Chapter One

  Guilt tapped me on the shoulder for the hundredth time since my morning coffee --although plaguing me for another, more immediate, reason. Paul, my boyfriend of six months, stood directly in front of me, hand on his hip, tux jacket pushed back, and eyes narrowed to the point of hiding their luminous blue.

  "Is there something you'd like to tell me? Something in particular you've been sitting on since, I don't know, all day?"

  I shifted on my three-inch stilettos, clamped down on my lower lip, then turned it loose. I'd only chew off my lipstick. "It's Andrea, and …" I trailed off. The excuse of our families and friends waiting for us to join them in one of the several huge banquet halls on the second level of the Seattle Convention Center seemed … lame. Sure, the annual awards dinner for the Puget Sound Dressage Society would be starting soon. Because of my foot-dragging we were tardy. Now, because of Paul's insistence we talk, we'd be later still. The problem essentially came back to Andrea. I scanned the elegantly dressed people streaming past us in the massive glass, brass and granite foyer.

  "Thea …"

  I returned my gaze to him and he circled my shoulders with an arm. At first I thought he intended to hug me. Instead, he gently steered me across the flow of pedestrian traffic to the protection of one of the numerous shoulder-high stone planters. Packed with large ferns and other greenery, they softened the cold, hard lines and gave the Convention Center's gleaming interior a Pacific Northwest feel. The main advantage -- and obviously Paul's intent -- was that the planter kept people from bumping into us. However, it did nothing to block the cold October breeze gusting in each time a door opened and raising goose bumps under the lightweight fabric of my long gown and tiny jacket. I should have worn a coat. What was I thinking? At least Paul's arm was warm.

  "'It's Andrea and' what?" he asked, turning me loose and facing me. I shivered with the returning chill.

  "And … and we're going to be late, because I couldn't find my evening bag, ran over to Aunt Vi's to borrow one, messed up my hair and had to redo it, ripped a perfectly good pair of panty hose getting into this dress and had to go out again to buy more."

  "That's all?"

  "What? That's not enough?"

  "So you're telling me all this stress has been about seeing Andrea?"

  I swallowed and darted another look at the crowd. Not everyone was headed to our banquet, unless we had a bridal party joining us. I returned my attention to Paul. "Yes."

  He closed his eyes briefly and ran a hand over his mouth before doing that hand-on-hip thing again. "Sweetheart, I told you it's not your fault. She's thirty years old, not --"

  "Almost thirty."

  "Almost thirty, not thirteen. Neglecting to sit up all night with her, eating gallons of chocolate ice cream and watching Beaches over and over when she broke up with Jonathan did not drive her into the arms of this Svengali you keep talking about, much less affect her decision to marry him."

  I snarled a look at him.

  He held up both hands. "I'm using hyperbole to make a point."

  "You're missing the point entirely. She needed me last summer. Paul, we've been over and over this. I want to see her, talk to her, but not with her husband around."

  This time his hand went on my shoulder, and he caressed my neck with his thumb. I melted into his touch.

  "You're missing the point," he continued softly. "You can't take care of everyone all the time. Don't worry. You two will have some time to catch up."

  He was so sweet, and so wrong. "You don't know him. He -- "

  A silver evening purse smacked Paul's arm, sending a shock wave through me and focusing every atom of my attention on the bag and the red-nailed feminine hand. And just as fast, suspicion leapt forward. The offending accessory looked exactly like the one I owned, down to the little jeweled loops where the strap should have been. Dammit, it was my purse.

  And here it was in my younger sister Juliet's manicured, pilfering hand. I turned a tight-lipped glare on her.

  She countered with an exaggerated huff that strained her blazing red, sequined gown. "Jeez, you guys, can't you save it 'til you're home?"

  "That's my purse," I snapped. "I tore the house apart looking for it this afternoon. Thank God, Aunt Vi had one I could use."

  Juliet poked a finger at me. "Do you have any idea how long I've been looking all over this freakin' place for you? I can't believe you're making out in the freakin' plants."

  "We're not making out." To her, everything was about sex.

  Paul straightened and crossed his arms. Only his tight stare shifted toward her.

