Pick Up Sticks
Page 2
Stanton Carruthers, Sloan lawyer.
Elizabeth (“Becky”) Thatcher, John Putnam Thatcher’s second daughter, stunning, smart, and much like his abolitionist grandmother. VP of IT & VC investments.
Occasional Characters
Professor Cardwell (“Cardy”) Carlson, the father-in-law of Laura, Thatcher’s oldest daughter. An erudite impractical professor.
Mrs. Agnes Carlson, Laura’s mother-in-law who keeps Cardy in line and up to form.
Dr. Ben Carlson, Thatcher’s son-in-law and Laura’s husband. Stays quietly in the background.
Laura Thatcher Carlson, Thatcher’s first daughter & family organizer.
Jack Thatcher, youngest of the Thatcher children and much like Tom Robichaux and hence now the junior partner in the firm of Robichaux, Devane & Thatcher..
Sam, Sloan Chauffer known for prompt service, comforting wit, and a warming temperament.
Sheldon, Office boy known for moving equipment, getting Bromo Seltzer for hung over trust officers, and doing other small nefarious chores.
Billings, the sardonic respectful elevator operator known for succinct observations about the day’s goings on.
Don Trotman, the Devonshire Doorman and Jack of all Trades onsite.
Albert Nelson, John Putnam Thatcher’s man servant and general helper.
Francis Devane, Quaker partner of Tom Robichaux in Robichaux & Devane, later Robichaux, Devane & Thatcher when Jack Thatcher, John’s son, became a name partner.
Arnie Berman, Waymark-Sims seasoned cigar chomping investment pro.
Claire Todd, Ken Nicolls secretary.
Miss Prettyman, Brad Withers secretary.
Characters only in Pick Up Sticks
Edward Quinlan, Valenti’s Partner in Northern Land Development which owned Fiord Haven.
Ralph Valenti, Quinlan’s Partner in Northern Land Development which owned Fiord Haven.
Henry Morland, John Putnam’s old friend and guide on their annual Appalachian Trail walk.
Ruth Morland, Henry’s long suffering wife.
Stephen Lester, visitor to Fiord Haven who bought a lot.
Amanda Trailor Lester, Steve’s second wife and homemaker in elegant Weston, Massachusetts.
Eunice Lester, Steve’s first wife, HR manager at a Boston department store, mother of their child, and resident of middle class Arlington, Massachusetts.
Peter Vernon, engaged to Eunice Lester.
Mrs. Elvira Tilley, who owned the farm property abutting Fiord Haven who sold an option to Northern Land Development.
Burt O’Neil, one of the relentless Fiord Haven salespeople.
Captain Frewen, the detective on the Steve Lester murder.
Alec Prohack, Contractor building Fiord Haven.
James Joel Finley, Famous architect who designed and promoted Fiord Haven.
Sylvia Hazen, friend of Charlie Trinkam, real estate expert, and temporarily acting as Mrs. Trinkam much to Charlie’s chagrin.
Alan and Sukey Davidson, back from their honeymoon, visiting New Hampshire, got lost on the Trail, guided back by Thatcher and Morland.
Don Cavers, young local banker who makes his bank look antique to attract second home loans.
Guy Villars, local lawyer and friend of the Morlans.
Emma Lathen Political Mysteries
Emma Lathen: As R. B. Dominic
1.Murder Sunny Side Up 1968. Agriculture.
2.Murder in High Place 1969. Overseas Travelers.
3.There is No Justice 1971. Supreme Court.
4.Epitaph for a Lobbyist 1974. Lobbyists.
5.Murder Out of Commission 1976. Nuke Plants.
6.The Attending Physician 1980. Health Care.
7.Unexpected Developments 1983. Military.
Tom Walker Mysteries
Patricia Highsmith Style
Deaver Brown, Author
01.18. Football & Superbowl.
02.Abduct. Sexual Misconduct.
03.Body. Planned Eliminations for Money.
04.Comfortable. Avoiding Consequences.
05.Death. Wrong Place at the Wrong Time.
06.Enthusiast. Opportunity Murder.
07.Fraud. Taking Your Chances.
