.”

  “Why am I here, then?”

  “Aren’t you meant to tell me that? Or have you come just to admire the decor and the view?”

  Chief Inspector Vaughn approached one of the massive tinted plate-glass windows and looked out. “Might as well, while I can. How the other half lives and all that. Don’t see anything like this when I’m stuck in my little cubbyhole at the Yard.”

  London simmered. The ziggurat-shaped tower blocks of Canary Wharf, the apex of one of which was home to Reston Rhyolitic, seemed to pulse beneath the hard-beating sun. The palm-lined streets and avenues were strips of scintillating green. A storm was brewing to the east, purple-black thunderheads boiling up on the horizon, out over the North Sea. When the rain came, it would be a welcome antidote to the heat.

  “You had a wife and son,” she said.

  “That’s correct.”

  “Sofia and Jack.”

  “Jake.” But you knew that already. You’re not the sort to slip up on details.

  “They’re not with us any more.”

  “Yes. So?”

  “Would you mind telling me how they died?”

  “I would. I don’t see that it’s any business of yours.”

  “Jaguar Warrior. Everything’s my business.”

  “Perhaps if I knew why you want to know...”

  “Perhaps if you could just answer the fucking question.”

  They held each other’s gazes. Seconds stretched.

  “Well,” said Stuart, “as it happens, they volunteered for sacrifice. I s
ay ‘they.’ Sofia did.”

  “Your son had no choice?”

  “How could he? He was two.”

  “And why did Mrs Reston put herself and your son forward for sacrifice?”

  “You’d have to ask her.”

  “You don’t know?”

  “Sofia was... not always a well-balanced individual. There were psychological issues. She was prone to mental disturbance, depression.”

  “So to opt for sacrifice one must be mentally disturbed, is that what you’re saying?”

  “No, chief inspector. I never said anything of the sort. Don’t put words in my mouth.”

  “Most regard giving your life to the gods as the sanest, most rational act imaginable. Patriotic, what’s more.”

  “Most do.”

  “But you’re not one of them,” the policewoman said archly.

  “I wouldn’t go in for it myself.” Stuart gestured around him. “Why, when I have such a good life?”

  “Your wife, presumably, had a good life too. Being Mrs Stuart Reston, she couldn’t have wanted for much. A lovely home, I’d imagine. Plenty of disposable income. A respected, successful husband. A son.”

  “Materially she had all she could wish for. But – perhaps you’ve heard this, Miss Vaughn – money can’t buy happiness.”

  “Were you cruel to her?”

  “Of course not. I resent you even suggesting it.”

  “Why did you marry her?”

  “What do you mean?”

  “If she was unstable. Didn’t you sense that? Didn’t alarm bells start ringing before the wedding bells did?”

  Stuart drew a deep breath. She was not going to rattle him, this lackey of the state. She was trying to, with her probing, her impertinence. She would not succeed.

  “Sofia was a vibrant human being,” he said. “She was beautiful. When she was comfortable within her skin, when she was herself, she was a dream. She lit up a room. She had a way of drawing everyone around her to her and making them feel at home and at ease. She was also a woman of high standing, accomplished, eminently marriageable. She’d had a hundred proposals and turned them all down.”

  “But then you came along, number one hundred and one, and she said yes.”

  “It wasn’t easy. It was a long, drawn-out campaign. But I was persistent, and in the end she succumbed.”

  “Campaign,” said Chief Inspector Vaughn. “Interesting use of military terminology.”

  Stuart gave a light shrug. “A stint with the Eagles. You pick up a phrase or two along the way.”

  The detective moved away from the window, closer to him. “You achieved your objective, then. Set your sights on a high-society lady and bagged her. Made a good match. And you had no reason to suspect there was anything wrong with her?”

  “There was nothing wrong with Sofia,” Stuart stated adamantly. “She had her flaws, she wasn’t perfect, but then who of us is, chief inspector? You could say she was a bit tightly wound at times. At other times, perhaps not tightly wound enough. But it wasn’t until after Jake was born that the trouble really began. He was a difficult birth and an awkward baby. Sofia had a wretched time with him. He wouldn’t sleep, wouldn’t feed properly. Colicky. Sick a lot. She had help, of course. Nannies, nurses, domestic staff, the best available, the costliest. But she insisted on doing the bulk of the work herself. She felt such a depth of maternal responsibility. She loved Jake as hard as any mother loved a child.”

  “Could you have done more?”

  The needling was persistent, he had to give her that. And accurate.

  “Maybe I could have,” he admitted. “But I couldn’t neglect my job. I had responsibilities too. I blame myself for not spotting the cracks sooner. The changes in Sofia’s behaviour. The mood swings. The long periods when she was withdrawn and uncommunicative. I just thought she was exhausted, wrung out to the last drop. Had I been a little less preoccupied with Reston Rhyolitic, maybe I could have leapt in and saved her. Saved them both.”

  “Was there any warning?”

  “What of?”

  “That she was going to do what she did.”

  “No. None. Had Sofia discussed it with me, I’d have done my damnedest to talk her out of it.”

  “Why?”

  “What do you mean, why?”

