CHAPTER VI

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NEXT MORNING I shaved before seven. I had some cereal in powdered milk and fed the robin my last bit of cheese. I went to have a word with Manton and Wilkinson, gave them their groundsel.

'Now, Manton,' I demanded as it noshed its greenery sitting on my arm, 'what's all this Roman jazz?'

It wisely said nothing, knowing there was more to come.

'The old man leaves two diaries. But why two?'

Wilkinson flew on me for his share.

'If he was crackers, let's forget it, eh?' They hesitated suspiciously. 'On the other hand, curators may be duckeggs but Popplewell can tell genuine Roman antiques, coins or otherwise. Right?' They closed up along my arm, interested now. 'Bexon's coins being genuine, pals, what can there possibly be, I wonder, stuck in an old lead coffin in some well-remembered spot in the Isle of Man?'

We thought hard.

'And who should benefit better,' I demanded, 'than Lovejoy Antiques, Inc.?'

Wilkinson fluffed out, pleased. Manton looked sceptical.

'Don't be so bloody miserable,' I told Manton angrily, 'just because I haven't the fare to get there. You're always critical.'

I shoved them on to a branch and shut their flight door. Both were looking sceptical now.

'I can get some money,' I snapped. 'Don't you worry. I'll have the sketch and the fare from Dandy. I'll be back. You see.'

By my front door the robin was cackling with fury. He was quite full but battling to keep the sparrows from the cheese he didn't want. Very feminine, robins.

The bus was on time. In my innocence I thought it a good omen.

Dandy Jack's is a typical lock-up, a shop front and two rooms. The clutter held miscellaneous modern tarted up as old, a brass 1890 bedstead (worth more than you'd think, incidentally), pottery, wooden furniture and some ornamentals plus a small gaggle of portabilia in a glass-fronted cabinet.

A few people milled about inside, mostly grockles (dealers' slang: tourists, not necessarily foreign, derogatory) and the odd dealer. Big Frank Wilson from Suffolk was there. He gave me a nod which said, nothing worth a groat. I shrugged. He's a Regency silver by desire, William IV furniture by obligation, and undetected bigamist by the skin of his teeth, as if scratching a quid in the antiques game isn't enough nightmare to be going on with. Jenny from the coast (she's tapestries and Georgian household items) was painstakingly examining a crate of porcelain. She and Harry Bateman were desperately trying to stock up their new shop on East Hill. They'd badly overspent lately to catch the tourist wave, but their stuff was too 'thin' (dealer's slang again: much low quality spiced with only rare desirable items).

I pushed among the driftwood - not being unkind, but I really had seen better antiques on Mersea beach-.

'Hello, Lovejoy.'


'What's new, Dandy?'

'Bloody near everything,' he grinned. I had to laugh. 'Message for you from Bill Fairdale.

He says to call in.'

Bill was from my village, rare manuscripts and antique musical instruments. The only trouble was that his rare illuminated manuscripts are a bit too good to be true. The sheepskin parchments pegged out drying in his garden do very little to restore a buyer's confidence. He's even been known to ask a visitor's help in mixing 'mediaeval' monks'

egg-tempera pigments with an unfinished carpet page of Lindisfarne design in clear view, only to offer the same visitor the completed 'antique' next day. He's very forgetful.

'Has his handwriting improved any?'

Dandy Jack fell about at my merry quip. Once, Bill actually acquired a genuine love-letter from Horatio to his dearest Emma Hamilton. Nobody else dared believe Bill. I bought it for a song. That's the danger of forging too much and not doing it well enough. A happy memory.

'He's got something right up your street.'

It was probably that bone flute, cased, sold in Bury the previous week. I'd heard Bill had gone up. Potter, the great old London maker, if Tinker was right. Very desirable. I said nothing, nodding that I'd pop in.

'I want a favour, Dandy. A certain sketch.'

His eyes gleamed. 'Come back here.' We withdrew into his inner sanctum. He offered to brew up but my stomach turned. That left him free to slosh out a gill of gin. Dandy was permanently kaylied. He perched on a stool opposite his crammed sink, shoddy and cheerful, a very rum mixture. Where I think in terms of mark-up, Dandy thinks booze.

I've never seen him sober in n years, where n is a very large finite integer. He has a good eye, sadly wasted. For some reason he believes there's no way of actually learning of the beautiful objects we handle, but then you don't get libraries in pubs.