08.Greed. Heirs Who Know Better.
09.Heat. Heir Arrogance.
10.Prodigy. Tom Walker’s First Case.
A similarly popular Simply Media mystery series.
Financial & Other Facts
Emma Lathen is all about the money not the emotion. In that light:
1.To provide financial incentives for collectors, Simply Media and others savings on groups of 6 eBooks, and the SuperSku (learning from the Star Wars franchise) “all in” collection.
2.Trust that we have all enjoyed this. But as Willie Nelson, Oscar Wilde, and others have said, we aren’t above the money. Stay well. And thanks from all of us on the Emma Lathen team.
Deaver Brown, Publisher & Editor.
www.simplymedia.com
Chapter 1
AH WILDERNESS . . .
WALL STREET, the great money market of the world, accommodates buyers and sellers from the four corners of the earth. Turbaned industrialists from Karachi and Tanzanian bankers do occasionally descend on Trinity Place, but most financial transactions are consummated over long distances. To make this possible, Wall Street has perfected a communications network that is a far cry from the homing pigeons that carried news of Waterloo to anxious investors in London.
As befits one of Wall Street’s most august institutions, the Sloan Guaranty Trust, third largest bank in the world, maintains a mighty array of news-gathering and news-transmitting devices. There are thousands of telephones to put trust officers on the sixth floor minutes away from any inhabited area. There are direct lines to London, to Washington, to Zurich, to Beirut. There are chattering ticker tapes, flashing the latest quotations not only from the New York Stock Exchange, but from the Board of Trade in Chicago, as well as the bullion market in Johannesburg and the sterling houses in Mumbai. The Sloan even has its own closed circuit television system, to give each part of its far-flung empire immediate access to every other.
Red lines and hot lines apart, there are few communications systems so comprehensive and responsive as that serving the Sloan Guaranty Trust, at home and abroad.
All of this added muscle to Charlie Trinkam’s grievance.
“What do you mean, I can’t get in touch with John?” he demanded.
Miss Corsa, secretary to John Putnam Thatcher, senior vice president of the Sloan, looked up from her desk with her usual calm.
“Mr. Thatcher circularized the memo that he was going to be away from the office for three weeks, Mr. Trinkam,” she said. “I’m sure you were on the list.”
Since Charlie Trinkam was currently acting director of the Trust Department precisely because Mr. Thatcher was away, he glared at her. His retort, however, was forestalled.
Everett Gabler, the oldest, and certainly the most meticulous member of Thatcher’s staff, ripped off his glasses, gave them a heated swipe, and carefully avoided glancing at Trinkam. At all times, Charlie’s expansive bonhomie and slapdash life style pained him; when Trinkam was his nominal superior, pain yielded to pugnacity.
“Of course, we know that John is taking a holiday, Miss Corsa,” he said. “What we want to learn from you is how to reach him. After all, he left you his itinerary, didn’t he?”
It was not so much a question as an accusation. When important Wall Street bankers leave the financial district, they do not go to ground. Their secretaries know where they are, or at least where they can be reached during most of the relevant hours of the day.
There lies the rub. Those same secretaries have strict orders not to divulge telephone numbers except in cases of emergency. And not everybody agrees on what is a real emergency. At the moment, for example, both Trinkam and Gabler were divided over the Sloan’s response to some ominous queries from the State Banking Commission. They were, however, united in suspecting Mis
s Corsa of savoring this moment of power.
But Miss Corsa, an extremely competent young woman, was above pettiness.
“Yes, I know where Mr. Thatcher is,” she explained precisely. “But I don’t know how you can get in touch with him.”
Charlie fairly gnashed his teeth, but Gabler raised a pacifying hand.
“Why not?” he asked, imagining the worst.
Miss Corsa silently produced a typed card from which she read aloud: “From September fourth through September fifteenth, important mail for Mr. Thatcher may be forwarded to the Long Trail Lodge, Sherburne Pass, North Sherburne, Vermont, marked: Hold for Appalachian Trail Hiker.”
There was a pause. Then, sadly, Charlie said, “Not again?”
Miss Corsa was in some sympathy with the sentiment.
