Page 120 of The Mystery of Nevermore

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“Wait, before I forget,” I said suddenly. “There was a note wrapped around the brick.” I pulled the folded paper from the pocket of my sweater. “Here.”

The female officer accepted the note. “Does this mean anything to you?”

I shrugged. “Not really. Unless the person who broke my window is judging me for my reading habits.”

Among other things.

She handed it back. “We’ll see if any businesses across the street have surveillance videos we can look over, but you should know that the chances of catching who did this are very slim.”

“I figured,” I replied. “Worth a shot, though.”

Luther walked into the shop as the officers left. He spoke with them briefly at the door before working his way through the cramped aisles toward me. His big belly pushed objects around on their displays as he moved through, and Max came up behind him to fix everything.

“Sebastian,” Luther said with a bit of a wheeze. “What happened?”

“Exactly as I said on the phone, Mr. North. Someone threw a brick through the window.”

“Why?” he asked, yanking a wadded pile of tissues from his coat pocket to dab his face.

“I didn’t think to ask them,” I answered.

“There you go with those smart-aleck responses. And before this, it was that creepy queer kid! He’s in jail now, right?”

“Yup.”

Luther paused from wiping his face. “Er—no offense with the queer thing.”

“My fragile ego is still intact. Mr. North, it’s currently raining in my store. How soon can this window be fixed?”

“Oh, well! It’s simply not that easy, Sebastian! I have to file a claim with the property insurance.”

“Which they’ll pay. Vandalism by an unknown assailant isn’t worth their time to investigate.”

“Yes, but it still takes a few days.”

“It’s raining in here,” I stated again, in case he hadn’t noticed.

“I can get a tarp.”

“Not exactly going to keep the riffraff out.”

“That’s why stores have metal gates,” Luther pointed out, as if I were dense.

“That’s fine. But I have books in here that are worth up to five grand. If they get warped or damaged—”

“I’ll have my boys come down and put up some sheets of plywood!” Luther growled. “Happy?”

“I’ll be happy when I have a new window.”

I DIDN’T want to spend the day cleaning up broken glass, wiping down and checking antiques that had gotten wet, and listening to the sexy voice of Frank Sinatra get drowned out by three of Luther’s construction guys nailing plywood over the empty window frame, but I did. And I wasn’t pleased about it. Leaving the shop for the night with such bulletproof security made me nervous.

Not that I could be blamed.

Explaining to Luther just how much my inventory was worth caused him to stay behind and personally oversee his workers.

I guess I should have been flattered.

But frankly, by the time I got home, kicked off my shoes, and dropped my coat on the floor while heading for the kitchen, I was tired. And cranky. I had a headache that was still in sync with the echo of hammers. I popped off the cap to a beer bottle and took a swig. I tugged a take-out menu free from under a fridge magnet, brought it closer to read, and took another sip.