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Dead Past

Dead Past

Titel: Dead Past Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Beverly Connor
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arms were folded over her stomach and she was bent over. Her blond hair swung forward and hid her face.
    “Dr. Price, are you all right?” asked Diane.
    “She’s fine. She’s a malingerer.”
    Diane ignored Whitney. “Juliet, are you all right?” Diane walked toward her and guided her to a chair.
    “I didn’t steal the shells,” she whispered. “I need this job.”
    Diane heard a snort from Whitney. “You should have thought of that. . . .”
    “Enough,” said Diane. “Juliet, you aren’t going to lose your job. Sit right here and try to stay calm. I’ll be right back.”
    “Mrs. Lester, in the office, now,” said Diane.
    Whitney Lester looked as if she’d been hit between the eyes. “You’re not going to leave her out here?”
    “Now, Mrs. Lester.” Diane preceded her into the collection manager’s office and sat down behind her desk.
    Whitney Lester followed and stood for several seconds as if waiting for Diane to get up from her desk. After a moment she sat in a chair in front of the desk, smoothing her brown suede skirt under her. She sat up straight and arranged her face to show her serious disapproval—or at least that’s what it seemed to Diane as she watched the movements of Lester’s expression go from surprise, to puzzlement, to a stern demeanor. She reached up once to smooth her salt-and-pepper hair.
    “What’s this about?” asked Diane.
    “Juliet stole some valuable shells. I’m trying to get them back.” She puffed up her chest, looking very righteous.
    “What’s missing?” asked Diane.
    Whitney straightened up again, looking more confident. “A Conus gloriamaris, seven inches long and worth four thousand dollars. Eight Cypraea aurantium, three hundred dollars apiece.” She ticked off each item on her fingers, hitting each finger firmly and bending it back as if that lent greater emphasis to the loss. “A giant whelk worth two hundred fifty dollars. That’s over six thousand dollars worth of shells.”
    “Have you informed Security?”
    “No, I like to handle things in my own department,” she said.
    “Did you see Dr. Price take them?” asked Diane.
    “No, but she is the only one who could have. They were here last week in the vault. I saw them. Now they’re gone. She’s here practically all the time and the only one who has access to the vault.”
    “So you were browbeating her. Couldn’t you see she is terrified?”
    “Yes, I could see that. I was trying to get a confession. You, of all people, should appreciate that.”
    “This isn’t a police interrogation room, nor is Dr. Price some perp you pulled in off the street. She’s an employee of this museum, and no employee here will be bullied. I hope that’s clear.”
    “My management style . . . ,” began Whitney.
    “Is not acceptable,” interrupted Diane.
    Whitney looked back through the open door as if to see if Juliet Price was listening. Diane could see Juliet sitting there where they left her, still holding her folded arms to her midsection. Diane was sure she was listening to every word. But it apparently was not giving her comfort. Juliet was one of the few employees that she had not had either lunch or dinner with—mainly because Juliet kept putting it off for one reason or another.
    Diane remembered interviewing her for the job. She was dressed in a conservative dark tweed suit and had her light blond hair pulled back into a French twist. It was one of the few times that she had seen her face. Her pale hair and skin and sky blue eyes gave her an ethereal appearance—almost like an angel. Had she chosen to flaunt it, she could have men hanging around her all the time. As it was, she was almost invisible. Juliet spent a lot of time hiding.
    Diane and Kendel almost hadn’t hired her, her shyness was so extreme. But in the end, her expert knowledge of marine life, and of mollusks in particular, proved to be the deciding factor. In reality, she was overqualified for her position. With her Ph.D. in marine biology she could be on a curator’s track. But she wanted to work cataloging shells and putting together learning kits for the schools—which was mainly solitary work. Hiring her had been a good deal for the museum.
    Until now there had been only one other puzzling event. When Juliet came to work, Andie put together a gift basket as she did for all the new employees. Andie liked to create the baskets with the theme of the new employee’s expertise. In Juliet’s case it was oceans

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