Chloe Palov
Stones Of Fire
About the Author
Born in Washington DC, C. M. Palov graduated from George Mason University with a degree in art history. The author’s resume includes working as a museum guide, teaching English in Seoul, Korea and managing a bookshop. Twin interests in art and arcana inspired the author to write esoteric thrillers. C. M. Palov currently lives in West Virginia.
To Ria Palov for keeping the faith.
And Steve Kasdin for taking a chance.
1
His movements slow and deliberate, the curator ran his fingertips over the small bronze coffer, lightly grazing the incised Hebrew letters. A lover’s caress.
Holding his breath, he opened the box.
‘
The keys to the kingdom of heaven.
Dr Jonathan Padgham, chief curator at the Hopkins Museum of Near Eastern Art, reached into the coffer, carefully removing what had once been a gem-encrusted breastplate.
Although bits and pieces of the gold scapular still precariously clung to the setting, the relic was scarcely recognizable as a breastplate, the chains that originally secured the gem-studded shield to the wearer’s body having long since vanished. Only the stones, set in four rows of three, gave any indication as to the relic’s original rectangular shape, the breastplate measuring some five inches by four.
‘That’s some real bling-bling, huh?’
Annoyed by the disruption, Padgham glanced at the curly-haired woman engaged in placing a camera on a tripod. Not for the first time, he wondered what possessed her to pair black leather motorcycle boots with a long tartan skirt.
A cheeky grin on her face, Edie Miller stepped over to his desk, bending her head to peer at the relic. Since immigrating to ‘the land of the free’ he’d come to realize that American females were far more brazen than their English cousins. Ignoring her, Padgham arranged the breastplate upon a square piece of black velvet, readying it to be photographed.
‘Wow. There’s a diamond, an amethyst, and a sapphire.’ As she spoke, the Miller woman pointed to each stone she named. Padgham was tempted to snatch her hand, afraid she might actually touch the precious relic. A freelance photographer hired by the Hopkins to digitally archive the collection, she was not trained to handle rare artefacts.
‘And there’s an emerald! Which, by the by, happens to be my birthstone,’ she continued. ‘What do you think that is, about five carats?’
‘I have no idea,’ he said dismissively, gemology not his strong suit. Hers either, he suspected.
‘How old do you think it is?’
Barely glancing at the plaid-garbed magpie, he again replied, ‘I have no idea.’
‘I’m guessing
To be certain, the age of the breastplate was punctuated by a very large question mark. So, too, its provenance. Although he had an inkling.
Again, Padgham ran the tip of a manicured finger over the engraved symbols that adorned the bronze coffer in which the breastplate had been housed. He only recognized one word — — the Hebrew Tetragrammaton. The unspeakable four-letter name of God. It had been placed on the coffer as a talisman to ward off the curious, the covetous, the greedy who gobbled up ancient relics like sugar-coated sweeties.
Although the museum director Eliot Hopkins had been very hush-hush, he had let slip that the relic originated in Iraq. Padgham had been entrusted by the old man with the initial evaluation of the bejewelled breastplate. He’d also been cautioned to keep mum. Padgham was no fool. Far from it. He knew the relic had been bought on the black market.
Risky business, the purchase of stolen relics. In recent years a curator at the renowned Getty had been brought to trial by Italian prosecutors for having knowingly purchased pinched artefacts. The black-market antiquities trade was a billion-dollar business, particularly with the unabated pilfering of Iraqi relics, Babylonian art popping up all over the place these days. Many in the museum world turned a blind eye, jaded enough to believe that they were preserving, not stealing, ancient culture. Padgham concurred. After all, had it not been for European art thieves, the world would have been deprived of such treasures as the Rosetta Stone and the Elgin Marbles.
‘There’s too much backlight falling on it. Do you mind if I adjust the window shades?’
Padgham drew his gaze away from the relic. ‘Hmm? No, no, of course not. This is your arena, as it were.’ He pasted a smile on his face, needing the woman’s cooperation. He’d been ordered not to show the relic to anyone on the museum staff. It was the reason he was conducting his preliminary evaluation on a Monday — the museum closed to the public, no staff on the premises. Of course, the photographer didn’t count, the woman a freelance contractor who didn’t know a breastplate from a bas-relief.
A flash of light momentarily illuminated the dimmed office.
‘Looks good,’ the photographer remarked, reviewing the image on the camera display. She deftly pushed several buttons on the camera. ‘I’ll just snap a back-up copy.’ No sooner did a second flash go off than she gestured to the bronze coffer. ‘Do you want a shot of the metal box as well?’
‘Is Queen Anne dead?’ Then, catching himself, he added in a more congenial tone, ‘If you would be so kind.’
Padgham stood aside as the photographer repositioned the tripod. Contemplating the beautiful relic, he worriedly bit his lower lip. As curator of Babylonian antiquities, he’d been given custody of the breastplate because it had been found in the deserts of Iraq. The museum director assumed he’d be able to put flesh to bone, to discover the four Ws of provenance — who, where, when and why. To Padgham’s consternation, those answers eluded him. The breastplate was most definitely of Hebrew derivation and his knowledge of the ancient Israelites was sketchy at best. Thus, the reason for the digital photograph.
As fate would have it, an old Oxford chum, C?dmon Aisquith, was currently in Washington on a publicity junket for his newly released book