Begin Reading Another Day Another Dali…
It’s official…Another Day Another Dali, the second book in my Serena Jones Mysteries is now available.
Here’s an excerpt to whet your appetite:Β
I tore my gaze from the porch that wrapped around the drug dealerβs house and cringed at the number on my phoneβs call display.
Mom said thereβd be days like this.

Tanner, still decked out in his SWAT gear, peered over my shoulder as the phone vibrated insistently in my hand. βGood thing youβre a field-hardened FBI agent, so you donβt let little old ladies scare the pants off you.β
I sent him a silencing glare. Ignoring his grin, I turned away from the rest of the team traipsing in and out of the building, and clicked Connect. βHi, Nana,β I said, injecting fake cheerfulness into my voice. βWhatβs up?β
βI need you to come see me.β
βYou neeβare you okay?β My heart stuttered. If anything happened to Nana . . .
βOf course Iβm okay. Stop stammering, girl.β
Tanner, still hovering close enough to hear her strident tones, snickered.
I placed a muffling hand over the phone.

βExcuse me, sir,β I said sweetly. βDonβt you have a forgery to bubble-wrap?β
βForgery?β His stunned look was so comical I forgave myself for rushing to a verdict before my usual careful perusal. Not that I was in any serious doubt about this particular painting.
βReally?β he said, broad shoulders slumping. When I arrived on scene, he boasted theyβd turned up art so hot it was still smoking.
βYup. Fake.β I, too, felt a pang of genuine regret that the βRenoirβ hanging in the drug dealerβs den wasnβt the one on the FBIβs Ten Most Wanted list.
But Iβd left Nana hanging.
Straightening my shoulders, I put the phone back to my ear. βSorry, Nana. Um, I have to be at the youth drop-in center by seven to teach the art class, so . . .β I glanced at my watch and cast about for a workable solution, but there just wasnβt enough time. βIβm afraidββ
βNever mind,β she interrupted. βObviously, youβre at work.β Where you shouldnβt be taking personal calls, her tone implied. βCall me when you get home.β
βOkay,β I said to dead air.
Annoyed at myself for the guilty feeling I couldnβt stop from churning my stomach, I turned to study the front of the house once more. Something was niggling at my brain.
βUm . . . Tanner,β I said, hesitating.
βYeah?β
βThereβs something . . .β I squinted against the dropping September sun, mentally reviewing the interior.
He grinned. βStop stammering, girl. Spit it out.β
βHa, ha.β Wait . . . βOh, thatβs got to be it!β I stuffed my phone in my pocket and headed back inside.
Tanner followed me. βWhatβs it?β
I stopped at the door to the den and glanced at the window three feet from the side wall.
βSerena? Whatβs going on?β Tanner pressed, trailing me to the next doorway, this one into a bedroom.
βThe window is three feet from the wall, just like in the other room.β
βSo?β
βWhereβs the attic hatch?β
βMason checked the attic.β
βHumor me.β
βDonβt I always?β Tanner said. βIβm a funny guy.β
βUh-huh.β He actually had the quickest wit of any guy I knew, even if he did run to cheesy puns sometimes.
Not that Iβd admit that to him.
βOver here.β He steered me toward a stepladder set up near the back door. βBut thereβs nothing up there but insulation and mice.β
βMice, huh? Are you trying to scare me out of looking?β I started climbing, and Tanner moved in to hold the ladder steady.
I pushed open the hatch and stuck my head into the attic.
βSee?β Tanner said.
βYes, I do.β I stepped down a couple of ladder rungs and flashed him a grin. βA false wall six to eight feet in from the back of the house.β
Tanner squeezed past me and beamed his flashlight around the vacant space. βUnbelievable. Mason shouldβve caught that.β
βThe wallβs covered in cobwebs and dust. It wouldnβt have registered unless you were looking for it.β
Tanner muttered something I couldnβt make out, but having been on the receiving end of his displeasure during my FBI trainingβgranted, always earnedβI didnβt envy poor Mason.
Tanner hoisted himself into the attic, then balance-beamed his way across a joist to the wall and examined every inch of it. βI donβt see any way to access whatβs behind it.β He shone the light over the atticβs insulation-covered floor and then the shoe impressions heβd left in the dust on the joist. βIt doesnβt look like anyone else has been up here recently. There must be another ceiling access panel.β He climbed back down, eyeing me with interest. βHowβd you know to look for a secret room?β
I shrugged evasively.
Tanner followed me back to the room where the fake Renoir had been found and swept his flashlight beam over every inch of the ceiling. βThereβs no other way up there that I can see.β
I maneuvered around the agent photographing evidence. The wall between this room and the next was decorated in wood panels and elaborate moldings that looked uncomfortably familiar. I ran my fingers along the moldings.
Tanner studied me. βWhat are you doing?β
βLooking for a secret panel.β
βUh-huh. And you seem to know exactly what youβre doing here, Nancy Drew, because . . . ?β
I expelled a breath. βThere was one at my grandfatherβs house, okay?β
βYour grandfather? The one who was murdered?β
βYes.β I blew away a strand of long, blond hair that had escaped my ponytail. βMaybe you could be helpful instead of giving me the third degree?β
βSorry.β Tanner beamed his flashlight over the section of paneling I was running my hands over.
My fingertips made contact with the pressure sensor Iβd been seeking and my breath caught. βTanner, Iβve foundββ
βWait!β
Primed to open it, I tossed a frown over my shoulder. βAre you really going to pull the SWAT-clears-every-room-first rule on this one?β
βNo, I thought Iβd rock-paper-scissors you for the privilege.β He motioned me to get out of his way.
My finger still on the sensor, I sidestepped two feet so heβd have a clear view as I pulled back the panel. βYou ready? Iβll slide it open and you can call the all-clear.β I slid it three-quarters of an inch and froze. βUh-oh.β
Tanner cursed. βPlease tell me youβre messing with me.β
I gulped. βYou donβt hear that ticking?β
He crouched down and shone his flashlight through the gap Iβd opened. βBlast, Serena, donβt move a muscle.β
Yeah, got that.
βBlast!β
βTanner, could you stop using that word?β

Hooked? π

Ask for it at your local bookstore or click here for more buying options: https://sandraorchard.com/books/another-day-another-dali/
If you missed the first book, A Fool and His Monet, I recommend reading it first, but each novel is truly a standalone, so not reading it won’t inhibit you from following book 2 in any way.
Tomorrow, October 19th, I am being interviewed at Emilie Hendryx’s blog and will be offering a paperback copy of Another Day Another Dali to one lucky commenter. Hope you’ll stop by and tell a friend.
In other News:
All my Love Inspired Suspense titles are on sale for only $1.99 for kindle at Amazon until October 25th
Find them here: http://amzn.to/2dj8gpA


I was so disappointed to see Another Day, Another Dali end!! And now we have to wait FOREVER! How can I stand it?! I felt like I didn’t get enough time with the characters!! And the love triangle continues…O just want her to choose Tanner already π
π So pleased you enjoyed it.
Great excerpt, Sandra.
Thanks!
I loved Another Day Another Dali! Hated for it to end. Would love for the series to continue for as many artists names there are out there!
Yeah, I had ideas for so many more great titles. π
HAPPY BOOK BIRTHDAY, Sandra!
Thanks π