Mad About You (22 page)

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Authors: Stephanie Bond

Tags: #Boxed set of three romances

BOOK: Mad About You
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"Do you approve selling prices?"

"Yes."

"Could someone be skimming?"

"It's possible, I suppose, but they would have to dispose of Guy, too, since he countersigns the sales slips."

"Unless it's Guy who's doing the skimming."

His eyes were closed, but she knew he was awake. "But then why rehire me? I was ready to walk away."

"But the auditors would subpoena you no matter where you went."

She shuddered. Could she have worked for a man all these years who would commit cold-blooded murder?

He inhaled deeply, then blinked wide, obviously trying to concentrate in spite of his exhaustion. Kat felt a rush of appreciation—and love—for him. Every woman should be so blessed as to have a brush with a real, live hero, she decided.

"What about something you do as a regular part of your job?" he asked. "Something no one else does?"

She frowned and started to shake her head, then stopped. "There is one thing," she said slowly.

He opened his eyes and turned his head toward her. "What?"

"The painting vaults are inventoried every three
years.
I was just getting started last Friday."

He sat up straight. "And the burglary interrupted you."

"Right." Then her eyes widened. "James—one of the reasons Guy hired me back was to finish the inventory."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Fourteen

 

 

"IT’S THAT ARTSY-FARTSY, long-haired Wharton guy, ain't it?" Tenner's voice barked over the phone.

"So it would seem," James said, trying to summon the elusive thought that kept nagging the base of his brain. He shifted the receiver uncomfortably, tired and keyed up at the same time. "My guess is he's creating forgeries and storing them in the vault, then selling the originals."

"And Ms. McKray was on the verge of finding them when she started the inventory, so he framed her for the break-in to get her out of the way?"

"Right."

"Hmmm—guess he wasn't as dense as I thought. How's he been smuggling in the fakes?"

"According to Kat, Andy supervised the construction of the restoration center based on her father's plans. My guess is he had a secret closet built in and that's where he's doing the work."

"Damn—right inside the gallery. Want me to pick up Wharton?"

James glanced at his watch. "No. Send someone else to arrest Wharton, and send an officer to stay with Kat. Then meet me at the gallery in forty-five minutes." He depressed a button to disconnect Tenner, his mind racing. Then he slowly punched in a London number. "Bernard, it's James Donovan. I'm in the States, and I need your help....Yes, anything to connect the name Andrew Wharton with the Webster art gallery in London." He spelled the last name. “Call me the minute you find something.” Then he ended the call.

"I just can't believe it."

He looked up. Wrapped in a robe and sporting her fuzzy house shoes, Kat stood in the kitchen, shaking her head. "I thought Andy was a friend of my
father's...
a friend of mine."

"Don't blame yourself," James said, pushing to his feet. "Some people only show you the side they want you to see." He tingled, feeling like a hypocrite, considering that was how he had behaved around Kat, afraid to let her see how deeply he cared about her.

His heart filled at the sight of the abrasions on her body—she'd nearly been killed for the sake of someone's greed. The thought flashed through his mind that he'd been given a wake-up call: seize the opportunity to plan a future with Katherine. But the old concerns were still there. Could he move in and out of the daily routine of being a husband for the next forty years with a smile on his face and sincerity in his heart? Did he have the strength to relinquish control over some parts of his life? He'd been completely independent of other people for so long, he simply didn't think he could incorporate them into his life at this late date.

"I made some coffee," she said, pushing a mug toward him.

"Thanks," he said, striding forward to take a great, hot gulp, then turned back to her bedroom. "I'm waiting for a phone call, then I'm meeting Tenner at the gallery."

"I heard." She followed him into the bedroom, and when he shrugged into his shirt, he noticed she was disrobing. Even the brevity of the moment could not prevent his body from reacting when she pulled her short gown over her head.

"Pussy-Kat," he said with a low laugh, unable to take his gaze from her bare breasts, "although I'd like nothing better than to usher in the dawn pleasuring each other, perhaps now isn't the time—"

"I'm going with you," she said, donning a T-shirt, then a sweatshirt.

