Cat's Headstone was a £200,000 Piece of Saxon History
A 1,000-year-old stone carving marking a cat's grave sold yesterday for more than £200,000.
Ruth Beeston had no idea of the value of the statue, a memorial to her cat, Winkle, in her garden in Somerset. Her husband, Johnny, who died last year, found the slab in a quarry years ago, and thought it would make a nice headstone.
But, at Sotheby's in London yesterday, a private collector paid a total of £201,600 for the limestone carving of St Peter.
The piece dates from the early 10th century and was spotted by a local potter and amateur historian, Chris Brewchorne.
Alexander Cader of Sotheby's said of Mrs Beeston: "It was like winning the lottery for her. She is going to be thrilled and I think she is planning a trip to Kenya. It is going to have a real impact on her."
Why does this story remind me of Stephen King's "Pet Semetary"?