what Celia believed to be solid brass.
âI might be interested in making you an offer for that,â he said, moving closer.
âThis?â Celia handed it to him. âSorry, but Iâm totally in love with it. Someday Iâm going to buy a house with a front door that will do it justice. I think itâs solid brass. Maybe a hundred years old.â
âIt is,â he confirmed, hefting it in his hand. He took reading glasses out of his pocket and slipped them on to examine it further. âBut my guess is around 1880. Whereâd you get it?â
âOn One Hundred and First Street. Guy was cleaning out the basement of the building. Ten bucks.â Actually, she had paid the janitor ten bucks so that she could climb into the Dumpster to see what he was throwing out. Celia didnât knowwhy she felt compelled to do things like this, but she felt no shame about it; she had always been fascinated by junk piles, looking for something that spoke to her. To a certain degree her mother shared her interest, but would never dream of the lengths Celia had been known to go.
Charlie carefully placed the knocker back on the counter. âHe gave you two, two hundred fifty bucks for ten dollars.â
âI guess itâs going to have to be a very expensive house, then.â
He looked at her. âYou donât seem surprised.â
âI donât know,â she said, shrugging, âitâs never really been about money.â
âSpoken like a girl who grew up with a lot of it.â
She looked up at him. âI beg your pardon?â She knew she sounded like her mother when she got on her high horse, but she didnât like the way he said it.
He held up his hand as a caution. âNo offense. I just meant you obviously havenât had to try to make a living selling antiques. If you did, well, then, the money would mean a lot.â
âIâm a bartender,â she told him.
He frowned slightly. âYou seem kinda classy for a bartender.â
âIâm a classy bartender,â she said, sliding off the stool to get more coffee. She was starting to feel depressed. âI just like old things.â
âI work weekends at an auction house in the Bronx.â When she turned around, holding the coffeepot out to him, Charlie nodded and she poured. âThanks. Thatâs why the money means something to me. I gotta kid trying to get through college. Thatâs what I use the money for.â
âWhere is this auction house?â
He told her. It was way uptown, but it would have to be tomake any money. âSo if you ever want to sell anything like that, the knocker, I can move it for you. Thatâs the kind of thing people go nuts over.â
Celia, standing there, sipped her coffee and lofted an eyebrow. âMaybe I should show you something, then.â She led Charlie to the maidâs room which she and Rachel shared as a kind of studio space. Rachel used her side for art stuff. Celia gestured to the wall and bookshelves on her side. There were various small oil and watercolor paintings and prints, some hanging in old frames, others in new, some prints vaguely speckled while others were almost clean. (Sheâd zap them in the microwave to kill the mold spores and then, if it was in good enough shape, use an artistâs soft putty eraser on the spots. The paintings she left alone.)
Her best find in terms of a document had been rescued from a carton of ancient newspapers on the East Side that had been put out with the garbage. It was a single sheet, a 1787 playbill from the Drury Lane in London advertising Sarah Siddons and her brother, John Philip Kemble, starring in Macbeth . Celia had carefully matted it and used an old frame from another one of her finds, outfitted with new glass. She gave it to her mother, the intrepid theater goer, for her birthday last year and was amazed when her mother burst into tears, she was so moved. (Celia
Tara Sivec
Carol Stephenson
Larry Niven, Nancy Kress, Mercedes Lackey, Ken Liu, Brad R. Torgersen, C. L. Moore, Tina Gower
Tammy Andresen
My Dearest Valentine
Riley Clifford
Terry Southern
Mary Eason
Daniel J. Fairbanks
Annie Jocoby