Page 1 of Shift in the Blood

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Chapter One

Clara

Ishouldn’t be here. I rarely do business face to face. Certainly not with new clients, and never where my boss can see me. But Maxim’s done so much damage already, he’s left me no choice. We started out as art forger and art thief, and now he thinks he owns me.

I took a deep breath, smoothing out my humid hair, my hammering heart, and the hiked-up hem of my dress. Off to the side of the red-carpet entrance of the museum’s annual gala, I gave myself one final check. This had to go right. I only had one shot. My clutch under my arm, my chin tilted high, I assumed the air of someone who belonged .

After the last job I’d done, I’d made the call that it was time to go legit. No more forgeries. No more shady characters. No more putting myself—or more importantly, my little sister Carina—at risk. Of course, the guy who had been hiring me, Maxim Popov, wasn’t going to be thrilled, but I’d saved up enough for us to leave and start over. We wouldn’t be living in luxury, but we’d be comfortable and safe. Until my accounts froze. Until I found myself trapped.

Just when I thought there was no way out for me, the email of a lifetime came in.

His name was Didier Hugo. I’ve heard of him, even seen a flattering picture of him. In his photo, he seems to glow. He’s attractive, older than me, and desirable. All those positive aspects are enhanced by his rumored wealth, his well-known reclusiveness.

He wants to hire me.

Not just for one painting, but for six. Six of them from this exhibit.

When I make it past security, and into the first room of paintings, I stop. There’s nothing else I can do. Timotheé Laferriere is the reason I became a painter. My parents took me to an exhibit that had his work, and once I saw his paintings, I stood next to them, staring from as many angles as possible, trying to take all of it in. The way he used light, and shadow, and his brush strokes—he’s my standard of genius. Not to mention, he paints fields of wheat and a woman’s profile so beautifully that it nearly brings me to tears.

How in the name of all the saints am I supposed to copy this? In a way that even comes close to the beauty spread out before me? I’m breathless at the assault on my senses.

I have no clue how Didier Hugo got my contact info. Maxim tends to keep those who work for him under lock, key, and concrete if you’re not careful. He’s not a guy who shares anything. Certainly not his most profitable forger.

I sighed. When it was just me and Carina packing up and getting out, that was stressful enough. Now I’m carrying enough stress to turn my hair gray overnight. Didier Hugo has offered me enough money for six paintings that Carina can finish her bachelor’s degree, go on for a masters, and take her time getting her PhD. All while I live in a nice area and pay someone to clean for us.

That kind of money is impossible to turn down, even to someone who recently found morals. I thought I’d lost them forever when my parents died in a car crash, leaving me fresh out of college with a sister in high school to take care of. There had been enough money at first, but like everything, the money ran out. So I started doing commissions while still in school. Commissions led me to Maxim Popov, who made it lucrative for me to forge the paintings he requested. He told me he wanted to have a collection of the greats for himself without the millions involved to obtain them. It took me a year to figure out that I was painting work that suddenly disappeared, fell off a truck, or met with some unfortunate fate only to be discovered just in time for an opening, a sale, or special exhibit.

Maxim kept me busy, and Carina and I were able to live.

But I didn’t want to be a forger anymore. I could imitate most artists. I enjoyed the challenge. Now I wanted to find my own style, lost years ago to necessity and the desire to eat.

Until Didier Hugo requested that we meet.

I’d been careful. If Maxim knew… the shudder moved up my spine like a slithering snake. He’d kill me. It was that simple. He didn’t share.

I walked along the paintings, behind the row of people that were clustered in front of each one, bathing in the luminous glow that radiated from each canvas. For a man of dubious means, who lived in provincial France over four hundred years ago, Timotheé Laferriere expressed nothing but joy and delight in his surroundings.

One of the paintings, titledFemme au Repos, or Woman at Rest, featured a woman sitting on a rock. The light made it look like late afternoon, and her dress was that of a farmer or peasant. She wore a kerchief around her hair, but the glint of auburn peeked out around the edges of the kerchief. The tip of her nose held the slightest brush of pink, and she was looking off in the distance, away from the painter.

To me, it looked like Laferriere knew this woman. He painted her with love, caring, and great precision. I didn’t know how to describe it in technical terms. His feeling for this woman leapt off the canvas, drawing the viewer in, and making you want to sit next to her, close your eyes, and enjoy the late afternoon sun.

This was one of the six recently discovered paintings. These six works had never been seen before. No one knew who had them, or where they had been all these years. The provenance was assured, according to the museum’s catalogue. They were delighted to have the newly revealed works. Anyone would be.

“Thank you for meeting me here,” a man’s voice said behind me. His voice was like smooth silk gliding over my skin, and I wanted to fall back into it and let it surround me. “Don’t turn around, please. Just listen.”

“I’m listening,” I said, not taking my eyes away fromFemme au Repos.

“Excellent. I am Didier Hugo. I would like to, as I mentioned, commission you to paint the six new paintings in this exhibit. We are agreed that is the work we discussed?” His voice, still silken, got right down to business.

How did anyone concentrate around him? He also smelled delicious, like the coolness of a lake at sunset. Fresh and green and crisp. Intoxicating.

“We are,” I spoke in a low tone, following his lead.

“What do you think of this one?” His tone shifted slightly, becoming more conversational, less enticing.

“I love this. I was most excited to see this one after seeing it listed in the catalogue.”

“Why?”