His expression changed abruptly. "No, you are not."

She stepped into a pair of jeans and quickly pulled them up over her hips, then fixed him with a hard stare. "Yes, I am. I'm the one who was framed for the break-in, I'm the one who was arrested, and I'm the one who was targeted for that bomb—I'm going with you. I might just be able to help you two find what you're looking for. Besides," she added with a wry smile, "do you trust my safety to a police officer standing watch at my door, or would you rather I be with you?"

He scowled and finished dressing in silence, unable to argue with her logic, but unwilling to acquiesce verbally. As she brushed her hair and pulled it back into a low ponytail, he saw that she moved gingerly and winced a time or two. She was stubborn. A taste of what it would be like to live with her, he noted wryly.

The phone rang just as he finished washing and toweling his face. "James Donovan here....Yes, hello, Bernard, do you have something for me?...Just as I suspected....Yes, let the London police know that the Wharton fellow is probably being arrested as we speak....I'll call you later, old man, thanks for your assistance."

Kat's eyes bulged. "Andy is connected to forgeries at a London gallery?"

He nodded grimly. "His name has come up, along with others. Didn't you say he studied art in Europe?"

"Yes."

"Well, he obviously developed long-lasting friendships with the wrong sort of people."

A knock on the door interrupted them, and Officer Campbell announced that Tenner had sent him. James admitted him and explained the change in circumstances, glaring at Kat. Officer Campbell offered them a ride, and James accepted, since he had planned on walking to meet Tenner before having Kat's company forced upon him.

The detective sat waiting in his new squad car when they arrived. Remnants of yellow police crime scene tape dangled from low cement pillars in the parking lot.

Tenner climbed out, his gum snapping with intensity. "What's she doing here?"

James frowned. "Weren't you the one spouting advice the other day about women?"

"Just because I live with four of 'em don't make me no expert."

Kat stepped between them. "At least the gallery was spared from the blast."

"Good thing there was no glass on this side of the building," remarked the detective.

She looked around, expecting to feel fear or dread, but the area seemed innocently normal. She noticed two cars parked where her van had been yesterday, one she knew belonged to Ronald Beaman and the other to a female guard she knew as Nisa. She shuddered to think that a few parked cars between her and the van had probably spared her life.

A hand-lettered sign on the door read "Will reopen Friday." So Guy had finally conceded defeat, she noticed. The open house must have been canceled. Unfortunately, he had no idea of the scandal that would shake the gallery to its foundation in the days to come. James pounded on the back door and waved to the camera pointed at them. Within a few minutes, Ron Beaman came to the door, his eyes wide. "Is something wrong?"

"We need to come in and take a look around the restoration center," Tenner said, flashing his badge unnecessarily.

The security guard bit his bottom lip, and Kat tried to force her thoughts from the costume in which she'd last seen him. "I'm not sure about this," Ronald said. "I'm going to have to call Mr. Trent."

"C
all him," the detective said casually. "But this is still considered the scene of at least one crime, so I don't have to have your permission, I was just being nice." In a burst of power that surprised Kat, he pushed his way in, and she and James followed.

"Is anyone else in the building?" James asked.

Ronald's eyes moved around nervously. "Just me and Nisa, the other guard."

They moved down the hall as a unit, then into the new wing with Kat leading the way, her heart pounding in anticipation.

"Open it," James ordered Beaman. The man jangled a huge set of metal card readers on a chain, finally finding the right one and swinging open the door to the restoration area.

"I need to get back to my rounds," Ronald said, backing away from them.

"We'll take it from here," James assured him.

Kat walked in first, turning on lights as she went and looking around the sterile room, which resembled a medical lab. Looking for what, she didn't know.

"Give us a brief tour," James said, his gaze sweeping the room, missing nothing, she was sure.

She showed him each of the four large rooms, including a tiled area with aluminum fixtures and a long, narrow storage room lined with containers of all kinds—cleaners, paints, turpentine.

"We've circled back around, haven't we?" James asked, almost to himself, his head pivoting as he walked.

