Authors: Karen White
A gurgling sound came from Grandpa's throat, his hand moving faster, plucking at the fabric of his jeans.
Georgia took Grandpa's hand, stilling it. The right hand lay useless and palm up on his other leg. “He can nod or shake his head, and he's been working on his words. Can you handle a few questions, Grandpa?”
His eyes turned to Georgia. He didn't show any indication that he'd heard her, or that he understood, and his face was devoid of all emotion except what Maisy could only describe as fear. She half stood, wanting to tell Lyle to stop, that something wasn't right. But Georgia caught her eye and shook her head. Georgia had always been better at facing unpleasant things head-on, dealing with the emotional fallout later. Maybe it was because she was the older sister. Or maybe it was just her being Georgia.
Lyle continued. “Finding your truck sure has brought up a lot of questions. This might sound a little off-the-wall, but I have to ask. Have you ever been to France, Ned? Maybe during the war?”
Grandpa took a moment to respond, finally shaking his head.
“He fought in the Pacific, Lyle. Fighting the Japanese. I really don't think he's up toâ”
“Do you speak any French?” Lyle pressed, and Maisy could see why he and Georgia got along so well. They were relentless, unconcerned for the feelings of others.
Grandpa blinked several times, as if he didn't understand the question. He grunted, then shook his head. Maisy handed him the glass of water she'd brought from the kitchen. He took long, deep gulps while they waited, seeming reluctant to stop drinking.
Lyle leaned back in his chair as if he were just having a relaxing conversation, but Maisy could see his shoulders were tensed, his heels bouncing up and down with nervous energy. “Well, as luck would have it, I'm staying with my parents right now.” He shot a look at
Maisy, and she had to remind herself why she was so angry, why she'd chosen to push him away.
Lyle continued. “Remember your old pal Gene Sawyers? He's my granddaddy. I hear y'all were good friends back in high schoolâboth played on the football team. Said you both signed up together in 1942, right after Pearl Harbor.”
Grandpa nodded slowly, his eyes focused on the flat horizon behind the hives. Two gulls barked at the cumulus clouds that hovered over them, promising fair weather. His hand tightened on the chair arm, brown sunspots highlighted against white skin.
“Says he hasn't seen much of you lately, since he can't drive anymore. Anyway, he moved in with my parents a couple of years agoâafter my grandma died. He sleeps as little as I do, so we were chatting late last night out on the front porch, having a beer. He's lived here his whole life and remembers everythingâevery hurricane, every red tide. Every Seafood Festival queen and king, even.” He gave a small chuckle, but his eyes remained serious.
“He remembers your daddyâhad some great stories about the timber business and how your daddy was successful because of his honesty and charity. That says a lot about a man, and he says you do your daddy credit. He also remembers how your daddy sent you on a European tour for your high school graduation. He remembers it because he and most of your schoolmates were either working on the boats or shucking oysters, and they made fun of you because you defended your trip by saying you were going to work.”
Grandpa's jaw worked, his mouth opening and closing, broken words tumbling out of his mouth sounding like they'd been poured over gravel.
Maisy handed him the glass of water again.
“What were you doing?” Lyle's voice was friendly, but his heels continued to bounce up and down.
“I can answer that,” Maisy surprised herself by saying. She remembered the late nights she sat with their grandfather in the darkened living room, waiting for Georgia to come home. She'd kept him
company, listening to his stories, trying to distract them both from the ugly truth of where Georgia was and what she was doing.
She patted her grandfather's arm. “Let me know if I get it wrong.” Facing Lyle, she said, “His daddy wanted him to study different ways of making honey and compare varieties, see which ones would make sense to try here. He'd sold his lumber business and wanted to do something else. Never got beyond a hobby for him, though. Lost interest when Grandpa's brother didn't come home from the war. But at the time he thought it would be a great education for Grandpa. I don't remember every country he visited, but I do know he went to Spain and Italy. I'm not sure about France.”
She felt Georgia's eyes on her, but didn't turn her head.
Lyle placed the plastic bags on a rusted metal table between his chair and Grandpa's, and waited for the old man to notice. Grandpa stared straight ahead toward the hives but, after a few moments, reluctantly looked down at the table.
“Have you ever seen either one of these before?” Lyle asked.
Grandpa's face showed no recognition, but the blue veins on his hand stood out through the thin veil of skin. His fingers tightened almost imperceptibly on the arm of the chair, slowly choking it.
“The postcard was sent from Apalach. All we know about the book is that it most likely belonged to a G. Mouton, and the postcard was sent to Château de Beaulieu near Monieux, France. Maybe you came across it in your travels?”
Grandpa continued to look at the postcard, as if willing it to be something else. Slowly he lifted his thin shoulders in a silent shrug.
Maisy frowned at Lyle. “He visited dozens of towns throughout Europeâmore than seventy years ago. Surely you don't expect him to remember which ones.”
