“How would you feel about getting some extra hours this year?” asked Francis.
“Are there any more hours in the day?” asked Peter. He was already spending most of his waking time either in class or in the library. Francis had him working fifteen hours a week in Special Collections, and he worked with Hank in Conservation when he could. His time had become more limited as he worked to fulfill his academic requirements. The dean had grown tired of Peter’s inventing classes—this semester he was taking a full load of courses in English, history, and economics.
“Well, there are six more boxes where this came from, and I think it’s time we got this stuff cataloged,” said Francis. “Given your . . . personal circumstances and your cataloging talents, you’re the perfect man for the job.”
“What is it?” Peter asked, his curiosity piqued.
“The personal letters and papers of Ms. Amanda Devereaux,” said Francis.
“Are you serious?” said Peter, lunging for the box. “Why didn’t you tell me about these before?”
“To be honest,” said Francis, “they’re not a high priority. Researchers are more interested in Ms. Devereaux’s collection than in the lady herself. But now that you’re marrying into the family, I thought you might like to learn about manuscript cataloging and Amanda Devereaux at the same time.”
“You bet I would,” said Peter, pulling open the box while his history text lay on the table, forgotten.
Over the next several months, Peter worked with the Devereaux papers, carefully sorting through correspondence with book collectors and dealers. Every day he told Amanda something new about her grandmother, and Amanda quietly indulged his passion, despite the fact that she could not keep straight the maze of collectors and dealers with whom her grandmother had interacted. On Saturdays, when he and Amanda spent the afternoon at the Ridgefields’ house, Peter would sit by the pool or in the sunroom regaling Sarah Ridgefield with tales of her mother’s collecting. Sarah showed a genuine interest in what Peter discovered.
“By the time I was old enough to understand what book collecting was, she had slowed down a bit,” said Sarah. “I remember that one trip to the auction house in New York, but other than that she didn’t share that part of her world with me.”
“But didn’t you ever look through the papers?” asked Peter.
“It wouldn’t have done any good without you to explain who Rosenbach was or Huntington or any of the others. You’re an excellent tour guide, Peter,” said Sarah, kissing him gently on the cheek.
“I was reading her correspondence with Henry Folger this morning,” said Peter.
“You mean the founder of the Folger Shakespeare Library?” asked Sarah.
“Exactly. Folger was the Shakespeare collector. They seemed to be pretty good friends. I guess Folger could be a nasty rival when it came to book collecting, but his letters to your mother are really kind.”
Amanda Devereaux, Peter discovered, never bid on a Shakespeare First Folio while Folger was alive—a courtesy to her friend who collected dozens of First Folios, by far the largest assemblage in the world. A letter to Amanda from Emily Jordan Folger, written two weeks after her husband’s death, read, in part, “He valued your friendship, and will no doubt rejoice in your finally acquiring a First Folio.” It was more than fifteen years later that Amanda bought the First Folio from which Peter had so often read.
“So many of the big collectors were kind to her,” said Peter, “and treated her like an equal—even though book collecting in those days was pretty much a boys’ club. Of course she couldn’t join the Grolier Club. She was pretty angry about that.”
“What’s the Grolier Club?” asked Amanda, who had just come into the room with a look on her face that told Peter she was determined not to let Sarah monopolize her fiancé’s conversation.
“It’s a club for book collectors in New York,” said Peter. “The oldest book-collecting club in America, and it was all boys until the nineteen seventies.”
“That must have pissed her off,” said Amanda, slipping onto the couch next to Peter.
“Amanda!” said Sarah. “Your language.” Peter had noticed that Amanda’s speech had become more colorful around her mother lately. When he’d asked her about it, she had shrugged and said she was only trying to see if her mother would notice, but Peter thought there was more to it than that. Since Amanda’s parents hadn’t been shocked by her choice of a socially unsuitable husband, she was determined to shock them some other way. Peter saw it as part of a plan Amanda seemed to have implemented since her illness to put herself into Peter’s world, rather than that of her parents, at every opportunity. He supposed that was what engagements were for—to allow the bride time to move from the world of her parents to the world of her groom—and, of course, Peter was not surprised that his friendship with Sarah Ridgefield, which threatened to make those two worlds one, still annoyed Amanda at times.
