squinted— “you can see that the left side of the blade is a flat plane, while the right bears the honing surface.”
Lydia had already noted this.
“And your police scientist told you—”
“It was an estimation,” she clarified. “There were no exact classifications in the indexes. This ax is definitely iron, and definitely forged over three hundred years ago. That’s all we know.”
“This isn’t an ax,” Fredrick said.
“What?”
“It’s plain to see. It’s not an ax. It’s not a mattock, an adze, or a froe either.”
“Then what is it?”
Fredrick’s brow rose over his aging face. He tapped his pipe into a glazed Babylonian bloodtap turned ashtray. “The tool you’re looking for is a beam hewer. It’s the only tool within your estimated time period that had this kind of cutting edge.”
Lydia frowned. “What the hell is a beam hewer?”
“A tool used by colonists to turn round logs into square beams. There were many different types of hewers, mind you, but only the beam hewer possessed a planed left blade side, so the scores of the dogged log could be sliced off evenly.”
Fredrick laughed, for the first time displaying a comprehension of humor. “Beam carpenters were the most vital tradesmen of the early colonial period. The procedure involved the following steps. One, a tree was cut down. Two, the felled tree was held to the ground by a dogging clamp. Three, the dogged tree was scored with axlike tools called adzes. Four, the scored tree was hewn—four flat planes were cut along the scores. The beam hewer had the appearance of an oddly shaped ax. The cutting edges were commonly a foot long, to clear each score.”
Lydia tried to picture an ax with a foot long cutting edge. “They were huge, you mean.”
“Yes, and heavy—twenty to thirty pounds. The left blade sides were perfectly level, or ‘basilled,’ so as to cut the scores off flat. A good beam carpenter could turn a thirty foot tree into an evenly sided beam in about an hour.”
Fredrick rose to take down some books. Lydia understood that he’d been on digs all over the world. Years of blazing sun had cragged his face, toughened his skin to leather. He slid aside a small statue of Chinnamasta, the Bengalian goddess of decapitation, and presented to Lydia an old book opened to a block of pictures.
“That,” he said, pointing to one, “is a typical beam hewer.”
Lydia nearly shit her police pants.
“And that,” he paused to add, “is me.”
The ghostly field photograph was dated March 19, 1938. “New Excavations at Kent Island,” it read, and the text: “Sophomore F. Fredrick displays one of dozens of newly disinterred artifacts found at Maryland University’s latest Kent Island dig, a beam hewer probably forged by William Claiborne’s blacksmiths in 1632. Note the hewer’s extraordinary size.”
In the picture, a young and dusty Professor Fredrick smiled as he held up the hewer for the camera. Its handle was nearly as long as Fredrick was tall, and its cutting edge easily cleared a foot. The bizarre blade was configured like an upside down, L. Lydia had never imagined a cutting tool so large.
“The hewer’s impractical size was necessary. Too small and they would not be able to cut each score in a single swipe. Needless to say, next to flintlocks, the beam hewer was the weapon of choice during Indian attacks.”
“I can see why,” Lydia commented. The look of the thing was terrifying enough, but worse was the rest. This was the same sort of instrument that had been used on Sladder.
Fredrick puffed smoke. “May I ask the nature of your inquiry?”
“Sure,” Lydia said. “The weapon that made these strike-marks murdered a man.”
“Oh, dear,” Fredrick said.
“But knowing what it is isn’t good enough, not with something this old. I need to know where a person could get one.”
“Well, I’ve told you, there aren’t any museums in the vicinity. Exham is a remote town; who needs museums here?”
“Except, of course,” Fredrick continued, “the artifacts owned by the college.”
Lydia stared. “You mean there’s a museum here? On campus?”
“No, but there are exhibits. The archaeology department sponsors several digs per year. Several battles of the Revolution were fought nearby, and early colony settlements were scattered all over Exham. We’ve got more musket barrels, bent bayonets, and crushed powder horns than you can shake a stick at.”
“Fine,” Lydia said. “But do you have any beam hewers?”
“Why, of course,” Fredrick answered.
Lydia wanted to shout the next question into his face, but she managed to calm herself. “Why didn’t you tell me that before?”
“You specifically asked me about independent museums, not college archaeological properties.”
Lydia’s heart quickened. “Professor Fredrick, are you telling me that there are beam hewers on this campus right now?”
“Yes,” he said. “Several, as a matter of fact.”
“Where?”
“The main administration lobby. My department maintains a fine display of local artifacts there. It’s an impressive exhibit; I’m sure you’ve seen it. There are three or four hewers on display.”
Lydia’s scalp seemed to be tingling. Tensely she stood up and said, “Professor Fredrick, thank you very, very much.”
««—»»
Wade scrubbed toilets and mopped floors, oblivious. He smiled, whistling, and thought of his night with Lydia Prentiss.
It had been wonderful, which sounded corny, but it was true. He’d driven her home at 7 A.M. He could tell by the way she kissed him that this was more than a one night stand. The look in her eyes had finished him.
What a stark, blazing realization. He felt glittering in the rush of love. Nothing could spoil the moment of this beautiful truth.
Or at least
He looked down and saw that he’d stepped in the mop bucket. It tipped over when he lifted his foot out. Then he slipped.
Now he lay belly down in the puddle. His temper struggled. When he tried to rise, he slipped again and fell on his back. He got up, swore, and kicked the bucket. The bucket bounced off the wall, hit him in the head, and knocked him in the water again.