Read Alex Ames - Calendar Moonstone 01 - A Brilliant Plan Online

Authors: Alex Ames

Tags: #Mystery: Cozy - Jewelry Creator - Cat Burglar - San Diego

Alex Ames - Calendar Moonstone 01 - A Brilliant Plan (15 page)

A detail search in the library catalogue brought up two titles, which a member of the staff retrieved for me. One was from 1954,
Almost King
, an account of the times of Maximilian and Empress Carlotta. The other, from 1972, was called
The Crowns of Mexico
. Same subject, different focus.
 

Both of the books were on the shelf, not much in demand it seems. So I sat down with them and made notes while I skimmed the pages in search of jewelry and riches.

There was mention of the crown ceremony, which interestingly enough, took place in Europe and was later repeated in Mexico City. An illustration showed the pair but you couldn’t make out the details of the jewelry they were wearing. The books provided lengthy explanations of the social reforms that Maximilian was planning, notwithstanding the desperate situation of his acquired country. I wasn’t extremely interested in American history, so my task became increasingly demanding of my patience. Plus, I found no mention of unfinished businesses, big secrets or jewels.
 

The public library was getting ready to close, I glanced at my watch and pondered the possibility of getting a library card to check the books out and take them home with me. Then another thought occurred to me and I sat down behind a public Internet terminal in the library and did a search of the UCLA library database. I found some more books and documents with the same keywords, most of them originating from before 1980. The most recent document I found was a history thesis from last year, “Maximilian and the Native Americans – The Last Attempt.” How convenient, Published by the Department of History, UCLA. I jotted down the author of the book and decided to leave the store in Mrs. Otis’ hands tomorrow morning and head out to the UCLA campus instead.

When I got back home, I called to inform Mrs. Otis of the change in plans; she was OK with it. Then I called Mundy to update him. He listened to the results of my little detective work and promised to do a little research in the database of his newsroom, which was supposed to host newspaper archives for all of North America, including Mexico.
 

Instead of spending the late night with David Letterman, I sat down near the pool, wrapped in a thick shawl and thought about jewels, murdered emperors and Ron. Why was it that Calendar Moonstone always fell for policemen and dominant males? Apart from the ‘attractive’ part. The night was silent and cold, hugging my shawl, I felt melancholic. I slowly swirled the wine in my glass and sipped now and then until I felt sleepy enough to go to bed.

Chapter 21

BY STARTING WITHOUT breakfast, I beat the rush hour traffic to the UCLA campus. Before I went into the library, I read the morning papers and munched a bagel in a nearby coffee shop. Together with eager students, I marched into the reading hall of the library and inquired at the information desk as to how to get the book that I wanted. After a half-hour wait, the thesis was mine.
 

“Maximilian and the Native Americans – The Last Attempt,” was a scientific—read, boring—account of Maximilian’s short-lived efforts to unite Mexico with the goal of forming an independent state with a French model, blah, skim, blah, skim. Suddenly, a paragraph caught my attention: A second coronation was held in Mexico City in 1864. It was a low-key affair by today’s standards but most of the social and political groups of the day had made their way to greet the new emperor with their gifts and their agendas. Among them was a group of representatives of the natives of Mexico. The author wrote about the different native Indian tribes who had their home in the territory that we call Mexico around 1860. This conglomerate of natives partially lived a nomadic lifestyle and partially in the villages. In early 1865, a group of those tribes made Maximilian a gift to support him in his plans to reform Mexico, give the natives more rights, provide them better education and give them equal status as citizens. At that time, it was probably considered akin to science fiction. A group of ten priests and elders offered a special crafted set of jewelry to Maximilian, each high priest offered one piece. Every piece in the set was of such a high standard in design, execution and style that Emperor Maximilian and Empress Carlotta were truly impressed by the dedication.
 

The maker or makers of the jewelry were unknown. There was no mention whatever of the pieces that went down in history as “The Maximilian Set.”
 

