'And Howard just disappeared into the jungle?'
'He disappeared into the friendly skies of Aeromexico. While we were all standing around gawking at the cave- in, he must have been doubling back to the hotel. The police found the crowbar near the path. Anyway, he picked up some stuff from his room, ripped off a van from the parking lot, and took off. They found the van at the airport in Merida a few days later.'
'What about the gun?'
'Never seen again.'
'And now you really think he's living the high life somewhere?'
'That I'm not so sure about. We put together a committee of anthropologists from Latin America and the States—I guess I was the prime mover—to keep him from selling the codex. The Committee for Mayan Scholarship. “
Julie giggled. “Sorry, I didn't mean to laugh, but what could a committee do?'
They could do plenty. They had made it their business to see that every potential buyer of the codex they could think of—every museum, every library, every auction house and gallery, even every private collector—was informed of how it had gotten into Howard's hands. They had contacted over four thousand institutions and individuals, and gotten articles in all the relevant journals and magazines.
'And we did a lot more than that. We made it clear that whoever bought it, or a piece of it, would be prosecuted to the full extent of the law—which was maybe pushing it a little, because there isn't any enforceable international law on buying stolen archaeological material.'
'And you were successful? He wasn't able to sell it?'
'Not as far as we know. It wasn't too hard to scare possible buyers, you see, because this would have been the first and only Mayan codex ever available on the open market, or any market. So anyone who bought
'I bet Howard was a little annoyed.'
'I sure as hell hope so. Look, the clouds have lifted.'
The plane was beginning its descent now, sliding down over the huge green bulge of Yucatan. There wasn't much to see. A virtually featureless world, neatly bisected: pure bright-blue sky above, hummocky green jungle below. Not a building in sight; no roads, no electrical towers. No rivers even, for northern Yucatan, lush as it is, has none. All the water is underground, in the enormous caverns yawning beneath the limestone crust. The only variation in the green was an occasional flat, circular gleam of olive brown, like a plastic disk stuck on a relief map to represent a pond. In a sense these
'I'm still not clear about the cave-in,” Julie said. “Was it an accident or what? Why didn't Howard get caught in it himself?'
'He didn't get caught because it wasn't an accident. He purposely knocked down the props to cave it in, hoping we'd think he might be buried down there and waste a day or two digging for him instead of hunting for him. Which we did.'
'But how can you possibly know that?'
'He told us.'
'He...?'
'Told us. He mailed us a letter from Merida before he flew out. Two pages, very cool and offhand. Said he really hated to smash the lid, but what else could he do, and he apologized for taking somebody's van but he couldn't very well call a taxi, could he, and the van would be found unharmed in Slot Number Something at the airport. And of course he'd do everything he could to find someone who'd buy the codex whole so he wouldn't have to cut such a wonderful thing up into little pieces. Itty bitty pieces, I think he said.'
'Gideon, he sounds a little crazy.'
'I wouldn't be surprised. Not that being crazy lets him off the hook, the bastard.'
'The louse,” Julie agreed.
The landing patter had begun, muffled by the heavy thrum of the engines. “The captain has turned on the no- smoking sign. Please fasten your seat belts and return your tray tables...'
Obediently Gideon folded the table back into the seat in front of him. “Anything else you want to know?” By now he was glad he'd told her the story. She was right; he should have done it a long time ago.
'Well, I do have one question, but you're going to think it's pretty dumb.” She grinned at him. “Something tells me I'm going to have a lot of silly questions over the next couple of weeks.'
Gideon smiled back at her. He loved her silly questions. “Your questions are never dumb. Merely ignorant.'
'Oh, thanks, that's a relief. All right, then, just what
'That's right. From the Latin
She looked at him quizzically. “You know the damnedest things.'
'I,” he said with dignity, “am a full professor. My mind is replete with scholarly arcana, some of which, I can safely say, are even more useless than that.'
'I know. It's ruining our social life. Nobody wants to play Trivial Pursuit with us.'
He laughed. “Anyway, the term came into general use to mean anything with pages, as opposed to a continuous scroll. A Mayan codex looks pretty much like a modern book, with covers and pages that turn, except it's