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“Who did you say is the artist?”

“Emily Winslow. Name’s right there in the corner.”

“Oh, yes, of course… Winslow.”

“Not terribly well known yet. But she will be.”

1:00 p.m. The Fenimore Gallery, Madison Avenue and 67th Street.

“Greatly talented,” says Konig.

“Yes, she is.”

“Greatly talented,” he murmurs again a little foolishly. “Greatly talented.”

And for a while the two men stand there, Konig and Mr. Anthony Redding, gazing at the three little gouaches.

“And you just have the three?” Konig asks finally.

“’Fraid so.” Redding glances somewhat disapprovingly at the rumpled figure with tie askew and slightly demented eyes. “We’ve sold quite a bit of her painting though. This is all we have left. Unfortunately,” he goes on apologetically, “these are not the most appealing of her works.”

“Not appealing?” Konig’s brow arches. “On the contrary, I find them very appealing. Oh, I s’pose there is a certain air of morbidity about them. I quite agree. But still I find they say something to me.”

“You do?”

“Yes, I do,” Konig goes on, fiercely protective, warming to his subject. “Something universal. I’m profoundly touched by them.”

“You are?” An expression of puzzlement and suspicion mingles on Mr. Redding’s sallow features. “Well,” he goes on agreeably, “she is a superb draftsman. Unusual to see that kind of discipline in one so young.”

“Is she young?” Konig asks slyly, enjoying in some odd way this utterly bogus role he plays.

“Yes, quite young. Early twenties, I should judge. I’m not sure. And utterly different from the other young painters of her generation, opportunists all trying to look chic and trendy. Winslow’s not trendy at all. Not voguish. Not afraid to be conventional. A little old-fashioned. Not hung up on style for style’s sake, and absolutely determined to master the tools of her craft. Yes, she has something to say. She is very good.”

“Yes.” Konig swells a bit with pride. Oddly enough, he’s moved. At a loss for words. Once again his eyes pore hungrily over the three little canvases. Displayed rather prominently as they are in this sleekly elegant gallery, exuding opulence and taste, they seem to take on a curious air of importance. Oddly enough, he’s impressed. But still, the paintings are profoundly sad. That woeful little shack in the burned-out field—so desolate, so forlorn. And even more disturbing, the study of broken glass, lethal little shards. And then the soiled underpants moldering in the fetid shadows of some tenement gloom. Something like a shiver courses through him.

“I’ll take the three,” says Konig suddenly.

“You will?”

“Yes, of course.” Konig is a little shocked at the sound of his own voice. As if someone else had spoken those rash words. “I said so, didn’t I?”

A look of something like wariness comes into Redding’s eyes. This man in his tatty suit—hardly the sort of person he’s accustomed to selling paintings to.

“They’re not inexpensive,” Redding says rather grandly. “I hardly imagined they would be,” Konig snaps, matching the grandeur.

The gallery owner is baffled. Somewhat at a loss. Not certain whether the man is a wealthy eccentric or merely a crackpot in off the street. “I can let you have the three for fifteen hundred,” he offers cautiously, half expecting the man to bolt out the door.

“Fine,” says Konig, whipping out his checkbook. “You will take a check?”

“Certainly,” says Redding, suddenly in a tizzy. Even his British accent lapses. “Come right this way to my desk, Mr.—”

“Konig.”

“Yes. Of course. Mr. Konig. Come right this way. We’ll make out the papers.”

Redding, on little maroon velvet pumps, scurries up to the front of the gallery, with Konig trailing a short distance behind.

Redding slips easily into the Mies chair behind the elegant little escritoire. “You have some identification, Mr. Konig?”

“Certainly.”

The gallery owner glances through driver’s license, registration, AMA card, jotting down details. “Ah, I see it’s not Mr. but Dr. Konig,” he says, by this time glowing with that kind of benevolence that only hard cash can engender in a merchant’s heart. “Very good, Doctor,” he says, handing back the identification. “I think you’ve chosen quite shrewdly. This girl’s work is going to be quite valuable some day. Funny, you know, only the other day, another gentleman was in here inquiring about her.”

“Another gentleman?” Konig’s eyes narrow to slits. “Who?”

“A very big collector from the Middle West. I’m not at liberty to divulge his name, you understand.”

“Yes, of course,” says Konig, his curiosity raging. “I don’t suppose you could tell me what he looked like?” Redding seems startled by the request, yet for Dr. Konig and his checkbook, he seems eager to comply. He laughs a little uneasily. “Well—he was a big man. Quite tall; white curly hair—”

As Redding drones on animatedly, it suddenly dawns on Konig that the big collector from the Middle West was obviously Frank Haggard, and that Mr. Anthony Redding is lying in his teeth.

“—and that’s why I say, Doctor,” he effuses, “you made a very sound investment today. Within the next few years Winslow’s work is going to be very much in demand. Big people are beginning to take notice. If you’d like, I can have those three gouaches sent up to you in Riverdale today.”

“No—I’ll take them with me.”

“But—”

“That’s all right,” Konig says emphatically. “They’re small.”

“Well”—Redding shrugs—“you’re the boss, Doctor.” He giggles a little foolishly. “If you can wait just a minute, I’ll have my boy pack them for you.”

Redding scurries to the back of the gallery where Konig can hear him calling down to someone on the floor beneath. In a few minutes he returns, face glowing unnaturally, and carrying a three-foot-by-four-foot package wrapped in brown paper.

“A fantastic coincidence, Doctor,” Redding bubbles excitedly. “I was just down in our storeroom. We had a shipment come in around two weeks ago. Most of the stuff is not even unwrapped yet, just sitting around down there waiting to be catalogued and inventoried. Anyway, look what I found right on the top of the heap.”

