Authors: Maryka Biaggio
I pulled my head back to evaluate the effect. “Why, yes, I see what you mean.”
“And yellow diamonds are, as I’m sure you know, much sought after. These are from South Africa.”
“And what is the cost of this necklace?”
“If it should be released for sale, it will be thirty-eight hundred dollars.”
“Oh, I’m afraid that’s out of my range.”
“I can’t say for sure it will be put on the floor anyway.”
“It is a private sale, then?”
“In a manner of speaking.” He brushed his palms together. “I must work out some details with the former owner.”
“Then I imagine some sadness attends this piece.”
“Yes, Miss Davidson, you are so right.”
“Well, I thank you for showing me. And if you should release it for sale, perhaps we can speak again.”
I returned to the Plankinton for luncheon. There, seated in a plush, high-backed chair, under glistening crystal chandeliers, I imagined that necklace gracing my throat, playing off my emerald-green gown, and garnering admiring looks from the gentlemen and ladies strolling among the magnificent furnishings of the Plankinton’s lobby and corridors.
Three days later, I returned to Ernst and Son. “Mr. Ernst, I happened to be in the neighborhood and thought I’d inquire about that lovely necklace.”
Once we had settled comfortably in his back office, he said, “Your timing is superb, Miss Davidson. I have this very morning worked out the details of the sale.”
“So it is for sale?”
“Yes, under one condition.”
“I’m willing to entertain your condition, though I must say the price is still something of an impediment.”
He pulled the necklace case out of his drawer and flipped it open toward me. “You will never find another necklace like this, I can assure you.”
I resisted the urge to glance at the piece and instead studied him. “And the condition?”
“The buyer must agree not to wear it in Milwaukee.”
I brushed a hand over the middle diamond. The piece was as beautiful as I remembered. “Really? How unusual.”
“Yes, I’m inclined to agree with you.” Mr. Ernst braced an arm on his chair and shifted his weight.
“May I ask the reason for this condition?”
“It’s a sad story, I’m afraid.” He scratched at his fuzzy gray side-burn. “A personal tragedy.”
I leaned back and gazed at him, but he offered no elaboration. “I don’t mean to pry, sir, but if I am to seriously consider such a significant purchase, I should like to understand the grounds for the condition.”
“A reasonable request,” he nodded. “But I must ask for your discretion in this matter.”
“Of course, I would hate to deepen the sadness surrounding it.”
He braced his elbows on the desk and leaned over them. “The owner, whose name I cannot reveal, recently lost his wife. She died quite unexpectedly, of the galloping pneumonia, after a trip abroad on which he had surprised her with this very piece. Now the poor gentleman can’t look at the necklace without the most painful of memories. He wishes to sell it and never again lay eyes on it. And he demands that the sale be conducted privately.”
Mr. Ernst had held his story back so long, and then told it so earnestly, that I questioned its veracity. I was willing to wager the piece was stolen. “The poor gentleman,” I said. “I can altogether understand the sentiment behind his wishes.”
“I don’t believe he would have wanted me to say as much as I have. I trust you will not repeat his sad story, or the circumstances under which you learned of it.”
“No, I wouldn’t dream of it,” I said, determined to test my theory. “But I honestly can’t afford to pay more than twenty-eight hundred dollars for this piece.”
Mr. Ernst stroked the loose flap of skin sagging from his neck. “I’m afraid I cannot sell it for such a low price.”
“What a shame. I might perhaps be the perfect buyer. As you know, I’m only stopping briefly in Milwaukee. And am unlikely to ever spend much time in Wisconsin.”
“Yes, well, there’s something to be said for that.” He wove his fingers together. “Would you consider bringing your price up a bit. Perhaps to thirty-two hundred?”
I pinched my mouth into a thoughtful pucker and studied the piece. “If you will meet me halfway, at three thousand, I can assure the utmost secrecy in this matter.”
And so I turned someone else’s sorrow—or knavery—into my own immeasurable delight. Despite the expense, I have never regretted the purchase. That necklace returned every cent invested in it, and more.
After eleven leisurely days in Milwaukee I received my portmanteau from Chicago, checked out of the Plankinton Hotel, and continued the train journey to my dear family in Menominee.
In the ensuing months, the compensation I’d received from Mr. Andrews slipped through my fingers as freely as fine grains of Lake Michigan sand. What reason did I have to squirrel away the money? After all, life is a carnival, and I could well afford the price of admission.
My most satisfying purchase was the Menominee home I bought for Maman, Paul, and Gene. Maman’s gratitude was well worth the fifty-eight hundred dollars it cost. When I brought her around to see it before closing the sale, she exclaimed, “Oh, May, it’s a dream come true,” and threw her arms around me. Paul, of course, inquired about how I could afford the purchase of such a fine house, and I had to explain my heartbreak over Dale’s breach of our engagement and how his father, the cause of the breach, had at least had the decency to recognize the damage he’d done to my reputation. The whole family rallied around me that summer of 1888, and I in turn took delight in procuring Queen Anne furnishings and some lovely oil paintings for their new home.
