The Amazon Code (38 page)

Read The Amazon Code Online

Authors: Nick Thacker

BOOK: The Amazon Code
9.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Amanda tried to wipe a tear from her eye by pressing her head to her shoulder, but couldn’t reach. It rolled, slowly, down her face and fell to the ground in front of her. “At least try to wake him up,” she finally said.
 

Ben watched as Reggie tried to urge the man to his left awake. Paulinho responded to the voice, but his eyes were still pulled up tight, revealing just bloodshot white spheres.
 

“Paulinho,” Reggie tried again. Paulinho’s eyes were still dead to the world, his face blank and expressionless. “Come on, man, wake up.”

The fourth mercenary was dragged, naked, to the rock bridge where the chief waited.

“Hey!” Ben yelled. He wasn’t sure what his plan was, but the one they had — the one where they just waited for their turn to be marched naked to their deaths — wasn’t one he particularly liked. At the very least, he wanted to get their attention.

He yelled again and this time a small portion of the villagers looked his way.

“Yeah,” he shouted. “Over here! Right here. I’m talking to you!”

Still more faces turned his direction.

“Ben,” Julie said, “what do you think you’re doing?”

He ignored her and started rolling his head around in circles. He didn’t have access to his hands and feet currently, so his head was the only thing on his body that could move.
Hopefully it will be enough
.

A few of the tribespeople started walking toward him. He noticed a few of the warriors glancing over, so he continued yelling. Reggie and Joshua joined in, and finally Archie and Amanda. Julie was the last to jump on board with the plan, but she eventually gave in and began shouting at the people surrounding them.

Two of the warriors appeared in front of Ben, and he shouted as loud as he could, directly in their faces. To their credit, they seemed immune to his chaotic insanity, and more concerned that he was interrupting their sacred proceedings.

“Not me, you idiots,” he shouted. “Go over there —“ he motioned toward Paulinho. “He’s the one you need to see.”

Still more warriors appeared in front of them, and even some of the older men of the tribe milled around the poles Ben’s group were tied to.

The fourth mercenary was marched outward from the lakeshore and onto the rock with the waiting chief. For an ostensibly ceremonious event, the chief quite unceremoniously jammed the blood-soaked daggers into the man’s neck, and the man’s two escorts followed up with their own stabbings.

Ben could hardly hear the man’s screams as he died, struggling for breath as his lungs and throat were punctured. He was caught up in his own yelling, screaming for attention.
I just need one of you to understand me,
he thought.
Is that so much to ask
?

“Ben, look.” Julie’s voice somehow reached his ears over the cacophony, and he followed its instructions and looked back to Paulinho. Three of the warriors had gathered in front of the man, and more were heading toward him.

“I think it’s working,” Archie said. “I think they’re —”

Six warriors surrounded Paulinho and began untying his hands and feet.

“No, no,
no
,” Reggie said. “That’s not what we —“

Paulinho still didn’t resist as his shirt was ripped off of him. One of the warriors was working on his pants when the others started dragging him toward the lake.

“This is not good,” Reggie said. “All we did was make them mad. They’re turning their attention to our group now.”

“No,” Amanda said. “Please, we have to make them understand.”

Paulinho had been stripped down to his underwear by now, and he was standing at the edge of the lake. The two men with spears pushed him forward, onto the first of the rocks. He took one precarious step forward, then another.

Whatever drug was affecting him had turned him into a calm, placated individual. He didn’t struggle, he didn’t fight back. He simply walked forward, walking toward his own death.

Does he even know what’s happening right now
? Ben thought.

Ben began to lose control. He forced his upper body to crouch down as low as he could, bending his elbows until the strain on his shoulders from his bound hands screamed in pain. He pulled the pole against his back, pressing it tightly to his torso, then he launched himself upward. He pushed with his feet, feeling them sink into the mud. The pole barely budged, but he knew it moved.

He repeated the process, again and again. He worked silently, all the while watching Paulinho and the chief out on the rock in the center of the lake. He didn’t want to call attention to himself, yet he silently begged the others to notice him, so that they could begin freeing themselves as well.

The pole loosened with every thrust upward, but it was far too long for him to lift it out of the hole it sat in.
What next
? Ben wondered. He was just loosening the trunk, but he was still tied to it. Even if he could loosen it enough to lift it from the hole, his feet were still affixed to it.

