Peter reached into his bag and withdrew his lifting knife. On the table in the conservatory lay the elaborate folding box in which the Pandosto had been stored. It seemed months ago that Peter had identified this box, built up to make the Pandosto look like a much thicker book, as a Victorian construction. He opened the innermost folding flap and inserted the lifting knife into the joint where this flap met the body of the box. With one swift motion he sliced cleanly through the cloth. He turned the box and repeated this motion on two other sides, leaving a flap of loose cloth attached on one side. Peter lay down his knife and peeled back the flap. There, snuggly nestled where it had been placed over a hundred years earlier, was a brown and battered book, the same size and shape as the Pandosto that Peter had been carrying around England for the past several days.
He turned the folder over and the book fell out onto the table. The binding was more worn than that of the forged Pandosto and Peter gently opened the cover. Liz leaned over his shoulder as they read a list of names on the endpaper—a list that included Wm. Shakspere, Stratford, but that made no mention of Mayhew, Smith, B.B., or E.H. The final name on the list was Phillip Gardner. On page sixteen there was no mention of the death of Walter Raleigh.
In the center of the rear pastedown was a rectangular impression.
“What’s that?” said Liz.
Peter slipped his lifting knife under a loose edge of the pastedown and pulled the paper away from the binding. He held up the rear cover and a folded piece of paper fluttered to the table. Peter set down the book, unfolded the paper, and read:
Harbottle,
Pardon the messenger, but I have business in Stratford. I think you will find something of yourself in A Winter’s Tale. I beg forgiveness for defacing your Pandosto, but return it herewith with my thanks.
W. Shakespeare
“It’s the real thing,” said Liz in whispered awe.
“So it would seem,” said Peter, smiling. “So it would seem.”
Kingham, Friday, June 23, 1995
Peter straightened his tie one more time in the mirror before running downstairs for a quick breakfast and a cup of tea. The train for London didn’t leave for an hour but it was such a lovely summer morning that he wanted to walk to the station.
It had taken four months for teams of lawyers and genealogists in Oxfordshire, Louisiana, and North Carolina to reach the same conclusion that Peter had reached that morning in his cottage—that the youngest living heir of Phillip Devereaux, illegitimate son of Phillip Gardner, was none other than Peter Byerly. According to a bill of sale found among the papers in his tomb, Phillip Gardner had been the legal owner of the true Pandosto; the forgery was determined to have been his property as well.
During that time Peter had returned to North Carolina for a long stay with the Ridgefields. He and Sarah had taken walks together nearly every day in Ridgefield Gardens, watching the daffodils blossom and then the dogwoods and the azaleas. Sometimes they spoke of one or the other of the Amandas, but often they spoke of nothing important. They were friends, Peter discovered, and he liked that.
Peter had brought the Pandosto to Ridgefield to show to Francis Leland, who had been properly awed. With the help of Hank Christiansen he had done some minor repair work on the volume so it would be ready for this morning. The forged Pandosto he had given to Francis to be shelved in the Devereaux Room along with forgeries of Thomas Wise. Peter had also donated Gardner’s portrait of Isabel Devereaux to the Special Collections department, where it was now displayed in the case below the significantly more imposing portrait of Isabel’s granddaughter, Amanda.
Cynthia had come to visit at the end of April and she and Peter had stayed up late watching old movies on television. One night she sidled next to him on the sofa and slipped an arm around him, pulling him toward her and kissing him gently. It was pleasant enough, thought Peter, but he had no desire to take things any further.
“Is it Amanda?” said Cynthia.
“No,” said Peter, “it’s just . . .”
“You don’t like me,” said Cynthia.
“No, I like you. As a friend I like you. You’ve been great, Cynthia.”
“Well it doesn’t have to be anything more than friends having a little fling. I mean, it is the nineteen nineties.”
“I know,” said Peter. “It’s just that—”
“Oh my God, there’s another woman, isn’t there,” said Cynthia, grinning and punching Peter on the shoulder. “You’ve got a girlfriend.”
“Well, I wouldn’t exactly call her a girlfriend,” said Peter.
“Okay,” said Cynthia, “tell me all about her.”
—
When Peter had returned to England in June, there were still only a handful of people who knew of the existence of the Pandosto, but that would all change in a few hours at an internationally televised event where he would present the volume to the British Library as a memorial to Amanda Byerly. After the ceremony it would be housed in the library’s permanent exhibit, in a case including items from the collection of Robert Cotton. Cotton, after all, had been the last legitimate owner of the Pandosto, as far as Peter could tell.
In the years to come some of the older anti-Stratfordians would continue to deny the authenticity of the Pandosto marginalia, but it passed every test, including the ion migration test that finally exposed Mark Hofmann’s forgery of “Oath of a Freeman.” Professor Kashimoto did, as promised, recant his position, first in a private phone call to Peter and later at a literary conference in San Francisco. Many others followed suit, and the few who continued to proclaim the Earl of Oxford or Christopher Marlowe or Francis Bacon as the author of the plays dwindled in number as the years went by. The English majors of the world, most of whom had seen the Pandosto either in person or in one of its widely published facsimiles, no longer offered fertile recruiting ground for the anti-Stratfordians, and by the end of the decade those who denied William Shakespeare his rightful place were only a handful of eccentrics, guilty of just what they had accused academia of for so many years—reaching conclusions without regard for the evidential record.
