Read Dead as a Scone Online

Authors: Ron Benrey,Janet Benrey

Tags: #Mystery, #tea, #Tunbridge Wells, #cozy mystery, #Suspense, #English mystery

Dead as a Scone (15 page)

BOOK: Dead as a Scone
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Nigel began walking again. Perhaps he deserved a mocking response from Flick. He had raised the issue chiefly because Iona Saxby’s “loose cannon” comment of the day before had hit home. On the other hand, Flick seemed to have backed away from her belief that Elspeth had been murdered. On the other, other hand, Americans could be outrageously unpredictable.

Hope for the best, prepare for the worst, expect the unexpected.

He mulled the old cliché that had popped into his mind. It seemed wholly apropos for dealing both with tea museums and Felicity Adams.

Ahead on the left were the two stone pillars that marked the entrance to Lonsdale Gardens. They passed through and walked left again, toward Barn and Rafters.

“Have you been here before?” he asked.

“Yes. The Barn Pub on several occasions and once for dinner upstairs at the Rafters.”

“Curiously, the place is new to me. We are here at Hoskins’s suggestion.”

“Do you know what he looks like?”

“No. But I doubt that a sixtyish museum consultant will be hard to spot.”

Nigel opened the door and murmured, “Oh dear!”

“What’s wrong?” Flick asked.

“I never have understood why so many English pubs revel in murky interiors crisscrossed by oaken rafters and filled with bucolic furniture that might have been owned by Nell Gwynne.”

“Maybe because guests like me enjoy it. Look around

you are the only person in the place wearing a sour face.”

“Bah humbug!”

“You may have to shut your eyes when we go upstairs. There are more red walls, high yellow ceilings, hewn beams, sprays of dried plants, and—”

“Let me guess,” he interrupted. “And an artsy assortment of jumble-sale relics hung decorously around the room.”

She smiled. “As I recall, there are paintings on the walls and a bookshelf or two.”

“Lead on. Even though you have ruined my appetite.”

They climbed the wooden staircase. At the top, Flick whispered, “That’s got to be him. The distinguished-looking gentlemen sitting alone at the table for four near the railing.”

“Mr. Hoskins?” Nigel asked cautiously.

“In the flesh!” He thrust out his hand. “You must be Nigel Owen.”

Augustus had the look, Nigel thought, of a modernized Pickwickian: portly, jowly, bespectacled, ruddy-cheeked, a fringe of hair encircling a gleaming bald pate—and below that an intelligent face that quickly gained one’s confidence. He wore a charcoal gray three-piece suit punctuated by an orange tie.

Hoskins smiled at Flick. “Dr. Adams, I presume.” He shook her hand, then pointed at the two chairs on the opposite side of his table. “Sit. Please.”

The waitress approached. Hoskins asked for a dry sherry. Nigel and Flick ordered small ciders.

“Would you be surprised to learn,” Augustus began when they were alone, “that forty-odd years ago I danced the Twist in this very room?” He didn’t wait for Nigel or Flick to reply. “It is perfectly true. This used to be a dance hall, with one large continuous floor. The ersatz skylight in the floor that provides a view of the pub below is a recent addition.” He paused to look around the restaurant. “Think of it! They held dances here while less than a mile away workmen were pouring the concrete basement of your splendid museum. I was only a callow youth back then, but even I had heard of the mighty Hawker Foundation and their reputation for doing things right. So imagine my astonishment yesterday afternoon when the lovely and talented Iona Saxby told me that your exhibitory knickers are in a twist.”

“It feels more like a double bowline knot than a simple twist,” Nigel said. “We do not own the principle antiquities on display in our galleries. The Hawker heirs have announced their intention to reclaim—and sell—their entire collection. We estimate its worth to be at least forty million pounds. The proceeds should be sufficient to pay the inheritance taxes on Elspeth Hawker’s estate, which is the reason they intend to sell the antiquities.”

“Blasted death duties! Britain makes it easy for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. Inland Revenue takes away half of his wealth when he dies.” Hoskins’s wry smile gave way to a serious glower. “And yet, one assumes that Dame Elspeth would have recognized the problem as she grew older and found a solution before her passing. The fact that she did not utterly bewilders me—it is completely out of character with her previous support of the museum.”

Nigel nodded. Iona Saxby had made a similar comment. Elspeth Hawker loved the museum, yet she had ignored an absolutely fundamental question: What would happen to the Hawker antiquities when she died? Perhaps Elspeth was one of those people who refuse to contemplate her own demise? Or was there another reason?

What difference does it make? Nigel reminded himself that Elspeth’s motives died with her. His job was to look ahead, not backwards, and to find a way to acquire the Hawker collection.

Augustus leaned his elbows on the table. “You must know that the Royal Tunbridge Wells Tea Museum has been the envy of other English museum directors for four decades. Generous initial funding from a major foundation. A one-of-a-kind collection on display. The devoted patronage of a wealthy family. Nary a need to chat with Augustus Hoskins about raising money.” He chortled again. “What more could a museum ask?”

“I agree,” Nigel said. “The tea museum led a blessed existence for forty years, but our joyful days came to an abrupt end last Wednesday. We can no longer rely on the Hawker family. Our antiquities are in jeopardy. The Hawker Foundation has ceased providing direct support. And we need as much help as you can give us. The fact is, we are being driven to make an important financial decision under pressure—a decision that may have severe repercussions in years to come.”

“An ever-so-common complaint these days.” Hoskins sat back in his chair, signaling that the waitress had arrived to serve their drinks. When she left, he said to Nigel, “Please continue with the details of your repercussive financial dilemma.”

