table. "She watched the cash register and never bought anything unless it was a super good deal. That's why I couldn't believe she'd cover up the way she did. It wasn't my fault. I can't be held accountable."
"We've been friends a long time, Evie," Caroline said.
"What's bothering you?"
Evie's eyes grew wider. She began to wring her hands.
"I knew it was a mistake to go along with it. I should have resigned on the spot, the minute I found out, but I didn't think it was my business. After all, I warned Charlie, held the spreadsheet with the proof right under her nose. Pointed right at it, even had his signature on the checks. He didn't even try to forge her name. The oaf used his own. But she already knew. Like I said, she watched the cash register, added things up, corrected my numbers once in a while. She could do the math in her head, while I needed a calculator."
"Evie," Caroline said. "What in the world are you talking about?"
"The first time, I thought I had made the mistake," Evie said, distraught. "I spent all day trying to figure out why the numbers didn't work. Then I realized that someone was stealing money from the shop. I took it to Charlie right away, but she told me to ignore it. Can you believe that?
'Look the other way,' she said. 'Fix it any way you like, but don't say a word.' She let the man keep doing it, and I'm telling you, the numbers were off every single month."
"Bernard," Gretchen guessed. She already knew that he had a bad habit of taking money that didn't belong to him.
"But why? He has a comfortable home in a nice neighborhood."
"Charlie said he can't help himself."
Evie resumed her nervous chatter. "Charlie said he was getting professional counseling for it, so I went along. Last week, I finally gave him an earful, told him he should apologize to Charlie for taking advantage of her. I remember a time when something like this wouldn't happen. I used to work for . . ." And away she went.
When she stopped for breath, Gretchen clicked through the pictures on her camera phone until she came to the unfinished room box. "Does this look familiar?" she asked. Evie barely glanced at it. "No, why should it?"
"Look again," Gretchen urged, putting the phone in her hand. "Was this part of Charlie's display?"
"What horrible construction. Charlie was better than that, much better. I've never seen that room box--if you can call it a room box--in my life."
At an appropriate gap in the conversation, Caroline said, "We should go. Work's waiting."
Gretchen practically ran for the quiet of her car.
"Please, don't say a single word," Gretchen pleaded with her mother before she pulled out of the driveway. "I need a moment of silence."
That glorious moment was interrupted by an urgent phone call from Nina.
"Daisy's missing," Nina said.
* 25 *
"Daisy's always missing," Gretchen reassured her aunt.
"I have a bad feeling this time," Nina said. "Get in."
Gretchen boldly removed bewigged Tutu from the passenger seat of the Impala and climbed in. The pampered pet, wearing her Barky Braids, snorted at Gretchen from the backseat and turned her head away in disapproval.
"Tutu's miffed," Nina said, driving off. "Why can't you simply share the seat with her?"
Gretchen gave her aunt a withering glare. "You should know the rules better than I do." Gretchen began to tick the points off on her fingers. "Don't feed your dog before you feed yourself. Don't let the dog sleep with its head on the pillow next to you. Don't treat the dog like a supreme being."
"Okay, okay, already. Of course, I know that. I'm a dog trainer. It's just hard for me to apply the same set of rules to Tutu. After all, she was a rescue dog, the poor baby."
Gretchen glanced at Poor Baby and thought she saw the schnoodle grinning smugly back at her. Nimrod wagged his tail, perfectly happy to ride in the back.
"Tutu's spoiled rotten," Gretchen said.
"I know you don't mean that," Nina said, handling the car like a woman who loved to drive. "You're just crabby today."
"Where's Enrico?"
"He's been accepted into a temporary home to see how it works out."
Wonderful! No more snarling and growling from the pint-sized handful every time he didn't like something, which was pretty much all the time. Someone else could deal with his unruly, challenging behavior for a change. Hurray. Nina glanced over. Too late to appear compassionate.
"Don't look so