Clues and Conclusions (Bran and Crowe Secondhand Books)

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I don't really know how to structure this yet.

Printed Ephemera from Hamilton Golding[edit]

Hamilton Golding has a manuscript codex for sale by auction at Bonham's before Easter. This leaflet has a first draft of a catalogue entry for the lot. Decoding the abbreviations, the exterior is half hide, metal boards, Folio, with bosses, clasps, and corner-pieces. The interior is vellum folios, manuscript, historiated initials, Latin inscribed in various hands, with a Latin manuscript vellum letter laid inside. It's 500 years old at least. Oddly, it doesn't say what the contents are, apart from historiated - decorated with histoires, i.e., figures of men or animals, rather than with floral or formal designs. If it's named like Codex Sinaiticus that's not mentioned either.

Document Analysis
It was typeset and printed on Saturday 17 Mar 1934 by a jobbing printer.
Occult
A wishlist of occult codices. Number 1 is reputed to be bound in iron in the lost original. Number 4 is reputed to be bound in steel.
  1. Book of Iod
  2. Book of Skelos
  3. Emerald Tablet
  4. Firenze Tome
  5. Ghorl Nigral
  6. Key Of Solomon (Clavicula Salomonis)
  7. Lesser Key Of Solomon (The Goetia)
  8. Parchments of Pnom
  9. Sepher Ha-Zohar (Book Of Splendor)
  10. Sepher Yetzirah (Book Of Formation)
  11. Testament of Carnamagos
Document Analysis
Typeset in Rockwell, a very new typeface from Monotype released this year. Printed with an Albion hand press. A jobbing printer with a Monotype system and the very latest Monotype matrixes, and an iron hand printing press designed in 1820 but still manufactured today? That's no ordinary jobbing printer.
Craft (papermaking)
It's printed on laid (i.e., handmade, chain lines & wire lines) art (i.e., coated, glossy) paper, normally used for expensive limited edition books of etchings or prints.
Bibliography 1-point spend
Golding's ephemera was printed by the Fanfare Press in St Martin's Lane, London. They aren't a jobbing printer as such. They do fine printing and advertising work.

Hamilton Golding[edit]

Credit Rating
You've (i.e., Frances Bradley) never met Hamilton Golding before. His accent marks him as upper middle class.
Golding is a catalogue agent. (Sebastian & Malcolm know that already, you'll learn much more about Golding at the bookshop)
Bookseller
The word is he's a personal catalogue agent, though no one knows who is client is. Someone with deep pockets and an aversion to publicity. Of course, in the absence of facts, rumours flourish, but I don't put much stock in them.
He's a bit of a snob, real upper-crust type. I've found the best way to deal with him is to be polite.
Book Scout
He's a solid fellow, certainly knows a fair amount when it comes to art, both of our sort and the more traditional, illustrative variety. I'm unsure if you remember last summer, when myself and others were running around purchasing translations of the Confessio Fraternitatis after he bought a Spanish translation over at Simons'. We are all so certain his client was looking for such items and hoping to be paid generously for them.

Walled Up Manuscript[edit]

It's written in the Freemason's cipher, which any schoolboy knows.

Antiquarian
Bibliotheca Sussexiana is a descriptive catalogue of the Duke of Sussex's vast library, but it covers only the Theology works in 2 volumes and 3 parts. Volume 1, parts 1 & 2, is Manuscripts. Volume 2 is Bibles.
Art (Calligraphy)
It's written in a masculine hand of the Regency period, even though it's more like block capitals.
Bibliography
Thomas Pettigrew served as librarian to the Duke of Sussex from 1818 to 1845. His three-volume catalogue of His Grace’s collection, the Bibliotheca Sussexiana, covers only a portion of the whole, mostly theological and religious works from all over the world.
Bibliography (Malcolm Collins)
The extensive and valuable library of the late Duke of Sussex was sold at auction by Messrs Evans; in 1844 on the 1st and 31st July, 12 August; in 1845 on 30 January, 22 April, 11 August. The two biggest buyers were Sir Thomas Phillipps and the British Museum.
You've seen the complete set of the sale catalogues of the Bibliotheca Sussexiana, the only complete record of the Duke's vast library, come up for auction themselves. There are people who collect sale catalogues.
Franklin Dunhill's bibliophile grandfather, who collected the library you were trying to get access to last night, was collecting in the 1840s. There should be a set of Bibliotheca Sussexiana sale catalogues in Dunhill's library.
Chemistry
The paint on the reverse of the last sheet is a typically Victorian period linseed oil based paint. It shouldn't be difficult to replicate.
Craft (Papermaking)
It's Regency period paper. It'll be laid rag paper. Watermarked, no doubt.
Cryptography
You can read it straight off the page because it's the pigpen cipher, also called the masonic cipher, Freemason's cipher, or Rosicrucian cipher. It purports to be Volume 3, Occult.
Document Analysis
You can date the paper and ribbon to before 1854. The paper was from Her Majesty's Stationery Office, James Street, Buckingham Gate.
Occult
Besides many occult works that you are familiar with, the catalogue contains some interesting works that you are unfamiliar with. The most recent is
Charles Leggett, Mysteries of the Worm, London 1821. An English translation of the German black-letter translation of the Latin De Vermis Mysteriis.
The most interesting is
Anon., Cultus Maleficarum (The Sussex Manuscript), Sussex 1598. Dedicated to Baron Frederic of Sussex, an English translation of the Latin translation by Olaus Wormius of the Greek Necronomicon. Not a manuscript, but a printed book that resembles an illuminated manuscript.
Textual Analysis (Sebastian Crowe)
What you can decipher in your head matches Thomas Pettigrew's style. This seems to be an unknown volume of the Bibliotheca Sussexiana.
Textual Analysis (Frances Bradley)
It was written in the 1820s, it's a descriptive catalogue, and the style matches the Bibliotheca Sussexiana closely.

