James Steimle - The Kukulkan Manuscript

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Porter stopped chewing. He met the gaze of his supervising professor and felt his prayers answered. Realizing that he’d frozen in an awkward position, Porter swallowed quickly and nodded while doing so. His eyes opened, wide and curious.

Kinnard looked down at the table and touched his fingertips together. “What I have is very…unorthodox…but it might be something up your alley. Now, the only reason I’m bringing you this idea is that I trust you as a student. You’re intelligent, and everyone knows it. I’ve read your work, and you go out on a limb all the time. You’re published, and you’re brave. You know my colleagues might consider you a little eccentric in some of your ideas.”

Porter smiled and nodded. He liked the idea of a being a peculiar person. Scholars-including Dr. Kinnard-could disagree with him, but they had to acknowledge that his arguments were good and worth investigating. A lot of people read his material, even when they suspected it would make them angry. They also knew John D. Porter published well-thought out material which others would jabber about, so it had to be read. No one else jeopardized their future career as frequently as Porter. But at the same time, those who read his stuff knew he had all the facts, and those facts would be presented in a manner which couldn’t be shrugged off with the same ease that Porter brought them forth.

“But you’re good at what you do.”

“I enjoy my studies,” Porter said with a smile. He wasn’t being cocky, especially because his position currently looked very unstable. He didn’t want to blow any opportunities Kinnard might present, and the humility showed in Porter’s face.

The smell of cinnamon simmered on the air.

“Do you know Dr. Ulman?” Kinnard said.

“Should I?”

“He’s a good friend of mine.” Kinnard looked at the table. “Always has been. Ulman has found something you might want to use to finish your work at Stratford. It provides a fixed argument, so you won’t have to spend time deciding your point.”

“I’ll use anything I can get my hands on,” Porter said with raised eyebrows.

“What do you know about Mesoamerica?”

“I haven’t studied anything in school,” Porter said, wondering what American history had to do with his dissertation. “But I’ve done a little research on my own…for interest’s sake.”

“I thought you might have,” Kinnard said. Porter was an excellent student. More than that, he excelled in his studies. Yes, he was eccentric, but some of the best professors were those absolutely obsessed with their work. So when Porter said he’d “done a little research,” Kinnard had no doubt that Porter’s grasp on the subject was stronger than his.

“This have something to do with my dissertation?” Porter said, scratching the back of his neck.

“You’re in a real fix,” Kinnard said, his face hardening. “You realize that?”

“Yes I do.”

“My colleagues know what caliber of student you are. It would look real bad on my record as your supervising professor, if you of all people failed to complete the requirements of Stratford University in the last seconds of a long, drawn-out game.”

“Wouldn’t want to blemish your reputation, sir,” Porter said. “I’ll do my best to rectify my situation.”

“That would be wise.” Kinnard said. Porter realized his supervising professor looked as bad today as he had the last time they’d met. Maybe even worse. His hair was askew, his eyes puffy, not to mention his peculiar paranoia.

“So what did you bring?” Porter said. He noticed Kinnard had a difficult time looking him in the eye. Kinnard’s hands fidgeted, and Porter wondered if the professor was taking this a little too personally. After all, it was Porter’s problem, not Kinnard’s.

“Dr. Ulman…my friend…” Kinnard said, “was working on something he found in the southern mountains of Guatemala.”

Porter sat up.

“I understand that at first it didn’t look like much. Another mound, buried in a Central American forest, but Ulman was led on by an ancient tale told by a few of the locals whose small families reportedly lived in the area for the last fifteen-hundred years.”

“A story?” said Porter.

“About a sacred place…destroyed by the hands of an ancient god, or something,” said Kinnard. “Ulman said it was a fascinating tale, all of which he would tell me after he returned to the states.”

“But he hasn’t come back,” said Porter.

Kinnard spoke, staring at Porter’s hot chocolate. “He found something. Wouldn’t even tell me about it at first. He said it was really big.”

“What, a Central American Jurassic Park? I’ve seen movies about lost-” Porter stopped.

With eyes hardening into marble, Kinnard stabbed his way into Porter’s gaze.

“I’m sorry. Dr. Ulman,” said Porter, “he’s an archaeologist?”

“Professor of Archaeology here at Stratford. He was down there for more than six months before he wrote me the first time. A memo.” Kinnard looked back at the table. Porter sensed that his professor’s mind had left the United States and was heading south. “Ulman said he’d written others as well. Seems he found something no one else would believe. Of course, we all like the sound of that, don’t we. But now I realize his words were accurate.”

Porter didn’t nod. Intrigue and questions colored his gray eyes.

“Ulman sent me more, since that time, and…I don’t know how to explain what he’s found. Or what he thinks he’s located.” Kinnard looked Porter squarely in the eye. “ You might want to explain it.”

“Tell me more,” said Porter, sipping from his scalding mug.

Kinnard sighed. “Seems that Ulman discovered a book.”

“I found one recently in my closet under a pile of clothes I didn’t know was there. What makes this book special?”

A red flush filled Kinnard’s face and the muscles in his jaw flexed. “I’m trying to save you from your mistakes, Porter, remember that! You may be a smart student, but there’s a big difference between intelligence and wisdom. Intelligence will get you through the university, but only wisdom can get you out with a doctorate! Up till now, you have not proven your brains!”

“Dr. Kinnard!” Bruno said, coming to the rescue out of nowhere. Of course the old man couldn’t let fights disrupt the cozy spirit of his place. “Can I get you something to drink?”

Kinnard let all the hot air rush out of him before looking up. He relaxed the muscles in his face as best as he could and said, without eyeing the old man for more than a second, “Coffee.”

Bruno turned with a smile. “One cup, com’n up!”

Porter relaxed, though he hadn’t realized the extent of his building tension.

Kinnard started again. “The book Ulman found appears, according to his analysis, to be a codex dating somewhere around 500 BC.”

“What’s it written on?” Porter said, intrigue in his tone.

“Paper,” Kinnard said without looking up from the fries on which he’d suddenly focused.

Porter waved a hand for him to have some. “A paper book?”

Kinnard shook his head at the food. “It’s not that uncommon.”

“I know. Two manuscripts made of bark paper were found at Mirador, but no one’s been able to separate the fused pages. I believe they dated to somewhere around AD 450. But I am not aware of any other paper codices recently discovered in the Ancient Americas.”

Kinnard nodded, gazing at the table as though ashamed of what he was saying. But that was an absurd idea, Porter thought. “Ulman’s codex isn’t glued together,” said Kinnard, putting a fry in his mouth. “The pages are in beautiful condition. But they hold something we never could have predicted.”

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