by Alex Archer
The man snorted. “You test me? It is metal. That’s what makes it obviously rare. Steel.”
“Right you are,” Rembert said.
Garin knew that to be true, as he had marched with men who carried similar shields, but they had been wood. In fact, most heater shields were—wood braced with iron, covered with leather or heavy linen. The one he had used was, and it hadn’t lasted all that long. But the one who’d carried this shield had been landed and important.
“This style,” Aeschelman continued. He looked at the screen of his iPad. “This style was used from 1200 until about 1500, but the supplier says this one has been successfully dated to being made between 1400 and 1430.”
“And you were able to pin it down that closely?” This from Rembert.
Garin nudged him with a foot. Be quiet, he mouthed.
“The workmanship, and the pattern on its face. What you can see of the pattern dates it. And definitely French.”
Garin mourned what the centuries had done to it. The steel shield had a thin piece of leather over the top, riveted in place and cracked, and the designs that had been painted on the leather were so faint he thought it sinful. Yet some care of it had been taken. The leather front was intact, and there was color to it. Still, he’d seen it when it was new; he knew what it once looked like in bright detail. A cross ran through the center of it, large and red like the Knights Templars had come to be known for. In the upper-left and lower-right quadrants were blue backgrounds with fleur-de-lis patterns in a yellow made to look like gold. In the upper right and lower left were each three white crosses on black backgrounds, representing the three crosses that had been placed side by side when Jesus was crucified.
“Yes, it is French,” Garin said.
“My broker thought it might have been Scottish, as it is similar to the coat of arms of Sir Hugh Kennedy, a Scottish knight who fought with Joan of Arc. But it is not an exact match to that, the cross down the center making it different than the shield attributed to Kennedy and his men. But it fits with Joan of Arc’s time. Perhaps it was carried by one of her knights. I don’t have that much provenance on it. As I said, rare, especially given what it is made of. So few of the shields from that period are with us, and those that are...well, they’re in museums.”
“Is this from a museum collection?” Garin asked. “Liberated somehow?”
Aeschelman scowled. “How our little circle comes by things is not up for discussion. You know that.” He reached a hand to his shirt, fingers resting on the medallion Garin knew hung there. “We hold close to our secrets.”
“Secrets.” Rembert visibly brightened at this. “Not legal channels, that’s for certain. Otherwise we wouldn’t be in this hotel room. We’d be at a public auction house or—”
“I merely asked where it came from because that would help Mr. Hayes and myself validate it.” Garin stared at Rembert. He should not have brought the photographer into this, no matter how much he wanted to rub Annja’s nose in this artifact-smuggling operation.
“This particular shield has had several owners, the last being old and divesting some choice pieces to pad his bank account for heirs that do not appreciate his collection,” Aeschelman said. “So no, this was never in a museum, from what I understand. But in passing from hand to hand, certain laws were broken, and so its ownership history is...best left to history.” He adjusted his collar. “So, Mr. Knight, are you interested? There are other pieces that we will be offering when our sale opens at eight. Smaller, easier to take away from this conference.”
“Yes, I am interested in this shield. Mr. Hayes, won’t you turn it over for us? That should help us authenticate it, yes?”
“Sure.” Rembert carefully grasped the edges and set it facedown on the bureau.
The back was dark, the rivets shiny from having rubbed against something, perhaps whatever the shield had been stored in. There were two leather straps that had been preserved. The shield Garin had used had only one and so the shield’s weight had not been as evenly distributed. But then Garin was not a landed knight and had not been as important as the shield’s original owner. This one also had a longer strap that had run top to bottom, though the center of that piece of leather was gone. It had let its owner sling the shield across his back.
“Earlier, they used round shields, then kite shields, which were longer and afforded better protection,” Aeschelman explained. “But these, these heater shields, were good for foot soldiers or mounted knights, more manageable.”
“I understand the history of shields.” Garin couldn’t take his eyes off the piece.
“So do you collect them? Or medieval arms and armor in general?”
Garin didn’t answer that. “The man who surrendered this from his collection...does he also have the companion piece, the helmet? It would have been made by the same armorer and at the same time. On the right side of the helmet were engraved fleur-de-lys and three crosses. I want to bid on that, as well.”
