The Queen Of Bedlam - Part 44
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Part 44

Forty-Two.

"My congratulations," said the lawyer, when Matthew had come down the stairs after him. Kippering stood in a meager circle of light, his eyes hooded. "I understand you had a visit with Reverend Wade. He wouldn't tell me what was said, but obviously you had an influence."

"Glad to be of help."

"You're absolutely sure you wanted to shut that door?"

"Yes." Before Matthew had followed Kippering down, he'd closed the door at the top of the steps. He didn't wish to be interrupted if either Pollard came in or Fitzgerald returned from what appeared to Matthew to be a pin-chasing errand, something that had been made up on the spot.

"The last time you were in here," Kippering reminded him with a tight smile, "you wanted all the doors left open. I thought you might be afraid of me. Would you care for some more light?"

"Always," Matthew said. He removed his tricorn and put it down atop a stack of boxes.

Kippering walked away a few paces, bent down, and rummaged in the wreckage of old discarded office furniture. He came up with a tin two-candle lantern and lit the wicks from his present flame. Then he reached up and placed the lantern's handle on a beam hook so that it hung between himself and Matthew. "There," he said as the illumination spread. "At your command. Now what is it you wish to see?"

"Actually," Matthew answered, "the stairs themselves."

"Oh? Anything special about them that I'm missing?"

"They are infirm, aren't they? I recall you telling me to watch my footing on them, as they were older than your grandmother. Mr. Kippering, what is your grandmother's name?"

"My...grandmother's..."

"Name, yes," said Matthew crisply. "What is it?"

Kippering started to speak, but both he and Matthew knew that any name he produced would be a lie. Perhaps if he'd been less weary, or less sick, or less bitten by the brown fox of liquor, he might have carried off a lie and done it with charm. Now, though, he saw no point to it. His mouth, half-opened, slowly closed.

"You don't remember your grandmother, do you? As neither do I remember my grandmother. A common bond between us orphans, I think."

Kippering stared into the flame of his candle.

"May I tell you a story?" Matthew asked. "It's a tragedy, really. But yet there's hope in it, as I believe you'll see."

"Yes," Kippering said thickly, transfixed by the eye of light. "Do go on."

"Once there was a couple, very much in love. Devoted to each other. His name was Nicholas, and her name was-is-Emily. The Swanscotts of London. Neither one started out with great ambitions. He loved music and hoped to conduct an orchestra, and she only wished to be a good wife and a mother. But as things progressed, Nicholas Swanscott was persuaded to buy with his father's help a small brokerage business that catered to the tavern trade and so went the youthful dreams. However, in came the money. As Mr. Swanscott's personality made him not so fixated on profits, he was able to undercut other brokers-with no malice, but rather simply the way he did business-and in essence suddenly found that he was a rich young man. His rivals took note of this, but what could they do?"

"What, indeed?" asked Kippering. "Are you making this up?"

"No sir. I've been in consultation with the Swanscotts' longtime coachman, whose name is Gordon Shulton and who lives two miles north of Philadelphia on the pike road." Matthew raised his eyebrows. "May I go on?"

"If it pleases you." There was a tremor to the voice.

"It seemed," Matthew said, "that Mr. Swanscott was a great success. He turned out to be naturally adept at planning and management. Well, consider it: anyone who could interweave the chaos of violins, horns, and kettle drums into a symphony would have no trouble managing the shipments of smoked sausage, salted beef, casks of wine, and ale to clients all over London. A goods broker keeps a warehouse, you see, and stores the food and drink until the taverns need it."

"A fine lesson in tavern economics, thank you," said Kippering, his eyes quickly glancing up toward Matthew.

"Sadly," Matthew went on, "as Mr. Swanscott was a success, his wife was finding her role difficult at best. According to Gordy-that's what he asked me to call him, by the way-Emily Swanscott was a gentle, quiet woman who would rather spend time in her b.u.t.terfly garden than go to the social events of the season. She was perhaps a little overcome by all the money. Perhaps, deep down, she didn't feel she deserved it."

Kippering set his candle down on a time-worn desk. "The illness of the upper cla.s.s. I pity her."

"You might, well and truly. You see, her greatest desire was to have children. Her first child, a boy, unfortunately died within minutes of being born. Her second child, also a boy, died at age eleven in a swimming accident. Her third, again a boy, perished of fever when he was five. You might pity her, for thinking as she did-according to my friend Gordy-that any boy born to her was doomed to die early. One might presume that under the weight of those three deaths she might have begun to break, even then."

