“Yuri? Eve? I’m here, and I brought the disc. The right one this time.” I took the disc out of my purse and waved it in the air. I don’t know why, it wasn’t like anyone could see it in the pitch dark. “You want to tell me what’s going on?” I asked. “Just tell me where you want me to leave the disc and-”
My flashlight beam skimmed over a body lying on the floor, and my words evaporated in sheer terror.
Though her face was turned away from me, I’d recognize the haircut and the three-inch heels anywhere.
“Eve!” I raced over to where she was sprawled behind the sales counter. Kneeling beside her, I felt for a pulse. It was thready, but it was there, and she was breathing. I barely had time to register relief when I heard a voice behind me.
“Not dead. Drugged.” It was Yuri.
I hopped to my feet and spun to face him. When the flashlight beam hit his face, he put a hand up to his eyes. “You will turn the light off, please,” he said, but I wasn’t in the mood to negotiate. At least not too much or too soon. I lowered the beam toward the floor.
“Drugged? Why?” I asked him. “Eve wasn’t going to cause any trouble. And she’s not the one who changed the discs-that was me. She didn’t know anything about it.”
“I thought as much.” Yuri took a step toward me. When he did, the light of my flashlight glanced over something metal in his hands. A gun.
My blood rushed so loud and so fast in my ears, I could barely hear what he had to say.
“I thought perhaps that it would be quieter if Miss DeCateur took a little nap. Then she would be less trouble and not so whiny. Poor thing. She is so lovely, but I knew she was not smart enough to change one disc for the other. But you, you are. Now, you have brought the disc with you? The proper disc?”
I put my hand-and the disc in it-behind my back.
“I brought the disc. It’s outside. In the car. Here.” With my other hand, I felt around in my purse for my car keys. It was the same hand I was using to hold the flashlight, and as I searched, the light was smothered. When I found the keys, I tossed them in Yuri’s direction, hoping that when he went to catch them, he’d lower the gun that was pointed directly at me. Wrong. He never even tried to catch the keys. They landed on the floor with a clank.
“Come, come, Miss Capshaw. I have just complimented you. I have told you that I believe you to be a bright young woman. The least you can do is offer me the same confidence in return. I am not stupid. You have the disc with you-you said as much when you walked in. If you will hand it over, we can finish with this business.”
“Not until you tell me what’s going on. What did you give Eve? When will she wake up?”
Yuri chuckled. In the dark, the sound was sinister. And too close for comfort-Yuri had taken a few steps closer.
“You do not understand yet, do you?” he asked. “You think life is like the stories you watch on your American television. Happily ever after. That is what you are waiting for, yes?”
I stepped back. “You’re not going to be happy, either, if you don’t get this disc. How else are you ever going to prove that Beyla is guilty?”
My own words echoed back at me. And that’s when it hit me.
Well, actually,hit me is putting it mildly. It ran into me like a freight train going full speed.
I can’t say that I know what a fell swoop is, but I know for sure that’s how the truth came to me. It landed right on top of me, all in one fell swoop.
“You and Beylaare in it together! Just like I thought when I saw you two at the restaurant. You pretended you were just there trying to find out what she knew, but you were really discussing strategy.” When Yuri didn’t answer, I kept right on putting two and two together. “You’re the one who had dinner with Drago at Bucharest that night. Beyla couldn’t have-she was at class. You’re the one who slipped him the foxglove, then she picked the argument with him to throw us off track. That’s why it was so important for you to get the receipt back. You knew it didn’t show that I was guilty. It showed that you were with Drago the night he died.”
“Brava!” Yuri could afford to give me a little bow and a smile that glinted in the glow of my flashlight. After all, he was the one holding the gun. “So, you are as smart as I thought. That’s too bad, really, because it means I will have to kill you.”
Talk about irony-I almost saidover my dead body.
This was one of those times when actions spoke louder than words.
I shone the flashlight right in Yuri’s eyes.
“Bitch!” He put a hand up to shield the beam, but by that time, I’d already made my move. I took off running across the gallery, switching my flashlight off at the last second so I wouldn’t give away my position. A moment later, I ducked below the front windows so that Yuri couldn’t see me against the bit of light that seeped in from the sidewalk that faced M Street.
“You cannot get away.” From the sound of his voice, I guessed that Yuri hadn’t moved far from where we’d started out, but it was hard to tell. The ceilings were open and high, and his words ricocheted against the redbrick walls and the hardwood floors. “It will be easy to find you here.”
I flattened my back against a cold, stone sculpture. “I was lying when I said I had the disc with me. I left it somewhere. Somewhere safe. And without me, you’ll never find it. Then you won’t have Drago’s inventory. That’s what it is, isn’t it? An inventory list of guns?”
Maybe I was imagining it, but I think the fact that I knew about the guns stunned Yuri a bit-he didn’t say anything for what seemed like an eternity. When he did, his voice came from somewhere on my right. Too close for comfort. I moved from the shelter of the sculpture.
“I hope for your sake that you do not think this is the smart way to deal with our little problem,” he said. “You will only make this harder on yourself. Harder on you and harder on her.”
In a flash, the overhead lights came on. I was blinded for a moment, but that moment dissolved all too quickly. When it did, I saw that Yuri had one hand on the light switch. He had dragged Eve to her feet and was holding her upright with his free arm. Her eyes were still closed, and she could barely stand-she swayed back and forth as if she were drunk. Yuri put the gun to Eve’s head.
“The disc,” he said. “Now. Or your friend dies right here, right now, right in front of your eyes.”
He might have been bluffing, but I wasn’t willing to take the chance. Not with Eve’s life.
I kept my place and held the disc out to him. “Here. Come and get it.”
“Bring it to me.”
“Move away from Eve.”
Yuri laughed. “You try so hard to bargain. I am impressed, Miss Capshaw. Who would have thought that a bank teller could be so tough? But there will be no bargaining. Just as there is no escape. You know too much.”
“You mean about the guns.”
“The guns, yes. The guns Drago was smuggling into this country. He did not want to share the profits, you see.”
“And you figured since you were partners in the gallery, you should be partners in the gun business, too. Except…” Another light went on, this time inside my head. “You weren’t partners in the gallery. You were the one who trashed the place looking for the disc, and when you didn’t find it, Beyla had to come back to look.”
“Very good.” Yuri’s smile was anything but friendly.
“And Tyler, he said something once about how now that Drago was dead, the gallery was closed up. I should have known right then and there. He didn’t just mean it was closed for the day. He meant it was closed for good, and that means that you and Drago were never partners. You were trying to take over his turf in the gun-smuggling business. You and Beyla.”
“If only you had put as much thought into your silly investigation as you are now. Then, perhaps, you would not have trusted me so much. But you didn’t. And now…” Yuri had the nerve to shrug, like we were discussing something no more important than the weather. “When the police find your bodies here, they will be baffled, yes?”