A Killer Collection Read online




  Molly Appleby is a sharp-witted writer for Collector's Weekly magazine. She has a keen knowledge of antiques, and a special fondness for collectibles. And when a fellow collector is murdered, Molly quickly develops an uncanny understanding of the criminal mind.

  Table of Contents

  Copyright Information

  Interlude

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Interlude

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Interlude

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Interlude

  A Brief Note on Face Jugs

  About the Author

  A Killer Collection

  An Antiques & Collectibles Mystery

  By J.B. Stanley

  Copyright © 2006 Jennifer Stanley. All rights reserved.

  This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously.

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by an electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the author.

  Many thanks to Lorraine Bartlett for helping this book have a second life. Not only is Lorraine a talented writer (check out her books under the names L.L. Bartlett and Lorna Bartlett as well as Lorraine Bartlett) but she is also a generous friend.

  The Antiques & Collectibles Mysteries

  A Killer Collection

  Fatal Appraisal

  A Deadly Dealer

  A Killer Collection

  An Antiques & Collectibles Mystery

  By J.B. Stanley

  The potter's hands were wide with short, thick fingers, gnarled and cracked from a lifetime of work. Small burn scars crisscrossed the tough skin on the palms from feeding wood into the kiln. Dried clay was wedged beneath the ragged fingernails. Specks of it dotted the potter's apron and stuck like gray flies to his muscular forearms.

  He reached under the cloth and drew out a ball of brown clay, looking it over for any signs of obvious impurities. He placed it on the scale and removed a few chunks from the ball until the scale read five pounds. He lumped the leftovers together and returned them to their shelter to wait under the wet cloth.

  Slapping the ball on his wheel so that it would hold fast and create the right amount of suction, he dipped his fingers in a pail of cloudy water and drizzled it over the expectant clay. He began pumping the foot pedal on the wheel, and as it spun around, he moistened the clay until it became malleable beneath his hands.

  As the potter centered the bulk, it lurched sideways like an unsteady drunk, and then rose upward like a giraffe craning its neck to reach a high branch. The wheel hummed softly as the potter worked under the light of a single bulb, the sounds of bluegrass music playing on the radio.

  The clay was alive. Warm below his arms, it moved, stretched, and twisted. He cupped his fingers around its body, forcing the ripples to grow into a steady curve. He pressed more firmly at the base, and hips appeared as the weight of the clay settled onto itself. Around the rim, the potter pinched with one hand and smoothed the swelling sides with the other. Then, he let the pace of the wheel slow as he curled his hand around the neck of clay, pushing it upward in a gentle choking motion until it was a symmetrical spout, obedient to his will.

  With a knife, he cut off the extra piece of neck and smoothed the insides of the opening. He stepped back and examined the piece, looking at the base, the round sides, and back up to the top where the centered spout emerged in perfect lines.

  Satisfied, he slid a length of wire beneath the jug and moved it gingerly onto a stone slab where it would dry. This one would not get a face. It was too late in the evening and the potter was tired He had made enough for today.

  As he switched off the radio, he noticed the little lump of leftover clay peeking out from beneath the damp cloth. A new wedge awaited him tomorrow, and he didn't really want to unwrap the whole thing just to save this small bit. Still, he hated to waste a piece of clay. He paused, picked it up, held it, thinking.

  His hands moved over it, hesitating. They weren't sure what they were supposed to do. Without the wheel, things were uncertain. Pieces could become anything—imperfect, irregular

  The potter smoothed the lump into a rounded body, and then applied pressure until he’d made a thick neck with one hand, widening a round head with the other. He pinched out two long, rounded ears, and pulled forward a small nose and cheeks. Dipping his hands into the water, he smoothed the body and pushed out a swollen hump to become the back and the hind leg, then pulled out two long, identical front legs from the clay below the head With a wooden carving stick, he traced an upright cottontail on the base of the back leg, drew paws into the little feet, and made a triangular nose, winking eyes, a grinning mouth, and six whiskers. Lastly, he carved his initials and a number onto the base.