“Not that I am aware of—”
“For what price will you give me the gentleman’s name?”
Aeschelman looked uncertain, bordering on anger. “Double the price of what the shield goes for and I will consider it.”
“I can do that.”
“But I can’t guarantee that he has—”
“I understand.”
“And you will not talk to anyone about this.” Aeschelman’s eyes were dark, and his fingers tapped the medallion beneath his shirt.
Garin remembered what Aeschelman had said about Mrs. Hapgood, that she was talking, talking, talking and that he “wanted to be rid of her” and so did her in. Doing Garin in would not be within Aeschelman’s realm of possibility.
“I understand that, too,” Garin said. “I know how to play this little game. I have been a part of your artifact-smuggling circle for nearly two years now.” He turned to Rembert. “Well, is it authentic?”
Rembert turned to put himself between the shield and Aeschelman, then pointed to a spot on the rim. Garin had discussed the shield with the photographer before coming to the suite, told him where to look.
It was engraved, small and worn, and Garin doubted that Aeschelman even knew it was there. Two words: Jeanne d’Arc. Joan of Arc had engraved the shield at Roux’s request. The shield had belonged to him, was made for him and signed by Joan herself at the armorer’s shop. Roux had told Garin all about it, showed him the shield and the prized signature.
Roux had been a fool to tease Garin with what had now become a holy and historic artifact. But that had been centuries ago.
“You know, Captain America carried a shield with this shape, a heater shield,” Rembert said. “The original Captain America, that is. Later the artists gave him a round shield.”
“Thank you, Mr. Hayes,” Garin said tersely. To Aeschelman, he said, “I don’t suppose you can quote me a price and I can buy it right now?”
Aeschelman cocked his head. “You don’t wish to attend our auction?”
Garin acquiesced. “Certainly, I will. There may be other pieces I want in addition.”
“That’s only two hours away,” Aeschelman said. “I think you can wait.”
“Two hours, then,” Garin said. “I will bring my bank codes.” He reluctantly left the room, Rembert behind him. He wanted the shield, and Aeschelman knew he wanted it. The piece was going to be very, very expensive.
Garin would give everything he had. Money was not important; it came and went. If he bankrupted himself to gain this very special shield, he would find a way to get more money.
But this shield...it carried Joan’s signature. The shield was priceless.
And in two hours, it would be his.
Chapter 20
“Sandra, my lawyer, doesn’t think she can get me out until Friday. She’s trying to get my bail hearing
moved up. Got a formal arraignment coming first. She says that’ll be Wednesday because the docket is otherwise full and one of the judges is up north.” Peter stared at Annja with tired eyes, the circles so dark under them he reminded her of a raccoon. “So much for a speedy system, eh?”
“Friday.” Annja learned a few minutes ago from Manny that Peter had been charged with manslaughter. They were going for the lesser charge, since the district attorney thought proving premeditation might be difficult. “Friday,” she repeated. “That means you’ll miss your diving session in Rock Lake with Bobby Wolfe.”
Peter’s eyes widened.
Annja had wanted to slip that bit in...that she knew about his plans. She was angry and made no attempt to hide it. “I met Bobby—dived with him earlier today, in fact. Nice guy. You were probably going to dive right where he took me. Down about ninety feet, to the mounds.”
Peter’s mouth worked, but nothing came out. He regained his composure, but Annja went on before he could say anything.
“So you said Edgar was a fool, right? You said he was into fringe archaeology, that he didn’t know what he was talking about...Mayans in Wisconsin. A wild-goose chase. But whatever it was that Edgar was looking for at the bottom of that lake, you wanted a piece of it, too. You booked his guide, and you were going to dive down. Bobby had your height and weight, had a wet suit picked out for you, knew where you wanted to go. You’d told him you were a friend of Edgar’s—”
“I am a...was...a friend—”
“You intimated that you were part of Edgar’s cadre. You and Papa. Except you weren’t, were you? It was just Edgar and Papa, their research.” Annja’s face felt warm and she knew her blood pressure was high. She swore she could feel her heart thrumming in her chest. “You weren’t part of it, but you were trying to horn in. You thought Edgar really was onto something.”
