still, the workmanship was excellent.
âFrivolous enough for you?â Lea asked.
âJust. Make a terrific doorstop.â After setting it down she reached for a tall figurine of a man and woman in antebellum dress caught in the swirl of a waltz. Doraâs hand closed over thick, gnarled fingers. âSorry.â She glanced up at an elderly, bespeckled man who gave her a creaky bow.
âPretty, isnât it?â he asked her. âMy wife had one just like it. Got busted when the kids were wrestling in the parlor.â He grinned, showing teeth too white and straight to be God-given. He wore a red bow tie and smelled like a peppermint stick. Dora smiled back.
âDo you collect?â
âIn a manner of speaking.â He set the figurine down and his old, shrewd eyes swept the display, pricing, cataloguing, dismissing. âIâm Tom Ashworth. Got a shop here in Front Royal.â He took a business card from his breast pocket and offered it to Dora. âAccumulated so much stuff over the years, it was open a shop or buy a bigger house.â
âI know what you mean. Iâm Dora Conroy.â She held out a hand and had it enveloped in a brief arthritic grip. âI have a shop in Philadelphia.â
âThought you were a pro.â Pleased, he winked. âNoticed you right off. Donât believe Iâve seen you at one of Porterâs auctions before.â
âNo, Iâve never been able to make it. Actually, this trip was an impulse. I dragged my sister along. Lea, Tom Ashworth.â
âNice to meet you.â
âMy pleasure.â Ashworth patted Leaâs chilled hand. âNever does warm up in here this time of year. Guess Porter figures the biddingâll heat things up some.â
âI hope heâs right.â Leaâs toes felt frozen inside her suede boots. âHave you been in business long, Mr. Ashworth?â
âNigh onto forty years. The wife got us started, crocheting doilies and scarves and what-all and selling them. Added some trinkets and worked out of the garage.â He took a corncob pipe from his pocket and clamped it between his teeth. âNineteen sixty-three we had more stock than we could handle and rented us a shop in town. Worked side by side till she passed on in the spring of eighty-six. Now I got me a grandson working with me. Got a lot of fancy ideas, but heâs a good boy.â
âFamily businesses are the best,â Dora said. âLeaâs just started working part-time at the shop.â
âLord knows why.â Lea dipped her chilly hands into her coat pockets. âI donât know anything about antiques or collectibles.â
âYou just have to figure out what people want,â Ashworth told her, and flicked a thumbnail over a wooden match to light it. âAnd how much theyâll pay for it,â he added before he puffed the pipe into life.
âExactly.â Delighted with him, Dora hooked a hand through his arm. âIt looks like weâre getting started. Why donât we go find some seats?â
Ashworth offered Lea his other arm and, feeling like the cock of the walk, escorted the women to chairs near the front row.
Dora pulled out her notebook and prepared to play her favorite role.
The bidding was low, but certainly energetic. Voices bounced off the high ceiling as the lots were announced. But it was the murmuring crowd that fired Doraâs blood. There were bargains to be had here, and she was determined to grab her share.
She outbid a thin, waiflike woman with a pinched mouth for the cherrywood vanity, snapped up the lot that included the creamer/slipper for a song and competed briskly with Ashworth for a set of crystal saltcellars.
âGot me,â he said when Dora topped his bid yet again. âYouâre liable to get a bit more for them up north.â
âIâve got a customer who collects,â Dora told him. And who would pay