Matthew held up a finger. "But...one day...Mr. Swanscott came home, very excitedly, and told his wife that he'd made an interesting discovery. He'd been touring, by necessity, a slaughterhouse where he bought his beef. And who should be there on the killing line, but a handsome young orphan boy working silently and diligently in all that blood and muck. A boy who looked out of place there, but who was uncomplaining of his lot in life. A strong young boy, stout of heart and quick of mind. And merciful, too, for this young boy had developed a system by which he struck the animals in the temple with a mallet before he delivered the cut. Might Emily wish to meet this boy, for his own mother and father had perished by the same fever that took little Michael? Might Emily wish to meet this boy, when he was all clean and presentable on a Sunday afternoon? Might she wish to just have one look at him, for he was not violent in his soul. No, far from it. He only did what he needed to do, to survive in a cruel and heartless world. Just one visit, and who knows what might happen?"

Kippering turned his head away, so the light would not touch his face.

Matthew thought he heard a footfall on the floor above. He waited, but it didn't repeat. This place might be haunted like the Herrald Agency's office, Matthew mused. A one-legged ghost, perhaps. But he knew he was already looking at a ghost.

He continued, in a softer voice. "This orphan boy did have a family name. It was Trevor Kirby. Over a period of time and many visits, he endeared himself to the Swanscotts. And why not? You should hear Gordy talk about him. Smart, a quick wit, a n.o.ble personality. Under all that blood, of course. Well, he got cleaned up and the Swanscotts took him out of the slaughterhouse and put him in a proper school. Then he really showed what he was made of. A piece of gold found in dirty water. His grades soared and he was making progress by leaps and bounds. Turning into a gentleman. And he was appreciative, too. On Sunday afternoons he used to read to his...well, I can't call Mrs. Swanscott his mother, exactly, because there was the fear of sudden death that she couldn't ever really banish. That was why the Swanscotts never officially adopted him. She feared giving him the family name. But he was her sparkle of hope, Trevor was, and he brought her back from the abyss. And they did become his foster parents, and loved him like a real son by any measure you give it. And do you know what? Mr. Swanscott even used his considerable influence to get Trevor admitted to law school!"

Matthew grunted, as if some people had all the luck in the world. "Then, to top that off, when Trevor graduated with honors the Swanscotts took him on a trip to Italy. What a trip that must have been! What a joyous occasion! After that, Mr. Swanscott gave him a gift of money, by which to open a small law firm in the town of St. Andrew-On-The-Hill, which was Mr. Swanscott's own hometown in the north of England and where I imagine he lay on the sward and dreamed of leading his symphonies under the clouds. But do you know what, Andrew? Gordy told me that Trevor Kirby paid every cent of that money back to his foster father. Every cent and more. You see, Trevor became very successful. Oh, not a big-city lawyer by any means, but maybe that was for the best. I think sometimes lawyers in the cities lose sight of the real meaning of justice. Don't you, Andrew? I think sometimes they can become bitter, and believe that the system of justice has failed. That can have unfortunate results to a man's mind, don't you agree?"

The lawyer put a hand to his face but did not speak.

"I'm sorry, sir." Matthew felt a lump rising in his throat. "But I have to finish it. It's my nature."

"Yes," came the barely recognizable voice. "I understand."

"Unfortunately," Matthew said, his own voice husky, "when Trevor began his own life, Mrs. Swanscott began to drift away again. Oh, he visited her of course, but...things do get in the way. According to Gordy, she couldn't sleep for days on end. She was having visions of death and disaster. Mr. Swanscott did what he could to soothe her, but she was slowly going to pieces. And then came the day when he asked his wife to consider leaving England, and starting over again in the colonies. A hard task? Of course. Fraught with difficulties? Certainly. But the business had gotten so large and utterly consuming. He planned to leave it to another manager he'd been training. Where might they go, in the colonies, that he might take what he knew of the brokerage business and yet not be overwhelmed, that they could spend more time together? Boston? The Puritans frowned on taverns. New York? Possibly, but word was that an old business rival named Pennford Deverick had set up shop there, and Deverick was not a man who appreciated compet.i.tion. Ah, Philadelphia! The Quaker town! Full of brotherly love and friendly companionship! Not so many taverns there as in New York, but that was all to the good, wasn't it?"

