I held my ground. “What’s the matter, Isabel? Can’t you find the
“You bitch! You made it all up. There aren’t any here.”
Yes, there are. I reached up to the back of the shelf. “You would have found them if you hadn’t been so impatient.” I opened the box and showed her one, the stylized woman’s head.
She stared at it. “That’s… that’s not one of the
“Yes, it’s mine.”
“Then why is it down here?”
“I planted it. So there would be proof.”
“Proof!” She laughed harshly. “Proof of what?”
“That you were the one who attacked me down here last night and removed the other artworks. That you drove me up north in my car and dumped me in the field when you ran out of gas. That you murdered Frank.”
“That’s absurd.”
“Is it? Then what are you doing down here, looking for this?” I shoved the
She slapped my hand away. “I’m trying to save this museum, you fool. You don’t care about that. You would go to the police about Frank’s indiscretions. You would bring it all out in the open. You’d drag our name through the mud. All I’m doing is trying to save-”
“You’re trying to save yourself.”
Isabel’s lips drew back in a snarl. She moved forward and slapped my hand again, knocking the
I wrenched away from her, stumbling back against an empty packing case. It collapsed and I fell to the floor. I struggled to sit up.
Isabel was upon me immediately, grabbing me by the throat. I tried to push her away, but her arms were long enough that I couldn’t reach her. I kicked out at her legs; that did me no good either. I tried to pry her fingers loose, but they were locked tight.
Isabel dragged me to my feet. Her hands tightened on my throat. It hurt, and I had trouble getting my breath. I rolled my eyes, looking frantically for a weapon.
Racks of paintings… the shattered remains of the
My terror brought a sudden burst of strength. I managed to break Isabel’s hold on my neck and lunged for the sword. My fingers grabbed its hilt, slipped off. Isabel pulled me back by the shoulder.
I turned, smacking her across the face. She screamed and let go. I grabbed the sword.
As I spun around, its tip nearly caught her in the eye. She stared at it, frozen, then backed off and scurried down the aisle between the boxes, out of the flashlight’s beam. Her sandals slapped toward the stairway. I followed, dragging the heavy sword.
Isabel ran up the steps and threw open the door. Welcome light poured into the cellar. For a second she stood silhouetted there.
“Help!” she screamed. “She’s trying to kill me!” Then • she started to run down the hall.
There was a pounding of feet on the floorboards above. They were heavily shod, not sandaled like Isabel’s. I bounded up the stairs.
Dave Kirk stood in the middle of the hall. Isabel was midway between him and the cellar door.
“Stop her!” I shouted. “She’s the murderer!”
Isabel looked back at me, then flung herself at Kirk. “Please help me! She killed Frank and now she wants to kill me!” She sagged against him, panting.
I stopped. “She’s lying.
Kirk put his arms around Isabel. His bland brown eyes met mine, shifted to the sword in my hands.
Whom was he going to believe? Isabel, because of her social status and respectability? Or me, because I was telling the truth?
Isabel clung to Kirk, not looking at me. “She wants me dead. Just like she wanted Frank dead…” The words trailed off into a low cry.
Kirk put his hand over Isabel’s mouth and, with his other hand, pinned her arms behind her back. She struggled, but he held her firmly.
Relief coursed through me. Kirk had seen through Isabel’s dramatics; he’d recognized the truth. Then, looking up at the ceiling light, I realized he’d known even before Isabel had burst into the hall. He must have been here, listening to what was going on in the cellar, because the light had been off when I’d gone down there but had been on when Isabel reached the top of the stairs.
I looked back at him. His eyes, still incredibly bland, again moved from my face to the Hispanic sword.
“So,” he said, “who are you supposed to be-Zorro?”
seventeen
When I got home from the doctor’s the next afternoon, my mother was holding court under the pepper tree in my back yard. She had dragged out the blue-flowered tea set I’d bought at a flea market several years before and was serving what I knew had to be Upton’s along with tiny circles of lemon and some very stale vanilla wafers.
I stopped in the back door, smiling. To Mama’s right sat Carlos Bautista, looking dignified as he balanced the delicate cup and saucer. To her left was Dave Kirk, looking as though he could use a beer. The two men got to their feet as I went out into the yard.
“What’s all this about?” I pulled up the remaining lawn chair and motioned for them to sit.
“Mr. Bautista came by to see if you were all right,”‘ Mama said, nodding at the board chairman. “As did Lieutenant Kirk. You
“Yes, the doctor gave me a clean bill of health.”
She sighed with relief and poured me some tea. She’d shown up here early this morning, as soon as she’d heard the news and, after taking one look at the disorder in my house, had started cleaning. She’d been working on the kitchen when I left for the doctor’s.
I turned to Dave Kirk. I was no longer angry at him. He had apologized for his earlier treatment of me and, surprisingly, admitted he had not suspected Isabel until he saw her use a key to slip into the museum after the party the night before. Foolishly, she had not thought to reset the alarm once inside, so Kirk had followed, searching through the galleries and offices until he heard the commotion in the cellar.
Now I asked Kirk, “Did Isabel confess yet?”
He shook his head. “It’s not likely she will. Her first call was to Al Faxstein, that criminal lawyer., He came right down and has been ‘defending her civil rights’ ever since.” Kirk’s mouth twisted in annoyance.
“He won’t get her off, will he?”
“No. Don’t worry.”
“What about the others?”
“Robert De Palma and Vic Leary have been arrested. So has the Sanchez woman, although she’s claiming she didn’t know anything about the embezzlements. We don’t really have anything on her, but she doesn’t know that, and we’re hoping she’ll talk. Some of the funds they appropriated were from federal grants. The guys from Washington are interested in them, too.”
“How’s Vic doing?”
“He seems relieved, strangely enough.”
It probably eased some of his guilt, past and present, to have been caught. “Wait a minute. What about Tony?”
Kirk grinned. Carlos looked amused. My mother scowled. “Tony,” Kirk said, “got on a plane to Colombia before we could issue the warrant.”
“What’s so funny about that?”