Her High-Stakes Playboy. Kristin Hardy
of the store’s important, too,” Joss reminded her. “We made some money while you were gone. Jerry’s good at selling.”
“I don’t doubt it.” Gwen picked up her coffee mug. “Call me if you get a sudden run and need help. I’ve got to log in the new acquisitions and get them into the safe.”
GWEN STUDIED THE TEAL-BLUE stamp through the magnifying glass. Across it a stylized steam train chugged—left to right instead of the right to left as it was supposed to. She checked the perforations and used tongs to turn the stamp so she could study the back. Inspect, confirm, log. This was the part of an acquisition she relished—poking through to get a firsthand look at all the new treasures, finding the hidden surprises.
And in this collection there had been more than a few.
She rolled her shoulders to loosen the muscles, then adjusted the headset she wore to keep her hands free during phone calls. For a minute she allowed herself to just sit in the blessed quiet of the back office. She’d always loved the store, from the time she’d begun helping out her grandfather at fourteen. After college it just hadn’t seemed right to move on—working the business had engaged her mind fully, and her econ and accounting degrees had made her more valuable to her grandfather than ever.
The place didn’t feel the same without him, even though he was only on an extended vacation. “Practice retirement,” Hugh Chastain had laughingly labeled his wife’s cherished four-month trip to New Zealand, Australia and Polynesia. So what if the process of shutting down the business hadn’t proceeded on schedule? There would be time to close things down properly when they returned.
Gwen tried not to mourn it.
Even though she had a nagging sense that she ought to be out fighting her way up the corporate ladder, she didn’t regret a minute of the three years she’d spent since graduation learning the investment ropes, polishing her expertise. Stamps fascinated her—the colors, the sometimes crude art, the shocking jumps in value of some of the rarities. The clients who chose investment philately over, or in addition to, the more traditional stock market were driven by a certain streak of romanticism, she suspected. There was no beauty or history to an online stock account. You couldn’t pick up a mutual fund with tongs.
Not that they kept any of the investment accounts in the store, of course. A safe-deposit box was the place for holdings whose values could reach into the hundreds of thousands or even millions.
Or it ought to be, she thought, glancing at the wall safe with her usual twinge of discomfort.
She put her grandfather’s stubbornness out of her mind and resumed the process of inspecting and logging the new collection. The auction catalog had focused on the plums, the Columbian Exposition issues and the 1915 Pan Pacifics. She’d never expected to find a mint block of four early Cayman Islands stamps, and the profit from their sale would more than pay for the trip. She already had plans for the Argentinian and Brazilian issues.
Thoughtfully she set down her stamp tongs and reached for the Scott catalog just as the phone rang. She punched a button and a man’s voice greeted her.
“Gwen, how’ve you been? It’s Ray Halliday.”
“Hi, Ray.” It was amazing how quickly word got around about who was and wasn’t at an auction, she reflected. Suddenly people you hardly knew became your best friend.
“Did you go to the Cavanaugh sale?”
He knew the answer to that already or he wouldn’t be on the phone to her. “It seemed worth the trip.”
“How’d you make out?”
He undoubtedly knew the answer to that, too. “I’m looking it over right now.”
“Anything interesting?”
“Maybe.” She turned back a page or two and lifted a quartet of stamps from their mount to inspect them. “Don’t you have a client who specializes in Caribbean issues?”
“Yeah, why?”
“I’ve got a nice little block of four early Cayman Islands. Very fine, by the looks of it.”
“I didn’t see that listed in the catalog.”
Gwen grinned. “Pays to actually get out and do some legwork, Ray.”
“I suppose this is going to cost me,” he grumbled.
“I’ve got to get something for my time and travel,” she said reasonably. “The question is, what’s it worth to you?”
The dickering over price didn’t take as long as she’d expected. After eleven years in the business, they’d finally realized she was no pushover. Her grandfather had taught her well.
“Anything else I might care about?”
“Just some South American issues that already have a home.”
“Stewart Oakes, no doubt,” he said sourly.
“Now, Ray, what kind of businesswoman would I be if I told you all my secrets?”
“A wealthier one. I’ll pay you more than he will.”
“If I need the money, you’ll be the first to know.”
She was still chuckling as she depressed the button on the phone. Might as well call Stewart while she was thinking of it. She hit a speed-dial number.
“Stewart Oakes.”
“You missed out at the Cavanaugh sale.”
“Gwennie.” The pleasure was warm in his voice. Only her family were allowed to call her by that nickname—her family and the man who’d helped her understand life in the U.S. back in the early days when she’d first arrived from Africa. Stewart Oakes had been her grandfather’s employee and protégé, but at thirty-five, he’d also been young enough and hip enough to introduce a shy fourteen-year-old to grunge music, Thai food and a culture she’d been separated from since she’d been a toddler.
“Got some goodies for you, Stewie.”
“Always nice to know you’re thinking of me.”
“Well, you’re going to love these.”
“I bet.”
“Careful, now, I thought you were giving that up.”
“Hey, I moved to L. A. and left behind my home poker game, didn’t I?”
“And we miss you every week.”
“Nice to know I’m appreciated.”
“And we miss the money we used to win from you.”
“Cheap shot, Chastain.”
She laughed and reached for another catalog even as the intercom buzzed. “Hold on a second, Stewart.” She pushed the button for the intercom. “What do you need, Joss?”
“I’ve got too many people out here. Can you come out?”
“Where’s Jerry?”
“He still hasn’t shown up.”
Gwen gave herself a moment to steam. “Okay, I’ll be right out.” She took Oakes off hold. “Stewart? I’ve got to run help Joss at the front of the store. Can I call you back?”
“I’ll be here.”
Gwen gathered the stamp albums together and slipped them into one of her desk drawers, locking it carefully. Even so, it nagged at her a bit that some one hundred thousand dollars in stamps was protected only by a desk lock that any self-respecting toddler could pick. A hundred grand of the most liquid, easily portable wealth known.
In countries with unstable stock markets—or none at all—stamps provided a relatively safe investment. Gold coins were heavy, they took up space. Mounted properly, a stamp worth thousands or tens of thousands of dollars could be slipped into a square of cardboard,