“What about this?” Lyle slid the novel closer to Grandpa. “Ever seen this before?”
Grandpa jerked his head left and right in an emphatic no, then glanced at the book again, as if he weren't completely sure of his answer.
“We were hoping you'd be able to tell us more, and maybe lead us to the identity of the man we found in your truck with these items. They found a few jars of really old honey, too. We're having it analyzed. I was hoping you'd know the man. Apparently, at about the time your truck was stolen, a man saying he was a beekeeper showed up in town asking where to find you.”
Maisy handed her grandfather the glass of water again, and waited until he drained it, small drops dribbling down his gray-stubbled chin. “I think I can answer that, too,” Maisy said. “Grandpa was the president of the Florida Beekeepers Association for a long timeâeven when Georgia and I were little. He always had people coming to see him to ask about bees and honey.”
“I figured that's what it had to be.” Lyle slapped his hands on his thighs and stood. “I was just hoping you could shed a little more light on all this. If you think of anything, Maisy knows how to reach me. Or just call the station and ask for Ricky.”
Lyle picked up the bags and then paused. “Oh, I almost forgot. Ricky wanted me to tell you that we got the coroner's preliminary report. The body has been there for a long time, so we've lost a lot of evidence, but from what they can tell there are no obvious signs of foul playâmeaning no bullet wounds or broken bones or that kind of thing. Not that there wasn't foul play, just that there's no evidence of it. But there was evidence of severe malnutrition.”
“That's not very conclusive,” Georgia said, sounding irritated. It was as if she wanted a clean answer, a period at the end of the sentence. A clean slate she could leave behind. It was almost as if she'd already packed her bags.
“No, it's not,” Lyle said. “But considering he's been there for over sixty years, it's something.”
“So he could have died from natural causes, but we'll never know.”
“Probably not.”
Lyle paused a moment, looking everywhere except at Maisy before forcing his gaze to meet hers. “Any more thoughts on coming to the honey festival with Becky and me?”
Maisy made a point of not looking at Georgia. “I already told you no.”
His old smile twitched at the corner of his lips. “But you know I've always had a problem accepting no for an answer. Call me when you change your mind.”
He said good-bye and left, and it took all of Maisy's willpower not to watch him walk away. Instead she turned toward her grandfather, who watched as a honeybee landed on his sleeve. He sat absolutely still as the bee explored the mesh of his shirt and then flew away, its wings fluttering at a furious pace, as if it needed to be somewhere else.
For a moment his eyes met hers, and she saw the tears in them, threatening to spill over. Before she could ask him why, he looked away, brushing off their assistance as he lumbered his way toward the house.
Maisy and her sister watched his slow progression. When Maisy turned to look at Georgia, her own confusion was mirrored in her sister's eyes.
“What was that about?” Georgia asked, annoyance creeping into her voice. Not at their grandfather, but at her inability to snap all the puzzle pieces in place.
“I don't know,” Maisy said.
Their grandfather stopped at the base of the back porch steps and Georgia began walking toward him to help.
Maisy stayed where she was, deep in thought. Could it be just confusion caused from his stroke and medication, and that was why he couldn't remember those parts of his past? Or maybe, like a jigsaw puzzle, there were still too many pieces missing, and he was too afraid to imagine it all together and see the whole picture?
A bee droned near her and she started to walk quickly back to the house, not fast enough to make the bee chase her, always mindful of the things in this world that had a nasty habit of biting you when your back was turned.
Bees see colors in the ultraviolet range that humans cannot. Some flowers have colored maps like little runways to show the bees where to land. Humans are blind to these special markings, but the bees see them.
âNED BLOODWORTH'S BEEKEEPER'S JOURNAL
Georgia
I
sucked in a deep breath as my sneakers pounded down Water Street along the river, the bent arthritic arms of a docked shrimp boat almost prehistoric against the orange sunrise. I heard James's running feet next to me, keeping pace, but I didn't look at him, preferring to be in my own thoughts.
As we approached the Grady Market I allowed myself to slow down, gulping in the warm air already thick with humidity despite the early hour. With my hands on my hips I forced myself to keep moving at a brisk walk, my lungs protesting.
James thudded to a stop next to me, breathing heavily, his skin coated with a thick sheen of sweat that did nothing to lessen his attractiveness. He grinned at me and I had to force myself not to look away. “It's like running through water,” he managed to say through gasping breaths.
“I told you that you should find an indoor treadmill. We locals have gills, so it doesn't bother us as much.”
He laughed, exposing those perfect teeth. I wondered whether he had any idea of his appeal. “I've been running four miles every day since I arrived. I thought I'd get used to it by now. Guess it takes longer to grow gills.”
“As I said”âI panted, leaning on a bench, trying to force more air into my lungsâ“you have to be born with them.”