Still, it gave him something to focus on, something besides watching his friend die at the hands of a religious nutcase.

The chief’s arms were raised over his head, preparing for the sacrificial murder. Ben could almost feel the anxiousness of the villagers as they watched the proceedings. The two warriors behind Paulinho stood on the rock with their spears at the ready, awaiting their leader’s next move.

Paulinho was in a daze, staring straight ahead. He was rail-thin, his lack of clothing only accentuating his lean physique.

Ben paused his attempts to loosen the pole from the dirt. He watched the back of Paulinho’s head as it rolled around lifelessly.
Wake up
, he thought.
Please, for the love of God, wake up
.

Paulinho didn’t wake up.

The chief’s arms tensed in anticipation, and Ben saw his hands start to fall downward.

Ben wanted to close his eyes, but he couldn’t. The chief’s hands began the downward half-circles that would terminate on either side of Paulinho’s neck, and Ben watched on in silent horror.

63

PAULINHO SPOKE, HIS VOICE RESONATING clearly over the water. Ben couldn’t make out the word, but it was a guttural sound, heavy with consonants.

The chief paused, his arms now held out at his sides, elbows bent.

Paulinho repeated the word. The chief cocked his head sideways but didn’t move his arms. The entire scene seemed to freeze in place, heavy with anticipation. Paulinho repeated the word a third time. Ben didn’t understand it, but he turned and looked at Archie.

“I — I’m not sure what it means,” Archie said.

“Have you heard it before?” Julie asked.

“Yes, I believe so. I always assumed it was just a curse, something said out of frustration toward another person.”

“What language is it?”

“That’s just it,” Archie said. “I didn’t think it actually meant anything in
any
language. Different tribes have used it, so I assumed that it was just a shared vernacular of the region.”

The chief slowly lowered his hands and whispered a few words to the men standing behind Paulinho. They placed their spears over their shoulder once again and grabbed Paulinho’s arms.

The chief stepped closer to Paulinho and stared at him. He was shorter, so he pulled Paulinho’s head down to look into his eyes. The two warriors began poking and prodding Paulinho with their fingers, pinching his skin as they examined him.

One of the warriors stopped and dropped Paulinho’s arm. He whispered something, a single word. Ben couldn’t hear what it was from the shoreline, but the chief reacted swiftly.

He shouted, a long stream of consonant-laden words that seemed more like grunting than conversational speech. The remainder of the warriors jumped into action, and even a few of the women and children. The entire village sprang into life, an odd juxtaposition as Ben’s group, the rest of the mercenaries, and Paulinho and the chief remained still.

One of the women stepped forward after a minute or two and offered two of the yellow fruits to one of the warriors who had returned to the shoreline. The indigenous warrior walked out to the lake center again and handed the fruits to the chief. The chief lifted one of the fruits to his mouth and bit a piece of its flesh. He held the other fruit toward Paulinho’s mouth and waited.

There were a few people standing around, but most of the village had disappeared to perform some unknown task. Ben watched anxiously to see what Paulinho would do.

It took about ten seconds, but Paulinho slowly lowered his mouth down and bit off a chunk from the fruit. Ben could tell he was chewing, then he saw Paulinho’s neck tense as he swallowed. He and the chief still stared at one another.

They began to sway, slowly at first then more rapidly as the fruit took its effect on them. Ben frowned, more surprised and confused than angry.
What in the world
? He watched Paulinho grow more and more unbalanced, finally convulsing into a heap on the large boulder at the center of the lake. The chief responded in kind, taking longer but eventually joining Paulinho on the boulder, both men’s backs resting on the rock submerged beneath the surface.
 

The water lapped at Paulinho’s face, but he didn’t move.

“They killed him,” Joshua said.

No one spoke. Ben and the others watched in silence for a few minutes, but neither man showed any signs of life.

Ben heard Julie whisper. “What’s going on? Are they dead?”

“Better not be,” Reggie said from Ben’s left. “I have some words I need to exchange with that chief.”

