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This wasn’t the 1920s or 1930s in Egypt where the Howard Carters of this world were making famous discoveries. It might have felt like that as we sat in the hotel room and she introduced me to the real world of archaeology, that one where time and effort often brought discouraging results and lack of progress, and then how she came to conclude that this unknown pirate that everyone and no one knew about, actually existed.
She was the only one to believe she actually existed and proceeded to explain why she thought differently to all the rest. The pirate, of course, was female, by the name of Charlotte de Barry. Born in 1624, she was of an age just as the golden age of pirates began. Reputed to have taken up with a pirate, she followed him back to his ship, disguised as a man, and learned the trade until her aspirations of captaining her own ship were realised. Pity then it was via a later Captain who had kidnapped and forced her to marry him, that harbouring a deep down hate for what he had done to her, she bided her time, and working with the crew finally killed him and took over his ship.
Was it a female crew? It was a question I wasn’t going to ask, but I suspect it was not. All the references were circumstantial, but there was a journal, not belonging to the captain, but the mate, chronicling their adventures, but the captain referred to in that journal was Captain Rodolph. Certainly, the story matched that of Charlotte.
Then there was an account of her in ‘A History of Pirates’, and again, it could be construed it was Charlotte. I wanted to believe it was true for her sake. The journal had one particular entry, rather long that detailed the burial of treasure to be collected later, in Jamaica, not far from Port Antonio in a place named, now, Frenchman’s Cove.
The thing is, as a work of fiction, it was entirely believable. I could write it, and it would be, as she said, a best seller because everyone wants to believe there’s treasure out there, somewhere.
When I asked her about the journal, she said it was a handwritten translation from a number of writing books that dated back to the late 1800s. She had considered the entries might be the work of a fertile imagination, but there were too many entries that had a ring of authenticity to them, that the writer had to be aboard a pirate ship.
Others had dismissed them as just that, fictional entries, but she had cross-referenced the dates with other known documents. A lot depended on their authenticity, and it begged the question of why someone else hadn’t taken the information. The person she’d bought them off had found them in an old chest up in the attic of her grandparent’s house in England, thought them to be just a work of fiction and put them out for sale in a garage sale. A lucky find, perhaps.
That didn’t mean I didn’t believe she made a tangible discovery. All it needed was some artifacts, and it would take on a whole new life, and that was where time and money played a huge factor. Like Howard Carter, those two items were running out.
This, by her own admission, was going to be her final attempt, and I was hoping it would be successful.
After making arrangements to be away for a few weeks and channelling the funds into an account accessible to both of us, we hopped on a plane and headed for Kingston, Jamaica, on the first leg of the trip.
We were planning to head off to the site near Port Antonio, a small Cove where they had to stop and make repairs after a battle at sea with a British frigate, and where the decision was made to offload the treasure into five chests and bury it.
The precise location was not exactly described in the journal, but there were references to landmarks that bore similarities. It was enough to go ahead and get the government documents required to explore. She had deliberately made it obscure by outlining a thousand more acres than was necessary.
Imagine then our surprise to find the Jamiesons, father and son, at the check-in counter having arrived the same time as us. It was the best hotel in Kingston, so perhaps not so much a surprise.
Jackson noticed us first. “Elizabeth, fancy meeting you here. Or not. This is your stomping ground. Found any pirate treasure yet. What’s it been, seven years? Did you break a mirror?”
I could see the expression on her face and the anger about to boil over. I stepped between them.
“I think that was a bit uncalled for, Jackson.”
“Why am I not surprised to see her with a trashy novelist. Couldn’t be an archaeologist, so you just invent stuff. I’m not surprised her university funds were cancelled. It’s going to real archaeology.”
It wasn’t hard to read between the lines. “Why are you here?”
“Haven’t you been reading the papers? We’ve found the location of the treasure. It took a week. Not seven years. I guess you’re as big a failure as your boyfriend here.”
She was going to remonstrate, but it wasn’t the place or the time. We needed facts if he had stolen her dig. I turned to her and said, “There’s no point discussing this while you’re angry, and we don’t know what’s happened, or if it’s the same dig. We’ll check in and then find out what’s going on.” I certainly didn’t want to argue with him here, now.
