born.' Lang waited, hoping for a date of somewhat more general recognition.
'Two, no, three years ago,' Guillaume said, now nodding. 'We made much rain.' He spread his arms as though precipitation came in armloads. 'The Aud flooded and much mud washed onto the road from the hills. I was driving past one day and noticed I could see sky where before there had been only the top of the cave.'
'The same thing that caused mud slides caused water to fill the tunnel inside that mountain,' Lang said, 'washing away the rocks and junk that covered the entrance that leads to the top.'
'You hope,' Gurt said. 'Part of the tunnel could also have washed away. If that is actually a tunnel.'
Lang was bending over, looking inside again. 'Has to be. Place was besieged for over a year, if I remember from the last time I was in the area. The Cathars had to have a way to get supplies and -water up there. If there had been an outside way to the top, the king's army would have found it long before a year.'
'They also would have found that entrance,' Gurt said.
'It was probably pretty well hidden behind rocks and vegetation. Even if the entrance was found, no more than one man at a time could have gotten through, and the stairs wind counterclockwise so that only a defender at the top could use his right hand, his sword arm.'
Lang looked from Gurt to Guillaume and back again.
'Well?'
Gurt squatted, duck-walking into the tunnel.
Lang followed, pausing only long enough to ask Guillaume, 'Coming?' Guillaume shook his head. It was a long way to the top, if the stairs were sufficiently intact to be usable.
Inside, a gray light filtered down a narrow, round shaft no more than three feet across. Carved into the wall were steps, each no more than a foot long and perhaps ten inches wide. They ended in rubble around the first turn. It took Lang only a couple of minutes to realize a slip in the dimness was likely to be fatal.
He stopped. 'Let's go back down. I'd feel safer with a couple of flashlights and rope.' Gurt was backing down the stairs uncertainly. 'Rope?'
'Tie ourselves together so if one slips, the other can arrest the fall.'
'Or fall, too.'
Gurt, the optimist.
Although he missed his wife, Fabian, Guillaume was glad she had chosen this particular week to visit her sister in Rochefort. Now there was no need to tell her how much money the American had paid him this afternoon and he could enjoy as much of it as he wanted. Or all of it, for that matter.
That was why he had made an unaccustomed trip to the town's bistro to let someone else prepare his dinner while he drank wine and shared local gossip in the cool of sunset. Moving inside the restaurant, he was wondering how much of the American's money he should put aside to buy a gift for Fabian, if any. Although only about half of the place's eight tables were occupied, a man he had never seen before motioned him over, indicating he should have a seat.
''You are Guillaume Lerat?' the man asked in French marred only by an accent Guillaume had never heard before.
A quick look at the stranger's clothes also told Guillaume that the man was not local. No one around here could afford American-made jeans. Guillaume nodded and gave the man a smile, fueled partially from the wine he had consumed and partially from the prospect of another well-paying customer.
''You are a licensed guide for this area.'
It was a statement, not a question.
Guillaume nodded again. 'Yes.'
Not quite true. Being a licensed guide required the payment of an annual fee, one much more expensive than simply having a commercial driver's permit. But then, who could distinguish between a professional guide who drove his customers around the area and a driver who simply pointed out the sights as he drove? Only governments could make such distinctions.
Instead of asking about specific locations, the man glanced furtively around the room before laying his hand on the table. Beneath his palm was a stack of euros. No matter how hard he stared, the man's hand prevented Guillaume from ascertaining exactly how much money he was seeing.
''You had customers today?' the man asked. Guillaume was trying, with little success, not to appear overly focused on the bills on the table. 'Qui.' The man thumbed the currency, letting Guillaume see the thickness of the stack. 'Who were they?'
Guillaume's eyes flicked to the man's before returning to the money. 'Information, like anything else, has its price.'
The man across the table twisted his lips into what might have been intended to be a smile. It reminded Guillaume of a dead shark he had once seen washed up on the beach. He used one hand to slip a bill from the pile. 'I agree. Who were your customers today?'
Guillaume pursed his lips, trying to feign indifference even as he slipped the money into his pocket. ''A man, an American, and a woman. I think she was German.' He had the distinct impression the stranger was not surprised.
He dealt another bill. 'Where did they go?'
'They were interested in the ruins of old castles and fortresses.'
This time there was no move to hand over more money. 'I know where they went. I want to know what in particular interested them, where was their attention?'
For an instant, Guillaume considered the possibility of holding out for more money. A look at the stranger's face told him that might be both unwise and unhealthy. He told him about Montsegur.
Guillaume's dinner, demi poule en vin blanc, half a chicken roasted with vegetables in white wine sauce, arrived as the stranger stood up, pushing the remainder of the euros across the table. 'I paid you to remember. This is to forget-forget you ever saw me.'
For the first time in his life, Guillaume was oblivious to food and a bottle of wine in front of him. Hardly noticing the savory aroma, he watched the man's back as he walked across the square and disappeared into the deepening shadows. Minutes ago, Guillaume had been ravenous. His appetite had somehow disappeared.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Southwestern France
Montsegur
The next morning
Lang had insisted on spending the night in Lyon, where they had taken up the earlier part of the evening shopping for equipment: several lengths of nylon rope, flashlights, heavy work boots, and a grappling hook, the sort mountaineers might use. He then visited a camera shop. It was only when he backed out of the parking space on the town square that he remembered he had made similar purchases at both stores the year previous, only to leave them on a hillside.
That, as they say, was another story. Before the sun was up, they were on their way back to the same hill they had visited the day before.
Gurt climbed out of the car, a large, comfortable Mercedes with such little power, Lang was certain that was the reason the class and number were not on the trunk, as was customary with other models of the marque. The factory was ashamed of the thing.
Gurt yawned and drained the dregs of cold coffee from a paper cup. 'This has been here how long? Seven, eight hundred years?'
Lang was unloading the trunk. 'The ruins? Yeah, I guess so.'
She wadded the cup with a crunching sound and tossed it into the rubbish bag hanging from the glove box. 'Then why so early do we come?'
Lang shut the lid with a soft thump. 'I'd just as soon finish whatever we're gonna do before anyone knows we're here.'
Gurt followed him into the entrance they had found. She squatted as he tied the rope around his waist and