Nigel took ten minutes to recount his meetings with Barrington Bleasdale and summarize the three obvious options. Hoskins proved an excellent listener, saying nothing but offering a sympathetic frown and a steady stream of interested nods. Nigel finished by saying, “Flick and I would appreciate your advice in two areas. First, have we ignored a potential solution? Second, if we choose to purchase the collection, is there a way we can decrease risk inherent in a long-term loan?”

Hoskins steepled his fingers. “Your first question has a simple answer. Yes—there is another option. Find a new patron to replace the Hawkers, a tea fancier with the financial resources and cultural inclinations of Cosimo de’ Medici. The modest museum he started in Florence during the early Renaissance is now the Uffizi Gallery.” Hoskins began to chuckle. “Every museum director I know goes on such a quest. Unfortunately, an approach that worked in fifteenth-century Italy almost never succeeds in twenty-first-century Great Britain.”

Hoskins turned to Flick. “Before I tackle Nigel’s second question, I would like to know your opinion. As chief curator, how do you feel about acquiring your collection with long-term financing?”

Nigel realized that Flick was looking at him—apparently to get his go-ahead before she answered. She’s not a loose cannon! He grinned at her and nodded his approval.

Flick began. “I fully endorse the general principle that a museum holds its assets in trust for the public. I would never consider mortgaging our antiquities to raise funds for another purpose—say to build a new building. But here the shoe is on the other foot. We’re engaging in financial wizardry to purchase our collection. I feel comfortable about doing that.”

“In that event,” Augustus said, “your challenge is to retire the debt as quickly as possible.” He looked at Nigel. “To reduce risk, you must find other sources of funding from people and organizations that support your mission. It won’t be easy. I sometimes feel we are living in a philanthropic ice age. Nonetheless, with perseverance, one can make progress despite treacherous glaciers and blowing snow.”

Flick chimed in. “We have the means to generate some additional revenues ourselves. We might create a line of replica artifacts, start a magazine for tea fanciers, publish a series of tea-related cookbooks, and even launch a chain of Duchess of Bedford Tearooms.”

“All intriguing ideas,” Hoskins said, “but alas, most will require significant investments before they begin to pay dividends.”

She gave a sheepish shrug. “I know—it takes money to make money. Well, if absolutely necessary, we can begin to charge visitors a modest admission fee, although that would undo our forty-year tradition as a free museum.”

“Perhaps it won’t come to that. Let me ponder your problem for a day or two and see if the ‘Great Hope’ can live up to his overblown reputation.” Augustus smiled benevolently. “If I may make an unrelated observation—you two seem ideally suited to work together. In my experience, the museum director and chief curator are often at each other’s throats.”

Nigel avoided Flick’s gaze and suspected that she was trying to avoid his.

The awkward moment passed when Augustus waived at the waitress. “Let’s order lunch,” he said. “On me, of course. I intend to have a substantial meal, and I don’t care to place a new financial burden on the museum.”

He began to chuckle again. Flick joined in.

Nigel merely smiled. He didn’t find the quip funny. These days, nothing about the Royal Tunbridge Wells Tea Museum seemed laughable.

 

 

Flick knocked on Nigel’s doorframe. He looked up from the mass of paper on his desk. “I meant to ask you a question earlier,” she said, “but it skipped my mind. At lunch you told Augustus Hoskins that the Hawker Foundation has ceased providing direct support to us. How come? After all, they created the museum in the first place.”

Nigel rummaged in the sea of clutter, found a brochure, and folded back the cover. “I have here the current annual report published by the Hawker Foundation. Take a good look at this photograph.”

Flick sat down in the visitor’s chair next to Nigel’s desk. The photo was an expensively done portrait of a distinguished man of perhaps fifty-five. He had salt-and-pepper hair, piercing eyes, beaky nose, square chin, and a no-nonsense expression.

“A nicely chiseled face,” she said. “Who is he?”

“Jeremy Strain, the managing director. When he took charge of the foundation two years ago, he appeared on one of the BBC current affairs shows. He explained that henceforth the function of his foundation would be to do measurable good in the world and not to teach the Tunbridge Wells gentry how to brew a cup of English Breakfast tea.”

“He said that?”

“Indeed! He also said that this museum never would have been built had he been managing director forty years ago.”

“Oh my.”

“How would you like to ask him for some ready money?”

“It might be tough—but if I were you, I’d definitely give it a go.”

“Excellent! My teleconference with Strain begins in about ten minutes. You can be me. You do the asking.”

Flick scrambled to her feet, feeling exceedingly foolish. “Forgive me. I didn’t mean to imply that you couldn’t—”

“Sit back down,” Nigel said. “I am utterly serious. I groveled before Strain on two other occasions, to no avail. Perhaps we should try a new groveler?”

“Not a good idea!” She could hear the near panic in her own voice. “I don’t know anything about British foundations. Even more important, I’m not very good at asking for money in person.” Flick let herself sigh. “The truth is, when it comes to face-to-face fund-raising, I’m as useful as a chocolate teapot.”

The look on Nigel’s face began to alternate between skeptical and surprised. He seemed unsure how to respond to Flick’s confession. She broke the silence. “I know it sounds silly, but I couldn’t sell Girl Scout cookies when I was a kid. And I’ve never been able to ask for a raise.”

“Hmmm.”

“However, I have no problem groveling on paper. I can write fabulous grant proposals.”

“I see,” he said, although it was obvious to Flick that he didn’t.

“And I’ll be happy to provide you with moral support.” She dropped into the chair again. “As long as
you
do all the talking.”

Nigel nodded slowly. “All right. I’ll explain to Strain that I asked you to sit in—as my technical advisor.”

BOOK: Dead as a Scone
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