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Authors: Hailey Lind

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BOOK: Brush With Death
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“Garlic and a crucifix.”
“A squirt gun filled with holy water.”
“A revolver with silver bullets. And don't forget the wooden stakes.”
“Would a paintbrush work?”
“Just don't use the Russian sable. A hog's hair brush ought to be good enough for your average ghoul.”
We laughed and retraced our steps to the Chapel of the Madonna, picked up our palettes, and settled in to work.
 
The half-moon “lunettes” we were restoring were painted in the manner of the early Renaissance, featuring a bevy of angels surrounding a flock of wooly lambs. In the background a da Vinci-style landscape with a curving river, a rise of sandy bluffs, and a faraway medieval town were crowned by an azure sky with wispy clouds and soaring birds.
The murals had been painted on canvas and attached with strong wallpaper adhesive. Water leaking through the plaster had detached the canvas in spots, trapping the moisture and creating an ideal environment for mold and decay. Mary and I had begun by laboriously removing the canvas from the walls, taking care not to stretch the weave. We dug out the damaged plaster, applied a stucco patch, and sealed the area with a water-impermeable shellac primer. Next we removed the adhesive from the backs of the murals. This was the trickiest step, and I was relieved to discover that the lunettes had been applied with “milk glue,” which was not uncommon in old installations. The casein in milk curds is made into glue and used in many household paints. Although the milk glue rendered the canvas vulnerable to decay, it was easy to strip off with water and a mild soap.
Parts of the canvas of both murals were unsalvageable, and so, using a sharp-edged razor, we had cut along the natural divisions of the painting so that when we patched the holes with new canvas and repainted, the seams would be invisible. In areas where the paint had bubbled up or flaked off but the canvas remained intact, we scraped off all shreds of the old paint. We next glued the lunettes back onto the walls, allowing the heavy-duty wallpaper paste to dry thoroughly. The prep work completed, Mary and I started applying the underpainting. Only then could we move on to the fun part: filling in the areas where the original paint and gold gilt were stained, faded, or had flaked off altogether.
While we painted I told Mary the romantic legend of
La Fornarina.
She insisted on referring to the woman in the painting as “Fornie,” but otherwise was enraptured by the tale. I was about to recite an excerpt from Honore de Balzac's nineteenth-century poem about the love affair between Raphael and his model when Dante called to announce he was out front to drive Mary back to San Francisco. She packed up her supplies and bid me a cheerful good-bye. I was a little sleepy but wanted to put the finishing touches on the background before calling it a night. Dabbing the tip of my paintbrush in a blend of lead white, oxide of chromium, and sap-green oil paints, I concentrated on applying the tiniest highlights to the background trees.
One of the challenges every artist faced was resisting the lure to do too much. Whenever I was tempted to overpaint, I remembered the cautionary tale of my college friend Gerald the Mad Sculptor. Gerald had worked two jobs for six months to afford a five-foot-tall, two-foot-wide block of black marble for his first major sculpture. Excited at finally being able to sculpt, he had holed up in his studio and commenced carving. By the time he put down his chisel a month later the black marble was only eighteen inches high and as big around as his stringy thigh.
In art, as in life, it was important to know when to quit.
After filling in a few shadows and highlights, I covered my palette with plastic wrap to keep the paint from drying out or skimming over. Then I rinsed my brushes in solvent, wiped my palette brush clean, and recapped the paint tubes and jars of mineral spirits. Time to check out
La Fornarina.
I studied the floor map Cindy Tanaka had given me to locate the Alcove of the Allegories, then shoved the map into the bib pocket of my overalls and headed to the bathroom to wash my paintbrushes. I walked down the Romanesque cloister along the east side of the building, made my way down three small flights of tiled stairs to the tiered gardens patterned on the Alhambra, and passed through successive alcoves known as the Chapels of Slumber, Serenity, and Spirit.
Following the twists and turns of the mazelike corridors, I pondered Cindy Tanaka's odd request.
