When he only shrugged, she walked to the pier. It groaned and swayed under her feet, and she lowered herself carefully.
“Actually, it started back in 1912 or ’13, with my great-grandmother, Bianca.”
“I’ve heard the fairy tale.” He could smell her now, flowers and sweat, and it made his stomach tighten. “She was an unhappy wife with a rich and difficult husband. She compensated by taking a lover. Somewhere along the line, she supposedly hid her emerald necklace. Insurance if she got up the guts to leave. Instead of taking off into the sunset with her lover, she jumped out of the tower window, and the emeralds were never found.”
“It wasn’t precisely—”
“Now your family’s decided to start a treasure hunt,” he went on as if she hadn’t spoken. “Got a lot of press out of it, and more trouble than I imagine you bargained for. I heard you had some excitement a couple of weeks ago.”
“If you can call my sister being held at knifepoint excitement, yes.” The fire had come into her eyes. She wasn’t always good at defending herself, but when it came to her family, she was a scrapper. “The man who was working with Livingston, or whatever the bastard’s calling himself now, nearly killed Lilah and her fiancé.”
“When you’ve got priceless emeralds with a legend attached, the rats gnaw through the woodwork.” He knew about Livingston. Holt had been a cop for ten years, and though he’d spent most of that time in Vice, he’d read reports on the slick and often violent jewel thief.
“The legend and the emeralds are my family’s business.”
“So why come to me? I turned in my shield. I’m retired.”
“I didn’t come to you for professional help. It’s personal.” She took another breath, wanting to be clear and concise. “Lilah’s fiancé used to be a history professor at Cornell. A couple of months ago, Livingston, going under the name of Ellis Caufield, hired him to go through the family papers he’d stolen from us.”
Holt continued to polish the brightwork. “Doesn’t sound like Lilah developed any taste.”
“Max didn’t know the papers were stolen,” Suzanna said between her teeth. “When he found out, Caufield nearly killed him. In any case, Max came to The Towers and continued his research for us. We’ve documented the emeralds’ existence, and we’ve even interviewed a servant who worked at The Towers the year Bianca died.”
Holt shifted and continued to work. “You’ve been busy.”
“Yes. She corroborates the story that the necklace was hidden and that Bianca was in love and planning to leave her husband. The man she was in love with was an artist.” She waited a beat. “His name was Christian Bradford.”
Something flickered in his eyes then was gone. Very deliberately he set down his rag. He pulled a cigarette from a pack, flicked on a lighter then slowly blew out a haze of smoke.
“Do you really expect me to believe that little fantasy?”
She’d hoped for surprise, even amazement. She’d gotten boredom. “It’s true. She used to meet him on the cliffs near The Towers.”
He gave her a thin smile that was very close to a sneer. “Saw them, did you? Oh, I’ve heard about the ghost, too.” He drew in more smoke, lazily released it. “The melancholy spirit of Bianca Calhoun, drifting through her summer home. You Calhouns are just full of—stories.”
Her eyes darkened, but her voice remained very controlled. “Bianca Calhoun and Christian Bradford were in love. The summer she died, they met often on the cliffs just below The Towers.”
That touched a chord, but he only shrugged. “So what?”
“So there’s a connection. My family can’t afford to overlook any connection, particularly one so vital as this one. It’s very possible she told him where she put the emeralds.”
“I don’t see what a flirtation—an unsubstantiated flirtation—between two people some eighty years ago has to do with emeralds.”
“If you could get past this prejudice you seem to have toward my family, we might be able to figure it out.”
“Not interested in either part.” He flipped open the top of a small cooler. “Want a beer?”
“No.”
“Well, I’m fresh out of champagne.” Watching her, he twisted off the top, tossed it toward a plastic bucket then drank deeply. “You know, if you think about it, you’d see it’s a little tough to swallow. The lady of the manor, well-bred, well-off, and the struggling artist. Doesn’t play, babe. You’d be better off dropping the whole thing and concentrating on planting your flowers. Isn’t that what you’re doing these days?”
He could make her angry, she thought, but he wasn’t going to shake her from her purpose. “My sisters’ lives were threatened; my home has been broken into. Idiots are sneaking around in my garden and digging up my rosebushes.” She stood, tall and slim and furious. “I have no intention of dropping the whole thing.”
“Your business.” He flicked the cigarette away before jumping effortlessly onto the pier. It shook and swayed beneath them. He was taller than she remembered, and she had to angle her chin to keep her eyes level. “Just don’t expect to suck me into it.”
“All right then. I’ll just stop wasting my time and yours.”
He waited until she’d stepped off the pier. “Suzanna.” He liked the way it sounded when he said it. Soft and feminine and old-fashioned. “You ever learn to drive?”