"All to the good," the lawyer blurted out, and kept his face averted.

"That's right," Matthew said, watching the man carefully. "But still, for all the excitement and challenge of sailing to a new land, making connections and starting over, Mrs. Swanscott must have felt a hole within herself. Do you know what she did, Andrew? She had buried her deceased infant in the b.u.t.terfly garden behind their house, so she let him lie there sleeping, but she took her two other sons with her, to be laid in Christ Church cemetery. The people I talked to in Philadelphia never knew about the infant, Andrew. They never knew that Mrs. Swanscott was carrying the burden of three deaths, instead of two."

"Imagine," came the garbled voice.

"Oh, I can't imagine. Who would want to?" Matthew paused, considering how to approach the next subject. There was nothing to do but forge ahead. "Everything went well until the summer of 1697. That was the year five people died and many others were sickened near to death in a Philadelphia tavern called the White Stag. Do you know the procedure that Mr. Swanscott went through to buy and deliver wine to his clients, sir? Gordy told me. It seems that wine is shipped over from England in hogshead barrels. These barrels would have been taken from the ships and stored in Mr. Swanscott's warehouse on the Philadelphia waterfront until orders were sent from the taverns. Depending on the needs of the taverns, the wine is transferred from the hogshead barrels to smaller casks, and these are delivered to the clients. Now, during the transferral from hogshead to cask, an inspector paid for by Mr. Swanscott is on hand to taste the wine to make sure it hasn't spoiled. The casks are likewise inspected for mold or other problems. When the wine is transferred, the casks are given a seal of approval by the inspector, and the destination tavern's name is chalked upon them. The casks may sit in the warehouse under lock for another few days awaiting delivery, but no longer than that. Everything should have gone as usual, but on this day it did not."

The lawyer lifted his head and was listening intently.

Matthew said, "On this day, in the summer of 1697, five people died at the White Stag from drinking wine poured into a pitcher from one of Mr. Swanscott's casks. Many others-a score, I understand-were brought to death's door. Some have not fully recovered yet, but have been made so feeble they can't even walk. In October of 1697 Mr. Swanscott was brought to trial, where both he and the inspector swore the wine was suitable and that the approval was not negligent. The Swanscotts' attorney, Icabod Primm, handled the defense. A few of the family members of those who died were adamant that the wine had spoiled in the summer heat and had been pa.s.sed on anyway, or that the cask had been fouled by vermin and not properly cleaned. Up until then, Mr. Swanscott's reputation had been spotless, but after that day...he was ruined. He couldn't prove the inspector hadn't been paid to apply a falsified seal, as some were saying. It didn't help that the inspector disappeared while the trial was going on."

"Yes," said the lawyer. He nodded. "Find the inspector."

"I don't have to tell you what was happening to Mrs. Swanscott, as she watched her husband being torn to pieces at court. Just after the incident, she had sent a letter to Trevor, explaining the situation and begging him to come help Primm with the defense. I can envision Trevor's horror at receiving such a letter, can't you?"

The lawyer did not respond, but Matthew knew the man had looked upon horror many times.

"He sent back a letter," Matthew said. "Promising to come, and to prove Mr. Swanscott's innocence. The only problem was that before Trevor could reach Philadelphia from Portsmouth, whether by accident or design his foster father stepped in front of a fast carriage at twilight on one of those long, straight streets. He lingered for..." There was no need to go into that. "At which point, Emily Swanscott retreated from the world and collapsed. She now sits every day at a window, staring out at a garden. But you know where she is, don't you, sir? You know, because you put her there."

The lawyer bent over the desk and gripped it as if he might fall. "Mrs. Swanscott does speak, if only briefly and nonsensically. She keeps asking about the king's reply having arrived," Matthew told him. "On the way into Philadelphia I saw some ships whose names were being reworked to honor the Queen. It struck me that the King's Reply might indeed be the name of a ship. Now, of course, it would be named the Queen's Reply. When Gordy very kindly gave me a ride back to Philadelphia on his wagon, I went directly to the shipping office to see if there might be any record of a ship called the King's Reply arriving at Philadelphia probably in the first half of 1698. Actually, it arrived in early March. The clerk there found a list of pa.s.sengers."

