The Mummies of Blogspace9 (3 page)

Read The Mummies of Blogspace9 Online

Authors: William Doonan

BOOK: The Mummies of Blogspace9
11.13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

But I’m not buying it. I’ve been known to drink and get rowdy myself, but I don’t walk quietly outside people’s gates dragging my feet. I’m going to try a little experiment.

voice activation mode:
enabled

indiv 1:
OK, so I turned on the recorder. This is still me, Leon, or indiv 1 as my loved ones call me. I am carrying the laptop outside to see if you can hear what I’m talking about.


indiv 1:
No, that was just the door opening. I’m now standing on the driveway and I’m walking towards the gate. The moon is full so I can see clearly but there’s no window or peephole on the gate, so I won’t be able to see out. And like I said, it’s locked with a key, but let’s see if we can hear something.

indiv 1:
I can hear you out there. Can you hear me? Oiga, no me oigas? Quien es usted? I’m trying to get some response. I swear there are two guys standing right on the other side of the gate but they won’t say anything. There’s a little crack just above the hinge that I can kind of see through but I don’t see anyone.


indiv 1:
Sorry. Holy shit. I just dropped the laptop. Sorry. Fucking guy just looked back at me. I’m looking out through the crack and a second later, this guy’s eye is right there looking back at me. I’m like completely shaking right now. OK, I’m going to take another peek.

indiv 2:
No los atormenta.


indiv 1:
That was just me jumping out of my skin. You want me to have a heart attack? Don’t sneak up on me. I was just trying to see who was out here. What do you mean, atormenta? I wasn’t tormenting anyone. I was just trying to see who it is.


indiv 1:
For those of you out there in internet land, our caretaker just snuck up and scared the crap out of me. Seriously, he’s going to have some cleaning up to do out here in the morning. You’re going to need the big mop, my caretaking friend. What the hell? Who is out there? There are at least two of them. And don’t tell me they’re drunk cane cutters. They’re not.


indiv 1:
OK, he’s pulling me back into the house, seriously. Come on, man, give me a break. Who are they? Hello? Great, now he’s not saying anything.

indiv 2:
No los atormenta.

voice activation mode:
disabled

I’m back in the house now. The door is locked, so I guess I’m in for the night. I’m a little concerned, I have to say. Tomorrow morning, I’m going to share some choice words with Cyrus. Then I’m going to sit back and stare at Kim Castillo until my heart rate returns to the other kind of elevated.

June 12, 2011
Segovia, Peru
Michelle Cavalcante

I miss you, Bruce. I know this is a public document, so I won’t focus on my feelings, but damn, you’re so far away. It feels like Tordecillas, when the Pope cut the world in half, you over there and me here. I hope you will keep in mind that the axis of your young world revolves around Peru.

Peru is where your employer employs, where your studies evolve, where your dreams take you, and where your drop-dead gorgeous fiancée misses you. I’ve had two Pisco Sours tonight, and three Cuzqueña beers. They’re disgusting beverages, raw local toxins blended by demons of old. I can barely breathe after a swallow. But the Pisco Sours were nice. What can I say, Bruce? I’m trashed.

But damn if you didn’t leave just when it started to get interesting. We got ourselves out to the site at six this morning as usual, except Leon was hung over and yammering about some nightmare, and then he fell asleep as soon as we get there. Cyrus was in a huff because some of our artifact bags got moved around. You know how we leave them out at night if we’re in the middle of a unit? Yeah, well they weren’t where we left them. It doesn’t look like anything was taken, but someone was having a look at our stuff while we slept.

Anyway, Kim and I started digging, and we got down a meter and a half under the north wall of the sacristy, and then the soil went sterile. No pottery, no guinea pig bones, just nothing. And I’ll tell you something, Bruce, I was ready to call it. But Kim, bless her little graduate-student heart, started in on how it didn’t feel right. It was too clean. Then I saw what she meant. It was pristine, just sand for twenty centimeters, no garbage at all. There wasn’t so much as a twig or a strand of fabric. Just sand.

So I woke Leon up, and I had him come over to chop through it with the pickaxe. I use him like that. He might not be bright but he’s strong, and if you tell him something loud enough, and perhaps demonstrate, he often gets the idea. So he shoveled through another thirty centimeters, and it was more of the same. Fuck it, he said, in that rudimentary speech-like way he has of communicating. So Kim and I jumped back into the pit, and we weren’t there half a minute before Kim troweled down on this board, on this piece of frigging wood. I swear it is pine, actual pine.

So we traced the edges and dug a little deeper and we saw that we had a box. It has writing on it but it’s so faded we can’t read anything except the word “Extremadura” and it has a drawing of a bottle. Cyrus thinks it was from a sherry producer in Extremadura, so probably it would have held a couple of bottles of sherry back in the day.

As you can imagine, we were more than a little excited. We brought the box to the lab and watched as Cyrus and Leon pried open the top. Guess what was inside? A Minoan cup? Roman coins? Even better…paper. It looks part of a journal. It’s unbound, just a stack of pages wrapped in a larger page. There are wormholes everywhere, so it’s not in great shape. But it’s definitely some kind of coherent text we’re looking at. Cyrus has it in the study right now. He says there are twenty-three pages, but most of them you can’t read. It looks like five distinct dated entries. Kim is going to work on translating them.

So here’s what we have so far, sweetheart…stop all your work, get to the Archive, and see what you can do with this. The document is signed
Fr. Sebastiano XXX.
No last name, just three Xs, which is odd. Maybe the good priest didn’t want anyone to know he wrote it. Anyway, see if you can get any hits on that. Cyrus wants to get some UV lights to get a clearer look at the ink. And then, one word in bold cursive script –
MALEUS
– and what looks like part of an M. We don’t know what comes after that word because the paper has rotted away, but geez, you have to be impressed. Maleus even sounds evil. Cyrus thinks it might be part of an old European handbook for dealing with witches.

