Stone Quarry

Free Stone Quarry by S.J. Rozan

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Authors: S.J. Rozan
forgotten at the end of his nose. "You must learn to curb your impatience, young man. It will get you nowhere in life."
    "I've been there already," I said. "I didn't like it."
    He sniffed, "Well," he said. "Well. An impatient young man like yourself hasn't come here to browse. You're looking for some particular item. Yes; you know precisely what you want. Not for yourself; a gift most likely, for someone who"—he peered at me intently—"who assuredly would rather have you at home by the fire than running all over hell-and-gone seeking out the perfect gift. But you won't hear of it, so we'll say no more about it. What was it you wanted?"
    I stared at him. "Old silver," I said. "Was that just for me, or can you do it all the time?"
    "Some people," he sighed. "Some people could benefit; but they won't learn."
    He turned and moved off with the speed of an acorn becoming a mighty oak. I followed. Luckily we were only going around a glass-doored breakfront to an alcove where wooden shelves were piled high with platters, plates, and carving knives, teapots and baby spoons. I don't think it took us more than an hour to get there.
    "Here." He made a round, inclusive gesture. "Here is old silver. But you, of course, had a particular piece in mind. What was it?"
    "A teapot. I called earlier; I may have spoken to you."
    "I've spoken to no one on the telephone today, young man. Perhaps my wife . . ." He turned a full circle like the light in a lighthouse. "I don't see her now, but she's in the shop somewhere."
    "It doesn't matter," I said hastily. If he went wandering off to find her it might be years before. I saw him again. "Is this all your silver?"
    "You've looked at none of it yet, but you're unsatisfied?"
    I didn't need to look at it. Everything was covered with a layer of dust so thick that the dust itself was probably on the National Register. Nothing had been put on these shelves in the last few days.
    "Is this all your silver?" I asked again.
    "Well," he sighed, reached up onto the shelf. "As to teapots, this one, for example, is particularly fine." He blew a cloud of dust off the graceful pot in his hands; it settled on my shoes like snow. He handed the pot to me. I took it, turned it, examined it. He was right; even tarnished as it was, it was beautiful. I handed it back.
    "I do have something particular in mind." I described Eve Colgate's teapot, the chased floral pattern, the scroll handle. He pursed his lips and shook his head slowly.
    "Young man, I can't help you. If you really are going to insist on a pot of that description, good luck to you; you will waste more time searching for it than the finding of it will be worth." He looked at me sadly in the dim light.
    "Well, thanks anyway," I said. "You've been a great help." I started to leave before I got any older.
    "Wait," he said from behind me as I rounded the break- front and reached for the door handle. "Young man, come back and look at these. They've only just come in. There isn't a teapot, but if the one you describe is to your taste, these may be also."
    I let go of the door handle, not without a pang of regret. I circumnavigated the breakfront again and found him kneeling in the dust, unwrapping newspaper from around a small silver tray. A pair of candlesticks, already unwrapped, stood on the floor beside him.
    Bingo.
    He smiled up at me. "You're pleased. My, my." He handed me the tray and clambered to his feet.
    They were a set, the tray and the candlesticks, as extraordinary as Eve Colgate had said they were. The minutely detailed pattern of grapes and grape leaves that covered the tray was repeated on the candlesticks' shafts.
    "Where did you get these?" I asked.
    He frowned. "Young man." He shook his head. "If you find them beautiful, you mustn't worry about provenance They are silver, I assure you. A pedigree does not ensure that they will give you pleasure, only that someone else will be willing, someday, to give you cash." He peered again. "And you do not

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