When the wall collapsed inward, I saw it. A long wooden case, old, worn, with brass corners that had gone green with age. It had been placed carefully in the niche, positioned so that it rested flat, undisturbed, for what must have been decades.
I set down the hammer. My hands were shaking, though not from exertion. I lifted the case from the wall and set it on the workbench beside the mirror.
The latch was stiff but functional. The lid opened with a soft resistance, like a book that hadn’t been read in years but whose binding still remembered how to flex.
Inside, resting on a bed of faded velvet, was a watch.
A pocket watch. Gold. Heavy in a way that told you the weight was deliberate—that whoever made this had understood that certain objects should feel like they matter when you hold them. The case was decorated with enamel work so fine it looked painted, and around the edge of the lid, tiny sapphires were set into the gold with the precision of someone who measured in fractions of millimeters and considered anything less than perfection a personal failing.
I opened the lid. On the inside, an engraving in French. And a date: 1896.
I turned the watch over, looking for a maker’s mark. Found it on the inner case, stamped with the quiet authority of a name that didn’t need to announce itself.
Patek Philippe.
I didn’t immediately understand what I was holding. I knew the name—everyone who’d ever glanced at a luxury magazine knew the name—but I didn’t understand the significance of the date, the enamel, the sapphires, the French engraving. Not until I photographed the watch and sent the images to a horologist whose name I found through three hours of research, and he called me back within twenty minutes, his voice careful in the way that people’s voices become careful when they’re trying not to alarm you.
“Where did you get this?” he asked.
“It was my father-in-law’s.”
“Do you know what it is?”
“A pocket watch.”
A pause. “It’s a Patek Philippe from an extremely limited series produced in the late nineteenth century. There are perhaps six known examples. Three are in museums.”
My legs went weak. I sat down on the workshop floor, the phone pressed to my ear, staring at the open case on the bench above me.
“How much—” I started.
“I’d need to examine it in person. But based on the photographs alone, we’re talking about a figure that would be…” He paused again. “Significant.”
A month later, after the expert evaluation and full appraisal—conducted by three independent specialists who handled the watch with cotton gloves and spoke about it in the hushed tones normally reserved for religious artifacts—they told me the amount.