Chapter 2
Callie Burke stepped out into the brisk October wind and pulled up her collar, feeling the rough scratch of it on her neck. The old wool coat had been her protection against cold, windy New York winters for years, just one more thing in her life that she needed to replace and couldn't afford to.
She glanced back at the art gallery she'd worked in for the past eighteen months and put her hands into her pockets, feeling her last paycheck through her mittens. Stanley, her boss, her former boss, hadn't wanted to let her go. Business, however, was slow because of the bad economy and he hadn't had much choice. People just weren't buying like they had during the dot-com years and financial reality had to prevail over all the interpersonal stuff.
She sure could have used more notice, though. Just this morning, she'd gone in assuming her job was secure.
Stepping forward, she joined the grim rush of pedestrians.
The gallery had been a good place to work. It put a roof, however modest, over her head and kept her in the art racket, even if she wasn't doing conservation projects. The place was also located in the Chelsea section of Manhattan, only blocks away from her apartment.
And she'd liked Stanley in spite of his theatrics and his codependent relationship with Ralph, his teacup poodle. She hadn't been all that fond of Ralphie. Four pounds of bad attitude backed up with a bark that could shatter glass just wasn't endearing—no matter what Stanley said.
Callie grimaced, thinking she would miss the place, and then pushed the temptation to sink into self-pity aside. She had real financial problems. Even with the check, she only had about seven hundred dollars to her name and rent was due in a week.
She thought about what she had to sell. There wasn't much back at her apartment. Her mother's jewelry had been used long ago to pay off medical bills. Callie's furniture, which had come from thrift stores and flea markets, wasn't going to bring more than two cents. And her old TV had been stolen months ago when her apartment was broken into.
The fact that the thieves hadn't taken anything else showed how little the rest of her stuff was worth.
She tried to think about her options. The thing she knew for sure was that she didn't want to go back to that depressing little hole in the wall she lived in just yet. There was no way to find strength or courage there. What she needed to do was walk around for a while and hope her head cleared.
As she marched through the chilly air and thought about employment opportunities, she wondered why she couldn't have gone to school for something a little more lucrative. Art conservation, however passionate she was about it, however good she was at it, was hardly a run-of-the-mill career to support yourself with. Accounting, law, medicine. At least in those fields, you could get work almost anywhere and be pretty well paid.
Landing a conservation job, however, was like getting struck by lightning and this was why she'd ended up at Stanley's gallery. While going through NYLPs conservation program, she'd interned at MoMA and received some great experience working under experts in the field, but with her mother so sick, she hadn't wanted to move out of the city when she got her degree. The field was competitive enough to begin with, but because she needed to stay where she was, her prospects were even more limited.
Callie stopped in front of one of the more prominent galleries, thinking they might need help. Maybe a receptionist. Or someone to empty the trash. She didn't care. Aside from her very real financial imperative, she just wanted to be around the art. She went inside, but was told that they had laid off their receptionist two weeks before. When she asked, halfheartedly, if they knew anyone who was hiring, the shake of the head and lowered eyes told her that many of the galleries were in the same shape as Stanley's.
Just keep going, she thought as she reemerged into the cold. At least if she wore herself out, she'd sleep tonight.
She was strolling past a newspaper stand when she saw a picture that stopped her. Picking up the paper, she looked at the face of Grace Woodward Hall.
Her half sister.
The stunning blond was in a gown at a podium, addressing a crowd of the city's most influential people. According to the caption, the picture had been taken at the Hall Foundation's annual gala and Callie was shocked when she read the article. A killer had tried to attack Grace in her office and she'd been saved when her bodyguard had taken him down. Also, it appeared that her marriage to the Count von Sharone was over and her soon-to-be ex-husband was shopping around a tell-all book about her.
Focusing on the picture, Callie was glad she'd finally introduced herself to Grace and sorry that the woman's life was in such turmoil. After years of reading about her half sister in the society pages, Callie had never expected to meet her, but things changed when their father died. She'd become determined to see her next of kin up close. Just once.
