It was Friday morning. The night before, each sister had taken a pile of papers from the strongbox to look through. It had been an emotional evening. Old memories, old hurts, and old happy times swirled around them in a confusing jumble.
In the morning light, Star had her head bent over a collection of silver lockets and periodically looked up at the tablet Duncan had loaned her, to confirm the dates against a hallmark checker website.
The ledger was open on Duncan’s desk, and he was prowling the shop looking for a pair of seventeenth-century shoe buckles, which had supposedly belonged to Charles the First.
“Are you starting from the first page and working through methodically?” asked Simone, who had left sifting through old winter solstice celebration menus and budgets to help Duncan’s search.
“I am attempting it this way first, yes. If that doesn’t seem fruitful, I will do it the other way: pick an item and attempt to match it to the ledger. Have you looked through it?” he asked.
“No.”
“It’s a bit . . . disjointed. I’d expected it to be laid out chronologically or alphabetically by item. Whilst it is alphabetized, it’s organized according to where the items came from rather than what they are. Where space has run out for a particular letter, another page has been added in with glue. It’s a little chaotic.”
“Ah, much like the man himself.”
“Oh, it wasn’t started by Augustus. The ledger begins with notes from Patience North and has been carried on down the generations.”
“So the buckles we’re looking for came from where?”
“Abingdon.”
“Of course. Absolutely no help whatsoever in finding the items.”
“That is correct.”
The door to the shop opened and Patrick walked in. “Patrick North!” Simone raised her hand in greeting. It still took her by surprise that he was a young man now. Seeing him at the funeral had been the first time she’d seen him properly in maybe five years. He looked like his dad, apart from the eyes of course.
Despite the sisters’ difficult relationships with their father and, in more recent years, one another, they were all fiercely protective of their name. Maggie had kept the name North when she’d married Josh, and when Simone had married Evette, she’d taken the North name. Patrick and Verity were also Norths, as would Simone’s children be, should she ever have any.
“Hi,” he called, meandering through the aisles until he located them.
“Hey, Patrick.” Star smiled up at him. “How are you?”
“Good, thanks,” Patrick replied, letting his eyes wander over the crammed shelves. “You?”
“Not too shabby,” Star replied.
Patrick nodded and murmured “good, good” but was too captivated by the clutter to start a proper conversation.
Duncan raised a hand in greeting. “Hello, we haven’t been formerly introduced. I’m Duncan, the appraiser. You must be Maggie’s eldest. I’ve heard a lot of good things about you. Great to meet you.”
Patrick smiled warmly. “You too,” he said. “Ma asked me to give you these,” he said to Star idly, placing a bowl of fruit down on the desk. “She said to tell you she’ll be over later to talk winter solstice plans.”
“Cool,” said Star, taking a bite out of one of the apples.
“I thought she was going to be here.” Simone didn’t like the petulant sound in her own voice. She took a breath. Don’t be stroppy. It is what it is. You have to be here, so suck it up.
“The shop’s busy, she can’t get away.” Patrick picked up a tiny model of a ship and studied it. Duncan came over.
“Trench art,” he said, pointing at the model.
“Huh?” Patrick looked quizzically up at him.
“Crafts made by soldiers who were in the trenches or held as prisoners of war. Most war-related arts are given the umbrella term of ‘trench art.’ That piece probably originated from World War One. Soldiers used what they had on hand, bits of wood, bullet casings, that sort of thing.”
“Wow, that’s kind of chilling.” Patrick frowned.
“I think it’s kind of nice, art through adversity, et cetera.”
“Sure, mate. This place is just mad, huh.”
“That’s an understatement,” said Simone.
“I don’t think Mum liked coming in here when Granddad wasn’t around.”
“It shows.”
Patrick turned to look at Simone. “What do you mean?”
Star was glaring at her with bug eyes, clearly imploring her to stop, but she didn’t seem able. She didn’t want to be sorting through two hundred years of grimy old crap. She wanted to curl up in a ball and hibernate through till spring, and she wanted someone to blame for not being able to. Patrick was watching her, the tic at the corner of his eye said Don’t you dare! and suddenly her blood was up.
“Only that the place is a mess.” Her words were a challenge. “Everything’s covered in dust. I thought since you only live over the road your mum might have tidied things up a bit before we got here.”
“Simone!” Star admonished.
Patrick cocked his head to one side. “She’s had a lot on her plate,” he said, his stare flinty.
Oh yeah? she thought. You want to see my plate? It’s brimming over, sunshine!
“Yes, well, we all have a lot on our plates now,” Simone countered, motioning around the shop. “I’m not having a go, I’m simply saying, you know it wouldn’t have hurt her to pop in and flick a duster around when she knew we’d all be having to go through this crap.”
She watched as Patrick gently placed the wooden ship back on the shelf and turned his gaze on her, his jaw set. Oh, crap.
“Where were you?” he asked. “When the funeral needed to be arranged?”
“Don’t get defensive, Patrick. I helped out on the day. But as far as organizing the rest of it, I live miles away, and your mum lives right here. It was a lot easier for her to sort it out than for me to try and do it from Greenwich.”
“You do know Granddad died on a mountain, in a van, in Italy? Yeah? Do you know how stressful it was for Mum to get him repatriated? I was coming home every weekend to help out because she was trying to organize the paperwork, which was a minefield by the way, and arrange the funeral and run the grocer’s and look after Verity. All you had to do was turn up on the day and eat vol-au-vents. I thought she was going to have a nervous breakdown. I don’t know what would have happened if Joe hadn’t been around and he’s practically a stranger.”
“Hardly a stranger,” Star interjected.
“Not family, though, is he? It’s not his business.”
“What’s your problem with Joe?” Simone asked. “You ought to be pleased your mum’s got someone to help her out.”
“Why? Because it makes it easier for you to shirk any responsibility?”
“Don’t speak to me like that,” Simone snapped.
“Why not? Where have you been? You certainly haven’t been down here for years. I’m surprised you even know who Verity is! So don’t chat shit about my mum not ‘flicking a duster around’ when you abandoned us a long time ago!”