“Is she likely to have eighteenth-century receipts?”
“That depends on whether Caleb Strong’s ancestors were sticklers for keeping records. Some of those old New England families never threw anything away.”
“Finish your breakfast and come into my office. I’ll draw up something for you.”
Barton read the document and set it on Stone’s desk. “Perfect,” he said.
Stone tapped a few computer keys, printed out some copies and put them into an envelope. “Here you are,” he said, handing over the envelope. I’ve put in some blank pages for the inventory which, I suppose, you’ll have to do by hand.”
“I suppose,” Barton said. “May I use your phone?”
“Of course,” Stone replied. “There’s one on the coffee table in front of the sofa. Would you like some privacy?”
“No, that’s all right.” Barton took an address book from his pocket, walked to the sofa and dialed a number. “May I speak to Mrs. Strong, please? This is Barton Cabot calling.”
Stone’s phone buzzed, and he picked it up. “Yes?”
“A woman who says her name is Carla is on line one for you.”
“Tell her I’m with a client, and I’ll call her back in a few minutes.” He hung up.
“Hello, Mildred?” Barton was saying. “How are you? Yes, it’s been a few years. I hope you’re well. I’m very well, thank you. I’m in New York, at the moment, but I’ll be driving to Newport in a few minutes, and I thought that, if you’re amenable, I might drop by Bristol and call on you.” Barton consulted his watch. “Lunch would be delightful. Would it be all right if I brought a friend?” He pointed at Stone and mouthed YOU.
Stone shrugged and nodded.
“You’re sure we won’t be putting you out? Fine, I’ll see you at one o’clock. Good-bye.” He hung up the phone, smiling. “That was easier than I expected,” he said. “She sounded very happy to hear from me.”
“You’re off to a good start, then.”
“I suppose I am. We better get moving, I guess.”
“I’ll open the garage door for you,” Stone said. He got up and pressed the button, then opened the inside door to the garage. “Just let me speak to Joan for a moment, then I’ll be right with you.” He walked into Joan’s office. “Please give me Carla’s number.” She did. “I’m going to drive up to Rhode Island with Barton. I should be back tonight.”
“Have a nice trip,” Joan said.
Stone went back to the garage. “I’d better follow you in my car,” he said to Barton. “You don’t want to have to drive me back to New York.”
“Good idea,” Barton said.
Stone hung his jacket in the backseat and got his car started. A moment later, they were headed to the East River Drive and thence to I-95.
When they were well under way, Stone called Carla.
“Hello?” Her voice was low and sexy. Stone repressed his thoughts.
“Hi, it’s Stone. I’m sorry; I was in a meeting when you called.”
“Are you out of your meeting, now? Would you like to come at… to lunch?”
Stone chuckled. “Love to, but I’m on the road. I have to drive up to Rhode Island for a meeting with a client.”
“Oh, shit,” she said.
“It’s just as well; Harlan Deal could still be having you watched. We had a meeting yesterday, and I think I threw him off the track, but you never know.”
“You mean we can’t get together at all?”
“Let’s give him time to lose interest,” Stone replied. “How did you and Barton get on?”
“Exactly how you thought we would,” she said with a little petulance.
“My congratulations to you both,” Stone said.
“Oh, go fuck yourself,” she said.
“That seems to be my only alternative.”
“Call me next week.” She hung up.
Stone tried redirecting his thoughts to eighteenth-century American furniture but did not entirely succeed.
43
Stone followed Barton up I-95, all the way through Providence, then they left the interstate and drove down the Bristol Peninsula to the town of Bristol.
Eleven Water Street turned out to be a large brick and limestone house in the Federal style, perhaps even the period. The door was answered by a middle-aged woman in a black housemaid’s uniform. They gave their names and were escorted into a spacious ground-floor drawing room.
“Mrs. Strong will be down directly,” the woman said, then left them.
Stone had expected the house to be something elegant but seedy, but there was no peeling paint or worn upholstery. The room was immaculate and beautifully furnished. Stone took a chair and watched Barton roam the room like a panther, looking closely at a piece here, a piece there.
Barton then joined Stone, taking the sofa next to him. “It’s a treasure trove,” he half whispered. “There’s at least ten million dollars at auction in this room.”
A door opened, and a tall, slender, beautifully dressed woman swept into the room, moving like someone half her age. She was perfectly coiffed and made up, and Stone wouldn’t have thought she was a day over seventy. He and Barton were immediately on their feet.
“Mildred! How good to see you!” Barton said.
She allowed herself to be kissed on both cheeks. “Barton, you look well.”
“May I present my friend, Stone Barrington?”
She extended a hand. “How do you do, Mr. Barrington.”
“I’m very pleased to meet you,” Stone replied, receiving a firm handshake.
“Would you like a glass of sherry, or shall we go straight in to lunch?” she asked.
“Whatever is convenient,” Barton said.
“Let’s have lunch,” Mildred said, leading the way toward the rear of the house, outside through French doors and down a staircase into a garden, looking south over Narragansett Bay, where a table had been set for three.
Barton held her chair for her, and they sat.
“Mr. Barrington, would you pour the wine?” Mildred asked.
“Certainly,” he replied, “and please call me Stone.”
“And I’m Mildred.”
Stone took the bottle from the ice bucket next to him and glanced at the label. It read Montrachet 1955. Good God! he thought. He poured a little for Mildred Strong.
She tasted it. “Oh, very nice,” she said. “Caleb was an avid collector of wine. I’ve hardly been able to put a dent in his cellar since he died, twenty-five years ago.”
Stone sipped the wine. It was a deep golden color and tasted of honey and pears. “This is perfectly wonderful, Mildred.”
“Are you a collector of wines, Stone?”
“I have a very nice cellar in my house in New York, but only a few good cases, I’m afraid.”
“It is so nice not to have to shop for wine,” she said. “Caleb has already done it for me.”
The maid appeared with bowls of chilled asparagus soup.
“So, Barton,” Mildred said, “what brings you to Rhode Island?”
“It occurred to me that I haven’t done the shops in Newport for a couple of years, and I thought I’d see what I could pick up for my own place.”
“From what I hear, you don’t spend much time in your shop,” she said.
“That’s perfectly true; I have a woman who runs it for me, while I scour the countryside for good pieces.”
“And that’s why you’ve come to see me, isn’t it?”
“My first impulse was to see you, Mildred, but it is a treat to see your beautiful house.”
“Yes, it is beautiful, isn’t it? In the daylight hours all I have to do with myself is to keep it that way, and the garden, too, and to write thank-you notes to my hostesses.”
“Do you still buy things?”
“Never. I haven’t bought a piece in thirty years. Caleb’s family collected so much over the centuries, that I haven’t had to shop. If I’m redoing a room and need something, I have no farther to look than my attic. There are dealers about who would pay a pretty penny for what I have in that attic.”
“Have you ever sold anything?” Barton asked.