***
The Christmas tree was still up in the corner of the reading room. Before even taking off her coat, Liesl walked over and plugged in the string of lights so they could keep her company while she waited. She put her phone on the desk in front of her, so she wouldn’t miss it when the detective called, and sat down to wait. Out the large window, the snow was falling in sheets over the empty campus. She craned her neck to look all the way down the street, and in the distance she could see an unmarked navy van making its way down the slippery road, just as she had been assured it would. At the stop sign before the library, the back wheels of the van slipped slightly, sending the van into a slow-motion fishtail that spun it halfway through the intersection. There was no reason to worry. There was nothing with which the van could collide. They had thought carefully about making the delivery to a totally empty campus. If she had asked, campus security would have opened the library’s loading dock for Liesl; they were working even on Christmas Eve. But she hadn’t asked. As per her instruction, the van slowly made its way over the curb and pulled up directly next to the fire exit of the reading room. Three times the van pulled forward and reversed, pulled forward and reversed, pulled forward and reversed until the van’s back doors were perfectly aligned with the entrance that Liesl had propped open. Finally, the engine and the lights cut out, and Detective Yuan jumped out of the driver-side door.
Liesl greeted him with a hug. He motioned for her to wait and reached back into the van where he retrieved a large box of sweets marked with Arabic script. She pulled it open and selected a honey-soaked pastry.
“You’re a terrible driver,” Liesl said.
He couldn’t immediately respond as his mouth was full of halvah. So he shrugged, indicating that he didn’t necessarily disagree.
“I didn’t think we could eat in here,” he said when he had finally finished chewing. He was right. Eating was strictly forbidden in the library unless one was a donor attending a cocktail reception. But stealing millions of dollars’ worth of rare books was also forbidden, and that had been allowed to go on for years, so she wasn’t going to let herself sweat over some baklava on Christmas Eve. She offered him another piece, but he refused. He could tell she was stalling. He walked with her to the staff area so they could wash the honey off their hands, and then they returned to the van and popped the latch on the back doors, revealing the boxes of books inside.
Liesl had prepared several book trucks for the job. They were lined up by the fire exit. Detective Yuan hopped into the van and began to hand boxes down to Liesl. She didn’t open them to see what was inside. That would come later. For now she loaded, truck after truck, until the van was empty and the reading room was lined with brown-paper packages waiting to be torn open and inventoried for insurance purposes. Detective Yuan slammed the van door closed, and the fire exit door behind it.
The boxes didn’t need to be immediately opened. She could leave them on the book trucks in the basement and worry about the unpacking after the Christmas break. The empty campus was necessary for the delivery, but not for the unpacking. Even still, she could not help herself.
“Which one is the Plantin?” Liesl asked. “Do you remember?”
He remembered. The officer in the evidence room had asked for Detective Yuan to come down and help pack the boxes, even though Yuan insisted he had no idea how to properly pack a rare book. He was certainly less qualified than the officer who spent most of his days keeping guns and cocaine contained. But his colleague had insisted that Yuan would have a feel for it. He was right. The books were arranged snugly, the boxes labeled neatly.
“Isn’t she beautiful?” Liesl said when she opened the box, the sumptuous red Spanish leather appearing to glow within its cardboard confines, the light dancing against the gilt on the spine that was so brilliantly preserved that it might have been applied that very morning. There were some scuffs on the bindings, a bit of a watermark in the gutter of one of the volumes. The little flaws only made the set more beautiful, a beauty mark on a perfectly proportioned cheek. She pulled one of the large volumes out, opened the creaking vellum pages so she could run a finger down the handsome columns of text, feel the slight raise of the intricate floral woodcut that marked the beginning of each section with the pad of her index finger. Yuan looked at her, unconvinced, as she looked at the pages. He shrugged.
“It’s got nothing on the baklava.”
***
Christmas Eve, near sunset. Liesl arrived at the downtown television studio to find her suit, chosen with care and donned moments before her departure, looked shabby next to the tight and trim and tone of television people all around her. She was self-conscious, and she looked it.
“You look like such an authority,” said Professor Mahmoud, rounding the corner to greet her.
Liesl was pliable, the emotion of the day making a compliment enough to set her straight, and she regained her footing. “Are you wearing makeup, Professor?”
He shrugged. “I didn’t ask for it, but I’m not mad about how it looks. The producer wants to run through some details before we film.”
“I’m ready when they are.”
Professor Mahmoud led her to the makeup room where she was seated under bright lights, her face dabbed with powders as an obscenely young television producer confirmed details for the segment.
“So you suspected the blue Quran might be a hidden treasure?” he asked.
“I knew only that the catalog description speculated as to Tunisian origin and that Professor Mahmoud was a great scholar of the library of the Tunisian Great Mosque of Kairouan.”
“You’re being modest,” the producer said.
“I only asked some good questions of some smart people.”
“That’s just it, though, isn’t it? The key to treasure hunting? Know when to shut up and ask good questions?”
Contrary to Liesl’s expectations, this was not taking shape as a fifteen-second feel-good clip on the local news. The producer was beguiled. He dug into their story, and while the money bit was important, the steal of a price at auction and subsequent valuation, he wanted to know about the history of the thing and about the nature of the discovery itself. How they knew what they knew and turned a paragraph-long description in an auction catalog into a treasure missing from the library that contained the oldest Arabic manuscripts in existence. He filled the room with the details of their discovery. Every bibliographical reference, every footnote in someone else’s story, every clue that others had ignored.
The set Liesl and Professor Mahmoud were led to had a podium that had been built to tilt the blue page toward the camera.
The producer introduced them to the anchor who would be conducting the interview. And then the lights in the studio darkened and the lights on Liesl brightened, and she took a last glance at her feet to confirm she was standing on the masking tape X that was her mark, and then she tilted her face up to the camera and prepared to talk about her work.
***
When she went to Marie’s house, she went alone and with the television makeup scrubbed off. Knocking with one hand, clutching a rioja by the neck with the other. She knocked as Marie was washing a single dinner plate, and when Marie answered the door, she was still holding a dish towel, twisting it back and forth in that way people do when they’re uneasy.
“Are you here caroling?”
Liesl didn’t answer. She hadn’t expected Marie to lead with a joke.
“Lighten up and come in,” Marie said. “It’s very charitable of you.”
“I’m not here for charity, Marie,” Liesl said. Her palms sweating, Liesl cast an agitated eye at Marie and followed her into the house. The door clunked closed behind them, but Marie didn’t invite her further. She crossed her arms and waited for answers.