Shadows at the Fair (2 page)

Chapter 2

Wall Street & Broadway: Ways of Getting and Spending Money,
wood engraving published by
Harper’s Weekly,
September 2, 1865. Elegant Wall Street men and their families…balanced by a tough bar, on Broadway. Surrounded by vignettes showing various means (elegant and rough) of “robbery,” “burglary,” “murder,” and “flight.” Price: $60.

Maggie passed several dozen vans in the fairgrounds parking areas, recognizing some. There was the red and white
PASTIMES
license plate advertising its owners’ shop name. The truck cutely bearing
OLDTHGS
plates. And the station wagon labeled
ANTQLADY
.

Every year there were a few new dealers, but most people who were offered a contract came back to a prestigious and profitable show like this one. An available booth usually meant someone had gone out of business or died. Antiques dealers had no mandatory retirement age.

There was no sign of her friend Gussie’s van—a tan model with Massachusetts wheelchair plates. Not here yet. But there was Abe and Lydia Wyndhams’ motor home. Strange couple. She pulled into a space a little farther along the line. The Wyndhams lived in their van, traveling up and down the country with their silver and jewelry. At their ages—at least in their midsixties—most people would want to settle somewhere.

Maggie hoped she wouldn’t be living on the circuit in twenty-five or thirty years. It was a rough life. But maybe the Wyndhams were staying in the motel this year. Usually they camped on the fairgrounds. Many dealers roughed it occasionally to save money on show expenses, but the Wyndhams did it all the time.

Susan Findley was unloading near the same entrance. Maggie climbed down and waved at Susan. Four hours of driving wasn’t too bad, but her back was stiffer than it would have been ten years ago, when she was in her twenties.

Susan and her husband, Harry, about Maggie’s age, or maybe a little younger, were enthusiastic and perpetually negotiating their next big deal. Susan looked good, as always, her hair in the latest shade and style. Today she was a blonde, with a touch of silver in the front. She also looked as though she’d lost more weight. Maggie waved again.

She’d have plenty of time to catch up with them—the Findleys had the booth on one side of hers, and her friend Gussie had the booth on the other side. Susan was a big talker. She loved to gossip between customers. Nobody kept a secret from Susan. And her energy level was incredible; maybe a result of the vitamins, herbal teas, honey, and fruits and vegetables she always carried in a small cooler and constantly consumed. Maggie had never quite decided whether Susan really knew more than anybody or if she was a hypochondriac.

Susan waved back as she balanced an Art Deco pedestal and a pile of Chinese embroidered hangings on a small dolly. Susan and Harry seemed the perfect couple. Even in their better days Maggie and Michael had never been as close as Susan and Harry. Sometimes during the past winter Maggie had thought of them. Energetic, attractive, interested in the same things, they lived and worked together in a loft in New York City and, according to Susan, had active social lives. Some people shared their children; Susan and Harry shared their business.

Maggie and Michael had shared neither children nor business. They had been too busy living their individual lives to focus on having children, and it had just never happened. Too bad. Maggie had always wanted to be a mother. Just not quite yet. In the meantime she had her teaching, and her antique-print business, and Michael’s job selling insurance had kept him on the road most of the time. Too often she’d been at the college, or out of town herself, buying or selling prints. Maybe they could have made the marriage work. Maybe neither of them had tried hard enough.

Just five months ago—three days after Christmas—those possibilities had ended. It was Christmas break and the sky had threatened snow. Maggie had been curled up in her big red chair near the fireplace rereading an Agatha Christie when the phone rang. It was the emergency room, reporting an accident.

“Your husband is here. He’s all right, but we’d like to keep him a few days for observation.”

Everything would be fine, she had told herself as she pulled out the overnight case Michael kept packed for quick business trips. It held the things he would need in the hospital. She decided to add an extra pair of pajamas.

The Tiffany’s receipt was under his navy-and-white-striped pajamas. Tiffany’s receipts are pale blue. This one was for a diamond and sapphire bracelet. There had been no diamond and sapphire bracelet under Maggie’s Christmas tree. Michael had given her new software for her computer and an espresso machine.

She hated espresso.

Maggie had read the receipt, folded it neatly, put it back in the drawer, and continued packing Michael’s small leather suitcase. By the time she got to the hospital there was more information.

