Consigned to Death (27 page)

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Authors: Jane K. Cleland

BOOK: Consigned to Death
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He shrugged, and I took the gesture to mean that he thought I was overreacting. “Sorry. There’s something else I need to discuss, so I knew we’d be talking anyway.”
I looked at him and shook my head, his cavalier dismissal of my distress fueling my rage. “
You
needed to talk to
me
? How thoughtful of you to balance my needs with your own,” I added, unable to suppress the sarcasm.
“I didn’t mean it that way. Sorry. Guess it was a little insensitive of me not to have called.”
“A little!” I exclaimed.
Max reached for my arm and squeezed, gently. “Josie,” he said. “Point taken. Let’s move on.”
I shook off his hand. “No, Max. This is too important.” I pushed hair aside. “It seems I should be grateful that you have something else to talk to me about,” I said to Alverez. “Otherwise I might have learned that I’ve been cleared—when? Tomorrow? The next day. Oh, I know! Probably you’d have given Cathy a note to call me when she got a chance, right?”
“Okay, Josie,” Alverez said, unsmiling. “I get it. I was thoughtless. I apologized once and I meant it. I’m sorry. Can we move on now?”
Stop
, I reminded myself.
Breathe
.
Think
. I took a deep breath and turned to Max. He was watching me with compassionate eyes. I looked out of the window. The tall grass that dotted the dunes waved in the light breeze. My anger dissipated as suddenly as it had arisen, leaving me spent. I felt exhausted and emotionally raw. Taking a deep breath, I looked at Alverez and smiled a little, a nonverbal offer of detente. His stern demeanor eased in response.
I felt awkward, uncertain what to do or say next. One emotion after another washed over me—the fatigue that had eclipsed my fury now gave way to an almost giddy volatility. I smiled again, broadly this time. Alverez smiled back, and I found myself admiring the flecks of gold that glistened in the brown of his eyes. His eyes were hypnotic, drawing me in. After a long minute, Max cleared his throat and the mood was broken. I looked away. “Sorry about that,” I said. “I guess this situation has made me a little emotional. I don’t normally rant like a fishwife.”
Alverez smiled. “It wasn’t so bad. I’ve been called worse than insensitive.”
“Really? Like what?”
Alverez smiled and shook his head slightly. “That’ll be a topic for another time, if you don’t mind,” he said, shifting in his chair.
“So,” I asked, pleased at his obvious discomfort, “what made you realize I wasn’t guilty?”
“That too can be covered later. We have something important to discuss now, if that’s all right.”
“Sure. What?”
“The reason I asked you to come in is to ask for your help. We’ve reached a point in the investigation where we need an expert.”
“An expert in? ...” Max asked.
“Appraisals.”
“Why Josie?”
“She’s the logical choice. We can bring in an outside expert if we have to, but my plan is more likely to work if Josie will help us.
“What do you need?”
Alverez cleared his throat and idly tapped his pen against the wooden table. “A couple of things. First, what do you know about the Renoir? I mean, according to Mrs. Grant’s ledger, the three paintings, the Renoir, the Matisse, and the Cezanne were all bought from someone or something called A.Z. Do you know what, or who, that is?”
“One second,” Max said to Alverez, reaching out his hand to stop me from speaking. He leaned over toward me and whispered, “Do you know what it means?”
“No,” I whispered back.
“Do you know anything about the paintings.”
I paused, then decided to tell Max the truth. “Yes. Yes, I do.”
“What?”
“It’s complicated.”
Max straightened up, glanced at the recorder, the red light indicating it was on, and said, “Josie and I need to consult for a moment. We’ll step outside and walk a little, if that’s all right.”
“Sure,” Alverez said, narrowing his eyes. “But you can stay here. I’ll leave the room, like I did before.”
“I’d just as soon stretch my legs,” Max answered.
Alverez shrugged and hit the Off button. “Let me know when you’re ready to resume.”
Max and I walked across the street and stepped up onto the sandy dunes. I picked up a flat gray rock and hurled it toward the ocean. Clouds were rolling in from the west, white-topped waves rippling the ocean’s surface. Max stretched and bent down.
“That’s a relief, huh?” he asked, standing upright.