'An old chap called Bexon. You got his stuff at Gimbert's auction.'

'Your young lady spoke to me yesterday. I gave her the box.'

'That's only rubbish, but he was an old friend and -'

'Yeah, yeah,' he said. 'Never mind all that, Lovejoy.'

I said, desperate now, 'She said you had a sketch he did.'


'That sketch'll cost you.'

'How much?'

'Do me a scan and you can have it free.'

'Get lost,' I groaned. It always came down to this, from fellow dealers too useless to do their own work.

'Go on, Lovejoy. You're a divvie. Help me out.'

I had enough trouble without feeling sympathy. 'Commission?' I tried hopelessly, but the wretch was grinning. He knew he had me and shook his head.

'Scan my stuff or you don't even get to see Bexon's picture.'

'All right,' I gave in bitterly. 'Anyhow, your commission wouldn't keep me in pobs.'

'My stuff's in that crate. I'll fetch it.'

He dragged in a tea-chest of miscellaneous porcelain, followed by Jenny Bateman protesting she'd not finished looking.

'Hard luck,' Dandy told her, pushing her out. All heart.

'Is this it?' I hate scanning junk.

'A job lot. There's a ton of valuable stuff in there, Lovejoy.' The eternal cry of mankind since Adam dressed.

I sat wearily, waiting for the mystic mood to come over my mind. A divvie always suffers. Having friends irritates me sometimes. I closed my eyes and stilled. Sounds receded.

The world slipped into silence and all feeling fell gradually into the distance.

Divvie? Maybe from the old word 'diviner', as in water, but who knows? It's slang for anybody who can guess right about a thing without actually knowing. Some people have it for gems or paintings, others for racehorses, thoroughbred dogs or scenic design, a precious knack that goes separate from any learning. I'm an antiques divvie.

And, incidentally, I'm the very best there is.

I've tried asking other divvies how they know, what actually happens. Some say they are 'told', others say it's a feeling. Water diviners say it's a foot-tingle or a twisting stick.

To me it's a kind of bell, and it rings in my chest. My knowledge, on the other hand, only tells me what an antique is. But my bell just rings for truth. And look, folks - good news. Everybody alive has this knack for something. Maybe not for antiques or diamonds, but for something. Nobody's been left out. It's superb news really, because you're included too. You. All you need to find is what your particular gift is for. You might actually be the most original and creative porcelain or furniture expert without knowing it. If you don't already know you're being dreadfully wasted.

The way I do it's to get close as possible, look and then maybe a light touch if that's not damaging to the antique. Always remember to leave antiques alone. Never fondle, clean, wipe, polish or brush. And I don't mean 'hardly ever', like in the song. Never is never. Leave antiques alone. Never scrape, improve, smooth, fill in or dissect.

Remember that all antiques really are Goya, Chippendale, Sheraton or Michelangelo until proved otherwise. If you say that yours aren't, I'd like to know what makes you so sure.

Dandy Jack was very considerate as I worked, tiptoeing in like a steamhammer for another pint of White Horse and having a hell of a row with a customer over the price of a modern vase he swore was Ming. Honestly, my head was throbbing by the time I finished. I was finished.

'Dandy,' I called. 'Done.' He dropped a pile of books with a crash and reeled in.

'Prime stuff, eh, Lovejoy?'

'Not bad.'

He grinned at the three objects on the table and nodded wisely.

'Bloody rubbish,' he agreed. 'I knew it was all valuable except for them.'

'They're the good stuff, Dandy.' I rose, stretching. 'Chuck the rest.'

'Eh?' He glared into the heaped chest. 'All this? Duff?'

'Duff,' I nodded. 'Have you any grub?'

'Margaret fetched these over for you. She'll call back.' He held out a brown paper bag towards me, two whist pies and an Eccles cake.

I sat and ate, recovering, while I explained the three pieces to him. He listened quite mystified.

'Candle snuffer, Worcester.' I nodded at the smallest item, a tiny bust of a hooded Victorian woman. 'It's 1864, give or take a year.' I hate them. Collectors don't.


'Pity it's not earlier.' He peered blearily in my direction. Good old Dandy. Always wrong, not even just usually.

