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Authors: James Twining

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BOOK: The Gilded Seal
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This novel was inspired by the theft of the
Mona Lisa
in 1911

and its eventual recovery in 1913, an event which triggered

one of the largest criminal investigations in history and to

which the
Mona Lisa
owes much of her present-day fame.

All descriptions and background information provided on

works of art, artists, thefts, forgery detection techniques and

architecture are similarly accurate. Unfortunately, the Clare-

mont Riding Academy, which is briefly featured in this novel,

announced its closure shortly before publication, but the de-

scription was left unchanged as a tribute to the sad passing of

a much loved New York landmark.

For more information on the author and on the fascinat-

ing history, people, places and artifacts that feature in

The Gilded Seal
and the other Tom Kirk novels, please visit

www.jamestwining .com.

Extract from
Lives of the Most Eminent

Paint ers, Sculptors, and Architects
by Giorgio

Vasari (1568), translated by Gaston du C. de

Vere (1912)

Leonardo undertook to execute, for Francesco del

Giocondo, the portrait of Mona Lisa, his wife.

In this head, whoever wished to see how

closely art could imitate nature, was able to

comprehend it with ease; for in it were counter-

feited all the minutenesses that with subtlety are

able to be painted . . .

. . .
The nose, with its beautiful nostrils, rosy

and tender, appeared to be alive. The mouth,

with its opening, and with its ends united by the

red of the lips to the flesh-tints of the face,

seemed, in truth, to be not colors but flesh. In the

pit of the throat, if one gazed upon it intently,

could be seen the beating of the pulse. And, in-

deed, it may be said that it was painted in such a

manner as to make every valiant craftsman, be

he who he may, tremble and lose heart.

And in this work of Leonardo’s there was a

smile so pleasing, that it was a thing more

divine than human to behold; and it was held to

be something marvelous, since the reality was

not more alive.

2 j a m e s

t w i n i n g

The Washington Post
, 13th December 1913

Mona Lisa,
Leonardo da Vinci’s great painting,

which was stolen from the Louvre, in Paris, more

than two years ago, has been found [and a man

arrested]. It is now in the hands of the Italian

authorities and will be returned to France.

Mona Lisa
or
La Joconde
as it is more prop-

erly known, the most celebrated portrait of a

woman ever painted, has been the object of an

exhaustive search in all quarters of the globe.

The mystery of its abstraction from the Louvre,

its great intrinsic value, and the fascination of

the smile of the woman it portrayed . . . have

combined to keep alive interest in its recovery.

On being interrogated, the prisoner said his

real name is Vincenzo Peruggia . . . “I was

ashamed,” he said “that for more than a century

no Italian had thought of avenging the spolia-

tion committed by Frenchmen under Napoléon

when they carried off from the Italian museums

and galleries, pictures, statues and treasures of

all kinds by wagonloads, ancient manuscripts by

thousands, and gold by sacks.”

P R O L O G U E

There is only one step

from the sublime to the ridiculous.

Napoléon I

MACARENA, SEVILLE, SPAIN

14th April (Holy Thursday)— 2:37 a.m.

It started with a whisper; a barely voiced tremor of sup-

pressed anticipation that rippled gently through the expec-

tant crowd.


Pronto. Pronto estará aquí
.” Soon. She’ll be here soon.

But the whisper evaporated almost as quickly as it had ap-

peared. Snatched from their lips by a capricious wind, it was

carried far above their heads into the warm night, only to be

casually tossed between the swirling currents like autumn

leaves being chased across a park.

It was replaced, instead, by the distant sound of a lone

trumpet, its plaintive, almost feminine cry echoing down the

winding, cobbled street. This time, people made no attempt

to conceal their excitement, and their faces flushed with a

strange inner glow.

“Ahora viene. Viene La Macarena.”
She’s coming. La Maca-

rena is coming.

The crowd, almost ten deep on both sides of the street,

surged forward against the steel barriers that lined the route,

straining to see. In between them, the dark cobblestones

fl owed like a black river, their rippled surface glinting occa-

sionally in the fl ickering light.

6 j a m e s

t w i n i n g

The man allowed himself to be carried forward by the

breathless host, sheltering in the warm comfort of the ano-

nymity they provided. In the crowd, but not of it, his eyes

skipped nervously over the faces of those around him rather

than the approaching procession. Had he lost them? Surely

they couldn’t find him now.

He caught his own reflection in the polished rim of a lan-

tern being carried by a woman in front of him. His leathered

skin, dark eyes glowing like hot coals, the steep cliff of his

jaw, the ruby-colored razor slash of his lips, his wild mane of

white hair. The unmistakable mask of despair. He had a

sudden vision of an aging lion, standing on some high prom-

ontory, taking one last look at his territory stretching toward

the horizon and at his pride, lazing beneath him in the setting

sun’s orange-fingered embrace, before heading quietly into

the bush to die.