I choked on sudden tears. “You have no idea.” I grasped his upper arm and leaned my forehead against his sleeve. “Thank you, Max.”
He reached over and patted my shoulder. “Sure, Josie. I don’t know that anything I did had anything to do with anything, but it’s a pleasure to work with you.”
I smiled as best I could given that I was still feeling emotional. My tears gradually abated, and I turned toward the sea. The salty air smelled fresh. I stood up, my smile broader, my confidence returning. “How come you wanted to come outside ?” I asked.
“Well, I wanted to make the point that we could. This time, we aren’t here for an interrogation. You’re being asked to do a favor.”
I smiled. “Wow, that’s right, isn’t it?”
He shrugged, and looked mildly embarrassed. “I wanted to crow a little.”
I tapped his shoulder and smiled again.
Max smiled back. “So,” he said, “talk to me.”
“I’ve researched all three paintings. They were stolen from Jewish families before or during World War II. The Matisse disappeared from a small museum on the Mediterranean. The other two were taken by the Nazis.”
“My God,” Max said, turning to look at me, shock registering on his face.
“Yeah,” I said, nodding, responding to his overall reaction, not only his words. “I know. It’s horrible. I think that’s why Mrs. Cabot hired me. I think her daughter, Andi, who’s an immoral shrew, by the way, would make it impossible for her mother to return the paintings to their rightful owners. But if I find them, and announce the discovery publicly, well, Mrs. Cabot will have no choice.”
He nodded. “Makes sense.”
“Here’s the thing. I’ve found them.”
“What?”
I nodded. “Yeah.”
“Where are they?”
“I’ve got them safe.”
After a pause, Max asked, “So why haven’t you brought them forward?”
I looked away, turning to focus on the ocean as I struggled to get my jumbled thoughts in order. “I’m not sure. Two reasons, I guess. First, I thought I ought to hold on to them in case I needed to use them to clear my name. And don’t ask how they’d help me do that, Max, because I don’t know. I don’t have a plan. I just knew those paintings could somehow be an ace in the hole.” I shrugged. “Or, they might be. It’s the only thing I know that no one else does. Knowing their location is, somehow, an insurance policy.”
“What’s the other reason?”
“I need to tell Mrs. Cabot first. I just found them. And today’s her father’s funeral. It seems too awful to tell her today. I just couldn’t do it.”
Max touched my arm again. “You’re a good egg, Josie.”
“A good egg?”
He smiled. “What else?”
“That’s it.”
“Where are they now?”
For some reason, I didn’t want to reveal their location, but I couldn’t justify not doing so. Max was my lawyer, after all. For reasons I didn’t understand, I stayed vague. “In Mr. Grant’s house. I moved them from one secret spot to another.”
He didn’t prod further. Instead, he asked, “How certain are you that someone else won’t find them wherever it is you’ve hidden them?”
“No one but me has access to the house right now, and I’ve arranged it so none of my staff will go near them.”
“I don’t like it, Josie. I think we ought to tell Alverez the truth, and let him take custody of them. Your exposure, your potential liability, if something happens to them, even, God forbid, a fire, is too great.”
I nodded. I hadn’t considered that aspect of the situation before. He was right. “There’s one more thing,” I said, looking down, not really ashamed, but feeling awkward that money came into my reckoning.
“What’s that?”
“There’ll be a reward. It was posted on a Web site. I found them, so I want it. If I turn them over to the police, I’ll lose my claim.”
“No, you won’t. I’ll make certain you’re covered.”
I couldn’t think of any reason not to do as he recommended. “Okay, then.”
“You ready to go back in?”
“Are you sure I should tell him everything?”
He squeezed my arm again. “Yes. I’ll protect your rights.”
 
 
Alverez looked somber. His eyes were dark and intent. His manner was serious, even grave. He’d asked if we were ready to resume, Max said we were, and suddenly, the tape recorder light was red, indicating, that once again a record of our conversation was being created.
“Josie has a statement to make.”
“All right,” Alverez said.
“A couple of things before she begins,” Max said. “She has acquired some knowledge of the missing paintings and is going to tell you what she knows.”
“Good,” Alverez said, his tone neutral.