There was a shaving mug shaped like a white monkey, grotesque with an exquisite glaze. I honestly don't know what the Victorians were thinking about, some of the things they made. The bowl was the precious item, though Dandy Jack could see nothing special about it. Like I say, some people can hear fish squeak. Others wouldn't hear a train in a tunnel. He said it looked like Spode, when it was clear Daniel, early 1830s. I tried not to stare at the lovely thing, but the elevated tooled bird motifs in gold, with curves resting on feet of bright blossoms, dragged my eyes. Blues screamed at pinks, greens and shimmering maroons in a cascade of colour. It sounds garish, but it really is class, and incredibly underpriced at today's prices, though that only means for a second or two. Dandy was more than a little narked that the rest was mostly junk.

'Bexon's sketch, Dandy,' I reminded him. Scanning stuff really takes it out of me, why I don't know. After all, it's only sitting and looking.

'Here.'

I took the drawing from Dandy's grimy hands. Bong went my chest. Simple, stylish, very real, a tiny pencil caricature with some colour. It was her again. The artist had pencilled her name in, Lady Isabella. She was the same snooty lass, doubtless made to look starchier than in real life, riding in a high absurd one-wheeled carriage with idiotically long shafts and no horse. The wheel splashed water as it rolled through the streets. It was probably one of those crazy skits they got very worked up about before steam radio and television blunted pens and sense.

'Is that all?'

'Yes. Straight up, Lovejoy. What is it?'

'Looks like a caricature. Genuine Burne-Jones.'

'Genuine?' A long pause, during which Greed crept ominously in. 'I'll give you the rubbish for nothing, Lovejoy,' Dandy said. Oh-ho, I thought. Here we go.

'You said -'

He crouched into his whining position. 'Look, Lovejoy—'

'Bastard.' I should have known he'd let me down, though Dandy Jack's no worse than the rest of us.

'No, honestly, Lovejoy. I didn't mean I'd give you the drawing as well.'


'Sure, sure,' I said bitterly. I was unable to resist one final glance at the Burne-Jones.

He was a Victorian painter, a bit of a lad who did a few dozen caricatures to amuse Maria Zambaco, a gorgeous Greek bird he shacked up with for three years before 1870.

Maybe Maria put him up to sketching one of her bosom friends.

Dandy offered me a drink but I staggered out into the oxygen layer, as broke as when I'd arrived. That's typical of some days in this trade.

There was a blue Lagonda occupying two-thirds of the High Street.

'At last, Lovejoy.'

'Oh. Hello.' I really was pleased to see her. It's the way it gets.

'Well?' She nodded at Dandy Jack's window. 'Did you get the picture?'

'Er, no,' I said lamely. 'He, er, he wanted to hang on to it-'

'You mean he won't give it to you?' she fired back. She stepped out angrily. 'You look drained. Have you scanned for him?'

'Yes, but -'

'Right. Wait here.' I caught hold of her.

'No, love. I'm not up to a battle today -'

'You're a fool, Lovejoy,' she stormed. 'No wonder you're penniless. You let everybody take advantage -'

I turned away, meaning to walk off because people were beginning to stare. And this lovely blonde was standing beside me, breathless and pretty.

'Excuse me, please,' she said. A picture, her lovely face anxious and her deep eyes troubled. 'Are you Lovejoy? Can I have a word, please?' There she stood, nice, worried, determined. Her smile was brilliant, full of allure. Women really have it. I decided I needn't walk off after all.

'Yes, dear?' Janie cooed. She drummed her fingers on her elbows, smiling.

Now, women don't like each other. Ever noticed that? If two meet, you can see them both instantly thinking (a) what's this bitch really up to? (b) thank God her clothes are a mess, and, following on pretty smartly, (c) isn't it time this ghastly female was leaving?


'I heard you're trying to find an old picture, sold at Gimbert's auction, belonging to a Mr. Bexon?'

I gaped. You just don't ask that sort of thing in this trade. It's like asking a Great Power which other nations it really hates at a peace conference. I suddenly caught sight of Beck stepping inside Dandy Jack's. I instantly' realized why Dandy hadn't kept his promise about the sketch. Beck had heard me talking to Tinker Dill and was now arriving to buy the worthwhile stuff.

'Eh?' I responded cautiously.

