Dead Girl Running (Cape Charade #1)(55)



“We were friends. Old friends, good friends. Friends with common goals.”

“Hmm.” If that was true, that made his appeal a little less offensive.

Damn him. Why had he introduced the man/woman thing into this mess? Sex was for people who had a future, who could remember all the days of their lives and could live without looking over their shoulder wondering what was sneaking up behind them…and what they had done.

Her appetite vanished. She took her bowls and placed them in his sink, ran some water and left them. Let the bastard load his own miniature dishwasher. She said, “The problem is—I can make a list all day long and my suppositions carry the highest percentages of being correct. Commanders tend to command, and thus I listed the resort’s department heads. But while we can play the percentages, we have to face the fact the Librarian could be a resident of Cape Charade. It could be one of the housekeeping staff. The people I have on the leader list could be the assistant and vice versa. And how many people does the Librarian have on the payroll?”

“I figure to make an operation of this size work—ten to twenty?”

“There you go. I don’t know how you’re going to make this sleuthing work.”

He finished his mac and cheese and pushed the bowl away. “In the autumn, a collection of illegally seized South American tomb art went astray.”

“About the time Priscilla went astray?”

“Exactly at that time.” He pulled out his tablet and passed it over.

Kellen flipped through the tomb art photos. A stone tablet covered in hieroglyphs, stone statues of angry, broad-cheeked faces, a carving of a woman’s naked pregnant body and the pièce de résistance, a red stone figure of a man squatting on his haunches with an enormous and well-polished penis protruding from between his legs. “Eye-catching,” she said drily and passed the tablet back.

“The private collector paid a lot of money to own those artifacts, and the knowledge of his displeasure spread throughout the art world. It’s said he demanded a refund and was told some version of ‘Ya pays yer money, ya takes yer chances.’”

“I’ll bet that went down well.”

“Wealthy people don’t take being swindled with any amount of grace. Word spread that the Librarian is losing his grip.”

“Who spread that word?”

“I may have helped.” He twirled his imaginary mustache. “But I didn’t start it. I want to find the Librarian, get him off the streets, dismantle the operation from the inside. It’s important to me.”

“Revenge for Jessica?”

“Yes, and a fulfillment of our mission.”

Kellen nodded.

“The Librarian created this very profitable operation, but you must know everyone would like to step into the Librarian’s shoes. He has to deliver Central American tomb art to this collector or be discredited. So—four days ago, another tomb was looted. Two archaeologists were shot. One died.”

“You think the artifacts are coming here?”

“Yes, and the Librarian can’t afford for anything to go wrong this time.”

Kellen thought about Mr. Gilfilen, lurking in the dark outside in camouflage, watching and waiting for his chance to break open the smuggling ring. If Nils Brooks was correct, Mr. Gilfilen faced a danger he could not imagine. How could she tell him without revealing what she knew about Nils Brooks and his operation?

She sagged. Was she ever going to enjoy another full night’s sleep?

Nils leaned over the counter. “Priscilla Carter was somehow involved in the theft of those artifacts. They haven’t resurfaced. Do you have any idea where she might have hidden them?”

“I didn’t know Priscilla. I wasn’t here when she was alive. Everyone who knew her tells me she wasn’t very smart and she wasn’t particularly principled. Assuming my information is correct, she might have taken the art, one assumes because she recognized the potential for profit, and she could have stashed it anywhere. The resort is huge and old, riddled with closets, storage, even some secret passageways.”

“I know it’s difficult, but—”

“But perhaps she didn’t realize its worth, or she wanted revenge on the Librarian and put it in the garbage.”

He put his hand on his chest as if his heart hurt. “Why would she want revenge?”

“If she was romantically involved with the Librarian and discovered he—or she—was using her as camouflage… A woman scorned, Mr. Brooks. You may never recover that tomb art. You may never uncover the Librarian.”

She was quite enjoying Nils’s horror, when out of the corners of her eyes, she saw something move outside the window. Someone was looking in.

Slowly, heart thumping, she turned to face the intruder.

Her husband, Gregory, was there, looking in. Dead and looking at her, a soft green light on his evil face.





24

Kellen gasped and slammed her back against the wall.

“What?” Nils swiveled around.

Gregory had vanished.

She cleared her throat, swallowed, said, “Nothing.” Because the cottage was elevated above ground level. No one could stand on the ground and look in unless they were ten feet tall.

“A light?” Nils walked over and looked out into the winter darkness. “Are the smugglers out there tonight?”

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