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He glanced up. "Maybe." With a putty knife, he began to sc.r.a.pe at residue. He sniffed, he grunted and, when he was satisfied, placed it in a jar. "Do you know what oxidation is, Ms. Fletcher?''
She frowned, s.h.i.+fted. "More or less."
"The chemical union of a substance with oxygen. It can be slow, like paint drying, or fast. Heat and light. A fire's fast. And some things help it move faster." He continued to sc.r.a.pe, then looked up again, held out the knife. "Take a whiff."
Dubious, she stepped forward and sniffed.
"What do you smell?"
"Smoke, wet... I don't know."
He placed the residue in the jar. "Gasoline," he said, watching her face. "See, a liquid seeks its level, goes into cracks in the floor, into dead-air comers, flows under baseboard. If it gets caught under there, it doesn't burn. You see the place I cleared out here?"
She moistened her lips, studied the floor he had shoveled or swept clear of debris. There was a black stain, like a shadow burned into the wood. "Yes?"
"The charred-blob pattern. It's like a map. I keep at this, layer by layer, and I'll be able to tell what happened, before, during."
"You're telling me someone poured gas in here and lit a match?"
He said nothing, only scooted forward a bit to pick up a sc.r.a.p of burned cloth. "Silk," he said with a rub of his fingertips. "Too bad." He placed the sc.r.a.p in what looked like a flour tin.
"Sometimes a torch will lay out streamers, give the fire more of an appet.i.te. They don't always burn." He picked up an almost perfectly preserved cup from a lacy bra. Amused, his eyes met Natalie's over it. "Funny what resists, isn't it?"
She was cold again, but not from the wind. It was from within, and it was rage. "If this fire was deliberately set, I want to know."
Interested in the change in her eyes, he sat back on his haunches.
His black fireman's coat was unhooked, revealing jeans, worn white at the knees, and a flannel shut. He hadn't left the scene since his arrival.
"You'll get my report." He rose then. "Draw me a picture. What did this place look like twenty-four hours ago?"
She closed her eyes for a moment, but it didn't help. She could still smell the destruction.
"It was three stories, about two thousand square feet. Iron balconies and interior steps. Seamstresses worked on the third floor. All of our merchandise is handmade."
"Cla.s.sy."
"Yes, that's the idea. We have another plant in this district where most of the sewing is done. The twelve machines upstairs were just for finish work. There was a small coffee room to the left, rest rooms... On the second, the floor was made of linoleum, rather than wood. We stored the stock there. I kept a small office up there, as well, though I do most of my work uptown. The area down here was for inspecting, packaging and s.h.i.+pping. We were to begin fulfilling our spring orders in three weeks."
She turned, not quite sure where she intended to go, and stumbled over debris. Ry's quick grab saved her from a nasty spill.
"Hold on," he murmured.
Shaken, she leaned back against him for a moment. There was strength there, if not sympathy. At the moment, she preferred it that way. "We employed over seventy people in this plant alone.
People who are out of work until I can sort this out." She whirled back. He gripped her arms to keep her steady. "And it was deliberate."
Control, he thought. Well, she didn't have it now. She was as volatile as a lit match. "I haven't finished my investigation."
"It was deliberate," she repeated. "And you're thinking I could have done it. That I came in here in the middle of the night with a can of gasoline."
Her face was close to his. Funny, he thought, he hadn't noticed how tall she was in those fancy ankle-breaking shoes. "It's a little hard to picture."
"Hired someone, then?" she tossed out. "Hired someone to burn down the building, even though there was a man in it? But what's one security guard against a nice fat insurance check?"
He was silent for a moment, his eyes locked on hers. "You tell me."
Infuriated, she wrenched away from him. "No, Inspector, you're going to have to tell me. And whether you like it or not, I'm going ) be on you like a shadow through every step of the investigation.
Every step," she repeated. "Until I have all the answers."
She strode out of the building, dignified despite the awkward boots. Her temper was barely under control when she saw the car pull up beside hers. Recognizing it, she sighed, made her way to the tape barrier and under it.
"Donald." She held out her hands. "Oh, Donald, what a mess..."
Gripping her hands, he looked beyond her to the building. For a moment he just stood there, holding her hands, shaking his head.
"How could this have happened? The wiring? We had the wiring checked two months ago."
"I know. I'm so sorry. All your work." Two years of his life, she thought, and hers. Up in smoke.
"Everything?" There was a faint tremor in his voice, in his hand as it gripped hers. "Is it all gone?"
"I'm afraid it is. We have other inventory, Donald. This isn't going to whip us."
"You're tougher than me, Nat." After a last quick squeeze he released her hands. "This was my biggest shot. You're the CEO, but I feel like I was captain. And my s.h.i.+p just sank."
Natalie's heart went out to him. It wasn't simply business with Donald Hawthorne, she thought, any more than it was simply business with her. This new company was a dream, a fresh excitement, and a chance for both of them to try something completely different.
No, not just to try, she reminded herself. To succeed.
"We're going to have to work our b.u.t.ts off for the next three weeks."
He turned back, a small smile curving his lips. "Do you really think we can pull it off, after this, on schedule?"
"Yes, I do." Determination hardened her lips. "It's a delay, that's all. So we shuffle things around. We'll certainly have to postpone the audit."
"I can't even think of that now." He stopped, blinked. "Jesus,
Nat, the files, the records."
"I don't think we're going to salvage any of the paperwork that was in the warehouse." She looked back toward her building. "It's going to make things more complicated, add some work hours, but we'll put it back together."
"But how can we manage the audit when-''
"It goes on the back burner until we're up and running. We'll talk about it back at the office. As soon as I meet the insurance agent, get the ball rolling, I'm heading back in." Already her mind was working out the details, the steps and stages. "We'll put on some double s.h.i.+fts, order new material, pull in some inventory from Chicago and Atlanta. We'll make it work, Donald. Lady's Choice is going to open in March, come h.e.l.l or high water.''
His smile flashed into a grin. "If anybody can make it work, you can."
"Wecan," she told him. "Now I need you to get back uptown, start making calls." PR, she knew, was his strong suit. He was overly impulsive perhaps, but she needed the action-oriented with her now. "You get Melvin and Deirdre hopping, Donald. Bribe or threaten distributors, plead with the union, soothe the clients.
That's what you do best."
"I'm on it. You can count on me."
"I know I can. I'll be in the office soon to crack the whip."
Boyfriend? Ry wondered as he watched the two embrace. The tall, polished executive with the pretty face and s.h.i.+ny shoes looked to be her type.
As a matter of course, he noted down the license number of the Lincoln beside Natalie's car, then went back to work.