La Fornarina,
Italian for “the little baker girl,” was not just
a
Raphael—one of the greatest painters of the Italian Renaissance—it was arguably
the
Raphael. By far the most personal of Raphael's exquisite portraits,
La Fornarina
depicted a young woman with almond-shaped eyes, alabaster skin, a forthright expression, and a seductive smile. Clad in a bejeweled turban and a gauzy cloth that she hugged to her rounded belly, the nearly nude woman gazed boldly at the viewer, her right hand touching her left breast. Art historians tripped over their bow ties to insist that the gesture owed more to classical Roman sculptural conventions than to lewd intent, as if Raphael's desire for his subject would lessen the painting's beauty.
Because no great artist ever painted with lewd intent,
I thought.
It was inconceivable that the original
La Fornarina
was hanging in the columbarium, labeled a copy. Famous paintings might be disguised as reproductions to fool customs officials, but in general it was the other way around: a fake was painted to conceal the fact that an original had been sold or stolen, to commit insurance fraud, or to dupe greedy or gullible collectors. Only when a painting was assessed for insurance purposes or for sale might its origins be discovered, and, if the forger were sufficiently talented, the truth might never be revealed. The best forgeries—the kind by artists such as my grandfather—were themselves works of art. One of the art world's dirty little secrets was that museums regularly bought and exhibited forgeries; indeed, experts estimated that as many as forty percent of museum paintings could be fakes. San Francisco's own Brock Museum displayed my grandfather's copy of the great Caravaggio masterpiece,
The Magi.
But the odds of a genuine Raphael hanging in Oakland's Chapel of the Chimes Columbarium were roughly akin to the odds of da Vinci's
Last Supper
decorating the men's room of the 12th Street Greyhound Station. What could possibly have given Cindy such an idea?
Turning the corner into the California room, I spotted the tiny bathroom door at the end of a narrow corridor. After washing out my brushes and using the bathroom, I would follow the Hall of the Cherubim to the Corridor of the Saints and take a look at the copy of
La Fornarina.
Then I could go home and climb into be—
“Annie.”
Letting out a shriek, I leapt in the air before collapsing onto a low garden wall opposite a statue of the angel Gabriel. I ducked my head between my knees and concentrated on breathing as black spots danced before my eyes.
“How I've missed you,” said a deep, amused voice.
I tilted my head to peer up at the man I knew as Michael X. Johnson. The last time I had seen him he was being dragged off to jail. Apparently he had managed to talk his way out of a well-deserved prison sentence.
No surprise there.
Michael and I met a year ago, yet I had no idea what his real name was, where he lived, how old he was, or what he looked like naked—though my imagination had taken a good run at that one. I
did
know he was a no-good thieving scoundrel, and one hell of a fine kisser.
“Go away,” I said, my voice muffled by my denim-clad legs. “I hate you.”
He laughed and collected the scattered paintbrushes I had dropped.
I sat up and glowered at him. “Why can't you call on the telephone, like a normal person? Why do you have to pop out of thin air and scare the you-know-what out of me?”
“And miss your reaction?” Handing me the brushes, he sank onto the bench and stretched out his long legs. Michael's devilish grin revealed straight white teeth and made his eyes crinkle adorably. His broad shoulders were clad in an aged brown leather bomber jacket, his snowy white shirt was open at the throat, and a pair of faded Levi's hugged his narrow hips and muscled thighs. Wavy dark brown hair brushed the top of his collar. As if this were not enough, his long-lashed eyes were as green as the beer at a North Beach pub on St. Paddy's Day.
Each time I saw Michael he was sexier than the time before.
How was that possible?
I wondered, irritated by his abundance of masculine pulchritude. Must be a trompe l'oeil—a trick of the eye.
“I only scream when you're around,” I grumbled.
“Oh, I doubt that. How've you been, Annie?” he asked, his eyes roaming over my overalls with a hint of lust and a glint of amusement.
Why did I always look so awful when Michael dropped in? Maybe I'd sinned in a previous life and the Fates were feeling vengeful. That would explain a lot.
