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He placed the empty can on the floor. ‘As you wish.’

‘Why did you do it? Why did you sell me out?’

‘Sell you out? I’m afraid you’re mistaken. I would never—’

‘Cut the bullshit! I know damn well you sent my picture and location to Angel. And don’t even try to deny it. I saw the email on his phone.’

The corners of his lips curled into a smile. ‘Ah, that explains your hostility. You found out about the email. I was wondering what you were referring to. Now your reaction makes perfect sense. I, too, would be upset if the same thing had happened to me.’

After a while, Maria’s conversation with Payne shifted to the mission at hand. Payne knew very little about the city of Cholula and needed to be briefed for the journey ahead. Instead of reading Boyd’s report, which was several pages long and looked less exciting than a history textbook, he decided to question Maria. According to Boyd, her knowledge would be the key to everything once they arrived at the site. Payne didn’t know whether or not that was true. He sensed that perhaps Boyd had presented the challenge that way to make her more receptive to the credit she would receive, but he wouldn’t know for sure until they solved the mystery.

Perhaps her knowledge was the key to finding the treasure.

They would find out soon enough.

He pointed at the file in her lap. ‘What can you tell me about the site?’

She opened the folder and handed him a picture of a large orange-yellow church that had been built on top of a lush, green hill. ‘This is Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de los Remedios. In English, that means Church of Our Lady of Remedies.’

Payne stared at the picture. ‘That’s a beautiful church.’

She nodded in agreement. ‘Does anything about it stand out?’

‘Tough to tell,’ he admitted as he tried to make out the details of the dome and spires, which could barely be seen in the photograph. ‘Do you have something closer?’

‘I do, but the feature I’m referring to is quite visible in this photo.’

Payne shrugged. ‘Sorry. Nothing stands out.’

‘Look at the hill.’

‘The hill?’ He glanced at the ground underneath the church. Trees and grass covered the terrain, as if it was any other hill in the rolling landscape of central Mexico. ‘What about it?’

‘It isn’t a hill. It’s actually a pyramid.’

‘Why did you do it?’ Tiffany repeated.

‘Not for money,’ Boyd assured her. ‘Technically speaking, I didn’t sell you out. I’m not the type of man who would sell information to scum like Angel Ramirez.’

‘No, you’re just the type of man who would stab someone in the back!’

He shook his head. ‘There’s a big difference between stabbing someone in the back and punishing someone for her mistakes. And you made several mistakes during this operation — the type of mistakes that have consequences.’

‘Mistakes? What mistakes? I acquired the medallion and millions of dollars for your front company. What else is there?’

He laughed at the absurdity of her statement. ‘What else is there? How about anonymity? I told you from the beginning that anonymity was crucial to this operation, yet you allowed Angel to see your face at Zócalo. Within twelve hours of the ransom drop, a sketch of your face was sent to every criminal and border guard in Mexico. The entire country is looking for you.’

‘Bullshit! I wore a gas mask at the plaza.’

‘What plaza is that? Because the Zócalo I remember is no longer there. All that remains is a giant hole and scorched stone. The damage is so bad that the Federales are treating it as a terrorist attack. As far as they’re concerned, you’re public enemy number one.’

Tiffany had seen pictures of the aftermath. The damage was more severe than she had anticipated. ‘That’s not my fault. My expert misjudged the explosives.’

‘But you hired the expert. Therefore, the fault lies with you.’

‘And you hired me, so ultimately you’re to blame.’

He smiled. ‘This isn’t about blame. This is about containment. As long as you’re alive, you’re a threat to everyone who participated in this operation. We can’t risk you talking to the Mexican authorities. That would make things, um, complicated.’

‘So you sent Angel to do something you couldn’t. You coward.’

‘No, my dear, you have it all wrong. I put Angel on your scent so you could punish the man who revealed your identity. If you had killed him in Mexico City like you were supposed to, we wouldn’t be in our current predicament.’

‘There you go blaming me again.’

He shook his head. ‘I told you, this isn’t about blame. This is about containment.’

Maria’s last comment confused Payne. ‘You mean the hill is shaped like a pyramid.’

‘No,’ she countered. ‘It is a pyramid — an ancient stone pyramid. In fact, it’s the largest pyramid, by volume, in the world. Its size is estimated at nearly four and a half million cubic metres. That’s nearly twice the size of the pyramid at Giza.’

He looked at the photograph again and tried to picture what she was saying. If not for her description, he never would have guessed that there was anything under the grass but dirt. It looked completely natural to him. ‘How tall is the hill?’

She corrected him. ‘The pyramid is two hundred and seventeen feet tall. Its base is nearly fifteen hundred feet on each side.’

‘Holy crap! That’s the length of five football fields.’

She knew little about football. ‘If you say so.’

He pointed at the grass. ‘Is this common?’

‘Is what common?’

‘The grass. I know some pyramids were swallowed up by the jungle and forgotten for centuries, but this is the first time I’ve ever seen one swallowed by a lawn.’

She smiled at the comment. ‘Actually, the pyramid wasn’t swallowed. It was hidden by the locals. According to legend, they were so convinced the Spaniards would destroy it — as they did to the great monuments in Tenochtitlan — that they covered it with soil and seed. By the time the conquistadors arrived in Cholula, the pyramid looked like a hill.’

‘That’s one of the coolest things I’ve ever heard.’

‘The locals did such a remarkable job of concealment that the pyramid was eventually forgotten. It remained undisturbed for over three hundred years until a construction crew rediscovered it in the late nineteenth century. Since 1931, archaeologists have dug over five miles of tunnels through the heart of the pyramid. They’ve found altars, floors, walls, and human remains dating back to the ninth century, but no significant treasure.’

He glanced at her. ‘Is that good or bad?’

‘Neither,’ she said, ‘because we’ll be focusing on the church, not the pyramid.’

‘Why’s that?’

She flipped through the papers in Boyd’s file until she found the document she was looking for. It was a photocopy of one of the pages of Mercado’s journal. She had highlighted several of the dates. ‘Construction of the church began in the spring of 1574, approximately the same time that the treasure arrived in Cholula. According to this, Marcos’s brother Manuel handpicked the work crew and oversaw the building of the church. Upon its completion in the summer of 1575, Marcos himself became one of the clergy. He remained there until 1596.’

Payne nodded in understanding. ‘From what I know about conquistadores, they were explorers and fighters. They weren’t architects and they weren’t builders. If Manuel took the time to build this church, there has to be a reason.’

She agreed. ‘Back then it was quite common to build churches on top of native monuments. It was Spain’s way of claiming the land as its own. If Manuel had somehow learned about the pyramid, he would have realized the best way to protect it would be to build a church on top of it. The hill underneath would then have been considered holy ground, which would have kept explorers away. By building one church, he hid the treasure and protected the pyramid.’