8 Monkey 1 Lizard 1 House
(Wednesday 12th December 2012)
“You’re still with us,” Ah Balam Chel said to Stuart. “You haven’t fled for the hills. That must mean you’re still interested.”
“Where am I going to go round here? There’s a lot of rainforest to get lost in.”
“You’d find your way back to civilisation if you had to. I think it’s now time I clued you in on the master plan. You’ve earned it. Follow me.”
He led Stuart across the clearing. It was midmorning, after an uneventful night, and the men of Xibalba were taking the opportunity to laze around and do as little as possible. Some cleaned their rifles in a desultory fashion. Others flirted with Chimalmat, who enjoyed the attention and had fun parrying their innuendo with even cruder remarks of her own.
“Hold on, we’re going inside thedisc?” Stuart gave a droll smile. “Does Chimalmat know?”
Chel gave Stuart a blank look. The man had a remarkable capacity for ignoring the things it suited him to ignore.
Inside, the aerodisc revealed itself to be a cargo transport model. There were few seats. Most of the interior was hold space, stripped of all adornment, bare down to the ribs of the airframe. The fittings showed their age, even a few specks of rust visible. Stuart reckoned the disc was at least forty years old, close to the end of its lifespan.
“This’ll fly?”
“It got here, didn’t it? And Chimalmat’s taken it up a couple of times since, to test it out.”
“But it looks ready for the knackers’ yard.”
“It is of some vintage, I admit. In fact, its destination before we got hold of it was the Mojave Desert.”
Where it was going to be scrapped. There were aerodisc decommissioning plants all over the American southwest. Dismantling neg-mass drives was hazardous work, best carried out in remote uninhabited locations in case of accident. Antigrav particles, if not handled correctly, were deadly stuff.
“But Xibalba has contacts in that region,” Chel continued.
“Xibalba has contacts everywhere, it seems.”
“Fellow travellers. Some of the native Americans in the southwest, especially the Anasazi and the Mogollon, haven’t forgotten how the Aztecs swept up across the border and subjugated them. Nor will they forgive the Empire for the way it treated all Americans, natives and settlers alike, during the War of Independence.”
Every schoolchild was taught that the American War of Independence, more properly called the Act of Necessary Suppression, was a vainglorious failure. George Washington and his cronies foolishly attempted to sever all ties between their portion of the country and the Aztec-controlled areas. As well as battling on various fronts with their militiamen, they roped in the indigenous peoples in the southwest, using them to attack the Imperial territories from within, hoping to undermine through sabotage.
It was all in vain, and the Empire’s retribution was swift and absolute. The punishments they meted out afterwards were terrible even by their own standards, and although the settlers suffered — Washington himself being hacked to death with an axe — it was the native Americans who bore the brunt. All members of the Hohokam nation, for instance, were forced at gunpoint to kill and eat one another. Most refused, and were repaid for their obstinacy by being staked out under the sun and skinned alive, then having fire ants poured on their flensed bodies. Many, though, did as bidden. Parents murdered and consumed their children, husbands their wives, in the belief that they would be allowed to live as a reward for their compliance. They weren’t.
The history books were unequivocal: they had it coming. But even as a boy, Stuart had been appalled as he read the eyewitness accounts and studied the sometimes very graphic illustrations. In quelling the native Americans and ending the American uprising, the Empire had come very close to committing absolute genocide. They had also snuffed out whatever small spark of selfhood America had been kindling in its breast, leaving it what it was now — a spacious, largely undeveloped land full of natural resources which the Empire plundered freely and at will.
America had had the potential to be the Empire’s greatest rival in the world. The Aztecs had turned it into a ghost country.
“My friends in America got wind that I was looking for an aerodisc,” Chel said. “This one belonged to a German freight airline. Not the most elegant of vessels, but beggars can’t be choosers. It was diverted on its way to the breakers in Mojave and brought here. The official records have it lost at sea. A malfunction in the antigrav over the Atlantic. No great surprise, given its age and state of repair.”
He showed Stuart to the cockpit. The controls were marked in German. Someone — Chimalmat was the likeliest candidate — had stuck pieces of tape on several of the instruments, with the Nahuatl words for their functions written on in marker pen.
“You know,” Stuart said, “if I was a pro-Empire kind of guy and someone asked me ‘What have the Aztecs ever done for us?’ I’d have to say that the power of flight is certainly a point in their favour.”
“Ah, but did they? Weren’t they just passing on a gift from the gods?”
“True. If you believe that sort of bollocks.” Stuart slapped the cracked leather headrest of the pilot’s chair. “So, what are we intending to do with this particular fine specimen of Aztechnology?”
“We” — Chel approved of Stuart’s use of the plural pronoun — “are going to fly it to Tenochtitlan and land there.”
