a couple of hours using Carolâs unique teaching method. Carol led me to an easel holding a blank sixteen-by-twenty canvas.
âWhat?â
âSomeone took my painting,â she said, pointing at the easel. A large canvas tarp sat crumpled on the floor beside it. Her face was pale, her eyes wide. She twisted a strand of hair around her finger. âRight before I called you, I took the tarp off. The blank canvas was there, and my painting was gone.â
âOh, no. Did they take anything else?â
I looked around. Sheâd lined most of the walls with pegboard. Old frames and assorted canvases hung in neat rows. A table was covered with a neat array of paints, arranged by color. Brushes stood in brightly flowered vintage biscuit tins. A chaise lounge sat in one corner with a stack of art books beside it. The room smelled like turpentine and paint.
At the back of the studio, vintage curtains weâd found at a garage sale divided the working area from a small storage space and a door that led to the alley.
âNo, just the painting.â
âNothing else is missing? No money?â
Carol shook her head. âItâs worse than money. Itâs a catastrophe.â
âWhy?â
âItâs a copy of the Patrick West painting at the library.â She pointed to a computer monitor next to the easel. The picture of a recently fought battle glowed with its bright reds and blues contrasting with ashen faces, gray stone walls, and rolling spring fields.
âYou were copying Battled ?â Battled was Ellingtonâs beloved painting by native son and Revolutionary War hero Patrick West. Heâd first sketched a drawing at the end of the first day of the Revolutionary War. After surviving the war, West had used the sketch and brought the scene to life in an oil painting that depicted the anguish and triumph as the colonials chased the British soldiers from Concord back to Boston. Heâd gone on to have a highly successful career as an artist. Some of his works hung in the National Gallery of Art.
âYes. It was doneâexcept it needed to finish drying. Here, I took some pictures of it.â Carol clicked on the keyboard. Her hand shook as she scrolled through pictures of the painting in various stages.
I was shocked. Iâd known Carol was talented, but only an expert would be able to tell that this was a copy. âItâs beautiful. Was it for you?â
âNo, a client.â
âWho?â
âThatâs not the issue. I have three more weeks before my client needs it, but Iâm sure I can recreate it in that amount of time.â
It worried me that Carol didnât answer my question about her client. âWhen did you realize it was missing?â
âJust before I called. Iâd draped the canvas over it last night because I knew weâd be busy today, and I didnât want anyone to see it.â
When Carol had painted a painting for me sheâd done the same thing. She didnât like people to see her work in progress.
âSo it could have disappeared anytime between last night and now?â
âYes.â
âDid you call the police?â
âNo.â
âDo you want me to call CJ?â I asked. Being close to the chief of police came in handy on occasion.
Carol took a shaky breath and thought for a moment. âNo. Itâs okay. You know that copying paintings is a little shady. As long as itâs for use in a private home itâs not so bad. I was planning to sign it after the paint dried.â
âIs there any chance Olivia moved it?â Olivia was Carolâs new assistant, an art student who wasnât all that reliable. Carol had called me more than once to help out when Olivia was a no-show.
âI did a quick search, but will you help me look again? Maybe I somehow overlooked it.â
âSure.â We started in the public space, going through cupboards and looking in corners.