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 dealer’s house and cringed at the number on my phone’s call display.

Mom said there’d be days like this.

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Tanner, still decked out in his SWAT gear, peered over my shoulder as the phone vibrated insistently in my hand. β€œGood thing you’re a field-hardened FBI agent, so you don’t let little old ladies scare the pants off you.”

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. β€œHi, Nana,” I said, injecting fake cheerfulness into my voice. β€œWhat’s up?”

β€œI need you to come see me.”

β€œYou neeβ€”are you okay?” My heart stuttered. If anything happened to Nana . . .

β€œOf course I’m okay. Stop stammering, girl.”

Tanner, still hovering close enough to hear her strident tones, snickered.

I placed a muffling hand over the phone.

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β€œExcuse me, sir,” I said sweetly. β€œDon’t you have a forgery to bubble-wrap?” 

β€œForgery?” 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.

β€œReally?” he said, broad shoulders slumping. When I arrived on scene, he boasted they’d turned up art so hot it was still smoking.

β€œYup. Fake.” I, too, felt a pang of genuine regret that the β€œRenoir” hanging in the drug dealer’s den wasn’t the one on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list.

But I’d left Nana hanging.

Straightening my shoulders, I put the phone back to my ear. β€œSorry, Nana. Um, I have to be at the youth drop-in center by seven to teach the art class, so . . .” I glanced at my watch and cast about for a workable solution, but there just wasn’t enough time. β€œI’m afraid—”

β€œNever mind,” she interrupted. β€œObviously, you’re at work.” Where you shouldn’t be taking personal calls, her tone implied. β€œCall me when you get home.”

β€œOkay,” I said to dead air.

Annoyed at myself for the guilty feeling I couldn’t stop from churning my stomach, I turned to study the front of the house once more. Something was niggling at my brain.

β€œUm . . . Tanner,” I said, hesitating.

β€œYeah?”

β€œThere’s something . . .” I squinted against the dropping September sun, mentally reviewing the interior.

He grinned. β€œStop stammering, girl. Spit it out.”

β€œHa, ha.” Wait . . . β€œOh, that’s got to be it!” I stuffed my phone in my pocket and headed back inside.

Tanner followed me. β€œWhat’s it?”

I stopped at the door to the den and glanced at the window three feet from the side wall.

β€œSerena? What’s going on?” Tanner pressed, trailing me to the next doorway, this one into a bedroom.

β€œThe window is three feet from the wall, just like in the other room.”

β€œSo?”

β€œWhere’s the attic hatch?”

β€œMason checked the attic.”

β€œHumor me.”

β€œDon’t I always?” Tanner said. β€œI’m a funny guy.”

β€œUh-huh.” He actually had the quickest wit of any guy I knew, even if he did run to cheesy puns sometimes.

Not that I’d admit that to him.

β€œOver here.” He steered me toward a stepladder set up near the back door. β€œBut there’s nothing up there but insulation and mice.”

β€œMice, huh? Are you trying to scare me out of looking?” I started climbing, and Tanner moved in to hold the ladder steady.

I pushed open the hatch and stuck my head into the attic.

β€œSee?” Tanner said.

β€œYes, I do.” I stepped down a couple of ladder rungs and flashed him a grin. β€œA false wall six to eight feet in from the back of the house.”

Tanner squeezed past me and beamed his flashlight around the vacant space. β€œUnbelievable. Mason should’ve caught that.”

β€œThe wall’s covered in cobwebs and dust. It wouldn’t have registered unless you were looking for it.”

Tanner muttered something I couldn’t make out, but having been on the receiving end of his displeasure during my FBI trainingβ€”granted, always earnedβ€”I didn’t 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. β€œI don’t see any way to access what’s behind it.” He shone the light over the attic’s insulation-covered floor and then the shoe impressions he’d left in the dust on the joist. β€œIt doesn’t look like anyone else has been up here recently. There must be another ceiling access panel.” He climbed back down, eyeing me with interest. β€œHow’d you know to look for a secret room?”

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. β€œThere’s no other way up there that I can see.”

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. β€œWhat are you doing?”

β€œLooking for a secret panel.”

β€œUh-huh. And you seem to know exactly what you’re doing here, Nancy Drew, because . . . ?”

I expelled a breath. β€œThere was one at my grandfather’s house, okay?”

β€œYour grandfather? The one who was murdered?”

β€œYes.” I blew away a strand of long, blond hair that had escaped my ponytail. β€œMaybe you could be helpful instead of giving me the third degree?”

β€œSorry.” Tanner beamed his flashlight over the section of paneling I was running my hands over.

My fingertips made contact with the pressure sensor I’d been seeking and my breath caught. β€œTanner, I’ve found—”

β€œWait!”

Primed to open it, I tossed a frown over my shoulder. β€œAre you really going to pull the SWAT-clears-every-room-first rule on this one?”

β€œNo, I thought I’d rock-paper-scissors you for the privilege.” He motioned me to get out of his way.

My finger still on the sensor, I sidestepped two feet so he’d have a clear view as I pulled back the panel. β€œYou ready? I’ll slide it open and you can call the all-clear.” I slid it three-quarters of an inch and froze. β€œUh-oh.”

Tanner cursed. β€œPlease tell me you’re messing with me.”

I gulped. β€œYou don’t hear that ticking?”

He crouched down and shone his flashlight through the gap I’d opened. β€œBlast, Serena, don’t move a muscle.”

Yeah, got that.

β€œBlast!”

β€œTanner, could you stop using that word?”

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Hooked?  πŸ™‚

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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

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8 Comments

  1. 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 πŸ˜„

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