Cyrus is here but he doesn’t want to say anything. He’s showing me this one line, and his transcription. It looks pretty good. Here’s what it says, Bruce,
“Padre, Padre, me persiguen.”
Father, father, they’re following me. So there’s your work for tomorrow, my love. See if you can crosscheck some sixteenth century friars out of Extremadura to figure out what ol’ Sebastiano is afraid of. Maybe he knows where all that Inca gold is, and he’s afraid the conquistadors are coming for him!!!!

Cyrus Sanderson

age:

64

occupation:

professor of archaeology, Yale University; director of excavations, Segovia, Peru

education:

P.h.D. University of Chicago

personal:

twice divorced, maintains an apartment in New Haven, Connecticut with sociology graduate student Macy Newman, age 28

hometown:

Sheboygan, Wisconsin

hobbies:

watching college football

food/bev:

steak/Scotch

life goal:

retire with academic integrity intact

fav movie:

High Plains Drifter

obscurity:

disappeared for four months in 1992, suspected nervous breakdown, enjoys renovating old barns

June 12, 2011
Segovia, Peru
Cyrus Sanderson
http://www.CyrusSanderson.blogspace9.ex

Can all my personal archaeologists, historians, technicians, and other academics who I own, please focus on work. The blog is nice, I’ll admit, and in saying that, I’m lying. I think we should do our work first and then publish our findings later.

You all think differently, I understand. It’s a whole new world of information, of access, you tell me. And that may be the case, but I’m the only one of us not employed by me. And if any of you junior scholars ever want a real job, you’re going to need some publications. So let’s dig some dirt first and write some papers later.

Furthermore, as we are now unearthing some artifacts that can be deemed “sensitive” or “controversial” or “downright problematic,” we might be wise to clamp down on the information lid. There are people out there, folks, who might be paying attention. Are you sure we want that?

June 13, 2011
Seville, Spain
Bruce Wheeler

Guys, it’s about seven in the morning here and I’m terrified. I just got back to the apartment and I need to get all this down before I have a stroke. I apologize in advance; I haven’t gotten to any of your notes yet. I probably won’t get to it today either because I’m not leaving the apartment.

I spent yesterday morning wandering the old city. I walked around the cathedral and then visited the Alcazar, the giant fortress of the Moors. I spent about three hours meandering through all the palace rooms and gardens. And the whole time, I had this suspicion that someone was watching me. I didn’t see anybody, but I could feel it.

Anyway, it was really hot out, and I think I might have spent too much time in the sun, so I went back to the apartment and took a nap. Next thing I know, it’s 10:00 at night. I hadn’t had anything to eat, so I figured I’d head out. The old city is a maze of narrow streets and paths, too small to get a car through, you’d think, but people manage. And it’s easy to get lost because there are so many twists and turns. It took me about six minutes to lose my way. Everything looked just a little different at night. And it was also deserted, all closed up, being Sunday.

So I kept walking, trying to find my way to some main street that I recognized, when I heard laughter coming from up ahead. Good, I told myself, I’ll catch up and ask whoever is laughing how to get out of the maze. So I started walking faster, turning down one little lane after another, but the laughter seemed always to be up ahead. Finally, I started running, and when I turned the next corner, I nearly ran into those two little gypsy twins, the boys from the restaurant a couple of days ago. They pointed at me and then they bolted. I didn’t know what to make of it, but it was definitely creepy.

At that point, I was really lost. I was in a part of the old city I hadn’t been to before, and the paths were really narrow. So I figured I would turn back the way I came, but when I turned around, I saw two guys standing behind me. They were gypsies, no question about it. Dingy looking guys in their fifties, they were smoking, and they were coming right at me.

“What do you want?” I shouted, but they didn’t answer. I tried it in Spanish too, but they kept coming. I ran. I followed the path as it turned, and I ran right into the side of a white Mercedes which was blocking the path. The back door opened and this old guy stepped out. He was a gypsy too, that much was clear by the beads and the pom-poms in the car, but he was dressed nice in a white suit and a cape. He was smoking too. Meanwhile, the other two were right behind me.

I was scared to death, certain that they were going to rob me or worse. “I’ll call for the police,” I told him. I should have said it in Spanish, being in Spain, but it didn’t occur to me. I spun around to face the others. “Don’t you touch me,” I yelled.

“They’re not going to touch you,” the man by the car said. “To them, you are mahrime, polluted, as are all non-Rom. It would take weeks to purify themselves, to remove your filth.”

“What do you want?” I kind of wedged myself up into a doorway so that I could keep an eye on all three of them. “Who are you? What do you mean ‘my filth?’”

“We’ll start with who you are,” he said. “There’s something special about you, isn’t there? My granddaughter smelled it on you. And you frightened my grandsons.” He leaned against the car.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” I told him I was a historian. I told him about the excavations, about the church ruins.

“So you were there, down there at the edge of the world?”

“If you think coastal Peru is the edge of the world, then sure.”

“You’ve seen them, the creatures who walk in the night?”

“Creatures?” I didn’t know what he was talking about.

“And at night, you never went outside?”

I told him about the nightly lockdown due to the drunk cane cutters, but he just laughed.

Other books

Ironheart by Allan Boroughs
All or Nothing by S Michaels
The More I See by Mondello, Lisa
Warlord of the North by Griff Hosker
Fires of Winter by Roberta Gellis
The Sword of Aldones by Marion Zimmer Bradley
Drenched Panties by Nichelle Gregory
Dream Warrior by Sherrilyn Kenyon
Riveted by Meljean Brook