Barneyโs expressionโthat of genuine care and concernโneedled Una as she navigated the bustling streets to Marm Bleiโs shop. He was a good reporter, hungry, albeit a bit green. And it was high time someone gave a damn about the slums. Someone other than those stodgy reformers whose kindness always came with a catch.
Maybe she should have played the coquette and let him buy her flowers. Lord knew they cost enough this time of year to be prized alongside gold. She slipped a hand into her inside pocket and fingered his tie pin. The pointy end pricked her through her glove.
Una cursed and continued on, the cold and darkness creeping over the city.
At the corner of Orchard Street, a young ruffian dashed out in front of her to sweep the road, the bristles of his broom caked in a dayโs worth of dust and horse manure.
โHow short are you?โ she asked when they reached the opposite side of the street. The boy, with his black hair and olive skin, was familiar, but she didnโt know his name.
โFive cents.โ
Una knew the racket. The boyโs father (who likely wasnโt his father at all, but a con man of the vilest sort) set an amount each day that the boy had to collect before returning home. If not, the boy would be beaten. She remembered passing by street sweepers at this very intersection with her mother nearly two decades ago. Sheโd been the same age as the children then, and theyโd been fellow Irishmen, the children, not Italian. Una and her mother had been off on some do-good mission, and instead of giving the boy a penny, her mother had given him a roll from the basket of food theyโd prepared that morning. Sheโd pointed in the general direction of the Points and told him about the House of Industry where he could get not only more food but an education.
โNever give them money, Una,โ her mother had told her. โIt only perpetuates their exploitation.โ
Una remembered nodding, though at the time she hadnโt fully understood all those big words. Now, she fished in her pocket for a coin. This late in the day, he was probably shy only a penny or two. An honest boy would have said so. But honesty didnโt buy you an ear of corn or meat pie on your way home. On these streets you survived by hustling. That was the lesson her mother should have taught her. She tossed the boy a nickel and walked away.
* * *
The front door of Blei Dry Goods store was locked when Una arrived and the windows darkened. But Una never used the front door. Instead, after a glance around, she slipped into the alley that flanked the shop, picking her way past ash barrels, empty chicken crates, and a broken wagon wheel to the back door.
A bell jangled from the door when Una entered, and Marm Blei looked up from the pearl-studded brooch sheโd been examining. The first time Una had seen herโthis giant of a woman with long, plump fingers and shrewd, beady eyesโfear had stricken her. One misstep and this woman could flatten her like a latke. All these years later, an echo of that fear remained. Never mind that Marm Blei had taught Una almost everything she knew about thieving and saved her more than once from a trip to the Island. She doted on Una, or so the others complained. But that didnโt mean she still couldnโt squash Una flat.
โCome look at this,ย sheifale,โ she said and patted the stool next to her.
Lamb.ย Sheโd called Una that from the very beginning.
Una set down her bag and sat beside her at the long narrow table that filled the center of the room. The store had two offices. One opened off the main shop and housed a polished oak desk and neatly kept ledgers of all official business. The other, where Una now sat, was part workshop, part receiving office for all unofficial items. Secret cubbies lay beneath the floorboards, and a hidden dumbwaiter ferried larger goods down to the basement.
Marm Blei handed her the brooch and loupe. โTangle-foot Toby wanted sixty-five dollars for it. What do you think?โ
Una turned the brooch round in her hand, feeling its weight, before examining it more closely with the loupe. The pearls were inlaid in a bed of delicately etched silver. On the backside, the seal of a well-known and high- end craftsman,ย Martin & Sons, was engraved beside the clasp.
โA fine piece. Worth at least sixty.โ โLook closer.โ
Una brought the loupe back to her eye and studied the brooch again. At first, she didnโt see anything out of the ordinary. Marm Blei wheezed softly beside her. The cold always troubled her lungs. Una raised the brooch to her nose and sniffed. No metallic smell. Pure silver, then. The weight of it confirmed that too. If it were lighter, sheโd suspect the thicker parts of the silverwork were hollow. Heavier, and sheโd guess silver plating concealed a cheaper metal beneath. She turned it over and studied the clasp. The soldering work was delicately done, but the clasp itself was rather flimsy. Una picked up a nearby rag, dipped it in the small pot of silver polish on Marm Bleiโs workbench, and rubbed it on the clasp. It remained a lusterless gray.
