insisted irritably. âAt least, not the way you mean.â
âIs there some other way it could matter?â Dinah asked, amusement dancing in her eyes.
âWould you just drop it?â
Dinah chuckled. âHappy to, now that Iâve got the answer I was looking for.â
âYou donât know squat.â
âThatâs what you think,â Dinah replied mildly. âSo what happened that had you calling for reinforcements?â she asked, pushing to get the topic back on her track.
Maggie described the scene sheâd come upon when sheâd gone to visit Ellie. âI wanted to get a new lock installed and those paintings of hers away from there before that Neanderthal came back and tried to destroy any more of them.â
âTheyâre here now?â
Maggie nodded. âSecured in the vault in back. Iâm not taking any chances that heâll figure out theyâre here and decide to come by to ruin a few more.â She shuddered at the memory of the fury in his eyes just before heâd stormed out of Ellieâs studio. âThe manâs scary.â
Dinah studied her with increased concern. âFor you to say that, Maggie, he had to have been awful. Notify the police.â
âI canât. I promised Ellie I wouldnât do that, at least for now.â
âI think youâre being foolish. At least tell them to keep a closer watch on the gallery,â Dinah pleaded.
âThe vaultâs secure enough,â Maggie insisted.
âAnd the rest of this place? If he canât get to Ellieâs work, he might take it out on the gallery.â
âI donât think heâs that stupid or that crazy,â Maggie said, though her certainty was shaken by Dinahâs concern. âThis is personal between him and Ellie. Heâs jealous of her talent.â
âReally? Her paintings are that good?â
Maggieâs enthusiasm for the paintings overcame the last of her irritation at Dinah for shutting her out the night before. âTheyâre fabulous,â she confirmed.
Dinahâs eyes gleamed the way they did when she was on the scent of a great story. âMay I peek?â
Maggie grinned. âAre you asking as a reporter or as a friend whoâs capable of keeping a secret?â
âAs long as you promise me an exclusive when the time comes, Iâll keep your secret,â Dinah bargained.
âOkay, then,â Maggie said, knowing that she could trust Dinahâs promises. Theyâd both kept silent about an awful lot of youthful misadventures. âCome with me.â
She opened the vault and switched on the overhead light, then gestured at the individual storage bins. âThe paintings are in those.â Then she waited, holding her breath for Dinahâs reaction.
The hundred-watt bulb in the humidity-controlled vault was nothing compared to what the gallery lighting would be when it came time for the show, but Dinah gasped at the first painting she pulled out to view.
âOh my, she really is talented, isnât she?â Dinah said in a hushed voice, stepping closer to the still life. âNot that Iâm half the expert you are, but this is amazing.â
Maggie beamed as relief flooded through her. âDonât sell yourself short, Dinah. The art collection your folks have is nothing to sneer at. You grew up being able to tell a masterpiece from junk the same way I did.â
Dinah gently retrieved each painting from its protective bin. At last she turned back to Maggie. âWhenâs the show?â
âI want to take my time planning it, so Iâm thinking September at the earliest, maybe October,â Maggie replied. âThat will give me time to create a certain amount of buzz and maybe lure a few art critics down here from New York.â
Dinah regarded Maggie with evident curiosity. âWhat did Josh think? I assume you paid close attention to his
Michele Mannon
Jason Luke, Jade West
Harmony Raines
Niko Perren
Lisa Harris
Cassandra Gannon
SO
Kathleen Ernst
Laura Del
Collin Wilcox