Matthew saw the man's shoulders hunch as if readying for a whipstrike.

"Your name was among them, Trevor. In your letter you'd told her the name of the ship on which you'd booked pa.s.sage. You came one month before your foster mother was put into the Westerwicke asylum. I a.s.sume you arranged everything with Icabod Primm. The removal of all personal items and the makers' marks from the furniture. You wished to hide her, didn't you? You wished no one to know who she was. I'm unclear on that part of it. Why go to all that trouble?"

Trevor Kirby shook his head. It was not denial, but a vain attempt at avoiding the wasps that stung his brain.

"Did you believe that the legal system had failed Mr. Swanscott?" Matthew asked. "Did you set yourself up as an avenger? A righter of wrongs? Because his innocence could not be proven in court, did you decide to murder the men you felt responsible?" Matthew dared to move a few steps nearer the man. "I realized, when I was sitting in Primm's office looking at his statue of Just.i.tia, that the cuts you made around the victims' eyes were not supposed to represent a mask, Trevor. They represented a blindfold. Your statement, I presume, that Lady Justice was never so blind as to allow those three men to escape the law?"

"Those three men," came the nearly strangled reply, "destroyed the only father and mother I ever knew." He turned now toward Matthew, the light was cast upon his enraged face, and Matthew decided it best to stand very still and not speak.

Kirby was sweating. His face was damp, his eyes swollen with either hatred or torment. Probably both, Matthew thought. "Yes, I did arrive too late. I went to the house and saw her sitting at a window, her head lolling. One of the servants had warned me how bad it was, but I wasn't ready. I could never have been. I stood there and I heard her cry out, calling for Father and Toby and Michael, but they were all dead. Then she started praying to G.o.d and speaking gibberish and sobbing, and I could not-could not-go to her side." He blinked, his mouth slack for a moment until it could once more form words. "I was afraid that when she looked at me I would see nothing in there but madness. And that is what tears me apart every day and every night. That is why I cannot stand to be with myself, and hear myself think. Because I was not there..." He seemed to waver on his feet, and had to start again. "I was not there, when she needed me. When they both needed me. And I promised I would come and help Mr. Primm prove he was innocent, and I failed. More than that." His face, once so handsome, was a thing of tortured angles wracked by a shudder. "I was ashamed to speak to her, there in that room. She was so broken. It was an obscenity."

He looked hopefully at Matthew, his expression begging for understanding. "If you'd seen her, when she was in Italy! When we were all happy! If you'd seen her...what she was then... you'd know why I couldn't bear it. Selfish, I know." He nodded vigorously. "Yes, selfish! But as I watched...she gave a moan. One long...terrible moan, and she suddenly stopped crying and praying. It was as if everything...everything had departed from her. I was looking at an empty husk. Dear G.o.d." Tears glistened. "Oh dear Christ, dear Jesus. I turned away from there and I walked out, and I went...I went directly to Mr. Primm. And I said...take care of her. Find a place where she can be...the nearest place to home. If at all possible. Not one of those...those filthy, ugly asylums. Those horrendous bedlams. Find a place, I said. Money is no object. Find a place where she can have some of her pretty things, and no one will steal them. I said find a place that is safe."

"And why safe to the degree of not even telling the doctors who she was?" Matthew asked. "Why did you remove any possibility of identifying her?"

"Because of the three men," Kirby replied. "Because I already knew what they'd done, and I already knew who pulled the puppet strings."

"Who?"

"A man. A shadow of a man. Known as Professor Fell."

Forty-Three.

Matthew didn't say anything for a few seconds. Then: "Go on."

Kirby reached into a pocket and withdrew a white handkerchief, with which he began to blot the beads of sweat from his forehead. "I didn't receive Mother's letter until November. I'd been in Scotland, working on a case. I had other commitments as well. I'd been planning on being married...to a wonderful young woman, the following summer. I was going to write Father and Mother, to let them know. Then I got the post. I dropped everything, of course. I shut my office, I told Margaret I'd be gone for a while, that my family needed me. A few months, I said. Then we'd pick our wedding plans up where we'd left them." He began to carefully fold the handkerchief into a tight square.