His phone beeped and I gave him my “I told you so” look that I'd given him when he'd strapped it to his arm at the beginning of our run. I didn't listen to music when I ran, finding the exercise a good way to untangle my mental threads. The only time I did listen to music was when my past wanted to push beyond the locked door where I liked to keep it.
“It's Caroline. She wants us to stop by after our run. Says she has something new to share.” He looked up. “She's already waiting for us.”
After the conversation the previous day with Lyle and our grandfather, I was no longer sure that I wanted to dig any deeper into the mystery of the stolen truck or the origins of the Limoges pattern. Whatever the answer, it had been hidden for so long and so well that there had to be a reason. I already had enough complications in my life.
“I'm glowing pretty profusely, and really need a shower before I see anyone.”
“Glowing?”
“Yeah,” I said, brushing back sweaty hair that had escaped my ponytail. “I keep forgetting you're not from here. In the South, horses sweat, men perspire, but women glow.”
He threw back his head and laughed. “Well, you're certainly glowing. Like a lighthouse beam.”
“Gee, thanks.” I frowned. “Can you tell her I'll be there in an hour?”
“You're fine,” he said, pulling on my elbow and crossing Water Street. “Although you might be cooler if you wore something more appropriate for warmer weather.”
I looked down at my capri running pants and long-sleeved sweat-wicking athletic top. It wasn't what I usually wore when I ran in New
Orleans. I'd just felt the need to cover myself up when I ran through the familiar streets of my hometown. “It's all I brought with me,” I said, avoiding his eyes.
“For a quick cooldown we could go run down your dock and take a dip in the bay,” he suggested.
“And there you'd be wrong. It's only early May, but the water temperature is probably in the eighties. It never really gets cooler than sixty even in January.”
“No kidding. Sounds like a nice place to be in January.”
“It is,” I said. “But we'd like to keep that to ourselves. Meaning if you tell anybody and tourists start flocking down here to make this like Panama City, I'll have to kill you.” I flinched, remembering what Caroline had said about his state of mind after his wife's death. He didn't appear to notice.
“Sounds like you still think of this place as home.”
I stopped in the middle of the sidewalk, considering my answer. “Regardless of how far you go, home will always be the place you started. There's really no way to change that, no matter how much we wish we could.”
His eyes were warm with understanding as we resumed walking. “My grandparents' house on Long Island was beautiful, every detail and piece of furniture carefully selected. But when my grandmother talked of her home, she was referring to the farmhouse where she was born. I don't even think they had running water.”
“In Italy?” I asked, wanting to form a picture of this woman in my head.
He shook his head. “No. My great-grandmother was French, but she married an Italian and lived on a farm in the south of France, where they raised my grandmother and her many siblings. It was crowded, but she says there was lots of love. She said the hardships meant they just loved harder. It made them stronger.”
“That's probably why she loved her French china. Because it reminded her of home.”
“Probably,” he said, although his brows knitted as if he was contemplating an internal question.
“What is it?” I asked.
“After going though all those catalogs and researching so much about china, it just occurred to me that Haviland Limoges has never been a âworkingman's' china, right? In other words, it wasn't something you would see on a farmer's table.”
“No, generally you wouldn't. It's always been considered fine china, and always marketed to the well-heeled.”
Our gazes met. “So where did it come from?” James asked. “And why did they never sell any of it when they were so destitute after moving to New York?”
His phone beeped again and he looked down at it. “Caroline says she's waiting in the garden at the back of the hotel.”
We passed the front of the old mercantile building with the French flag dangling over the entrance to the former French Consulateânow converted to a hotel on the second floor and the Grady Market on the firstâand headed around the block to the back of the building. The garden was a beautiful oasis in the middle of downtown, a lush greenscape of flowering bushes, potted flowers, various benches, and strategically placed oak barrelsâharking back to the building's origins as a shipping-supply company and hardware storeâall connected with brick walkways.
Caroline sat in the shade on one of the benches, a stack of papers and a thick catalog next to her. She was tapping something on her iPad, but looked up with a smile as we approached.
“Before you say a word, you must tell me what that beautiful fragrance is.”
I'd smelled it too as we'd passed the plantings in the middle of the garden, and I'd recognized it immediately as something my grandmother had cultivated in the backyard, equally pleasing to bees as to humansâmy grandfather's only input into my grandmother's garden.
It reminded me of my conversation with James, and one more
thing I needed to tell him about what home meant. How sometimes it took only a whiff of one of my grandmother's flowers and I would be back in Apalachicola again, holding Maisy's hand and telling her the bees wouldn't hurt her as long as I was there.
“It's pittosporum,” I said. “I'm surprised there are still a few blooms leftâit usually blooms in late spring for only a couple of weeks. Definitely subtropical, though, in case you were thinking of planting it in your garden in Connecticut.”
“You're a gardener?” Caroline asked.
