Aztlan: The Courts of Heaven (2 page)

Read Aztlan: The Courts of Heaven Online

Authors: Michael Jan Friedman

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Police Procedurals, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Mystery

BOOK: Aztlan: The Courts of Heaven
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“Better get it set
professionally
this time,” I told him. “It looks like a bad one, even for you.”

Huemac laughed, hawked up some blood, spat it out on the tiled floor and laughed again. “I’ve set it enough times to
be
a professional.”

Atl and Panitzin said they were taking the rail to a medical facility to see how bad the damage was. The rest of us offered to go with them, but they said they would be all right on their own.

Even so, we saw them as far as the rail platform. For all we knew, some of the Gophers had decided to wait for them there, meaning to pick up again where they left off.

As it turned out, the platform was free of Gophers and everyone else. So we just stayed with Atl and Panitzin until their carriage came. Then we took the tunnel under the platform and came up on the other side to wait for a carriage home.

We were still waiting when my radio buzzed. I took the call and said, “Colhua.”

“Gods of Death,” said the party on the other end, “I’ve been buzzing you for the last hour and a half.” It was my boss, Eloxo Necalli, Chief Investigator for the Fourth Sector. I could tell by the gravel in his voice.

“And you would still wouldn’t have gotten me,” I said, “if my game hadn’t broken up early.”

“Your—? Oh, that’s right. Tonight was your I’m-not-a-complete-has-been-yet game. Well, guess where I am.”

Necalli liked to play games. “I don’t know.”

“The Tonatiuh Pyramid. Top floor.”

Tonatiuh was the tallest, most exclusive residential building in Aztlan. Lands of the Dead, the city’s First Administrator lived there. The woman who ran the Mirror in our part of the Empire lived there. But the top floor . . . ?

Then it came to me. “Coyotl’s place.”

“Exactly.”

Necalli had piqued my interest. “What’s going on?”

“From the look of things, nothing good. Someone’s thrown some of the furniture around. And though there’s a game tonight, no one has seen our friend Coyotl in some time.”

“We’re talking about
Coyotl
,” I said, just to make sure I hadn’t misheard.

“That’s right,” said Necalli. “If I had to guess, I’d say he’s been kidnapped.”

He might as well have told me the Emperor had been overthrown. Then again, the Emperor was only the Emperor.

Coyotl was
Coyotl
.

 

It was twilight when I got to Coyotl’s apartment at the top of Tonatiuh. The first thing I noticed was the sprawling, golden splendor of Aztlan that graced the oversized windows on three sides of the main room. The second thing I noticed was the bleached lizard-leather furniture, a couple of pieces of which had been unceremoniously overturned. The third was the collection of pale blue and muddy orange statuettes—antiquities, unless I missed my guess—scattered across the plush, white rug.

There were also two people in the room, neither of which was looking at the other. One was Necalli. A short, stocky man with bowed legs and the biggest forearms in the Empire, he was kneeling beside one of the overturned chairs, looking at something on the floor. The other was Ozo Ichtaca, the coach of the Aztlan Eagles.

A man of more than sixty cycles, Ichtaca was sunken in a lizard-leather chair in the corner looking like he had lost his best friend. And in a way, he had.

Seeing me walk in, Ichtaca looked up, his face a web of wrinkles beneath his thatch of silver-streaked hair. “Colhua,” he said, “it’s about time you got here. I told your chief I wouldn’t waste my time talking with anyone else.”

Necalli frowned at Ichtaca over his shoulder, then looked at me, and finally turned back to whatever he was doing. Clearly, he hadn’t enjoyed the time he and Ichtaca had spent together.

But then, Ichtaca wasn’t known for his tact. He had once publicly chastised the mother of one of his players because she had fattened the guy up in the off-season.

Still, I was surprised Ichtaca had insisted that I be assigned to the case.

True, I’d gotten some play in the Mirror for bringing down Huicton Itzcoatl, the man who had been the High Priest of Aztlan until he started making human sacrifices on the eve of the Last Sun. As Investigators went, I was something of a celebrity.

In addition, I had played in the professional ball court, like Coyotl—though not nearly as explosively. That too could have figured into Ichtaca’s request to see me.

But he’d also had a pretty big reason
not
to see me. Obviously, he had decided to look past it.

Of course, it wasn’t everybody who could pick and choose the Investigator assigned to a case. Fortunately for Ichtaca, he wasn’t just anybody. He was one of the most accomplished coaches in the long history of the Sun League. And it wasn’t just the thousand-plus victories he had notched; it was the way he had notched them, often inspiring mediocre teams to play way over their heads.

A half-cycle earlier he had been sipping
octli
and lime juice on the patio of his big, white vacation house on the Gulf, thoroughly enjoying his retirement. Then he got a call from the Eagles. Their coach was quitting for health reasons. Would Ichtaca consider coming back to the league to take the job?

In the articles on the Mirror, Ichtaca had cited two reasons for emerging from retirement. One, of course, was the pile of beans he had been offered—a record sum for a ball court coach. But that, he insisted, was Reason Number Two. Reason Number One was Coyotl, the best player in the league—not just at that time, but arguably of
all
time.

Without Coyotl, Ichtaca had won more championships than all but two other coaches in history. What couldn’t he accomplish
with
Coyotl?

Now that the season was a few weeks old, we had begun to find out. We had begun to see a certain magic between the stone walls, not just a refinement of technique but a weaving of blood and bone and instinct—which was what made the call I had gotten from Necalli that much more unfortunate.

Not that part of me didn’t enjoy the misery on Ichtaca’s face. After all, if not for him I might still have been playing in the Sun League.

I didn’t see him the way other people did—as a genius, as a legend. To me, he was the gopher turd who had ended my career.

