Part 9 (1/2)
”Oh, exactly what I hired you for: to pick up where the Corys left off and find the treasure room of Kachi-Tochetin.”
Dr. Cooper was puzzled. ”What would a weapons dealer want with ancient artifacts?”
Mana.s.seh laughed. ”Not the artifacts, doctor! The curse guarding them!”
”What?”
Mana.s.seh's eyes sparkled with devious delight. ”Imagine entire armies stricken with madness- turning into raving animals, turning and attacking each other instead of the enemy, generals going out of their minds! Whoever possessed such a wonderful biological weapon could win a war without firing a shot!”
Dr. Cooper quickly scanned the work counter behind Mana.s.seh. ”So that's what Armond Basehart was working on all this time?”
”Exactly. He acquired the journals of Jose de Carlon and developed the theory that the curse of Toco-Rey might be due to a rare toxin the Oltecas planted in the tomb. He came to me with his idea. I bought into it, and, well, here we are.”
”And you hired Ben Cory and his crew to find the tomb for you.”
”And to unwittingly serve as guinea pigs. They entered the tomb, encountered the toxin, and later went berserk, proving our theory. You can imagine our elation! We had discovered a toxin that had remained dormant for a thousand years but still came to life upon contact with human beings. It is the ideal weapon! It can be stored for years-sealed in sh.e.l.l casings, kept in jars, whatever-and still work when we want it to. But our archaeological team was reduced to raging animals, and we still didn't know exactly where the tomb was. Besides, neither Basehart nor I had any intention of going into the tomb ourselves. So ...”
”You hired me.”
Mana.s.seh nodded. ”And staged the raid on the Cory camp so you wouldn't know our real intentions.”
Dr. Cooper was appalled. ”You're a mad man.”
That only amused Mana.s.seh further. ”No, just a businessman. Thanks to the Corys, we were able to discover a perfect weapon that could devastate an army, a city, or a nation.” He pointed to a jar on the counter containing a preserved dead carvy. ”And thanks to your daughter, who was affected by the toxin and then recovered, we were able to discover the cure. So we now have a product we can sell to the right people for millions. In a way, there's treasure in the burial tomb of Kachi-Tochetin worth far more than the gold.”
Dr. Cooper wasn't entirely impressed. ”So what do you intend to do, start a carvy farm?”
Mana.s.seh burst out laughing as if he'd heard a terrific joke. ”That's good, doctor! Very good! But let's get to the real discussion here. You want your children, I want your cooperation. Let's cut a deal.”
Jacob Cooper said nothing. He just listened.
Mana.s.seh made his pitch. ”We need your expertise in further explorations of the tomb and any other sites that might contain the toxin. We'll harvest the toxin, and any treasure you find, you can keep for yourself. You'll be a millionaire, doctor, overnight- if you join us, and if you keep our little secret.”
”a.s.sist you in profiting from the deaths of millions of people? You're talking to the wrong man.”
Mana.s.seh only smiled wickedly. ”I've heard about your deep moral convictions, Doctor. But I'm willing to wager that your Christian morality can only govern you up to a point. Beyond that, well, as they say, every man has his price.”
”I got my Christian morality from G.o.d, and He's a far greater treasure than you could ever offer me. I'm afraid I'll have to decline.” Dr. Cooper raised the gun threateningly. ”Now where are my kids?”
Mana.s.seh eyed him a moment, then tested him. ”We can throw in an immediate bonus, a little incentive: How about two million dollars-today?”
Dr. Cooper pulled the hammer back. ”Where are they?”
”Two more million once you've found the tomb and make it accessible.”
Dr. Cooper spoke slowly and clearly. ”I strongly suggest you take me to my children.”
Lila and Jay stared into the pit near the burial tomb of Kachi-Tochetin, closely guarded by Armond Basehart and Toms. The morning sunlight was piercing through the trees and the carvies had returned from their night foraging. There were so many of them that their restful muttering and shuffling echoed out of the pit like the hum of a beehive.
”You gotta be kidding!” said Jay.
”Make no sudden moves or noises, and green carvies can be quite indifferent to your presence,” said Basehart. ”Toms, the ladder.”
Toms seemed very nervous but obeyed, opening a bundle and removing a long rope ladder.
”Hook it over the wall and lower it down very slowly. Let's not upset our little friends down there.”