  "You were going to," my sister said. "And you're hiding. Your dress almost blends right in."

  I had an overwhelming urge to bean her. "We were having a private discussion, not seizing an opportunity."

  She tapped my silver purse against her thigh. "Whatever. I'm not going anywhere without you two. Everyone else is at our table already. Your 'discussion' needs to wait. Let's go. Now. I don't want to miss dinner."

  My original tension barged to the head of the line. I chewed my lip, remembered the lipstick and quit. It occurred to me that I stood a better chance of talking to Andrea alone after dinner and the awards than beforehand. Therefore, arriving late for dinner had merit. We'd be in time for Uncle Henry's speech and the awards. A number of my equestrian friends would be collecting ribbons and trophies for the scores they'd earned during this year's horse show season. I'd be there to applaud their accomplishments as well as my uncle, who'd already achieved, several times over, what many of them dreamed of: Olympic medals and international acclaim as a trainer.

  Juliet put both hands around Paul's bicep and pulled. Nothing happened. "I mean it. I'm taking you with me." She tugged again with the same result, gave up and reached for me.

  "We'll catch up," Paul growled.

  Juliet waved my purse in the air. "And I flippin' give up." She strode toward the escalator leading to the second-floor ballroom, the hem of her clingy dress whipping left then right with each purposeful stride.

  Unfortunately, this time guilt didn't tap my shoulder so much as sock me in the arm. I was wimping out. Paul understood how I felt -- well enough, anyway. And there were so many people at the banquet that it wouldn't be difficult to avoid Andrea until the right opportunity presented itself.

  "We might as well go. We'll talk later. I promise." I reached up and ran an admiring fingertip down Paul's lapel. Just by putting on a tux he'd transformed into a dark-haired James Bond. Sure made it a lot easier to find my smile.

  He cupped my face in a strong hand. "If you're sure."

  "I'm sure."

  Totally sure. All I needed was for Juliet to go back and report that we were here, but having a private talk. Then everyone would want to know what it was about, and if I didn't tell them they'd make something up. It wasn't like they didn't already know I was worried about Andrea, but Paul was the only one who knew how responsible I felt for her poor marriage decision. I didn't want them making my issues this evening's focus. I brightened my smile to reassure my lover.

  The moment our eyes connected a familiar tug redirected my awareness. With a slow half-blink he bent toward me, delivering a soft kiss that lasted long enough to make my heart thump. As he drew back, my eyes fluttered and my gaze went to his mouth. I stood on my toes to claim another kiss -- just a thank-you kiss. Really. Maybe with a little body contact or a sly opportunity to run my fingers through his hair ….

  "Stop that. You're going to get lipstick all over his face."

  My sister had returned.

  Progress into the ballroom was the usual stop and go of greeting friends and making introductions. People who usually dressed in breeches, serviceable jackets and dusty boots were almost unrecognizable in formal wear, including me. Double-takes prompted laughter and good-natured teasing. The banquet hall without decoration was impressive with its elegance, but our decorating committee had outdone themselves. Huge, banner-sized photographs of fam
ous and not-so-famous horses and riders hung suspended from the ceiling, providing dramatic focal points throughout the room. Tables with huge sprays of fresh flowers radiated out from a dance floor near the stage, already set up for the band that would be playing later. Around the perimeter of the room were tables displaying the door prizes donated by local tack shops and other businesses. Animated, mirthful conversation brought it all alive.

  And I was doing a darned good job of acting like I wanted to be here.

  We were a scant few minutes into our arrival tour when I halted. As if compelled by some unheard command, I scanned the crowd.

  Andrea.

  Every drop of the day's anxiety, every crumb of trepidation, descended into my stomach as an indigestible ball. Halfway across the room, she stood slightly behind her husband, intent on studying the floor. She hadn't seen me, I was sure. Other sensory input faded into the background like a classic Hollywood movie, and I studied her face, the slack expression, the pallor …

  My heart twisted. Something was wrong. More wrong than I'd thought.

