The Mystery of Yamashita's Map (30 page)

BOOK: The Mystery of Yamashita's Map
9.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

Winthrope held his arm. ‘It’s night time, professor, we can’t go now. Besides, you have an obligation to fulfil.’

 

The professor gulped. He had been hoping that Winthrope would forget about the deal that he had agreed to. It was not that he was scared of women, but he had never had much dealing with them before. Women to him were like mountain climbing: he could see the attraction and he knew why other men did it but, somehow, he could never be bothered. He smiled politely and sat back down. ‘Of course,’ he said. ‘The deal.’

 

Winthrope looked around and caught sight of Joe; he reached across and squeezed one of Joe’s biceps. ‘We need muscle too, eh, Joe? We need the brains of the professor here, your muscle and Fraser’s gentlemanliness, eh?’

 

Winthrope laughed. Joe turned to look at Lisa but she was looking away. He thought he saw a tear in her eye but it could have been the way the light hit her.

 

‘Of course, there are rules that need to be obeyed here, the same as anywhere else; you must of course be respectful to the girl and to her successor, in order that the two don’t meet. The door to the hut must remain closed while you are with a wife. If any of the wives see a closed door they will not enter and as soon as they have finished they will leave, making sure the door is left open for the next girl. You see how all these things have their own little rules that make them go swimmingly? Once you have mated with the girls you are free to do whatever you wish. Tomorrow we will test your map and seek out the tunnels but for now please, gentlemen, enjoy yourselves and be proud of your status as founding fathers. Professor, Fraser? Would you like to follow me? Lisa, you can sleep in my hut tonight. You will be all right.’

 

Lisa followed the others out, leaving Joe alone in the hut. He flicked idly at the fire and watched as the flames sent up tiny sparks of light into the smoky air. Every thought in his head revolved around Lisa; not a second passed without it being filled with images of her. He would not have thought it of himself three weeks ago, he would not have thought it possible but, there it was, it was true. Joe was in love.

 

He also hated what he was being asked to do. He knew that Lisa would never forgive him, and why should she? It was a poor way to show the woman you love what you felt about her. It was a strange way to declare your feelings for someone. He told himself, however, that it was not his fault. He was being made to do these things, he had no choice – his hands were tied. He doused the fire with some water from the bucket, hoping that this would stop him feeling quite so low. Perhaps if he could not see their faces it meant he was not as guilty, perhaps . . .

 

Outside he heard the sound of the village preparing itself for sleep. The occasional child let a cry go out that shook the jungle and caused it a moment’s panic but eventually all was quiet. Joe got on his bed and lay there looking at the ceiling. He laughed to himself and thought what he would have made of this situation a month ago. It would, perhaps, have been the one thing he wished for, but meeting Lisa had changed him. He no longer felt as if he was alone, no longer felt the need to fight. He just wanted to see her, to be able to touch her, to be with her.

 

He closed his eyes. Perhaps if he could fall asleep they would never come. They would pass by his door on the way to the professor’s or to Fraser’s. The irony of the situation crashed in on him as he rolled over and stared into the darkness. He heard a sound outside his hut that he assumed was his first ‘wife’. It was a nervous shuffling, as if eager to get in but afraid to do so. Joe rolled over to face the door but it was too dark to see. He called out but there was no reply. Slowly, the feet moved inside the hut; Joe steadied himself. He thought perhaps he could communicate with her, try and get her to say that they had done what was asked of them. After all, Joe thought, he was sure it was equally as uncomfortable for her. The shape in the darkness closed the door and moved over to his bed.

 

‘Look,’ Joe said to it. ‘I think you are very nice and everything but I just don’t think it’s right for me to be doing this. I’ve been thinking a lot about someone else lately and I am sure that anything we could do might get in the way of that. I mean, I know it doesn’t mean anything between us and that if I don’t do whatever it is we are about to do, I’ll get a bullet, but I think that maybe it’s worth it. I mean, I have been a rogue in my life, phew, yeah, I have been with some women, but she’s something else, you know? Pure and innocent, like no one else I have met and I don’t want to ruin things. You see what I mean, don’t you? Don’t you?’

