171273.fb2 According to Their Deeds - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 49

According to Their Deeds - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 49

EVENING

The train came to a final stop. Charles exited and wandered toward an exit with his briefcase, Angelo a few steps behind with the satchel of books.

“Penn Station,” Charles said, and they walked up the stairs and to the central hall.

“It is big.”

“Have you seen anyone?”

“I don’t see anyone.”

“It’s probably hard to tell here. There are so many people.”

“Too many,” Angelo said.

“First we’re going to Horton’s on Fortieth.”

Angelo’s face lifted as they left the station.

“It is tall,” he said. He was not impressed.

“Yes. Most people notice. We have about a half mile to walk.”

“Do they have a Metro?”

“The Subway. But I’d rather walk, I think.”

They crossed to Seventh Avenue and turned left. The sidewalks were crammed and people moved much faster than in Alexandria. No one’s eyes met theirs.

“I cannot see if anyone is watching us,” Angelo said after a while.

“I don’t know what we’d do if someone was.”

“This is Horton’s.” It was.

“I will stay here.” Angelo stopped outside the door.

“No, come in.”

Angelo obeyed. He stepped over the threshold, and then stopped.

Six of Norman Highberg’s shop could have fit inside; and besides antiques, Horton’s did furniture. The display tables and cases were works of art by themselves. Thousands of pieces were ranged around them: Byzantine, Baroque, Beaux Arts, Bauhaus; porcelain, pewter, paintings. Not much of human history or geography was not represented.

“Do you remember Derek Bastien’s house? The man who was killed.”

“I remember.”

“He had lots of things like these.”

“I never touched them.”

Charles paused. “I know you didn’t. Here,” he picked up a candlestick from a display of silver in the front aisle, “hold it for a moment.”

Angelo took it, turned it from one side to another, and handed it back.

Charles replaced it on the table. “Angelo, I don’t believe you’ve ever touched a valuable antique before in your life.”

“What do you mean?”

“Nothing. Just the way you held it.”

“Mr. Beale. I am Edmund Cane.”

Charles turned and extended his hand. “Mr. Cane. Thank you so much for seeing me.”

“So good to see you again.”

“Thank you. Although we’ve only barely seen each other before.”

“I do remember,” Mr. Cane said. “You were in the back row?”

“Yes, I was. I came in during the bidding for the desk.”

“Of course. I believe I said that I’m no longer interested in the desk.”

“Yes, you did say that.”

“I am, however, interested in the books you purchased at the auction. The thirteen volumes mentioned in the catalog.”

“As it turns out, there were actually fourteen,” Charles said.

“The catalog was incorrect?” Mr. Cane’s enunciation was as stiff as his white hair was riotous. “I believe it said thirteen volumes?”

“There were thirteen volumes at the auction. Derek Bastien had fourteen, but one had been separated from the others.”

“I would want them all.”

“Yes. I don’t have that particular one in my possession.”

“I would take the ones you do have.”

Charles nodded. “I think I would like to know who is actually trying to buy them.”

Edmund Cane’s speech had been robotic. Now he seemed to have blown out his transistors. He froze, jerked slightly, and finally computed an answer.

“I’m very sorry, Mr. Beale, but of course I can’t give you that information.”

“That’s too bad,” Charles said. “It is quite a mystery, isn’t it? First the desk, and now the books.”

“I really can’t comment.”

“There’s a lot of mystery surrounding the whole Bastien estate. I’ve been told that a few of the pieces stolen from the house have been recovered by the FBI.”

“I am currently only interested in the books.”

“Yes,” Charles said. “I only deal in books, but the FBI actually questioned me concerning the other pieces.”

“I suppose they would be interested in the stolen antiques.”

“Yes, exactly. Did any of them come from here?”

“Here?”

“I wondered if Derek Bastien had bought anything from Horton’s. Did the FBI ask you about them?”

Mr. Cane wasn’t sure of any reason not to answer. “No one from the FBI has been here about anything stolen from the Derek Bastien estate. I don’t believe he had purchased any of them or any pieces at all from us.” At about two syllables per second, the sentence took a long time.

“No one at all? You’re quite a large dealer in antiques.”

“We do cooperate with the FBI. It is our normal procedure to compare our pieces with their lists. But no one has been here in specific reference to the Bastien estate.”

“I see. I suppose you deal with their New York office?”

“Of course.”

