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The Black Painting
The Black Painting
The Black Painting
Ebook308 pages5 hours

The Black Painting

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

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A literary mystery about an old-money East Coast family facing the suspicious death of its patriarch, andthe unsolved theft of a Goya painting rumoured to be cursed.The fascinating creation of Goya's “black paintings” has not been covered widely. Readers are consistently interested in the unusual stories of forgery, theft, tortured geniuses, and wealthy owners that go with the world of fine art.

There were four cousins in the Morse family: perfect Kenny, the preppy West Coast lawyer; James, the shy but brilliant medical student; his seductive, hard–drinking sister Audrey; and Teresa, youngest and most fragile, haunted by the fear that she has inherited the madness that possessed her father.

Their grandfather summons them to his mansion at Owl's Point. None of them has visited the family estate since they were children, when a prized painting disappeared: a self–portrait by Goya, rumoured to cause madness or death upon viewing. Afterwards, the family split apart amid the accusations and suspicions that followed its theft.

Any hope that their grandfather planned to make amends evaporates when Teresa arrives to find the old man dead, his horrified gaze pinned upon the spot where the painting once hung. As the family gathers and suspicions mount, Teresa hopes to find the reasons behind her grandfather's death and the painting's loss. But to do so she must uncover ugly family secrets and confront those who would keep them hidden.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 1, 2018
ISBN9781489251268
Author

Neil Olson

Neil Olson, the grandson of Greek immigrants, works in the publishing industry and lives in New York City with his wife.

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Rating: 3.0263157789473683 out of 5 stars
3/5

19 ratings7 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Can paintings be possessed? The family at the center of this story thinks so. They’ve been haunted by a Goya painting for years, and blame it for the horrible things that have happened in their lives. Goya’s work *is* startling in its rawness but it’s the evil perpetrated by the living that startles me the most. Good book....
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    What a great premise, right? Unfortunately, the actual story failed to live up to it. 

    The story itself had all the makings to be great. You have a painting that contains a demon in it, and this painting is stolen. The owner of the painting, Teresa's grandfather, is found dead with a look of horror on his face. And everyone in the family wants to find this painting because of its wealth - and because of the powers it is rumored to hold. The problem with the story, however, is the plot doesn't really stick to the script. It meanders and flows in so many different directions that it is hard to keep track. I don't care about any of the other side plots, I just want to know what is going on with this painting! It was so frustrating to read this novel because I never got the information or the story I wanted.

    There were also a lot of characters. As in, way too many. There was nothing to really set any of them apart, and there was just so many names being dropped with no proper development that they all melded into one. It almost felt like I was experiencing whiplash, what with the sheer volume of characters and character interactions that were present in this novel. This is what happens when a story doesn't have any character development whatsoever - and it was an experience I do not want to ever repeat. 

    As I'm writing this review, I feel quite sad. This novel could have been so good. And I don't want to bash the author's efforts to write and publish a book. But there was no redeeming quality about this book. There was no effort made to keep the plot concise and interesting. There was absolutely no character development, leaving the reader swamped by the sheer number of players in this book. It was just not a good book. For those reasons, I'm giving this a 1/5 stars.

    I received this novel as an advance copy from NetGalley in exchange for my honest review.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book reminds me of the gothic mysteries I read as a young teenager - a crazy family, money to inherit, secrets everywhere, a mysterious painting. A quick, entertaining read.

    (A review copy of this book was provided by the publisher.)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    More of a mystery novel than anything supernatural. This novel was pretty good, and kept me entertained throughout it. The cast was a mix of horrible people, only a couple with some redeeming properties. Goya and his paintings being the best, or course.
    Emily Woo Zeller was the Narrator, and she was very good at this. I will have to find more of her audiobooks.
    This novel gets 3.5 stars, and is recommended to art lovers, and mystery lovers.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    An obscure Goya self-portrait is at the center of The Black Painting and the Morse family, who owns it. Or did until it was stolen after which time the family fractured amidst distrust and dysfuntion. Now with their grandfather dead under mysterious circumstances, cousins Teresa, James, Audrey, and Kenny are brought back together for the first time in a decade and things get complicated fast. Too complicated. I finished because it’s a mystery and I wanted to know whodunit, but got the sense that Olson decided the murderer at the last minute by throwing a dart at the list of characters.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I've always been an easy mark for any book focusing on art theft and art history, so when I learned of The Black Painting, I had very high hopes. For the most part, those hopes were not realized. As much as the very first sentence tries to evoke Daphne du Maurier's superb Rebecca, it falls short. The entire cast reminded me of the motley crew of Gone Girl-- scarcely a one of them that I wanted to have anything to do with and none of them that I cared one tiny bit about. Self-absorption and greed ruled their lives. Yawn. Teresa is, by far, the best of the lot, but she's so ethereal she's like a bit of fog blown on and off screen. She's not enough of a presence to carry the narrative load.

