Jamie Brodie 02 - Hoarded to Death

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Book: Read Jamie Brodie 02 - Hoarded to Death for Free Online
Authors: Meg Perry
Some of them were decorated very lavishly, and this looks like one of those."
    "Is it old?"
    "If it's authentic, it is. There are ways to reproduce them and make them look old when they're not. An expert would have to look at it."
    “You’re not an expert?”
    “No. My degree is in ancient history, but I don’t know how to tell the good fakes from the real thing.”
    "How old might it be?"
    I thought. "Well, the European Middle Ages lasted for about a thousand years, from the fifth to the fifteenth century. Any time within that time frame. So at least 600 years. Again, if it's authentic." I handed the bag to Pete, who started examining it. “I can't imagine what Jennifer would have been doing with a page from an illuminated manuscript. Or, in this case, the corner of a page.”
    Belardo nodded. “The way the vic was holding it in his hand, it looked like there had been a struggle that might have resulted in the paper being torn. The argument may have been over the paper.” He looked at me. “If it’s authentic, would it be worth a lot?”
    “ Oh yeah. Depending on how old it is and what book it’s from, it could be worth a good bit.”
    Pete turned it over, frow ning. “The writing is in Latin.”
    “Yeah, this is really elaborate.” I pointed to the page. “And the ink here looks faded. And this is some kind of stylistic animal.” I raised my head and stared at Pete, not seeing him. “No. No way.”
    Belardo leaned forward. “What?”
    I shook my head. “It’s not possible. The Book of Kells is missing about thirty leaves – sixty pages – but they went missing around a thousand years ago, in Ireland. I don’t see any way possible that a page from the Book of Kells could have made it to an apartment in Culver City.” I took back the bag and looked again. “My bet is that it’s a reproduction. It’s beautiful, but it’s probably not authentic.”
    Pete, Belardo, and Eckhoff all looked confused. Eckhoff asked the question. “What’s the Book of Kells?”
    “It’s an illuminated manuscript of the four gospels of the New Testament. It was created around the year 800, at a monastery on Iona, an island off the coast of Scotland. When the Viking raids on Scotland started, it was taken to Ireland, to a monastery at Kells, for safekeeping. It was stolen from the monastery in the year 1007 and found a couple of months later, with the gold cover and several pages missing. Now it’s kept in the library at Trinity College, Dublin.”
    Pete asked, “ What makes you think of the Book of Kells?”
    “ The colors, and the art, especially the figures and animals. Other illuminated manuscripts were done with very fancy writing and colorful alphabet, and sometimes some pictures, but the Book of Kells is known for its colors and the way animal and human figures are woven into the text itself. Very unusual.”
    Eckhoff still looked mystified. Belardo said, “But it’s as you say. How would pages from a thousand year old book in Ireland end up in the possession of a schoolteacher in LA?”
    I shook my head. “I don’t see how that’s possible. This has to be a reproduction.”
    “Do you know anyone who might be able to determine whether this page is authentic or not?”
    “ Yeah. We actually have a copy of the Book of Kells in our special collections at the library. The special collections librarian would be a good place to start.” I handed the bag back to Belardo.
    Eckhoff said, “Is there any chance this page is from the book in your library?”
    “No. It’s intact, and it’s behind several layers of security. If anything had happened to it, I’d have heard about it.”
    Belardo looked at the scrap again. “The dead guy, and whoever tore the other piece off, must have thought it was pretty valuable.”
    “ It was stupid to tear it, though. If it is rare and old, tearing it has decreased its value right there. And if it is from some famous manuscript, especially the Book of Kells or something

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