“The paintings, we believe, were stolen. Josie expects to return them to their rightful owners, and if a reward is forthcoming, she expects to claim it.”
Alverez paused and I heard the soft whirr of the recorder. “And?”
Max shifted in his chair. “And we’d like to turn them over to you. But we want to be on the record that you acknowledge that but for the actions of Josie Prescott, you wouldn’t have been able to take possession of the missing artwork.”
Alverez turned to look at me. “Are you saying you have them in your possession now?”
Max said, “Do we have your acknowledgment?”
“When you turn them over, I’ll write you a receipt. I can make no comment about any other aspect of the situation.”
“That’ll be fine,” Max said, but it didn’t sound fine to me.
I leaned over to Max and whispered, “That sounds bad.”
“Nah, it’s standard operating procedure.”
“Okay,” I said, unconvinced.
“Plus, we’ll have a copy of the tape.”
“Josie,” Max said aloud, “tell Chief Alverez what you know about the paintings.”
Taking a deep breath for courage, I said, “I found out that all three paintings were stolen.”
“How?” Alverez asked.
“A Web site.”
“We checked on-line.”
I shrugged. “You checked law-enforcement sites, right?”
“Right.”
“Me, too. I didn’t find the paintings listed there. I found them on a specialized site tracking Nazi thefts before and during World War Two.”
Alverez leaned back and shook his head. “What are you saying ?”
“You asked me before about Mrs. Grant’s ledger. The entry that indicated that Mr. and Mrs. Grant bought all three paintings from ‘A.Z.,’ right?”
“Right. Do you know who or what that is?”
I shook my head. “No. Maybe a person. Maybe a gallery.” I shrugged. “No idea.”
“What do you know?”
“I know Renoir’s
Three Girls and a Cat
was one of several paintings taken from the Brander family home in Salzburg in 1939. Cezanne’s
Apples in a Blue Bowl with Grapes
was stolen from a well-respected Viennese collector and businessman, Klaus Weiner and his wife, Eva, also in 1939, except that they called it collecting the ‘Jew tax.’ Matisse’s
Notre-Dame in the Morning
was owned by the Rosen family. They’d lent it to a small museum in Collioure, France, in 1937. In February of 1941, the curator reported it stolen along with, if I recall right, seventeen other paintings.” I shrugged. “Maybe the Nazis got that one, too. I can’t confirm that. But I do know it was stolen, and it had been owned by a Jew.”
Alverez’s eyes narrowed as he listened, and when I was done, he shook his head.
“We figured they were stolen. Why else keep them under wraps?”
“Well, a legitimate owner might be afraid of theft,” I ventured.
He shook his head. “Then you wouldn’t leave a gimcrack lock on the front door.”
“Good point,” I acknowledged.
“Where did you find them?”
“In a hidden compartment behind other paintings.”
“How did you know to look there?”
“Intuition? Luck? I don’t know. I noticed a three-sided frame on the workbench in the basement. A few hours later, tossing and turning in bed, something clicked.”
“Where are they now?”
I turned to Max. He nodded encouragingly.
“I’ll show you. I won’t tell you.”
“Why not?”
“I want that receipt as I hand them over.”
He nodded. “When we’re done here, we’ll go together.”
“And you’ll give me a receipt?”
“On the spot.” He rat-a-tat-tatted the table with his pen. “We need to get the paintings authenticated.”
“Yeah.”
“I want to alert our expert that they’re coming.” He pushed back his chair and stood up.
“I thought I was your expert.”
He smiled. “You are on appraisals. Not on authenticating art.”
“Who are you going to use for that?”
“Leo Snow from Dartmouth.”
I nodded. “He’s an expert, all right. Good choice.”
“I’ll be right back.” He punched the Off button and left the room.
Max and I sat quietly. When he returned, he started the recorder, and said, “I got Dr. Snow on the phone. He’ll be here in the morning with his chemistry set, and we’ll have confirmation by the end of the day.” He paused. “Josie?”
“Yeah?”
“Congratulations on finding them.”
I smiled. “Thanks. I was pretty pleased.”
He smiled back. After a moment, he asked, “Change of subject. How do you set values?”
“You mean on the Cezanne or the Matisse?”

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