“Liar.”
“I mean it,” I said, balancing on the balls of my feet, ready to spring if she made a move. “If I could do it over again, I would’ve left you to rot.”
“You bitch,” she snarled.
“Back atcha. Now get out of my classroom.”
“Just because you made a stupid phone call doesn’t mean you’re some kind of savior.”
“I agree.” I gestured toward my students, who watched with avid interest. “Now, I have a class to run, so amscray, itchbay.”
“Because you’re not,” she continued, as though I hadn’t said anything.
“I know. I heard you.” That’s when I noticed Naomi wringing her hands. Even Layla looked nervous. Fascinating. But not much help. To Minka, I said, “What part of hasta la vista don’t you understand?”
Her scowl would’ve been scary if not for her tendency to spit when she spoke. “I can see the smug satisfaction in your eyes.”
“Can you?”
“Yes, and it sickens me.”
“Minka,” Naomi said, tentatively reaching for Minka’s arm, “you should thank God that Brooklyn found you in time.”
“Oh, really?” Minka shrugged Naomi’s hand away as her voice grew louder and more shrill. “So she can rub my nose in it for the rest of my life?”
A few of my students cringed as she shrieked the word life. She sounded like a squealing rat, but I could sympathize. The thought that I’d saved her life made me just as queasy.
“But you could’ve died,” Naomi said. I appreciated her attempts to be civilized, but she didn’t know who she was dealing with.
“Oh, get real,” Minka said to Naomi. “It was just a friggin’ bump on the head.”
“Is that so?” Naomi said, irritated now. “I heard you were still out cold until late this morning.”
Minka rolled her eyes, then grimaced in pain from the effort. “Never mind.”
“You probably shouldn’t be here,” Naomi said. “I’ll bet your doctor doesn’t even know you left the hospital.”
Minka’s nostrils flared but she said nothing. Naomi folded her arms in triumph.
“We’re just glad you’re back in fighting form, sweetie,” Layla crooned, touching Minka’s shoulder. “Now, don’t you have your own class to teach?”
Why did Layla treat her so nicely? Professional courtesy among snakes, maybe?
Minka glared at me. I gazed back at her with what I hoped was a look of blasé indifference, though I wanted more than anything to stab her with my long, sharp sewing needle.
Finally, she shook her head in fury, stomped her foot like the frustrated cow that she was, then whipped around and clomped out. Layla rushed after her and wrapped her arm around Minka’s shoulder. Naomi exhaled loudly, shot me a fulminating look, and left the room, shutting the door behind her.
I let out a breath I didn’t realize I’d been holding. So much for gratitude.
“Wow, that was so rude,” Alice said, shocked. She turned and studied my face. “Are you all right?”
“Yeah.”
“Isn’t she the girl who was knocked out in the hall the other night?” Gina asked.
“Yes, she’s the one,” Whitney said, then grimaced. “I remember that hair.”
“What an ingrate,” Marianne said, righteously indignant on my behalf. “She could’ve died if Brooklyn hadn’t found her.”
“What’s wrong with her?” quiet Jennifer asked.
“She’s just a royal bee-yotch,” Whitney said, and the others agreed.
I smiled gratefully. I was growing more fond of my students every day. “So, where were we?”
“It’s hammer time?” Mitchell said, causing more groans and a few laughs.
“Right. Everyone find their hammer in their tool packet.” While they went through their packets, I took a minute to catch my breath. Minka was a menace to my health.
“Okay, everyone ready?” I asked, holding up my favorite tool. I’d purchased the new bookbinders hammer when I’d returned from Edinburgh last month. My old favorite hammer, a gift from my mentor, had been stolen and used as a murder weapon.
It was a long story, and I tried not to think about it as I prepared to demonstrate the proper way of rounding the spine of the textblock.
I had them remove their glued pages from the wood presses and test the glue.
“The adhesive should still be slightly tacky,” I said, holding up my demo and touching the spine.
“The reason we hammer the spine is to round it out. A flat spine won’t allow the book to lie nicely. You want to round it slightly. And you do it by pounding it with a hammer.”
“Fun,” said Kylie.
I demonstrated by holding up two different books I’d made. “If you keep the spine flat as it is now, the book will plop one way or another when you open it. See? But a rounded spine will allow the book to fan open.”
“Cool,” Jennifer whispered.
“Now, hammering works best if you place the textblock flat on the table with the spine near the table’s edge.” I used the end of the worktable to demonstrate.
“I’m going to hurt myself, aren’t I?” Gina whispered to Whitney.
I smiled at her. “No, you won’t. These hammers are lighter and shorter than a regular carpenter’s hammer, and the head is wider. That’s because you don’t need to apply as much pressure to this as you would to a nail to pound it into a wall. Your pressure to the book is more of a smack than a smash.”
“Smack, don’t smash,” Gina muttered.
“You take the hammer and start pounding the spine with a pushing motion,” I said, demonstrating. “You’re effectively nudging the layers out to form a curved surface.”
“I like it,” Kylie said, clobbering the pages with her hammer. “I’m pretending it’s my husband.”
“This is fun,” Gina said, pounding like mad on her book. “I’m so fierce.”
“Easy,” I cautioned. “Push, don’t pummel.”
“Oops,” she said, and lightened the pressure of her thrusts.
“Now, turn the textblock over and do the same thing from the back side so it evens out. Do this several times, and you’ll see the spine becoming rounded.” I held mine up for everyone’s scrutiny.
“As soon as you have the desired curve, place it back into the wood press and apply another thin layer of glue. That way, it’ll stay rounded for good.”
A twittering sound chirped. Cynthia grabbed her purse and found her cell. She checked the screen and looked at me. “It’s bidness. Can I take a quick break?”
“Sure,” I said. “Everyone knows what they need to do now, so proceed at your own pace and take a break if you need to. I’ll walk around and check your work or answer questions if you have any.”
For the next ten minutes, everyone worked quietly. Some people left the room, others came back in. I didn’t pay much attention to the comings and goings as I stopped to ask Marianne and Jennifer about their library arts-and-crafts program. Then I made another pass around the table and paused at Mitchell’s place.
“How’m I doing, boss?” he asked, grinning as he held up his glue brush.
“Much better,” I said.
“Thanks,” he said. “But I—”
A loud blast interrupted him.
Gina screamed and Whitney pulled her under the table.
“Oh, my God,” Kylie cried.
“Calm down!” I shouted. “It’s probably nothing.”
But I knew that sound. I’d heard it more than once before.
“Everyone stay here.” I ran from the room, closing the door behind me. No one was in the hall. I tiptoed to the entry and peeked around the corner. The gallery was empty.
“I’m right behind you,” Mitchell said evenly. “That was a gunshot.”
“I know.” I turned and scowled. “That’s why I told everyone to stay in the room.”
“Oh, right. Like I’m going to wait in there while you’re out here getting yourself killed.”
“Men,” I muttered.
“Yeah, we suck,” he growled. “Come on.”
We crossed the gallery to the north hall. I could see that Layla’s office door was open. Light poured into the hall, illuminating a lifeless lump on the carpet.