According to Their Deeds

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According to Their Deeds Page 4

by Paul Robertson


  “Charles, that’s ridiculous.”

  “They have that whole big building to fill. This particular nest of Deputies was in charge of pushing Congress on laws the Justice Department was interested in.”

  “It sounds very bureaucratic.”

  “That would be an understatement. He only did it as a game. He liked to play games.”

  “You played chess with him?” Dorothy said.

  “Yes. We would talk and play chess. Move and countermove and strategy.”

  “That job isn’t my idea of a game.”

  “Not exactly mine either. But Derek thrived on it.”

  “How was he connected with Karen Liu?”

  “I had Morgan look her up. She is on the House Judiciary Committee. She must have worked with Derek fairly often.”

  And after fending off dessert, they were again on the street and the sky was polished ebony, reflecting the lights of the town in its stars.

  “Home?” Charles said.

  “Please,” Dorothy said, and they passed the incandescent shop windows and the curtained sitting-room windows; and where old trees reached over an even older street, and old brick sidewalks led past even older brick townhouses, they came to their own steps and front door.

  “Were you serious?” Dorothy asked when they were inside, turning on their own sitting-room lights. “How do you meet a congresswoman?”

  “I’ll call and ask.”

  “They won’t let you in.”

  “Then I won’t go. And if she does let me in, I will go.”

  “But after that?”

  “I will go on, wherever the wind blows.”

  Dorothy settled into a deeply plush wingback chair beside the fireplace and opened a book from the table beside it. Above the mantel was a framed photograph of a much younger two of them and a teenage boy, the same face on Dorothy’s desk. “You will be tilting at windmills.”

  Charles took his own book from the table. “I’ve always wanted to do that.”

  “What do you think, Charles? Is Locke the greatest of the English enlightenment?”

  “Now, come, Derek. You ask those questions just to be provocative. There’s no answer to that.”

  “Who would rank with him, then? And don’t say Hume, he’s Scottish.”

  “Newton.”

  “Gravity is nice, but I’m speaking socially, politically.”

  “I’m speaking philosophically. There are laws that govern nature, and laws that govern man’s nature. The Enlightenment isn’t limited to politics.”

  “But, Charles! The end of philosophy is politics.”

  “Politics puts an end to philosophy, if that’s what you mean. It’s hardly the intellectual end.”

  “But politics is the practical end. And the practical purpose. What other use does philosophy have? Not personal, not for most people.”

  “It is personal for them, Derek. They don’t call it philosophy. Most people call it values, or life purpose.”

  “And for most people it’s a muddle. John Locke was concerned with the practical government of men, not some amorphous cloud of personal morals and beliefs.”

  “Morals were vital to him!”

  “An Enlightenment philosopher, Charles? He was far past religion.”

  “Do you know his epitaph?”

  “I believe I do.”

  “Let me try to remember. There’s the part that says, ‘Of good life, you have an example in the gospel, should you desire it; of vice, would there were none for you; of mortality, surely you have one here and everywhere, and may you learn from it.’ That’s the message of his Essay. His theories of government don’t mean anything without his theory of human nature.”

  “Yes, I know the epitaph. But he was a dying man when he wrote it. He’d lost his objectivity. What would you put on your tombstone, Charles?”

  “Maybe the same as Locke. I hadn’t thought about it. What about you, Derek?”

  “Do you mean when I’m in my dotage and trying to curry favor in the next world?”

  “Oh, let’s say what you’d write now, still at the brazen height of your intellectual powers. If you were to die unexpectedly tonight, what would you want written as your memorial?”

  “I would take the first part of Locke’s, that says that ‘His virtues were too few to mention, and may his faults die with him,’ and paraphrase it.”

  “How?”

  “Virtue and vice are too subjective. I would take modern properties that I value: ‘His knowledge of his fellow man was too great to describe, and may it die with him.’ ”

  TUESDAY

  MORNING

  “Good morning, Alice.”

  She beamed at him like the morning sun. “Good morning, Mr. Beale. Good morning, Mrs. Beale.”

  Charles climbed the stairs to the office. Morgan was already in his nook.

  “On the hunt?” Charles asked.

  “Yes, sir. There’s an auction in San Francisco next month.”

  “Let me see.” Charles stood over Morgan’s shoulder and looked at the list. “A few things. I might call Jacob and see if he’s going. Do you see anything we need?”

  “I’ll check against inventory. This is what’s up on eBay since yesterday. And Briary Roberts just put a bunch of new stuff on their website.”

  “Did we sell anything?”

  “Three volumes. Nothing big. I’ll mail them this afternoon.”

  “Carry on.”

  Dorothy was just sitting at her desk. Charles plopped down at his and opened the newspaper.

  “Do you have plans for the day?” she asked.

  It was in the morning that her voice was the most musical. “Tell me what you’ll be doing,” Charles said.

  “I’ll finish this set of invoices and then I’m going to call Wilhelmina Stratton about the banquet Saturday evening. We have to start on the fall catalog this week . . . Charles, are you listening?”

  His eyes were closed. “Of course, dear.”

