Read The Juliet Online

Authors: Laura Ellen Scott

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Historical Fiction

The Juliet (10 page)

BOOK: The Juliet
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—From
The Inquisitor
, November 1906

 

Lorelei and Clothilde grew up more like Dellaires than Stiegs in that they were strong-minded and clear-eyed. Neither of the girls wanted anything to do with The Juliet. They claimed to be embarrassed by its history, but Dellaire suspected they were more concerned by fashion than anything else. Some dispositions were genetic, after all. At Morecambe’s funeral, the press followed the girls up to the doors of St. Patrick’s Cathedral. All of New York’s elite attended the services, and not for the old jeweler’s sake, either. Everyone was enchanted by the Stieg girls, especially now that they were young women.

Once inside, the girls told their devoted guardian to donate The Juliet to a museum.

Dellaire was old now, broken and molded into a new design because that’s what raising wealthy girls did to a man. He said, “I thought we could display her at the hotel.”

The girls were going away to school, so it would not have mattered one way or the other, but Lorelei was insistent. “We want to sever our affiliation with that thing.”

“Use those terms in the announcement,” added Clothilde. “Use the word ‘sever.’”

“And ‘thing,’” said Lorelei. The sisters exchanged a significant look. They had been thinking about this for some time.

Dellaire shook his head.

“What’s wrong, Martin? You look as if someone walked upon your grave.”

“It’s nothing. It’s just…” He looked around the cathedral and saw that all eyes were on the girls. Well, good. Dellaire had dedicated the best years of his life to inspiring this level of fascination.

Lorelei and Clothilde stared at him and waited. If they were angels as babies, they were goddesses now. They weren’t necessarily coldhearted, but they had learned to keep their emotions invisible.

Dellaire said, “May I keep her?”

“Keep?”

“Have,” he said. “She means nothing to you, but everything to me.”

Lorelei said to Clothilde, “Spoken like a man in love. Desperate.”

“Cursed, some might say.” Clothilde pretended to be concerned about the fit of her glove. “You have your instructions, Martin. Execute them. Or don’t. You have been serving us for so long, I wonder if you haven’t forgotten your own nature.” The girls were at that stage of life where they knew everything—the past, the present, and the future.

Lorelei said, “Get rid of The Juliet. Do it soon enough and they will say Morecambe died of a broken heart, won’t they? They are always getting the order of things mixed up.”

“There’s nothing wrong with that,” said Clothilde. “Life is all stories, isn’t it, Martin? With every teller trying to rationalize his point of view somehow.”

“I’m tired of stories,” said Lorelei. “I’m tired of old stories, especially. Do you understand?”

Of course he understood. They were grown now, Morecambe was dead, and it was a new century. The Juliet was an inconvenient sister, a prostitute at the dinner table. So what did that make Dellaire?

The girls left him behind, even the thought of him, as they took their place in the front pew next to three of Morecambe’s male cousins. Each resembled a raggedy, tanned version of the jeweler. They were his only living family, and they’d come all the way from California. They stood to inherit millions, but by the dazzled expressions on their faces, it was possible they weren’t aware of that yet. Clothilde and Lorelei made a point of embracing each cousin and kissing him on the cheek, as if it were Christmas morning, in full view of all the other mourners. It would be a scandal by the end of the week.

Dellaire believed they were going to fire him just as soon as he made it possible. And it was his job to make it possible. It was his job to finish this business with The Juliet. The lawyer melted into the shadows at the back of the cathedral to grieve and contemplate nature, particularly his own.

 

* * *

 

Morecambe’s Jewelry was locked up tight with a large black wreath on the door. The wreath was frosted with snow. Dellaire should have thought of that; of course the store was closed. He rubbed away a bit of frost on the window and peered in, not seeing much. He had no idea why he was there except that he wanted to see The Juliet again. While the world had regarded Morecambe’s creation as some larger, critical statement about art and modernity, Dellaire always assumed the old jeweler’s intentions were more personal than that. The man spoke through his creation, but to whom? Dellaire had an inkling.

He was surprised to see a shadow of movement from the back of the store, and then he saw the guard. And not just any guard, either. It was Lucien Jilka, the man that Dellaire had hired to protect The Juliet. Jilka came forward and started to unlock the shop doors.