“Sorry, Mother,” she said, taking Peter’s hand and giving him a gentle squeeze. “Do go on, Peter.”
“Well, she was so pissed off about the Grolier Club,” said Peter, squeezing Amanda’s hand back to let her know where his ultimate loyalties lay, “that she became a founding member of the Hroswitha Club.”
“The what?” said Sarah.
“The Hroswitha Club,” said Peter. “It was a club for lady book collectors founded in nineteen forty-four.”
“Ladies?” said Amanda, with a hint of politically correct scorn in her voice.
“That’s what women called themselves in nineteen forty-four, dear,” said Sarah.
“They met at your mother’s apartment in New York one time,” Peter continued. “Apparently the Hroswitha Club was suitably impressed.”
“The ladies in my family have always known what to do in a roomful of rare books,” said Amanda, surreptitiously pinching Peter.
“Whatever can you mean by that, dear?” asked Sarah, but Peter was spared the embarrassment of Amanda’s answer by Charlie’s call to dinner.
London, Tuesday, February 21, 1995
Liz insisted on hearing Peter’s account of his trip to Cornwall before she would share with him the contents of Graham Sykes’s manuscript, so as they inched through the London traffic, Peter told her of his visit with the old scholar. He skirted around the issue of the Pandosto, saying only that Sykes had taken an interest in the document Peter showed him, but even as he danced around the truth, Peter began to see that he had no choice but to trust Liz Sutcliffe. Like it or not, she was now a part of all this. She needed to know the whole story.
“I just don’t understand,” said Liz. “Graham’s manuscript is about a hundred-and-thirty-year-old scandal. Outside the world of Victorian art nuts, who’s going to give a toss? There’s just nothing in there that’s worth . . . worth killing for.”
Peter took a breath, then the plunge. “What about the most valuable relic in the history of English literature—would that be worth killing for?”
“How valuable?”
“Millions.”
“And where is this relic?” said Liz.
“In the backseat of your car,” said Peter.
“Well, now I feel safe,” said Liz. “Do you want to tell me what’s going on here?”
And so Peter told her everything, from his finding of the painting to his visit to Evenlode Manor and the discovery of the Pandosto, to his suspicions that Thomas Gardner and Julia Alderson were trying to cover up the fact that the book was a forgery just long enough to get a few million pounds from some gullible American institution like Ridgefield University. They had reached the M40 by the time he finished his story, but the traffic was nearly at a standstill.
“So if B.B. is a forger,” said Liz, “then the Pandosto is very likely a fake.”
“Exactly,” said Peter. “So what can you tell me about B.B.? Was he Phillip Gardner?”
“I don’t know,” said Liz.
“But I thought Sykes had written a whole exposé of this guy,” said Peter.
“To be honest,” said Liz, “I was a little disappointed with the manuscript. He seemed to be missing some key information.”
“Like the actual identity of his subject?” asked Peter.
“He said he didn’t want to tell me that until just before we went to press,” said Liz. “He just calls him ‘Mr. X.’ But here’s what I do know. B.B. was an amateur artist who was kept out of the Royal Academy and the Watercolour Society by someone named Reginald Alderson.”
“John Alderson’s ancestor,” said Peter. “So it does come back to Kingham. B.B. must be Gardner.”
“According to Sykes, B.B. married a wealthy widow who was keeping him in clover and financing the rebuilding of his house. Then he took up with an American woman in London and made the mistake of getting her pregnant. Rather a big mistake for a kept man to make in eighteen seventy-six.”
“Just like the old sisters told me,” said Peter, “but they didn’t know about the pregnancy.”