  “Then what did I say?”

  “Oh, I don’t know. I just like to hear you talk. Your voice is a symphony to me, your words are pure notes—”

  “Would you empty the trash, please?” Dorothy said.

  He sat up. “First I need to read it.” He opened the newspaper and scanned the front page.

  “Anything?” Dorothy said.

  “What a sordid world.” He folded the paper and dropped it in the wastebasket. “What a human world. It’s all scandals and failings.”

  “There’s more to it than the front page of the Washington Post.”

  “Yes, there are other sections, but they are all still human.”

  “What in the world else would there be? Don’t you have enough to do, Charles?”

  “I have plenty to do.”

  “Because if you don’t, you could file these invoices.”

  “I would love to, but I really have quite a bit to do.”

  “I was just asking.”

  Charles found his telephone book and looked up a number.

  “Thank you for calling the office of Congresswoman Karen Liu,” the telephone said.

  “You’re welcome. My name is Charles Beale, and I would like to meet with the congresswoman.”

  “Mr. Beale, is there anything I can help you with?”

  “No, I’m sorry. It would need to be with her.”

  “She’s very busy, of course.” The voice was very polite. “Are you from her district in California?”

  “No,” Charles said. “I’m not a constituent, and I’m not a lobbyist or reporter.”

  “What would you want to discuss with the congresswoman?”

  “I was a friend of a man named Derek Bastien, who died several months ago. He worked in the Justice Department.”

  The voice did not realize for a moment that Charles had finished his turn.

  “Are you with the Justice Department?” it finally asked.

  “No. I’m not with the government. I’m a bookseller, actually.”r />
  That was enough for the voice to be finished with the conversation. “Mr. Beale, let me take your number and I’ll pass it on to her chief of staff. She is very busy, though, and she is usually not available.”

  “I’m not sure if you’re serious,” Dorothy said after he’d hung up.

  “I am.”

  “You didn’t give any good reason she should take time to meet you.”

  “I hope I didn’t. And now I am going to visit Norman Highberg.”

  “You’re going to Georgetown?”

  “I need the exercise.”

  “I thought you had too much to do.”

  “This is one of the things.”

  “Then have a nice morning. I know better than to ask you questions when you don’t want to answer.”

  “I don’t have any answers. And I think it’s important to find some.”

  The well-worn walk to the Metro station past the urban townhouses of Prince Street, and the bland Metro ride under the Potomac, brought Charles finally to the even more urban townhouses of Georgetown. The streets weren’t very different from Alexandria, just wider and with more cars and more city and more important-looking people. The Capitol and the White House weren’t far away; Georgetown was a closer planet to the sun and less likely to have its own native life.

  Charles chose a doorway.

  “Good morning. Is Mr. Highberg in?”

  The young thing behind the counter gaped. “I don’t know.”

  “Go find out.”

  The young thing went and Charles was alone to stroll. Somehow, it was a very nice showroom. Every manner of upscale antique was there, except of course furniture and books. Crystal sparkled, silver shone, wood glowed, and not an item was less than two hundred dollars or more than three thousand.

  “Charles! What are you doing here?”

  “You need to work on your customer service, Norman,” Charles said.

  “You’re not a customer. What do you want?”

  “I’m quite well, thank you. How are you?”

  “Great except for taxes.” The frames of his bulky glasses were as shiny and black as his hair. The lenses were smudged with gray fingerprints, and the hair was smudged with just gray. “My accountant just sent me last month’s report. Taxes are killing me. You need an accountant? This guy’s my brother-in-law and he’s looking for clients.”

  “I don’t need anyone.”

  “What are taxes in Virginia? It must be better than here. This place, you walk around with the mayor’s hand in your pocket. You put a dollar in and he takes it out. You aren’t a customer, right? Or maybe you are. Are you looking for anything?”

  “I don’t need anything.”

  “Sure you don’t, but that doesn’t keep people from buying this stuff anyway. Who needs any of it?”

  “I don’t, I’m afraid. But it is all very nice.”

  “You bet.” He paused to breathe and look around, and he smiled. “Real nice. Because it’s real. Every piece.”

  “I’m sure it is.”

  “I don’t mean it’s not fake. I mean there’s something about it. You have to have the eye.” He put his finger beside his eye and tapped. “If you have the eye, you can look at anything and tell. I’ll go places and walk through somebody’s showroom and nothing’s real. It’s not fake, but it’s not real. And I can see it. I can see it a mile away. You know what I mean.”

  “I do know, Norman. I know exactly what you mean.”

  “Sure you do. Why else be in the business? You’ve got the eye, Charles. You can see what’s real. I don’t do books, but I can tell, even with them.”

  “Anyway,” Charles said, “I have a question.”

  “Maybe I even have an answer! What do you want?”

  “Yesterday that man called me, Edmund Cane.”

  “Yeah, right, he was asking who I knew at the auction and I told him all the names I knew. He was trying to find out who the blonde was.”

  “Do you know if he found out?”

  “Nope. I sure didn’t know who she was. He might have found out, but I don’t know.”

  “Who was he?”

