'I'm going, mate,' Tinker muttered.
'Tinker. ' I gave him a quid. My voice sounded funny. 'Wait in the pub. I'll only be ten minutes.'
'Ta. But the auction won't be over till—'
He peered at my face and then quickly went, his old boots clumping until the door pinged shut behind him. By now old Alfred was at the door, nervously measuring distances for a quick getaway. Trust him to suss me out before the rest.
Millon announced, pompously tugging his waistcoat neater, 'Now we can get on! Lot Forty-One. The bid's with you, sir. ' He pointed to a tall neat gabardine-suited bloke, who had bid last in a foreign accent. 'It was fifty pounds. Who'll give fifty-five?'
I found Helen's hand on my arm. 'Please no, Lovejoy,' her voice begged. But it was miles off and I shrugged her away.
Millon was chanting, 'Fifty-five anywhere?' when I coughed. The place stilled again. It was nothing like a Tinker special, but I did the best I could.
'Who'll give me fifty-five for this—?'
I coughed again, a non-cough phoney enough to gall anyone. Millon glared in my direction. 'Sir. Please control your noise or I shall have to ask you to leave also.'
So I was a sir and Tinker was a doss-house lounger. I coughed again, looking deliberately at Millon. He reddened and for the first time noticed that the other bidders had silently begun to recede, leaving a clear space around me. I heard Alfred mutter,
'Oh Gawd!' The door pinged once as he slid out. Wise old bird.
Millon's voice wavered but he gamely went on, 'In view of the interruptions we will leave Lot Forty-One in abeyance and go on to Lot Forty-Two, which is Chippendale—'
'No. ' That was me, trying for a normal voice but it came out like a whipcrack.
He stared. I smiled back. In that moment one of the strangers next to the big bloke started to say something but he was pulled up by a kindly friend, which saved him a lot of trouble, whoever he was. I heard another voice murmur, 'Watch it, mate. That's Lovejoy.'
Millon's gaze wobbled. For confidence, he stared belligerently to where his three miffs were standing. Miffs are auctioneers' callers who hump stuff about and make sure potential bidders get the barest glimpse of the lots next on offer. They were looking anywhere else. You have to smile. Sometimes they behave like real people.
'What do you mean, no?' Millon snapped, which only goes to show how dumb auctioneers can be.
'I mean your “Chippendale” bureau is a fake.'
There was a babble of alarmed chatter, quickly fading.
Millon practically went berserk.
'This is outrageous! I'm putting you out this instant! And I'm having you sued for—'
That old familiar white heat glow came in my head. I gave up trying to be patient and found myself walking forward, the mob parting like a bow wave. Everybody gave me their attention, especially when I told them to.
'All of you listen, ' I said. 'Lift his Chippendale bureau up. It's the wrong weight for its size. Look at the right-hand drawer—you'll find a pattern of old filled-in screw holes. It's oak all right, but nicked from a World War One vintage bedroom cupboard. And the ageing stain's phoney. Invert the drawers and you'll see the paler shrinkage lines round the edges. ' I looked up at Millon, now looking considerably less assured. I added, 'It's not Chippendale, chum. It's a bodged mock-up.'
An angry murmur rose from the crowd. Millon paled. I felt so happy.
Blithely I sailed on, 'Like that old sextant.' It had been proudly displayed in the window all week. 'Did you tell them it isn't really seventeenth-century, Millon?' I explained how even with a small handlens you can spot modern high-rev lathe work.
Millon was going green. The ugly groundswell of muttering intensified. He bleated, These allegations are quite unfounded—'
'And that old Dutch microscope, Millon,' I announced with jubilation. 'You catalogued it as a mint original. The lenses are whittled-down spectacle lenses from a threepenny stall. Any optician will tell you how it's done.'
