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Rhinoplantiquity
by Zach Smith

He was an eccentric man who came from and had a lot of money, and he collected art that he wasn’t supposed to have... if what he said was true.
I met him for the exchange at his hunting lodge, Woodrest Manor, deep in Somerset, England. When we were alone in his library, he pulled down on a bust of Lord Baden-Powell, and one of the bookshelves rotated to reveal a hidden room. This was the secret place he kept the various treasures he did not display to the public.

The walls were lined with shelves and curio cabinets displaying damaged pottery and statuettes unearthed from dig sights both attic and biblical. Chunks of marble from broken statues, chips of porcelain from cracked and otherwise priceless Ming vases, pagan idols defaced in Christian purges, and even certain unmentionable pieces from roman statues “censored” in the Victorian age.

At least that is what the collector told me about these things.

He liked to tell his stories.

I’m not sure why he believed them.

Yes, these could have been originals like he claimed, But they could have been fake too; there really was no way to tell… which was good for me.

At the center of the collection, sitting under a bell-jar, was a small lump of limestone, the presentation of which indicated that it was perhaps the most valuable piece in his collection.

“What is that?”

“You wouldn’t believe me,” he said.

“I might.”

“Very well.”

He lifted the bell jar and picked up the rock, and hefted it in his hand.

“This is a piece of the missing nose from the Great Sphinx of Giza.”

That was a dubious claim at best. Bold. Nearly as difficult to prove as it was to disprove.

I inspected the rock with a jeweler’s loop. It fit the color and pattern, at least from what I’d seen, but still, limestone was limestone. It could have come from the Sphinx of Egypt or just as easily from El Capitan across the pond or the White Cliffs of Dover right here in merry old England; people took limestone for granite.

But I agreed that it was part of the Sphinx’s missing noes, perhaps the most famous missing noes in history, boosting the limestone’s provenance, and my credibility.

“What have you brought me?” he asked.

I put the chunk of sphinx nose back under the bell jar, pulled out my briefcase, opened the crushed velvet bag inside, and removed the marble lady’s finger.

“What is this?” he asked.

“This is the left hand, middle finger, of the Venus De Milo.”

He looked at it for a long time.

“Your loop please?” he asked seriously.

“Sure,” I said, handing him the loop.

He looked at the piece more thoroughly, then looked at me, the loop still in his eye, hammering home his words.

“You think I believe everything people tell me?”