    Most of the time, this unlikable bunch of misfits prowled around the property like a pack of hyenas, their sole concern being the amount of money they inherit from their grandfather. The only time the book came to life was when Goya's fantastic Black Paintings became the focus. The first time I learned of their existence was when I took an art history class in college. Even as mere illustrations in a book, these paintings are so powerful that they've remained in my mind ever since. If only Olson's novel had one-tenth their power!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I’ve often enjoyed novels about art and art history So much can be hidden in works of art that they are the perfect topic to base a mystery on. I remember reading a few years ago, that art curators had discovered in a portrait a miniature self-portrait of the artist rendered as the reflection in the pupil of eye the subject painted century’s before. I digress, but this is an example of the fascinating things that make the art world the perfect setting for a novel.

    Neil Olson apparently agrees as both of his novels to date center around works of art, in this case a supposed fifteenth painting created during Francisco Goya’s Black Painting phase, a self-portrait reputedly able to induce death or madness in those who view it. In this, Olson’s second noel, wealthy New England patriarch Arthur Morse has summoned his many offspring and descendants home to his estate to discuss…who knows? The first of his grandchildren arrive to find him dead on the floor, his face a mask of terror and his sightless eyes gazing fixedly at the spot where his prized possession, the aforementioned cursed Goya self-portrait, would have stood had it not been stolen several years ago under mysterious circumstances. As the rest of the family arrives, the reader begins to see that this odd assemblage is about as far from being a big happy family as one can imagine. Past events, including the disappearance of the painting have left them paranoid, suspicious, traumatized, and unable to trust each other. What is happening at Owl’s Point is anybody’s guess but you can be sure that a lot of ugly secrets will be uncovered before the whole story is revealed.

    Olson writes with a sensitivity most often found in female authors, which allows him to focus on the inner angst and psychological torment of the Morse family’s many members, especially Teresa, art history student and youngest granddaughter, who suffered an unknown trauma during the original events and whose discovery of her grandfather’s body threatens to send her over the deep end again.

    My impression of this book was that it focused too much on the dysfunctional Morse family and not enough on the mystery. Olson can definitely write but I’d like to see him tighten up his plot and focus more on the mystery that is ultimately what keeps the reader engaged.

    *The review was based on an advanced reading copy obtained at no cost from the publisher in exchange for an unbiased review. While this does take any ‘not worth what I paid for it’ statements out of my review, it otherwise has no impact on the content of my review.

    FYI: On a 5-point scale I assign stars based on my assessment of what the book needs in the way of improvements:
    *5 Stars – Nothing at all. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
    *4 Stars – It could stand for a few tweaks here and there but it’s pretty good as it is.
    *3 Stars – A solid C grade. Some serious rewriting would be needed in order for this book to be considered great or memorable.
    *2 Stars – This book needs a lot of work. A good start would be to change the plot, the character development, the writing style and the ending.
    *1 Star – The only thing that would improve this book is a good bonfire.

Book preview

The Black Painting - Neil Olson

1

Last night she dreamed of the house on Owl’s Point. Waning sunlight bathed the old brick face, and waves pounded the rocks below. Her cousins were there. James, whom she loved, and his sister Audrey, whom she despised. James tried to warn her of some threat hidden in the pines, but his sister only laughed. Audrey was grown-up, looking as she had at her wedding. Disheveled and slightly mad. James was the child he always was in her dreams, never older than eleven. As if his life had stopped there. Though the dream disturbed Teresa, there was nothing odd in the fact of it. At her grandfather’s request she was returning to Owl’s Point for the first time in fifteen years.

