Carlos liked what he saw obviously: He was practically salivating. “And how is Senorita Tracey?” he asked in a greasy tone.
“Just ducky!” she replied in as pleasant a manner as she could muster. “And how about you, Senor Montero?”
“Carlos, please. You must call me Carlos,” he oozed. “I am extremely well. And may I dare hope that in my absence you have been successful in finding some excellent artifacts, or God willing, even, perhaps, a tomb?”
“Nothing really exciting, Senor Montero,” Tracey said, assiduously avoiding his attempts at familiarity. “You won’t have got your money’s worth this week, I’m afraid.”
“But it is not the money,” he said unctuously, making a pretense of appearing pained at the mere thought. “My sponsorship is all in the name of scholarship.”
“Of course,” we both muttered.
Getting nowhere with Tracey, he turned back to me. “It would be a great honor to personally show you around Paraiso, senora. I do hope I will have that pleasure very soon.”
Tracey began to make excuses, and after a few more minutes of expressions of appreciation for Senor Montero’s great generosity and commitment to scholarship, and a promise of mine that I would come for a visit, we began to take our leave. Tracey, wisely as I was to learn, backed away from him. Naively, I turned around, bringing my first encounter with Montero to a close with a sharp pinch on my derriere. So unfamiliar was I to such treatment—I hadn’t had my bum pinched since I’d been backpacking my way through Italy at the age of eighteen—I actually said nothing. Being a quick study, however, I vowed to back out of Senor Montero’s presence thereafter.
“The word yuk, colorful though it may be, does not begin to describe that man. Carlos Montero goes way beyond yuk!” I hissed at Tracey when we were out of earshot. “Now I see why you don’t think Lucho is so bad. I mean, he only points a gun at you. This fellow drowns you in drivel and then pinches your rear.”
Tracey giggled. “Oops. Should have warned you about that.” I glared at her, but then I had to laugh.
Armed with Montero’s invitation, I found an excuse to visit Paradise the following day. The hacienda didn’t have a telephone, and part of Montero’s so-called sponsorship included the use of his telephone and fax machine. Steve asked me to send a fax to one of his colleagues back home to ask him to try to find an X-ray machine he could borrow to help in the study of Benji.
The Fabrica Paraiso was on the far side of the highway, just a little north of the turnoff to the road to the hacienda. It was a sprawling complex of faded pink buildings that housed the factory, a body shop, and a small gas station. Montero was quite the local businessman.
There was no sign of Montero in the body shop or at the gas pumps, so I entered the farthermost building through a doorway marked on either side by rather large ceramic pots decorated with Moche- style drawings. Just inside the door, in the dark little entrance-way, was a table on which were displayed a number of ceramic items, including three or four pots with stirrup-shaped handles, and various ceramic animals, most notably sea lions and deer. The entranceway led to the right, and I turned into a row of three little rooms, one leading into the next.
The second room had been set up as a little exhibit, with large poster boards on the walls that explained how Moche ceramics were made. Before I had time to look around, however, a timid little woman approached me quietly, as I glanced in the cabinets. “Can I help you?” she asked.
“I’m looking for Carlos Montero,” I said. “Steve Neal has sent me, from the archaeology project,” I added. Heaven forbid Montero should think I’d come for personal reasons. I heard Montero grunt as he hefted his not inconsiderable paunch out of a chair in the next room and came to see who was looking for him.
“Senora MacCrimmon,” he exclaimed, his face breaking into a smile. “What a great pleasure!” I stayed well back as I asked him if he wouldn’t mind sending the fax for us.
“Consuelo,” he ordered, “get Senora MacCrimmon a soft drink. Have a seat,” he said, gesturing toward a chair as Consuelo, who I decided was Montero’s wife, poor thing, brought me an Inca Cola, a drink that is very popular in Peru, but which tastes to me like bubble gum in a glass. One sip was enough from my perspective. To cover up this lack of social graces on my part, I asked Montero if I could have a look around the factory while he took care of the fax.
At Montero’s “of course” and gesture toward the back, Consuelo led me past Montero’s desk and through a door into a very large work area where maybe twenty people turned from their work to look at me as I came in. It looked like any large industrial building anywhere: very high ceilings, open to the rafters, with louvered windows high up for light and ventilation. Ventilation in particular was needed, because at one end of the place, to my right, there was a very large kiln blasting away. On either side of the kiln were large doors open to cool the room.
Filling about half the room, opposite the kiln, were several long tables at which workers, a number of them young women, were painting ceramic vessels in preparation for firing. At the far end of the room, to the left, there was a drafting table set up at which worked a middle-aged man.
I wasn’t really quite sure what to look for, now that I’d got there. Earlier I’d decided, sitting in the museum cafe in New York, that Campina Vieja was the point of origin of some Moche artifacts that were being passed off as fakes, but which were, in fact, authentic. There was only one crafts factory in town, and I was in it. So I looked around for anything suspicious, for locked doors, large pieces of equipment or packing that would cover up a trapdoor, some telltale sign of a hidden room. I couldn’t see a thing. Other than the two garage-type doors on either side of the kiln, there were only three others: One was open to the back to let in some air—the kiln made the place stifling, another door was the one I’d come through from Montero’s office and the rooms at the front, the other led to the washroom.
The storage area, situated in the same area as the kiln, was quite open; rows of metal industrial shelving about eight feet high were lined with various ceramic objects arranged by type. One cabinet had rows of identical fish, another had rows of Moche warriors, still others were plants, animals, and so on in various stages of finishing. Nearer the kiln there were some figures that were still wet clay, others with a first firing only, others decorated but not yet finished, and then a packing area for the finished product. I’ve visited similar places in my line of work, and it looked perfectly normal to me.
I took a quick look through one of the doors to the outside and saw what was left of a building about 500 yards away, four brick walls in various states of decay, no roof on it, and no windows on this side. It might have been a storage area at one time, I supposed, or a very small house, but now it could serve no useful purpose, whatever it once was.
Montero joined Consuelo and I shortly thereafter. He shooed his wife away and took over her duties as tour guide. He proved to be very knowledgeable about Moche ceramics, and how they’d originally been made. He told me that the Moche were the first in this part of the world to use molds, that the most common form of Moche pottery were vessels that had spouts in the shape of stirrups, and how it was possible to date the pottery, particularly in the southern part of the Moche empire, by the length of the spout and the type of lip on it.