—
Sarah and Charlie Ridgefield had flown to London the previous morning and were staying at the Russell Hotel along with Francis Leland, Hank Christiansen, and Cynthia. Peter had insisted on paying for suites for everyone.
Peter was just finishing washing up the breakfast dishes when he saw Amanda standing in the corner of the kitchen. He hadn’t seen much of her in the past few months, though they had had a chat after Cynthia had kissed him.
“It’s a big day for you,” she said.
“For us,” said Peter. “It’s a gift in your honor.”
“It’s what you always wanted,” she said, “to find a book that would change literary history.”
“I wish I could share it with you,” he said.
“I’ll be there,” said Amanda.
“I miss you,” said Peter, “but it hurts a little less than it used to.”
“You won’t see me anymore,” said Amanda.
“I know,” said Peter.
“I’ll always love you,” said Amanda, “but I have to go now, and so do you.”
And she was gone.
Peter took a deep breath and then had one more look around the kitchen. After the ceremony Liz was coming up for the weekend and he wanted everything to be perfect. The counters were clean, the dishes put away—the only bit of clutter was the curling paper of Dr. Strayer’s list pinned to the message board. Peter read quickly over the list and chuckled. In one deft motion he yanked it from the board and threw it into the rubbish bin.
Two minutes later he was striding toward the station, the Pandosto under his arm, and the warm summer breeze sweeping him toward the center of life.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am grateful to scores of people who helped inspire, grow, and hone this book, particularly to my mentors in the world of book collecting, Bob Lovett, Stuart Wright, the late Stan Marx, and Just
in Schiller; to those who nurtured my writing life, especially Phyllis Barber, Chris Noël, Walter Wetherell, Diane Lefer, Sandra Adams, and Peggy Elam; to early readers Janice Lovett, Stephanie Lovett, and Nina Weigl for their excellent advice; to David Lovett for introducing me to my agent; to Anna Worrall for her early support; to David Gernert for his faith in the book and his insightful advice on revisions; to all those at the Gernert Company who have helped bring the book to the world; and to Kathryn Court and Tara Singh for their kind guidance and brilliant editing.
Thanks to all those librarians around the world who inhabit places like the Devereaux Room and who have assisted me with research and welcomed me into their sanctuaries over the years.
I would like to thank the people of the real Kingham, which is a more lovely, welcoming, and peaceful place than I could ever hope to portray in its fictional counterpart. In particular thanks to the Stockwell family for their love and friendship over many years.
Just as scores of people are responsible for the book you hold, so did scores of sources help create the historical sections of the novel. I am particularly indebted to the following—for details on William Shakespeare and his fellow Elizabethan writers, Judith Cook’s Roaring Boys: Shakespeare’s Rat Pack, Stephen Greenblatt’s Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare, and Bill Bryson’s Shakespeare; for her descriptions of book repair, restoration, and binding, Annie Tremmel Wilcox’s A Degree of Mastery: A Journey Through Book Arts Apprenticeship; and for the saga of Mark Hofmann’s forgeries, Linda Sillitoe and Allen Robert’s Salamander: The Story of the Mormon Forgery Murders. All the books quoted in the text were, needless to say, important sources and those quotes are, with minor editing, taken from the original sources.
Above all, I wish to express my gratitude to my children, Jordan and Lucy, for their love and inspiration, and to my wife, Janice, whose love and faith supports me daily.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
All the published books mentioned in the text and their bibliographical details are real, though obviously some individual copies, inscriptions, and marginalia have been invented for this narrative. No complete copy of the first edition of Robert Greene’s Pandosto, upon which Shakespeare based A Winter’s Tale, is known to survive. Only two copies of the bad quarto of Hamlet are known.
I have invented scenes, actions, and dialogues for historical characters, but the basic biographical details of the following real people are more or less as stated in the text: the Elizabethan writers and their acquaintances William Shakespeare, Robert Greene, Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Nashe, George Peele, John Lyly, Emma Ball (and her son Fortunatus), Mrs. Isam, and Richard Burbage; the book collectors and librarians Robert Cotton, John Bagford, John Warburton, Humfrey Wanley, Robert and Edward Harley, and Henry Clay and Emily Jordan Folger; the forgers William Henry Ireland, Thomas Wise, John Payne Collier, and Mark Hofmann; and the bibliographers and scholars Edmond Malone, John Carter, Graham Pollard, William Henry Smith, and Charlton Hinman.
It is a sad truth for English literature that the combination of the carelessness of John Warburton and the ignorance of his cook Betsy Baker led to the destruction of over fifty manuscripts of Elizabethan and Jacobean plays, only five of which were preserved through separate sources. The rest were lost forever.
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