“I wish you could tell me who you were representing,” Charles said.

“I am sorry, Mr. Beale, that I can’t help you. I would still want to purchase the thirteen volumes you have.”

“I am sorry, Mr. Cane, that I can’t help you.”

“I see.” Mr. Cane dealt with the sorrow. “Then I hope your trip hasn’t been wasted. What else are you doing in the city, Mr. Beale?”

“As I said, I have a meeting at nine. Just book business. And no, stopping in hasn’t been a waste.”

The next walk was twenty minutes.

“This is Briary Roberts,” Charles said. “It’s a very old antique bookstore. It’s been here more than a hundred and fifty years.”

“I will stay out.”

“You could at least bring those books in.”

So again Angelo followed Charles over a threshold. At the counter, Charles said, “Is Mr. Peake in?”

The Alice-ish young woman said, “May I tell him who is asking?”

“Charles Beale. I have some books for him, and I also want to ask him a question.”

“I’ll see if he can come down. Just a moment.”

Charles used the moment to stroll. Angelo stood beside the counter, the book satchel at his side.

“Come look at this,” Charles said.

Angelo came.

“It’s just a book of photographs,” Charles said. “These are New York tenements a hundred years ago. They would have hundreds of people in a building like this. There would be six or eight people in a room the size of yours, but no window.”

The page held Angelo’s interest. “Where do they come from?”

“They’re immigrants. They came from Italy and Poland and other countries in Europe.”

“People still live in these buildings?”

“There are new immigrants there, but it isn’t nearly this bad. These people”-he touched some of the faces on the pages-“their great-grandchildren live in houses out in the suburbs, all over the country. They have jobs and families. That was why these people came, so that their children could live better lives.”

Angelo turned a page. “What are these people?”

“That’s Ellis Island. They are just arriving in America, maybe that very day. They’ve left everything they know behind to come to a place they’ve never seen. They don’t speak any English. They have hope, but here, I think they are mostly afraid. When you came to our shop the first day, it was something like that.”

“I was not afraid.”

“Oh no, I didn’t mean it that way. I know you weren’t.”

“Charles!”

A teapot of a man, short and stout, came bubbling and whistling toward them.

“Ah, Mervyn, here you are. Here, I’d like you to take a quick look at something. Angelo, they have some books to trade for the ones in your bag. I’ll be back in a few minutes.”

“What do you think?” Charles said. Mervyn Peake was bent as much as he could be over the Odyssey.

“The quality’s good. The title page, or whatever you call it, doesn’t look good. Where’d you get it?”

“Off eBay. Just someone clearing out their attic.”

He gave it one more critical look. “Seven hundred.”

“I paid seventeen.”

“You’ve been snookered, then.” He gave Charles a critical look. “What do you think’s so funny?”

“I’m not laughing!”

“You’re rolling in the aisles. What’s the hook?”

“Mervyn, have you ever heard of a man called Mr. Smith?”

“Are you kidding me? Half the people who want to sell me books are Mr. Smith.”

“This Mr. Smith wants to buy a book. This book. He’s British, and I’m meeting him this evening at a restaurant called Rusterman’s.”

“On Twenty-eighth? I’ve been there.”

“Did you meet a Mr. Smith there?”

“No Smith. We had a dinner there once when the manager of our London branch came over.”

“Any particular reason you had the dinner there?”

“The British Consul in New York came, too. He picked it. He had some connection with the owner. It didn’t have anything to do with books.”

“We’re ready,” Charles said to Angelo. “Did you get the books?”

“I have those books from the lady.”

“Very good. It looks like we have plenty of time to get to Twenty-eighth Street.”

The sky was finally black, what little could be seen beyond the high walls and lights. The windows of Rusterman’s were bright but only looked into the lobby. The dining room was hidden.

“I will stay here,” Angelo said for the third time that evening.

“You are completely respectable, Angelo,” Charles said, “and it would be fine for you to come in. But Mr. Smith is expecting me alone.”

“That man, he knows I am here, he is watching. He doesn’t show up if I come in. I will wait outside and watch.”

“That’s fine. I don’t think he’s watching us, but maybe he is. I don’t know how long I will be.”

“Thirty minutes and I will look in there for you,” Angelo said.

“Charles Beale.”

“Yes, sir,” the maitre d’ said. “Please come this way.”

Through the foyer, but they did not turn into the dining room. Farther back in the hall, the master opened a door and stood back. Charles entered.

