He glanced at the soundless television set, where stock symbols and prices crawled across the screen beneath two men holding a furious silent argument. “How’re we doing?” he asked.
“In the market? We have good days and we have bad days, but lately the good days are running ahead of the bad ones.”
“What are you going to do with your share?”
“I might just stick it in the market,” she said, “and see if I can fatten it up a little.”
He pushed the envelope across the table. “Do the same with mine,” he said. “Otherwise I’ll spend it.”
“If you’re sure. I was thinking we should diversify into some overseas companies. India and Korea are booming.”
“Whatever you say.”
She put a hand on the envelope, drew it closer to her. She said, “Keller? Those stamps he bought at auction, that you just left on the table with the suicide note. Weren’t you tempted?”
“No, not at all.”
“Because it’s your hobby.”
“That’s right.”
“I guess I get it,” she said. “There was an envelope he gave you, except you called it something else.”
“A cover.”
“There you go. From Martinique, right? What did it cost him?”
“It’s worth somewhere between eight and ten thousand. I don’t know if he paid that much.”
“And you’re keeping it.”
“Well, sure. It was a present.”
“I see.”
“And something to remember him by.”
“I guess,” she said. “But don’t you usually try to forget them as quickly and completely as possible? Don’t you do that mental exercise, fading their image to black and white and then graying it out? Letting it get smaller and smaller until it disappears?”
“Usually.”
“Oh. Are you all right, Keller?”
“I think so,” he said.
KELLER’S LEGACY
48
When Keller turned the corner, he saw Dot standing on the front porch. A white flowerpot was suspended from the ceiling on either side of the old-fashioned glider, and each held a spider plant, and she was watering them. She turned at his approach, and her eyes widened, but she took a moment to finish watering the plants.
“This one,” she said, “is growing faster than the other. See? It’s got more babies, it’s going to reach the floor sooner. I wonder if I should trim it and keep them both the same length.”
“Why?”
“In the interest of symmetry,” she said, “except I’m not sure it’s good for the plant. What did you do, walk from the train station?”
“It’s a nice day.”
“I guess that’s a yes. Except how did you get here so fast? I left a message on your machine less than an hour ago, and by the time you got it and caught a train at Grand Central…” She frowned. “It doesn’t add up. What did you do, call in and pick up your messages?”
“I went out for breakfast,” he said, “and I read the paper and did the crossword puzzle, and then I was going to call you but I figured I’d take a chance and just come up. I never thought to check for messages.”
“You came up on your own. There’s a stamp you want to buy, so you want some of the money from our brokerage account.”
He shook his head.
“You sensed that I was trying to reach you, and that’s what drew you here. No? Well, I’m all out of guesses, Keller. Come on inside and tell me about it.”
At the kitchen table, he drew a folded sheet of paper from his pocket. Without unfolding it he said, “I’ve been thinking. I’ve got my share of whatever’s in our brokerage account, but aside from that most of my net worth is tied up in stamps. There are ten albums, plus a small carton of odds and ends.”
“In your apartment.”
“That’s right. Now here’s what I want you to do. If something should happen to me, go straight to my apartment. You still have the key I gave you, don’t you?”
“Somewhere.”
“If you’re not sure where it is-”
“I know right where it is, Keller. It’s hanging on a hook by the back door. You want to tell me what all this is about?”
“What you’ll do,” he said, “is go to my apartment and let yourself in. You’ll probably want a helper, because they’re hefty albums and it’s a lot to carry. Just take them right on out of there and bring them back here.”
“And then I suppose I’ll have to kill my helper and bury him in the backyard, because dead men tell no tales.”
“I’m serious about this, Dot.”
“I can see that, and I wish I knew why.”
“I was thinking about that guy. Sheridan Bingham.”
“The one who went out the window.”
“He’d made arrangements. His stamp collection was going to Wayne State University, and they would sell it. Well, what would happen to my collection? It would just sit there until somebody cleared out my apartment, and then God knows what would become of it.”
“And you want me to display it or something? Add stamps to it?”
“What do you care about stamps? You can sell it and do whatever you want with the money.”
“But-”
“I haven’t got anybody else to leave anything to,” he said, “and I haven’t got anything else to leave, aside from the brokerage account. And you’d get that, wouldn’t you?”
“Officially,” she said, “we’re joint tenants with right of survivorship. So yes, it’d come to me. Keller, why the hell are we having this conversation?”
“Peace of mind,” he said.
“My mind was at peace before you brought this up,” she said, “and now it’s not, so I have to say I think the whole thing’s counterproductive.”
“Just let me finish going through this.” He unfolded the sheet of paper. “Three dealers,” he said. “What you do, you call all three and offer them the opportunity to inspect the collection and make an offer. I wrote out a description of the material. Schedule them on different days, because it’ll take them a while to look through everything and come up with a price.” He went on, explaining how to negotiate with the dealers, and what sort of offer she might realistically expect. With really expensive items, a dealer could work on a narrow margin; with common stamps, you could recover only a very small fraction of the cost when you sold. On balance he figured his collection would probably bring a fourth to a third of catalog value, but it was hard to say for sure.
“If you think of stamps as an investment,” he said, “you’re better off putting the money in the market, or even in the savings bank. But if you think of it as a hobby, a leisure-time pursuit, well, you get a certain amount back, and that’s not true of fly-fishing.”
“On the other hand,” she said, “you can eat what you catch. Unless you’re one of those catch-and-release guys. Keller? What brought this up, and don’t tell me about Sheridan Bingham.”
“Well, something could happen.”
“Have you got a bad feeling, Keller? A premonition?”
“Not exactly.”
“Not exactly. Is that a yes or a no?”
“Things happen to people, Dot. They get hit by buses.”
“So be careful crossing streets.”
“Or, well, the work I do. I don’t usually think of it as dangerous, but I suppose it is.”
“It’s usually dangerous for other people. But I suppose the life insurance companies would consider you to be in a high-risk category.”
“Or I could get arrested. Last time out I wound up talking to the police. I initiated it, and they never came close to suspecting me of anything, but it gets your attention, when you go and talk to the police.”
“I can see where it would.”
“If I get killed,” he said, “go straight to my apartment and grab the albums. If I just disappear, if you don’t hear from me and can’t get in touch with me, do the same thing, but in that case just hold on to them for a while on the chance that I’m all right. You can always sell them somewhere down the line. Same thing goes if I get arrested.”