The annotations and citations gave some sources for the existence of the set: there was a thesis on royal coronation gifts from 1954, some documents from the Museum of Mexican History and some old newspaper articles from
El Diario Nuevo
, which must have been a Mexican newspaper. I wrote down all the sources, hunted down a copy machine and made photocopies of the important pages from the thesis.
 

By intuition, I did a quick Internet search of the author’s name, Benito P. Salanca, and it turned out that B. P. Salanca was assistant professor at the UCLA’s history department. Such a small world, the university’s public white pages even gave the office and phone number. I walked outside the library and called Professor Salanca’s number from my cell phone. After three rings, a young voice said “Yeah.”

“Professor Salanca, my name is Calendar Moonstone. I just read your thesis on Maximilian and the Natives. Could we meet?”

A second of silence. “Are you a student? My hours are… ”

“No, I am a jewelry expert and I also work as a police consultant.” Give it to him thick. “I am supporting the police in an art theft and wondered if you could tell me more about the Maximilian Set.”
 

Another second of silence. “Sounds intriguing. When would it suit you? A meeting, I mean.”

“What about now? I am at the library.”

Salanca gave a small laugh. “What about Coffee Culture on Dickson Plaza?”

“Fifteen minutes,” I said. “Look out for a stunning blonde with blue eyes and a black knapsack.”

“This is California; you all look like that,” he said, laughing aloud.

“It’s a Prada knapsack. See you in fifteen.” I hung up.

Well, this was California, so I went back to the car and drove the one minute to Dickson Plaza to find a suitable parking spot, didn’t find any and then ended up in a parking garage for two bucks an hour, which took more than the planned 15 minutes. Coffee Culture turned out to be a Seattle coffee shop clone, up to the brownish interior. When I entered the shop, I did a small scan of the inhabitants and found a young blonde man with freckles and a corduroy jacket looking straight at me. I raised a hand in salute, got a double latte decaf and joined him.

“Professor Salanca?”

“Don’t tell me,” he said, “I look younger than you expected. And why do I carry a Hispanic name and blonde hair?”

I gave a laugh, shook his offered hand and sat down beside him. “All of the above,” I said and introduced myself, gave him my business card.

He studied it, turned it over and asked, “What about this police consulting thing?”

“They made me ‘deputy’ for the San Diego Police on Thanksgiving,” I admitted.
 

Salanca looked me over with curiosity. “San Diego Police? Long way from L.A. Call me Benito. What is your interest in my work?” He got straight down to business. He indeed looked very young and was clearly Hispanic in complexion and build. On the other hand, he sported bushy blonde hair and his olive skin was counter-colored with an infinite number of reddish freckles. I wondered if he was an overachiever, being a professor already.
 

I started my little story. “As I said, I am helping out the police of San Diego on an art theft case. It is possible that some jewelry was stolen that once had been in the possession of Emperor Maximilian or his wife. I did some research and got as far as your thesis, which is just about the most I could find published on it.”

“Yup, finished it about six months ago, my professors and peers were so impressed, they offered me an assistant professorship.” He sounded proud, probably had all reason to be, despite the boring read.

“I found it very…
 
solid, very solid and mostly understandable even for a layman like me,” I freely improvised an opening to show my appreciation.
 

Benito was pleased about the compliment and beamed. “Why did you come to me, though?”
 

“I hoped that maybe you have more background information about the ‘Maximilian Set’ featured in your thesis. There was precious little in your work about it.”

Benito leaned back, put his hands behind his neck and concentrated. “The Maximilian Set was one of the building blocks of the general hypothesis. The precious gift from the Natives was as goodwill and trust for his reign. Their influence was one factor of many. Another was Maximilian’s European and French thoughts on how to run a state. Plus, consider the civil war building up in the USA around the same time.”

“Unfortunately, I am not well informed about Mexican history,” I admitted. “All I understand is that Mexico was at unrest after independence in 1821.”

