The body in the gallery, p.1

The Body in the Gallery, page 1

 

The Body in the Gallery
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The Body in the Gallery


  * * *

  Title Page

  Dedication Page

  Epigraph Page

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Author’s Note

  Excerpts From Have Faith in Your Kitchen

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Katherine Hall Page

  Credits

  Copyright Notice

  About the Publisher

  For my dear friend Jean Fogelberg

  There will be time to murder and create.

  —T. S. ELIOT, “THE LOVE SONG OF

  J. ALFRED PRUFROCK”

  Contents

  Epigraph

  iii

  Chapter 1 “Wait, let me get this straight. Isn’t what you’re suggesting…

  1

  Chapter 2 The Ganley Museum of Art is a well-established Aleford institution.

  23

  Chapter 3 “It isn’t worth having an extra hour to sleep in…

  45

  Chapter 4 Faith dropped her bag and screamed. She felt her legs…

  71

  Chapter 5 If Faith thought she had the upper hand, she was…

  92

  Chapter 6 The voice continued. “I’m pretty sure it’s Tess. She was…

  117

  Chapter 7 Mrs. Whitman Polk didn’t read any Boston papers—only the New…

  141

  Chapter 8 Faith slipped the book into her bag and walked toward…

  164

  Chapter 9 “He was asleep in his bed all night. We can…

  187

  Chapter 10 Tom had been so distraught that he hadn’t lowered his…

  211

  Chapter 11 Harriett Spencer Potter had been a champion horsewoman in her…

  237

  Author’s Note

  Excerpts From Have Faith in Your Kitchen

  Acknowledgments About the Author Other Books by Katherine Hall Page Credits Cover Copyright About the Publisher

  “Wait, let me get this straight. Isn’t what you’re suggesting called ‘breaking and entering’?”

  Faith Fairchild’s fingers had been hovering over the plate of sticky buns her friend Patsy Avery had put out to go with the coffee they were drinking as they sat in Patsy’s large kitchen on Maple Street— two blocks from Faith’s house, the First Parish parsonage. Now she pulled her hand away as if the buns themselves might be larcenous.

  “Entering, no breaking involved. All very legit. As president of the board of trustees I have the museum’s alarm code. Trustee. Trust. We’re not removing anything from the property, merely taking a look at something that’s already there.”

  “Then why do we have to do it at night when the Ganley is closed? And why does it have to be ‘we,’ by the way?”

  “Have a bun.You know you want one. I haven’t been explaining this very well.To reiterate.”

  “You’re sounding very lawyerly.” Faith took a bun and started picking the pecans from the top. Patsy’s mother sent the toothsome pastries up from Louisiana periodically, and even though Faith was a caterer, she had never been able to duplicate them.The recipe was a family secret—like the ones for jambalaya and cornbread.

  “I am a lawyer.”

  “Just a reminder.”

  “Okay.When we were first married,Will and I bought a Romare Bearden.You saw it in the show that’s up at the museum now.”

  Faith remembered it well. It was a Bearden collage from the 1960s, often considered the period when he was doing his best work. This piece was deceptively simple—a bass player in blue set against a background of more shades of blue.The rich brown of the musician’s hands and face were in sharp contrast to the soft yellows and reds of the instrument itself, which merged to become part of his body. Looking at it, you could hear the notes—mellow, vibrant, pure jazz. Feel the intensity of the player, floating through the space the artist had created—Bearden, the figure, the viewer, all one with the music.

  She nodded.“It’s wonderful.”

  “When I was asked to join the board,Will and I decided to offer it to the museum as a permanent loan.We didn’t plan to take it back, but we wanted to see what kind of commitment the museum would make, and continue to make, toward broadening its horizons before we gave it outright. Loan is the operative word here, my nervous friend. It’s still my Bearden.”