“Well I’ll be damned,” said Dellaire.

Jilka grinned humbly. “Still here sir. For a while anyway.” He welcomed the lawyer into the store and offered to take his coat.

Dellaire waived him off. “No, this is an impulsive visit, I shouldn’t stay.”

“I had hoped to attend the services myself.”

“Oh, the crowds were too thick, you wouldn’t have gotten in.”

Jilka nodded. “You’ll want to see her then.”

“Yes, please.”

“The letter is in the case.” Jilka sorted through his keys as he approached The Juliet.

Dellaire followed. “Letter?”

“Mr. Morecambe said you were coming.” Jilka unlocked the back of the case.

Dellaire had no idea what Jilka could mean, but he was upon The Juliet now, and even without illumination it was gruesome and glorious. Impossible to wear, too. When did Morecambe make that decision—at The Hunt? When Sailor perished? Or when he was in his shop, finally alone with the two gleaming halves of The Juliet? Perhaps she spoke to him.

“Jilka, you’ve been sitting with this old girl for a long time. Do you think she’s cursed?”

“Oh sir, we all are.”

“Right. I forgot you’re a Catholic.”

Jilka removed the velvet display tray and set it atop the glass. He then extracted an envelope that had been tucked under it.

Dellaire picked it up. A “D” was written on the front. “What’s this about?” The paper was old and dry.

Jilka said, “Mr. Morecambe put that in the case a couple of years ago. That’s all I know.”

Clearly that wasn’t all the guard knew, but Dellaire wasn’t going to press it. Jilka said, “I’ll give you a bit of privacy then.” The guard retreated to the back rooms.

“I won’t be long,” promised Dellaire, but there was no response from Jilka. Dellaire detected a wisp of winter flowing through the shop as if a window was cracked, and he assumed it was the effect of the snow he’d tracked through. The store was cold enough.

Dellaire opened the letter:

 

Dear Martin,

 

Did you know that every piece of jewelry is an apology, and that every apology is really a boast? Just as The Juliet apologizes for the past, a ring will apologize for the future, and both glorify sin itself. We, the girls and I, have often discussed whether you had a hand in their father’s death, and while we believe you did not, we are undecided as to whether that means you are a better man, one way or the other. It is important that you know we have talked about you in this manner.

 

Take The Juliet, and take her curse as well. The girls never expect to see you again.

 

Love,

Gregory M.

 

The lawyer called out for Jilka, and when there was no answer, he placed the brooch inside the envelope along with the letter from Morecambe, and tucked it into the inner breast pocket of his coat.

And that was how The Juliet was lost.

 

* * *

 

The lawyer Dellaire was on a train back to Philly before the old jeweler was in the ground. He cleared out his safe in the Bottler’s House and vanished into the margins of history.

This left Lorelei and Clothilde free to become modern women, even if that meant the end of their celebrity. Dellaire doubted they would ever acknowledge the disappearance of the brooch. They would graduate from Smith, get married, have children, and be forgotten in their own lifetimes. However, The Great Question would persist from generation to generation, because gossip is life to art’s death:
Where is The Juliet?

 

 

 

ROCK AND ROLL

Chapter 4

 

 

March 19, 2005: Death Valley, CA

 

Nene Glatter was disappointed and tired, barely able to make eye contact with her husband, Baron. They’d come all this way for nothing. They pulled the old blue Subaru into the Alkali so they could grab an early lunch and rethink their options only to have Missy, their four-year-old lab, go bonkers over the pigs. There was no way she was going to stay quiet in the car, and these days, leaving a pet in a vehicle was one moral notch above pedophilia. The truth was, the Glatters loved Missy to a fault. They couldn’t bear to leave her, so they drove all the way to Death Valley from Missouri with her in the back of the car.

They sat at an outside table under an awning, just around the corner from the potbelly pigs. The smell was sharp, even on such a gusty afternoon, so Missy was kept on her leash with one end wrapped around Baron’s sand-chapped ankle.

