Downtown Debutante. Kara Lennox

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Downtown Debutante - Kara Lennox


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      Brenna snapped her fingers. “Of course. You’ve got a midwestern accent, which to me sounds like no accent at all. I spent four years in Kansas City, at the Art Institute. I should have guessed.”

      “You went to the Kansas City Art Institute?” He seemed surprised.

      “I not only went there, I graduated,” she said proudly. It was her one tangible success, her single piece of evidence that she wasn’t a complete screwup. Her parents hadn’t come to her graduation. They hadn’t understood what a big deal it was. They thought art school was insignificant compared to law school or business school.

      She and Heath lapsed into another silence, and Brenna flipped through a jewelry magazine she’d picked up at one of the stores they’d visited. Suddenly she stopped turning pages. Her heartbeat accelerated. “Oh, my God.”

      “What?” Heath looked around, his right hand reaching inside his jacket for his gun.

      “Back down, there, Mr. FBI man. It’s not a physical threat. Take a look at this.” She turned the magazine around and showed him the ad that had so captured her attention.

      “Synthetic emeralds by mail?”

      “Not that ad, this one.” She tapped impatiently on the one she meant. “Big gem-and-bead show. This weekend, right here in New Orleans. If I were wanting to unload some hot jewelry fast, that’s where I’d do it.”

      “You think Marvin will be there?”

      “I’d bet on it. It’s one of those shows where anybody with the money for a booth can exhibit anything they want.”

      “We’ll go, then. The doors open this evening.” He paused, regarding her thoughtfully. “How come you didn’t know about this show before? You’re in the business.”

      She shrugged. “There are so many shows these days I can’t keep track. Besides, once I got accepted to the IJC show, I totally forgot about everything else. I needed all the time I had to get ready for New York. I get a ton of jewelry-trade magazines, but I haven’t cracked one in weeks.”

      “Guess Marvin blew your chances to make a big splash in New York, huh?”

      She sighed. “I’ve been thinking about it. If I pull out of the show, they’ll probably never invite me to come back. The IJC is run by a bunch of snobs—cream-of-the-crop designers who want to protect their own positions as top dogs. On the other hand, if I show up with a less-than-stellar collection, they’ll also never ask me back.”

      “So there’s no way out?”

      “I have to find the stolen jewelry.” The more she talked, the more depressed she felt about her situation. “Let’s keep working the stores. Somebody, somewhere in this town knows Marvin.”

      HEATH DIDN’T KNOW what to think about Brenna. Her parents hadn’t mentioned anything about a degree from the Kansas City Art Institute, and it hadn’t shown up on a background check. That was a pretty decent school. The way the elder Thompsons had presented Brenna, she’d sounded like a dabbler, a hobbyist. But she didn’t strike him as that way now.

      Then again, what did he know about the jewelry trade?

      Fueled by caffeine and sugar, Heath and Brenna visited several more jewelers. But Brenna’s enthusiasm waned as afternoon wore into evening. No one recognized Marvin, and there was no sign of the stolen loot.

      “Are you ready to go back to your hotel?” Heath asked.

      “Yeah. My feet are killing me. Where are you staying? Somewhere fancy? Our tax dollars at work?”

      “Actually, I’m in the room next door to yours.” But he would probably spend most of the night in his car, alternating shifts with Grif—who was, speak of the devil, sitting down at a table uncomfortably close, his ubiquitous newspaper in hand. Brenna’s back was to Grif, so he grinned and waved at Heath.

      Heath suppressed his urge to grin back. Grif was a good guy, fresh out of the academy and still having fun with the job. Heath sighed quietly, remembering when he was like that.

      “Gee, and I was going to offer to let you sleep in Sonya’s bed,” Brenna said breezily. “Without Sonya, I mean. Since she’s gone. We could have split the cost of the room.”

      Heath’s breath caught in his throat. Share a room with Brenna? Oh, yeah, that would be a smart move.

      “Why would you offer me a place to sleep? I thought you didn’t like me.”

      She batted her eyelashes in that flirty way she had that was starting to drive him crazy. “Well, I would like to know whether you wear that tie to bed.”

      He knew she was flirting to throw him off balance. He clearly wasn’t her type. Her father had said she usually dated “long-haired artistic hippie types.”

      “I don’t think the Bureau would go for me sharing a room with a…with a crime victim and potential witness.” Damn, he’d almost used the word suspect.

      “Probably just as well you have your own room.” She grinned. “Staying with me, you’d be overwhelmed by my potent sexuality.”

      She probably had no idea how close to the truth she was.

      BRENNA STOPPED OFF at her room to change clothes. The weather in Cottonwood, Texas, had been briskly cool when she and Sonya had taken off last night, but it had degenerated into a muggy eighty degrees in southern Louisiana, unusually warm for November even in New Orleans. Her tank top was damp. She thought about taking a shower, then decided she was too hungry. She’d been ravenous the past few days, even for her.

      Heath had suggested she go incognito to the jewelry show, in case Marvin was actually there. The last thing they wanted to do was spook him. She didn’t really think Marvin would be dumb enough to show his face at such a public event when he knew he was wanted. He would con someone else—perhaps Miss FrenchQuarterChic—to sell his stuff. Still, after donning a black denim miniskirt and a purple crop top, she tucked her frosted hair into a baseball cap and put on a pair of nonprescription glasses with pale purple lenses, which she sometimes used as eye protection when working with her jewelry. She slid her feet into a pair of platform sandals and freshened her strawberry lip gloss, then left the room.

      Heath was waiting for her. Still in his suit. She thought his eyes shone with a strange light when he first looked at her, but then it disappeared—if it was ever there.

      “Oh, you look real unobtrusive,” she said. “Only maybe four out of five people would guess you were a cop in the first thirty seconds.”

      He arched one eyebrow at her. “And I suppose you dressed to blend in? Good Lord, have you never heard of a neutral color?”

      “I don’t own neutral colors. And I’ve never been the kind to blend. You don’t think the hat and glasses are enough? As long as Marvin doesn’t get a close look at me, I should be fine.”

      Heath looked doubtful about that, but he didn’t make her change. They set out toward the New Orleans Convention Center, which was on the river just west of the French Quarter and fortunately only a few blocks from their guest house.

      “Where should we go for dinner?” Brenna asked brightly.

      “You’re hungry again?”

      “Those beignets were mostly air. Anyway, you must be starving. Hey, how about that place?” She pointed to a dimly lit bar with a corner doorway that looked as if it hadn’t changed for fifty years. Smoky jazz filtered out into the street.

      “Big Daddy’s Oyster Bar?”

      “It looks like the sort of place that’s not written up in the tourist guides.”

      “There’s probably a reason it’s not written up,” Heath said dubiously.

      “Come on, where’s your sense of adventure? This place is just overflowing with local color.”


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