  Faith nodded again. She was with her friend so far, recalling that African-American artists were severely underrepresented at the Ganley before the Averys’ gift started the ball rolling. The Ganley, to its credit, was making up for lost time. A new acquisition, an Elizabeth Catlett mother and child bronze, that was also in the show was stunning. Faith had almost wept it was so beautiful. Catlett often portrayed mothers and children, which reminded Faith why she thought Patsy had asked her to drop by.

  When Patsy had called Faith to come over for coffee, that she had something important to tell her, Faith happily jumped to the conclusion that the Averys were expecting their first child.They had been trying for a long time. A good-sized house and yard for the family they were planning to start was the reason they had moved from Boston’s South End to Aleford, a western suburb. Patsy and Will had both grown up in large New Orleans families, and Faith had sympathized with Patsy at the announcement of each sister’s, sister-in-law’s, and cousin’s new arrivals, while the Averys’ cradle remained empty. “The way they’re poppin’ them out, must be something in that Louisiana air.We need to move home,” Patsy had said at one point. But Will had made partner in a prestigious firm, and Patsy loved her exhausting job as a juvenile public defender.“These babies have no problem having babies, and that’s the problem,” she’d mentioned to Faith often.The Averys had seen specialists and engaged in all kinds of treatments without success so far.

  Yet, it wasn’t news of a blessed event, but of an unexpected one. Faith had no sooner sat down than Patsy had excitedly started talking about getting into the Ganley tomorrow night to look at the Bearden collage—one she strongly suspected was not the one the Averys had loaned the museum. Now she had calmed down and was patiently explaining it all to Faith, who had quickly gotten over her initial surprise and in one part of her mind was even starting to agree with Patsy’s rationalizations.The woman was the president of the board of trustees, after all.

  “It was all right at the opening, although it’s hard to see what’s on the walls with so many people milling around.That’s why I went in today to take a last look by myself. I wanted to say good-bye for a while before it goes into storage. It could be a few years before it’s in another exhibition. There I was, almost alone—there are never many people first thing in the morning—and right away I knew it wasn’t our Bearden.”

  “How could you tell?” Faith asked.

  “It was a vibe. I’m not one of those people who can spot a fake—I don’t have ‘the Eye’—but I’ve lived with this piece of art. I know it. The colors were right, the composition, everything, but something was off. Bearden’s signatures were very distinctive. This one was vertical in black script so fine it looked like it was written with an etching tool—four lines, Rom, are, Bear, and den. As much of a work of art as the rest.”

  Faith had an art dealer friend from the years before her marriage when she had been living in her native Manhattan.Andy always said the way an artist signed a piece of art could make or break it.

  Patsy continued. “The signature was very good, but not good enough. I’m sure it’s a fake.And the signature is key. It’s not a crime to copy a work of art—think of all those students on campstools at the MFA—but it is a crime to forge a signature. The show comes down tomorrow when the museum is closed, so we have to act fast. Early Wednesday morning it will all be transported to the storage facility in South Boston. I’ll never be able to get at it! Before this happens I have to take some photos, and there’s a tiny mark on the back that the forger may have overlooked.The frame looks the same, but whoever did this would have been smart enough to put the fake in the original one.”

  “But why don’t you just go in and look at it during the day tomorrow? Surely Maddy wouldn’t object to your taking it down from the wall.”

  Madelyn,“Maddy,” Harper was the current museum director.

  “Faith.” Patsy sounded a bit impatient.“If there’s something funny going on at the museum, the last person I want to alert at the moment is the director.”

  “Of course. I wasn’t thinking. It’s just that the whole thing is so implausible. This is Aleford, not London or New York. The Ganley is a small, New England museum, not the Tate or the Met.The idea that someone has switched an original for a fake here is hard to believe.”

