The whistling stopped. Olivia sensed Raoul standing in the study doorway. She imagined him taking in the condition of the room. He might be noticing that his papers were not as he had left them.
Raoul began to whistle another tune, which sounded vaguely familiar. Olivia had heard it at her mother’s dance lesson. A rumba. He was in the room. Olivia realized she was still holding the psychiatrist’s notes she’d been so thrilled to find. The whistling stopped. Olivia didn’t dare move for fear the paper might crinkle. All she could do was hope that Raoul wasn’t searching for that one page.
The continued silence should have been reassuring, but Olivia’s imagination filled it with specters of an enraged Raoul about to swing the closet door wide while he called 911. Maddie shifted a bit. She was closest to the open crack and was trying to see into the room. Before Olivia could stop her, Maddie edged the door open a few more inches and peeked through. Nothing happened. Maddie pushed the door wider and poked her head into the room. Pulling back inside, she whispered, “I think I hear him releasing the chain lock on Valentina’s bedroom door. We could try to make a run for it.” She tiptoed toward the office door.
“Too dangerous,” Olivia said. “If she’s asleep, he’ll come right back out. Even if we get out of sight in time, he’ll hear us run down the stairs.”
Maddie peeked into the hallway, then hurried to the safety of the closet. “You nailed it,” she said. “I saw his foot step out of the bedroom. I can hear him coming this way.”
Olivia felt sweat collecting under the light bangs that waved across her forehead. At this rate, she’d need another shower before greeting customers.
“Okay, I think he’s on the stairs.” Maddie cracked open the closet door and listened. Olivia took the opportunity to fold the paper she’d been holding and stuff it into her jeans pocket.
“I don’t hear a thing,” Maddie said. “Maybe Raoul is downstairs. He starts teaching at nine, doesn’t he?” She checked her watch. “Yikes, it’s eight forty. How did that happen? We have no chance of escaping until Raoul is in the studio with a student, and we are supposed to open the store in twenty minutes. We’re doomed.”
“Probably,” Olivia whispered, “but not because we’ll be late opening the store. I called Bertha and Mom last night.”
“Whew. I may need to reconsider this thinking-ahead idea,” Maddie said. “Raoul must be downstairs getting ready to teach. I’m about to suffocate in here.” She pushed the door open wide enough to slide through. “All clear,” she said, checking the hallway.
Olivia left the closet and went straight to the window. “I don’t see a car parked in front,” she said, “though anyone who lives in Chatterley Heights would probably walk to a lesson.”
“Shh,” Maddie said. “I hear something.”
“It’s music,” Olivia said, “coming from downstairs. Which means Raoul could be in the office or out on the dance floor.” Her mind began to click off possible escape ideas, but they all involved going through the office. “How can we know for sure that Raoul is in the dance studio?”
“Only one way to find out,” Maddie said. Before Olivia could stop her, Maddie stepped into the hallway, leaving the door wide open. She looked down the hallway toward the staircase, as if preparing to sneak downstairs. Instead, she spun around ninety degrees and turned to stone. Olivia rushed toward the open doorway, her heart pounding inside her brain.
Maddie’s jaw slowly dropped. “Livie,” she said. “You’d better come out here.”
Olivia stepped out and joined Maddie. Light spilled into the dim hallway through the open door of the ballerina’s bedroom. An ethereal creature dressed in layers of pink chiffon watched them. Her body was so slight that for a moment Olivia thought she was a mirage. But her face was real, the scar on her cheek unmistakable. Her light brown eyes regarded Olivia and Maddie in a calm and incurious way.
Olivia breathed the name, “Valentina.”
“Yes,” Valentina said, “though Daddy calls me Tiny. I know who you are. You are the ones who make beautiful cookies. You saw me dancing in the park. Daddy told me.” Despite her size and childlike way of speaking, Valentina appeared to be in her mid-twenties.
“We just finished making some ballerina cookies,” Olivia said, “in your honor. You dance so wonderfully.”
A ghost of a smile touched Valentina’s lips. “I would love to see the cookies. Daddy tells me I have to eat more. He doesn’t know you are here, does he? If he did, he would have locked me in my room to protect me.”
“We wanted to meet you, Valentina,” Olivia said. “We need to ask you something important.”
“Daddy wouldn’t like that. You should leave before he sees you.” Valentina cocked her head, as if to listen. A thick lock of straight, white-gold hair fell across her face, nearly obscuring the scar on her cheek. Olivia realized how beautiful she must have been. “Daddy will be on the dance floor right now,” Valentina said. “He is warming up before he starts teaching. You can go out the back door. If you are quiet, Daddy won’t see or hear you. He is in another world when he dances.”
Olivia reached out a hand in supplication. “Please, Valentina, one question only, I promise. It would mean so much to me and my family. I have a younger brother, Jason. He is in trouble. The sheriff thinks he killed a bad man, but I know he didn’t. All I want to know is if you were dancing in the park a few nights ago . . . Tuesday, the night of the storm. If you were, did you see anything, anyone?”
Small as she was, Valentina shrank into herself. She turned her face toward her bedroom but did not escape into it, which Olivia found hopeful, yet puzzling. The psychiatric report Olivia had read described a frail creature so damaged that she couldn’t think or act rationally. Certainly, Valentina appeared to exist in a world of her own. However, the Valentina standing before her, though delicate and damaged, might make a credible witness.
Valentina turned to face Olivia. Tears bunched in her eyes. She blinked until they burst and trickled down her face, following the line of the scar on her left cheek. “I didn’t want to dance in the storm,” she said.
“But before the storm,” Olivia said. She could hear desperation in her own voice and took a deep breath to calm herself. “Did you see anything at all that night? Or anyone?”
Valentina’s frail body began to shiver. She reached up to her cheek and touched her scar.
“Please, Valentina. Jason is my baby brother. He doesn’t deserve this. I know he didn’t kill that man. You are my brother’s only hope.” It was too much pressure; she knew it as soon as she said it. Valentina’s face contorted in agony as she fled into her room. Olivia heard the click of a lock.
“We’ve got to get out of here,” Maddie said. “Now!” She grabbed Olivia’s arm and dragged her toward the staircase. Olivia didn’t fight her. Her chance had evaporated, but she’d find another. Somehow.
With Maddie in the lead, they tiptoe-ran down the stairs. Maddie peeked into the kitchen and signaled the all clear. The tough part came next. The door leading from the kitchen into the dance studio stood wide open. A familiar waltz played on the CD player.
Maddie yanked her along by the upper arm. “It’s three minutes to nine, and that waltz is almost over,” she hissed in Olivia’s ear. “Raoul will be coming into the kitchen to set up music for his students.”
Olivia nodded and reached for the doorknob. It wouldn’t turn. She remembered she’d flipped the lock from the inside to keep Raoul from becoming suspicious. A good idea at the time.
Olivia whispered in Maddie’s ear, “The music needs to be loud enough to cover the sound of this lock.”
Maddie nodded. She grabbed the doorknob with one hand, the lock with the other. The music grew softer. Olivia held her breath. Maddie’s muscles twitched a split second before the music crescendoed. She timed it perfectly. The lock snapped, the door opened, and Olivia slipped through. Maddie was right behind her. She eased the door shut. “Should we lock it?”