Blood, Ash, and Bone

CHAPTER Five

Audrina Harrington’s mansion, a three-story Greek Revival on Tuxedo Road, reclined on an eighteen-acre swath of manicured fescue. Neighbored by blocky Tudors and rectangular Georgians, it disguised its years behind wrought iron gates and tangled sweet pea vines, as artfully coy as an aging concubine.

I parked, aware of the swivel of security cameras as I walked to the front door. Doric columns stood sentinel, six of them, regular and fastidious. No noise from the street intruded in that insulated space, only the whispery rasp of fallen leaves and dry wind. I clutched my tote bag and rang the bell.

The door opened immediately, revealing a man with a clipboard in hand. He frowned. “Tai Randolph?”

I nodded, trying not to stare. He was six feet tall, with black hair and blue eyes, and he wore a tailored black suit, white shirt, and tiny discreet earpiece. Beefier than Trey, without the elegant cheekbones and tiny silver scars at the chin and temple, but definitely the same species.

“Umm,” I stammered.

The man’s eyes were stern and bored. “Miss Harrington was expecting two.”

“Mr. Seaver couldn’t make it. Which is a shame, really.”

I thought for a second he’d turn me away, but he made a note on his clipboard and waved me in. “Miss Harrington will see you in the gazebo. Straight down the hall, then through the doors.”

I could feel his eyes on my back as I followed his instructions, my footfalls silent on the inch-thick carpeting. The drawing room lay to my left, with pale blue walls and watered silk drapes, the dining room to my right. I caught a glimpse of a mahogany accordion table underneath a Waterford crystal chandelier. The furniture reeked of lacquer—even the air felt heavy and preserved—but I saw no sign of the fabled Harrington collection.

I saw the woman herself, however, on the patio. She waited in her gazebo underneath the spreading arms of an ancient magnolia, a tiny woman in white palazzo pants and a jeweled navy top. Even from a distance, she displayed the brittle authority of someone so accustomed to command that it came as naturally as breath.

I approached the linen-covered table. Her eyes were ice gray, her soft thin skin like parchment. She had at least seven decades on her, possibly eight, and she wore them as well as her clothes, definitely a woman who understood the necessity of maintenance.

Before I could speak, she arched a precisely penciled eyebrow in my direction. “Where’s Trey?”

I noticed then that the snowy tabletop had been set for three. “He couldn’t make it, unfortunately, but—”

“Tell me who you are again.”

“Tai Randolph. Pleased to meet you, Ms. Harrington.”

“Miss Harrington. Never married, never wanted to be, never cared to leave anybody guessing about that.”

“Sorry about that. Miss Harrington.”

She threw a suspicious glare my way, her eyes raking me up and down. There was a bite of winter-sharpened autumn in her garden. I imagined it was so even in the summer, that it was always cool under that gazebo.

I kept smiling. “Trey sends his regrets. He really wanted to come.”

That was a flat-out lie, but it pleased her. She waved at one of the empty chairs. “Sit.”

The delicate rattle of china cups in saucers announced the delivery of our tea. I smelled oolong. Trey’s favorite.

“Thank you.” I smiled up at the server.

He placed the teapot in the center of the table and returned the smile. “You’re welcome.”

I blinked at him. Another six-foot creature with black hair and blue eyes. This specimen was slim and vivacious, with a tanned complexion and a slashing white grin like a Jolly Roger.

I bit my lip to keep from laughing. “Three sugars and lots of cream, please.”

He obliged me. Miss Harrington ignored the tea tray, folding her hands in her lap. “Trey says you’ve found something remarkable, a Bible with connections to both Lincoln and Sherman. Is that so?”

“It is.”

“Tell me more.”

I dabbed at my mouth and did just that. She listened. The waiter delivered a three-tiered silver tray to the table, stacked with scones and clotted cream and cheese straws. At the end of my tale, Audrina sniffed loudly.

“Poppycock. Have you seen this Bible?”

“No.”

“Then it doesn’t exist.”

“What if it does?”

“Then it’s a forgery. My authenticator tells me there’s not a single clue supporting such a document’s existence.”

I folded my napkin in my lap. “Sometimes things hide in plain sight. You know this better than anyone.”

I saw the spark of pride flare in her watery eyes. My preservation-minded customers spoke of her with bitterness. She didn’t let her things out to play. Once they were in her possession, they rarely saw the light of day, existing under glass in her hermetically-sealed safe room.

“It could exist,” she admitted. “Flying monkeys could exist. But in the tales associated with Sherman’s March to the Sea and his subsequent takeover of Savannah, in the multiple and long-winded accounts of what transpired, there is no mention of such a Bible. In that hugely self-congratulatory moment, can you think of any reason such a thing would have escaped notice?”

I took a sip of tea. “There was the tragedy, of course.”

“What tragedy?”

“The general’s infant son, Charles Celestine, died during the Savannah Campaign. Sherman had never even seen the child.” I dabbed my lips. “He learned of the death from the newspaper.”

Miss Harrington stared at me. “Go on.”

“I’m sure you know that Sherman was plagued with fits of melancholy his whole life—what we’d diagnose as major depressive episodes today—so it’s possible that during this sad time, his affairs weren’t as meticulously arranged as usual.”

Her manicured nails drummed the tablecloth. My recitation appeared to surprise her, which surprised me. I’d gotten it in my head that she was an expert on such matters. Apparently, however, her fascination lay in the collection, not in the history behind it.

“And so?” she prompted.

“And so the Bible could have been stolen, hidden, accidentally left behind. One tiny margin of error, a thousand possibilities.”

She tossed her napkin on the table. The server pulled her chair back, and she stood. The top of her head barely reached my clavicle.

“This way,” she said. “And don’t dilly dally. I haven’t got all day.”

