neatly typed sheets. âSee, Helenâs listed all the merchandise we auctioned, the lot numbers, selling price. Womanâs a jewel.â
âMay I see that?â
âSure, sure.â After handing over the papers, Porter pulled open the bottom drawer of his desk. He took out a bottle of Four Roses and a couple of dusty jelly glasses. He offered DiCarlo a sheepish grin. âJoin me in a drink? Itâs after hours now, and it keeps the cold away.â
DiCarlo eyed the bottle with distaste. âNo.â
âWell, Iâll just help myself then.â
DiCarlo took out his own list and compared. It was all there, he noted, torn between relief and despair. All sold. The china hound, the porcelain figurine, the abstract painting, the bronze eagle and the stuffed parrot. The enormous and ugly plaster replica of the Statue of Liberty was gone, as well as a pair of mermaid bookends.
Inside his pocket, DiCarlo had another list. On it were descriptions of what had been carefully and expensively hidden in each piece of merchandise. An engraved Gallae vase valued at nearly $100,000, a pair of netsukes stolen from a private collection in Austria and easily worth six figures. An antique sapphire brooch, reputed to have been worn by Mary, Queen of Scots.
And the list went on. Despite the chill of the room, DiCarloâs skin grew clammy. Not one single item remained in Porterâs possession. Sold, DiCarlo thought, all sold.
âThereâs nothing left,â he said weakly.
âSaid we had a good turnout.â Pleased with the memory, Porter poured another drink.
âI need this merchandise.â
âSo you said, but that shipment came in just minutes before we started the auction, and there wasnât time todo an inventory. Way I figure it, your boss and I could sue the pants right off Premium.â Because the idea held appeal, Porter smiled and drank again. âBet theyâd settle on a nice tidy sum, too.â
âMr. Finley wants his property, not a lawsuit.â
âUp to him, I guess.â With a shrug, Porter finished off his liquor. âHelen keeps a mailing list of our customers. Pays to send out notices when weâre having an auction. Best I can say is you go through it, match up the names and addresses with the names sheâs got there next to the stuff we sold. You can get in touch, explain things. Of course, youâll return my merchandise. I paid for it, right?â
It would take days to round up Finleyâs stock, DiCarlo thought, sickened. Weeks. âNaturally,â he lied.
Porter grinned. The way he figured it, heâd already sold one lot. Now heâd sell anotherâall for the price of one.
âThe mailing list?â
âOh, sure, sure.â Comfortably buzzed on Four Roses, Porter shuffled through a drawer and came up with a metal box full of index cards. âGo ahead, take your time. Iâm not in any hurry.â
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Twenty minutes later, DiCarlo left Porter comfortably drunk. He had one bright pinpoint of hope. The porcelain figurine was still in Front Royal, the property of a Thomas Ashworth, antique dealer. DiCarlo grasped hold of the possibility that regaining possession of one piece quickly would placate Finley and buy time.
As he drove through light traffic to Ashworthâs shop, DiCarlo worked out his strategy. He would go in, explain the mishap, keeping it light, friendly. Since Ashworth had paid only $45 for the figure, DiCarlo was prepared to buy it back and include a reasonable profit for the dealer.
It could all be handled quickly, painlessly. Once he had the figurine, he would phone Finley and tell him that everything was under control. With any luck, Finley would be satisfied to have Winesap contact the rest of the list, andDiCarlo would be back in New York to enjoy Christmas.
The scenario brightened his mood to the extent that DiCarlo was humming as he parked his car by the curb in front of
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