Reston flew to Mal’s side. “We are definitely even now. That was magnificent stuff.”
“It was, wasn’t it?”
“I thought I was a goner for certain.”
“To be honest, I thought so too.”
“And now, surely, we have an uninterrupted journey to shore. Nothing else could possibly go — ”
He broke off.
“Me and my big mouth.”
Mal saw what he saw.
Flying gods. Three of them.
Huitzilopochtli. Itzpapalotl. And Quetzalcoatl.
The Hummingbird God’s flame spear launcher was on his shoulder, its missile pointed directly and unarguably at Mal and Reston. Or, as Huitzilopochtli saw it, at two enemy soldiers.
“Yes,” Mal said to Reston, “you and your big fucking mouth.”
THIRTY
Same Day
“Don’t shoot!” Stuart flung his arms up into the air. “Hold your fire. We’re not what you think we are.”
Hutizilopochtli’s stance did not shift.
“Look. I’m going to move my hand now. Easy does it. I’m going to tap the side of my helmet here, like so.”
Stuart didn’t know if any of the gods could hear him through the faceplate. He hoped they could, for his and Vaughn’s sake. At the same time, he was trying to send out all the right signals through posture and attitude alone. We’re no threat. Don’t attack.
“And hey presto,” he said, as his faceplate vanished. “It’s me.”
The three gods looked at one another. Quetzalcoatl’s and Huitzilopochtli’s expressions were flat — hard to interpret. As for Itzpapalotl, her all-covering helmet gave away nothing whatsoever.
“I’m Reston. Stuart Reston. Remember? I know I’m just a human, but surely you remember me, Quetzalcoatl.”
He had no idea how good a god’s memory was when it came to lesser beings. Perhaps mortals were as hard for a deity to distinguish from one another as, say, laboratory mice were for a scientist. Quetzalcoatl had recognised him on the terrace of the Great Speaker’s palace but, it seemed, just barely. He’d offered a passing nod, but that was all. Bigger fish to fry, maybe. Or maybe Stuart’s face had been familiar but one he couldn’t place. He had forgotten the man whom he’d briefly taken under his wing only a few days earlier. Stuart had reverted to being just another anonymous human, one among the billions of such creatures who infested the earth.
“We’re not Serpents,” he said. “We’ve just borrowed these suits to get out of Tenochtitlan. Vaughn? Show them your face too.”
Vaughn’s faceplate winked out of existence.
“See? When you came to visit Tezcatlipoca earlier today, the two of us were there. But we’ve nothing to do with him. Not allies, not anything. The moment you left, as a matter of fact, he tried to have us killed.”
Quetzalcoatl cocked his head. A thin-lipped smile appeared.
“Yes, I know you,” he said. “The Serpent armour threw me off. Huitz? Lower your weapon. These are friends.”
“Fucking phew,” Vaughn said, with feeling, as Huitzilopochtli did as told.
“But you should count yourselves lucky,” Quetzalcoatl said. “We were this close to attacking. The only thing that prevented us was seeing you take down that aerodisc. It made us curious about you. Serpent Warrior versus Serpent Warrior? If not for that…”
“If not for that,” said Huitzilopochtli, “your bodies would be lying beside the gunship on the lakebed even as we speak.”
Itzpapalotl nodded in agreement.
“So it was actually a good thing we got waylaid,” Stuart said to Vaughn.
“Every cloud…” she replied.
He turned back to the three gods. “Well, I must say, Quetzalcoatl, it’s a pleasure to make your acquaintance again. But now, if you don’t mind, Vaughn and I will be on our way. The more distance we put between us and Tenochtitlan, the better. That place is a deathtrap.”
“Of course,” said the Plumed Serpent. “As you wish.”
As Stuart started to float past, however, Quetzalcoatl held up a hand. “Although, perhaps…”
Stuart’s heart sank. What now? What did this god want with him?
“Perhaps I ought to accompany you, at least part of the way. Huitz? Itzpapalotl? Carry out the next raid without me. Be careful.”
“Really,” Stuart said, “you don’t have to.”
“If I don’t escort you, someone else in the pantheon may mistake you for genuine Serpent Warriors, and this time there might not be anything to give them pause for thought.”
“Ah. Fair point. Wouldn’t want that to happen.”
“I daresay not.”
So, while Huitzilopochtli and Itzpapalotl carried on towards Tenochtitlan to bombard the city yet again, Quetzalcoatl flew in the opposite direction with Stuart and Vaughn. They kept to a moderate pace, so were able to talk without yelling.
“You’re winning, right?” Vaughn asked. “Looks that way to me. Tezcatlipoca’s men are putting up a fight, but really it’s a foregone conclusion.”
“Things are going in our favour, so far,” Quetzalcoatl replied. “But by no means has it been an easy ride. We’ve taken casualties. Mixcoatl, the Hunter God? Serpent Warriors cornered him and overwhelmed him through sheer numbers. I saw it myself but was too late to save him. And Coyolxauhqui — ”
“The Moon Goddess.”
“I sent her in before anyone else, to infiltrate the city and scout out the lie of the land. Her stealth capability should have protected her. Not even Itzpapalotl is her rival when it comes to blending in with her surroundings. However, we haven’t heard back from her, and I fear the worst. She may even have fallen foul of Tezcatlipoca himself. He’s the only one who could have detected her presence. Then again, it’s unclear whether the Smoking Mirror has taken a direct, personal role in proceedings as yet. I’m minded to think that he hasn’t, that he’s still orchestrating from the sidelines, simply because our side still appears to have the upper hand. When he does become fully involved, it could alter everything.”
“He’s that powerful?” said Stuart.
“Oh, yes.” Quetzalcoatl looked grave. “That and more. Tezcatlipoca could singlehandedly turn the tide of this battle.”
“So why hasn’t he tried to yet?”
“Why should he bother, when he has a whole army to fight on his behalf? If I know my brother, he’s using his Serpent Warriors as a shield. We throw ourselves against them and break them, but break ourselves in the process too. They’re there to wear us down. When they’re at their lowest ebb, then and only then will Tezcatlipoca emerge, because then we, his foes, will be at our lowest ebb as well. His reputation for cunning is not undeserved.”
“It sounds to me,” said Vaughn, “like you’re scared of him.”
“I am. I don’t mind admitting it. Any sane being would be.”
“Is that one of the reasons why you left him here on his own? The real reason?”
“It did have some bearing on the decision, yes,” said Quetzalcoatl. His hair flowed in a long dark mane behind him with the passage of flight. “Angry as I was with Tezcatlipoca, I was unwilling to antagonise him too greatly. His rage, when roused to its fullest, is immense. Earth-shattering. It seemed wiser simply to back off and leave him where he was. Giving him dominion over your planet was a way of appeasing him, I suppose. Had we not done that, had he and I continued at loggerheads, there’s no telling how things might have turned out.”
“But you’re happy to run the risk of antagonising him now.”
“I couldn’t, in all conscience, permit his reign to continue. I had to do something.”
“So you might say this is kill or cure.”
“That, unfortunately, is a fair summation of the situation, Miss Vaughn. The game is being played for the very highest of stakes. Should we lose, Tezcatlipoca will not only wipe out all of us, his peers and aggressors, but he may well unleash further calamity on the people of earth. It would not be out of character for him to commit another genocide, as he did in America, purely out of pique. He might go even further than that.”