The room was comfortably sized for the single table, and at the table, very comfortably, sat a middle-aged man. He was impeccably dressed in a dark suit and silk tie.

“Thank you,” he said, and the maitre d’ bowed and slid out. “Mr. Beale. Please sit down.”

“Thank you. Mr. Smith?”

“Mr. Smith, yes.” His tone left no doubt that he was not. “I trust you had a pleasant trip.”

“Very pleasant.”

“Good. We won’t take extra time this evening. May I see the book?”

“Of course.” There was no place setting or food on the table, just a large flat envelope and a brick-shaped wrapped bundle. Charles opened his briefcase and set the paper package in the center. The man waited and didn’t move.

Charles took his white gloves from his pocket and pulled them on. He pulled the paper apart and lifted the book from its cushioning and held it forward.

Mr. Smith took a magnifying glass from his pocket and inspected the cover. “Please open it to the signature.”

Gently, he did.

The signature was considered.

“Turn the page, please.”

Charles turned to the half title. The imperturbable Mr. Smith tensed slightly.

“The full title page has been removed,” Charles said. “Evidently long ago.”

Mr. Smith took the large flat envelope from the table, and from it extracted a clear plastic sheaf enclosing a single, yellowed book page.

“Oh my,” Charles said. Her Royal Highness

Princess Victoria

History of the War of Troy and the Greeks

The Odyssey

Padding amp; Brewster, London, 1827

“There is a slight notch from the cutting,” Mr. Smith said. “I’d like to see that it matches.”

Charles held the book while the man compared his page to it.

Then the man leaned back. “I accept that it is authentic.” A tiny charge of excitement made the convivial smile he’d had from the beginning tremble, just a little.

Then Mr. Smith returned to his perfect poise. Pleasantly, he said, “I propose one hundred thousand dollars for the book.”

Charles paused. “It’s a very rare book, of course, but I wouldn’t have asked that much.”

“I have made inquiries into your business, Mr. Beale, and I don’t feel that negotiations are necessary.”

“But-”

“And this is the only offer that I’m authorized to make.”

Charles gestured with his empty hands. “Then by all means. I accept, very gratefully.”

He re-wrapped the book and held it out.

Mr. Smith received it, and in return handed him the brick-shaped package. “I hope you find that in order.”

Charles opened the end. “This is cash!” He recovered. “I’m sorry, I hadn’t expected it.”

“It is one hundred thousand dollars.”

“Mr. Smith, I’m very sorry-a cash transaction of this size, I would need some idea of who you are-”

“I hope you can deal with the formalities. I would prefer that there is no idea of who I am.”

“I see.” Charles smiled. “Yes, I can deal with the formalities. And please tell me, do you have the other volumes in the set? I suppose there would be an Iliad and an Aeneid?”

“They will all be together. Thank you, Mr. Beale. It has been a pleasure.”

“Thank you very much,” Charles said. “And please give Her Majesty my regards.”

Mr. Smith chortled as only an Englishman of his bearing could.

“What a romantic thought. But if I ever were to see her, I will.”

Charles stopped ten feet out from the front door. He still had the package in his hand.

“The deal is good?” Angelo appeared from the empty air.

“Um, yes, I think so.”

“That is the cash?”

“Yes, it is. How did you know it would be cash?”

“A deal is always cash. Did you count it?”

“I didn’t. It would have taken too long.”

Angelo’s eyes were on the package, but he managed a brief look of scorn at Charles.

“You don’t even count it?”

“I’m sure it’s fine.”

“Don’t carry it out in your hand.”

Charles opened his empty briefcase and put the package inside. “All right. We’ll just go back to the train station, then, and head home.”

Angelo swept the street with a quick glance and then fixed again on the briefcase in Charles’s hand.

Dorothy was parked in front of the deserted train station. The sky was moonless black.

“Hello, dear,” Charles said. He took the driver’s seat. “We did make it home.” Angelo slid silently into the back.

“Thank you,” she said. “Did you sell your book?”

“I did. It was all very interesting.”

It was 2:30 a.m. as they crossed the Potomac and ten minutes later when they stopped in front of the bookstore.

“Here we are,” Charles said to Dorothy. The street and the shop were as dark and empty as they could be. “I’ll only be a minute.”

“I’ll come in.”

Angelo followed with the book satchel. Charles turned on the light and put his code into the alarm.

