“Nothing I didn’t learn from the monster films when I was a kid.”
“I publish several lines of paperbound books, and this was the cover painting for a science-fiction novel. I liked the painting, even if the book lost money. Only one thing sells these days.” He grinned and chose a book at random from the case beside him. Nick needed only a glance at the bare-bosomed model and the sex-slang title to know the kind of book it was.
“You publish pornography?” he asked Kincaid.
“I publish what the people buy. One year it’s dinosaurs, the next it’s derrières. Makes not a particle of difference to me.”
Nick merely grunted. He was hardly in a position to comment on other men’s morals. “What is it you want stolen?”
Kincaid tapped the framed painting with his index finger. “This one is a Tyrannosaurus Rex, the largest flesh-eating creature that ever existed. Its teeth alone were eight inches long, and its total length was something like fifty feet. The Brontosaurus was larger, of course, but it ate only herbs and plants.”
“You seem to know a great deal about them.”
“It’s a hobby of mine.” Kincaid smiled with satisfaction. “But to get to the point, Mr. Velvet. You are familiar with the Museum of Ancient History in upper Manhattan?”
“Of course.”
“They have a fine complete skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus Rex there. I want you to steal its tail.”
Nick Velvet simply stared at him, letting the words sink in. He had received some strange assignments in his career, but never anything like stealing the tail from a museum’s dinosaur skeleton. “Not the whole thing? Just the tail?”
“Just the tail. The last few bones of the tail, to be exact.”
“All right. How soon do you need it?”
“Before the end of the week. I do believe it was fate that brought you here today, just when I needed you.” He walked a few steps to a small wall safe and returned with a packet of money. “This much in advance. The rest when you deliver the tail.”
They shook hands and Nick pocketed the money. Then he left the room in search of Gloria. When he found her she was looking unhappy. “I never thought you were coming back, Nicky!”
“Didn’t you enjoy your chat with Lynn Peters?”
“Not really. She doesn’t actually know too much about jumping.” Gloria put down her glass. “Maybe we should go now, Nicky. They really aren’t our sort of people.”
“No,” he agreed. “I don’t think they are.”
On Monday morning Nick drove down to New York. He left the Major Deegan Expressway at 155th Street and crossed the Harlem River into Manhattan’s northern limits. From there it was only a five-minute drive to the Museum of Ancient History, a big rambling redbrick monstrosity that reminded him of the Smithsonian on a bad day. The parking lot was nearly deserted this early, and he pulled up near the front entrance.
Inside, the place was all that its exterior promised — high ceilings with dusty skylights, marble floors, an air of mustiness that seemed to filter right through his clothes. It was everything a museum of the 1920’s should have been, and if it was still that way nearly a half century later, one could only sigh with regret and remember those earlier, grander days.
Nick made his way through the Egyptian Room and the Etruscan Wing, coming at last to the Hall of Great Reptiles. And there it was, in all its baroque splendor — Tyrannosaurus Rex, towering 25 feet into the air and stretching back nearly 50 feet from head to tail. There was something sad and oddly dated about the hundreds of polished bones wired together as a memorial to this creature of long ago. After the indignities of the zoo, would modern animals be subjected to such extravagancies, too? He’d read somewhere that only 600 tigers remained in the world, and he wondered if some future generation might be forced to view the skeleton of a charging Bengal as he now-viewed this blanched relic.
He walked the full length of the great beast and paused to examine the jointed tail section. There was certainly nothing remarkable about the dozens of small bones that made up the tail. He bent closer across the rope barrier for a better look, but there was nothing to explain his assignment. He’d hardly expected a jeweled tail, for example; yet there must be some reason for the proposed theft.
Almost at once a uniformed guard appeared and called out, “Not too close there, mister. Them things are delicate!”
“Sorry. Just wanted a good look. Know where these bones came from?”
The guard moved closer, friendly now. “Out west somewhere. It tells on the sign. In most of these skeletons we have to use some fake bones. It’s impossible to find one of these things complete.”
Nick nodded and turned away, not wanting to show too much interest. “It sure was big,” he said by way of conclusion, and drifted back to the Etruscan Wing.
He might have passed directly through to the Egyptian Room if he hadn’t recognized a familiar face bent over one of the glass display cases. It was that of Lynn Peters, the girl he’d met at Kincaid’s house. Her flushed cheeks and sandy hair were unmistakable, even if she was not wearing her riding costume.
“Hello there,” he said. “I believe we met yesterday after the horse trials.”
She turned, the fresh young smile coming naturally to her face. “Oh, it’s Mr. Velvet, isn’t it? I had a nice chat with your wife last evening.”
“Gloria’s just a friend,” he corrected her amiably. “But what brings you here? I don’t see a single horse in the whole place. Not a live one, anyway.”
“They’re having a special exhibit of antique jewelry, including some pieces from ancient Egypt.” She led him to a nearby case filled with what looked to him like beaded trinkets. “That necklace of gold and jasper and amethyst is from the twelfth dynasty — two thousand years B.C.! Can you imagine?”
She seemed genuinely excited by the necklace, and Nick had to pretend a mild interest. Almost at once he noticed another guard, watching them from a high balcony that ran around the room. “This place is alive with guards, isn’t it? Don’t they trust anyone?”
Lynn Peters brushed the long hair from her eyes. “They’ve had some trouble — a number of robberies during the past couple of years. The latest one, a few months back, was the last straw, I guess. Someone stole the famous Pliny diamond, one of several brought from India to Rome about the year 60 A.D., and described by Pliny in his writings.”
Nick grunted, vaguely remembering having read something about the robbery in the papers. “I don’t know much Roman history, but I always thought Pliny was a politician of some sort.”
“Pliny the Younger was, but his father was. a naturalist. He wrote a thirty-seven-volume Natural History, which still survives. The diamond that bears his name is a really fabulous stone, almost priceless. Though of course it doesn’t have the brilliancy of modem gems.”
“Why is that?”
“The art of lapidary wasn’t fully developed until the middle years of the Eighteenth Century — around 1746, to be exact. Before that, very little was known about the faceting of diamonds to give them the sparkle and brilliance we know today.”
“You speak like a true authority.”
She smiled at the compliment. “I’m studying to be a lapidarist. I work at the diamond exchange on West Forty-seventh Street.”
“An unusual occupation for a young lady.”
The grin turned impish. “Did you think I spent my life falling off horses?”
“Hardly.” He was watching the guard on the balcony. “Just what happened to this Pliny diamond?”
“It was stolen from one of these showcases, just as other jewelry had been earlier. An alarm sounded when the glass was broken, of course, but by the time the guards got here there was no sign of the thief. Each of the thefts happened during the daytime hours, which is why they now have a guard assigned to every room. At night they have an elaborate alarm system, and two guard dogs patrol the place.” She chuckled at the thought. “I always imagine the dogs carrying off the dinosaur bones and burying them somewhere.”