Kat looked around to gain her bearings. "You're right—on the other side of that wall"—she pointed to the row of supply-laden cabinets—"is the painting vault."

James and Tenner headed for the wall at the same time. The men exchanged glances, then both started pulling supplies from the floor-to-ceiling metal shelves.

"Well, what do you know," Tenner said. He swung out an emptied section of shelving, revealing a sliding panel the size of a three-drawer file cabinet that led to a closet-size lab.

"I'm afraid I'll have to stop you right there," a menacing voice called from behind them.

James froze, then turned around slowly to see Andy Wharton standing beside Kat, holding a pistol at shoulder level, aimed directly at her left ear. His heart jumped to his throat, and he drew blood from his tongue.

"Wait a minute, Wharton," Tenner said, raising his arm slowly. "Forgery and burglary will only get you a few months—murder is another matter altogether."

"Then I guess I just blew it," Andy said, his mouth twisting into a grin. "Because Beaman is lying in the hall with a bullet in him." He laughed. "I insisted on maximum soundproofing when these walls were built."

"And the other guard?" James asked.

"She's tied up, but she'll die in the fire."

"The fire?" he pressed, trying to stall.

"Oh, yeah," Andy said with confidence. "This whole place has to go. Does anyone have something to start a fire with?" He glanced at the shelves packed with flammable solvents and laughed.

Kat’s gaze darted sideways, then back to him, her eyes wide and terrified. James nodded to her, trying to comfort her with his eyes and hide the fact that he was shaking inside. He'd nearly watched her die yesterday—he wasn't about to watch her be executed today.

He jerked his head to indicate the panel they'd uncovered. "Soundproof walls—so you could work undetected in your little lab?" he asked, his voice unbelievably casual.

"Yeah," Andy said with pride in his voice.

"I’m guessing there’s another hidden door from your lab to the vault?” he asked to keep the man talking.

"Uh-huh. I could take things out for hours at a time and no one even suspected. Ingenious, wasn't it?"

"You're right, Mr. Wharton," James said agreeably. "We quite underestimated you. I have to admit, you fooled many people for a rather long time. Except perhaps Mr. McKray." He saw Kat's eyes close and prayed she wouldn't faint. Wharton looked so wild-eyed, he might shoot at the first movement.

The man frowned, and his hand dropped an inch. "Frank was starting to get in the way, being a little too nosy for his own good, so I fixed his brakes."

Kat looked as if she were going to be ill.

James nodded to the man sympathetically. "He found out you were behind the embezzling—I suppose you needed start-up funds?"

Andy pursed his lips. "Someone told me you were smart."

Conjuring up his most charming smile, James moved his hands to his waist. His gun was at his back, beneath his jacket, but he wasn't going to risk any quick movements. "Which brings me to another point," James said, shaking his head. "How you were able to branch out internationally—I'm dying to meet your London connection."

Andy's grin was slow and sweet. "Are you now?"

"Tania," James called, "you might as well show yourself."

After a few seconds of silence, he heard the sound of a woman's heels clicking on the tiled floor in the other room. Tania Mercer appeared, dressed in a black pantsuit and boots, her hair tucked beneath a black beret, holding a box of long matches. "James, darling, I hate to see it come to this."

James smiled sadly. "You wanted me out of England because you knew I had been asked to work on the Webster museum case in London."

She raised her lovely hands in a shrug. "You're the best—I knew you would find me out."

"So you shipped me here with a fake love letter."

Tania sighed. "Very fake. You were supposed to be gone by the time the burglary took place—but you missed your damn plane." She frowned in Kat's direction. "I wonder what could have distracted you. Women have always been your weakness, James. I'm afraid this little dalliance will cost you your life."

"You beat me to San Francisco, didn't you?" he asked. "It was you on the videotape, stealing the letter."

She nodded, her eyes alight with drama. "Andy knew she was going to stumble across the forgeries when she inventoried the vault, so we came up with a way to get her out from underfoot." Her lip curled in disgust. "But your libido got in the way and messed up our entire plan."

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