“What’s the word?” I said.
“I checked an old photograph with a magnifying glass,” said Caroline. “It’s her ring, all right.”
“So there’s no doubt,” I said.
“No doubt at all,” she said. “The body we found is of my grandmother’s sister, Charity Chase Reddman.”
32
WITH CAROLINE SITTING on my couch, smoking, her legs crossed, her arms crossed, sitting there like a shore house boarded up for a hurricane, I brought Morris up to speed on the mystery of the Reddmans. I told him about Elisha Poole, about the three fabulous Reddman sisters, about how Charity, the youngest, had apparently found herself pregnant and then disappeared, seeming to wrest the shackles of her oppressive family off her shoulders and be free, only to turn up eighty years later in a hole in the ground behind the Reddman mansion. Morris listened with rapt attention; it was the kind of puzzle he liked most, not of wood or of stone but of flesh and bone and blood.
I showed him the ring. “What’s this on the inside?” he asked. “My eyes such as they are, I can’t read printing so small as this.”
“ ‘You walk in beauty,’ ” I read from the inside of the band, “and then the initials C.S.”
“Any idea who this C.S. fellow is?” asked Beth.
“Could be anyone,” I tried to say, but Caroline, who had remained remarkably silent during my background report to Morris, interrupted me.
“They were my grandfather’s initials,” she said flatly. “Christian Shaw.”
“What about the inscription?” I asked. “Anyone recognize it?”
“ ‘She walks in beauty, like the night,’ ” recited Morris.
“ ‘Of cloudless climes and starry skies; and all that’s best of dark and bright meet in her aspect and her eyes.’ ”
I was taken aback a bit by such melodious words coming from Morris’s mouth, where only a jumbled brand of immigrant English normally escaped.
“Byron,” said Morris with a shrug. “You know Pushkin, he was very much influenced by this Byron, especially in his early work.”
“Pushkin again?” I said.
“Yes Pushkin. Victor, you have problem maybe with Pushkin?”
“No, Morris. None at all.”
“This girl,” asked Morris, “this Charity, how old was she again when first she disappeared?”
“Eighteen,” said Caroline.”
“Then that fits then. It is a poem, this, for a young girl. It ends talking of a heart whose love is innocent.”
No one said anything right off, as if there was a moment of silence for the dead girl whose heart was suffused with innocent love.
“Open the box,” said Caroline.
“I’m ready if you’re ready,” said Morris.
“I’m ready,” she said.
“Are you sure?” I asked her.
“I told you I want to find out everything I can about my family, all the bitter truths. I won’t stop at a corpse. Open it.”
From his seat Morris bent down and lifted onto the table a leather gym bag. He opened the bag, peered mysteriously inside, reached in, and took out a small leather packet from which he extracted two thin metal picks. I looked at Caroline on the couch, arms still crossed, her front teeth biting her lip. I smiled encouragingly at her but she ignored me, focusing entirely on Morris. Morris turned the box until the front was facing him and then began working on the padlock.
“Are you sure you can’t get hold of Sheldon?” I said, after Morris had tried for ten minutes to work the lock with the picks and failed.
“It’s a tricky, tricky lock. Very clever these old lock makers. I must to try something else.”
He put the picks back in their leather packet and the packet back into the gym bag, reached in, and pulled out a large leather envelope from which he took a jangling ring of skeleton keys. “One of these will work, I think,” he said. He began to try one after the other, one after the other after the other.
“Do you have a number for Sheldon?” I asked after all the keys had failed to fit the lock.
“Enough with the nudging already,” said Morris, anger creeping into his voice. “These locks, they are not such a problem for me, not at all. For this I don’t need Sheldon.”
“I’ve seen Sheldon work,” I said. “He is in and out in seconds.”
“On second-rate locks, yes,” said Morris as he put the skeleton keys back into the bag and rummaged around. “But this is no second-rate lock. I have one special tool in such situations that never fails, a very special tool.”
With a flourish he pulled from the bag a hacksaw.
“This lock it is very clever but the metal is not as strong as they can make now. Is this all right, miss, if I hurt the lock?”
“My grandmother’s dead,” said Caroline. “I don’t think she’ll miss it.”
It took only a few minutes until we heard the ping that signaled he had cut through the metal hoop. He opened the lock and took it off the metal guards soldered into the box. That left only the internal lock, which Morris looked at carefully. “For this again I need the picks.”
“It’s getting late, Morris,” I said.
He took out the picks and began to work the little lock. “This second is not so tricky,” he said as he twisted the picks once and twice and the lock gave way with a satisfying click. Morris beamed. “Sheldon maybe would be a bissel faster, but only a bissel.”
Caroline rose from the couch and sat beside Beth at the table. Morris turned the box to her. She looked around at us. I nodded. She reached down and, slowly, she lifted the metal lid.
Beth let out a “Wow,” as the lid first cracked open and Caroline shut it again.
“What?” I asked.
“I just thought I saw something.”
“One of your flames?” asked Morris.
“I don’t know.”
“What color was it?” asked Morris.
“Yellow-red,” said Beth.
Morris nodded. “The color of the death force.”
“Enough already,” I said. “Just open it.”
Caroline swallowed and then flipped up the top of the metal strongbox. Inside were dust and dirt and a series of old manila envelopes, weathered and faded and torn. Not very encouraging.
“Let’s see what they’re holding,” I said.
One by one Caroline lifted the envelopes out of the box.
The first envelope contained a multitude of documents on long onionskin legal paper of the type no longer used in law offices, each dated in the early fifties. The documents were all signed by Mrs. Christian Shaw, Caroline’s grandmother, and witnessed by a number of illegible signatures, all probably of lawyers now surely either dead or retired. As best as I could tell, as I plowed my way through the legal jargon of the era, replete with Latin and all types of convoluted sentences, the documents created a separate trust to which a portion of the Reddman estate was to be diverted. The trust was named Wergeld and so a person or a family named Wergeld was apparently the intended beneficiary, though nothing more specific was provided in the documents. It wasn’t clear exactly how much was to be transferred, but it appeared to be considerable, and over the past forty or so years the amount in the trust must have grown tremendously.
“This must be the trust Harrington was talking about the other night,” I said to Caroline while I examined the documents. “Ever hear of a family named Wergeld?”
“No.”
“Are you sure? Anyone at all?”
“No, no one,” she said. “Never.”
“That’s strange,” I said. “Why would she set up a trust for someone you never heard of? All right, let’s go on.”
The next envelope contained a series of bank documents, evidencing the opening of accounts all in the name of the Wergeld Trust. The signatory on each account was Mrs. Christian Shaw. The banks to which the money was to flow were in foreign countries, Switzerland, Luxembourg, the Cayman Islands. “All tax havens,” I said. “All places where money could arrive and disappear without anyone knowing, and where the banks are all governed by secrecy laws.”