โThe clasp isnโt silver. Not pure silver, anyway. And rather cheaply fashioned.โ
โWhat else?โ Marm Blei asked.
She flipped the brooch over and reexamined the pearls. They floated amid the filigree like frozen raindrops, uniform in size and color. Too uniform. Beneath the loupeโs magnification, she ought to see more variation. Ought to see the tiny imperfections that marked each pearl as unique.
โRoman pearls. Fakes.โ โAll of them?โ
โNo.โ She gave each a scratch. A fine powder came away from the real pearls. The othersโglass beads coated on the inside with an iridescent liquid made from ground fish scales and then filled with waxโgave off nothing. โAbout half.โ
Marm Blei nodded approvingly as Una handed back the brooch.
โYou think itโs been fenced before and someone replaced the real pearls with fakes?โ she asked. โMelted down the original clasp and replaced it with this one?โ
โPerchance. Smart of them, if they did. Theyโd have to have skill, though. An untrained hand would have damaged the silverwork removing
and replacing all those pearls.โ
There were a few fences in townโMarm Blei includedโwho could manage such a feat. But it was an awful lot of trouble to go through for a handful of loose pearls and a spot of silver. Una frowned. โYou donโt think .
. .โ
โThat Martin and Sons did it themselves? Seems likely as not to me. Your average customer wouldnโt know the difference.โ She laughed and patted Unaโs knee. โWeโre not the only crooks out there,ย sheifale.โ
โHow much you give him, Toby?โ โFifteen.โ
A fair price. Never mind that Marm Blei would turn around and sell it for fifty. She tucked the brooch into a velvet-lined box opened on the workbench. When her gaze returned to Una, the laughter was gone from her eyes. โHeard you got in a bit of a scrape today at the station.โ
Una shifted on the stool. Whoโd ratted on her? She hadnโt seen anyone else from Marm Bleiโs crew at the depot, but then, Marm Blei had eyes even Una didnโt know about.
โIt was nothinโ.โ โNothing?โ
โNothinโ I couldnโt handle. Iโm here, ainโt I?โ
โYes. Late, but you are here.โ She studied Una a moment longer with that hard stare, then her expression softened. She patted Unaโs knee again. โCookโs making hasenpfeffer tonight. Never was overly fond of rabbit anyway. Show me what youโve got.โ
Una turned out her pockets and laid the dayโs loot on the workbench. A gold ring. A pair of kid gloves. A few crumpled bills. The silver cigarette case. But Barneyโs pin she held back. Sheโd taken it to prove a point, not to sell it. Maybe someday sheโd give it back. Maybe not.
Marm Blei counted the bills first, then turned her attention to the rest. She tossed the ring alongside a gold watch chain to be melted down later. The gloves were well-stitched with few signs of wear. Marm Blei tried to fit one over her giant hand but managed to get it only halfway on. โOh well,โ she said and threw them into a basket with other bits of clothing. Next, she examined the cigarette case.
โBe worth more without these initials.โ
โTheyโre not deeply engraved. Wonโt be but the work of a few minutes to buff them away.โ
Marm Blei pursed her lips, eyeing a pile of silver trinkets that, like the gold, were bound for the melting pot. After a moment, she nodded. โSuppose youโre right.โ She placed the cigarette case alongside the brooch, then locked the box with a key she wore on a chain around her neck.
Without having to be told, Una picked up the box and took it across the room, where a faded upholstery chair sat against the wall. She moved the chair aside, pulled up the corner of the rug, and stowed the box beneath a loose floorboard.
โYouโll work here in the back room tomorrow,โ Marm Blei said to her, handing over a few of the bills before tucking the rest in her pocket. Una didnโt need to count them to know it was less than sheโd hope for but more than she deserved.
โBut I hateโโ
Marm Blei silenced her with that steely gaze. โBesser friโer bevorent aider shpeter bevaint.โ
Una had heard the words enough to know well what they meant: better caution at first than tears after.