overcome her reservations about the brown-yolked eggs) and then brought some more soup to a shaven and largely restored Abe. They had talked about Stan Ard, whom Gideon offered to confront, but this time Abe had been adamant. It was his job, and he would talk with Ard the next day about the tainted juice and see where it led. As to the attack on Gideon, it was agreed that Marmolejo was the one to follow up on that.
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Chapter 15
* * * *
It was the end of the next workday before Julie, Abe, and Gideon got a chance to talk again at length.
They were on their way back to the hotel along the path. The crew was eighty or ninety feet ahead of them, out of sight and hearing. Behind, the policeman maintained a discreet twenty-foot distance, ambling as casually as a man strolling through a zoo.
Indeed, they might have been in some wildly extravagant walk-through aviary. They moved along a moist green corridor impossibly crowded with gorgeous little birds of blue, red, and orange, which darted by their heads as nimbly as swallows or watched gravely and openly from the branches. Motmots, jacamars, cotingas, manakins, according to Julie. And some she swore were not in her
'How did it go with Ard?” Gideon asked. “I noticed him around today.'
'We had a nice talk. He fervently denied putting anything in the apple juice. He was thoroughly shocked at the idea.'
'That's not too surprising,” Julie said.
'You want a surprise?” asked Abe. “How's this: the mysterious digger was at it again. Two more steps excavated.'
Julie looked at him open-mouthed. “What happened to the guards you hired?'
'I hired them for night duty. But the site was deserted during the
Gideon shook his head. “What in the hell are they looking for?'
'Well, I hate to repeat myself,” Julie said, “but I keep thinking that no one's actually seen that codex since the cave-in...'
'Impossible. If that codex was down there and anyone knew it—or even thought it—that stairwell would have been dug long ago. Besides—'
'I know,” Julie said, sighing. “I know.'
Gideon paused to let a beaded, spiny-backed iguana scuttle across his path and into the foliage. “Julie, you don't suppose that was the point of getting us all sick—so that someone could have the site all to himself?'
She glanced at him. “That just might be. And Stan would have been the only one who was healthy enough to go out there and dig while the rest of us just flopped around at the hotel.'
'Oh, I wouldn't say that. I could have done some digging yesterday if I'd had a good enough reason. I wouldn't have wanted to, but I could have. So could most of the others, I imagine.'
'Maybe, but Stan makes such a satisfying villain.'
Gideon smiled. “I can't argue with you there.'
Abe returned from wherever he'd been. “Did you hear Ard's leaving tomorrow night? He says he's got all he needs for his first installment.'
'He is?” Julie said. “Shouldn't Marmolejo talk to him first?'
'Don't worry, I'm calling the inspector as soon as we get back.” He laughed suddenly. “I almost forgot. I have some good news for you. Emma buttonholed me this afternoon to tell me now she's established a second-level pretersensory interface with Huluc-Canab.'
'Terrific,” Gideon said. “Maybe he'll tell her what we have to do to propitiate the gods.'
'He did. He says we have to be more respectful of personality entities from other culturotemporal horizons.'
Julie cocked her head. “Meaning?'
'Sorry, that's as specific as he got.'
'Emma,” Julie mused. “Emma always gets in her two cents’ worth, doesn't she?'
Gideon knew what she was thinking. Just after lunch Abe had passed on some information: Preston had proudly told him that Emma was writing a book on the events of Tlaloc, to be told from the perspective of Huluc-Canab, who had revealed himself to be a tenth- century
Thus, as Julie now pointed out, Emma would seem to have a considerable stake in the fulfillment of the curse; even more than Ard did.
'I don't know, Julie,” Gideon said. “I don't have any trouble imagining her slipping something into our water, but I still can't see her as the one who jumped me at Chichen. I just can't.'