“I'm fine. What are you doing here in the middle of the night? Are you after the—”
I caught myself. The columbarium had many valuable artifacts, such as the carved Roman birdbaths, the tables inlaid with precious stones, antique religious texts, and a superb collection of American portrait miniatures. But these relics would not attract Michael X. Johnson, art thief extraordinaire. He specialized in big-ticket items, art so expensive it would give Bill Gates sticker shock. Could Cindy Tanaka's wild suggestion be true? Why else would Michael be snooping around a columbarium in the middle of the night?
Relax, Annie,
I chided myself. It was a coincidence, nothing more.
“Am I looking for the what?”
“Nothing.”
“Annie, I do believe you're fibbing.”
“Go away.” I glared at him.
“I just got here.”
“Go away anyway.”
“Okay,” he said, standing up.
“Wait!”
“I thought you wanted me to go.”
“I'll see you out,” I said, unwilling to allow him to roam the columbarium unescorted. Not that throwing him out would slow him down. He'd broken in once, he could do it again.
Michael smiled. “Feeling better?”
“Right as rain,” I said and stood, only a little wobbly. “I just have to use the bathroom.”
“Of course.”
“On second thought, it can wait.” In my mind's eye I saw Michael locking me in the toilet while he stole whatever he'd come for, leaving me to face the authorities without even a decent lie at my disposal. Talk about getting caught with your pants down. “Come with me.”
“I'd follow you anywhere, my love.”
I snorted.
“Aren't you curious as to why I'm here?” he asked.
“I know why you're here.”
“I don't think you do.”
“Maybe I don't care.”
“Are you sure?”
Our eyes held for a moment and I tried not to recall the touch of his lips. My heart remembered and sped up, the traitorous thing.
“Okay, pal, time for you to run along.” I grabbed his arm and pulled him down the hallway to the Chapel of Brotherhood. From there it would be a quick jog over to the Gregorian Garden, through the Cloister of Contentment, past the Garden of Enchantment, then a quick left and a right to the Main Cloister and the exit. I hoped.
“Interesting place,” he commented, gazing about as we walked. “Quite lovely, in fact. A bit of a maze, though, isn't it? Do you ever get lost?”
“Nope.”
“Really.” The suppressed humor in his voice made my blood boil.
“My mind is like a global positioning system,” I bragged, though this was not even remotely true.
“So I guess that means we've been going in circles on purpose?”
“We haven't been going in—” I halted as we emerged in the Gregorian Garden for the second time. “What I mean is, this isn't the same place. It just looks like it.”
“Ah,” he said with a nod.
I stomped off, Michael in tow. He launched into a long-winded tale about encountering a ghost while attempting to steal—“to liberate,” he insisted—a Gainsborough painting from a castle on the coast of Ireland. “It was a knight, complete with armor. I don't know how they fought in those things. This guy could scarcely walk. Then again, he
was
dead. . . .”
I listened with half an ear as I tried to remember where the exit was. As Michael droned on, we snaked through the twists and turns of the narrow hallways, went up and down stairs, and arrived once again at the Gregorian Garden.
“I'm enjoying our stroll,” Michael murmured as I stopped short, confused but unwilling to admit it to Mr. I'm-So-Cool-Even-Ghosts-Don't-Scare-Me. “But could I make a suggestion?”
“What.”
“I believe the exit's that way.” He pointed in the opposite direction.
“I knew that.” I yanked him by the elbow in the direction he had suggested.
“Excuse me?”
“Keep walking.”
“It's always so special spending quality time with you, Annie.”
I ignored him.
“I ran into your assistant as she was leaving. Such an interesting fashion sense, that one. She's a Goth, isn't she? Anyway,” he continued, “she said something about someone called Fornie, and—”
“Oh, for the love of—” I cut myself off, afraid that swearing in the presence of religious icons and human remains would double my no doubt lengthy sentence in purgatory. “I can't
believe
she told you—”
“Relax, Annie. Haven't you heard? I'm no longer in the business.”
I snorted.
BOOK: Brush With Death
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