Gabriel swore as he screwed up the fingering on the arpeggio again. He couldn’t focus on the music because he kept struggling to solve the mystery of Quinn’s revelation. She’d shared the bare facts but had withheld the most important element: her motive. What could have compelled her to commit a crime like that?
He slashed his fingers across the guitar strings in frustration, ripping a discordant wail from the instrument that echoed off the stone walls of the tower room.
“Tough day at the office?”
Gabriel turned to find Raul leaning against the doorjamb, his hands tucked into the pockets of his trousers. He was in full-on prince attire with his charcoal-gray suit jacket buttoned up and his Caleva red tie snugged up to his neck.
“Too bad you’re not dressed for fencing. I could use a good bout right now,” Gabriel said, slinging the guitar around to his back where it hung by its strap. He was tired of wrestling with the damned thing.
Raul strolled in and seated himself on the antique dragon chair. Somehow he made it look like a throne.
“I’d rather fence with you than go to my next meeting,” Raul said with a grimace. “But I don’t have time to take a shower.” He relaxed his stance by stretching out his legs and crossing them at the ankles. “I came to offer a different kind of help. I hear you’re meeting with Kyran Redda in New York. That’s pretty damned impressive.”
“One of my classmates from the conservatory grew up with him and put us in touch,” Gabriel said.
“Yeah, but he wouldn’t give you his time if he didn’t think you were worth it,” Raul said. “He must respect you as a musician.”
“More as a curiosity. A royal duke who also plays the guitar.” Gabriel’s tone was sardonic.
“You don’t give yourself enough credit, primo,” Raul admonished. “Pater is genuinely excited about your culture festival. More excited than I’ve seen him about a project in a while. I want to help you make it happen.” He sat forward. “Clearly, the best use of your time is persuading famous musicians to come, something no one else has the artistic credentials to handle. So I want to handle the behind-the-scenes work, like developing a budget. That would free you up to get the big names on board for next year.”
“Just because I’m meeting with Redda doesn’t mean he will sign on for the festival,” Gabriel said, even as he felt a new pressure to succeed. If his uncle wanted the festival to happen that badly, Gabriel would move heaven and earth to make it so. Tío Luis deserved to have some fun.
“So you’ll get another marquee band instead. I have no doubt about that,” Raul said.
Raul was right, if only because Gabriel wouldn’t quit until he had a star-studded lineup for his uncle. “I accept your offer on the budget. Gracias.” Gabriel was relieved to hand it off to an expert. It would free him up to pursue more performers.
“How’s the practicing going?” Raul gestured toward the guitar banished to Gabriel’s back.
“Today, not so well.” The bleakness on Quinn’s face as she’d told him her surprising story punched him in the gut again.
“Take the rest of the day off.”
Gabriel snorted. “It’s ten in the morning. I’ve barely started. And I leave for New York tomorrow. I can’t afford to take time off.”
Raul looked down at his hands for a moment. “Have you considered postponing the trip? It might be a good idea, given the developments in the kidnapping investigation. Mikel and Quinn have poked the hornet’s nest so hard that one especially nasty hornet flew all the way here.”
“Joder! You too?” Gabriel shook his head before he met Raul’s eyes straight on. “I can’t do it. I can’t wait any longer. I have to know the truth about my music. About my future.”
Although Quinn’s words about who had appointed Marisela Alejo queen of the tocaores floated through his mind. How could this woman with such profound insights have schemed to steal other people’s money? There was more to this than she was revealing.
“The truth is that you have an incredible talent, and you should share it with the world, no matter what anyone else says.” Raul smacked his palm on the chair arm. “Por el amor de Dios, you don’t need to be perfect.”
“No, not perfect. I’ve grown beyond that. But I have to earn a real place in the world of flamenco. I cannot be the tocaor whom people allow to perform and applaud for politely because he is a royal duke.”
“I understand that.” Raul relaxed back into his chair again. “As long as you’re not channeling Abuelo Carlo.”
“How would I do that?”
“You know. The old king wouldn’t let Pater fence on the Calevan Olympic team because he might not have won the gold medal, and that would have embarrassed the royal family and Caleva. The disappointment went deep, both because Pater wanted to compete and because his own father didn’t believe in him enough to let him do it.” Raul’s hand curled into a fist. “He could have won.”
“He still is scary good.” But maybe Gabriel had absorbed some of his abuelo’s attitude. He didn’t want to make a laughingstock of his uncle or Caleva.
“Don’t let that crap stop you.” Raul seemed to read his mind. “You could never embarrass Caleva.”
And that brought him back to Quinn, who thought she would embarrass him, his uncle, and his country. Gabriel eyed his cousin, speculating. How much did Raul know about Quinn?
“You have a weird look on your face,” Raul said. “What is it?”