Still Waters (Charlie Resnick #9)(30)
“Sorry?”
“David Bomberg. I looked up the Castle’s holdings. They haven’t got a lot of modern stuff, but he’s worth checking out.”
Vincent held open the passenger door. “Don’t know that much yet, I’m afraid.”
“But you’re learning fast.”
“I hope so.”
“Good.”
Resnick had arrived at the Castle twenty minutes early and walked slowly around the grounds. On the southern parapet, he stood looking down at the canal: kids fishing, a man in a bright blue leisure suit cycling, couples taking a short cut to the supermarket or to Homebase, the sedate movement of a red and yellow barge through gray–blue water. In all probability, she had been dead by that point, the young woman whose body had floated toward the far lock and had never yet been identified, her blank, almost featureless face rising momentarily to the surface of Resnick’s consciousness.
How many were there whose deaths still sought proper explanation and resolve? How many women in water, ditch, or hasty grave, their bodies spilled out at the sides of roads or in the stairwells of deserted buildings?
A hundred and ninety nationwide? Two hundred?
Half a dozen in his immediate area alone, and close enough in cause and means to think there might be a connection between them. But not his business, not any more. Serious Crimes: their affair. Turning, Resnick cleared it from his mind and watched as one of the uniformed attendants opened the gate on to Lenton Road and Vincent drove through.
“Teacakes,” Jackie Ferris enthused. “Place like this, there’s got to be teacakes.”
Not any more.
They sat in the far corner of a surprisingly bright and spacious room, the café recently revamped with fresh paint, trendy but comfortable chairs, and overpriced but tasty gateaux and pastries. The waitress, young and alert, made her way purposefully between the three of them and a pair of retired ladies in serious hats.
“As scams go,” Jackie said, “it’s near classic. Basically simple and with the beauty of covering all the bases.” Her first bite told her the apricot Danish was as delicious as it looked—she was in her element. “The perennial problem with selling forgeries, no matter how well they’re executed, is attribution. Obviously, copying a piece that’s already in a known collection is pretty much a waste of time. Choose an artist who has no reputation at all and there’s little to gain. So …” pausing for effect and to try her English Breakfast tea, “… the smart move is to paint in the style of someone who’s bankable but not really famous, choose the kind of subject they would have worked on at a certain stage of their career and then provide it with unimpeachable authentication.”
“Doesn’t sound so easy,” Vincent said.
“What they do is perpetrate a second forgery. Or set of forgeries. The archives at the Tate, for instance, are recognized as the main source of documentation for twentieth-century art. These people have gained access to the archives, not difficult in itself given the right accreditation, and somehow altered the information to include references to the forged painting.”
“Highly specialiszd,” Resnick observed.
“Absolutely. Whoever’s responsible for this, they’re very careful, very good. And they know their art history backward.”
“What kind of things do they fake?” Vincent asked. “What kind of documentation do you need?”
“The clever thing—and that’s why none of this was picked up on for, oh, five, or six years, possibly more—is that they’ve run the whole gamut. Forged letters from relatives or patrons, sometimes by the artists themselves. References in critical monographs. Additions made to catalogs. In at least two instances, they’ve had a whole catalog specially printed, purporting to come from a show which when you check back never took place. And the way information technology’s developing, a number of these fake additions have already found their way onto CD-ROM.”
“But we’re not talking Picasso here,” Vincent said. “So who?”
Jackie Ferris shrugged. “Ben Nicholson. Some of the Abstract Impressionists. Joan Mitchell and Adolph Gottlieb, for instance.”
Resnick signaled the waitress for another filter coffee. “The ring behind this, there must be at least three, then. Someone to forge the paintings, someone else to handle the fake documentation, and a third party to sell the paintings.”
“Exactly. Though in theory, each of those three could be more than one person.”
“You mean,” Vincent said, “they could have different painters slaving away in their attics or wherever, copying different artists.”
“And more than one dealer, yes.”
“You think that’s likely?” Resnick asked.
Jackie Ferris wiped her mouth with a paper napkin and told herself she didn’t really need a cigarette. “On the one hand, we don’t consider it likely more than a small nucleus is involved; anything larger and something would have leaked out sooner. But because of the range and number of pieces, more than one dealer is a strong possibility. A small consortium, maybe. Two or three.”
“Names you fancy?” Resnick asked.
Jackie smiled. “A few.”
“Edward Snow.”
“Absolutely.”
“Thackray?”