Five months after I left Chicago, my funds had dwindled to a dangerously low level, and Menominee presented no means of fattening my purse, let alone affording a modicum of entertainment. How tedious the ticking of the great mantel clock became, how wearisome Paul’s constant prodding about how I should be managing my funds, how musty the house’s shut-in air. I craved new adventure.
Our family had finished Thanksgiving dinner and retired to the parlor when I announced, “It’s time for me to move on. I believe I’ll go west, to Portland.”
“Whatever for?” Maman asked, as if I’d proposed joining the circus.
“To replenish my funds.”
Paul huffed, “Don’t know why you piddled away what you had.”
“How I spend my money is my own affair. I have been generous with this family.” What Paul didn’t know or wished not to acknowledge was that his job at the lumber mill couldn’t last forever. Sooner or later, he and the whole family would be dependent on me, though I knew better than to hurt his pride by laying that reality before him. The kindest course was to let him consider himself the family’s mainstay as long as possible.
True to form, he said, “Don’t count on me sending you any money.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it.”
“Like that fool Rob Jacobsen did.”
Maman’s eyes darted from me to Paul. “Robby Jacobsen? What’s he got to do with this?”
“Maybe May will explain that for you,” said Paul.
I cleared my throat. “Robby was under the mistaken impression that we were to be engaged, and that if he kept me in an allowance I would become his wife.”
“That’s not how I heard it,” said Paul.
“You can listen to rumors from people who don’t know my personal affairs, or you can believe me.”
“Oh, don’t go, May,” Maman said. “You belong here, with your family.”
“I don’t want you going, either,” said Gene. “It’s boring when you’re not here.”
I wasn’t surprised to hear this from an eleven-year-old whose older brother harangued him endlessly about his lessons and chores, though I wished he hadn’t said it in front of Paul, who crossed his legs, leaned back in his chair, and said to Gene, “It’s probably just as well. Give you more time to do your lessons.”
Maman said, “But Portland is so far away.”
I reached for her hand. “But how can I help you in Menominee? It simply doesn’t afford the opportunities of a larger city.”
Maman pulled her hand away. “I’d rather have stayed in the old house with you than in this new house without you.”
“Oh, Maman, I’ll visit. I promise.”
“How can you visit from way out there?”
“Just let her go,” said Paul. “She’ll do whatever she damn well pleases anyway.”
I assured all of them, even Paul, that I would hold them close to my heart, write often, and always consider their well-being.
Before I left, I took Maman aside and showed her my new diamond necklace. “You mustn’t tell anyone about it. It’s one of the secret spoils of my broken engagement.”
She couldn’t resist trying it on. And then she hugged me. “My goodness, May, I guess you
do
know how to take care of yourself.”
THE TRIAL
THE VALUE OF A DOLLAR
MENOMINEE—JANUARY 24, 1917
W
hen Alvah Sawyer called Frank back to the stand on day three of the trial, I prepared myself for more shilly-shallying.
“Miss Shaver, we haven’t talked much about you.”
Frank folded her hands in her lap, pretending at a humility we both knew was altogether alien to her. “No, sir.”
“Can you tell us about your parents and your upbringing?”
“I was born in Pittsburgh and am an only child. My father was in property development, and my mother’s father was a banker. They ran in circles that hosted dinners for well-off families and served lovely feasts and French wines. You could say I grew up surrounded by generous and wealthy families.”
I noticed Frank was taking pains to put on the proper parlance of her upbringing, which she rarely used in the parlors or dining halls, to say nothing of the streets, of Menominee.
“And did you have to worry about money when you were growing up?”
“Oh, no, I had everything I could want. My parents didn’t show off their wealth, but I knew there was plenty of money and that someday I’d inherit it.”
“So you believed money would never be a problem for you?”
“That’s correct.”
“You thought it was a bottomless pit, right?”
“Yes, I always thought there’d be money whenever I needed it.”
“Did your family pay for your education?”
“Yes, after I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania they paid for my law schooling at the University of Michigan.”
“And they helped you set up your practice in the Chicago area?”
“They helped me buy a home in Highland Park and sent me a three-thousand-dollar allowance until I started making a respectable income from my practice.”
Where, I wondered, was she going with this—besides showing she could play Little Miss Proper and Innocent? Perhaps Sawyer had encouraged her to strike a virtuous demeanor.
“So there was never any question that money was there for you if you needed it?”
“No question whatsoever.”
“Would it be correct to say that until the events of the last few years you didn’t understand the value of a dollar and thought there was no limit to your family’s resources?”
“Yes, that would be accurate.”
I couldn’t keep my jaw from dropping. This was her strategy? To claim that she didn’t know the value of a dollar? That she believed her supply of money was unlimited? I stared at Frank; when she glanced my way, I rolled my eyes.