A Roman-era Stone Fragment was thought to be a piece of the epitaph from Saint Peter's tomb.
History[]
Around October 1937, Professor Aldrich Savage and his apprentice Sidney were carrying out an excavation at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City when they uncovered a Roman-era Stone Fragment. However, the dig was suddenly shut down and the piece confiscated by a Blackshirt occupation of the Holy See coordinated by Father Cesare Ventura and Prime Minister Benito Mussolini.[1]
Sidney got detained by the Italian Fascists on trying to take back the artifact but a distraught Savage was later found by Indiana Jones–an archaeological peer at the Vatican disguised as a American priest to chase down a stolen Cat Mummy–who offered his assistance and rescued Sidney before locating the Stone Fragment hidden elsewhere in a cellar at a property on the Via del Pellegrino.[1]
Intrigued by the partial Latin text speaking of a patron of fallen angels and the Great Circle, Jones reunited with Savage and his apprentice back at the Apostolic Library and returned the Stone Fragment. Still oblivious that the helpful Jones was an academic counterpart, Savage was stunned when the supposed clergyman 'guessed' that the artifact was a section of the epitaph from the tomb of Saint Peter.[1]