A cheer drew his gaze. The fi rst
nazarenos
had swung into

view. Sinister in their matching purple cloaks and long

pointed hats, they trooped silently past, their faces masked

with only narrow slits for eyes, a black candle grasped sol-

emnly in one hand. Behind them, a marching band dictated a

steady pace.

“¡Está aquí! ¡Está aquí!”
She’s here! She’s here! A small

boy with long golden hair had fought his way through to where

he was standing and was jumping to try and get a better look.

The man smiled at his eagerness, at his uncomplicated and

breathless excitement and, for a moment, forgot his fear.

“Todavía no. ¿Ves?”
Not yet. See? He swept the boy off

the ground and lifted him above his shoulders to show him

how far the procession still had to run before the solid silver

float containing the statue of the Virgen de la Esperanza

Macarena would appear.

“Gracias, Señor.”
The boy gave him a faint kiss on the

cheek before diving through the legs of the people in front

with a snatched wave.

The fi rst fl ower-strewn fl oat shuffled past—the sentencing

of Christ by Pontius Pilate. The faint aroma of incense and

orange blossom drifted to him on a mournful sigh of wind

and he breathed in deeply, the smells blending harmoniously

t h e g i l d e d s e a l

7

at the back of his throat like cognac fumes. How had it come

to this? It had all happened so long ago now. Forgotten.

He looked back to the procession and saw that the
nazarenos

had given way, temporarily at least, to two rows of
penitentes—

those who sought to repent of their sins by walking the pro-

cessional route barefoot and with heavy wooden crosses slung

over their shoulders. He smiled ruefully at the sight of their

bruised and bloodied feet, part of him wanting to take his

place alongside them, the other knowing it was too late.

A sudden break in their somber ranks afforded him a clear

view right through to the other side of the street. There sev-

eral
monaguillos
, children dressed as priests, were handing

out sweets to the people standing in the front row. They were

all smiling, the peal of their laughter filling the air. All apart

from one man who, his phone pressed to his ear, was staring

straight at him.

“They’re here,” he breathed. “They’ve found me.”

He turned away, instinctively heading against the fl ow of

the procession to make it harder for anyone to follow him.

Elbowing his way through the crush, he came to a narrow

street and darted up it, past a drunk pissing in one doorway

and some kids making out in another, the boy’s hand shoved

awkwardly up the girl’s top. Halfway along, he veered right

down a side alley where bright banners and wilting fl owers

hung lazily from low, sagging balconies.

He skidded to a halt outside a large wooden gate. The sign

nailed to it indicated that the building was currently being

renovated by Construción Pedro Alvarez. That meant it was

empty.

It only took him a couple of seconds to spring the padlock

open. He stepped inside and carefully closed the gate behind

him, finding himself in a small courtyard littered with paint-

spattered tools and broken terracotta tiles. A dog had fouled

the large pile of sand immediately to his left.

In the middle stood a well. He made his way to it. It was

disused, a black grille over the opening rendering the bucket

suspended above it purely ornamental. This was as good a

place as any.

A match flared in the darkness and he held it to his small

8 j a m e s

t w i n i n g

notebook. The dry paper clutched at the fl ame, drawing it in

like water, the fire gnawing hungrily at the pages’ pale skin

until only the charred spine remained. He glanced toward

the gate. He still had time. Time to leave some clue as to

what he had discovered before it was too late.

The knife bit into his palm, the blood welling up through

the deep gash and then oozing through his fingers, sticky and

warm. He had barely finished when the gate burst open.


Está allí. Te dijé que le iba a encontrar. ¡Venga! ¡Venga!

Antes de que se vaya.
” He’s in here. I told you I’d fi nd him.

Quick! Quick! Before he gets away.

He looked up and recognized the little boy he had lifted

above the crowd earlier pointing triumphantly toward him, a

cruel look in his eyes, blond hair shimmering like fl ames in

the darkness.

Five men shot through the doorway, two of them overpow-

ering him instantly by bending his right arm up behind his

back and forcing him to his knees.

“Did you really think you could hide from us, Rafael?”

came a voice from behind him.

He didn’t answer, knowing it was pointless.

“Get him up.”

The grip on his arm relaxed slightly and he was dragged to

his feet. A cold, blinding light snapped on. Rafael held his

other hand up to his face, shielding his eyes. A video camera.

The sick
putas
were filming this. They were filming the whole

thing.

A shape materialized in front of him, a solid black outline

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