***

Her library felt like a set piece for Masterpiece Theatre—walls paneled in polished butternut, nail-backed reading chairs paired next to the fireplace, floor lamps oozing honey-thick light. It was mysterious and cloistered, a place where illicit lovers groped and high class matrons hissed threats as deadly and fine as powdered poison. And its bookshelves held the stories of the doomed glorious South—leather-bound editions of Robert E. Lee’s memoirs, Stonewall Jackson’s letters, Matthew Brady’s collected photographs—all of them pristine, as if their pages had yet to be cracked.

“It’s lovely,” I said.

She harrumphed. “This isn’t it. Turn around. And close your eyes.”

I did as she asked. Behind me, I heard the beeping of a keyless entry system, then a click. Cool odorless air flowed from deep within…somewhere.

“You can turn around now.” She gave me that look again, like a pissed off egret. “Now be quick. Like I said, I don’t have all day.”

I stepped across the threshold into a low-lit room, rectangular and sterile. I remembered the specs from the AJC article—constant temperature of sixty-five degrees, constant humidity of thirty-five percent. The serviceable wood tables and chairs were plain, every square inch of wall and table space devoted to display cases. I saw swords and scabbards, full Confederate uniforms, derringers and Sharps carbines and bullets, even a saddle, all of them behind glass, protected and preserved.

The real glory, however, was the papers. The ephemera, as it was called in the trade. Books, certificates, photographs, letters, more pieces than I could count. If some apocalypse ever did strike Atlanta, future generations would find Audrina Harrington in this cloistered space, surrounded by her treasures like an entombed pharaoh.

A man rose from behind one of the tables as we entered, a grid of beige papers and magnifying glasses before him. I’d been so overwhelmed by the sheer volume of the room, I hadn’t noticed him, but when he stood, I recognized him instantly—six-four, dark shiny hair, every inch the suave professional in his navy suit and blood-red tie.

He came around the table. “Ms. Randolph, I presume? My name is—”

“David Fitzhugh. I know. I’ve seen you on Antiques Roadshow.”

“Really?” He flashed a full white smile. “Which episode?”

“The one with the McElroy saber.”

The smile widened. Fitzhugh Appraisals and Authentications was the Southeast’s leading consignment shop for Civil War artifacts. Fitzhugh himself struck me as more used car salesman than scholar, but his record spoke for itself. In a crowded field, his company moved more historical collectibles than his top ten competitors combined. My dinky shop pulled in peanuts compared to his operation.

He maintained the full wattage grin. “Miss Harrington told me we’d be having a visitor. She said you’d found something extraordinary.”

“All I have so far is a tantalizing story.”

“Then let’s hear it.”

As I repeated the tale, Audrina kept her mouth compressed in a severe line, her thin arms crossed. But her eyes flashed with avid curiosity.

When I was finished, Fitzhugh clucked his tongue. “I’m sorry, Ms. Randolph, but I’ll tell you what I told Miss Harrington—that sounds like a fantasy to me.”

“Why do you say that?”

“Because history is silent on this Bible, and history is never silent.”

“Ah, but you’re wrong. History often keeps her mouth shut, and for good reason.”

He looked at me with the patience that experts reserved for impertinent amateurs. “Trust me, I’ve been doing this for thirty years. A Bible like that doesn’t suddenly appear. The rumors come first, then the false leads, then the fakes.”

“What if we’re at the ‘rumor’ stage?”

He gestured at the manuscripts before him. Flesh-colored cotton gloves gave his hands an odd mannequin-like appearance. He pointed to an old book, its pages yellowed, crisp with age.

“Do you know what this is?”

“It looks like a diary.”

“It is. It belonged to Confederate Lieutenant James H. Polk. That’s him, here.”

He pointed to a tintype photograph. A fresh-faced young man stared at me from one hundred and fifty years in the past.

“He signed the diary, dated it too. It’s filled with the usual stuff of the soldiering life—politics, complaints about the food, letters from other soldiers.”

“In other words, you have supporting provenance.”

He smiled. “And that’s why Miss Harrington authorized me to pay almost four thousand dollars for this grouping. So please understand, we’re not interested in funding a wild goose chase.”

I blinked at him. “Funding?”

Fitzhugh’s smile thinned. “I’ve done my research too, Ms. Randolph. You inherited a ramshackle gun shop with an equally ramshackle clientele. You are in no position to run across a historical artifact worth a few hundred thousand dollars. And you have no money to go chasing one.”

I kept my voice steady. “I came here for information, not money.”

“Then I’m sorry if I offended you. But Miss Harrington is approached relentlessly with relics for sale. Ninety-five percent are either deliberately forged or misidentified by overenthusiastic amateurs. The other five percent are sentimental slop with no historic value whatsoever.” His tone was magnanimous. “But go ahead. Chase your Bible. And should you actually find it, here’s my card. I’ll offer you my ten dollar special.”

I took his card. “Which is?”

“I look at your item for two minutes and tell you it’s worthless.”

I was surrounded by the authentic and documented and preserved in that library. The cataloged and categorized and recorded. There was no room to be surprised, no room for a single story to breathe its way to life. I suddenly developed an irresistible craving to prove this smug gentleman wrong.

“What if my Bible turns out to be real?”

He smiled again, showing his big teeth. “You show me that Bible, and I will eat one of your Confederate hats.”

I smiled back. “If I were you, I’d keep some ketchup handy.”

***

A third version of Trey escorted me back to my car, this time a lithe Asian with a dancer’s carriage and eyes like Swarovski sapphires.

I shook my head. “This gig must pay ridiculously well.”

“You wouldn’t believe.” He grinned. “Of course you have to put up with a little ass-grabbing every now and then, but the dental is amazing.”