“Your husband seems to have had a minor stroke. He lost control of the car, but he was lucky. He didn’t hurt anyone else, and only his leg was broken.”

Only his leg. That was good.

“He’s in some pain; we’re going to keep him here and run some tests.”

Of course. Tests. The next call came at four-thirty in the morning. Apologies. It had all happened too suddenly. It had been massive this time. There wouldn’t be any more tests. It was over.

At the age of forty, Michael was dead.

At thirty-eight, Maggie was a widow.

She had found the receipt for the bracelet at two-thirty in the afternoon, and he had died at four-thirty the next morning. After fourteen years he had left her twice in fourteen hours. No time to question; no time to argue; no time for explanations or apologies. Only time to grieve, and then to rage.

Her marriage was gone, but Susan and Harry still had each other. They were lucky. Maggie told herself not to be jealous.

It was time to get on with her life.

Chapter 3

Woman in a Feathered Hat,
Harrison Fisher (1875–1934), famous American illustrator whose pastel portraits of beautiful women appeared on the covers of many magazines, including
Puck
and
Cosmopolitan.
From
American Beauties,
1909. Price: $90.

Abe and Lydia Wyndham had just finished draping their tables in black and were beginning to hang a few prints for decoration. Maggie decided to check those out later. Usually the Wyndhams just hung some
Godey’s
fashion prints or gold-framed mirrors to fill up space, as many dealers did: nothing that would be competition for a print dealer. But you never knew what they might have come up with this year.

Susan had vanished after placing the pedestal under a spotlight in her booth, leaving the Chinese embroideries to be arranged or hung. The Findleys must have been here at dawn: their Art-Effects booth looked almost finished, and Harry was now helping Joe Cousins, the nerdish antiquarian-book dealer whose booth was next to the Wyndhams’, unpack some cartons of first editions and private printings. Harry and Joe looked like mismatched bookends. Harry was tall and slender, with neatly sculptured dark blond hair and designer jeans. Joe was short, a few pounds overweight, with slightly scruffy brown hair, wire-rimmed glasses, and, today, a brown cardigan buttoned unevenly, creased slacks, and baggy white socks.

Harry and Joe waved, and Maggie waved back. “Hello! Good to see you both!” She took a quick look at her space to make sure the four eight-foot tables she had ordered were in place. She hadn’t known that Harry Findley and Joe Cousins were friends.

Dealers often hired porters to help bring inventory in from trucks or vans, or they brought friends or relatives to help. They almost never helped each other. No time or energy was left after setting up your own space.

But first she had to check in. Vince Thompson’s Show Management booth was at the far end of building four. He looked up from piles of dealer envelopes, admittance cards, advertising posters, future show contracts, and promotional notices for the buyers’ trips he organized each year to London, Paris, and the Far East.

“Maggie!” He stepped around the table and gave her a hug that was, as usual, a little tighter than necessary. “I was so sorry to hear about your husband—but you’re back! And you look terrific! You’ve lost some weight, haven’t you?” His cologne smelled expensive, and slightly exotic. Maggie grinned, moving back from his hug, shaking her head and accepting the compliment. Vince was a charmer. His wavy black hair and mustache were elegantly touched with a little gray this year, but Vince was holding his own. Today he looked tired, though. He had probably been up most of the night supervising booth construction. Or involved in other activities. Vince’s other activities had always kept him far too busy to be married or have a family.

So where was the young, attractive assistant of the season who was usually there to share his motel room, serve coffee, and admire Vince should anyone else fail to do so? Either no one was playing that role this year, or she was off doing errands. Knowing Vince’s record, probably the second.

“Yes, I’ve lost a few pounds. I’ve taken up long walks,” Maggie said. Quiet time; thinking time. “It was a rough winter, Vince, but it’s over. Thanks for saving my booth when I couldn’t make the January show.” Vince expected his dealers to do all four shows he promoted each year; Maggie had canceled out of his January show knowing that might take her off his dealer list. Illness or death was no excuse: she knew one dealer who’d done the show with two broken arms and a bandaged head because Vince said he’d have to be there or lose the space. Booths at a Vince Thompson show were coveted.

“Always for you, my dear. My favorite print dealer? Always a place for you.”

Vince must not have found another print dealer to replace her.