The train car swayed gently. Connecticut coast swept past the window. Rocky woods gave way to broad swaths of gray water and the dark smudge of Long Island. Streams ran through acres of marsh grass, and an egret took flight, white wings pumping. Sometimes it felt like Teresa had spent her life on this train. Going back and forth to school. Later to visit friends and professors still in New Haven. Before that, long before, were the trips to her grandparents in Langford. The house and grounds were a vast and beguiling world where she and her cousins burned countless hours, outside the normal flow of time. They built a tree fort in the big oak. They explored the inlet by the bridge in their canoes. They played epic games of hide-and-seek. There was no beach, but Audrey—against all warnings—would leap from the black rocks into the surf. Just as she would climb the tallest trees, or slip out an attic window to crawl around on the slate roof of the mansion. No punishment or injury deterred her, and that recklessness continued into adulthood.

It was Teresa and James who discovered the indoor secrets. The dumbwaiter that ran from the cold cellar to the master bedroom—by way of the kitchen, where you could fling open the door and scare Jenny, the cook. The hidden closet under the stairs, where they fell asleep one afternoon and threw the house into a panic. The unfinished room in the attic, the crawl space in the wine cellar, more places that she had since forgotten. Only Grandpa’s study was off-limits. Teresa looked forward to the trips to Owl’s Point for weeks beforehand. They were the highlight of summer, or any season. Until they abruptly stopped.

No one else left the train at Langford. The platform was short and broken. Only eight cars were in the lot, none of them her grandfather’s green Jaguar. Teresa remembered that he no longer drove, so she looked for Ilsa. Had they forgotten she was coming? That seemed unlikely, but ten minutes passed without any sign of a ride. She reached for her phone, then stopped. If she had ever known the Owl’s Point number, it was lost to memory. She could call her mother, of course, but she would rather drink paint thinner. It was two miles to the house, more or less. On a narrow and twisty lane. Teresa sighed. Then she slung her bag, walked past the coffee shop, bank, jewelers, and up the slope of Long Hill Road.

There is absolutely no need to go there, she heard her mother say, an echo of last night’s argument.

He’s asked all the grandchildren, Teresa had replied, though Miranda knew that. Kenny and Audrey and James have agreed.

That’s their choice. You can make a different one.

Mother.

Whatever he wants to say he can put in a letter or a telephone call.

Do you know what he wants to say?

For goodness’ sake, how would I know that?

Because he’s your father.

Miranda treated the fact as an accusation, and the conversation went downhill fast. Trudging up the steep and tree-shrouded lane, Teresa pictured her mother in the West Village apartment, bought when there was still family money. Tending her exotic roses or painting in her studio. Flitting about in those bright Indian shawls with her artsy friends. Clueless about the real world.

Stop, Teresa said aloud. Only the trees as witnesses. Just stop. Stop being angry with your mother, with everyone.

A car was rushing up the hill behind her. She could hear the high performance motor straining through the steep turn. They all drove too fast around here, and of course there was no sidewalk. Who would walk anywhere in Langford? She stepped off the road into a mass of saplings and early fallen leaves. Praying not to be hit. Or that at least it should be a quick death from a very expensive car.

It was a red Lexus convertible, which missed her by several feet. She saw a blur of blond hair and sunglasses, then the car slowed immediately, pulling onto the scant margin forty yards ahead. The driver jumped up in the seat and turned, calling out merrily.

Tay-ray!

Dear God in Heaven. Audrey.

Well, don’t just stand there, her cousin shouted.

At least she would not have to walk the rest of the way. Dutifully, Teresa marched toward the vehicle. Like a condemned man. To her horror, Audrey leaped out and swept her into a hug. She smelled musky. Some combination including sandalwood, vodka and sweat. She carried a few extra pounds, though in all the right places. Audrey stepped back to survey her younger, skinny, dark-haired cousin.

Look at you all grown-up, she gushed.

I was twenty years old at your wedding, said Teresa.

Yeah, Audrey conceded. But there were, like, four hundred people there. And I was completely wasted. Teresa had to laugh at the admission, and Audrey flashed a peroxide smile. Get in. I guess we’re going the same way.

Teresa climbed in and buckled up as Audrey gunned the engine. With hardly a glance either way, she shot back onto the road.

When did you get this car? Teresa shouted over the wind and motor.

In the divorce, said Audrey, matter-of-fact. Piece of crap, but I’m broke right now, so I’m stuck with it. What do you drive?

Nothing.

Seriously?

New York has excellent public transportation.

