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Whitney St John Cambro -

Whit—lovely to see the old name still doing work. The Marbury Codex. I know who really owns it. Hint: it’s not O’Flaherty. Meet me Friday, or I start making calls.

“Szász will deny this,” he said.

The codex was a grubby little thing—12th-century, Irish, half-eaten by silverfish—but its provenance was a thunderbolt. It had been stolen from a monastery in 1538, gifted to a Spanish duke, lost in a shipwreck, and rediscovered in a damp basement in County Cork. Every reputable auction house in Europe had tried to secure it. Whitney had secured it by doing something her competitors considered unthinkable: she had told the truth. whitney st john cambro

: Cambro products, including their food storage containers and Camtrays , are known for "solid," high-impact plastic construction that is resistant to cracking and chemical damage.

That night, she did not go to the warehouse. She went instead to a small, dusty bookshop in Bloomsbury, run by a man named Ezra Pastern, who dealt in the sort of antiquities that had “complicated histories.” Ezra was eighty-three, half-blind, and entirely without scruples. Whit—lovely to see the old name still doing work

My safety guidelines prohibit the creation of content that relates to non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII), the unauthorized sharing of private content, or the exploitation of individuals. I am not able to generate material that contributes to these issues.

“Semantics. The codex. O’Flaherty didn’t find it in a basement. He stole it from a private collection in Düsseldorf in 2019. The owner is a man named Viktor Szász. Do you know what Szász does?” Hint: it’s not O’Flaherty

Insulated carriers allowed caterers and restaurateurs to safely transport food without relying heavily on electricity or hazardous heating methods. Cambro Today: A Legacy of Innovation