'I want it,' she explained. 'I'm Nichole Bexon.' She took hold of my arm confidingly, better and better. 'I'm trying to find my uncle's things. A sketch, mainly. And two diaries. I was… away, you see, when his things were… taken to a sale. My sister cleared the house. It's so unfortunate. I heard you were trying to find them as well. A neighbour.'

Good old Mary. That's the trouble. In these remote little East Anglian villages rumour does a faster job than the new electric telegraph.

'Ah, sorry, love,' I said, smiling. 'You'll have to try Dandy Jack.' I nodded at his emporium. And, innocently thinking to get one back on poor old Dandy for changing our agreed deal in mid-scratch, I added malevolently, 'He has the things you want. He won't let them go, I'm afraid. I've offered him the earth.'

'Oh, dear.' She looked almost in tears.

'Is there no way at all?' this chap asked. He'd been listening. I dragged my eyes from the lovely Nichole and noticed him.

Nichole seemed to have brought her tame male along, a real weed in Saville Row gear.

The fool wore a city titfer. Honestly, some people. A hat in the Arcade's like wearing a coronet at football. You know how some couples are just not suited? Well, here was the archetypal mismatch. Her: lovely, cool, gleaming, luscious, a pure swinger. And him: neat, precise, waistcoat complete with gold watch-chain (not antique, the pathetic slob), rimless specs, glittering black shoes, and a Rolls the size of a tram. A worrier, accountant if ever I saw one. How a pill like him ever got her…

'No,' I said. Luckily Janie had reached (c) by now.

'Mr. Lovejoy is a well-known art expert,' she cut in crisply, 'and even he hasn't been successful. Sorry we can't help.'


She slipped into the Lagonda. It was sneering at the Rolls, nose to nose. The Rolls wasn't really up to noticing riffraff for the moment and gazed into the distance. She gunned the engine. They got the message.

'Then what shall I do?' the beautiful Nichole said. 'I must have Uncle's things back.

They're nothing much. But he'd have wanted me to have them.' She actually twiddled a button, one of the remaining few, on my coat.

I cleared my throat. 'Er, well…'

'Please?' Flutter, flutter.

Women intrigue me. No, they really do. Say a woman wants ten yards of lovely Thai silk. She'd expect to have to pay for it, right? Same as a bloke wanting tobacco.

Everybody knows it - you have to pay. But mention antiques and suddenly everyone wants something for nothing. Or, at the very least, a Constable or Rembrandt for a quid or two. And make no mistake, women are the worst. A man will laugh ruefully, say no hard feelings. But a woman won't. You get the whole bit, the smoulder, the come-on, derision, the wheedle, and finally everything they've got thrown into the fray. Born dealers, women. You have to be careful.

'Can you not help, please?' Her chap tried to smile ingratiatingly. 'You've been highly recommended to us, Lovejoy, as an antiques dealer. I would make it particularly worth your while. If it's a question of money…' he said.

The town stilled. The universe hesitated. The High Street froze. Nobody in the known world breathed for a few lifetimes as that delightful scent of money hung in the air.

He really seemed quite pleasant after all. Charming in fact. Then Janie hauled me, literally yanking me off balance so I tumbled back into the Lagonda.

'So sorry,' she called out brightly, swinging me round and slamming the door. I grappled to lower the window.

'My card,' the chap said. 'Phone me. Edward Rink.' We were off like a Brands Hatch start. I sulked most of the way home holding his engraved card.

It'd soon be time for Algernon's test. What a bloody day. Diddled by Dandy Jack, frogged by Beck and no nearer understanding the Bexon business, and now Algernon.

I'd reluctantly cleared away by the time Algernon arrived.

In he came, cheerful and gormless. In his own way he's an entire miracle. A trainee dealer for six long months and still thinks Faberge eggs are crusty chocolate.


'Good evening, Lovejoy!'

'How do.' I stared morosely into his beaming face. Why was somebody who gets me so mad so bloody pleased to see me every time?

'Let us anticipate that my efforts will meet with your approval this evening!' the nerk said. He reached out and actually wrung my hand. He stripped a layer of motor-cycle leathers and left them heaped in the hallway. 'I am all keyed up!' he exclaimed.

'Did you read Wills?'

'Certainly, Lovejoy! And the brass instrument book. And - ' he blushed -'the jokey book all over again. I appear to have been quite taken in!'

He laughed merrily as I led the way into the main room without a word. You can see why Algernon gets me down. He's always like this.