Threadneedle Street[edit]

Bibliography (Malcolm Collins)
The six men with Golding are partners or senior staff from these booksellers:
  1. Edward G. Allen & Son Ltd
  2. Ellis
  3. E.P. Goldschmidt & Co. Ltd
  4. Maggs Bros.
  5. Myers & Co.
  6. James Tregaskis & Son
The Knowledge
This is Alf Jackson's corner. He's got a better whistle since the last time you came past here.
Bibliography (Frances Bradley)
That's Ernest Maggs! The man who negotiated with the government of Soviet Russia to acquire not only a Gutenberg Bible, but also the Codex Sinaiticus.
Bargain
A wealthy Italian arrived in London on Friday morning, stored something in the Bank of England before he went to his hotel, returned after lunch with Hamilton Golding and spent the afternoon in the Bank. Golding returned to the Bank on Monday morning as it opened.
Assess Honesty
Alf is telling you the truth.
The Knowledge
Percy Clarke is a cabbie. He's easy to find. You know where he stops for his tea, where he garages his cab, and so on.

Regent Street at Air Street[edit]

Streetwise 1-point spend
The bespectacled man (i.e., Evelyn Hathaway, bookseller) is an associate of Compeyson Kane, the fence. When Hathaway needs to dispose of stamp collections, coins, or weird family heirlooms profitably, he does so through Kane.
Flattery 1-point spend
Hathaway's bibliophily is fine bindings.

Manuscript Codex[edit]

Golding's client requests that as few people as possible handle the codex.

Bibliography
The half hide is not calf, nor goatskin, there are no follicles, perhaps it's sharkskin. The boards are grey metal and slightly incised with a herringbone pattern. There's dirt but no corrosion visible. The bosses, clasps and corner pieces are the same metal. The clasps are on the lower board, so it comes from elsewhere in Europe than England and France.
It is not in the usual wedge shape caused by swelling of the vellum in damp, nor is the vellum wrinkled and cockled by being too dry. The clasps would be under no strain keeping the codex closed.

Opening the upper board reveals the Latin vellum letter laid in.

Languages (Latin)
For the love of God and for Christendom and our common salvation, from this day onwards, as God will give me the wisdom and power, I shall keep this codex secret and safe in this, the vault of Rinaldo, protected by Saint Francis and the bones of my brothers.
The first signature underneath is
Fra Lodovico degli Anguillara Anno Domini Nostri Iesu Christi 1440
The signatures continue down the vellum sheet and overleaf in an apparently unbroken series of Italian priests. The last signature is
Fra Teobaldo Catazara AD 1910
History
Fra Lodovico is likely a relative of Everso degli Anguillara, who was a condottiero and member of the House of Anguillara, one of the most important Roman families in the early Renaissance.
The Battle of Anghiari was fought in 1440, between Milan and the Italian League led by Republic of Florence in the course of the Wars in Lombardy.

Under the letter is the first folio of the manuscript. It has an historiated initial letter, decorated with a picture of an ox. It's not in the Latin alphabet.

Occult
These symbols bear great similarity to those on the mysterious rongorongo boards found on Easter Island.

The first Latin inscription is on the reverse of the first folio.

Languages (Latin)
No, for me, if they are her face and a hundred tongues a hundred, and voice of iron, all the forms of crimes, the names of all those punishments beyond my power.
Occult
It is in the handwriting of Cecco d'Ascoli, an astrologer burned at the stake in 1327.
Document Analysis
You are sure it is the handwriting of Cecco d'Ascoli though a check in the Museum would not hurt.
Textual Analysis
He wrote it late in his life, in the 1320s, and the style is not his usual. It's poetry, but utterly unlike his normal poetry. It's like his mind is unravelling. It was written in the last 3 years of his life, but not during his trial.

A later inscription

Languages (Latin)
Behold, I devise, against this family an evil from which you shall not withdraw your necks, and you shall not walk haughtily, for this is a very evil time.
Occult
It bears the signature of Francesco Prelati. Prelati was named in the trial of Gilles de Rais. Rais was hanged in 1440 for crimes committed in the 1430s.
History 1-point spend
See the Wikipedia articles on d'Ascoli and Rais and their references up to 1934 verbatim.