“I’m afraid so,” she said.
Even Everett Gabler was moved to recall common hardship long shared.
“Do you remember the year we tried to send Ingersoll to get in touch with him?” he reminded his audience. “That was the time we needed his signature on the revised Bannister contract.”
“How could I ever forget?” Charlie replied rhetorically. “That was somewhere down in the Smokies. You remember what Ingersoll said when he finally got back?”
They all did.
Charlie rose and studied Miss Corsa’s card.
“Hold for Appalachian Trail Hiker,” he repeated. “Well, one man’s meat . . . Now listen, Everett, this puts the lid on it. We don’t have time to play games. We have to work out some sort of compromise between ourselves. If you want to bring Lancer into it . . .”
“What do you mean by compromise?” Gabler replied stubbornly.
They were again deep in dispute when they left Miss Corsa to the solitary possession of John Thatcher’s corner suite on the Sloan’s sixth floor.
She returned to her sorting of the mail. She was not surprised by this conflict between Trinkam and Gabler. If past performance meant anything, it was the first of many. Furthermore, she confidently expected Mr. Bowman, from Research, to try wheedling some extra meetings of the Investment Committee.
All because Mr. Thatcher had this strange predilection for long walks.
Things were always difficult when Mr. Thatcher was away. Not that difficulty troubled Miss Corsa. She was fortified by explicit instructions covering most foreseeable contingencies. As well as a strong inner conviction that things were even worse at the Sloan when she was away.
Still, in the privacy of her own thoughts, Miss Corsa agreed with Charlie Trinkam. She accepted most of her employer’s foibles even if she did not understand them. But, incurious as she was, Queensbred Miss Corsa did wonder why an important man like Mr. Thatcher should be so attached to marching through the countryside between Maine and Georgia. A stroll around Kissena Park was one thing—
The telephone put an end to these thoughts.
“No,” she said. “Mr. Thatcher is not available. No, I’m afraid not. . . .”
John Putnam Thatcher, methodically placing one foot before the other, three hundred miles north of Wall Street, was removed in fact and in spirit from New York State’s menace to its banks. He was trudging along America’s longest foot trail. It unrolled endlessly before him over each successive horizon.
The Appalachian Trail, extending from Maine to Georgia, is over two thousand miles long. A crest path, it follows the summits of one range after another, the White Mountains, the Green Mountains, the Blue Ridge and the Great Smokies. On federally owned lands, a mile-wide swath on either side is preserved as natural wilderness. On state owned lands, the swath diminishes to a half mile on either side. Happily, over half the trail passes through public lands. On private property, hikers are urged to keep to their right of way, in order to avoid charges of trespassing. Scattered along the Trail, a day’s easy march from each other, are sleeping shelters.
Thatcher had not seen the Trail for a year. He was reminded of how much he forgot between each annual retreat to the perfect antidote for Wall Street. There were the white blazes systematically marking the way. And, here in New England, of course, there was the surprisingly sporadic nature of the views. To the uninitiated it might appear that a crest trail would provide one vista after another. And so it did, in the northernmost reaches of New Hampshire and in the Blue Ridge in Virginia. But Thatcher and his companion, Henry Morland, were cutting southward across New Hampshire into Vermont. So they were below the timberline and inevitably hemmed in by forest on either side. Only an occasional clearing or a fold in the hillside revealed the valleys and lakes scattered far below. In its own way, this was more satisfying than a continuing panorama. It provided more than beauty: it provided anticipation and suspense.
“We’ll get there in good time,” Henry Morland spoke over his pack frame.
“Good,” said Thatcher.
“How do your boots feel?”
“Fine.”
Moving forward with the easy, slow pace of the experienced walker, Thatcher contemplated his boots with approval. Then, since he was not one of those who take to the hills to leave the world behind, he considered a commercial establishment, L.L. Bean, of Freeport, Maine.
