13.

Rosettes. Pilasters. Colonettes. Cornices. Witch’s caps. Gables. Finials.

By six o’clock my feet hurt and my mind was crammed with more architectural details than I’d ever hoped to possess. I knew that the usual San Francisco lot was twenty-five by one hundred feet; that most Victorians shared the same long narrow floor plan; that they were constructed from California’s then-abundant redwood trees.

The wood in the dining room of the Haas-Lilienthal House, where I now stood, was golden oak, however. So Eleanor van Dyne informed me as I reached for my seventh cheese-and-cracker. When I’d gone home to change into the conservative black pantsuit appropriate for this occasion, I’d neglected to eat and now, as well as being footsore, I was starving.

As politely as possible with a mouthful of Danish tilsit and a Ritz cracker, I murmured my appreciation of the highly polished wainscoting. Van Dyne had taken a liking to me, presumably because I’d claimed to share her views on color. I wanted to keep her talking.

I asked, “How come Salvation Incorporated is holding this reception at Heritage’s headquarters?” The mansion, an impressive combination of Queen Anne and Stick styles, had been donated to that foundation by the heirs of the original owners some years before. It was open for public tours and private parties such as this, but it seemed odd that van Dyne’s group would hold their wine-and-cheese tasting here when they had a perfectly good mansion of their own.

Van Dyne helped herself to another glass of wine from the sideboard. She had a surprising capacity. “Our headquarters on California Street is currently undergoing redecoration and, as usual, it’s behind schedule. When it became apparent it wouldn’t be ready for our tour, Heritage very generously offered to let us hold the reception here. We are not rivals; we’re all in the preservation effort together.”

I glanced around at the crowd, most of whom were middle-aged and appeared well heeled. “How did you get into this line of work?” I asked. “Preservation, I mean.”

“I’m a fifth-generation San Franciscan. My family had a mansion far more splendid than this one, on Van Ness Avenue. Unfortunately it was dynamited following the quake in oh-six.”

As Nick Dettman had mentioned last night, Van Ness, the widest street in the city, had been used as a firebreak. The Army Engineers had dynamited all the buildings on the east side of it to stop the spread of the flames that were the real cause of the postearthquake destruction.

Van Dyne went on, “At any rate, my family has always had a sense of civic duty. Others of my means,” she added contemptuously, “may prefer to spend their days at I. Magnin fashion shows, but I feel it’s important to make a contribution if you have the leisure to do so.”

I knew which people she spoke of: They were the ones who went to the opening night of the opera season expressly to show off their designer gowns. To bring the subject closer to my investigation, I said, “Your motivation makes me think of David Wintringham. I believe it was a family mansion that interested him in the preservationist effort.”

The lines around van Dyne’s mouth hardened. “The resemblance stops there.”

“I don’t understand. Aren’t the Wintringhams another old San Francisco family?”

She raised her eyebrows, as if this were the first time it had occurred to her. “Yes, they are. Fourth generation. It’s hard to understand how… Of course, David’s great-grandmother was only a Schuyler. Perhaps that explains it.” She seemed to be talking more to herself than to me.

“Explains what?”

She made a quick gesture of dismissal. “Never mind. You wouldn’t understand. How long have you lived in San Francisco, dear?”

“About nine years, both here and in Berkeley. I’m originally from San Diego.”

“Not long enough. Not nearly long enough.”

The words stung. I considered myself a stable resident of the city. I certainly knew it better than most people. I had a job, I voted, I even planned to buy a house or condominium someday. Who was van Dyne, to intimate I didn’t belong? Swallowing my annoyance, I said, “But you say you differ from David Wintringham. How so?”

“Let’s start with the father, Richard. He may have been fond of the family home, but at the same time he created those stucco monstrosities out in the Avenues. And do you know what he did to those other houses in the Steiner Street block?”

I shook my head.

“He carved them up into apartments. Stripped them of their original fixtures. Walled up fireplaces when he didn’t just plain rip them out.”

I recalled the living room of the house where I’d first met Wintringham and Charmaine. “David is restoring them to the original, though.”

“So he says. If he does, he’s got his work cut out for him. The worst of it is the exteriors. They’ve either been covered with asbestos siding or stuccoed over, all in the interest of postwar modernity, to say nothing of saving on paint.”

“What will he have to do, remove the stucco and asbestos?”

“Yes. It’s a painstaking process. If he’s lucky, there will be scars on the wood beneath that will show where the original ornamentation was and what it was like. A good woodworker can match up old pieces of trim with the scars or, if it’s unavailable, mill new ones. But, if I know David, he’ll just toss on whatever he thinks looks good, paint it garishly, and sell it to the highest bidder.”

“I take it your organization doesn’t – ”

“Let me tell you about Salvation Incorporated. We advocate exact restoration, down to every detail, strictly as the homes were when they were built. Unfortunately, David doesn’t have the patience for that. And the worst of his crimes is his use of color.”

“You mean exterior?”

“Interior, too. The décor… But don’t get me started on that.”

Van Dyne’s voice had become shrill. To calm her, I said, “I agree with you about the color.”

“So you mentioned.” She modulated her tone. “Gray was the preferred exterior color in San Francisco’s Victorian era, and the restorations should reflect that. Sometimes white was used. The trim was glossy black. Vestibules were painted to simulate mahogany.”

