Sayid watched as Max scrolled down. The links continued in the same vein: protocol and error messages. “Maybe. This might be something you’re supposed to decipher. Y’know-one knot means something in the binary of a specific string that he’s laid in somewhere. Has he sent you anything by email that we could look at?”
Max shook his head. “Only that he was coming to London and he’d be in touch. That was a month ago.”
“Well, this is going to take some kind of genius to work it out. I’m happy to have a go at it.”
“Nothing like modesty, Sayid. Who appointed you chief scientific officer?”
“Someone’s got to try.”
“This hasn’t got anything to do with computers; I’m sure of it. He was doing field studies in South America. This has something to do with where he was. What is it he’s trying to tell me?”
Max scrolled down the screen. There was nothing apparent. String instruments of South America, shoestring holidays … nothing that indicated what he was looking for.
The door burst open. Max slammed the laptop’s lid down. It was Baskins, as subtle as a bull in a china shop. “Hey, Max, I need one more for seven-a-side. Be great in the snow, yeah? Oh, hi, Sayid. You up for it, Max? Come on, it’ll be raining again soon, and where’s the fun in that?”
“No, thanks. I’m busy.”
“Ah, come on! I need some speed and muscle on my team. Look, I’m sorry for what I said, OK? No hard feelings-you caught me a good one. My ears are still ringing. Why’ve you got a khipu?” Baskins rattled on, never drawing breath as he picked up the tassels of string.
“A what?” Max said.
“Khipu.”
“How would you know what this is?” Max said.
“We did a whole thing on South America with Mr. Peterson last year. Hoggart called ’em
Max took the strings back and cut short Baskins’s gory recounting of blood sacrifices. “What’s it for?”
“Apparently, Incas used them for keeping tabs on things. Y’know, how many bags of corn they had, information and stuff, shorthand or something. Look, I dunno. Are you coming or what?”
Max eased him out the door. “I can’t right now. Thanks, you’ve been a great help.”
Baskins had never been a great help to anyone before, so the compliment needed some thought. By the time he’d reached the top of the stairs, he still had no idea what he’d said that was so useful, but he remembered someone else as a replacement for Max. He pounded down the corridor to press-gang the boy.
Max tapped another query into the computer: “k-e-e-p-u.” That made no sense at all. He reached for his dictionary. He couldn’t see anything that spelled what Baskins had said.
“Let’s try Incas,” Sayid said as his fingers quickly touched the keys. “Here we go!”
They scrolled down the information bars. Incas: pre-Columbian tribes, distinct language, located in Peru, Ecuador and Chile.
Max clicked on one of the links:
Sayid double-clicked another link. “Stand back-genius at work.”
They had found the correct spelling. Max read the paragraph on the khipu, which described it as an abacus, but then went on to explain that khipu knots might well be arranged in a binary code, which meant they held more information than a simple memory aid.
“Y’see, I was right,” Sayid said. “Binary. You send an email or anything and what you see is really eight-digit sequences of ones and zeros. Then that gets translated by the computer that received your text.”
“Then maybe there
“Well, you’re good with knots.”
“I’ve never seen any like these, though. And what’s this got to do with Mum?” Max inadvertently asked the question aloud that echoed around his mind.
Suddenly, what had been upsetting Max recently was becoming more apparent. “This is about your mum?” Sayid asked carefully.
Max nodded. He fished out the half-dozen photographs and gave them to Sayid, who thumbed through them.
“But she was in Central America when she … when she died, wasn’t she? I thought Maguire was doing his field trip in South America,” Sayid said.
“That’s right,” Max said, taking the pictures back, regretting mentioning his mother. “But there has to be a connection. I’m just not sure what it is.”
“Do you want to tell me what this is all about?” Sayid asked.
“I just want to find out more about her, that’s all. I put a thing out on the Net. Danny Maguire said he knew about her.” Max did not want to tell even his best friend about the accusation against his father. That he had left his mother to die alone in the jungle. That in fact even Max did not know exactly how she had died.
“But your dad must know all that stuff.”
“But how do I get it out of him? The way he is, I mean.”
Sayid did not press his friend. It was obvious Max was being cagey, and given his recent unsettled behavior, he did not want to risk pushing any wrong buttons, as Baskins had done earlier. Word had zipped around the few boys left at the school that Max Gordon had lost it big-time.
“Maguire’s death was suicide,” Sayid said gently.
Max gave him an “oh yeah?” look.
Sayid shrugged. “Well, OK. The guys who came here were pretty creepy, and maybe it is a bit of a coincidence. But they thought Maguire was involved in drug smuggling. We don’t know for sure.”
Max pulled his backpack down and began folding clothes. “I’m going to see my dad. And I need a couple of things.”
“Like what?”
“A school letterhead, and Mr. Jackson’s signature.”
“Max, that’s crazy. It’s impossible.”
“Nothing’s impossible, Sayid-you should know that. Anyway, that’s the easy bit. I need my passport.”
“To go where?”
“I’m not sure yet.”
“Well, your passport’s in the vault. End of story.” It was a flat statement of finality.
The vault was 133 steps below Dartmoor High’s granite walls. Each boy had a safe-deposit box, and in each box, which could be opened only by a key that Mr. Jackson held, was that boy’s life. A passport, a legal guardian’s letter, a parent’s last words. If anything fatal happened to any of the boys’ parents, Mr. Jackson would take him down into the gloomy cavern, open the box and hand the boy a prerecorded message on an MP3 player. It was a final act of love from a father and a mother to their child-the last words the boy would hear from his parents.
The vault gave everyone the creeps-it was as if the dead were waiting.
Max had almost finished rolling T-shirts, cotton shorts and cargo pants. He pulled the compass cord over his head and let it sit below his sweatshirt.
“I know. But I have to get it.”
“Just like that? You get caught and they’ll kick you out.”
“If
Stanton had changed his mind. Why would Jackson have phoned the nursing home to inquire about Tom Gordon? Stanton’s people had already checked the place out, and there had been no sign of Max. That was understandable given his father’s condition. So why phone? To reassure a boy about his father? He had underestimated the possibility that Jackson might be canny enough to be suspicious of them.
Jackson had lied; Stanton was beginning to be sure of it. He was protecting one of his pupils. Max Gordon was somewhere in that school, and if somehow Maguire had managed to get any kind of message to him, what