  “Believe it. Romare Bearden died in 1988 and his work, especially his collages, has appreciated enormously. London and New York don’t have a monopoly on greed. In fact, a fake at a museum like ours would be less likely to be spotted. Not only don’t we have a large number of specialists on staff, but we also don’t have the kind of traffic those museums have—traffic that includes connoisseurs from all over the world who might raise questions. And whoever’s responsible knows the piece will be in storage for a long time—and in an off-site location. Maddy is hoping t o launch a campaign for an on-site facility in the not too distant future, but it’s a hard thing to get people to donate to—can’t put your name on it or exhibit it. Too utilitarian.”

  “Which means whoever’s responsible has to be on the staff or somewhat intimately connected with the museum to know the schedule of exhibitions,” Faith said.“We’re not dealing with Banksy here. You know that British artist who sneaks into museums and glues a piece of his own work onto the walls? He hit the Met, MoMA, Brooklyn Museum, and the Museum of Natural History all at once. Nobody noticed that what he calls his ‘subverted art’ wasn’t supposed to be there for several days. I mean, the man disguises himself as Inspector Clouseau, although I guess in New York people wouldn’t bat an eye.”

  “They would in Aleford, but although our crook is leaving something, it’s not with the same intent. So here’s the plan.We go in tomorrow night. Better wear dark clothes, and we can park at Have Faith and walk from there.”

  Faith had started her catering firm, Have Faith, in New York before moving to New England as a new bride, and after brief hiatuses when Ben, now twelve, and Amy, nine, arrived on the scene, had continued the business in Aleford. Faith only lied to her minister husband,Tom, when it was absolutely necessary and even then crossed her fingers behind her back. Patsy’s plan would make both unnecessary. Faith could tell him she was going to work.Which she was. Kind of.

  Lying to members of the clergy in some form was inevitable when one was the daughter and granddaughter of men of the cloth. Faith Sibley Fairchild and her sister, Hope, one year younger, had grown up on New York’s Upper East Side.Their mother, Jane Sib-ley, a real estate lawyer, was descended from the canny Dutch who had made such a profitable—for them—deal with the original New Yorkers. The long-ago indigenous people who were unfortunately swayed as much by fashion—those blankets and beads were to die for—as present-day New Yorkers—got to have that Prada bag and Jimmy Choos.

  Jane had no problem assuming the tasks a ministerial spouse inevitably inherits—Ladies’ Aid, calls on the infirm in mind and body—but she firmly refused to leave her island, or her neighborhood.The Sibley parsonage was a very roomy duplex just off Central Park. Early on, Faith and Hope had sworn never to enter even as well-appointed a fishbowl as the one in which they had grown up. Hope married Quentin Lewis, her counterpart on Wall Street. They synchronized their PDAs and produced Quentin Lewis III in due time.

  Faith, however, had fallen. Fallen very much in love, virtually at first sight. The Reverend Thomas Preston Fairchild was in town performing the wedding ceremony for his college roommate, and Faith was catering the reception.Tom had shed his robes and collar. By the time she found out what he did for a living, it was too late. While she never regretted her choice, there were moments when she regretted his—members of the parish offering her “friendly” child-rearing advice or entering the parsonage living room and declaring in aggrieved tones, “You’ve rearranged the furniture.” And then there was the omnipresent fact that with rare exception, Tom was on call twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year.

  “I don’t want to park in the museum lot, and your place isn’t far.” Patsy was revved up. She was speaking fast again. Ms. Avery liked having a plan; she liked following up on one even better.

  Faith had finished one sticky bun and was seriously contemplating another.This was what was so devastating about them—the first merely whetted your appetite for the second, and so on . . .

  “You haven’t explained why you need my company for your escapade. Certainly not to park at the kitchen.That’s no problem.And it’s not a large work of art.You can get it off the wall by yourself.”

  “Honey, I can get into the museum, but I can’t shimmy under the laser beam into the gallery where everything will be wrapped and waiting to go. There’s where you come in. And now that you mention it, it would be nice to have some company.”

  “Take Will. He can do the limbo number as well as, if not better than, I can.”

