Dinner for Eight
by
Steven Hunley
You are cordially invited to dinner at Mandalay House for our annual meeting of the Collector’s Club. Don’t forget to bring your nephew for his initiation on this exclusive special occasion. We look forward to seeing you both.
Sylvia and Louis Purloiner
I bounded up the stairs to the west wing, in through the oak double doors of the study and found my uncle with a feather duster in his hand, dusting one of the two Faberge eggs in his collection. I think it was the Necessaire, the one Alexander the Third gave to his wife Maria Fedorovna on East day 1889. It was one of those pieces he wouldn’t let the servants near.
“It’s come, Uncle, it’s come!”
He looked up, recognised the stationary and smiled. “Now you’ll see what real collecting is all about.”
As if I didn’t know already. Just one look around the room the first day I arrived told me more than enough. The doorstop was one of my uncles first ‘rare pieces’. I looked like a worn-out brick, which it was, but no ordinary brick. My uncle had slipped it out of the wall of the Coliseum in Rome when he did a grand tour of Europe in his twenties. It was nearly two thousand years old.
‘Vespasian’s Dream’ he christened it.
“But Uncle, if every tourist had stolen a brick, they’re be nothing left by now.”
“You’re right, but I’ve got my piece here, a chunk of history, an Emperor’s dream if you will. And I’ll protect it. Vespasian imagined the Coliseum when he was in Sicily keeping bees, after Nero banished him for falling asleep during one of his poetry readings.”
That was my uncle. If the piece had an interesting provenance he wanted it. When he was poor and younger he collected simple things, and was limited. But then his grandfather left him a vanilla plantation in Tahiti, and that led to a coffee plantation in Sumatra. Long before Starbuck’s signed him as a preferred supplier he became rich, and his wealth enabled his collection to grow in value. The trouble was that good pieces were rare and dear, and since he’d been brought up a bargain hunter, he often sought out black-market suppliers.
He received special satisfaction in getting ‘impossible to obtain’ antiques at discount. He started off a young man, poor, grabbed an odd brick when was no one was looking. Now he was old, rich, and possessed two Faberge eggs. It didn’t bother him in the least when a week later he read of an art robbery in a St. Petersburg’s museum.
“It only adds to the provenance,” he shrewdly calculated, and left it at that.
“How many others will be there, Uncle?”
“Oh, two or three couples more. It’s only a once a year affair, and they’re highly selective in who they invite.”
Uncle Silas returned the egg to its holder, a small cupped gold platform shaped like a bird’s foot.
From there he moved on to the shelves holding his rare book collection.
“I’ll be finished with these soon, and we can talk more over dinner. Are you still practicing the latest trick I bought you, what was it?”
“Haskell’s Diminishing Deck.”
“That’s the one we found in the shop in San Francisco, wasn’t it?”
“That’s it.”
“Will you be ready after dinner?”
“I think so.”
“Very well then, Max and myself will be your audience.”
He turned his attention and his feather duster to his precious books and I took my hint and left. I liked practicing before the two of them, my uncle had a keen eye, and Max was very direct for a butler, and forthcoming with his comments. I think he picked up the habit when he worked for a has-been movie star on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. She’d gotten in some sort of scandal, but he wouldn’t say anything more. I could always depend on Max for a truthful evaluation of my performance and to keep his mouth shut.
I would practice and practice, cut and restore bits of rope, change things from one thing to another, levitate, read minds, do a million a one card tricks. But my specialty was sleight of hand, because it took manual dexterity and misdirection.
Allow me to let you in on a secret. The best magic tricks are the ones where no one knows you’re doing them, just as the perfect crime is one that no one knows was committed.
It was my plan, no, my design, that that dinner at Mandalay was to be my crowning achievement in magic and crime wrapped up in one single flawless performance. It wasn’t that I needed the money mind you, but rather the fact I’d become profoundly addicted to the thrill.
***
to be continued…
©Steven Hunley 2013
http://youtu.be/ivTbd38NtWg Max Sunset Boulevard


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Checking back to the original version I see that I misread the bit about the phrase in comic sans. It wasn't reported speech. However, unless you make particular reference to the way it's written there isn't really a justification for using an odd font. If, for example, you'd said, 'written in childish letters' then using comic sans would make sense in context. I wouldn't change it though, it's fine as it is now.