Socialist, Audrey jeered. This ain’t New York. Why were you walking?

Because you were late? Teresa guessed. Audrey did a double take.

Wait, what? Nobody told me to pick you up. I didn’t even know you were coming.

Teresa’s anxiety, briefly quelled, rose up again.

There was no one at the station. I figured Ilsa would get me. We spoke two days ago.

Ilsa, Audrey scoffed. She must be like a hundred years old now.

I don’t think she’s more than seventy. Maybe not even.

Whatever, at least you were wearing the right shoes.

Teresa’s boots were low-heeled and comfortable. She never wore anything that was not good for walking. For her grandfather’s interview, she had put on a tasteful gray suit. Audrey was driving barefoot, but a pair of red pumps was jammed half under the seat. She wore tight black jeans and a white V-neck tee to show off her big tanned boobs. Because you never knew when you might meet a hot guy at your decrepit grandfather’s house.

"So qué pasa, Tay-ray? What’s going on in your life?"

The nickname came from her father Ramón’s pronunciation. Not the Anglicized Ta-ree-sa, but the Spanish Tay-ray-sa. For the Saint. James started calling her Tay-ray when they were four years old. She liked the name on his lips. With Audrey, it always sounded like a taunt.

I’m back in school, Teresa replied. Graduate school.

I heard. Art appreciation or something?

It’s called art history, she said impatiently. Art appreciation is what your mother does at the country club.

"My mother just got plowed there. Audrey slid the sunglasses down and smirked. A little defensive, are we?"

No.

Are you painting? Isn’t that what you really wanted to do?

Watch the road.

They had swung up on the rear of a gray Volvo. Its cautious speed annoyed Audrey beyond reason.

This is ridiculous. Speed up or move over, granny.

Don’t, Teresa said, sensing her cousin’s intention. Do not try to pass her on this narrow—Audrey!

The Lexus was already moving around the slower car, simultaneously shaping a very tight—and blind—curve. Teresa closed her eyes and prayed to the God in whom she no longer believed. When she opened them again they were accelerating along what must be the only straightaway in Langford. Audrey was hooting.

Oh, Tay, you should see your face. Am I going to have to clean that seat?

I would punch you in the head if you weren’t driving.

Audrey laughed even harder.

I like this feisty you, she declared. "You were such a drip as a kid. With your pasty skin and your books and your condition. Who knew you would grow up to be such a tough girl? All ninety pounds of you."

It was a hundred and three, by why argue? Teresa had as much trouble keeping weight on as other women did losing it. It was actually a problem, but not one for which she would get any sympathy, so she learned not to discuss it.

Is James at the house? she asked, as much to change the subject as from real curiosity.

Nope, Audrey answered. James and Kenny were yesterday. You and me today.

Oh. Teresa tried to hide her disappointment, though her cousin surely noticed. She used to tease that James and Teresa would get married someday. Why?

Why do you think? Audrey said, smile gone sour. But her disgust was not with Teresa. Boys first, then girls. Men have serious stuff to talk about, right? Careers, obligations, all that. Women, we’re just frivolous creatures.

It probably doesn’t help that you act like a frivolous creature, Teresa wanted to say, but did not.

I don’t think Grandpa feels that way. I don’t remember—

Exactly, Audrey cut her off. You don’t remember. You were how old the last time you saw him? Nine, ten?

I’m the same age as your brother.

So eleven. Both of you off in your own little world. Kenny and me were older, we saw what was going on. This family has always been about the boys.

Did James tell you why we’ve been summoned?

No, Audrey said. Little prick hasn’t returned my call. I’m guessing it’s to pass on some precious wisdom before the old geezer kicks it.

Teresa recognized the brick pillars wreathed in ivy even as Audrey slowed for the turn. Sixty-Six Long Hill Road. Owl’s Point. The drive dipped down into a marsh with a narrow bridge, barely wide enough for the car. This was where they swam and canoed. Where Kenny caught the sand shark. Where he nearly drowned Audrey after she teased him once too often. It was as Teresa remembered, but also different. Smaller. They ascended again, through a grove of cedars and a huge bank of rhododendron. And there was the house. Three stories of red brick and slate. The blue shutters and door were faded. The steel cross on the lawn—the work of some second-tier sculptor—was rusted and had a branch wedged in the crossbar. There were no cars in sight. Audrey killed the engine, and silence fell over them.

