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“If being with the instructor from my cooking class counts.” I knew it did, and that Jim would verify it if he needed to. “As for tonight, the time of our 911 call confirms that we arrived just a little while ago.”

Tyler knew it. He knew it before he ever walked into Miss Magda’s and started treating me like public enemy number one. I could tell because he didn’t look happy about being shown up.

With a scowl, he slapped his notebook closed. “You two aren’t involved in anything stupid, are you? You’re not playing detective?”

This time, he knew he wouldn’t get an answer from me. Not a straight one, anyway. He turned to Eve, but I spoke up before she could.

“What makes you think that?” I asked Tyler.

“I dunno.” He shrugged. The gesture would have made anyone else look uncertain. Coming from Tyler, it sent a whole different message: he might have been saying one thing, but he believed something else. And he didn’t care if we knew it. “Seems funny to me, is all. You think what happened here has some connection to Drago Kravic’s murder?”

Was he asking for my opinion? My input?

And was I supposed to be flattered?

For a second, the prospect cheered me right up. Iwas a private detective, and Tyler knew it.

Or was this my official notification that if I knew what was best for me, I’d back off?

Before I had a chance to decide what Tyler meant and how to respond to it, Eve popped off the settee.

“That’s exactly what we think,” she told Tyler, and emphasized her point by stabbing a finger in his direction. “If you weren’t so blind, you’d see it, too. Who’s the smart one, now?”

“Who’s the one who still seems to care so much?” Tyler got up, too. He turned to Eve, both fists on his hips.

He moved so fast, the table bucked. Miss Magda’s crystal ball tipped. Eve and Tyler were so busy facing off, neither of them noticed.

I darted forward just in time to catch the crystal ball before it rolled over the edge of the table and landed on the floor. Bracing the hefty item in my hands, I stood next to the table, wondering what to look at. The floor? The ceiling? The Eve vs Tyler heavyweight match being slugged out right in front of my eyes?

It seemed like a safe bet, so I decided on the table. But what I saw there nearly blew me away.

A computer disc.

It had been hidden under the crystal ball. Because of the curvature of the glass and the reflection of the light, nobody ever could have seen it when the ball was in place.

My mind raced. This was the disc Yuri talked about. It had to be. Beyla must have found it at the gallery and brought it here. But why? And why would she kill the fortune-teller and leave the disc behind?

I would have loved to think my way through the puzzle, but it was a little hard to concentrate with the sounds of Eve and Tyler going at each other echoing through my head.

“You think I care?” Eve snorted her opinion. “Honestly, Tyler, you have grits for brains.”

“At least I have brains,” he shot back.

“And what a pity you never use them. If you did, you’d know the two murders are connected. Beyla came here last night. I know because I followed her from the gallery that Drago owned. You want to know why, Tyler? My goodness, I’m surprised you haven’t figured all that out for yourself by now.”

“Oh, I’ve figured out the Beyla part. But you apparently haven’t.” The noise Tyler made from deep in his throat was more of a growl than a laugh. “Your imagination is running away with you, Eve. You’ve been reading too many books, if you read at all. You’ve concocted something straight out of a James Bond novel. Do you think that life really works that way? So what if Beyla went to the gallery? That’s not all that surprising, is it? After all, she was Kravic’s bookeeper. Or didn’t you know that? As to why she went to the gallery last night… why would she bother? The place has been locked up tight since Drago’s death. What would she want there?”

“What would she want? How about a-”

Before Eve could blow our entire investigation with two little words, I opened my hands and let the crystal ball slip. It hit just where I inteded, right where the rug ended and the hardwood floor began. The crash made both Eve and Tyler shut their mouths and brought the crime scene techs running.

I didn’t stop to think about right or wrong. I didn’t debate the ethics of the situation or my obligation-moral or otherwise-to authority.

Who knew I could be so downright underhanded?

While Eve, Tyler, and the crime scene techs were all busy staring at the thousands of glass shards that littered the floor like fallen stars, I whisked the disc off the table and tucked it into my purse.

“YOU’RE KIDDING ME, RIGHT? YOU TOOK IT? RIGHT out from under Tyler’s nose?” Eve practically crowed. “Annie Capshaw, you are the bravest and the coolest thing on two feet!”

I wasn’t so sure.

As we drove away from Clarendon, my hands were shaking against the steering wheel.

Eve chuckled. “When Tyler finds out, he’ll have a cow.”

“He’d better not find out!” I flicked on my blinker and waited for the opportunity to turn left, slanting Eve a look as I did. “You’re not going to tell him. Not ever. If you do, I could be arrested. Tampering with evidence is a crime, isn’t it?”

Eve gulped down her horror. “I guess it is. I never thought of that.” She crossed her heart with one finger. “I swear, I’ll never breathe a word. Not to Tyler or anybody else. Besides, once we give the disc to Yuri, it won’t matter. You won’t have the disc, and Tyler will never be able to prove where Yuri got it. You’ll be home free.”

I liked the sound of that. A life of crime, it seemed, did not agree with me.

By the time we got to my apartment building, parked the car, and got upstairs, I was lightheaded and my knees felt as if they were made of jelly. I needed chocolate, and I needed it bad.

If only I hadn’t eaten my emergency Hershey bar the night we found Drago’s body.

I peeked in the pantry and saw the Nesquik jar was empty. Apparently I’d forgotten to restock the last time I was at the store.

I checked the stash I kept in the freezer for those times when I absolutely, positively needed chocolate and none was to be had anywhere else, but even the cache of chocolate chips I usually kept squirreled away was gone, too.

It had been a stressful summer.

I settled for salt and vinegar potato chips. I ripped open the bag and plunked down in one of the kitchen chairs.

“My nerves are shot,” I said, tipping the bag toward Eve.

She reached in for a handful. When that first, tangy taste of vinegar hit her tongue, she made a face. “Mine aren’t.” She grinned. “I’m still too jazzed thinking about what you did to Tyler. That no-good slimeball. Did you hear him? ‘If you read at all.’” She echoed Tyler’s words from back at Magda’s in a singsong voice. “He’s got a lot of nerve. If he only knew how smart we both are! And he will, too, won’t he? As soon as we get this case cleared up.”

She crunched into another handful of chips. “We can do it, don’t you think? Now that we have the disc, we can prove that Beyla stole money from the gallery. That will give us the motive we’ve been looking for. Then we can prove that Beyla killed Drago and probably Magda, too. My gosh, Annie!” Eve blanched. She stopped dead just as she was reaching back into the potato chip bag.

“Do you suppose Beyla was inside the tea room strangling Magda while I was outside waiting for her to come out?” she asked.

“Looks that way.” There was no use denying it, but I knew I had to get Eve’s mind off poor, dead Magda, or she’d end up convincing herself that there was something she could have done to stop the murder. There wasn’t. Not without her risking herself and her own safety. I had to change the subject, and fast.