I could see the anger blazing in her eyes, and if I let her, I was sure that the police would end up being called. Instead, I hustled her away to a safe distance. Right then, I didn’t think her opinion of me went anywhere but down.
I saw Jackson say something to the father, and he looked over at us with an odd expression. Whether or not he had heard his son belittling us, he definitely looked uncomfortable, which to me was odd.
“Why did you do that. You know what this is about. He is not content to create his own miracle find. Now he’s trying to steal mine.”
“You don’t know that for sure. He might have found something else entirely. This place has more than one dig right now, and Pirates are in the news. Let’s check-in, go to the room, and then I’ll make a call. When my first book was published, I got a call from an editor of the paper here. I’ll call him and see what he has to say. Jackson said that it was in the news.”
I could see she was still angry but saving her from making a scene in the hotel lobby was better than the alternative and might play into their hands. I had to sigh in relief when she did as I asked.
“Do you have someone local you can call and see what’s happening at your site? I assume you shut it down before coming back?”
“Yes. I left Jimmie there. He lives nearby. Oddly, he hadn’t called to tell me anything.”
“Then perhaps it’s not your site Jackson was referring to. They could be somewhere else.”
I was hoping it was.
A half-hour later, a local newspaper in hand, and seeing a small story about the famous Egypt archaeologist who was in Kingston to make an announcement about his next exciting project, I arrived back in my room. I could see she was trying to phone her local assistant, just as I tracked down the editor.
He was delighted to hear I was in Kingston and asked if it was for a book signing.
“No. I’m not sure why my agent doesn’t schedule signings all over the world, it would certainly make a difference to the dark attic I seem to be continually stuck in, writing.”
“Really?” He seemed to believe me.
“No, not really, but some days I feel like it. Actually, I’m here because a friend of mine has been working on a dig of her own, investigating one of the few female pirates one Charlotte de Berry, and the myth of buried treasure.”
“A story no doubt you will be writing about.”
“Something like that. There is another archaeologist in town, we just ran into the Jamiesons downstairs, and I read in the paper there’s going to be a big announcement. Do you know what it is?”
“As it happens it’s about the same pirate. But no one believes it’s possible. One of our experts and believe me she knows everything about Pirates and Jamaica, says that whatever he turns up, it will have nothing to do with Charlotte de Barry, or anyone else. Any treasure buried or otherwise will not be found. “
“You say that with a lot of scepticism”.
“I read your story on the Jamieson Egypt dig and it dripped with scepticism. My impression is that you have proof, you just never played that card. They tried to stop the publication of your first book. Not the wisest of moves because it turned it into a best seller. It might have just disappeared into the ether had he not.”
A blunt but true assessment. I had thought it would not get any interest and end up on the remainder tables. Then came the lawsuit, and the reluctant publisher that had delayed the release, suddenly published and glad they did.
So was I with the three-book deal that followed.
“They simply saw that there was no merit to their case. But still, it could as you say disappear into the ether. When is the press conference?”
“Three days. They’re going to the site, do a preliminary investigation, and then tell the world. I fear this may be a gigantic hoax and it’s not what we want or need.”
“Then I shall put on my investigative journalist hat and see what it’s about. And you can have the story whichever way it turns out.”
“Thank you. We shall speak again.”
I disconnected the call and looked over at Elizabeth. She did not look happy. “What did you find out?”
“Jimmie has gone missing. I spoke to Fred, another chap I was working with, and he said that a large team of people arrived a week ago and set up about a mile away from my site, closer to the Cove. He says that the man in charge is Jackson Jamieson. I sent him a photo and he ID’ed him. I think Jimmie has sold me out. I told him I would be back with his money but apparently, he called the Jamiesons and said if the price was right, he’d tell them everything.”
“Including the place where you think the treasure is?”
“No. Only I know where that is. But if he rips up the site, then might just bulldoze over the top of it.”
“Can they do that?”
“How much money can they throw at it?”
A lot.
“Then we need to get there and see what’s happening for ourselves. They’ll probably go by helicopter. We’re going to have to drive there.”
“If we go tonight?”
“We could do that.”