He began sorting through his paperwork again. A handsome bronze Chinese lion, a carved ebony letter box, a scrimshaw-cased Japanese sword, and a pair of jade bookends were almost lost among the clutter on his tables.

“Going into the trade?” Maggie asked. “These are all lovely.” Vince was also wearing an unusual jade and gold tiepin that looked as though he’d picked it up in Asia: one of the side benefits of being in antiques.

Maggie glanced down at the three marcasite
M
pins on her red Somerset County College sweatshirt. She and Vince were dressed to play different roles, but they were both obviously in the same business.

“That stuff isn’t mine; it’s on loan. I’m just an entrepreneur. And a voyeur.” He leered comically at the Asian antiques. The look would have had more impact if it hadn’t been so close to his normal expression.

Maggie ignored his mime.

“I really like the lion; it is a ‘temple lion,’ isn’t it?” She reached over and touched the ornate animal. Its body was embellished with scroll-like curls, and two small horns were on its head.

“Some people would call it that. Or a ‘temple dog.’ But it’s really a smaller version of the immense bronze lions that guard the sacred way, or Shen-tao, on the way to the tombs of emperors of the Southern Dynasties. They’re called chimeras.”

“I didn’t realize you knew Chinese art.”

He shrugged. “I’ve led enough antiques-dealer tors to Hong Kong and Singapore to know some of the basics. I’m no expert.” He looked down at his balance sheet. “That’s a balance of eight hundred and seventy-five dollars before setup.”

She reached inside her tote bag for her business checkbook.

“What’s the story about a murder at the Westchester Show? I hadn’t heard.”

“Awful situation. John Smithson.”

“John Smithson!” He’d always had a booth down the aisle from Maggie’s. Architectural details and turn-of-the-century wrought-iron furniture. A friendly, rather pale young man. He’d shared the coffee and soda run at last fall’s show.

“He was doing the Westchester Show last Saturday and just keeled over. No one could do anything. Right in the middle of the customers and everything. Really upsetting. Some customers asked to have their admission fees refunded.”

“Why did the officer at the gate say it was murder?”

“Seems John had been taking medication, and some of his capsules had been tampered with.” Vince hesitated. “It probably had nothing to do with the antiques show, but it got a lot of publicity around here, so I wanted to make sure we didn’t lose any customers because of it. The local police agreed I could have extra security. I was lucky to fill John’s booth space at such short notice. A fellow named Will Brewer, from near Buffalo, called and said he was in the area and could fill a last-minute cancellation. So it worked out.”

For everyone except John Smithson.

“Actually we have several new dealers here this spring as a result of deaths.”

Maggie shivered. “Who else died?”

“Jim Singleton, Don Worthington, and Thom Reardon. Must have been a rough winter.”

For sure. She hadn’t known any of those dealers—at a 250-dealer show you only got to know the people whose booths were near yours. “There are a few deaths every year; that’s what happens in a business where lots of people go into the trade when they’ve retired from other jobs.”

“You’re right. It’s not unusual. Although, come to think of it, all of those fellows were young. One car accident; one fire. I don’t know about the other one. Sad.”

Vince took another sip from his coffee cup.
TAKE THE MONEY
! was imprinted on its side in green.

“Have you seen your neighbors yet—Susan or Harry Findley, or Joe Cousins?”

“All of them—they were unloading and setting up when I walked by.”

“Have you been in touch with anyone? I mean, since last fall’s show?”

Maggie handed Vince the check for the balance of her booth rent. “No. Not really. I’ve talked with Gussie White and exchanged Christmas cards with other people, but that’s about it. You know what it’s like—being off the circuit and all.”

Vince looked amused. “Well, you’ll have a lot to get caught up with then. Glad you’re back.”

“Been looking forward to it. Refreshments for the dealers this year?”

“All the coffee and tea you can drink until the show opens. Just around the corner, outside, under the overhang.”

Maggie shook her head. “No coffee or tea for me; what I really need is a diet cola.”

“You’re on your own for that. There’s a machine near the rest rooms.”

“No problem. My major priority is unloading my van. I want to get my prints inside the building before it rains.”

Maggie stuck her envelope of show papers in her now overflowing canvas bag.

“I’m on my way.”

“Good show!” Vince said.

Yes, thought Maggie. Let it be a very good show.

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