"When I got the letter from Mother...I knew there had to be some other explanation," Kirby said. "I knew Father would never have made an error like that. No. He was a professional. He was clean. But if he hadn't made an error...then how was it done, and why?" He was silent, turning something over and over in his mind like a puzzle to be viewed from all sides.

"I had remembered...once when I visited them, a few years after they'd moved to Philadelphia...Father asked me my opinion of whether he should take the business into New York or not. There were two brothers who owned the White Stag tavern. They had plans for one to move to New York and open a second White Stag. In their research, they discovered that the brokerage prices commanded by Mr. Pennford Deverick were very much higher for the very same items that Father sold. They wanted him to consider expansion into the New York market, and they would wish to invest some money in the enterprise if he did. They were sure that Father could undercut Deverick's prices and still make a profit. So...he asked me that day what I thought."

When Kirby hesitated, Matthew asked, "What was your advice?"

"Not to go. I just didn't think the extra work would be worth it. They had a grand life, why should they disturb what they had? Besides, Father was never driven by greed. Far from it. He simply enjoyed the management process. I left him still considering the opportunity, but I don't think he was going to do it. I don't think Mother wanted it, either."

Matthew nodded. "So when you read in your mother's letter about the incident taking place at the White Stag, what did you think?"

"That it was very suspicious. Why that tavern, of all the others? Why only that tavern? It would be called, I suppose, killing two birds with one stone."

Matthew thought Deverick's zeal for destruction might indeed have been set flaming by the news that an old rival was moving into his territory, whether it was only rumor heard round the New York taverns or not.

"When I got to Portsmouth, it was the height of the winter storm season," Kirby said, blinking up at the lantern that hung from the ceiling beam. "My departure was to be delayed for at least three weeks. I think I...had my own breakdown then. My first one. Knowing I had to do something, but could do nothing. I went to London. And I went with a vengeance, for as London is the center of the world, so it is the center of the underworld. Deverick had his motive, yet he needed the advice and aid of professionals. A contract might have been drawn up. Would anyone in London have any information? I decided to find out.

"I visited my attorney friends first, for names of contacts. That led me nowhere. Then...I suppose I might say I threw myself with a fervor into my research. My second breakdown, perhaps." Kirby's eyes glistened, but they were dead. "I went through every back alley ginpot I could find. I gambled, threw away money, drank with the reptiles, pegged the wh.o.r.es, and winnowed into every little s.h.i.tpot that opened up for me. Suddenly two weeks had pa.s.sed, and I was bearded and filthy and the lice were jumping out of my hair." He brought up a wicked smile. "And do you know who was born, during that time? Andrew Kippering himself. Andrew for Father's hometown, Kippering for the tailor at the end of my street. I looked into the grimy gla.s.s of a half-pence wh.o.r.ehouse and lo and behold-there he stood, grinning back. Ready to get to work. To rub shoulders with the thugs and thieves, and announce that money was to be had for information. A lot of money."

"I almost got my head bashed in outside the Black Tail Tavern," Kirby said. "Almost was caught by a band of men and would've been beaten to death in an alley if I hadn't been carrying a knife. Suddenly everything came back. The movement of the arm, the quickness of the strike. Even the smell of blood. I cut one right across the face, pretty as you please. The second one I got in the ribs. Then they ran, and the next night the Blind Boy found me."

"The Blind Boy?"

"About thirteen or fourteen years old. Thin as a pole, but well-dressed. Dark gla.s.ses. Very articulate. Had a cane. Was he blind or not? I don't know, but his face was terribly scarred. A wh.o.r.e named Tender Judy brought him to my table. Said he could find out things, but it would cost me. Said he would tell me once, and I could ask no questions. Said I would never try to find him again, afterward, or it would be my death. I believed him."

"A reasonable a.s.sumption," Matthew agreed.

"I paid him half up front. Then he asked me what I wanted to know. I'd been thinking what to ask. It was very important, with these people, that you phrased things correctly. I said, 'I want to know about the contract on Nicholas Swanscott. How was it done, and who did it?' He said he had no idea what I was talking about, but he would make some inquiries."

"And he delivered the information?" Matthew prodded.