  The potter smiled, flicking away any flecks of clay from around the last piece of work he would do that night. He hid it far back behind the other taller pieces where it could remain a surprise until the moment was right.

  The rabbit smiled back at him, sharing his secret among the crocks and chums, the pitchers and bowls, and the face jugs with their rows of crooked teeth. It waited for the time when the potter's hands would reach out with his brush and glaze its naked body into a cobalt the color of the deep sea. The clay was patient. It had waited hundreds of years to be formed; it could wait a little longer to be burned blue by the kiln fire.

  It waited. But the gentle hands of its creator would never come again.

  ~~~~~~~~~~

  Chapter 1

  It was quick, it was ruthless, it was in-your-face collecting . . . .

  Did people really go this crap over pottery?

  —ANDREW GLASGOW, from Catawba Clay: Contemporary

  Southern Face Jug Makers

  "Time to get up!"

  The call seeped into the dark bedroom and murmured around antique woven coverlets and a turn-of-the-century walnut blanket chest. It stared at the Dutch girl with the metal bucket in her oil painting of snow, reflected the sheen on the porcelain curls of a pair of Staffordshire dogs, and tickled the ecru page comers on a stack of leather-bound books. Finding no response, it accepted defeat and melted into the open mouth of a large cherry corner cupboard filled with row upon row of white-glazed pottery glowing with life in the weak, first stripes of dawn light.

  "MADAM!" This call was loud enough to stir the silence of the room and awaken the sleeping woman. The gray tabby beside her burrowed a sharp claw into the woman's hand as punishment for daring to move a body part.

  The door was flung open without ceremony and a rectangle of light from the kitchen burst into the room like an uninvited guest.

  "Who do you have in there?" Molly's mother asked from the doorframe, and without waiting for an answer, asked the groggy feline, "Sophie, would you like some milk?"

  The rotund tabby turned toward the voice and issued a small chirp of assent. Molly, whose nickname was "Madam" in her mother's house, turned over and buried her head beneath the pillow.

  In the kitchen, her mother sang little ditties to her seven felines, cracked open cans, and distributed dry food into bowls. Cats meowed, fridge and cupboard doors were opened and closed, the microwave whirred and beeped. Then her mother was back, balancing something carefully in one hand and turning o
n the lamp with the other.

  "Get up, Molly. It's time to go."

  "I'm up, I'm up. What time is it?"

  "4:45."

  "Four! This is insane." Molly sat up and pushed a strand of dark hair out of her face. "You are truly an evil woman," she mumbled.

  "Get up. Sophie wants her milk, and she doesn't like anyone on the bed when she's eating."

  Molly looked at the porcelain doll-sized teacup and saucer her mother held with as much disdain as she could muster. Sophie glared accusingly at her in return.

  "I hope you realize that I am going to be crabby all day," Molly announced as she shuffled off to the bathroom.

  "Yes, dear. But I'm used to you."

  "Hrmphh."

  It was a cool, predawn morning. Molly shivered and wiped the condensation from the car windshield. Beneath fading stars, she watched as her mother loaded some rubber bins stuffed with bubble wrap into the trunk. It was hard to believe that this was the beginning of what would become another stiflingly hot June day in North Carolina. Molly rubbed the goose bumps on her arms and climbed into the driver's seat of her mother's pearl-white Lexus.

  By 5:30, they were merging onto interstate 85 South toward Seagrove, home of the southern potters. As Molly sipped her warm sweet coffee, her mother offered her a banana. Molly crossly waved it away.

  "I can't eat at this hour. The truckers are the only people crazy enough to be on the road, and they're probably getting paid much more than I am."

  "The other collectors are out here too."