  For years -- since elementary school -- she and I had been best friends. Events this last summer had torn an almost insurmountable rift in our relationship. When I thought we were back on common ground, she'd disappeared from my life and not responded to any attempts I'd made to get in touch. At first, I assumed she was busy. After all, she was an attorney with a big Bellevue-area firm. I was busy, too, but not specifically with my accounting business.

  The murder of one of Paul's colleagues, the theft of valuable fossils and the ensuing investigation had landed both Paul and me in the hospital on separate occasions -- and delivered emotional and relationship wounds we had to work at to mend. Even as life returned to the mundane, we were at the beck and continual call of the police. The cumulative stress was more than I was used to, and I freely admit to being self-involved.

  In hindsight, too self-involved.

  Rumors of Andrea's marriage in September broke my heart. It hurt to hear the information fourth-hand, but worse was learning who she'd married: Sig Paalmann, an exceedingly wealthy horseman. I knew him by his reputation as a dressage judge harshly critical of those who struggled with the sport. There were two habits of his that created the lion's share of responsibility for this reputation. The first was the demoralizing verbal commentary Sig fired at many a hapless competitor at the conclusion of their test, and the second was his custom to write additional, more callous edicts on the test sheet itself. Trainers and coaches carried packs of Kleenex to hand out to their unfortunate students who couldn't escape the arena soon enough at the conclusion of their ride, or who foolishly insisted on reading the scored test sheet at the end of the show.

  Unfortunately, Sig's presence at the awards dinner was a given. Every local judge had been invited to this premier equestrian gala.

  Andrea, of course, was with him.

  I had to talk to her, no matter how painful. If I could find the courage. If I could get her alone.

  After dinner was my best chance.

  Pre-meal socializing was not going to work in my favor, if one could call the tense scene before me "socializing."

  Lips drawn tight against his teeth, Paalmann spoke in a rapid burst to my great uncle, Henry Fairchild. In his mid-sixties, close to Sig's age, Uncle Henry had an unfailingly kind character that couldn't be more different from Sig's. But now, even from a distance, the flash of anger in my uncle's eyes was impossible to miss. Sig, punctuating his words with small chops of his hand, either didn't see or didn't care. He was engrossed in vehemently expressing an opinion my uncle found distasteful.

  I doubted my uncle had said anything to provoke him. I'd heard from show organizers and volunteers like my aunt that even when in a cooperative mood, Sig was unpleasant. The world revolved around his desires.

  He'd obviously desired Andrea. Who could blame him? She was elegant, intelligent and generous. What had my friend seen in this sarcastic, egotistical bastard twice her age?

  My sister prodded me with my purse, jerking my attention back to immediate company. "Andrea's put on weight since last time I saw her."

  "She looks beautiful. Don't be so critical." But Juliet had a point. Although far from unattractive, Andrea wasn't her usual stylish self. Maybe the shapeless gray dress was to blame.

  More likely it was her listless expression.

  A horrible possibility crept into my mind. What if Sig had forbidden Andrea to contact any of her old friends … like me?

  An elbow gouged my ribcage. "Hey," Juliet snapped. "I said I'm not being critical. Besides, I hear everybody puts on weight after they get married." Juliet looked down, flicking a slender hand over the red-sequined curves every male had ogled on our way in. "Man, I hope it doesn't happen to me." She flashed Paul a wicked smile and reached across me to pat his stomach. "Aren't you kind of jumping the gun?"

  Paul started, then stood up a little straighter. "I need to start running again," he muttered.

  But he'd noticed Andrea, too, and I knew he was thinking. If he hadn't been, Juliet wouldn't have surprised him. This "thinking" of his concerned me. He'd chided me more than once for leaping to conclusions -- which I wasn't. He was wrong. And as surely as I knew how each and every Sunday would begin and end, I knew exactly what he was doing at this moment. He was sizing up an opportunity to prove to me that Andrea would be delighted to see me. My gut told me I needed to approach Andrea privately. Paul needed to be distracted.

  I pressed against him, as close to face to face as I could manage while still holding his arm, and gazed up at him with as much ardor as I could self-consciously pull off in a crowd. Heat crept up my neck and scalded my cheeks.