Stuart gave a hollow laugh. “And get blasted to buggery the moment we step out.”
“Not if we don’t step out.”
“Just sit there on the landing pad, then, and wait for Serpent Warriors to board. The slightest hint of something dodgy going on, and they’ll storm the disc all guns blazing. In a confined space, against dozens of them, I don’t rate our chances.”
“Neither would I,” said Chel. “What you’re not seeing, Reston — and it’s not your fault, because you’re not in possession of the full facts — is that the Great Speaker himself will walk voluntarily up the gangplank, straight into our waiting arms.”
“Yeah, right. Because he does that, climbs aboard random aircraft that touch down on his roof.”
“He will if he’s under the impression that this is the disc that’s been chartered to fly him to China for a High Priestly conference due to take place on Two Flint Knife.” Chel grinned. He’d just played the card he’d been keeping up his sleeve all this time, and he was convinced it trumped all.
“Conference?” said Stuart. “I didn’t know there was one happening.”
“It’s not been widely advertised. These hieratic synods rarely are, for security reasons. Only much closer to the date does the information get released, a day or so, and then it’s touted all over the news networks, the biggest thing since, well, the last one. I happen to have heard about it well in advance thanks to an insider in Beijing. Preparations at the Forbidden City have been going on for months. It’s supposed to have been kept under wraps, but you can’t hide that much construction work or that level of heightened security around the venue. The more hush-hush the activity is, the more obvious it becomes that something big is in train.”
“And your man in China knows for a fact that it’s a conference? All the High Priests are going to attend?”
“He does. He’s an Anahuac, a cousin of a cousin of mine. Works in the building trade over there. He’s been supplying labour to the site. They’re putting up a convention hall right where one of the main palaces in the Forbidden City used to stand. They’re also raising a brand new temple ziggurat. There’s going to be some serious sacrificing once the Great Speaker blows into town.”
“How do you know he’s on the level, your cousin’s cousin? Mightn’t the Empire have turned him? Could he be feeding you deliberate misinformation? Couldn’t this all be some Imperial plot to smoke Xibalba out?”
“Ah, so suspicious,” said Chel. “And you are wise to be. However, I’m in absolutely no doubt that he’s telling the truth. He’s sympathetic to our aims, and what with that and our shared blood, I trust him implicitly. That’s why I’ve obtained this aerodisc. That’s why I’ve cooked up this kidnap plan.”
“Kidnap? It isn’t going to stop at that, though, is it?”
“No.” Chel looked grave. “It can’t. The Great Speaker has to die. And he has to die publicly, screaming, begging for his life. As a man, not a god. In mortal terror.”
“In Beijing.”
“That would be the ideal location. The world’s press are going to be there. It’ll be the focus of international media attention. Before hundreds of cameras, before millions of watching eyes, Xibalba will unmask the Speaker and show him to be a human being, as frail as any of us and as capable of dying. We will cut him down just as his priests have cut down so many countless others, and the Empire’s reign of terror will be over.”
Off the top of his head Stuart could think of a dozen objections to this plan. The ways it could go wrong were many and obvious. For one thing, they had to make sure the Serpent Warriors at Tenochtitlan were fooled into believing this disc was the one that had come to fetch their master. For another, it was a distance of several thousand miles from Anahuac to Beijing. Could such a rusty old rattletrap make it that far? And assuming they got there in one piece and were able to stage a public execution for the Great Speaker, wasn’t there a chance people might be made to think it was faked? The Empire could claim the whole thing was a setup, with some hapless impostor duped into wearing a replica set of robes and golden mask. A replacement Great Speaker could be wheeled out at short notice and declare that a vicious prank had been played by enemies of the Empire and the world should pay it no attention.
Chel studied his face and saw all the doubts there.
But he saw something else as well.
“It’s not without its potential drawbacks,” he admitted. “I’m well aware of that. Some might even call it harebrained. But imagine if we manage to pull it off. Just imagine. The Empire is predicated on the fact that its Emperor is Moctezuma the Second, ancient and everlasting. If we were to prove convincingly otherwise, it would have nothing to stand on. It would fall heavily and hard. And…”
He moved a step closer to Stuart.
“What a grand gesture it would be. What a spectacular coup. I know your love of the bold, flashy statement, your flair for the dramatic. You understand that that’s what’s needed to get one’s point across. A slumbering public has to be woken up. It has to be shocked out of its complacency. People are numb, docile — sheep. What else was the Conquistador about if not throwing a metaphorical grenade in their laps? This would be the biggest grenade of all. The effects of its explosion would be felt for all time. It could change everything!”
Chel looked deep into his eyes.
“Let’s set it off. Let’s at least try.”