Faux Paw: A Magical Cats Mystery Read Online Free Page A

Faux Paw: A Magical Cats Mystery
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conversation to know she wanted to move some of the new lights he’d installed.
    Again.
    Luckily, Larry, the younger of Harrison Taylor’s sons, was one of the most laid-back people I’d ever met. He smiled at me over the top of Margo’s head.
    Margo Walsh was a tiny woman, five foot four or so only because of her four-inch heels. She wore her blond hair in a sleek bob with side-swept bangs.
    “Good morning, Kathleen,” she said as she passed me, her head bent over her phone.
    “Good morning,” I replied, but she was already past me, heels clicking on the mosaic tile floor. I walked over to Larry. “She wants to move those spotlights again,” I said.
    He pulled off his ball cap and smoothed a hand over his blond hair. “That she does.”
    I shook my head. “I’m sorry. I know working with Margo has been a bit of a challenge.”
    Larry laughed. “The old man when he gets his shorts in a bunch over something—excuse my language—now, that’s a challenge.” He gestured toward the steps with one large hand. “Her, not so much.”
    Larry’s father, Harrison Taylor Senior, was one of my favorite people in town. He was also, to use an expression from his other son, Harry Junior, as stubborn as a bear with a closed picnic basket.
    I laid a hand on Larry’s arm. “How about a cup of Mary’s coffee in about half an hour?”
    “I wouldn’t say no to that,” he said. He had the same warm smile as his father and brother. He headed toward the exhibit area, and I went upstairs to talk to Margo.
    She was in the workroom that she’d taken over as a temporary office. She was dressed in slim black pants and one of her ubiquitous white shirts, the sleeves rolled back to her elbows. She turned when she heard me in the doorway. “Kathleen, I need a favor,” she said.
    That was a change. Usually Margo left out the word “favor.”
    “What is it?” I asked.
    “Do you know Oren Kenyon?”
    I nodded. “Yes, I do. Oren did a lot of work on the restoration of this building.”
    Margo leaned back against the worktable that she was using as a desk. “Maggie Adams told me he made the sun that’s over the entrance.”
    “Yes, he did.”
    Our library, like many others of its vintage, was a Carnegie library, built with funds donated by Scottish American industrialist Andrew Carnegie. The carved wooden sun Oren had made for the entrance was a nod to the first Carnegie library in Dunfermline, Scotland.
    “The detail is incredible,” Margo said.
    I wondered how she knew that. The sun was twelve feet in the air over the main doors.
    She must have read the question on my face. “Lorenzo let me use his ladder.”
    Lorenzo? Did she mean Larry Taylor? Why didn’t I know his full name was Lorenzo?
    Margo was still talking. “I’ve heard that Mr. Kenyon has created a replica of this town’s seal done in the same way as the sunburst over your door.”
    I’d heard that rumor, too, although I wasn’t sure if it was true or not. Oren didn’t talk a lot about what was going on in his life.
    “It seems that he doesn’t have a cell phone.” She glanced over at her own smartphone, lying on the table next to her briefcase. “And I haven’t had any luck getting his home phone number, either. I asked Mary and somehow the conversation turned to how many third cousins she has in town.”
    I bit the inside of my cheek so I wouldn’t laugh. If Mary didn’t want to tell you something, she could lead you into a conversational labyrinth.
    Margo’s eyes flicked to the heavy, stainless steel watch on her left arm. “If the seal does exist and it’s as good as that sun, I’d love to have it in the exhibit. It fits with the overall theme of the other artwork: the history of this part of Minnesota.”
    Oren was a very private person. His father, Karl Kenyon, was a frustrated artist, a metal sculptor who’d spent his whole life working as a laborer, dreaming of a different life. Oren had inherited his father’s artistic streak, but
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