Peter mumbled, but Annja couldn’t hear the words. He’d held the phone away from his face to cut the volume of her rant.
“You found out...Bobby said he’d told you...told you that Edgar couldn’t go into the lake, that he didn’t want to take Edgar in, his age and weight, no suit to fit him. And that Papa was afraid to go, claustrophobic, whatever. They were relying on Bobby to cement their great discovery. But you? You weren’t afraid to dive a lake, were you? I know you, Peter. We’ve dived together, in cenotes in Mexico for crying out loud. You can dive.”
He held the phone farther away and looked at the receiver, as if he might hang up on her.
She stumbled over her words, anxious to get them out, to make sure he heard her. “You were going to dive. You thought Edgar was right. You lied to me. You said you told Edgar he was a fool.”
Peter held the phone close now and pressed the palm of his free hand against the Plexiglas that separated them. “I did tell Edgar he was a fool, all right? I said it.”
“But you didn’t mean it.” She lowered her voice. “You really didn’t mean it.”
“The hell I didn’t. He was a fool, an old fool. But a fool for telling me about his theory. A fool for not keeping his mouth shut. And look where he is now...the morgue.”
Neither said anything for a moment. Annja thought Peter was going to cry. His shoulders had slumped forward, defeated.
“Dead is where it got him,” he said finally. He regained a measure of composure and dropped his hand from the Plexiglas. “I don’t know whether his theory was right, Annja, about Mayans in Wisconsin, but he showed me some of his research. It looked solid, believable. Plausible, in fact. He might have been onto something. I thought...yeah...maybe. Someone thinks he found evidence of Mayans in Georgia. They don’t know if he’s off his rocker or is valid. But if Georgia, why not Wisconsin, huh?”
Annja stared at him incredulously. “He was your friend, Peter. If you thought he had a good theory, why call him a fool? Why not support him?”
He was slow to answer. “He wouldn’t let me in. He had Papa. It was going to be Edgar and Papa’s find, with Edgar the primary. He let me get a taste, he teased me with the details out of our supposed friendship...teased me because his work was all so secret and compelling that he had to tell someone. Couldn’t keep it to himself. It was eating away at him. He was so excited. So why not tell a friend, right? He showed me a piece of gold jewelry and said it came from Rock Lake.”
“A gold circle?”
“Three, actually. I saw them Thursday. We got in about the same time. He showed them to me before I went on the Aztalan tour. I talked to Papa about their discovery when we were walking in the park. I thought if Edgar—”
“—wouldn’t cut you in, that maybe Dr. Papadopolous might?”
“Something like that. I tried to talk Papa into including me in the hunt. I volunteered to do some of the research to help. I said I’d do the dives for them. Papa hated the water. His wife drowned in the city pool, you know. He was with her, couldn’t save her. He never went in any body of water bigger than a bathtub after that. I’m surprised he went out on Rock Lake. That Papa would get in a boat at all convinced me that there was something to it.” He paused. “Something. I don’t know what, but something.”
“And Papa wouldn’t cave?” Annja talked softly now, trying to coax more information.
“Not on the tour. He wouldn’t talk much about it on the tour. He was so busy spouting off about the mounds, showing people this and that. So I went to his house after dinner.”
“Papa’s house in town?”
A nod. “I was at Papa’s house—” Peter stopped abruptly and hung up the phone.
“No!” Annja tapped furiously on the Plexiglas. “Pick up the phone! Peter! Talk to me!”
He looked to the door, as if he might summon a deputy to put him back in the cell.
“No!” She stood and leaned close to the barrier. “Peter!”
He relented and picked up the phone. “Annja, I shouldn’t talk to you about this. Any of this. I’ve already said way too much. Sandra, my attorney, she said not to talk. To anyone. I’m like Edgar, huh? Saying too much when I should have kept my mouth shut.”
