your duplex,â Max said. âYouâre grinning. What?â
âI still donât feel like a landlord.â
âWhat does a landlord feel like? Does this take special training? You think youâre not mean enough, tough enough?â
She gave him a sly look.
âTough as boots,â Max said. âYou donât mind having friends as tenants? With Ryan in the other unitâ¦â
âI love having Ryan there. We havenât disagreed yet. The few improvementsâ¦We settle the cost over a cup of coffee. Ryan does the work, I buy the materials. What could be simpler?â
âI married a sensible woman, to say nothing of her beauty.â
The biggest improvement so far to the duplex, after the initial painting and cleaning up, had been the backyard fence for Ryanâs lovely weimaraner, an addition well worth the money. It was a real plus to have a guard dog on the premises. Ryanâs side of the building had already been the scene of a kidnapping, and, just a month ago, the scene of a shocking murder. Such events were not all that common in their small quiet village, but Charlie and Max both hoped the big, well-trained dog would put a stop to any unsettling trend.
The other tenants, in the one-bedroom side, would be leaving in February, four months hence. Charlie wondered if Kate would want to wait that long. She watched Kate and Ryan, and Ryanâs sister Hanni, with their heads together laughing. Golden hair and dark, and Hanniâs premature and startling white hair. The three young women had started in her direction when they were sidetracked by Marlin Dorriss, who seemedto want to escort them all to the buffet tableâCharlie guessed Dillonâs mother hadnât accompanied him; the two did not overtly flaunt their relationship.
It was amazing to Charlie that since moving to the village, she had acquired three close woman friends her own age, trusted friends even besides her aunt Wilma. She had never had girlfriends in school, had always been a loner. She hadnât known how comfortable and supportive female friends could beâif they were women who didnât fuss and gossip, who liked to do outdoor things, who liked animals and liked to ride. Women, she thought amused, who preferred an afternoon at the shooting range to shopping. Though Charlie had even begun to enjoy shopping, when she had the spare time.
She could never get over the fact, either, of her sudden success as an animal artist. After giving up a commercial art career at which she had been only mediocre, and moving down to the village to open a cleaning-and-repair service, she had suddenly and without much effort on her part been approached by a gallery that loved her work. Her animal drawings and prints had been warmly accepted in the village and far beyond it, in a way almost too heady to live with. Even Detective Garza, that very discerning gun-dog man, had commissioned her to do his two pointers, and she considered that a true compliment. She watched Garza start through the crowd now, as if to speak to Max; she supposed the detective would take Max away from her. The square-faced Latino looked very handsome in a pale silk sport coat, dark slacks, white shirt, and dark tie, particularly as she was used to seeing him in an old, worn tweed blazer and jeans. She could see a tinyline of pale skin between his short-trimmed dark hair and his tan.
Easing through the crowd to them, Garza gave her a brief hug and turned his attention to Max. As Max squeezed her hand and moved away with him, Charlie turned toward the curatorâs desk where Anne Roche, the Doberman woman, had made herself comfortable in one of the two leather chairs.
Anne was a frail, fine-featured woman, cool to the point of austerity. Everything about her spelled money: her glossy auburn hair sleeked into a perfect shoulder-length bob, her creamy complexion and impeccable grooming. Her easy perfection made Charlie uncomfortably