 

A hand slowly reached out in the darkness and touched Joe’s lips, quietening them for a second. He began to lie back on the bed. ‘Well, I think we should stop this, before it . . . er . . . starts.’

 

Joe felt a face next to his. It was soft and warm and he thought to himself that he should just close his eyes and think about Lisa, pretend it was Lisa. After all, she was a strong girl with a good head, she would understand the position he was in. He could tell her the next day that he had been thinking about her that would be sure to make things better. He did not know if his reasoning was correct but it was all he had.

 

He felt a pair of lips kissing his ear and a voice began to speak. ‘Quiet,’ it said. Joe recognised it as Lisa’s. ‘I haven’t got much time. I understand. We must keep Winthrope happy in order to get out, to find the gold. Do as he wants.’

 

Joe stammered a reply but was cut short by a kiss on his lips that seemed to take every breath he could ever have out of his body. He wanted this moment to go on forever, to never get dim and die. He made himself fully aware of everything that was happening, every sound he could hear, every feeling he was experiencing, every taste. Everything, so that in years to come he would be able to recall this moment exactly as it was.

 

Lisa drew back and passed a hand across Joe’s face. Joe took it and held it to his lips. It felt so smooth and inviting. He just wanted to be near her now, to be with her.

 

‘I have to go,’ Lisa said with a giggle. ‘Your first wife will be here any minute.’

 

There was a nervous laugh between the two for a moment, Joe went to speak but thought better of it; there would be time enough later, he thought, to tell her everything that was on his mind.

 

Joe was woken by the sound of screaming. Something was happening in the village. He rubbed his eyes and realised that it was still dark, but he could hear the sound of shouts and feet running outside his hut. Quickly he dressed and stuck his head out of the door. In the dim light of the village he saw flames being carried this way and that, and women waving their arms and screaming as if trying to chase an animal away. Joe realised that something terrible and strange was happening. The looks on the women’s faces as they passed his door were as if they had seen the devil himself and they ran as if they were being driven from hell. Every now and then a shot from the village’s only gun would sound in the night, sending the animals of the jungle into a panic and waking everything and everyone within a five mile radius. Joe ventured out of his hut and joined a moving group of women as they shuffled to a hut on the furthest outskirts of the village.

 

There was a strange low murmuring and shuffling as the women made their way over the hard dry dirt to the hut that was clearly illuminated now by a number of torches, all of which jutted out of the walls. Joe was surrounded by women chanting and moaning gently to themselves. In the distance he saw others running and patting their heads in frustration. He didn’t know what was going on but he knew that something was wrong – something was horrifically wrong. Suddenly he saw Winthrope in the throng standing by the door of the hut. Joe pushed his way through the crowd and grabbed him by the arm. ‘What the hell’s going on?’ Joe asked, and Winthrope turned. Joe had never seen a man so white. His face had been completely drained of blood and his eyes stared like those of a madman. Joe shook him. ‘What’s the matter? What’s happening?’

 

Winthrope could only raise an arm and point at the hut in a manner that seemed all the more terrifying for its restraint, and Joe made his way to the door. Pushing through the crowd, Joe looked into the hut, and the sight that met his eyes made him gasp. He had seen a few things in the back streets of Hong Kong. He had seen his fair share of death and blood before – some of it had even been his – but as his eyes adjusted to the dim light of the hut and he began to make out the shapes in the darkness he could not believe that what he was witnessing could have been human once.

 

Blood stained the walls of the hut and sparkled slightly as more torches were brought in to illuminate the scene. Now Joe could quite clearly see the body of a young girl, no more than sixteen, lying on the floor, completely covered in blood and lying beside her what looked like a mass of intestines and organs. Her face, eyes wide open, stared at the ceiling as one of the other women knelt beside her cradling the foetus of an unborn child that could have been of no more than three months’ gestation. The kneeling woman rocked gently and wiped the blood from the dead baby’s face, kissed its head and passed a hand along the shoulder of its mother, who was alive but dying. The hut smelt of iron and bodily fluids or like the abattoir that Joe had visited once on the docks in Hong Kong. No animal has ever died in such pain or fear as the woman who lay on the floor in front of Joe, he could tell that from her face as she looked at him one last time, closed her eyes and breathed a deep sigh. Her chest stopped rising and falling and her arm by her side fell slightly as she died.