  “Cane? Oh, just a guy from a place in New York. He looks just like Einstein. Did you want to talk to him again?”

  “Maybe. I’d at least like to know how to.”

  “Sure, you could look him up. The place in New York, it’s called Horton’s on Fortieth.”

  “Horton’s.”

  “On Fortieth, that’s part of the name. Big place. Say, that was some auction yesterday. All I was trying to do was just buy back the stuff I sold the guy.”

  “That reminds me, Norman. I have another question.”

  “I think I can do two, but don’t push your luck!”

  “I won’t. You said the police gave you a list.”

  “Right. Stuff that got stolen from the house the night the guy got whacked. They want me to be looking for it.”

  “Yes. Do you have a copy?”

  “Yeah, sure, somewhere back here. Give me a minute and I’ll find it. You think you’ve seen something?”

  “Probably not. I was just curious.”

  “I’ll find it. It’ll just take a minute.”

  Charles browsed. They were real things. The shelves and floor and tables were blanketed by a dizzying variety of shapes and materials and uses, but they were all very real.

  Charles could tell.

  Then the real Norman was again with him. “I got it. It’s the list of the stuff that got stolen. You’re supposed to keep an eye out for them, and if you see anything, call that number at the top. It’s the police, and that’s the detective to ask for, his name is Watts. And there’s an FBI guy on it, Frank Kelly, since it’s antiquities, and you can call him, too.”

  “I see. There are over fifty things here!”

  “Oh. It’s from all the burglaries. I think Bastien was the fifth one. Some guy going through the neighborhood.”

  “Norman—does it mean anything to you?”

  “What, the list? It’s stuff that got stolen.”

  “Yes,” Charles said. “But the things that were stolen—do they say anything about who would have stolen them?”

  “Huh? It’s all kinds of stuff. A little French statue, a mahogany letter file, an ivory dolphin—that was a nice one, I sold him that one.”

  “They’re all antiques.”

  “So the burglar’s got good taste. And they’re all small and valuable. He breaks in, grabs stuff, and runs. That neighborhood up there in Foxhall, every house is piled high with stuff.”

  “I have several customers up there,” Charles said.

  “Great place for a burglar. Except when Derek Bastien walks in on him right in the middle of his haul. Too bad. Wrong place, wrong time, and the guy panics. Grabs a marble statue and wham, wham, wham! You read about it, right?”

  “I didn’t read the details.”

  “I sold him that statue. I bet it weighed thirty pounds, at least. One whack would have been plenty, but the guy’s panicked I guess. Blood everywhere. You know, I wonder if that’s why the desk sold so high. But they wouldn’t sell it with all the blood, would they? They’d clean it off.

  But you have to be careful cleaning those old finishes—”

  “Thank you, Norman. It’s been so nice to see you.”

  AFTERNOON

  The return from Georgetown had been about the same as the trip to it.

  “Mr. Beale,” Alice said as he paused in the showroom, “there was a telephone call for you. Mrs. Beale has the message.”

  “Thank you. Have we sold anything this morning?”

  “A Dickens. The Olde Curiosity Shoppe.”

  “There are shops where curiosity is a dangerous thing,” he said.

  “Hello, dear.”

  “Well, well,” she said, with a lemon meringue tartness.

  “Well what?”

  “Congresswoman Karen Liu’s office called and she would be pleased to see you tomorrow, Wednesday, at 7:3
0 in the morning.”

  “Tomorrow morning?” he said.

  “Yes, and please call back to confirm.”

  “I will. How unexpected.”

  “Charles.” The lemon had some sour. “What are you going to say to her?”

  “I have until tomorrow to think of something.”

  “I still don’t know why you are even going.”

  “I am going to look at her and tell if she’s the real thing.”

  “The real what?”

  “The real thing.”

  “How will you tell?”

  He tapped his finger beside his eye. “I can see it.”

  “And did Norman Highberg answer any of your questions?”

  “Some of them more than I wanted. Dorothy, I have some odd things to think about.”

  “It is because you are looking in odd places.”

  “Yes. And now, I think, bookstores in California should be open.”

  “Mr. Leatherman, please. This is Charles Beale.”

  He waited.

  “Charles? Is that you?”

  “Yes, Jacob. It is.”

  “Have you come to your senses? I’ll give you twenty-three, and not a penny more.”

  “Did you have a nice trip home?”

  “Of course not. If you’re not calling about those books, what are you calling about?”

  “I saw there was an auction in San Francisco next month.”

  “What about it? You’re not coming out here, are you?”

  “No. But I might want a few things from it, and I wondered if you were going.”

  “I might be. I might not be. I haven’t looked at the list yet, but I don’t think I want anything from it.”

  “Then if there is anything I want, and if you do go or send someone, and if you aren’t bidding on the same things that I want, would you bid on them for me?”

  “If, and if, and if, then I might.”

  “Thank you. I’ll look at the list again and decide.”

  “Or I might just decide that whatever you want, I want it, too.”

  “I would expect no less of you, Jacob.”

  “And don’t tell me you weren’t the one who had that Edmund Cane call me this morning.”

 

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