I shook my head. “No. My grandmother was, though. I always imagined I'd be one, but my job keeps me pretty busy.”
“I imagine it does. I love to garden. Not because I'm good at itâI'm notâbut because it gets me out of the house and allows me to let my thoughts wander. That's not always a good thing, is it, James?”
“No. Because when you start letting your thoughts wander they always land on me. Maybe you should start collecting antique china instead.”
I lifted a foot behind me to stretch my quads. “You're up early, Caroline. I'd hoped to squeeze in a shower before our meeting.”
“Four kids in six years means I've forgotten how to sleep. So I might as well be up and productive.”
James used the bottom of his shirt to wipe the sweat from his forehead, revealing more than I needed to see. “You can go for a run with me tomorrow morning at six.”
Caroline grimaced as if her brother had just suggested she eat sawdust. “No, thank you. I'll wait until I get back home to my Pilates trainer. We do that inside in the air-conditioning.”
She looked past James to me, peering at me from above her Chanel sunglasses. “You look more like a cheerleader than a runner.”
Knowing she had meant it as a compliment, I grimaced. “My mother wanted me to be a cheerleader, so I tried out for track instead.”
Caroline laughed. “I certainly understand that. We should write a book on oldest daughters and their mothers.” She shrugged. “I swore
my whole life that I wasn't going to be a lawyer like my mother. I don't know who was more surprised when I decided to go to law school, her or me. But enough of that.” She patted the seat on the bench next to her. “I've got so much to show you. I must say, if this is the sort of detective work you get to do in your job every day, I definitely chose the wrong profession.”
“It's not all that glamorous, believe me. I'm basically a glorified Dumpster diver.” Ignoring the seat next to her in deference to my dripping face and hair, I perched myself on the armrest on the opposite end of the bench.
“Thank you for the collector's encyclopedia for Haviland and Co. Limoges. I found what I was looking for, but I was hoping you'd let me borrow it for a few days, because I'd like to read the rest of it. The history of the company is really interesting.”
“That's fine,” I said. “You can even take it back home with you if you're not done with it when you leave. I've got more editions of it back at my office.”
“And I'm sure you need to be getting home, Caro,” James said, giving his sister a hard stare.
“I'm enjoying myself too much right now to want to leave. I haven't spent this much time with James in years. The history of this place is truly remarkable. Did you know that this little town has tons of historic homes and buildings, and even a few on the National Register?”
I smiled. “I don't think it's possible to grow up in a place like this and not love history or old things. It's probably why I moved to New Orleansâsame kind of vibe.”
James cleared his throat. “If you don't mind, Caroline, some of us are melting and would like to take a shower, so if you could go ahead and share what you've learned?”
Pointedly ignoring him, Caroline said, “Be glad you never had a brother. All right, then, where were we?” She touched her iPad screen to wake it up. “Elizabeth went to Grandmother's house yesterday and took more pictures. I told her the first photo of the soup cup wasn't
clear, and that we needed a photo of the bottom, too. She also did an exact inventory and shared that with me. Because of the helpful encyclopedia that Georgia gave me, I made a list of serveware Haviland Limoges of the late nineteenth century made in blank number eleven. Not exacting, as I'm sure you can guess, but I wanted to give Elizabeth some kind of guideline in determining what was missing. Did you know there was such a thing as a covered muffin server? The dome is higher than a pancake server.”
Caroline tapped in her password, then opened her photo album on the iPad. “But first, here's a better picture of the soup cup. Now that you can see it better, is it the same?”
She handed the iPad to me and I took it, then stared at the clear picture of the soup cup, the bright pattern, the bees in flight connected by swirling dips of green paint. Clear enough to bring back the day in my mother's closet when I'd thought it was a small thing to keep a secret, a rare moment of sharing something with Birdie, the only thing worth remembering the fleeting sense of being cherished.
“Going on memory, I'd say it's definitely the same one,” I said, sliding onto the bench next to Caroline, who seemed oblivious to how I must look or smell. I held the iPad away from me, as if the photo might change. “Did she take a picture of the bottom?”
“Yes. Just swipe for the next photo. There are more pictures of the other pieces as well as the mark on the bottoms.”
I stared at her for a moment. James came to my rescue by reaching over and showing me how to use my index finger to swipe across the screen to bring up the following photo. The next one was clearer, showing small yet familiar letters. On one line was “H&Co,” underneath that the capital letter “L,” and then beneath both, in a curve that looked like a smile, the word “France.”
“Is that the marking you were looking for?”
I nodded. “It's the Haviland blank mark used from 1888 until 1896. At least, I think that's rightâI'll have to look it up to be sure, but I'm around this stuff so much it's practically engraved in my mind. And it's the same mark on the teacup and saucer, verifying that at least
those pieces are part of the same set. I don't always like to assume that, but now I know they are.”