Read Curses! Online

Authors: Aaron Elkins

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective

Curses! (26 page)

BOOK: Curses!
5.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

"So he came back to try to find it before Abe got to it. That's why he was digging under the temple at night?"

"Uh-huh, but I think that was pretty halfhearted. He knew his watch had come off while he was fighting with Howard, and he'd have liked to have it back to be on the safe side. But it wasn't anything to panic over. He figured there wasn't any way to connect it with him."

"Until you showed up yammering about his watch stopping at 4:12."

Gideon glanced back at her from the window he'd been looking through. His eye muscles were still stiff, and he had to swivel his head to do it. He thought it gave him a certain dignity. “There is,” he said, “no need to be unkind."

She laughed. “How would a bowl of Washington State clam chowder strike you?"

"As if I've died and gone to heaven,” he said earnestly and began to get up.

Julie stood first and leveled a finger at him. “Stay. I'll go get some. I'll bring some hot chocolate to have afterwards, too. Dr. Plumm said hot liquids are good for you."

"Great.” Gideon settled back at the window, feeling luxuriously convalescent and pampered. All he needed was a lap robe. Outside, a string of cormorants scudded along three inches above the water on some urgent avian mission, their black, snaky necks stretched out ahead of them and their wings flapping frantically to keep pace with the ferry. Above and to the north, a lone bald eagle wheeled slowly over the Sound, wings outspread, against swollen clouds.

Julie was right, of course. If not for that conversation about the watch, Leo might have continued to poke along, trying to get in a little more digging of his own, but not overly concerned. There was time, after all; the codex, the body, and the watch were all still well below the surface of the rubble. As Leo very well knew, having so selflessly volunteered to supervise the stairwell excavation.

But once he learned that Ard and Gideon were aware of the watch, he had to act more decisively. And so the threatening note had come within a few hours of that conversation, and the Chichen Itza attack had followed the next night. And when Ard announced that he was leaving Yucatan, Leo had to get rid of him immediately. He couldn't chance Ard's finding out—perhaps when he was back in the United States, out of reach—that a watch stopped at 4:12 had been found near a body lying in the stairwell. Even Stan Ard had been capable of putting two and two together from data like that. Poor Ard.

As for Gideon, his clock had run out the moment the watch had been uncovered by Marmolejo's men. God, how Leo must have panicked at that point—but of course Marmolejo had given him another night's grace when he'd put off digging it out until the next morning. And Gideon himself had told Leo just how to put that night to good use; he had forthrightly proclaimed his intention of doing a thorough skeletal analysis the next day...after getting his tools from the work shed.

Sealing his own doom, Ard would probably have called it, and the flea in Leo's ear had been enough. All he'd had to do was go to the back gate at Chichen Itza, buy a cute little poisonous snake in a cute little basket from one of the cute little kids (even with a vocabulary of
bueno-bueno,
how hard could it have been?), return to the site the same afternoon, stuff it in the storage bin with the basket lid loose, and leave it there all night to grow more and more agitated and enraged. Then when the blissfully unknowing Dr. Oliver returned in the morning...

"Question,” Julie said, putting a tray down on the table. She set out cardboard bowls of clam chowder for both of them, along with crackers, plastic spoons, and two cups of cocoa, then slid into her seat across from him.

"I've been giving this a lot of thought,” she said, “and what I don't understand is why Leo was working so hard to make it look as if Howard was behind everything. I mean, he knew it was just a matter of days before we got to the skeleton. The minute Howard's body was identified, all that fancy footwork wouldn't count for anything."

"Ah, but he didn't expect Howard to be identified. You know, that clarinet-playing business was just a freak bit of luck. And Howard didn't have any identification on him."

"No, but Leo couldn't be sure of that."

"Yes, he could,” Gideon said. “I was thinking about what went on after we found the codex in ‘82, and I remembered that the foreman asked for the workmen's pay. Howard said he couldn't give it to them because he didn't have his wallet on him. Well, if he didn't have his wallet, it was pretty unlikely that he had any ID. There wasn't any reason for him to have a passport tucked in a pocket. I'm sure that didn't get by Leo."

He paused for his first taste of the smooth white chowder. Plastic spoon, cardboard bowl, and all, it was wonderful, redolent of the sea and the Northwest. It was very good to be home.

"Besides that,” he went on after a second spoonful, “Leo knew Howard had been wandering around Central America for over a decade, so no one was too likely to identify him through his dental records. No one was too likely to identify him, period."