“A lot of things in the Victorian homes seem to have been imitations,” I commented, recalling fake balconies, simulated leather wallpapers, and painted-on wood grain from the tour.

“Yes, the Victorians prized the art of imitation, in spite of the real materials being available, often at far less cost. Victorians loved nothing more than for things to seem exactly the opposite of what they were.”

“It sounds hypocritical.”

“Admittedly it was a hypocritical age. But that was the way it was, and the restorations should adhere to the tradition. These multicolored abominations only came into vogue in the nineteen sixties.”

“By abominations, you include what Jake Kaufmann created?”

“Please do not dignify his work with the word ‘created’!” Van Dyne spoke through her teeth.

“You disliked Jake?”

“Personally, no. In fact, I rather liked him.”

“Is that why you dropped your suit?”

She patted her gray-blond coif, eyes evasive. “That, and other factors.”

“Such as?”

She glanced around as if she were afraid someone might overhear us. “Expense, of course. It would, of course, have gone to the state supreme court. They all do. Merely to have the briefs printed costs a small fortune. And, of course, I liked Jake enough not to want to ruin him financially…” She stopped, a clock that had run down.

Of course. I looked sharply at van Dyne, and she turned to the sideboard for another glass of wine, even though the one she held was half full. There had to be some other reason for dropping the suit, one she didn’t want to talk about. Expense, to van Dyne and her financier husband, would have meant very little once her fury was aroused, and I sensed her capacity for fury was extensive. What, I wondered, could this fashionable crusader have to hide?

She turned back to me, her confusion banished.

I asked, “Who do you think killed Jake?”

The question didn’t startle her. Probably there had been plenty of speculation in preservationist circles. “I don’t know. Certainly none of us would kill a person for using the wrong combination of paints.”

I hadn’t implied it was one of them, but that must have been on all their minds. “Most likely it wasn’t anyone who was intimate with the process of restoration,” I said.

“Oh? Why?”

I described the conditions in which I had found the body. “Whoever tried to fake that accident did a poor job,” I concluded. “A person who knew about painting and plastering would not have made those mistakes.”

Van Dyne nodded thoughtfully. “Yes, I see. That lets out quite a few people.”

“It certainly lets out David Wintringham. And Charmaine.”

“It lets out anyone who had been around those houses enough to pay attention to how the work is done. The Italianate where David and his friend live was fully restored over two years ago. Any of them would have had ample opportunity to observe.”

She was right; it eliminated French and Paul Collins, too. Prince Albert? How much would a fixture manufacturer know about painting? Dettman or Hart or angry blacks from the ghetto streets? Their ignorance was even more likely.

Van Dyne looked toward the dining room door. I followed her gaze. There, by the red-marble fireplace in the second parlor, stood Prince Albert. He was beckoning to van Dyne, but when he saw me he whirled toward the hall.

“Excuse me,” van Dyne said, “someone I must speak with.” She hurried through the crowd after him.

Thoughtfully, I sipped my wine. What was Prince Albert doing here? Why wasn’t he at the home show? And what was his connection with van Dyne? Naturally all of the preservationists would know one another, but those two seemed a strange pair. I threaded my way through the second parlor and looked into the hall. Van Dyne and Prince Albert were nowhere in sight. Probably she’d taken him into some area of the house off limits to outsiders.

Well, I couldn’t follow them there, but I could locate Prince Albert’s panel truck and see where he would go next. I set my wineglass on a passing tray and left.

The truck was parked only two blocks away. If I hurried, I could fetch my car and idle up the street until my quarry returned. But then again… I slipped behind the truck and tested the rear doors.

Yes, Prince Albert hadn’t locked them. In fact, the lock was broken. I glanced over my shoulder. Although dusk had fallen, this was a well-traveled street and buildings on it had many windows. Suppose someone had seen Prince Albert park the truck and now saw a strange woman climb in? Would he call the police or simply mind his own business, as so many did in this age of noninvolvement? I’d have to take the chance.

I climbed into the back of the truck, conscious of headlights from passing cars. Three cardboard cartons rested there, including the one I thought I’d seen Prince Albert load earlier. Had he really gone to the trade show to replace his broken fixtures? Or had he merely made up that story to avoid talking to me?

I crawled forward, wishing it were not necessary to keep my back to the doors. As I reached for the first box, my ears strained for an approaching footfall. I grasped the lid and lifted it. Stared down inside. My lips parted at what I saw.

A shade. Tiffany, it must be. Leaves, tiny pieces of glass in red, gold and brown. A broad grin of teeth. And the eye, greenish yellow. The Cheshire Cat’s Eye.

Voices sounded on the sidewalk, and I began to tremble, all senses alert for danger. The voices passed. Controlling myself, I crept forward and opened the other two boxes. More leaves. Two more grins. Two more eyes.

Replicas, naturally. Prince Albert must have cast these off the original. Gingerly, I lifted the lamp. Yes, the tubular piece of metal I had found at the murder scene was a delicate bronze tree limb that held a bulb. But where had the broken lamp gone? It wasn’t the original; it was electric. So was this one. Was the original in one of the other boxes?

Footsteps on the sidewalk made me almost drop the lamp. I replaced it in the carton and flattened against the wall of the truck. I held my breath, torn between hiding and taking flight.

The footsteps, like the voices before, passed. I scrambled toward the rear doors, slamming them shut behind me as I jumped from the truck.