“Thank you for coming, Angelo,” he said. “I’ll put those books down in the basement for Morgan.”

“Good night,” Dorothy said as Angelo disappeared.

The desk was empty except for its computer and one volume that hadn’t been returned to its shelf. Charles set the book satchel next to them. Then he opened the briefcase and took the package out and unwrapped it. There were ten banded stacks. It took over a minute to count one stack of one hundred hundred-dollar bills.

He didn’t count the others. He wrapped the stacks back together and set the package on a shelf behind a row of books.

He looked closer at the volume on the desk. It was the Dante; he opened it and read a few lines at random. For all the gold that is beneath the moon,

Or ever has been, of these weary souls

Could never make a single one respose.

Then he put it up on the same shelf as the package of money.

“Is everything all right?”

“Yes, it’s fine.” Charles turned the alarm on and the light off. He and Dorothy walked out into the night. The streetlamp sent their shadows flying.

Charles stretched his fingers as he opened Dorothy’s car door. “I’ve been carrying that briefcase all day. It’s nice to have my hands free.”

On the third floor, Angelo’s light turned off.

“One hundred thousand?” Dorothy was shocked.

“It was the only offer he was authorized to make.”

“Who was he?”

“Just Mr. Smith.”

“That’s how he signed the check?”

“No check, dear. Just hundred-dollar bills. A thousand of them.”

Dorothy was very shocked.

“Where is it?”

“In the basement at the store.”

They reached their house. Charles parked on the street in front.

“Does Angelo know?”

“Know what?”

“That there is a hundred thousand dollars of cash just downstairs from him.”

“Um, not necessarily.”

“Why didn’t you bring it home?”

“I thought it would be safer locked in the basement of the store.”

“Is it just lying out?”

“It’s not lying. It’s telling the truth.”

“Charles.”

“It’s on the shelf behind the Dante.”

They were finally settling into bed at three o’clock in the morning.

“You could sleep late tomorrow,” Dorothy said.

“Maybe I will. I’m not as young as I used to be.”

“You always will be, dear.”

“I’m too tired to think what that means. The only thing I have to do tomorrow is to call the police detective.”

“Did you see Mr. Horton?”

“Cane. Edmund Cane. Of Horton’s. Yes.”

“Did he tell you anything about the desk?”

“No, except that he never told the FBI anything about it. But someone must have.”

“Told them what?”

“I’m too tired to think what that means either. Oh, Dorothy, what was Derek doing? What was going on?”

“Someone must know.”

“I keep thinking about the conversations I had with him. Especially the last one.”

“What did you talk about?”

“Just a game we had started. It was about how we lived our lives, but it was mostly just an exercise in repartee. That’s what I thought, but suddenly I wonder what he really meant.” He turned off the light. “How I wish I could have one more talk with him.”

“So, Charles, how do you like the game now?”

“I don’t, Derek. It’s quite unfair that you’ve put me up to it. I’d rather not be playing.”

“I think you need to be. We’ll see if the principles you’ve spouted all these years will stand up to a real test.”

“Is that the point, Derek? Is that why you put the papers in the book? To embroil me in all of this?”

“It seems to have worked.”

“But surely you didn’t expect to be killed. Was it just a common burglary, or was it one of your victims?”

“You’re only imagining me, Charles. You know I can’t answer that.”

“Were you really a blackmailer, Derek? Was that the game you were playing, and your ‘situation’ at the office?”

“You don’t sound content, Charles. You must be losing our game.”

“But you’re dead, Derek, so I don’t think you’ve won it.”

“No. It isn’t pleasant here. The circles go deeper and deeper and I still haven’t found my depth.”

“Who killed you, Derek?”

“Have I passed that circle yet? I believe I have. The murderers. Yes, that was one or two back. I hope I’m not headed to the ninth circle, to the circle of traitors.”

“Who was the other person you were blackmailing? The person who tried to buy your desk? The person Patrick White had helping him. Who was it, Derek? Was that who killed you?”

“Patrick White? Yes, he’s down here now, too. I don’t know where they’ll put him. There’s a circle for everyone. I hope I’m not in for the traitors, the betrayers. That’s the worst judgment of all, way down at the very bottom of the Inferno. Am I a traitor? Did I betray you, Charles? Is that why I’m still going down?”

“No, Derek. You’re no traitor. I forgive you.”