franksolich extinguished his cigarette and got up from his table, walking over to the table where the two were sitting; he greeted them, and welcomed them to the area, apologizing for the weather.
The older woman beamed, in the manner of an older woman being paid attention to by a much younger man. The younger of the two looked at franksolich quizzically, as if trying to remember something. There was something about his voice; she had head it before, a long time ago.
Perhaps a long-forgotten high-school classmate of one of her children, she supposed.
The older one inquired his business, what he was looking for here.
"Well, I was really hoping to find something that'd been advertised as being here, but the seller never showed up," he said; "coronation and jubilee memorabilia."
"You collect coronation and jubilee china?" the older one asked. "It's a rather unusual hobby."
"Yeah, I know," franksolich said; "this fondness for fine china, and myself being, well, a guy, your usual standard typical customary hot-blooded American male, this Nebraska cowboy; it doesn't seem to fit.
"But most consider it a harmless little quirk, and let it go.
"After all, we all have those, harmless little quirks.
"When I was 17 years old, I saw a cup commemorating the coronation of Edward VIII in 1937--it was from 1936, and the coronation never happened, of course--and I rather liked the way it looked, and so bought it.
"After that, the deluge; I started collecting pieces commemorating the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1897, the coronation of Edward VII in 1902, George V in 1911, the Silver Jubilee of 1935, Edward VIII, George VI, Elizabeth II.....but I stopped with collecting pieces after the Silver Jubilee of 1977, because since then, it's all been junk.
"I don't do Chuck and Di or Billy and Kate, for example; it's all junk.
"The prize piece I have is an anniversary clock--one of those thing with the four balls rotating on the bottom, under a glass dome--from the Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II in 1977; nearly all the metal in the clock is made of sterling silver. It's really neat, and I wish I could display it, but with cats, you know, one can't, because they'll knock it over. I can't display anything, with cats."
"But the Edward VIII cup must be more valuable," the older one said; "after all, he was never crowned, you know."
franksolich of course knew, but was kind enough to not point that out. When a college sophomore, as a lark, franksolich had written a research paper, The Socioeconomic Implications of the Abdication of Edward VIII in December 1936, and it ran for 26 pages, single-spaced.
(The paper had been written as a lark, but much to franksolich's surprise, the professor from Yale who was teaching at the University of Nebraska thought it a rather scholarly work for a 19-year-old, and gave it high marks; franksolich was bored in college, and was always submitting unassigned papers to professors, which had the unintended consequence of upping his grade-point average.)
"Actually no," franksolich said; "as it turns out, Edward VIII stuff is pretty cheap, as no one wants it."
"But it's rarer than George VI's, his younger brother's, stuff," the older one insisted.
"Yes, but nobody wants it," franksolich illuminated her. "During most of 1936, the china and pottery works of England went into overtime, churning out pieces to commemorate the upcoming coronation of Edward VIII. But then he abruptly abdicated in favor of his younger brother.
"Since the Edward VIII pieces had been made to commemorate an event that wasn't going to happen, the china and pottery works in England had to destroy all their goods, possession of such things being considered bad luck. Made mountains of crumbled and shattered glass in the landfills of England, all these Edward VIII things.
"And then the china and pottery works had to go into double triple overtime to get out the goods in time for the coronation of George VI, and as the demand for those was much larger than they'd been for his older brother, they were still on double triple overtime long after the coronation.
"George VI pieces outnumber Edward VIII by, surely, at least 100,000-to-1, if not more, but still, George VI pieces get a higher price on the market. People don't want Edward VIII stuff, even if it is much rarer."
"You know," the Vinca primitive said, "I think I myself might have something of interest to you; it's from 1902, and's Shropshire china.....and it's out in my car, so I'll have to go get it."