'On the table, Algernon,' I cut in sourly, 'are several objects.'

'Right! Right!' He sprang at them, oily fingers at the ready. I caught him in mid-air and put him back.

'I shall cover all but one with a dark cloth, Algernon. You have to identify and price whichever's exposed. Okay?'

'Ah!' He raised a finger delightedly. 'Your identification game!'

I fetched the carriage clock across.

'You're allowed one minute. Remember?'

'Of course, Lovejoy! How absolutely right to be so precise -!'

I lifted him out of his chair by the throat, struggling for iron control.

'Algernon,' I hissed. 'Silence. Clam. Shut up.'

'Very well! I follow exactly!' He frowned and glared intently. Then he closed his eyes to concentrate, heaven knows what with. Your modern intellectual at bay. I watched this performance wearily. I suppose it's meant to be like I do when I'm scanning, the idiot.

He opened his eyes, thrilled. 'Right! Ready, Lovejoy!'

'No,' I said.

He concentrated hard. 'Ah! The lights!'


'Good, good, Algernon.'

We lit two candles and the oil lantern before switching the electric off. I suppose there's no point in rubbing these details in too much or you'll not read on but I have to say it.

You'll all have made this mistake. What's the point in looking at Old Master paintings by neon or tungsten-filament glare? Dolphins don't do well in pasture land. Stick them in an ocean and you'll never see any living thing so full of beautiful motion. Give antiques the kind of light they're used to and you're halfway there. And for heaven's sake space the flames about the room. Never cluster natural flamelight. It's no wonder people get antiques wrong.

I sat myself down and took the time. I uncovered one small silver object. He prowled about, peering at and over it, for all the world like an amateur sleuth. I observed this weird performance with heartbreak.

'Time's up.' I covered it. This is the nightmarish bit.

We sat in silence broken only by my drumming fingers, the tick of the clock and the squeaks Algernon's pores made as sweat started on his fevered brow.

'Go on, Algernon,' I encouraged. 'Any ideas?'

'Erm.' He glanced to judge the distance to the door. 'Erm. It looks… sort of… well, a spoon, Lovejoy.'

'Precious metal? Plastic? Wood? Gilt?'

'Erm… silver?' he guessed desperately. 'Caddy spoon?'

'Certainly.' He beamed with relief. Examine antique silver in the correct light and even Algernon can spot it. 'Yes.' I even smiled. 'By…?' He didn't know. 'Three giant steps back, Algernon.' His face fell a mile while I rose and uncovered all the little silvers.

He missed Hester Bateman, whizz-kid of 1785. He missed the stylish Sam Massey, 1790, and the appealing work of Charles Haugham, 1781. He had omitted to learn a table of hallmarks, and thought that a superb artistic piece of brilliant silverwork from Matthew Linwood's gnarled hands was plastic.

'Compare this lovely silver shellfish,' I ended brokenly, 'with the three in the museum tomorrow. His best work's 1808 to 1820. Look up the history of tea drinking. I'll ask you tomorrow why they never drank tea with milk or even sugar in the seventeenth century, and suchlike background gems.'

'Yes, Lovejoy,' he said dejectedly.


'And go round the shops that sell modern spoons. Right?' He opened his mouth. 'Never mind why,' I said irritably. 'Just do it.' I keep telling him there's no other way to learn how to spot crap, gunge and dross. I saw his blank face and wearily began to explain for the hundredth time.

You teach a beginner about antiques by seeing if he has any feeling for craftsmanship.

It's everything. Antiques aren't alien, you see. They're extensions of mankind through time. It may seem odd that love instilled into solid materials by loving craftsmanship is the only creation of Mankind to defeat Time, but it's true. In holding antiques you reach across centuries and touch the very hands of genius. I don't count plastic cups or ballpoint pens stamped out by a machine. Fair's fair. Man is needed.

First you look round the local furniture stores to see new furniture. Then lampshades.

Then shoes. Then modern mail-order catalogues. Then mass-produced prints and paintings. Then books. Then tools. Then carpets. Then… It's a terrible, frightening experience. Why do you think most modern furniture's so ghastly? And why's so much art mere dross? And fashions abysmal? And sculpture grotty? Because of Lovejoy's Law of Loving - a tin can is a tin can is a tin can, but a tin can made with loving hands glows like the Holy Grail. It deserves to be adored because the love shines through. QED, fans. Most of today's stuff could last a thousand years and never become antique simply because love's missing. They've not got it. The poor things were made without delight, human delight.

