Chapter 21: Resurrecting Jack (part 2)
"He said he would only meet with me, but I figure that with your abilities that wouldn't pose a problem," Karick said as the trio stood on the curb, the taxi having just deposited them in one of Paris's seedier neighborhoods. They had set out from the hotel not long after first light, after checking in and leaving their bags in the rooms.
"No, that wont be a problem," Alan agreed.
Karick rang the bell and led them in after their host buzzed them door open. Alan immediately took charge, calming the man's fears.
"I don't like it," he said quietly to Karick, who assured him Alan and Neil would be discrete. When the former Czech intelligence agent started to introduce his colleagues to the grubby document expert he was cut off. "Call me...Viktor," obviously making up a name on the spot.
"Alright, Viktor," Alan said, extending his hand out, but it was not taken.
"You have the document?"
Alan nodded, and handed it over, and the three of them followed Viktor into his work room. Viktor held it up to the light, looked at the wordless parchment wordlessly for a few seconds, and then clamped it down on a lightboard. A magnifying glass, attached to the side of the lightboard by a swinging arm, was moved into place, and Viktor took station over it. Without moving his head from the glass he reached to a side drawer and pulled out a tool that looked like a needle on a mount, and then scraped some of the parchment away at the corner. The next table over had a small-model gas chromatographer and he prepped the sample for analysis.
"What do you think?" Karick asked.
"I'll know on a few moments, but my best guess is that it is vellum. Sheepskin, probably about mid-fifteenth to sixteenth century. From the way it's been cured and treated I would guess Central Asian origin, Uzbek or Tadjik, a very small chance Armenian. Quite possibly..." he drifted off, but his eyes lit up at the last thought.
"Is there a hidden message?"
"What?" Viktor asked. "You're looking for a message? You should have said that at the outset," he grumbled as he opened some cabinets looking for something. He came back with a spray bottle and without asking permission saturated both sides of the parchment.
"Hey! What the fuck are you doing?" Alan yelled.
"Nothing to fear, nothing to fear, boy. Just watch. The solution is almost completely inert." Viktor flipped a switch and the room's light all went off, including the lightboard, and a black light flickered on from both the ceiling and from within the belly of the board. In the dim glow of the room Alan could see him beckoning for him to come closer to the parchment.
"I can state with authority, and you can ask your friend Tadeusz what kind of authority I am, that this paper is blank. You see how clean it is. No pen marks of any kind, no print marks of any kind. No kind of writing or printing instruments have impacted on the paper. A virgin, you get it? Virgin!" he laughed, a rheumy cackle.
The gas chromatographer beeped and Viktor sat down at a p.c. which was attached to it by a cable. The results meant nothing to Alan, and he watched with interest as Viktor loaded a CD into the drive and ran a comparison program. "This will take some time," they were informed by their host.
Alan and Neil went looking for a café, while Karick stayed behind to keep an eye on things.
"So, Karick, you've come up in the world, I see," "Viktor" said once the others had left.
"The Cold War is over, my old friend. I have to make a living somehow. To tell the truth, I consider myself lucky. It is a good job. No wet work."
"You never did like killing."
"No, but I did it, unhappily. And you? Now you forge passports and identity papers for the highest bidders, not for love of Lenin and Marx. More rewarding for you too, no?"
"Victor" sighed. "The more things change...most of my, ah, clientele, are Russians, fucking Russians. Mafiya scum, and kleptocrats calling themselves without a hint of irony 'New Capitalists,'" he grumbled. "The pay is better, but the more things change..." he added with a laugh.
They chatted of trivial things while the computer searched the database looking for a match to the sample; the computer was fairly ancient, and taking its time. When the match had been found Karick keyed his cell phone and called Alan and Neil back from their coffees.
"Samarkand," Viktor pronounced triumphantly. "From the workshop of the Master, I would guess early 1500s."
"The Master?" Alan asked.
It was Neil, to the surprise of the other three who answered. "The Master of Samarkand, a dyer, name unknown, who worked from about 1480 to 1515. His product was of exceptional quality." Neil pointed to the parchment laying on the lightbox. "This is the Stradivarius of paper, parchment, whatever," he said correcting himself. "If the provenance can be proven," he ventured, getting a small snarl from Viktor in response (so unused he was to having his expertise questioned), that is one valuable piece of parchment."
"Valuable, yes," Alan thought, "But that doesn't quite help us along in our quest however much it's worth."
"The bleaching process used by him," Viktor began, taking up Neil's point (and a bit perturbed at being upstaged and doubted), "Is quite distinct, decades, no centuries ahead of his time. From the finish on the document I should have pegged it off right away, but I've never seen an unused piece of his product."
Later, back at the hotel Alan asked him if that was the clue. "Do we need to go? To Samarkand? I'm willing, but that corner of the world is not exactly considered safe." Uzbekistan borders Afghanistan.
"No, Alan, there's nothing left there. The Soviets pretty much plundered the country back in the day, and the best experts about the Master are all in Russia now. I know one, he lived in Moscow. He consulted with the museum back when I worked there. Should I call him? Try to see if he's still around? He'll be terribly excited seeing an unused parchment."
"No hold off on that. Karick's team had been watching Massimo since before I even acquired my powers. So we know that Massimo was never even near Central Asia for a long time. Damn it! Somehow there's a message on that parchment, and I just don't know how to get at it. What's worse, the dreams are back, and more frequent, more powerful. It's like being here, on this side of the Atlantic, I'm closer to the solution, and Jack is trying to guide me more. This whole fucking thing makes no sense."
"Whoa, whoa, step back a minute. You getting frustrated will not help you get over this thing."
"You're right," Alan exhaled.
"Let's look at this thing from a logical point of view, OK?"
"OK," Alan responded, rubbing his temples trying to massage the stress away.
"Massimo is out there somewhere. In some form, yes?"
"Yes."