Tower Bridge Road[edit]

The Knowledge (interpersonal)
The wealthy Italian arrived in London at Waterloo Station.
His manservant is German and named Stefan. He addresses his master as signore.
They are staying at Claridge's in Mayfair.
Their luggage had 'Homeric' labels on it. The box that was 'Not Wanted on Voyage' went into the Bank.
Assess Honesty
Percy Clarke is telling you the truth.
The Knowledge
RMS Homeric is a White Star Line ship. Their headquarters are Oceanic House, 1 Cockspur Street, Westminster. A short walk from Bran & Crowe.

Report of PC Warmuth[edit]

"Last Monday, the twelfth of March, I was proceeding up Buckingham Street towards John Adam Street. I greeted Mr Bran as he passed me on his way to Charing Cross tube station. Shortly after I heard him cry out. I ran back and found him coughing violently on his hands and knees in York Terrace. Once the coughing had ceased Mr Bran requested that I assist him to the station, which I did. When I parted with Mr Bran I went back and examined the area where I believe the attack took place by torchlight. I could find no sign of another person there."

(Crowe asks "You believe Bran was attacked? But, was he robbed? Did he say anything to you?")

"I believe Mr Bran was attacked, Mr Crowe, but Mr Bran did not make a statement to that effect. After I helped him to the Underground station, I could see no marks of violence on him, just the wet marks on his clothing where he'd been kneeling in the rain. He still had all his possessions on him, I saw him checking his pockets. After that he just thanked me by name and passed through the ticket barrier. I reported the incident when I returned to the station house."

"Mr Crowe, the police are satisfied that Mr Bran died of pneumonia, because that's what the doctors agree on, and it's likely the Walthamstow coroner's court will agree too. Officially, Mr Bran had a coughing fit. It sounded like he was being strangled to me. When I ran up and shone my electric torch on him, it changed into a coughing fit."

(Collins asks "How much time was there between your hearing Bran and laying your eyes on him? Could someone have had time to run away? Or hide somewhere in the area? He surely couldn't have been attacked by some unseen assailant?")

"Well, Mr Collins, I wasn't far up Buckingham Street, maybe 30 yards or so. I didn't hear any fleeing footsteps on York Terrace, or in Victoria Embankment Gardens, but it was raining and the ground would have been soft. I didn't see any footprints there afterward."

Assess Honesty
PC Warmuth has been truthful the whole time.
Occult
Frances constructs a mental list of grimoires that confer invisibility.
  1. The Book Of Abramelin
  2. The Grand Grimoire
  3. The Key Of Solomon (Clavicula Salomonis)
  4. The Lesser Key Of Solomon (The Goetia)
  5. The True Grimoire (Grimoirium Verum)

British Museum[edit]

Library Use
A montage of Frances in the catalogues and stacks with prints, pencils, and notebook.
  1. Fra Lodovico degli Anguillara was a member of the House of Anguillara and is mentioned in a history of the Anguillara family.
  2. Fra Lodovico and all the signatories with biographies were Franciscans and the family priests of the Albizzi family.
  3. The Albizzi family, originally based in Arezzo, were at the centre of the Florentine oligarchy from 1382 to the rise of the Medici in 1434.
  4. Rinaldo degli Albizzi and the rest of his clan, excluding his brother Luca, were exiled under the Medici regime in 1434.
  5. The family returned to Florence in the early 16th century and rebuilt their palazzo in Borgo degli Albizzi.
  6. Rinaldo degli Albizzi died at Ancona in 1442.
Library Use 1-point spend Languages (Italian)
The Florence newspaper La Nazione has reports on the Albizzi family. The current head of the family is a young man, Luca, in his mid twenties. He is unmarried and lives in the family palazzo with his mother. Signore Luca degli Albizzi reported the family priest Teobaldo Catazara missing on 28 Feb 1934, and Catazara was found stabbed to death in Arezzo on 3 Mar 1934. The polizia are seeking an American, Professore Clive Lewiston, to assist them with their inquiries.
Occult
Clive Lewiston is a researcher of classical and medieval texts on ritual magic at Miskatonic University.

Ghost of Pre-War Bran[edit]

They are dressed in an old fashioned frock coat, stiff wing collar, and holding gloves and a bowler hat: English business dress before the Great War. They are also pale blue and translucent.

Chemistry
The gas ring is on.
Evidence Collection
The bookshop's daybook from 1906 is open on Bran's old desk. It's open to Tuesday 20 March, today's date. The calendar for 1906 is the same as for 1934.
The splashes on the kettle match Bran's "through the spout" method of filling the kettle. Crowe always fills the kettle through the lid and there's no splashes.
The Knowledge
Malcolm doesn't have keys to the shop, but someone athletic could be able to get in through the yard behind the building. It's normally accessed from Bedford Court, but there's a shortcut through the Medical School next door.
Streetwise
The boy is Ronald Galvin. Ronnie's a budding rough lad from the East End. Someone has sent a message and Ronnie is the courier.