‘It’s not the archaeologists who are the problem, it’s the site guards and whoever is topping up their wages. Whoever it is also pulls the strings at the top of the archaeological superintendency. They’re always apprehensive, clamped down, even some old colleagues I know personally, and sometimes there’s real fear in their eyes. I’ve never seen anything like it. I feel as if we’re walking on very thin ground.’
‘Everyone ready?’ Maria said, slinging her pack and clipping on her waist strap, then turning back up the ramp. ‘Maurice and I have learned the hard way that when you get the go-ahead in this place, you go-ahead pronto. It’s about two hundred yards due west from here, but we have to go out of the site and down some back alleys. We’ll be met at the entrance.’ She eyed Costas’ camera bag. ‘And watch your valuables, right? Remember where we are.’
7
T wenty minutes later, Jack and the others stood outside a low door at the end of a dark alley in the modern town of Ercolano. They were above the buried remains of the Villa of the Papyri, one of the greatest archaeological sites ever discovered, much of it still entombed under the streets around them. Jack’s excitement had increased as they came closer, though the narrowing walls of the alleyway seemed to accentuate the unease he had felt since talking to Hiebermeyer and Maria. It had become hot in the midday sun, and they gathered in the shade against the wall. The scene was astonishingly similar to an excavated street in ancient Herculaeum a few hundred metres away, and for a split second Jack felt completely displaced, uncertain whether he was in the past or the present. He was brought back to reality by the tinny echo of a Vespa scooter as it hurtled down a nearby alley, and by the distinctly modern smells that rose up around them. The sides of the alley were strewn with rubbish, and an alcove beside the doorway was scattered with used hypodermic syringes.
‘Watch your feet,’ Maria said. ‘It’s a favourite local shooting-up place.’
‘Opium,’ Costas said. ‘ Plus ca change.’
Maria looked at him questioningly. ‘Later,’ Jack said. ‘We’ve got some fabulous news. An incredible discovery. But let’s do what we’ve got to do here first.’
The door opened, and an armed security guard appeared. Hiebermeyer spoke a few halting words of Italian and the man looked dubiously at Jack and Costas. He shook his head, grudgingly took the permit papers Hiebermeyer offered him and pushed him back out into the alley, shutting the door again in his face.
‘This happens every time,’ Hiebermeyer said, his teeth clenched. ‘There’s always a new guard, and they always need to see the paperwork. Then they insist on keeping the papers, and I have to get new ones issued by the superintendency in Naples. It took two weeks before they’d let Maria in.’
‘I don’t know how you can stand it,’ Costas said.
‘Patience 101,’ Jack said. ‘Mandatory introductory archaeology course.’
‘I can’t imagine how you passed that one, Jack.’
‘I bribed Maurice to sit the exam for me.’
The door reopened, and the guard jerked his head. Hiebermeyer ducked through and the others filed after him into a small grey courtyard. The guard waved his sub-machine gun towards another entrance. Costas caught his gaze for slightly too long, and the man’s look froze.
‘Don’t,’ Jack said under his breath. Before they realized what was happening, the guard was beside them and had casually sideswiped Costas, knocking him into the wall. Jack took Costas by the arm and quickly led him behind Maria and Hiebermeyer towards the other entrance. The guard remained rooted to the ground, watching them, then they heard him sidle away. They passed through the entrance into another small alleyway.
‘Nobody does that to me,’ Costas seethed, brushing the graze on his arm and trying to push Jack away.
‘Keep cool,’ Jack said quietly, keeping a vice-like hold on Costas and steering him forward. ‘It’s not worth it. A little man in a uniform.’
‘With thirty rounds of nine millimetre,’ Maria murmured.
‘I thought you were supposed to be the star attraction around here,’ Costas grumbled to Hiebermeyer as Jack released his hold. ‘Distinguished foreign archaeologist, flown in from Egypt to help excavate one of the most important sites ever found.’
‘That’s the public face of it,’ Hiebermeyer said, keeping his voice down. ‘Come through that entranceway, and it’s a different story. They won’t even let a film crew in here. This place has been shut down for two hundred years, and somebody somewhere wants it to stay that way.’
‘None of the villa’s open to the public?’
‘After intense international lobbying, a small section was opened with great ceremony a few years ago. We passed the entrance on the way. For the first time, people can visit some of the eighteenth-century excavations. They made a big show of it, even got Prince Charles over from London to cut the ribbon. You’ve no idea how many scholars and philanthropists have been trying to kick-start work on this place. But from our point of view this progress has been a mixed blessing. It’s allowed the authorities to paint a picture of huge achievement, diverting attention away from the most pressing need, which is to resume the excavations.’
‘So without the earthquake last month that opened up this new tunnel, we wouldn’t be here,’ Costas said.
‘Not a chance.’
‘Thank God for natural catastrophe.’
‘You could say that about this place.’
‘It’s bizarre,’ Maria said quietly as they reached the end of the alley. ‘It’s as if they hate us being here, and have done everything in their power to impede us. It took a geologic age for Maurice to get an extractor fan in to clear out the toxic gas from the tunnel. But in the press releases, Maurice is the big star. He’s all over the papers here. Then, once we’re inside, it’s as if they actually want us to find something, but only enough to allow them to shut the whole place down again for good.’
‘That’s just about the stage we’ve reached now,’ Hiebermeyer said. ‘I’m convinced this is the last time we’ll be let in. You’ll see why in a few minutes. Okay. Here goes. Best behaviour.’ He led them round a corner into a deep trench, open to the sky, like the foundation pit for a large house. The walls were grey volcanic mud, identical to the main site of Herculaneum, and they could see fragmentary courses of ancient masonry and the odd Roman column sticking out. Half a dozen workmen and a woman with a clipboard were clustered round some tools and planking on the far side of the pit, and two more armed security guards were loitering and smoking in another corner. The guards grasped the barrels of their sub-machine guns and peered suspiciously at his companions. Hiebermeyer took a deep breath, nodded courteously and proceeded to lead the entering group briskly across the floor of the pit. ‘The guards are here to prevent the site being pillaged at night.’
‘That’s a joke,’ Costas said. ‘Those apes look like they were recruited from the local drugs gang.’
‘Keep your voice down,’ Maria said urgently. ‘There’s some authority behind all this that even keeps the guards in control, and I don’t think it’s the Mafia.’ She took the lead, navigating her way around piles of ancient masonry towards a wooden structure against the other side of the pit, which evidently concealed some kind of entranceway. The workmen all glanced up briefly as they passed, but the woman studiously ignored them. She was dark featured, Neapolitan, with wavy black hair going prematurely grey, wearing jeans and a loose-fitting white shirt. A superintendency ID hung around her neck and she wore an orange hard hat. She slipped on a pair of sunglasses as they passed.
‘She’s our guardian angel from the superintendency,’ Hiebermeyer murmured.
‘No meet and greet?’ Costas said.
‘No chance. They’re under strict orders not to fraternize with the enemy.’
‘Dr Elizabeth d’Agostino,’ Jack murmured, fiddling with his cell phone. ‘An old friend of mine.’ He slipped the phone inside his bag.