“Well, Mexico was not really independent for a long time after that. Unlike the USA, Mexico was an alibi battleground for the European powers, similar to the US territories 100 years before or Middle Latin America in the nineteen eighties. Maximilian was born in 1832; he was an Austrian archduke and by French grace became emperor of Mexico in 1864. To everyone’s surprise, he turned out to be a reformer, initiated land reforms, started to educate the Native Americans and invited larger immigration. At that time, Mexico was at civil war, disunited and still looking for a national identity. After only a few years, which included state bankruptcy and estrangement from Maximilian’s European allies, the old republican crowd came to power again. Maximilian was court marshaled and executed in 1867.”

“Three years of power,” I calculated.

“Yup. The Native Americans presented the Maximilian Set to him, well, you probably read that. Ten priests, ten pieces. In a way, they tried to bribe their way into his heart.”
 

“What else do you know about the Maximilian Set that was not written up in your thesis?” I asked.

“Ah, bored by the science, straight to the glitter, no need for me to ramble about political motivations and social backgrounds of emperors, republicans and rebels.” Benito shook his head, good-naturedly. He frowned. “What else is there? The artist or artists of the set are unknown to me. And it looks like to anyone else, too. I couldn’t find any references or theories about it. The ten pieces held a diadem, a small crown, rings, a scepter, a pair of ear jewels and a necklace. Reportedly, they are of great beauty, not the tacky stuff that some royals have with lots of diamonds and pearls, more like straight lines with some selected stones of very high quality. I can’t say, really, as I have no knowledge of good jewelry.”
 

“Do photos, drawings or paintings exist of the set?” I asked.
 

“If I remember correctly, I have a partial drawing of a small diadem, a tiara style piece in my background documentation in my office. That’s all I found in my research, no photos, no other pictures.”

“So, in reality, no one has actually seen them,” I felt discouraged.

“Oh, but I have,” Benito said.

My heart did a little jump. “You didn’t!”

“Did!” Benito gave a smile. “When I did the research for my thesis down in Mexico City. One of the curators at the history museum who helped me find my references showed them to me. I mean, I have no knowledge of jewelry but the pieces I saw looked very nice, somehow very royal and spectacular, yet…
 
Earthen. They had a… ” He was looking for the right words, “… simplicity.”

I had a million questions for him and started to fire away to get a feeling for the design and make of the Maximilian Set but Benito raised his hands. “Come on, I only had a quick glance at them in a semi-lightened vault. You can torture me or use hypnosis, but I wouldn’t be able to make a phantom drawing or any such. There was a lot of gold and many colorful stones. And yes, I would buy one for my girlfriend for Christmas.”
 

I had to rub my eyes and breathe in and out several times to get my racing pulse down.
 

“You have reason to believe that the jewelry stolen from the San Diego gallery is the Maximilian Set?” Benito raised an eyebrow at me.

“Maybe. Would it be possible?” I waved my arms around, almost knocking over our coffee mugs. ”Where exactly did you see them?”

“Well, the Museum of Mexican History, Mexico City,” Benito answered. “At least they were there a year ago. If they were stolen in San Diego, they must have been stolen from the museum before that.”

“So whoever stole them from the gallery stole them from another thief,” I continued.
 

“Impressive, dear Watson. You are worth your money as a consultant.”

“OK, but at least now I know what to look for,” I said and we stared into our empty mugs for a minute.

“Do you know of any other jewelry that was in possession of Maximilian or Empress Carlotta during their time in Mexico?” I asked.

“Sorry, can’t help you there. Imagine the times: Mexico was in a civil war, just like the US. The Juarez republicans were fighting the French reign. Nothing lasted for long then. If there is anything else that belonged to the emperor’s family besides the Maximilian Jewels, the most likely place to look is in the European collections.”

“Why Europe?”

“When her husband Maximilian was shot in 1867, Empress Carlotta returned to Europe to build support for her former husband’s politics,” Benito explained. “She was most likely able to save at least some of the family valuables.”

“What became of her?”

“Oh, sad story. She went mad. And lived for a very long time with that.”

We finished our coffees with small-talk. Then, Benito and I walked over to his office. He had a small outfit on the second floor of the history department building, not very modern, slightly stuffy and smelly floors.
 

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