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“Maybe you saw one of his pieces in a museum, or read about him in art class,” George suggested.

“Wait a sec,” I said. “I remember.” I jumped up and ran into the house to grab the two Lacey O’Brien books I had bought earlier in the day. I came back to the porch and opened one of them to the “About the Author” page and skimmed it quickly.

“I knew it!” I said triumphantly. “I read about the author on the way to the diner before. Rick Brown is Lacey O’Brien’s husband.”

“That’s too much of a coincidence, isn’t it?” George said. “I mean, first Lacey’s supposed to appear for a reading but there’s a fire at the bookstore. Then her husband’s statue is stolen from an art gallery on the same day.”

I took a sip of tea and closed my eyes for a second.

“Do you remember those two girls at the bookstore fire this morning? One of them mentioned that it seemed awfully similar to the plot of Lacey O’Brien’s book Burned.”

George nodded. “Right,” she agreed. “But what does that have to do with the stolen sculpture?”

“Well, Burned is about a fire in an old building, and Framed is about a theft from an art museum,” I told her.

“Seriously?” she said.

I nodded. “And another one of Lacey’s mysteries is Drowned. Think about what happened to us on the lake before. It sounds like someone’s copying the crimes from her mystery novels,” I said.

George gave me one of her George looks and said, “Okay, so we could have drowned today in Moon Lake, but why would anyone target us? No one knows who we are. And besides, how could anyone have known we’d go out on the lake and be caught in a storm?”

“But remember Alice Ann—and that waitress—told us where Lacey lives. I just have a feeling it’s connected somehow. I know you’re beat, but maybe we should start reading Burned and Framed now. There just might be more clues to what’s next.”

“I’ll tell you what’s next for me, Nancy: sleep. You can wait up for Bess, but I’m going to bed.”

The next morning I woke up early and waited to tell Bess and George what I had discovered. I had looked at both books, letting George get her beauty sleep. Burned opens with a mysterious fire at an antiques store. The arsonist tampers with the wiring in an old chandelier to make it look as though the fire is accidental. The rest of the plot involves an international ring of criminals who traffic in fake and stolen antiques. The heroine in the novel—a journalist named Lucy Luckstone—breaks the story and eventually solves the case with the help of Detective Buck Albemarle.

The two characters appear again in the novel Framed. This time a thief steals a valuable painting from an art museum while Lucy Luckstone is on a behind-the-scenes tour. Lucy is framed for the theft, and Detective Albemarle has to clear her name.

I didn’t know if Drowned would have revealed anything helpful, but I didn’t have a copy of it.

I was on my second cup of tea when Bess came into the kitchen.

“So, what did you find out?” Bess asked eagerly as she helped herself to a mug of coffee. “Any insight into the Avondale crime spree?”

“Well, I think there’s a pretty good chance I’m right about someone borrowing crimes from Lacey’s books,” I explained. “But I don’t even know where to begin in terms of motive.”

“How about Alice Ann?” George said as she shuffled into the living room. “You said she didn’t seem to like Lacey or Paige all that much.”

I nodded. “Could it really be that easy? Who else? Lacey?”

Bess yawned from the couch. “It sounds crazy, but who else knows her books better than the one who wrote them?”

Bess had made a good point. But as much as I would love to talk to Lacey, we had already been warned by Sheriff Garrison to stay away, far way. I wasn’t sure if anyone would be willing to talk to strangers from out of town, no matter how friendly people from Avondale appeared.

George looked thoughtful. “Well, you’re probably the only person in town who’s made the connection between the two crimes,” she said. “Ian and the sheriff might figure it out as well, but something tells me you have a leg up on those two, at least for a little while. The sheriff thinks we’re stalkers, remember?”

I answered, “I know. But the girls in town did know that the Paige’s Pages fire sounded similar to Burned. Maybe it would make sense if we let people know about the connection between the two crimes. What do you think?”

George didn’t look too happy. “Do we really have to get involved in this, Nancy? Can’t we let the sheriff take charge, for once?”

My friends knew me better than that. If there was even a possibility that these occurrences were copycat crimes, then I couldn’t ignore them. And it didn’t mean they would stop—Lacey O’Brien had written a number of mysteries, and the person or persons behind the fire and the theft had more than enough material to keep them going.

I frowned at George.

She and Bess both sighed. “Okay, Nancy,” Bess finally said. “What do we do next?”

I got up from my chair and walked into the kitchen area to pour myself another cup of tea.

“I was thinking I might give Ned and his dad a story for the Bugle, and if they want to run it, they would be free to do so.”

Bess nodded. “And you’ll get this story by . . .”

“Saying I’m a Bugle reporter, of course. And that I’m following Lacey O’Brien’s rare appearance and book signing in the quiet hamlet of Avondale.”

“Hamlet?” George said.

“I’m going to give Ned a call right now,” I said. “And then I’ll do the dishes. Promise.”

My boyfriend, Ned Nickerson, is a part-time reporter and news editor at the River Heights Bugle, his dad’s paper. The Bugle covers a wide area encompassing three counties, including Avondale, so the chances were good that Ned and his dad would be interested in the story.

I quickly filled him in on what had happened yesterday, and he agreed that both crimes sounded newsworthy.

“I’ll have to clear it with my dad, but if you write the story, I’ll edit it and get my dad to publish,” he told me on the phone. “When will you be back in River Heights?”

“I’m not sure. But Bess and George are coming home first thing tomorrow,” I replied. “I hope to do the interviews tomorrow morning and write the article tomorrow night so you can post the story ASAP. Sound good?”

“Yes, sounds great,” he replied.

After I hung up the phone, I cleaned up the dishes as promised. And because yesterday had been such an unplanned adventure, we decided to relax the rest of the day at the cabin—snacking, napping, reading—before George and Bess took off for home.

After dinner, we decided to play one of our favorite games, Scrabble.

George was easily the best player among us, and just fifteen minutes into the game, she was well ahead of Bess and me.

“Triple word score!” she shouted gleefully as she played the word ZEBRAS.

“Ugh, and you even have a Z in there,” Bess groaned.

“Not only that, but the Z is on a double-letter-score square,” I added with a pained sigh.

“Sorry, girls,” George said apologetically, though the smile on her face made it hard to believe she was being sincere.

I played the word YEAR and was left with the letters A, D, K, and O. I selected a Q and then two Os in a row.