"I was walking back to my room two nights later," Kirby said. "Long after midnight. I was nearly drunk on some filth or another. Suddenly there was a man beside me. Not a big man, but a tough gent who could handle himself. He seized my elbow before I could turn around and he said right up in my ear, 'Come with me. No noise.' I thought I was going to be killed, but we didn't have far to go. A few streets, a few alleys. I was pushed into a little room with yellow wallpaper, the Blind Boy was sitting on a throne of rags, and he beckoned me nearer. 'Now listen,' he said. 'No questions. After this, we are strangers. After this, you will die if you go asking anymore. Do you understand?'

"I said I did," Kirby related. "Then he said, 'The contract was paid for by a man named Deverick, who came from New York to have a problem solved. The problem being: how to destroy someone and their business at the same time, yet leave no trace?' Done with poison, he said. The poison had been made by a New York doctor. Goodwin or G.o.dwin, he thought was the name. There was something on the doctor in London, having to do with a prost.i.tute and a dead baby. The name he got was 'Susan.' An abortion gone bad, he said. Local talent for the job was provided by someone named Ausley. Two crows, a screever, and a lugger."

"Pardon?" Matthew asked.

Kirby translated: "Two lookouts, a forger, and someone to carry the materials."

"Oh. Yes." Matthew nodded, as if he'd known these street terms all along. "Go ahead."

"While the crows watched for constables, the others opened the lock with a key provided by an inside-man. A cask was chosen, opened, and the poison poured in. The cask was closed with a soft mallet. The screever had a blank paper inspection seal, which was forged on the spot and fixed to the cask with red wax. The inside-man had told them the correct color to use. Then the cask was returned to its place, the team got out, relocked the door, and it was all over in a few minutes."

"And they didn't care how many people would be killed?"

Kirby didn't bother to answer. "The Blind Boy said there was one loose end to the contract, which the hornpipe-a criminal attorney, if you will-suggested correcting. He said it involved Swanscott's wife. Her name, he said, was Emily."

Matthew waited.

"The Blind Boy told me," Kirby said, "that this hornpipe considered that Mr. Swanscott would likely go to prison for many years. Would probably die there. But if the wife decided to rebuild the business, as a gesture of faith, she should promptly meet with an accident. If the contract called for destruction of the business, then destruction it should be. Signed, sealed, and delivered."

"Very civilized of them." Matthew was beginning to understand why Kirby had so desperately wanted to keep his mother hidden away.

"They have their own code." Kirby stared intently at Matthew for a few seconds before he went on. "The Blind Boy said he didn't know me-except that he knew my name was Andrew Kippering and I was a high ball playing low. He said, 'I'd like to give you some advice, sir. Go home where you belong. This contract was underwritten by the professor, and your interest in it disturbs me. Now, if you'll pay me my money, you'll be shown back to your door.'"

"Underwritten by the professor?" Matthew frowned. "Why?"

"I didn't know who the Blind Boy meant. I asked Tender Judy about it, later. She told me as much as she knew, which was not very much. A shadow here, a shadow there. A black carriage pa.s.sing in the fog. Rumors and whispers, and a great amount of fear. Professor Fell, first name unknown. Age and description, unknown. But whoever he is, he had a hand in the ruin of my father. And I feared beyond anything that if Mother got well...if she came back to herself...someone might talk her into hiring managers and rebuilding the business again under the family name. So I did my best to prevent anyone from finding her, or to prevent anyone at that hospital from pursuing her ident.i.ty. I didn't want her attracting unwanted attention." Kirby looked down at the ground, and Matthew could tell he was fighting a battle with the shame that must be festering in his soul. "I didn't want her to get better," he said softly. "To come out of her sleep. There's just pain waiting for her, when she wakes up."

"Not least of all, the fact that her son has murdered three men in the name of justice. Let me ask this: did you tell Mr. Primm what you'd found out?"

"No. Well...I did mention Pennford Deverick's name. I think I said...something about him being one of Father's fiercest compet.i.tors in London, and the fact that they'd had more than one public argument. I said it was peculiar, that Pennford Deverick now ruled New York's taverns only a hundred miles away, and this very suspect tragedy had destroyed my father. Primm didn't make any connection, and why should he? I had no proof whatsoever."

Matthew remembered Primm's declaration: I consider proof to be the alpha and omega of my profession. Difficult to argue with that. Matthew was also thinking about something Pollard had said. "Did you advise Primm to sell the business?"

"I did, and the sooner the better. The money could go into the fund I'd set up for Mother. Actually a buyer was already interested. I signed the papers before I left Philadelphia."

"Who was the buyer?"