  "Oh," Molly moaned, ignoring her mother, "I wish I hadn't volunteered to cover these pottery fair things. I hate getting up when it's still dark."

  "They're called kiln openings. And once you've been to one, you'll be hooked for life. I know you!"

  "Well, it was your idea to suggest these articles to Collector's Weekly, and now I'm driving instead of sleeping. My editor thinks a series on pottery is a great idea, and he never likes anything."

  Her mother examined a minute stain on her teal cardigan sweater. "The collecting world needs to be educated about southern potters, and you're just the person to do it."

  Molly had been an English teacher at an exclusive private school for eight years when the job started to wear on her. Though people assumed most teachers worked a short day and took summers off, Molly worked long days, graded papers on weekends, and spent every summer teaching extra classes in order to meet her mortgage payments. After eight years, she felt that she had no time for herself.

  Whenever she did have a few moments to spare, she spent them attending auctions and browsing antique shops. Soon she was submitting articles to Collector's Weekly for extra spending money, and when a full-time staff position became available, she jumped at the chance to get paid for doing what she loved most

  She typically wrote on the bigger-name antique auctions in her area, driving around Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina to snap pictures and interview auctioneers and bidders. Her articles featured detailed descriptions of the items that brought in the highest prices as well as quotes from satisfied buyers.

  After covering the auction beat for a year, she noticed that more and more southern pottery was appearing on the auction block and then disappearing at exorbitant prices. Knowing little about the subject, she asked her mother for a quick course on the world of southern pottery.

  She had received a pile of books to read, but her mother warned her that the written word could never compete with the real thing. Molly would have to meet the potters and see them working in person to fully understand why people went wild over their wares.

  Molly's mother, Clara Appleby, had once owned a thriving antique shop. Over time, she discovered that she hated being tied to retail hours and dealing with finicky customers, so she switched her business and became a dealer in southern folk art pottery. Instead of renting and maintaining a costly shop space, she now conducted business using a simple Web site and a "shop" located in the log cabin on her property. Customers could visit by appointment only.

  Clara's own house was filled with pottery of all shapes and sizes and she was well known as an expert on all things made of clay. Molly repeatedly teased her that she bought more to keep than to sell.

  "You have to go to kiln openings to get the pottery at reasonable prices. Dealers can turn right around and double their money by selling the pieces they get at openings on the Internet the same day. Plus, some of these potters only make two batches a year. That puts a big limit on supply. You've got to grab them fresh out of the kiln," Clara lectured animatedly.

  Molly threw her mother a sideways glance. "Sounds like a scam to me. Dealers wait for those two kiln openings a year and go crazy, buying up everything the potter has, right? I mean, the potters limit the supply and the demand increases, causing normal people to get up with the chickens. Pretty clever."

  "It takes a ton of hard work to make this kind of pottery. We're not talking about pansy pots or coffee mugs. These art potters may have spent ten years learning how to make something perfect come off the wheel. I can't explain it to you. You just have to see it for yourself. You'll learn to love it all—the kiln openings, the pottery festivals, outbidding someone for a piece you just have to have at auction. Trust me, it's a complete addiction! People will absolutely kill for this stuff, you'll see."