  “Why would you try to talk her out of answering the call of the gods? If she felt a compulsion to be part of a blood rite, why would you not approve?”

  “Because she was my wife and I loved her and I didn’t want to lose her. Or my son.”

  “But children are especially blessed if they die under the priest’s knife. Their souls go straight to Tamoanchan, where they frolic at the feet of Quetzalcoatl all day and sleep in a dormitory next to his throne room all night. Jake could not be happier on earth than he is now, in the gods’ company.”

  “Jake,” said Stuart, “belongs at my side. He would be four now, just starting school, and I would be with him every step of the way, teaching him what I know, giving him all he needs to become a man. Sofia took him from me, and herself as well, and the gods received what the gods did not deserve to have.”

  Those grey eyes glinted like gunmetal. “Must make you pretty cross, that, huh? I bet you’re pissed off with your wife, but because she’s not around to be pissed off with, you resent the Empire instead.”

  “That would be absurd. To transfer one’s emotions onto an abstract, unfeeling entity? What would be the point?”

  “The blame’s got to go somewhere.”

  “I told you, if I blame anyone, it’s myself. I could have been more on the ball. I could have been more sensitive to Sofia’s needs. A better husband.”

  “Self-hatred has a way of turning outward.”

  “I still don’t see what all this is about, Inspector Vaughn. What are you driving at? Why all these questions about my wife and son? Their deaths are a matter of public record. There’s no secret involved. I’ve nothing to hide. It happened while I was abroad on a business trip. Sofia chose her moment well. She was cunning, in the way that the mentally ill sometimes are. She knew if I’d got a sniff of what she was up to, I’d have moved heaven and earth to prevent it.”

  “Business trip,” said the chief inspector. “Funny you should mention that.”

  “Funny why?”

  “Actually, you know what? I’m parched. Long day yesterday, late night last night. Could your PA whip me up a coca tea?”

  “I’m sure it could be arranged.” Stuart pressed a button on the intercom and placed the drink order with Tara. Five minutes of smouldering silence later, in she came with a tray.

  Vaughn noted the single cup. “Nothing for you?”

  “I don’t partake,” said Stuart. “That’ll be all, Tara, thanks. Hold my calls for the time being. The chief inspector here seems to have a lot she wants to chat about.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “You were saying?” he prompted, after Tara had gone. “Something about a business trip?”

  “Yes. Ooh, good coca. Classy stuff. Straight from the slopes of the Andes, if I don’t miss my guess.”

  “They have the best plantations there. I’m told the home-grown strains don’t compare.”

  “I speak as someone with a lifelong habit – this is seriously good shit.”

  She meant it, too. Stuart could see this wasn’t some devious tactic of hers, designed to disarm. Chief Inspector Vaughn was genuinely taken with the quality of the coca on offer at Reston Rhyolitic.

  He didn’t believe for one moment, however, that he had won the duel.

  “Anyway, business trip, yes,” she continued. “Would I be right in thinking that you travelled to Italy recently, on business?”

  “You would be wrong.”

  “Really?”

  “It was Sicily. Don’t ever confuse the two places, certainly not in the presence of a Sicilian.”

  “But the date of the excursion was Six Vulture One Monkey, yes? I’m not wrong about that?”

 
; “I believe it was.”

  “I know it was. I checked. What’s curious is, that very same day His Holiness Priest Marquand was killed – nastily – at Heathrow, along with his bodyguards. In fact, I understand His Holiness happened to be on the very same inbound flight that you were on.”

  “I don’t recall. In all likelihood he was.”

  “I’m telling you he was, because the records back me up.”

  “How do you know? Priests don’t have to log their comings and goings. They don’t have to register at customs.”

  “True, but airlines are obliged by law to make a special note of every commercial flight that carries a priest. Should the aerodisc crash or go missing, the hieratic caste need to know if one of their own is aboard, so that steps can be taken as soon as possible to replace him. It’s not public knowledge that this happens, but it’s been official protocol for many years.”

  Shit, thought Stuart.

  He said, “So what if we were on the same disc? There were three hundred other passengers on the flight. Any one of them could have murdered His Holiness. As could any one of the hundreds of people who were airside at the time.”

  “It’s an intriguing coincidence, though,” said Chief Inspector Vaughn. “You being there. A man with Eagle training, what’s more.”

  “My Eagle days were long ago.”

  “But the army taught you how to kill with your bare hands.”

  “And the police taught you the same. Maybe one of your lot did it. Ever thought of that?”

  “No motive,” she replied flatly. “The Jaguars exist to serve and protect the state, not murder its representatives.”

  “But it is, after all, as you say, a coincidence. Just chance. That’s not enough to pin the guilt for it on me.”

  “True. As a matter of fact, it’s probably the one crime for which nobody could lay a finger on you.”

  “Implying there are others you can.”

  “Where were you, Mr Reston, on the night of Seven Movement One Monkey?”

  “Look, when the fuck was that?” said Stuart. “The tonalpohualli calendar is so damn confusing. Day-signs, trecenas, two different lengths of year... Why couldn’t we have kept the Gregorian? So much more bloody logical and easy to follow.”

 

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