The boots currently performing so satisfactorily had come from L.L. Bean—in parts, to be sure. They had recently been refitted with new lug soles; earlier they had had tongues removed, uppers restitched, bindings replaced. Each transaction, whether by mail or by personal visit, had convinced Thatcher that these boots remained as technically interesting to L. L. Bean as they did to him. On this, the second day of a prolonged trek, he had reason to be grateful. L. L. Bean, he recalled, was open twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year, ready to serve hunters bound for the Maine woods, climbers setting forth to scale Mount Washington, and backyard barbecuers renting places in Boothbay Harbor, with any conceivable gear they might desire. Thatcher reminded himself, stepping meantime over a fallen branch, to talk to Henry about this.
For Henry, a small spare figure topped by a nutbrown pate, was the owner of The Pepper Mill, a mail-order business in Pepperton, New Hampshire. In that guise, Henry dispatched maple syrup, sconces, early American TV carts and deacon’s benches from Pepperton to most of the fifty states. The Pepper Mill was basically a warehouse. But, with an eye to tourists, Henry had appended a picturesque country store, complete with apothecary jars filled with penny candies. Anyone who made as good a living as Henry did exporting Yankee handicrafts (frequently imported from Hong Kong) must know how businesses were run in northern New England.
This was another noteworthy aspect of modern America, Thatcher thought, registering at the same time that the trail had begun climbing again. He himself had been born and reared in Sunapee, New Hampshire. But he had left small-town New England for Harvard many years ago, and after that for Wall Street. Consequently, for specialized insights into modern ways to play the Down East game, he would have to consult Henry Morland. Henry, born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, had carved a respectable business career in New York before deciding, years ago, to strike out with his own firm in rural New Hampshire.
They plodded on in companionable silence. September was a good time to be on the trail. Peak foliage color still lay weeks ahead, but here on the heights there were already brilliant crimson touches. The long light of the westering sun painted the valley below, sometimes visible through clearings, with dramatic shadows. Filtered by greenery, a golden warmth mellowed the austere New England light.
“Good God!”
Henry had halted abruptly. A step brought Thatcher to his side. Henry was peering into the distance, down the trail.
“Do you see what I see?” he demanded.
Thatcher, whose vision was excellent, replied that he did.
A turn on the trail had brought them to a long, straight alley. At its end, perhaps thirty yards ahead, two young people sat slumped against a huge boulder.
“What are they doing here?” Henry asked.
“Well, after all, Henry,” Thatcher pointed o
ut reasonably, “the Appalachian Trail is open to the public. Think of how many people you would have met up here before Labor Day.”
Henry shook this observation aside with a vigorous to-and-fro of his bald head. “That’s not what I mean at all, John. Just look at those getups, will you?”
Thatcher did, and conceded that Henry had a point. The young woman was wearing a complex garment of bold black-and-white stripes which flowed from neck to ankle. Her escort, a young man, sported a striped French sailor’s shirt over saffron yellow slacks.
Anything less appropriate for movement anywhere in rural New England, let alone the Appalachian Trail, would have been hard to find.
“I tell you—” muttered Henry, setting forward on the trot.
But Thatcher was not the hard-core purist that Henry was. The world, he knew, abounds with people who want to climb Mount McKinley in opera pumps, to cross the Atlantic in a canoe, to bicycle through Afghanistan.
Possibly Henry had retreated from the big city too early to appreciate this. However, any comments Thatcher might have been contemplating along these lines were not destined to be uttered. For, as they approached, it became painfully evident that the young couple was not only singularly ill equipped for a September evening 3,000 feet above sea level on the Appalachian Trail. They already knew it.
The young woman was a picture of misery. Long black hair hung in disarray around a small, dejected face. The young man clambered painfully to his feet as Henry fetched up before him smartly. Thatcher brought up the rear at a more leisurely pace.
“Hello,” said the young man.
Henry, who enjoyed throwing himself into roles, immediately became a kindly but stern schoolmaster, of the old school. “What’s the trouble?”
The young man, who had rather long black hair himself, was past taking offense.
“We’re lost,” he confessed unhappily. He looked back at his companion. “Don’t worry, Sukey. They’ll help us.”
Henry, like most enthusiasts, could be obtuse in some ways.
“Lost?” he said with high good humor. “Now, you can’t get lost up here. The whole trail is marked. Where do you folks want to be?”