-------
Olivier actually harumphed. “I’d no idea you were so judgmental.”
Only on things of importance, Simon thought to himself. “I...I don’t know that I’ll be right for this.”
“Nonsense, you’ve done this so many times before...”
“Off a list you provided, not one I had to make up. Which is time-consuming and...”
“Simon...Simon, it will be fine. I promise. Shouldn’t take more than a day or two. Wait, you do have a laptop?”
“You know I do.” He had used it on the two previous jobs for Olivier, but so like him to forget that.
“Right, right. And Excel?”
Oh, for god's sake... “Yes...but...”
“That’s how I want the list. Four columns. Quite simple.”
“You only say that because you’re not doing it.”
“Simon, please. I would, but I’m four-thousand miles away and the Chelsea Book Fair is happening, next weekend. Tanner wants this done, now, or he’ll have someone just take the books away.”
Which definitely would not do. “But I haven’t heard anything about a collection being up for sale...”
At least, not on the message boards, nor on the ABA's Facebook page regarding her passing, but those could take weeks to catch up.
“Told you, I got in before anyone knew about it. She has some nice editions of Brontë and Austen, a lovely Rubaiyat bound by Sangorsky-Sutcliffe.”
Which Simon had heard about through the bookseller grapevine but had never seen. “Well...there was also that nice set of Amelia she bought from Veriman’s.”
“I didn’t know about that one. So it’s a hundred-and-one books.”
“You mean titles. That one’s four volumes in a slip-case.”
“There! There! You know exactly what to expect.”
Simon was still unsure, but Olivier was being his usual cajoling self, reminding him of the two previous jobs done, one of which included air travel. And how he was always quick to reimburse for expenses.
So Simon sighed and said, “I’ll head down Sunday.”
“Can’t you go, tomorrow?” he asked. “Start Thursday? Finish Friday?”
“I have to make plans and...”
“Simon, you could head out tonight, if you wanted.”
“That...is an absolute no. Why are you in such a rush?”
“Told you, it’s Tanner. He’s pushing to have it gone ASAP. I'll pay you for your drive time.”
“You will, anyway. But all right. I’ll drive down, tomorrow. That way I can start nine a-m, Thursday.”
“I’ll let Tanner know. You’re a life-saver.”
“I’ll need his information...”
“Check your emails.” Then he disconnected.
And that was that. But something within Simon began to tell him, Refuse the job. Do not do it. Stay home and deal with the myriad other things you have to do. So many...things. List of things. To do. Make a list to...to prove you have a list of things to do. On top of that, do not forget that every time you’ve ignored this feeling, you’ve regretted it. So call Olivier back and tell him you forgot about something and do not go.
But reality has this cold manner of bringing one back to a simple understanding...the need of money. Commissions for his art were few and far between, and when one reaches an age where you’re considered elderly, general employment is not easy to come by. Payment for this job would provide enough to cover that brake job and ease his concerns. And...perhaps even let him look into the cost of that worldwide library crawl.
So by the time he realized he should have listened to that voice, it was too late.










