“Occasionally,” I agreed.
“That must have been part of what attracted you to Rafe Acosta,” he said. “His… unpredictability.”
I arched back slightly in his hold, trying to read his face. His eyes held a hint of mockery. “Actually, Rafe was pretty predictable,” I said. Up until the last few weeks. “He took dancing very seriously and trained hard.” And slept-predictably-with any woman who caught his fancy.
As we traveled counter-clockwise around the floor, I spotted Tav engaged in conversation with a handsome couple about his age. He seemed oblivious to Bazán and me. I felt a bit piqued at his indifference, but quickly squelched the feeling. Tav was Rafe’s half brother and would be returning to Argentina in a few days. Letting myself be attracted to him spelled “disaster” in at least eight languages.
“I, too, am a hard worker,” Bazán said, reclaiming my attention. “Perhaps I could be a competitive dancer.” He laughed, as if the idea were preposterous, but I got the sense of an ego that believed it could excel at any challenge. “I could take lessons at your studio.”
“Absolutely,” I said. “Drop in when your wife gets back from her trip.”
His hand tightened painfully on mine. “What do you know about Victoria?”
I gave him a startled look. “Nothing! I’ve never met her.” I tugged at my hand and his grip loosened.
Steering me around an elderly couple who moved like they’d been dancing together for fifty years, he studied my face. “So who do you think killed Acosta?” he asked. “Perhaps it was a random thing-he surprised a thief or some such?”
His tension communicated itself to me through the stiffness in his shoulders and a certain immobility in his jaw. “I have no idea,” I said truthfully. “Although I can’t think why a thief would be in our ballroom. Hopefully, the police will realize I had nothing to do with his death and get on with finding the real killer.”
“Indeed,” Bazán said with a tight smile. I got the feeling he was going to say more, but something behind me caught his attention.
“The ambassador needs me,” he said. “I’m afraid I must cut our dance short, Miss Graysin. May I call you Stacy? Perhaps we can finish this another time.”
“Of course,” I murmured as he escorted me to Tav’s side, nodded, and strode off toward the beckoning ambassador. The disturbance in the air caused by his movement brought a whiff of his scent back to me and this time I identified it: cigar.
“He’s the one,” I whispered to Tav as we moved away from the couple he’d been speaking to. “The man from the limo.”
“What were you talking about?” Tav nodded sideways toward the dance floor.
“I’m not quite sure,” I admitted, filling him in on our conversation.
“I would really like to talk to Victoria,” Tav said.
“Did you believe Bazán about her traveling?”
Tav’s gaze followed the diplomat as he exited the room. “No, I do not think I did.”
“Maybe Rafe knew where she was. You said they were engaged once. Maybe they were running off together.” My stomach felt hollow and I had to force the words out. Maybe Rafe had never loved me. Maybe our whole time together was a sham. When he thought Victoria was unavailable, he settled for me, but when he found out she was here, nearby, they rekindled their romance. I blew out a sigh as if expelling the idea. It completely left Solange and his other brief flings out of the equation.
Tav and I batted around a few ideas about how Victoria might tie in to Rafe’s murder. I suggested she might have killed him and was now in hiding, and Tav countered with Bazán as the murderer, having found out that his wife and Rafe were carrying on a torrid affair. He had killed Victoria, too, Tav theorized, and hidden her body. Both our theories foundered on logistics: neither Bazán nor Victoria was likely to know I had a gun, never mind have the opportunity to sneak into my bedroom to steal it.
The band struck up “Fly Me to the Moon,” perfect foxtrot music, and I looked up at Tav. “Let’s dance.”
He shook his head, a rueful smile playing across his handsome face. “You forget-I do not dance.”
“I’m a teacher.” I took a step toward the dance floor. Teaching Tav to dance would be fun, and I had to admit that the thought of him pulling me close had more appeal than it should.
He grabbed my hand to restrain me, his hand callused and hard against mine. “This”-he gestured to the crowded room-“is not the ideal location for a first lesson.”
“There’s a dance floor and music.” I tugged at his hand. “Come on.”
“I do not choose to look like a fool in front of so many people,” he said, standing as if rooted to the floor. “Would you want to learn how to play soccer with a hundred people looking on?”
He had a point. “I don’t want to learn to play soccer under any circumstances,” I said, letting go of his hand.
He grinned, crinkling the skin at the corners of his eyes and looking so dangerously attractive that I caught my breath. “But turnabout is fair play, no? If you are to teach me to dance, than I must also teach you something.”
I returned his smile, thinking that he could teach me anything he wanted to, although I’d prefer that the activity not involve a ball, teammates, or onlookers.
Chapter 13
The excitement of the competition swirled around me Friday morning as I descended in the hotel elevator from my twelfth-floor room in downtown D.C. Dressed in a short scarlet dress with narrow horizontal panels of flesh-colored mesh and thousands of stones twinkling across the bodice and skirt, I was ready for the Latin rounds that kicked off at seven o’clock. I’d been up since four, doing my makeup-including false eyelashes-and hair. I had pulled it back into a complicated twist, securing it with rhinestoned clips and gel. The getup was probably more appropriate for a nightclub than a hotel, and the businessman who got on at the fourth floor had trouble not staring. The lobby, though, bustled with similarly dressed women, some wearing silk robes over their brief Latin costumes and others shuffling around in flip-flops or slippers. Temperatures in the ballroom were generally kept at levels a penguin would find chilly and Latin costumes especially tended to be skimpy, so robes or other cover-ups were useful for preventing frostbite. A student in a tux did relèvés to warm up as he chatted with a friend by the registration desk.
It was a familiar scene and I let a smile burst over my face. I loved this. The competitive spirit that electrified the air, the fit bodies, the glitz of costumes, and the female students feeling glamorous with their fake lashes and cat’s-eye black liner, moving with an ease and sensuality that they normally hid behind tailored suits or mom jeans in the cubicles or minivans that defined their usual existence. Nondancers, a minority of the hotel’s clientele this weekend, eyed us surreptitiously, disconcerted, curious, or envious of the gathering that looked and sounded like a convocation of noisy tropical birds. I didn’t imagine their dental conventions or library association meetings looked much like this.
I grabbed a coffee, a yogurt, and a hard-boiled egg from a cart in the hall by the ballroom, needing fuel for the dancing, but keeping it light because the sleek contours of my dress would be unforgiving of a large meal. Entering the large ballroom, I spotted the event organizer on a dais that stretched the width of the room and waved. Graysin Motion’s table-each studio competing in the event had a floor-side table at which competitors could relax between heats-was midway down the dance floor on the far side and I made my way to it, exchanging greetings with pros I hadn’t seen since the last competition. Vitaly was already at the table chatting with a student. He’d called me last night and said his tummy troubles were under control and he’d be able to compete.