Wildfire Griffin (Fire & Rescue Shifters: Wildfire Crew #1)(76)
“Come on, Brithelm,” she coaxed under her breath, as though a warrior who’d been dead for over fifteen hundred years could obligingly shift his grave into a more discoverable position. “Don’t be shy.”
Unfortunately, Brithelm continued to be a coy corpse, as her sweep of the perimeter turned up not even as much as a bent copper coin. Virginia eyed the CCTV cameras, wishing that she’d taken a few electronics or computing courses alongside her archaeology major as an undergrad. As it was, her extensive and detailed knowledge of Anglo-Saxon Migrations (AD 400-900) did not provide her with any particular insights as to how to disable a modern security camera. With a shrug, she started sweeping her way across the monitored area anyway. Having spent the better part of three months single-handedly examining every other square inch of the hills above Brighton, she could hardly turn back now.
“Come on, Brithelm,” she pleaded, each foot of ground covered eroding her hope.
Four years of research, three preliminary papers, two trips to Europe and one nearly-exhausted grant all led to this tiny bit of churned mud. She’d staked her reputation on this find. If there was nothing here—
The metal detector squealed.
Virginia’s heart leaped into her mouth, and she dropped to her knees. Carefully locating the source of the signal, she pulled her trowel from her tool belt and started digging. She methodically passed the metal detector from deepening hole to growing pile of earth and back again, testing each shovelful as she dug. Nothing. Nothing. Nothing.
Signal!
Virginia gently sifted the soil through her shaking hands. Her bare fingers brushed metal, and a peculiar, very unscientific thrill shot through her veins. Even before she rubbed off the dirt, she was strangely certain that this, this was what she’d been looking for, and that somehow it had been looking for her too.
Though exactly what it was she had found wasn’t immediately apparent. The gently-curving piece of metal was as wide as two of her fingers, and about five inches long. Cradling it in one hand, Virginia fumbled with her night vision goggles with her free hand, pushing them up onto her forehead. She took her penlight from her tool belt, clicking on the narrow beam of light, and directed it onto the piece.
“Oh, you beauty,” she breathed, as the light illuminated the unmistakable gleam of pure gold.
She turned the piece over. The concave side was smooth, but the convex side was chased in intricately worked patterns. Even through the concealing grime, Virginia could see that the workmanship was exquisite. An enormous domed gem glinted up at her from the center of the piece, the shifting highlight trapped in its heart making it look like the slitted eye of some fabulous beast.
Like...a dragon? Virginia’s heart skipped a beat.
“Brave Brithelm, with the dragon’s eye,” she said aloud in Old English, quoting one of the few handful of surviving texts from the period that referred to the warrior.
Suddenly what she was looking at clicked into place. “The nose guard of a helmet.”
She imagined how it would have looked complete, how the jewels and gold work would have crowned the head of the warrior who wore it in a dazzling display of wealth and power. “A bright helm. Brithelm.”
“Ah, the indefatigable Virginia,” drawled a familiar, amused male voice from behind her, nearly making Virginia drop the precious artifact. She just managed to shove the nose-guard into her pocket before she was pinned in the beam of a flashlight. “Why am I not surprised?”
“Bertram.” Virginia stood and turned, her eyes watering in the sudden glare. Even though her heart was hammering in her mouth, she would rather have died on the spot than given her nemesis the satisfaction of knowing he’d startled her.
“What, slumming it out in the field? I thought you liked to leave that sort of thing to us,” she made air quotes with her fingers, “‘less intellectual dirt-diggers.’“
“Unintellectual dirt-diggers, my dear,” Bertram said, his aristocratic British accent making each syllable ring like cut glass. “Do learn to quote sources accurately. It would improve your papers immensely.”
He sauntered forward, delicately picking his way over the churned ground. As ever, he was impeccably dressed in a slim-cut pale grey suit that had probably cost as much as Virginia’s entire research grant.
He twitched the flashlight’s beam down to the hole at her feet, then back up to her face. “My, haven’t you been a busy girl.”
I didn’t hear a car, Virginia realized uneasily.
Bertram looked as freshly-pressed and crisp as if he’d just dropped out of the sky, but she could only assume that he’d been lurking in the shadows the whole time. Had he seen the nose-guard?
She forced herself to keep her hand away from her coat pocket, and her voice light and even. “Have you been following me, or just hanging round here in the hopes I’d turn up?”
“I had a feeling your little wild goose chase might lead you to do something rash.” Bertram inclined his head in the direction of the CCTV camera. “I thought it prudent to keep an eye on my father’s investment. After all, I did recommend this site to him as an ideal location for his latest hotel. Such charming views, after all.”
“You knew,” Virginia spat, fury making her fists clench. “You knew all my research pointed to this being Brithelm’s grave. You aren’t fit to call yourself an archaeologist, you, you vandal.”