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But Yuri was blocking the mouth of the alley. And one step in the other direction put me even farther into the shadows.

I had only one option: I stood my ground and raised my chin. “What are you doing here?” I asked him in my most challenging tone.

Yuri stared at me, his expression unreadable. He’d been puffing on a long, thin cigarette, and after he took the last drag, he tossed the butt on the ground and crunched it under the sole of his expensive sneaker. When he blew out a long stream of smoke, I leaned downwind.

“You are Miss Capshaw. From the gallery. You are following her?”

It took me a couple seconds to figure out what-and who-he was talking about.

Yuri could obviously read the surprise on my face. A slow smile lifted the corners of his mouth. “You are police?” he asked.

I knew I had to regain my composure, and fast. I shook my head. “No. Not police. I’m…” What was I? And how could I even begin to explain it to Yuri?

I decided on the truth. Or at least part of the truth.

“I’m a bank teller at Pioneer Savings and Loan. But I go to school with Beyla. We take a cooking class together at Très Bonne Cuisine. I was in a store over there…” I poked my thumb over my shoulder roughly in the direction of the Angel Emporium. “And I thought I saw her walk by. I wanted to catch up with her. To say hello.”

“You do not try to arrest her?”

OK, so maybe I’m a little slow. Chalk it up to the heat or to the fact that I was a novice when it came to this whole detective game. It took me a while to process what Yuri was saying. When I finally did, it hit me like the smell of the men’s locker room at the gym where Peter and I used to take couples aerobics.

I staggered back against the brick wall behind me. “You sound like you expect the police to be following her. That means you think she’s guilty. Are you saying…” Eve and I discussing our theory of the crime was one thing. But hearing our theory echoed by an almost stranger… well, I suddenly knew how Chris Columbus must have felt the first time someone slapped him on the back and told him that he’d been right about that whole the-world-is-round thing all along.

I sucked in a breath to steady my voice. “Are you telling me you think she’s guilty? You are, aren’t you? You think Beyla killed Drago. Or do you know it for a fact?”

This time, Yuri’s smile was quicker. And grimmer.

“So, this is why you follow her.” He nodded, and somehow that one gesture said it all. Yuri and I were in agreement: he thought Beyla was guilty, too.

Yuri’s thin fingers fidgeted with the big metal buckle on his belt. “What is it you see?” he asked.

“See? Nothing.” That was the truth, too. Listening to myself say it, I realized how totally lame it sounded. I decided to stick with my original half truth. “She walked by the store where I was shopping,” I said. “I told you, I just wanted to say hello. But she saw me and she ran away.”

“This is so?” But he didn’t wait for me to respond. He lit another cigarette and took two long, slow drags. His eyes narrowed as if he was thinking very hard. “You saw from where she came?” he asked.

I hadn’t. At least I didn’t need to lie about that part of the story.

“You know where she is going?”

I didn’t, except for the Angel Emporium part of the equation. But right about now, that didn’t seem to matter as much as the fact that Yuri had put the kibosh on this part of my investigation. “How was I supposed to figure out where she’s going when you stopped me from following her?” I asked him. “And what are you doing here, anyway? Why are you following Beyla? Are you investigating, too?”

Yuri’s eyes were small and dark. His gaze darted away from me as if he was uncomfortable with what he had to say. “Drago Kravic, he was like a brother to me. And you said it, yes? You said that Beyla killed him.”

“You know this for certain? For real?” I took a step closer to him, intrigued and eager to know more. “Can you prove it? Should we go to the police?”

“No, no. No police. Not yet. It might be… how would you say this… bad luck, yes? It would ruin everything. First, we must have proof.”

“We do. Or at least a little bit of proof.” I reached in my purse and pulled out the vial. “It’s foxglove. It belongs to Beyla. I even know where she bought it.”

I swear, at that moment, Yuri looked as beatific as one of the angels over in the Emporium. When he reached toward the vial, his hand quivered. “And this, it is Beyla’s? You are certain of this?”

I nodded, but when I tried to give the vial to him, he pulled his hand back to his side.

“You must keep it safe,” he said. “If the police are looking for evidence, this is perfect, yes? With this and the disc-” As if he was afraid he’d said too much, he stopped abruptly and gave me another long, careful look. If we were in the bank, and I was on one side of the teller station and he was on the other, I might have thought he was going to rob the place. That’s how intense that look was. He must have known it, too, because he erased the expression and gave me what was almost a smile of apology.

“I am sorry. My mind is busy. Preoccupied. I am thinking, perhaps, that you might be able to help me.”

“Help you prove Beyla is the killer? It’s exactly what Eve and I have been trying to do all along. Or at least what Eve’s been trying to do. I haven’t been so sure-until now. Now that I know this is foxglove…” Suddenly, the herb in the vial made me queasier than ever. I tucked it back in my purse. “I’ll have to turn it over to the police,” I told Yuri and reminded myself. “I suppose it’s pretty compelling evidence.”

This time, Yuri’s smile was wide and broad. He breathed a sigh of relief. “I am so glad. So glad you have found such a thing. And so glad that I do not have to search for the truth by myself any longer. I have an ally, yes? And a pretty one at that.”

I was so ingrained with the Eve-is-gorgeous-and-then-there’s-Annie frame of mind, I almost didn’t realize Yuri was talking about me. Until I realized he was looking at my chest.

He took a step forward.

I took a step back and smiled in a way that was friendly. But not too friendly. “An ally when it comes to investigating and nothing else,” I said. It was best to get that straight right there and then. “Tell me, how do you know Beyla is guilty? And what’s this about a disc?”

Lucky for me, Yuri knew when to back off. He refocused his eyes on mine. “Drago and Beyla…” He shook his head, like he was trying to find the right words. “There has been bad blood between them for many years. They were lovers once, you know. Back in Romania. Now, they feel nothing but hate for each other. As only former lovers can.”

Yeah, I understood that.

“But why kill him?” I asked. “Why now?”

Yuri scraped a hand over his head. “It is complicated. And I, I am not certain. Otherwise I would have gone to the police with this story. But I think that Beyla, she has stolen money from Drago. From the gallery. I think Drago had proof that she took the money. The day he died, he told me there was something we needed to talk about. Something serious. I believe…” He paused. Though he wasn’t an attractive man, there was a sort of straightforwardness about Yuri, a frankness that made me feel sorry for him. He had to relay all this painful information, and in a language he wasn’t comfortable with.

“You think the disc contains proof that Beyla took Drago’s money and killed him because of it.”

Yuri smiled, relieved that I’d helped him out. “That is it. Just so. It is a disc. You know, like for computer. Like for DVD. It was Drago’s. Ours. It was in the gallery.”

“And now you can’t find it.” One by one, every fact Eve and I had discovered was falling into place. I smiled, pretty pleased with myself. “Beyla’s the one who trashed the office at the gallery. She was looking for the disc. And you think she found it.”