Another minute passed, Ben’s group intently watching the center of the lake. Finally, Ben thought he saw Paulinho’s arm twitch. He waited to make sure he wasn’t going crazy. It moved again, and he saw the chief stir just behind Paulinho.

The chief gasped a breath of air, his eyes flying open in bewildered surprise. Paulinho’s neck pulled his head upward while his hands shook and beat at the surface of the water. Both men convulsed a few times, as if experiencing the aftershock of a seizure. The chief stood up, blinked a few times, and fell backwards into the water.
 

Ben tensed, not expecting the chief to have disappeared so suddenly, but then remembered the legend.
 

The gold-covered chief jumps into the lake to rinse himself off and mark the close of the ceremony.

Finally, Paulinho sat up.

“Paulinho!” Reggie shouted. “What the hell was that about? You okay?”

Paulinho ignored him, shaking his head slowly. His hands rose to his forehead, and he began pushing inward on his skull.

“What’s he doing?”

“He was complaining of a headache earlier,” Amanda said. “I imagine whatever we just saw didn’t help.”

The chief was already back on the rock, dripping wet and no longer covered in gold, waiting for Paulinho. He didn’t offer a hand, but when Paulinho began standing up the chief stepped close to him. Once more he pulled Paulinho’s face close to his and spoke.

When he was done, the chief lowered his head and stepped back to the center of the rock. Paulinho turned and walked off the edge of the rock and onto the next. He stepped purposefully, not looking down to make sure his foot was hovering over the solid surface. His head was no longer rolling, his eyes no longer white.

Paulinho made it to the shoreline then turned to the group. Ben was intrigued, but still on edge. He felt the pole pressing against him, its full weight no longer secured by the thick mud and dirt. He leaned back against it, steadying himself. Paulinho marched to the edge of the lake and turned to address the group.

He cleared his throat, then began.

64

“I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT just happened,” Paulinho said. Julie looked like she was in shock, watching a man she had grown close to visit the brink of death then come back full circle. He was very much alive, and yet he knew he was very much a different person.

Paulinho continued. “The fruit did something to me — to us,” he said. “I feel… connected. I can understand what they are trying to do now, on a general level.”

He realized only then that the tribespeople had begun cutting their bindings loose. He saw Julie’s hands freed, then her feet. The two warriors who had previously marched Paulinho out to the center of the lake by spearpoint were now offering him his clothes. His shirt was torn beyond repair, so he was given a long, loose-fitting one by a child who had run up to him as he spoke.

“Why are they letting us go?” Julie asked.

“They know that we are safe. They understand that we are not here to upset their way of life.”

“Yeah?” Reggie asked. “What do they think about
those
guys?” He motioned over to the remaining mercenaries, still tied to their tree trunks. He made the motion with the flick of his head, as he was still tied to his own pole.

Paulinho turned to address Reggie. “They do not know about them,” he said, simply. “I am the one who was drawn to them, and you are the ones who helped me return.”

“Paulinho,” Julie said. “What are you talking about? Are you sure you’re okay?”

“I feel completely normal,” Paulinho said. “There’s just something… something
deeper
I feel as well. This tribe shares my blood. My family was descended from them.”

Julie walked over and stood next to Paulinho. Slowly, as they were untied and freed, the others joined him. The moon had risen above the edge of the tepui, causing the lake and river to light up with a white glow. In light of everything happening, he found himself struck by the beauty of the place. He turned a full circle, capturing the essence of the beautiful scenery — he hadn’t noticed most of it until now. The tall, thin waterfall fell from the top of the cliff far off in the distance, with only the sound of the gentle throb of running water to remind him that he wasn’t looking at a postcard.

“How do you know?” Julie asked. “Are you sure you’re not just hallucinating?”

Paulinho shook his head. “No, I’m sure. My grandfather used to wear this symbol on a necklace,” he said as he revealed the tattoo on his wrist and stared down at it. “We never knew the name of the tribe we were from originally, as it was generations ago we left the rainforest and settled in the city.”

Other books

All the Shah’s Men by Stephen Kinzer
Mothering Sunday by Graham Swift
Call of the Kiwi by Sarah Lark
Striper Assassin by Nyx Smith
Where Did It All Go Right? by Andrew Collins
The Blood of Roses by Marsha Canham
Tell Me No Lies by Delphine Dryden