“Oh, I’m so sorry, excuse me, I wasn’t looking where I was going!”
Ba’al had lost count of how many times he had bumped into someone today, and this felt like the third time he was stooping to pick up his fallen papers. Things were busy, as they always seemed to be for him, but had been running around quite a bit recently. There always seemed to be something to do, something to translate, something to dig up. Ba’al had been knee-deep in a bog in the Amazonian rainforest when the owl reached him. He had been leading a dig to uncover a cache of ancient weapons buried somewhere in the much, hopefully wrapped in some thick fabric to prevent disintegration. It was common for indigenous tribes to leave hordes of weapons and gold for emergencies.
The London Museum of Magical Artifacts had requested his expertise in translating an Assyrian stone tablet collection that they had recently gotten a hold of. Ba’al was an expert linguist and historian and had worked with them a few times before. The museum was quite nice, though the people there seemed somewhat stuck up. That was why he preferred to stay out in the field or at the universities. Dealing with private collectors and museums tended to get messy. And messy it did get when he discovered that the museum had a collection of pebbles, rumored to be the raven’s creation stones from Kwakwaka'wakw mythology. Ba’al knew for a fact that if the descendants of the Kwakwaka'wakw tribes still living in North America knew they had these stones, they would be livid. The stones were stolen some two centuries ago and had somehow ended up here. He knew he had no choice but to retrieve them and bring them back. Unfortunately, they were under lock and key, with a web of wards and a security panel protecting it from people like him.
He was so deep in thought that he hadn’t realized how late it was. He gathered his things and made his way out, passing by the café. There was a lone figure sitting there. He recognized the young lady as a member of the museum’s founding family. He’d met her and her grandmother in passing the day before when he was first brought in. What was her name…Aine? Ba’al doubted the girl remembered him, she probably came into contact with a lot of different historians and scholars. He was considering walking right past her, but something made him pause. She would have access to the museum’s security panel and she would know exactly which ward held the east wing’s display case in check.
Ba’al had heard things about Aine, the current heir to the museum. She wasn’t like the rest of the society ladies in this area, from what he could tell. He’d heard a few whispers and caught a few bits of conversation from others when she walked past a group of gossiping women. People tended to ignore Ba’al’s presence since he was just a lowly historian to most of these people, and he was okay with that. He usually didn’t pay much attention to the elitist gossip he was surrounded by, which allowed him to hear quite a bit of intel.
But would she want to help him? That was a huge leap, but it wouldn’t be the first time he’d gotten inside help to rob a museum. He usually liked to work alone, but having friends in the museum business, especially someone who was in line to inherit the whole museum, seemed like the perfect match. Shifting the four long rolls of parchment under his arm, he squared his thick black glasses on his nose and approached her table.
“Hi, ah, um, I don’t know if you remember me... I’m Ba’al, the linguist translating the Tiglath Pileser III decree tablet on the fourth floor. Do you, uh, mind if I join you?”