  "You look perfect," I purred, ignoring my embarrassment and praying I was subtle.

  A corner of his mouth turned up. Tapping into his libido was a sure thing. Worked every time. I brushed against him and felt his long, slow intake of breath. His arm tightened, pressing my hand into his side.

  "Gagging here, you two," Juliet groaned. So much for subtle.

  "Let's go say hello to Andrea," he said, and took a step in her direction, spinning me on my too-high heel.

  My heart slammed into my ribs while my "sure thing" dragged me toward the exact situation I wanted to avoid. Damn, damn, damn. What was wrong with him? Couldn't he take a hint? I hauled at his arm.

  "No. I'll say 'hi' later." I said. "We should look for our table and Aunt Vi."

  Paul urged me along. "Come on. They haven't even started serving the salad yet. She'll be happy to see you, and I know you want to talk to her."

  "I do -- did -- do want to talk to her. But not right now. Later. When she's not with her husband."

  "Why?" Juliet asked.

  Great. I'd forgotten she was still with us. The short answer might save me from looking any more foolish. "Because he's a jerk."

  "I thought he was a dressage judge. He's not nice?" Juliet said.

  Paul's mouth twitched, but a small snort escaped anyway. However, the fear that Sig might be deliberately keeping Andrea from me scared off any levity I might have felt.

  "'Nice' is not a prerequisite for a dressage judge," I said.

  "Well, no duh." Juliet crossed her eyes, implying I'd been the one with the dumb remark. "Isn't he a friend of Uncle Henry's?"

  "Passing acquaintance."

  "Well, you must be wrong, Miss Know-It-All. Uncle Henry saves his stern lectures for friends and family, so the old guy next to Andrea who looks like he has a stick up his --"

  "Juliet! And no, I'm not wrong. That's him, Sig Paalmann."

  Paul tipped his head in interest, then looked again toward Andrea.

  Juliet's brow furrowed. "He has to be as old as Uncle Henry. And the conversation seems pretty intense for a couple of guys who barely know each other."

  "Oh, they know each other. They're just not friends. Uncle Henry has no patience for someone as deliberately nasty as Sig." At that exact moment my uncle shook his head once and walked away
from Sig and Andrea. Not surprised, I continued. "And yes, Sig has to be around sixty."

  She shivered. "Eww. Andrea's what -- thirty?"

  "Next month."

  "Sorry, but even if he was worth bazillions, it just doesn't make up for the ick factor."

  "He is, in fact, worth bazillions," I said.

  "Whoa. No shit. Well, I'd never let the flash of cash blind me, but looks like your BFF has." She wiggled her fingers, palm up.

  I scowled at Juliet's insult. Could my friend really have changed that much? The Andrea I'd known since grade school wasn't a money-grubber. She regularly worked more pro bono cases than anyone else in her firm, and championed the Great American Small, Struggling Business. Unfortunately, her track record with men hit the "also ran" lists -- due to her tendency to get doe-eyed over a handsome face and ignore the warning signs of a man-looking-for-a-sugar-mama. She had made consistently bad choices and ended up getting used. Sig, while distinguished, was not her usual well-built, testosterone-dripping, needy fare. To the best of my knowledge he did not require any rescuing and was, by reputation, an emotional deep freeze.

  My heart lurched. Had she thought she was breaking her old pattern with him, only to overlook warning signs more dire? A cold certainty made me shiver. Andrea's cocoon of silence since her hasty September wedding had not been of her own making.

  Juliet narrowed her eyes as she continued to study my friend and her husband. "Sig Paalmann …." She tapped a long red fingernail on her chin. "Isn't he Paal Toys?"

  I nodded. "Makes those cute dolls. You know the ones."

  "Apple Cheek Babies? Wow. Who'd have thought the guy who makes the doll on 'every little girl's Christmas list,'" she had deepened her voice to a good approximation of the TV announcer's, "would look so opposite of Santa Claus? Well, except for the gray hair."

  Paul tipped his head again, first at Juliet, then me. "Wait a minute. Did you say Sig Paalmann?" He pronounced his last name differently than Juliet and I. "That's who Andrea married? The Sig Paalmann?"