“Please, Peter, will you just—”
“Just what, Annja? Tell you I don’t have a significant find to my credit? I don’t. Tell you I’ve drawn no great conclusion regarding Egyptian symbolism, my specialty? I haven’t. That I’ve made no remarkable contribution to anything? That I’ve written no book in demand for college courses. That I’ve done...what...that I’ve done nothing significant in my life. I’ve piggybacked my whole career on other finds, followed other archaeologists, worked their digs, gotten grants by following up their projects. Never anything to leave behind. Nothing. Nothing. Nothing. Don’t you understand?” He was shouting now and gripping the phone tightly. “And here my friend Edgar comes along and tells me about this ‘amazing’ theory he’s been working on. That despite his arthritis and gout and all his other old-man ills he was going to put himself in the books. His name up in lights, as it were.”
“So he told you out of friendship, because he wanted to share his joy,” Annja said. The words were a summation for her. “But he didn’t want to share.” She shook her head. “I understand him, Peter. If it was his discovery, his and Dr. Papadopolous’s, he shouldn’t have had to share. You should have simply been happy for him. Proud. Supported him.”
“Proud? Wouldn’t that be a kick, Annja, me being proud? Of myself. I’ve never been proud of myself. I’ve done some things—”
“What, Peter? What have you done?”
“I was at Papa’s house Thursday night. Went a little after the tour, followed him home. Thought I’d try talking to him again, thought I’d tell him how dangerous the lake was and that he shouldn’t go out on it. That I would dive it for them, that they didn’t need the guide they’d hired. That their guide wasn’t good enough.”
“And he told you their guide was good.”
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“Yeah, he told me about Bobby Wolfe. But he wouldn’t let me sign on with them, wanted to keep it just the two of them, him and Edgar. He didn’t want to share the glory. Just like Edgar, he’d tell me about their theory...that Mayans had come all the way up here, that ultimately the indigenous people drove them out, but that they left buildings behind. He showed me some of the research. Just a little of it.”
“And it was plausible.” Annja recalled the underwater mounds. There was nothing Mayan about them.
“I gave up trying to convince him, though.”
“Because he told you to leave,” Annja guessed.
“Yes. So I did. I left, was in the car. I’d put the key in the ignition and somebody pulled up. I waited. I watched. I dunno why. I stayed out front and saw a big man go into Papa’s house, saw them together. The drape was in the way, but I saw the silhouettes. I saw a struggle. I should have called the police, I know. Should have called right then and there. Should’ve gone back to the house and helped Papa. All that twenty-twenty hindsight, right? Instead, I drove away. Papa wouldn’t let me in? Why should I help him? He wasn’t going to help me.” He started sobbing.
Annja realized that while she had considered Peter a friend, she didn’t truly know him. Not at all. He wasn’t as close a friend as Edgar, but still she thought she knew Peter’s heart. Most of her relationships were casual, surface, not letting anyone too close. So she wasn’t aware that Peter had a record—priors—and she never figured he was the type of man to try to take credit for another archaeologist’s discovery...or hopeful discovery. To muscle in.
“I could have done the dives for them, Annja.”
“But they had Bobby Wolfe for that,” she returned softly.
“It occurred to me that maybe whoever had gone to Papa’s house was also looking to get a cut, had maybe overheard us talking at the Aztalan mounds. So I drove around and came back an hour later. I was gonna ask Papa about his visitor. The car was gone, and I went to check on Papa. See if he was okay. I’d decided on another tactic to try to persuade him. The door was open, and so I went in. Papa...he was dead. I assumed whoever came to visit him did it and then put him in bed to cover it up. Then I called Edgar to warn him. Maybe it was about the gold. Edgar was in his hotel room, and I told him it looked like Papa’s house had been searched. Papa’s medallion—” He paused, letting out a great breath that steamed the Plexiglas. “Edgar had showed me the three circles, clearly pieces of jewelry, clearly Mayan. He’d brought them here. And Papa...Papa had four pieces, one of them a bigger piece, a medallion that he’d said came from the same place, and a bracelet. I looked for the medallion at Papa’s, found the box he’d had it in. But the medallion was gone, the circles and the bracelet, gone, as well as his research notes and computer. I told it all to Edgar. Annja, that gold was valuable. Seriously, seriously valuable. Not because...well, not because it was gold, but because of where it came from and that it hints there could be more.”