 

The kneeling woman began to cry, a loud wailing cry that sent shivers down the spine of every living thing in the area. In the quiet of the night the wail seemed to speak for everyone who had lost and who had known death, and Joe too wanted to cry, not perhaps for the girl or for her baby but for the sheer inhumanity of a life that had ended in this way. He staggered out of the doorway and grasped Winthrope by the arm. ‘What the hell happened in there?’ he asked, barely able to catch his breath. The blood had returned to Winthrope’s face and the two sat down under the warm glow of the torches. ‘The manananggal,’ Winthrope said. ‘The villagers talk about it but I have never seen it until tonight. They come out at night and only when there is a pregnant woman near the perimeter of the village. Usually this girl sleeps with me, in my hut, but because of Lisa . . . well . . . she slept here. It starts with the sound, the flapping of wings, the others say they heard it over an hour ago, going from hut to hut looking for victims.’ ‘Is it an aswang?’ ‘A variety, yes. A shape shifter. Most of the time it resembles a woman, like a vampire and flies like the wind.’

 

Joe thought back to his vision of the aswang a few days earlier. He remembered how it had flown around the group, encircling them, paying special attention to Lisa.

 

‘It has a long tube like tongue,’ Winthrope continued, ‘it uses it to enter the stomach of its victim and suck out the intestines and the foetus of the unborn child. It is an angry demon that does not stop until it gets what it wants. It drinks the blood and then eats the flesh if it is not driven off in time.’

 

Winthrope pushed a hand through his hair and Joe thought he saw what looked like blood on the sleeve of his shirt. ‘Rumour has it that it can only be killed if you find its lower half, and put salt or garlic on it to stop it re-joining, but that’s virtually impossible. You saw the power of the thing. You saw what it can do.’

 

Winthrope’s head fell onto his knees and he began to weep silently. Joe noticed how the blood on Winthrope’s shirt had stained only the underside of the arms. He wondered whether he perhaps he had been one of the first to examine the girl and had picked up the stains then – but why only the underside? Why so little blood anywhere else?

 

‘If only I could have been near her,’ Winthrope moaned. ‘If only I could have saved her. She was my wife, after all.’

 

Joe placed a hand on Winthrope’s shoulder and tried to comfort him the best he could. Beside him, the women of the village began to disperse, each one casting suspicious glances at Winthrope and Joe.

 

Winthrope began to pull himself together. He wiped his nose with his sleeve and realised that it was stained with blood. He quickly lowered his arm to his side and began to wipe it on the side of the hut that he sat against.

 

‘You believe in the manananggal?’ Joe asked.

 

‘Of course. Do you think you could not believe after tonight? You have to believe. We all have to believe after tonight.’

 

‘But most of all, these people believe?’ Joe said, and Winthrope knew exactly what he was implying.

 

‘Yes, they believe, why wouldn’t they? They believe, their mothers did, their fathers did and their children will.’

 

‘Yes, their children, they believe for their children.’

 

Winthrope was silent. Joe sensed a change in the balance of the world – suddenly everything was a little stranger, suddenly things were not as they seemed. As much as he told himself that the blood on Winthrope’s shirt was from the woman as she lay dying, as much as he told himself that the spirits of the jungle really had killed her and taken her baby, and as much as he told himself that the village treated Winthrope as a god because he offered them wisdom and not fear, he still could not rid himself of the feeling that this was not the first time the aswang had visited this village at a time of crisis. How many unborn children were being sucked from their mother’s womb? Is this the reason why Winthrope wants to populate the village? The answers were too horrific for him to comprehend. He decided however to keep quiet, for the moment anyway. There was the gold to consider and Lisa and the rest of the party. He would watch, though, and listen, and see how things panned out.

Other books

Murder on the Down Low by Young, Pamela Samuels
Forever Never Ends by Scott Nicholson
Crimson by Jeremy Laszlo
Odd Apocalypse by Dean Koontz
Take What You Want by Jeanette Grey
Winter Queen by Amber Argyle
You or Someone Like You by Chandler Burr
The Outcast by Sadie Jones