  I eyed him. "I suppose so. How many of them could there be?"

  "He's got one of the most extensive private collections of dinosaur fossils in the world -- that's public knowledge, anyway. Not that any of my colleagues have had any more opportunity to view them than I have."

  Juliet rocked her head side to side. The conversation had veered to the uninteresting -- for her. If there wasn't loud music and louder laughter, she'd find something else to do. However, the increased animation in Paul's voice alarmed me. I had to keep him talking or this time he'd succeed in dragging me to them.

  "I know he owns an impressive art collection and antique cars, but I'd never heard about the fossils."

  "The rumor is he limits access. To a paranoid degree. Most paleontologists would give their left -- um, would really like to be invited to inspect the collection."

  "Including you?"

  "Yeah. But I draw the line at giving over body parts I use." He grinned. "So, let's go say hi. I'll lay you odds he'll be so busy bragging to me about how much he knows about my area of expertise that you and Andrea can do some catching up."

  Damn. No way was this going to work out well. "No, really. I don't think …."

  "Come on." He patted my hand, which was still clutching his arm.

  I'd encountered that man-on-a-mission spark in his eye before. Short of throwing myself on the ground and shrieking, my chances of turning him aside were zero. I'd have to ditch Plan A and go with Plan B -- whatever that was.

  "Have at it, you guys," Juliet said, peering through the crowd in another direction. "I'd love to tag along and find out what Andrea sees in the old fart, but I need to protect my sweetie from all the dressage queens. They lust after that god-of-a-man. Can't say I blame them. Eric dressed up is almost as delicious as Eric naked." Her voice dropped to a sultry timbre with the last sentence, and she flapped her lashes at Paul.

  He reared back.

  Her mouth curved, cat-like. "I must go remind them all they don't stand a chance. You know how I hate waving this ring, and other things, under people's noses." She held her hand out, examined the modest diamond, and gave it a quick polish on her sleeve. "Sometimes one must sacrifice." She flitted off, left hand pressed delicately to her bosom.

  "I could have lived my life happily never hearing any of that," Paul said, grimace still in place.

  I'd wanted to chuckle, but my throat constricted the moment Paul moved off in Andrea's direction. I hoped she, in realizing the attraction of the fossil collection for Paul, would introduce him as Dr. Hudson, professor of paleontology at the University of Washington. Then, while the men talked shop, the two of us would shift around making inane, self-conscious chit-chat and I'd figure out how to arrange to meet with her later.

  Perhaps Sig would show a kind side. Perhaps Andrea would be glad to see me. Perhaps she'd understand I was still her friend, if I could untie my tongue enough to explain how the murder investigation and nearly losing Paul was a wound too private to share at the time, even with her.

  And perhaps Paul would luck out and Sig would invite us to view the famous private collection.

  Then again, sometimes you never get a chance to find out.

  From the publisher

  All Thea Campbell Mysteries are available in both e-book and print formats. Check with your favorite retailer. Remember, if you don’t see what you want, ask!

  Other books by Susan Schreyer

  Death by a Dark Horse

  Levels of Deception

  An Error in Judgment

  BushWhacked

  Shooting to Kill

  About the Author

  Susan Schreyer lives in the great state of Washington with her husband, two children, a couple of playful kittens and the ghosts of several other much-loved pets. The horse lives within easy driving distance. When not writing stories about people in the next town being murdered, articles for worthy publications, or blogging, Susan trains horses and teaches people how to ride them. She is a member of the Guppies Chapter of Sisters in Crime and is co-president of the Puget Sound Chapter of SinC. Death By A Dark Horse is her debut mystery. The second book in the Thea Campbell series, Levels of Deception will be out in early spring of 2011.

  Susan would love to hear from you. She can be contacted through her website:

  https://www.susanschreyer.com

  Or either of her blogs:

  Writing Horses

  https://writinghorses.blogspot.com

  Things I Learned From My Horse

  https://thingsilearnedfrommyhorse.blogspot.com

 
Thank you for reading books on BookFrom.Net

Share this book with friends

Susan Schreyer's Novels