Toms anch.o.r.ed the top end of the ladder to the wall, then let the ladder out one rung at a time, lowering it into the pit. The hum of the carvies stayed steady. So far, so good.
”Why do we have to go down there?” Lila asked.
”Oh, indulge me,” said Dr. Basehart. ”One final little experiment. Toms here insists that green carvies are harmless. We're going to find out if he's right.”
Mana.s.seh seemed to weaken. He'd tried several tempting offers to buy Jacob Cooper's loyalty, but the Christian was unshakable.
”You certainly are a man of conviction.”
”Some things are more important than money,” Dr. Cooper said simply. ”Now we can spend the rest of the day in a deadlock or we can bring everything to a conclusion. It's up to you.”
Mana.s.seh thought it over, then nodded. ”All right.”
”Where is Dr. Basehart?”
”Actually, he and Toms went into the ruins at first light to gather some more samples. I have your children. They're locked up in a shed in back.”
Dr. Cooper gestured toward the door with his gun. ”Let's go.”
Mana.s.seh made his way out under Dr. Cooper's watchful eye. Then he led him around to the back of the trailer where the shed stood, still locked up with a padlock and two slide bolts. ”This was rather hurriedly built, I'm afraid. We weren't expecting to house prisoners.”
”Open it up.”
Mana.s.seh took a key from his pocket and unlocked the padlock. The two bolts slid easily aside, but the door wouldn't budge when he tugged on the handle. He turned to Dr. Cooper, looking apologetic. ”As I said, we put this together rather in a hurry.”
Dr. Cooper stepped closer and grabbed the door handle. With both of them tugging, the door finally jerked open. It was dark inside. He could tell immediately his kids were not- OOF! Something hit him from behind with tremendous force, hurling him through the door. The shed had no floor and he fell, tumbling head over heels through empty s.p.a.ce until he landed with a soft thud. The dust rose up in a cloud around him, choking him, blinding him. He could feel it grating between his teeth, burning in his nose.
Struggling to his feet in the dim light, he blinked his eyes clear and discovered he'd fallen into a pit about eight feet deep. He could hear the voices of Juan and Carlos above, laughing and chattering. ”Very good job,” Mana.s.seh told them. ”Muy, muy bueno!”
The door slammed shut and the pit went dark except for thin ribbons of light that came through cracks between the boards.
Mana.s.seh had a quick conversation with Juan and Carlos, and then Dr. Cooper could hear the two men walking away. ”Sorry to slam the door on you, Dr. Cooper,” Mana.s.seh called from outside. ”But we can't let any of that fine green dust escape. The stuff is lethal.”
Jacob Cooper looked around as his eyes adapted to the dim light. The shed was sealed up with clear plastic and the air inside was murky with green dust. It covered the walls of the pit and lay several inches thick on the pit floor. He was covered with it. He could taste it.
And he wasn't alone. A dead man sat in a corner of the pit, his eyes gone, his jaw hanging open, barely recognizable under a thick layer of green mold that covered his entire body.
”Dr. Cooper,” Mana.s.seh called, ”may I introduce you to John Cory, the only one of the Cory party we were able to recover and contain. We were lucky enough to find him in the jungle just after he died but before the carvies had a chance to pick his bones clean. And now that Juan and Carlos are gone and we can talk privately, may I also introduce you to the deadly curse of Toco-Rey, that lovely green dust.”
Jacob Cooper looked at himself. He looked as if he'd fallen into green chalk.
”I had to laugh at your question about starting a carvy farm,” said the ruthless weapons dealer. ”Carvies aren't worth the trouble. Their poison doesn't drive you crazy, it just kills you. But this stuff ... ! Remember the video of the Corys admiring the artifacts they'd brought back? Remember how John Cory wiped them down with a rag, wiping off all the green dust? It's more than dust, Dr. Cooper. It happens to be a spore that can sit dormant for centuries until it infests the respiratory system of a human being. Once you inhale it, it germinates, giving off a toxin that turns you into a raving animal until ... well, you saw what finally became of Brad Frederick and now John Cory: The spores grow into a deadly fungus that eats you alive. Kachi-Tochetin must have covered his treasure with the stuff, forever guarding it from outsiders. He was a clever old brute, wouldn't you say?”