Huh, Audrey said, beginning to share Teresa’s unease.

You think they might be out?

Ilsa maybe. Audrey stepped from the car and slapped her door closed, startling a crow from a pine tree. The old guy never goes anywhere.

Have you seen him? Teresa asked, getting out and following. I mean, have you been here since...

Since the theft? Maybe twice, but not for years. You?

No, Teresa said. Never. I’ve spoken to him on the phone. I thought I might see him at your wedding.

He was invited, Audrey said. I think someone told him not to come. Wow, this place has really gone to hell.

They stood before the door, which was badly chipped. The whole house had a mournful air about it, though that may have been Teresa’s imagination. And the late September light. Audrey was about to hit the bell when Teresa noticed the door was a few inches ajar.

Look. It’s open.

They exchanged a quick glance. Then Audrey pushed the heavy door and marched in.

Hello? The girls are here—anyone around?

Teresa followed her into the front hall, papered in a fading green of leafy vines. A wide, carpeted stairway ascended on the right. The look and even the smell of the place—wood polish and dust—was instantly familiar. Yet like the property outside, it was diminished by time and wear. That magical house of Teresa’s childhood no longer existed. Near the stairs, Audrey was looking at the control panel of what must be a fairly new house alarm. The display read: Disarmed.

They must be home or they would have set the alarm, Audrey said, tightness creeping into her voice. You look around here, I’ll check upstairs.

Teresa started to protest, but could think of no reason why. Then she realized that she did not want to be left alone. Her face flushed with embarrassment, but Audrey was already bounding up the stairs. Get a grip, Teresa said to herself. It’s an old house. Full of sadness and memories, but nothing to be afraid of. You haven’t believed in evil paintings since you were a little girl, and anyway it was stolen. It’s not here anymore.

It took only a glance into the sitting and dining rooms to confirm they were empty. She went slowly down the hall, glancing at old vases and portraits without seeing them. Dread gripped her. She had shed childish superstitions in college. She took pride in her scientific view of art, of the world. Yet some habits stuck. Such as the belief in her own instinct, which was correct more often than she could explain. And which was telling her right now that there was nothing alive in this house.

The billiard room was also empty, the table covered in a white tarp. Teresa enjoyed the game, but she was a poor player. Audrey was the pool shark. Hustling Kenny for his summer allowance while James and Teresa played chess in the corner. For a moment, she saw the ghosts of their younger selves scattered around the room. There and gone.

The corridor to the kitchen beckoned, but she was stopped short by something she had never seen before. The door to her grandfather’s study stood open. In all of Teresa’s time here that door had been a virtual wall. Locked when the old man was not inside, closed even when he was. Always closed. Now, just the glimpse of afternoon light falling across an ornate desk and a blue-and-red oriental carpet, thrilled her with fear and wonder. She took a deep breath and forced herself to walk through the door.

It was a smaller room than expected, but otherwise exactly as she had envisioned it. Bookcases lined the walls, though there was space enough for one painting directly behind the desk. Did she only imagine the faint square where the cream paint seemed brighter? It had hung there a long time before some brave soul seized it. She looked away, as if even this outline might retain a lethal potency. A set of casement windows let in the mellow autumn light. The fireplace stood like an open black maw. Was that the same iron poker the thieves had used to clout Ilsa, or did Grandpa replace the set?

On the near wall was a cracked leather sofa, and on it sat a man.

Not sat, but sprawled, in a position that must surely be uncomfortable. One slipper dangled off the pale left foot. His dressing gown—dusky gold with red Chinese dragons—was badly rumpled. Teresa knew that dressing gown. Indeed, she would have said the man was her grandfather, except for his awful stillness. And the expression of abject terror which twisted his features. The dead blues eyes were fixed on the empty space across the room.

Teresa?

Audrey’s voice from the back stairs broke the spell. Teresa shuddered with an animal revulsion, then backpedaled. Until she struck a bookcase and fell to her knees. There had been a noise. A deep, guttural moan whose source she could not identify. The man? Had he groaned? Then she understood that she herself had made the noise. She tried to speak, but no words would come.

Was that you? Audrey asked, rushing into the room. Did you hurt yourself? What is the... Oh. Oh, man.

Teresa could not even look at her cousin. As much as she wished to, she could not take her eyes from the hideous gray face.