Somebody shouted, 'Well, Millon? What about it, eh?' Another dealer yelled, 'I bought that ivory, Millon—'
'Taiwan,' I put in before the dazed auctioneer could draw breath. 'They simulate the grain.' With a wax coating pitted by a kitchen cheese-shredder and a dilute solution of phosphoric acid you can give almost any plastic a detailed texture of ivory.
Unscrupulous forgers of antiques can mass-produce them if you make a template, though I've found (er, I mean I've heard) the moulds don't really last very long.'
'Please, gentlemen.' The nerk tried to gavel but it only irritated everyone still more.
'What about this miniature?' That was the big Continental bloke. He was looking not at Millon but directly at me, which I thought odd. Nor did he seem worried at having risked his money on a load of tat. The man next to him, obviously one of his many serfs, was holding up a small filthy medallion-sized disc covered by a dirty piece of glass. Even across the angry crowd in that dingy hall I felt that luscious shudder deep inside my chest. My breathing went funny, and I shook to the chime of heavenly bells.
For me all strife momentarily ceased, and I was in Paradise. I was in the presence of a genuine sixteenth-century miniature, possibly even done by the great Hilliard himself. I groaned audibly and felt tears start in my eyes.
The big geezer laughed, a strange noise like a cat's cough. I didn't need to explain my jealousy because it must have showed on my face. He had made himself an absolute fortune and suddenly I hated him more than fried liver, the bastard.
I turned away and raised my voice over the babble. 'Pay attention, troops. That bobbin tree catalogued as late Hanoverian is actually brand new, and imported pinewood at that.' I could have gone into details of how fruitwood and laburnum can be simulated in these delectable household necessities of Regency days, but you can't educate antique dealers so it's no use bothering.
'Please. You're ruining—'
'That Civil War cavalry pistol's a fake,' I continued, pointing. 'A cut-down Eastern jezail with a Turkish barrel. Note the—'
I would have gone on because I was just getting into my stride, but with a howl the dam broke. A beefy gorilla in from the Smoke shouldered me out of the way. The furious dealers grabbed for Millon, the poor goon shrieking for help but of course his three miffs had vanished and he disappeared in a mound of flying limbs. I spent the next few seconds eeling my way from the pandemonium, smiling blissfully. The place was in uproar as I pinged out into the cold.
Happier now, I plodded the few snowy yards to the Ship. I could still hear the racket from the auction rooms as I pushed open the tavern door. Tinker was hunched over a pint at the bar. He started at the sight of me. 'Look, Lovejoy. I could get old Lemuel to help instead.'
'Shut it.' I gave him the bent eye and he subsided into silence but still managed to drain his pint. His gnarled countenance led me to understand a refill was a matter of survival, so I paid up. It was in that split second while Tinker's pint glass remained miraculously full that I felt the most horrid sense of foreboding. I started to slurp at my own glass in an attempt to shake it off just as a hand tapped my shoulder.
'Lovejoy.'
Chris Anders was normally a taciturn geezer but now his face was puce with fury. He is domestic pre-Victorian furniture—that treacherous shifting sand of the antiques world—
and late Victorian jewellery, and good at both. I quite like him but at the moment I wasn't exactly in the mood to have my shoulder tapped. I sighed and put my glass down. It was one of those days.
'You bastard! You shambled the whole bloody auction!'
'Me?' I said innocently.
'You! I wanted one of the lots and you stopped me, you—'
I tried to calm him. 'Sorry, old pal. Anyway that Chinese funereal terracotta bird shouldn't be glazed, Chris.' I was only trying to be reasonable, because he's famous for coating with polyurethanes any antique that stands still long enough, the maniac. The object Chris was after shrieked authenticity. It was one of the terracotta figures from Fu Hao's tomb, excavated at Anyang in China during the mid-1970s. Anyway, I have a soft spot for that tempestuous empress Fu Hao who lived such a stormy life. Wife of the Emperor Wu Ding, 1300 BC or thereabouts, and not above leading his armies into battle if the need arose. A real woman.