“Alderson found out about the affair and started blackmailing B.B., but Sykes is a little fuzzy on exactly what Alderson was extorting. Alderson was pretty well off, and blackmail seems a big risk for a wealthy man to take just to become more wealthy. Apparently most of B.B.’s surviving output is hanging on the walls of Evenlode Manor, but Sykes says they’re fairly unimaginative paintings—watercolors mostly—and since Alderson kept B.B. out of the Royal Academy, why would he have extorted paintings he could have bought for next to nothing?”
“I know exactly what he extorted,” said Peter. “I’ve held it in my hand.”
“The Pandosto?” asked Liz.
“Maybe,” said Peter. “But that wasn’t the only thing in Evenlode Manor that came from Evenlode House. Every document in that box that Julia Alderson showed me was marked ‘E.H.’ Alderson and Gardner were rival collectors; Alderson must have blackmailed Gardner out of all his best material.”
“Would a collector really stoop to blackmail just to get some old documents?” asked Liz.
“You haven’t spent much time around bibliophiles, have you?” asked Peter. He recalled the lengths to which Thomas Wise and Mark Hofmann had been driven by their passions. Perhaps B.B. wasn’t a forger, but simply a victim of blackmail. Perhaps the Pandosto was genuine.
“One thing Sykes is firm on,” said Liz, “is the dates. He says the child was born in late eighteen seventy-six; the blackmail began the following spring and continued for about two years. Then whatever trail of evidence Sykes was following apparently went dry. That’s why I was so pissed off at the manuscript. It raises more questions than it answers. What happened to the child? What happened to the mistress? Why was the whole extortion affair so short lived?”
“Where did Sykes get all his information?” asked Peter.
“A lot of it came from B.B.’s correspondence with his bookseller. Chap named Benjamin Mayhew.”
“Are you serious?” said Peter.
“As a heart attack,” said Liz.
“Benjamin Mayhew is one of the names in the Pandosto.”
“Well, that makes sense. So who the hell was B.B.?”
“He had to be Phillip Gardner,” said Peter. “The evidence fits perfectly. Obviously Sykes never saw the box of documents or he would have figured out what the blackmail was all about.”
“Did you tell him about the other documents?” asked Liz.
“No,” said Peter, “just the Pandosto. Frankly, everything else paled by comparison.”
“There’s something else you need to know,” said Liz, after they had driven a few miles in silence. The traffic had finally thinned out on the motorway and they were barreling toward Oxford.
“What’s that?” said Peter.
“Well,” said Liz, “you seem convinced that Thomas Gardner and Julia Alderson are the ones who killed Sykes and ransacked my house and office.”
“It had to be them,” said Peter.
“Well, it couldn’t have been both of them,” said Liz, “because I phoned Evenlode Manor this morning from a phone box in Hampstead on my way back from the heath and spoke with Julia Alderson. She can’t have been in London ransacking my office.”
“Why on earth did you call her?” said Peter, jerking forward in his seat for the first time since they had left London.
“Graham mentioned her in his acknowledgments as the person who had shown him B.B.’s watercolors. I wanted to try to talk her into letting us reproduce them for the book.”
“And what did she say?” asked Peter.
“She’s expecting me for tea tomorrow at three.”
London, 1877
Benjamin Mayhew slipped into his usual seat in Sotheby’s salesroom. Across the room, leaning in the doorway, was the familiar brooding figure of Reginald Alderson. Looking through the catalog of the day’s sale, Benjamin reflected how disappointing the afternoon was likely to be for Reginald. Benjamin knew that Reginald collected documents signed by the kings and queens of England. He knew, too, that Alderson’s collection lacked the signatures of only four monarchs, and all four were represented in that afternoon’s sale—four documents that would be leaving Sotheby’s with Benjamin Mayhew bound to Evenlode House and the collection of Phillip Gardner.
Benjamin glanced up at Alderson again and realized that he was not, after all, brooding, as was his wont during these fruitless appearances at Sotheby’s. On the contrary, a sly smile played across Alderson’s face as he brushed a hank of hair back from his forehead.