  ~~~~~

  It took about an hour and a half to reach Seagrove from Hillsborough, and the two women pulled onto a dirt and gravel road Matted with a plywood sign that read C. C. Burle Pottery in rough, worn letters. The narrow, tree-lined drive was already packed with cars and the sun had barely begun to warn the sky of its imminent arrival.

  "Look at all these cars!" Molly exclaimed. She had expected to see a dozen at most.

  "We're late," her mother scowled. "We are going to have a horrible place in line. Just park anywhere. Hurry, hurry!"

  Molly squeezed her mother's sedan in between a makeshift row of pickup trucks and noted several other luxury cars farther up the drive toward a rusted metal barn. The mix of people gathered in front of the bam was just as interesting. There were men in overalls and others in button-downs and khaki pants. Several women wore frumpy, flowered dresses, and others dressed in pants, sweater sets, and pearls. Molly felt comfortable in her white blouse and khaki pants—one of the standard uniforms worn to a casual southern event. Her eyes, which had felt puffy and swollen in the car, now darted around wildly as she tried to soak in all the details.

  "I'm going to look over the pottery. Get in line," her mother hissed urgently and prodded her forward. Molly walked quickly up the drive to a patch of scraggly grass located between the barn and the potter's workshop.

  Molly got in line behind the small cluster of buyers who appeared to be calmly chatting next to a rope. The thin strip of twine served as the divider between the customers and the three tables loaded with pottery. Molly noticed that the calmness on people's faces was likely a charade. Nervous glances were thrown back and forth between the other buyers, the tables of pottery, and the ticking face of a watch. Tension sat in the air like a low, heavy thunderhead.

  "This isn't too bad." Her mother returned from examining the pottery. She counted out the twelve buyers ahead of her and smiled, pleased with their spot in line. "With two of us, we should easily get three or four pieces. Let's decide on what we're going for."

  Molly followed her mother's eyes toward the pottery. In the young light, it was effused with a glow that only pieces made by hand seem to carry. Molly noticed a brown and white pitcher with a snake curling around the top. The snake's mouth was open as if to strike, revealing a red tongue and two rows of sharp, white clay teeth. As she scanned the rows of face jugs, churns, pitchers, roosters, and crocks on the other tables, more people began lining up behind them, whispering to one another.

  "I like that snake pitcher," Molly announced to her mother in a normal voice.

  "Shhhhh!" her mother hissed apprehensively. "Don't say what you're going for or y
ou'll draw attention to it. Then everyone will think you've noticed something special."

  "Oh, sorry," Molly said quietly. "Which pieces are we going for?"

  "Those two roosters on the table to the far right, that face jug with the crying eyes on the center table, and your snake pitcher."

  Molly scanned the tables until she had located the two large red roosters with sharp, angular beaks and tails. On the center table, a jug decorated with a grotesque face leaked white glaze from its porcelain eyes. Molly grimaced.

  "That's not very attractive."

  "You'd change your mind if you sold it for $500 on eBay."

  "I certainly would." Molly nodded. "So how does this work?"

  "At exactly eight o'clock, C. C. will cut the rope and everyone will make a mad dash for the pottery. You have to have a good jump off the line—that's very important."

  Molly giggled. She began imagining a wild animal stampede, complete with pushing and shoving, pottery smashing, and women screaming.

  "This is pretty nutty," Molly said.

  "Uh huh. Just you wait," Clara said, then turned her head in the direction of a car with a powerful engine approaching the spot where they stood.

  A large black Mercedes raced up the driveway toward the line of apprehensive buyers, forcing people to grudgingly step aside. The freshly waxed car stopped abruptly in front of the barn, spraying dust and bits of gravel into the air. A portly man with a shock of white hair slowly lifted himself out of the driver's seat and raised his hands to the watching crowd like a conductor ready to begin a symphony.

  "All right, y'all can start. The Pottery Man's here now!" he called in a loud, brassy drawl.

  "Who is that?” Molly asked her mother, who was now frowning.

  "That is George-Bradley Staunton. He's a big-time collector and a full-time jackass."

  "Oh," said a surprised Molly, for her mother rarely used expletives.

  The jackass in question began moving up the line, shaking hands with reluctant men and flirting with all the women. A partially smoked cigarette dangled from his mouth and he paused to light another one whenever he began a new conversation. He wore a white linen suit with a peach shirt and tan leather loafers. He had loose cheeks and his neck was so thick that it seemed to have swallowed his chin. The formless neck and bulging green eyes gave him the overall look of a bullfrog. He dabbed at the beads of sweat on his forehead with a ratty, monogrammed handkerchief and moved toward Molly and Clara like a king receiving the acquiescence of his subjects.