He thrusts the package at Konig. Large, black Crayola letters in the upper left-hand corner read: “Emily Winslow. 324 Varick Street. New York City.”

Suddenly Konig’s legs are trembling beneath him.

“Shall we open it, Doctor?”

“Yes,” says Konig, his mouth suddenly dry. “By all means.”

“I’m dying to see it myself.” Redding slashes the cords rather gleefully with an Exacto razor. Then the two of them are tussling with the wrappings. Beneath the coarse brown outer wrapping is a layer of newssheet lying directly over the canvas. They lift that in turn and then step back.

For a long moment Konig stands there gazing down at the canvas, not speaking, seeing only a flood of color and light—grays, greens, blues, dazzling ocher, and yellows. Then gradually a configuration of line and motion come together on the canvas, and suddenly Konig is aware of cold sweat erupting on his forehead. His legs buckle and he nearly sags.

“Marvelous,” Redding enthuses, unaware of Konig’s reaction beside him. “Isn’t it marvelous? Look at the gorgeous way she’s handled—”

Konig’s feverish eyes range avidly over the familiar lines of his house in Montauk. There it is, lovingly recreated. Every last detail of it—windows, balconies, decks, shrubbery, the dunes running out from the back of it. And there’s the high sand bluff on which it sits, the long sweep of empty beach below, and beyond that a gray-green slab of gently undulant surf, glinting with sunlight, unfolding like a scroll onto the beach below.

But it is not that, not simply that, that has caused his wrenched heart to slug so in his chest, beneath his shirt, like a huge mallet It is the face in the center of the canvas, the dear, beloved face of Ida Konig smiling out at him from beneath the huge brim of an old, floppy sun-bonnet. How well he knew that bonnet. It is still out there in Montauk, stored away somewhere in the attic in a stack of cartons that contain the rest of her things, hastily packed and stored away when she died. Her eyes smile warmly out at him. She is kneeling in the garden, her garden, with huge blood-red poppies nodding all about her. The poppies seem like living creatures, tall, slender, graceful things with fiery heads. They delight in her presence.

The painting is literally awash with sunlight. Suffused with love. And in all that dazzling incandescence of feeling, there is only one shadow—rather large and portentous—a gray eminence framed in an upstairs window. It is a faceless figure staring down on the scene below, and though it is small in relation to the size of the painting, it nevertheless succeeds in casting a pall over everything else in the canvas. It is as if the artist, having succeeded out of love (for the painting was pure love) in recapturing some precious moment of her past, then had, for inscrutable reasons, known only to herself, to ruin it, deface it, sully it, with this rather dirty thumbprint stain of gray.

“Simply smashing,” Mr. Anthony Redding enthuses, manufacturing fresh banalities in his quickly regained fraudulent British accent.

“I’ll take it,” Konig says. He can barely speak. His voice is choked.

“Oh, but Doctor—I’m afraid—”

“I’ll take it.” Konig turns fiercely on him.

Redding gapes into that wild, demented face. “But I don’t even know what to ask. I have to at least consult the artist.”

“Then consult her. Speak with her,” Konig shouts, scarcely fathoming his own words.

“But I can’t.” Redding pleads, now genuinely terrified of the madman standing there before him. “I can’t. I haven’t been able to reach her in weeks. I’ve got money here for her. A few thousand in addition to what you’ve just given me. She must be out of town. She’ll be back. Listen—the minute I get in touch with her. I’ll—”

“I have to have it now.” Konig snatches the painting. Redding tries in turn to snatch it back. Then for a moment or two they do an idiotic little dance, a tug of war with the canvas jerking back and forth between them.

“Doctor—please, please, Doctor.”

“I’ll pay you whatever you want.”

“I can’t,” Redding pleads, “at least not until—”

“I must have it now.” Konig’s voice brings Redding up sharply. Something he’s heard in that strangled sob alerts him, tells him something is profoundly wrong here. At the same time his shrewd merchant’s mind is quickly computing a hefty price to attach to the painting, as well as exacting a neat profit for himself in the transaction.

At last Redding sighs, letting go his end of the canvas, capitulating nobly, as if he’d fought the good fight. “I don’t think I can let it go for a penny less than three thousand.” As he utters the figure, even he is a little awed at his own audacity. But there is in this man, this wild,, rumpled apparition, with the mad eyes and the awful odor of hospital antiseptic all about him, clutching the painting in one hand and waving a checkbook at him with the other, something that tells Redding to try to get shut of the man. Get his money and get him out of there as quickly as possible.

Together they stagger back up to the front of the gallery, Konig still clutching the painting, refusing to relinquish it for even a minute. Even as he scribbles another check, he holds tight to the canvas with his free hand.

Redding dabs petulantly at his brow with a silk foulard, muttering, “Highly irregular. Highly irregular.”

“Here’s your check.”

“Are you taking the big one with you, too?” Redding leans back, exhausted.

“Yes.”

“Then at least let me wrap it so that you don’t damage—”

“No time now.”

“It’ll take just a minute.”

“No time—no time.” Konig backs toward the street door, bowing and smiling foolishly, canvases jammed under both arms.

“Are you sure you’re all right?” Redding, terrified, trails him out.

“I’m fine. Fine.”

“Dr. Konig.” Redding cries after him.

Startled, Konig turns. “Yes?”

“You’re her father, aren’t you?”

For a moment they stand there gawking at each other across a troubled space. Then in the next moment, Konig is out on the street, in the warm April sunlight of Madison Avenue. Running. Jostling through startled lunchtime crowds. Flying like a wild man, not even aware that he is crying.

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