Strands of Nene’s steel-colored hair worked their way out of the black band at the back of her neck. She kept her hair unfashionably long for a
grande dame
from St. Louis, but the further west they drove, the more common her style became. She’d seen a lot of tough old bitches like herself out in the desert, every one of them carrying a garden trowel as if they were on a mission to restore Eden to its original state.

The napkins and menus were weighted down with tableware, and Nene and Baron hunched around their food to protect it from dust. The wind also made it permissible not to speak until someone had something to say. Like this:

“This whole damned trip.”

“Don’t.”

By the end of the meal Baron was a mess even though he’d given at least half of his burger to Missy. He was a soft man and a soft touch, and despite being so much younger than Nene, it was his health they had to watch. Men were like pets that way, Nene thought; you were lucky to keep one alive for as long as you needed him. Nene, on the other hand, was a rail. An iron rail with steel hair. No one had to worry about her. She could eat, drink, and smoke what she liked.

Baron removed the leash from his leg and handed it to her. “I’m going to clean up.” While he was inside using the facilities, Nene started feeding her own sandwich to the dog. Missy ended up with a full meal while the Glatters went a little hungry, unsatisfied.

Nene had been to the Valley before, but that was years ago in a different lifetime, and she and Baron tried not to talk about that. Back then she was tall, striking, and glib. Now she was rangy, defeminized, and her sense of humor was limited to cutting remarks at Baron’s expense. As a couple, their natural state was domestic and dreamless, that is until Nene broke her silence about her past and started talking about The Juliet. The facts and the rumors. The
clues
, like in a kid’s book.

She watched a tiny lizard run across Baron’s judiciously abandoned fries.

“Missy, look!”

Missy didn’t care about the lizard. She wanted those piggies. Eventually Nene left the table and allowed the dog to pull her towards the pen. Jesus, did they reek. Missy strained and whined. Nene looked around to make sure they weren’t being observed, and then she and Missy inched towards the pigs.

So the government burned down The Mystery House. That was too bad for Baron. He was beginning to act as if his life had finally begun. Too bad for Nene, too. Long gone were the boys, the drugs, and the parties, but The Juliet was supposed to endure, like Nene herself.

Now what?

The pigs came right up to the edge of the pen to check out Missy. The desert was weird, and the people who tried to make it normal and hospitable, like the proprietor of the Alkali with his burgers and beer, ended up weird too. With pet pigs. It was the same with people who went to live in Alaska. The rough conditions bred an eccentricity tinged with nobility. The biggest assholes in the world were ex-pats living the cushy life in the Caribbean.

Nene brought Missy close enough to get a couple of licks in. “Come on, girl.” When Missy had cleaned Daphne’s and Velma’s snouts, Nene decided that was enough, and she hauled her back to the table.

Baron wasn’t back yet. Nene was going to say to him,
Did you fall in?
And then he’d be irritated by her crudeness, and that might give her a chuckle. Or maybe not.

Finally, Baron hustled out of the lobby of the Alkali, breathless and scuffing his sneakers through the gravel. Excited, he formed two trembling fists like a baby.

“That
was
the house,” he said.

“What?”

“We were there this morning. The Mystery House. Folks inside the restaurant, they were talking about it.”

“That prick,” Nene muttered.

“Go pay our check, Nene. Now. That
prick
just gave away the deed and drove off into the goddamned sunset.”

“Gave away the deed?”

Baron’s eyes grew wild. “The House, Neens. It’s
empty
. For now, anyway.”

 

* * *

 

Rigg hoped that Willie gal was properly impressed. Giving away a house—that was big. An actor acts, and a great actor improvises fearlessly. He’d almost forgotten that. But what a trio he’d left behind at the Alkali: Willie, who’d spent her life waiting for fate to drop a house on her; Tony, who seemed pretty sure fate didn’t exist; and Rhys Nash, with those sad eyes blinking on either side of that bony nose, like shy stars behind a barren planet. Nash was a thinker and a worrier. As an athlete, he was someone to admire, but what if running was a just a really clever way of doing nothing at all: you go out, you come back, and everything was how you left it. It’s always better to run away than run for nothing.

Hamlet was a thinker and a worrier, too. Hamlet would perish in the desert.

BOOK: The Juliet
4.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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