  Will Avery was thin. His wife was more ample, much more ample. She liked to point out that when they met, Will told her he didn’t like to see bone on a woman, and thank goodness still didn’t.

  “Are you crazy, Faith! Can you imagine what he would say about all this? He’s a lawyer, remember?”

  Since she had brought it up before, Faith didn’t feel it was necessary to remind Patsy of her own esquire status.The sugar rush or Patsy’s enthusiasm was making Faith’s skin tingle. It had been a slow fall so far at Have Faith with the downturn in the economy. She suspected many of her previous customers were transferring Costco’s shrimp platters and other offerings to their own silver salvers instead of hiring outside help. Investigating possible art fraud would be a pleasant diversion, and as for entering the museum, Patsy had the code—no breakin involved—and the only things they would be taking were a few photos.

  One more thought occurred to her.

  “What about surveillance cameras? I’ve seen them on the outside of the building when we’ve catered events.”

  “Major secret, but they’re there for show. I don’t think the film has been changed since they were installed. Thomas, the security guard, told me that one was removed recently when he found mice had not only left little calling cards on the path below, but had had the further audacity to line their nest with the wires they’d chewed through.”

  Patsy paused for a moment.

  “In or out?” she asked.

  “In.” Faith sighed.“Basic black and we meet when?”

  As she walked home, rustling through the fallen oak leaves on the sidewalk, Faith wondered what had happened to September. Or the summer, for that matter.Time seemed to be speeding up. Is that what happened as you got older? She remembered longing to be more grown-up when she wasn’t.Always waiting to be a certain age—old enough to wear makeup, old enough to drive, old enough, well, for all sorts of things. She was old enough now, but the funny part was that she didn’t feel all that grown-up. Even with two very much wanting-to-be-grown-up children. Especially Ben. As she looked at the shadows that were growing longer each day, a shadow crossed her mind. Middle school.

  Ben couldn’t wait for the first day. All summer he and his best friend, Josh, had agonized over what to wear, what school supplies to buy. And then there was the mighty cell phone debate. Ben had started early—last spring—wisely avoiding the ineffective “Everybody else has one” for the canny “You’d know where I was all the time.You’d never have to worry.” And “They have number blockers and limited-minutes programs, not that you couldn’t trust me, but I’m just telling you.” Faith and Tom had gotten to the point in life where they couldn’t imagine how they functioned before cell phones, using them, on occasion absurdly enough, to speak to each other when they were both in the house—Tom in his study, Faith in the kitchen. Cell phones weren’t permitted in elementary school, but the middle and high schools had given in to parental— not student—pressure two years ago. If little Jack missed the bus, he could call right away. If little Jill’s soccer practice was canceled, she could let a parent know. Latchkey children needed all the connections they could get. And in the post-9/11 world, the option many parents wanted above all was 911.

  Although he didn’t come home to an empty house, Ben got his phone.

  Faith cut across her next-door neighbors’, the Millers, backyard. The house was dark. In the past at dusk, there would have been lights on in the kitchen as Pix, Faith’s closest friend, supervised her younger son Dan’s homework and chose from an array of boxes with the word HELPER on them for something to put together for supper. Pix worked part-time for Faith, balancing the books and doing some of the ordering, a job she had taken with the proviso that she would not prepare any actual food. Dan was in his first year of college now; his older brother and sister already out. The nest was empty, and it looked as if Pix had flown off, too. Probably meeting her husband, Sam, in town for dinner. It was a good thing those boxes in the cupboard had a shelf life measurable by carbon dating.

  The lights were on in the Fairchilds’ kitchen and up in Ben’s bedroom, one of the ones in the back of the house. Faith had left Amy doing math homework at the big round table in the kitchen. She was also supposed to keep an eye on the chicken dish simmering on the stove that they’d have once Tom got home from whatever parish meeting would delay him tonight. Ben had been at his desk writing a book report on a book of his own choosing. He’d picked Eldest, the sequel to Christopher Paolini’s Eragon.

 

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