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“There’ll be flying femurs tomorrow!” Ralph crowed. “Please, please, let there be untouched ceramics for me.”

Only Hilda was quiet, perhaps because of the effort it took her to climb the huaca, or because she felt it was almost too much to hope for.

By now it was getting late, and Hilda called a halt to the day’s work. I had to run my usual taxi service into town for the workers and students, although I could do it in one trip now with all the defections, while Steve took the others home in our second truck, thereby eliminating another opportunity for me to speak to him.

Dinner was a fairly raucous affair, and for a change Hilda stayed for most of it, helping to plan the next day’s work. “What makes everyone so sure they’ve found an important person’s tomb?” I asked Ralph.

“Because of where it is, and the type of tomb it is,” he replied. “First of all it’s right in the huaca. That says a lot. Also, the Moche appear to have had a range of burial procedures and rituals which depended, by and large, on the individual’s status, in much the same way we do. Some of us are buried in simple graves with wooden markers, others with elaborate headstones and the finest coffins,”‘ he said.

“For the Moche, the commonest form—the grave with a simple wooden cross, if you will—would be a pit burial, just a shallow grave really, with a few burial goods interred with them. The middle class, if we can use that term, would have had more elaborate burials. A shaft would have been constructed down several feet, then a chamber hollowed out, sometimes to one side, like the foot on a boot. The bodies were lowered down the shaft, either horizontally or vertically depending on the size of the shaft, and placed in the chamber. We know that much from Moche ceramics, my specialty.” Ralph smiled. “Burial scenes are depicted on several that we know of, and they show the bodies being lowered into the chambers by two ritual or perhaps mythological beings, Iguana, someone with the face of a lizard, and Wrinkle Face, a being with a very wrinkled face, as the names imply.

“For the higher status individuals, and this is what we’re hoping for here, large chambers were constructed, large enough to hold the individual, lots of grave goods, some very elaborate, and other sacrificed animals, like llamas or dogs, and individuals, perhaps their retainers in life. Sometimes there are even guardians, bodies placed in niches above the principal body. So these graves are much larger, they have been known to have adobe walls, and they are more likely to have timber roofs. The presence of these three things, a large chamber, the adobe walls, and the roofing, is what makes us pretty excited about what tomorrow may bring.”

“So what will this look like, if we get in?” I asked.

Steve jumped into the conversation with enthusiasm. “Moche dead are normally buried flat on their backs, arms at their sides, with the head usually facing more or less south and away from the shaft. They were wrapped in cloth, then enclosed in some kind of cane sleeve or tube, although there wouldn’t be much of the cloth or the cane left, probably. The head normally rests on a plate of some kind, its material related to the status of the individual, a gourd for the lowliest, a gold disc for the most powerful. The feet are often in sandals, silver ones for the big guys, much more humble ones for those of lower status. If we’re really lucky and it’s a warrior priest or something, he’ll be wearing the full regalia—ear spools, the headdress, back flaps, necklaces, everything. Actually, I don’t even want to think about this, in case it jinxes us.” Steve laughed.

“How do we think the huaqueros missed this one?” I asked. “If indeed they did.”

If” is a good way to put it,“ Steve replied. ”Remember what I told you about Moche pyramids. They were built platform on top of platform. There could be individuals buried in the different levels. It’s possible that huaqueros found a tomb higher up in the structure and figured that was it.“

It was at this point that Hilda decided to retire for the night, this time without the scotch bottle, a development I considered real progress, and perhaps an indication of just how important she felt the next day’s work would be. The rest of us sat around for a while waiting to see Ines off. Tomas was a little later than usual, and I figured once Ines had left, everyone would start to head upstairs to get some rest for the big day ahead and I might have an opportunity to have a quiet word with Steve about Puma and Pachamama.

When Tomas came to pick up Ines, however, he brought with him bad news. Gonzalo Fernandez, the night guard at the site, had walked off the job. Just after dark, Fernandez had seen, according to Tomas, an apparition of an owl, a creature associated with death in this part of the world. This was not just any owl, apparently. This one was several feet tall. Furthermore, the Guerra family had paid him a visit after we’d left to go back to the hacienda and told Fernandez he’d be dead by morning if he stayed.

Steve slumped in his chair and sighed. “Well, I guess there’s nothing for it. I’m sleeping at the site tonight. Tracey, Rebecca, where’d you put the gun?”

“Caja Ocho, in the lab,” Tracey replied. But there Was no gun in Caja Ocho.

“That was the number, wasn’t it?” she asked me.

“Definitely,” I replied. We searched through several boxes. No gun.

“It must be Lucho,” Tracey said. “Where is he?”

But Lucho swore up and down he didn’t have it. He even invited us into his room to see, but the place was such a mess, it would have taken us hours to search it.

“Never mind,” Steve said. “It was only a precaution. Just thought I might bag me a seven-foot owl. Something for the record books.” He grinned as he headed out the door, loaded down with a couple of blankets and a pillow.

“I’ll take the second truck, Rebecca,” he called back. “Maybe you wouldn’t mind bringing me back here for breakfast and a shower after you drop off the students, so I can leave this truck at the site. Don’t use all the hot water in the morning, you guys,” he called from the cab of the truck as he pulled away.

But in the morning, Steve was gone.

14

Carlos Montero stood in his office, beads of sweat breaking out on his brow and upper lip. “Missing!” he exclaimed. “How can that be? I haven’t heard from him, no.” He looked nervous to me, the way he wiped his brow a couple of times with a large pink handkerchief. It was warm in there, but perhaps not that warm.

“I’ll make a couple of calls, why don’t I?” he said. You do that, I thought. I was rapidly reaching the conclusion that there was something terribly wrong in Campina Vieja, and that a single sinister thread had been snaking its way through all the events of the past several weeks, from the death of Lizard in my shop, Edmund Edwards in his, to the disappearance now of Steve, Puma, and Pachamama. And Montero, I was convinced, was part of it.

When I had first arrived at the site that morning, I’d thought Steve, while I could not find him, must be somewhere nearby. The bedding he’d taken with him was still there, the pillow still bearing the imprint of his head in a rather endearing sort of way, the blankets tossed aside as if he’d arisen in a hurry. There was certainly no sign of violence or an accident of any kind.

“He’s gone to pee in the woods,” Pablo said, pointing to faint footsteps in the sand that headed in that direction, and it seemed the obvious conclusion. I waited several minutes, but Steve didn’t return. “Maybe he got lost in the woods,” Pablo added.