As I stood in what remains of the broch looking out over the clear blue waters of Scapa Flow, or rather what Thorfinn would have known as Skalpeid-floi, I thought about how it is impossible for us to know if the moment in time in which we find ourselves is the cusp of a glorious era, or merely its dismal, if not catastrophic, end. Politicians try to persuade us that through them lies a brilliant and prosperous future, doomsayers may warn that the rot has set in and the end is near, but when it comes right down to it, we can never know.
Bjarni certainly didn’t know that his time was over, that he and his people, once rulers of the northern seas, would become frozen in time as mere nuisances at best, violent thugs at worst, in the onward march of civilization. Bjarni thought he’d come back to find his world the same as it had ever been, that if anyone had changed it was he with his great adventures, and a magnificent silver cauldron to prove it. He was perhaps no more nor less realistic than those who came after him, those seeking the cauldron, or a chalice, or even the Holy Grail, imbuing the object with spiritual significance way beyond its physical presence. But it was a pot, useful perhaps for food and drink, and even, in the beauty of its workmanship, an object to inspire. Still, it was a pot.
Both Trevor and Percy saw the scroll framed above the reproduction Mackintosh. They both knew what they were looking at, because they’d both been in one of Sigurd’s classes more than thirty years before. Percy, like so many of Sigurd’s students, loved the tale, and when he later came to read Arthurian legend, he put the two stories together in his mind, saw connections that weren’t there and determined to find the Grail.
Percy’s quest took him far afield. He must have realized what had happened to the scroll, because he followed Trevor to Toronto to get it. I like to think he would have returned it had he found it, but I’m not really sure. What I do know is that his quest took him to the tomb of the orcs. He was stabbed there, according to police who found traces of his blood, and the knife with Drever’s prints on it. I don’t know whether he went back a second time to see what else there was to be found and was discovered there by Drever just as I was, or whether Drever or Robert enticed him back to his death.
I still have mixed feelings about Percy. If there was anyone whose time was long past, it was he. I believe that it was Percy who hid in my shop after it closed for the day, and then ransacked the place looking for the scroll. He didn’t trust me, not then anyway, but I didn’t trust him either. I think that explains why he was always running away from me, because he thought I was about to accuse him of that crime. I also think he wanted to tell me what he had done the day we went touring together. As far as the shop is concerned, he didn’t steal anything, he didn’t break anything. I am trying to just close the door on that one.
Unlike Percy, Trevor helped himself to the scroll. Either that or Betty Haraldsson, lost in her dementia, gave it to a fellow she doubtless thought was charming. No doubt Trevor thought he was on the cusp of some great new life. He’d found his own grail, and it had nothing to do with a cauldron. Instead his time was up: he was on his way down the basement stairs.
Trevor apparently was born a rogue. There were a lot of questions I failed to ask at Sigurd’s house that first afternoon. Sigurd told me that one of his students faked a scroll and tried to sell it to the museum. I did not ask that student’s name, but could it possibly have been the man who ended up dead as a result of having tried to fake something again? Sigurd confirmed later when, unlike Perceval, I got a second chance to ask questions that it had in fact been Trevor. Trevor was sent to a strict boarding school in Glasgow in order to avoid more serious charges. He left both school and Scotland as soon as he could, which may explain why he never talked about Orkney.
As the police have pieced it together, Trevor was forced to help Robert and Blair move their furniture back and forth because of his gambling debts. He got the real Mackintosh from Alexander, who had purchased it many years earlier from Lester, made up a phony invoice and had it shipped, probably for a relatively small commission, one that would not even come close to paying off his gambling debts.
Sometimes I try to imagine how Trevor felt when he first saw the reproduction that Thor had made. It must have seemed a godsend, as a plan to solve all his problems began to form. I expect it was Alexander who told Trevor about Thor, never guessing the purpose to which he would put that information. Trevor purchased Thor’s reproduction, made up another bogus invoice and separately shipped both that and the real Mackintosh to his store. I think he did some work on the fake to make sure the wear on the drawer and legs matched, at least from a distance, that of the original. He showed Blair the real one, got my approval, however tentative, but delivered the fake. Then he turned around and sold the first one a second time, planning to simply take the money and run. He didn’t make it.
The question was where had the real Mackintosh gone? I told the police what I thought, and they paid a visit to Desmond Crane, search warrant in hand, and found the Mackintosh writing cabinet in a room hidden behind a fake bookcase. The Mackintosh’s lock, I can tell you, was just fine. Blair must have been feeling pretty smug about getting to the Mackintosh before Dez did, while he was having an affair with Dez’s wife. Dez, who didn’t know about Leanna and Blair, must have been feeling pretty smug about owning the real one, too. Neither of them is feeling particularly cocky now. You have to wonder why someone like Crane would pay that much money for something he couldn’t show to anybody, but as Clive is always pointing out, rich people are not like you and me. True collectors aren’t either. I suppose it was enough for Crane just to possess it, but for some reason that fact depressed me. I mean if the rot is setting in, this surely is a sign.
In addition to the Mackintosh, police found a number of objects including a pair of bronze candlesticks from McClintoch Swain that Desmond hadn’t paid for. Or rather he hadn’t paid us. He’d paid the thieves who’d stolen them in the first place. Antiques thought lost forever by other dealers in town turned up, too, which also proves, I suppose, that even people with pots of money like to get stuff cheap. Crane swears he had no idea he was purchasing stolen goods. I don’t know whether anyone will be able to prove otherwise or not. At least the break-ins seem to have come to an end.
I sincerely hope the era of men like Robert Alexander, Blair Baldwin, and Drever Clark is fast coming to a close. The Churchill Barriers that I crossed so often while in Orkney were built during World War Two to provide safe haven from German U-boats for the British fleet in Scapa Flow. They could not stop people like Alexander, however, who used his army connections, including Drever, to find a source for heroin in Afghanistan, and to bring it in to Scotland via Orkney. Heroin is a terrible scourge there, particularly in Edinburgh, according to Rob, and Alexander and Drever must share some of the blame for that. The police here believe that Blair was a major player in cocaine in Toronto, and he and Alexander had begun to have unpleasant business dealings.
An international team has been struck to piece this all together, including, I’m proud to say, my sweetie, lovely man that he is. Rob wasn’t thrilled with my participation in Blair’s arrest, but we both did what we had to do. It seems clear that Blair is also going to jail for a long time, not, as I hoped, for the murder of Trevor Wylie, but for money laundering and drug dealing. So far that’s the best anybody can do, but they’re working on it.
Robert Alexander died virtually instantly at Maya’s hands, and Drever has been charged with Percy’s murder and numerous drug offences. Drever isn’t looking nearly as good as he used to after his encounter with Oddi and Svein. Ask me if I care. Actually, I shouldn’t say that. I do care, very, very much what happens to people like him. It does seem rather fitting though, that in a way, and after about a thousand years, Oddi and Svein took their revenge on Bjarni’s killer.