Okay, said Audrey between deep breaths. Okay, Teresa? Look at me. Don’t look at him, look at me.

She tried to obey, but could not move her head. She could not even close her eyes. She would be looking at that face for the rest of her life. Then something intervened. Audrey’s white T-shirt. Then her face. Those blue eyes. Like their grandfather’s, though bright and full of life.

Audie, Teresa whispered. A frightened four-year-old girl again.

"I know, sweetheart. It’s all right, let’s get you out of this room. No, don’t. The voice went from compassion to anger in a moment, or maybe it was only panic. Don’t you dare have one of your fits right now. Stay with me, Teresa."

It was no use. The hard edges of the world fractured into prismatic color. Her senses closed down, and she saw into the heart of the universe. For a bare moment she understood everything. Then a blinding light absorbed her. She felt her body go slack, go liquid, vanish. She gave herself up to the light.

"Teresa. Teresa."

2

For madness, no one could top Goya. Drunks, murderers, victims of violence. Lunatics beset by demons or witches summoning them. Gods destroying their children. The Spaniard had seen it all, in the war-torn landscape of his country or in his own troubled mind, and captured it on canvas. Including at least one thing he should not have caught.

Francisco José de Goya. Teresa had known the name always. It was synonymous with fear. She was as easily scared as any sensitive girl who read too much, and the scariest things were those left to your imagination. Her grandfather, usually kind, was stern and absolute in one matter. Stay out of the study. Never go in for any reason. The fear could not be explained away as Teresa grew older because it was so obviously shared by her mother and uncles. They had also known of the painting all their lives, although only the eldest, Philip, had actually seen it. And he never spoke to his brother or sister about what he saw. Of course the old man saw it every day, and he was neither struck dead nor driven mad. There was a trick to it, or there was a type of person able to withstand the portrait’s awful gaze. More than withstand it, but learn and prosper from the contact. This was explained to Teresa by her father, Ramón, who counted himself among those so gifted. For he had seen the painting many times. Whether and how it had damaged him was anyone’s guess.

There were many reasons Teresa could invent for her obsession with art. Because it was something she shared with her father and grandfather, who took her to all the best museums in New York and Boston. Because her impulse toward the mystical and curiosity about her Spanish heritage found their perfect union and expression in the artists she adored: El Greco, Zurbarán, Goya. Because she was so bad at the hard sciences that a humanities degree was her only choice. But she knew very well that the obsession had its roots in that first terror and fascination of childhood. The haunted self-portrait by Goya from his solitary days in the Quinta del Sordo. A painting that had left one man dead in Teresa’s lifetime, and carried the rumor of death and insanity in a long train behind it. A painting she had never seen, and never would.

* * *

The ambulance made its slow way around the drive and out of sight. No lights or siren. There was no need. A police cruiser escorted it, but the nondescript brown sedan that arrived later was still parked out there. The detective must be somewhere talking to Audrey, yet the house was quiet. Teresa was in the sitting room. She had been lying down, recovering from her migraine. But the settee was too hard, made for perching, not reclining. She was sitting up now, sipping from a glass of water Audrey had left for her. Everything that had happened since finding the dead man was vague and disjointed.

She was ashamed of her uselessness. She should be calling people, starting with her mother. She should be speaking to the sad-faced detective—it was she who had found the body, after all. Mostly she should not be falling to pieces like a fragile girl, leaving Audrey to handle everything. Audrey, who had been praising Teresa’s toughness only an hour ago. Who had kept her cool in the presence of death. Whatever her faults, the woman clearly had strengths which Teresa had been slow to perceive. Slow or unwilling. Her sense of Audrey as a person was trapped in the past, in a wounded child’s perceptions.

Voices approached down the hall, and Teresa stood. She was unsteady, but did not want to seem meek or ill. Audrey’s voice rose sharply just outside of the room, then fell silent. One set of footsteps retreated, and a moment later the detective appeared in the door.

He was tall and lean, though his face was puffy. Dark hair retreated from his forehead, and his hound dog eyes made you want to comfort him. It was a face you trusted, which must be useful for a detective.

Miss Marías. How are you?

Fine, she said, pleased by the firmness of her voice. Call me Teresa.

I’m Detective Waldron.

You introduced yourself before, she remembered.

Right, I wasn’t sure if you, ah...

Was in my right mind? she supplied, forcing a smile. "I really am okay now. Won’t you

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