Grace was Cornelius Woodward Hall's daughter. Callie was his dirty little secret. At birth, she'd been given Burke, her mother's name, and the lies that began with her first breath had followed her into adulthood, creating a wild disparity between the kind of life her half sister lived and the kind Callie struggled through. Despite the fact that Cornelius was worth close to a billion dollars, lavish financial support for his illegitimate daughter was out of the question. When he was alive, he could barely stand to be in the same room with her, as if she were too obvious a reminder of the double life he was leading. Anything that would have increased her profile was to be strictly avoided.
Although, even if he had wanted to be generous, such gestures probably wouldn't have been accepted. Her mother's pride had cut off much of what Cornelius had tried to give his lover over the years. Extravagant gifts to her went unopened. A fancy apartment was left uninhabited. The only thing she'd accepted was the payment for Callie's college and graduate school tuition.
And some jewelry that had ultimately helped to ease her death.
Callie read on. The article mentioned that at the gala's auction, Jackson Walker had purchased a portrait of his ancestor, Nathaniel Walker, the Revolutionary War hero.
Jackson Walker.
At the sight of the name, she felt like a blast of hot air had hit the back of her neck.
"Hey! Are you gonna buy that or do you want me to get you a chair?" the stand's owner barked at her.
Callie put the newspaper down and kept going.
She'd first learned about Jack Walker through the gossip columns years ago. He came from one of America's most famous families and had more money than most small countries. He was also too damn handsome for anyone's good. For years, he'd been a notorious bad boy and the tabloids had carried endless stories about his women. He'd tended to date models, actresses, and debutantes; usually more than one at a time. The ensuing catfights and his casual dismissal of jealous rages had probably moved more newspapers than the exploits of Bill Clinton and Jennifer Lopez put together.
Needless to say, it had been a surprise to meet him in person.
Evidently, he and Grace were friends and he looked like the kind of man Grace would know; everything about him was expensive. From his fine, tailored suit to his polished shoes to the leather briefcase he carried, he was from the world of privilege.
And in all his finery, he was precisely the kind of man she avoided.
Okay, maybe avoided was the wrong word, because billionaires didn't cross her path very often. But all that money, all that smooth confidence was a red flag. Her father had taught her everything she needed to know about rich men and little of it had been good.
But she had to admit Walker was attractive. Aside from his physical attributes, he spoke with the authority of someone used to being followed, in a voice that was seductive even when he was talking about nothing sexual. She could have listened to him speak for hours, his words enunciated with that aristocratic drawl, a signet ring flashing gold on his hand as he gestured.
And then there was the way he'd looked at her. He'd met her eyes directly and it was as if he'd really seen her. As someone who was used to being sidelined, it was nice to be noticed. Especially while standing next to a woman like Grace.
It had been another surprise when he'd offered her the job of conserving the portrait of his famous fore-bearer. He made the proposal even though he didn't yet own the painting, taking for granted he'd prevail in the auction. Considering the kind of money he had, she supposed no price would be too high for him.
But she'd walked away from the proposition, in spite of the fact that it was a plum job. It wasn't that she couldn't handle the project. She'd worked under some renowned conservationists during school and had tackled some very difficult restorations. The Copley, though dirty and in need of a cleaning, wasn't a big deal in terms of technical difficulty.
Callie just wasn't in a big hurry to work for the man. She knew how the Jack Walkers of the world operated, having had to deal with them on occasion in Stanley's gallery. Having had one for a father. They thought of themselves first and that meant there was always an angle and always a demand. He probably treated his employees as if they were disposable and found fault with even the most successful of efforts.
Maybe she was wrong. Maybe Walker was a perfectly nice man who just happened to have built a business empire. Maybe he was honest and forthright, a beacon of human virtue laced up in a Saville Row suit. Maybe he was closer to Nelson Mandela than Donald Trump.
But more likely, he was a tough guy in gentleman's clothes and not someone she should work for. Getting mixed up with Walker had Bad Idea written all over it, even if she could have used the money.
Abruptly, Callie turned around and started for home. She reminded herself that walking alone through the city on a cold night could only get her two more things she wasn't interested in: a case of pneumonia and mugged.
Besides, she had more important things to worry about than the real or imagined character defects of some man she was never going to see again. She had to think about shelter. Food.
She shoved her hand into her pocket and felt the lining give way.
Clothing.