Though, of course, he’d had help.

“You’re looking at me funny,” Ichtaca said, his dark eyes narrowing. “I hope you’re not thinking about that night in Yautepec.”

He was nothing if not insightful. I smiled and lied through my teeth: “Of course not.”

“Good. Because this isn’t about you and me, Colhua. For the love of the gods, it’s about Coyotl.”

No one needed to tell me how to do my job. “Let’s start from the beginning,” I said. The cut under my eye had begun to throb. I ignored it. “My chief told me Coyotl didn’t show up for practice this morning. Was that the first indication you had that something was wrong?”

Ichtaca nodded. “Yes.”

“And he’d never missed a practice before?”

“Not since I became the coach here.”

“You buzzed him to find out why?”

“Several times. No answer.”

“Why didn’t you call the police
then
?”

Ichtaca shrugged. “Coyotl and I had had some words yesterday. I figured he was just making a statement.”

“But you eventually wound up here.”

“To confront him. I’d never taken crap like that from a ballplayer. I wasn’t about to start now.”

“The doorman let you in?”

“He’s an Eagles fan,” said Ichtaca. “I convinced him that tonight’s game hung in the balance. It wasn’t a lie.”

The doorman could have lost his job for being so cooperative. Not that Ichtaca cared.

“And when you got here,” I said, “you saw . . . ?”

“Everything. The furniture upended. The god-statues scattered. And the blood.”

I glanced at Necalli. More than likely, it was blood he was collecting as he knelt there.

“That’s when you called the police?” I asked.

“That’s right.”

“Did you touch anything?”

Ichtaca looked around. “Maybe. I don’t remember.”

I took a moment to absorb what I had heard so far. “You said you had words with Coyotl yesterday. When was that?”

“Right after practice.”

“And what did you have words about?”

Ichtaca scowled. “I told him we were a better team when he didn’t try to score goals all by himself. I might as well have been talking to a rubber tree.”

He was right, of course. The Eagles
were
a better team when Coyotl passed the ball. But that observation wasn’t relevant to my Investigation.

I asked Ichtaca a few more questions—most of them about Coyotl’s private life. None of them bore any fruit. As far as the coach knew, nothing in Coyotl’s world had changed recently—not the people with whom he associated, not his health, not his finances. But as Ichtaca was quick to point out, he didn’t know
everything
about Coyotl.

“I’m his coach,” he said, “not his best buddy. It’s not my job to ask him where he goes when he leaves the ball court.”

Suddenly, his brow furrowed as if something had just occurred to him, and he took out his timepiece.

“What?” I asked.

“Lands of the Dead,” rumbled Ichtaca, consulting the face of the piece, “I’ve got Yopitzinco in an hour.” He looked up at me again. “Is there anything else?”

I had no good reason to keep him there at Coyotl’s place, even if I did enjoy seeing the bastard squirm. “Go,” I said. “If I have any more questions, I know how to get hold of you.”

Ichtaca said something beneath his breath and left the apartment. By then, Necalli had gotten to his feet.

“Blood?” I asked.

“Blood,” he confirmed. “It doesn’t look like Coyotl disappeared just to piss off his coach.”

I had seen Coyotl play. A guy like that wouldn’t have missed a game if his life depended on it.

I looked around. “Blood on the floor, chairs overturned, expensive antiquities tossed around. But, interestingly enough, no sign that the door was forced open.”

“So, obviously, Coyotl opened it himself. Which means he probably knew whoever it was that kidnapped him.”

I nodded. “All we have to do is question the doormen.”

“I already spoke to the one on duty,” said Necalli. “The problem is that the guy who was here this morning had the green-apple runs. There were a couple of stretches where nobody was watching the door.”

“The runs,” I echoed. “How convenient. What did the guy eat for breakfast that got him in trouble? And where did it come from?”

“I’ve got Takun over at the doorman’s apartment trying to figure that out now.”

Takun was a slob, but he knew what he was doing. If there was information to be gotten, he would get it.

“Neighbors?” I asked.

“Quetzalli is talking with them now. So far, no one heard a thing. But then, in these luxury pyramids, no one ever does.”

I understood. Places like Tonatiuh boasted extra-thick walls and floors so people with beans could have their privacy.

“I’m taking this blood back for analysis,” said Necalli. “You’ll be here a while, I suppose?”

“A while,” I agreed. “By the way, about that other thing . . ."

“Nothing yet,” he said. “Just sit tight.”

He had been telling me that, or some variation on it, for weeks. Never mind that I felt like a stranger every time I went to work. No—worse than a stranger.
A traitor
. Never mind that the police force might be turned on its collective ear.

“All right,” I said. “I’ll sit tight.”

He saw I wasn’t happy. “Look, we’ve got an Investigation here. Why don’t we take care of
this
while we’re waiting to hear about
that
?”

I shrugged. “Whatever you say, Chief.”

“See you later, then,” said Necalli.

As he left Coyotl’s apartment, I headed for the kitchen. Back when I was new at Investigations, one of the veterans on the force told me to check a victim’s cold cabinet before anything else. “You can learn a lot about a man by what he eats,” he said.

Coyotl’s box was nearly empty—just a quarter-full pitcher of octli, a paper bag full of limes, a couple of loose chiles, and a cloth-covered bowl of cactus worms. Apparently, I thought, the guy eats out a lot.

My next step was to pull out the kitchen’s built-in storage bins, one by one. As it turned out, they weren’t much better stocked than the cold cabinet. One had a couple of boxes of maize chips, both unopened. Another had a big jar of pickled grasshoppers with little but leg and wing debris left at the bottom. A third had an unmarked container of powdered chocolate mix, a ceramic jug of honey, and a few tins of beans.

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