"Except you."

Gideon demurred. “Luck,” he said again. “And the fact that I knew the guy. But once I was out of the way, Leo would have been free and clear. No one to recognize the watch, no one to identify the body. How could a Mexican pathologist who didn't know Howard ever figure out those bones were his? The corpse would be listed as unidentified, and poor Howard would be blamed for
that
murder too—his own—on top of everything else."

"But you'd already identified him. Killing you wouldn't—"

"But Leo didn't know that, remember? Marmolejo didn't want the crew to be told."

"Mm, that's right,” Julie said.

For a while they attended quietly to their meal. Outside the window a misty drizzle spattered the metal deck. It looked cold. It looked good.

"Gideon, what do you suppose it was all about? What did Leo have in mind in the first place? Why did he attempt to steal the codex? What kind of plans did he have for it?"

"I don't think it was that kind of thing at all, Julie. No carefully worked-out plan, no complex motives. Nobody even knew a codex existed until almost five o'clock, and by nine Leo had already made his stab at getting it."

He shrugged. “I suppose Leo just heard Howard say he could get two million dollars for it—'easy,’ I think he said—and that was enough to set him off. Sneak back to the site, remove it without anyone seeing him, have it blamed on the
bandidos,
and then look into peddling it at his leisure. Or at least that's what he must have had in mind."

He pushed his empty bowl away. “There is one thing I still haven't figured out. The gun. How did Leo get it out of the country in 1982 and then get it back in through airport security? And what for? It was a hell of a chance to take."

Julie concentrated on chewing and swallowing a particularly tough piece of clam. “Oh, I know the answer to that one. He didn't."

"You mean he hid it somewhere around the site for five and a half years? I don't know, that seems—"

She shook her head. “No, I mean the gun got caught in the cave-in too, and then turned up in the rubble some time during the last few weeks. Leo must have been keeping a pretty sharp eye out for such things, and he probably grabbed it before the workmen even realized what it was. Using it on Stan was probably just an afterthought; one more way to incriminate Howard."

Gideon considered this. “Good thinking."

"It's Inspector Marmolejo's thinking. The gun turned up a few days ago, conveniently tossed under a bush just fifteen or twenty feet away from where Stan was killed. Inspector Marmolejo says there was limestone dust in all the crevices. It'd been buried, all right"

"Ah, good old Marmolejo. You're frowning. Something's still bothering you."

She nodded, spooning up the last of her chowder. “Well, what do you suppose that curse business was all about? Was it some sort of smoke screen? Was it a plan to upset Dr. Villanueva enough to close down the dig again? Leo couldn't really think anyone—besides Emma—would take the curse seriously, could he? Or could he?"

"I don't think so,” Gideon said. “And I don't think he was trying to make it look as if the curse were coming true; I think he was trying to make it look as if a desperate, demented Howard Bennett was trying to make it look as if the curse were coming true."

She nodded sagely. “That's just clever enough and crazy enough to be right. Hence the message from the gods on Howard's typewriter.” She pulled the lid from her cocoa, sipped, and grimaced. Chowder was the Washington State ferry system's long suit; the cocoa came out of a packet that you stirred into a Styrofoam cup of tepid water.

Above them the ferry's horn hooted, loud and deep and throaty, and the big ship began its majestic turn into the Kingston ferry dock. Behind the little port town the rich green flanks of the Olympics rose and disappeared into the mist. It was snowing up there.

"Home,” Julie said with satisfaction. “Had enough hands-on anthropology to last you for a while?"

"You better believe it,” Gideon said. “You know the first thing I'm going to do when we get back?"

"Yes,” she said with her no-nonsense look, “you're going to stay in bed for a few days, the way Dr. Plumm told you to."

"After that."

"Let's see. Build those bookcases?"

"Nope."

"Finish that monograph?"

"Nope. I'm going to straighten up my office. Everything in its proper place."

"Good."

"I'm cleaning up my act. I'm a new man."

"I'm glad to hear it."

He drained the last of his cocoa. “Besides,” he said, and smiled, “did you ever stop to think what might be lurking in there under all that junk?"

Visit www.e-reads.com for information on additional titles by this and other authors.
BOOK: Curses!
5.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Granny Game by Beverly Lewis
Immortal Love by Victoria Craven
Trail of Blood by Lisa Black
The Forced Marriage by Sara Craven
Lipstick Jungle by Candace Bushnell
Tyler's Undoing by L.P. Dover
Out at Night by Susan Arnout Smith