Therefore, folks, into your modern shopping precincts for a three-day penance of observation. And at every single item stop and ask yourself the only question which ever mattered: 'Does that look as though it was made with love, from love, to express love?' Your first day will be bad. Day Two'll be ruinous. Your third day will be the worst day of your life because you will have probably seen nothing which gets a Yes. Score zero. Nothing you see will have been made with love. It is grim - unbelievably, horrendously and frighteningly grim.

Now comes Day Four. Go, downhearted and dismal by now, into your local museum.

Stand still quite a while. Then drift about and ask yourself the same question as you wander. Now what's the score? You already know the answer.

It's the only way to learn the antique trade. Look at rubbish, any cheap modern crud on sale now. You'll finish up hooked for life on what other people call antiques, but what I call love. Laugh if you like, but antiques are just things made full of love. The hands that produced them, in factories like flues from Hell, by some stupendous miracle of human response and feeling managed to instil in every antique a deep hallmark of love and pride in that very act of loving.

That's why I'm an antique dealer. What I can't understand is why everybody else isn't.


I ended my explanation. Algernon was goggling. He's heard it umpteen times.

Algernon failed that whole evening miserably. He failed on the precious early Antoine Gaudin photograph I'd borrowed. He failed on a rare and valuable 'Peacock's New Double Dissection and History of England and Wales', 1850, by Gall and Inglis of Paternoster Square ('What a tatty old jigsaw, Lovejoy!'), and a child's George IV

complete teaset, almost microscopically small - the teapot's a quarter of an inch long -

brilliantly carved from hardwood and very, very costly. Of this last Algernon soared to his giddiest height yet, asking brightly, 'What kind of plastic is it, Lovejoy?'

I slung him out after that, unable to go on. I'd not laid a finger on him. Willpower.

The world would have to wait with bated breath for Algernon's judgement of paired water ewers, Wedgwood and Bentley polished black basalt, which I'd borrowed to include in his test. But I was especially keen not to hear him on the film transparency of a tortuously elaborate weapon by that genius Minamoto Tauguhiro. I couldn't bear hearing him say it was a fancy dagger for slicing bread.

He donned his motor-bike leathers. I pushed him forcibly into the dark garden.

'I expect you're letting me off early because I was doing so well,' he said merrily. He believes every word.

'Sure, sure.'

'Will you please inform Uncle how successful I was with those sugar ladles?' he asked at the door. 'He will be so hugely delighted.' His uncle pays me for teaching the goon.

I wonder where all my patience comes from, honestly. I'll tell him you're making your usual progress, Algernon.'

'Thank you, Lovejoy!' he exclaimed joyously. 'You know, eventually I anticipate to be almost as swift as your good self -'

I shut the door. There's a limit.

Normally I'd stroll up to the pub to wash all that Algernon-induced trauma out of my mind. This particular night I was too late to escape. There was a knock at my door.

'Nichole. What -?'

'Kate,' she said. Her smile made it the coldest night of the year. 'The wicked sister.'

'Oh, come in.' She was slightly taller than Nichole but the same colouring.


'No, thank you. You're Lovejoy?' I nodded. You feel so daft just standing holding a door open, don't you? You can't shut it and you can't go out or back in. 'I want to ask you not to help my sister,' she said carefully. 'She… her judgement is sometimes, well, not too reliable, you understand.'

'I haven't helped her,' I explained. 'She wanted a sketch and some -'

'Some rubbish,' Kate cut in. 'Uncle was a kindly man, but given to making up fanciful tales. I don't want my sister influenced.'

'About his other belongings,' I began hopefully.

'Very ordinary furniture, very cheap, very modern,' she stated, cold as ever. 'And now all sold. You do understand about Nichole?'

'Sure,' I said. She said goodnight and drove into the darkness in an elderly Mini. I sighed and locked up. I seemed to be alienating the universe.

I've told you all this the way I have because it was the last quiet time there was in the whole business. I realized during the rest of that evening that something was rapidly going wrong in my humdrum normal life. Looking back, I don't see to this day what else I could have done.

The murder honestly wasn't my fault, and I don't think the other deaths were, either.

Honest.


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