“I’m sorry but this is just too much. I should have guessed something like this would happen. It’s all become a very cut-throat business, and I’m just not up for that end of it.”
“Well let’s wait and see. It all might be a storm in a teacup.”
An hour later, while Elizabeth was showering and changing her clothes, I said I was going down to tell the front desk we would be away for a few days. In reality, I told her a small lie.
There was one stop along the way. The presidential suite, where I knew the intrepid father and son archaeologists were staying. I didn’t have to ask the front desk.
Standing outside, I rang the doorbell, and a minute later, a man came to the door, what looked to me like a butler.
I’ve come to see Aristotle Jamieson. I don’t have an appointment but tell him it’s Leo Brightman, and it’s in his best interests to see me.”
“Very good. Please wait.” Then he shut the door again, leaving me out in the passage.
Five minutes passed before he returned. “Mr Jamieson will see you now. Follow me.”
It was like some of the very large apartments I had seen in New York when I was contemplating living there. A large living area, a passage to two bedrooms, and a study or meeting room that would double as a dining room.
He was sitting at one end of the table in the meeting room, documents, folders, a computer, and a phone set out neatly in front of him. The son was not in the room, thankfully. The butler closed the door behind me, and we were alone.
“If you’ve come to plead her case to withdraw, it won’t work. Her claim expired two weeks ago, and she should have renewed it.”
“That’s part of the reason I’m here, but not the only. To be clear, I was, and still am in fact, an investigative journalist. You will know this because a lot of my first book was based on my investigation into your Egyptian find. You tried to stop publication and force a few changes, but ultimately, I have you to thank for making me far wealthier than I would have been digging around looking for stuff that’s increasingly rare to find. So thank you.”
“And yet, I sense a but.”
“The but is a man named Antoine Gascon.”
I could see the flicker of recognition and the attempt to hide that tell.
“He died five years ago. A grubby little man who forged Egyptian trinkets to sell on the black market for extortionate sums to gullible fools.”
“He was murdered, you know. I investigated his death because I didn’t believe he had died accidentally. Turns out the toxicology report the police received wasn’t the real report.”
“Not my concern.”
“Not right now, but it will be. Six years ago, a week before his untimely death, he and I sat down and had an extensive interview. He showed me his workshop and the trial-and-error artifacts he created for you. Just so you know, there are numerous copies of this interview in the hands of various people who will make that information public under certain circumstances.”
“No one would believe it, because, as I said, he has been proved to be a liar and a cheat.”
“That may be, but when he told you he destroyed all the prototypes and moulds, and I know you or your son, he didn’t specifically say, was there when he did, the fact is he kept two, both of which you generously donated to the museum. When he made those, he made two identical artifacts, which experts will discover when they do a thorough examination. The location of them is in the recorded interview. Now you can keep up the charade, or we can do a deal. I’m not interested in making a mockery out of archaeology, but I do want something that will be very easy for you to grant. If that happens, then you won’t be reading about a certain scurrilous archaeologist.”
I could see he was wrestling with the idea of just bluffing me and sticking to his original story so that no one would believe Antoine. Had he not shown me the two artifacts, I would have done the same in his place. I would have liked to be able to read his mind.
After a small sign, whether of defeat, or pragmatism, he said, “And what guarantee do I get in return.”
“If you leave Elizabeth and her dig alone, the interview never sees the light of day. I don’t care what you do, just don’t destroy her one chance. You can join her, but it is her dig and her glory. You have yours and you can keep it. As I said, it’s in the best interests of everyone that the status quo remains. It’s up to you. We’re leaving for her dig site in a few hours. If she chooses to go where you set up your circus, they should be informed that it is her project and that they are working for her. Your collaboration will be appreciated. Your son, just keep him under control, he wasn’t particularly nice earlier.” I stood.
“Is that all? I assume you will not be destroying those tapes?”
“No. Just in case you change your mind in the future, or, if anything happens to you, your son decides to go off the reservation. What I’m asking for is no skin off your nose. We don’t have to be friends, but it would help if you simply played nice.”
“I’ll think about it.”
I shrugged. “Don’t think too long.”
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© Charles Heath 2024
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