As the auction progressed, Alderson’s behavior became even stranger. He did not move from his spot in the doorway, nor did he lift a hand to bid on the documents that Mayhew knew he so coveted. This must have come as a disappointment to the consignor, for the spirited bidding between Alderson and Mayhew had driven the prices of documents to new heights recently, and it was generally assumed among the antiquarians of London that today’s auction would be no exception. Instead, Mayhew easily bought the four royal documents, as well as several other choice items, without a serious challenger. Alderson seemed amused by the whole affair. As soon as the final hammer fell, he tipped his hat to Mayhew and disappeared from the room, now buzzing with gossip about the sale. Mayhew accepted the congratulations of his colleagues perfunctorily, for pleased as he was to be bearing new treasures to his best customer, he had a nagging feeling that Reginald Alderson was up to something.
Two days after the Sotheby’s sale, Phillip Gardner came up to London to claim his prizes. Far from being the gloating victor that Benjamin usually saw after a successful auction, Phillip slumped into the bookseller’s office a picture of abject defeat.
“You do know that we won,” said Mayhew, opening a large portfolio on his desk and displaying the documents that now belonged to Gardner. “Some spectacular acquisitions, and at an excellent price.” Phillip did not so much as glance at the documents, but with a long sigh, he merely fell into a plush armchair under the window.
“Do you know of a fellow named Collier?” said Gardner. “John Payne Collier.”
“I know of his work,” said Mayhew, puzzled by the abruptness of the incongruous question.
“But you don’t know him personally? He’s not a customer?”
“No,” said Mayhew. “Is he still alive? He must be quite an old man by now. He was living in Maidenhead, last I heard. There was always something of a taint to his work after that business with the Shakespeare folio.”
“He forged the marginalia, isn’t that right?” asked Gardner.
“So it would seem. I was a young man at the time, first starting out in the book business. It caused quite a stir, I can tell you.”
“And he lives in Maidenhead, you say?”
“I suppose if he’s still alive he may still be there. Why this sudden
interest in Collier?”
“I’ve been thinking about starting a collection of books on forgery,” said Gardner.
“That’s quite a departure.”
“Not at all,” said Gardner. “It seems to me that a man who collects documents should know as much about forgery as he can, if only to protect himself.” Benjamin knew enough about the eccentricities of collectors not to question the motivation behind a fresh passion, but merely to take that new interest as an opportunity for additional sales.
“Is it just the Shakespeare forgers you’re interested in, or is it any forgery?” asked Mayhew.
“Any of them, I suppose,” said Gardner. “Are there other Shakespeare forgers?”
“I think I might be able to get you a nice little collection of books on William Henry Ireland,” said Mayhew. “He was the greatest. Forged manuscripts, letters, all sorts of things. He was absolutely shameless.”
“And would these books tell how he did it?” asked Gardner, and for the first time in the conversation, Benjamin Mayhew suspected that he knew what his customer was thinking.
Ridgefield, 1987
The Ridgefield campus was a riot of dogwoods and azaleas and the students had returned from Easter break in shorts and T-shirts, when Peter pulled the last stack of letters from the last box of Amanda Devereaux’s papers and finally found something he could not share with Sarah and Amanda—a correspondence that, unique among the papers he had cataloged, showed Amanda Devereaux not as a book collector but as a woman: the correspondence between Amanda Devereaux and her future husband, Robert Ridgefield.
They had met in the New York salesroom of Sotheby’s, where Robert Ridgefield’s first encounter with Amanda Devereaux had left him both outbid and smitten. She had just turned forty; he was twenty years her senior. They corresponded first about books—Ridgefield was not a serious collector, but occasionally bid on something that struck his fancy. They saw each other in New York, where Ridgefield lived during most of the season. Amanda liked to be in the auction room for important sales, and Ridgefield soon learned to follow the schedules at Sotheby’s and Parke-Bernet so he did not miss a chance to encounter her.
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