the bathroom. Hopefully Bess or George had called the police by now and they were on their way.
With a deep breath, I pressed forward. âYou pulled off a good trick, Hugo, and for a while there I boughtthe illusion, just like the police and everyone else.â
He frowned but didnât speak. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Bess, George, and Sawyer slip out of the bathroom and into the back of the room.
âIâve learned that there are several kinds of magic,â I said. âDrake does illusion, so you created a robbery that obviously fit within that type. The video with the darts gave the illusion that coming to River Heights was a coincidence. It wasnât. You somehow knew that Candy Corlean stored millions of dollars of loose gems at the shop and that the ones you stole would be easiest to take.â
I continued. âUsing gum to clog locks so that they donât completely close is a classic illusionist move. So you left gum on the floor of the jewelry store. Itâs also well known that video is often used in illusion.â George had told me that.
âBut the truth is, you used escape magic to actually open the locks and the gem cabinet. You just made it look like an illusion in order to frame Lonestar, who is a known illusionist.â George and Bess moved closer tome, leaving Sawyer near the door. âAnd then there was the trick at the courthouse.â
When Drake rattled the handcuffs in the judgeâs chambers, he was silently telling me I was searching for a thief who was an expert at escapes.
âYou never meant for the box to end up in the evidence locker,â I said.
Bess caught on. âOh! You kept the gems you wanted, then planted the rest in the mandala box and put it in what you thought was Drakeâs hotel room. You probably thought it was Drake in the shower. It was John Smallwood!â Bess shook her head. âImagine your surprise when it turned out heâd been a jewel thief and they confiscated your box. Poor John Smallwood,â Bess groaned dramatically. âSerious case of wrong place, wrong time.â
âCan I make a guess here?â George asked. âThe box belongs to Gritty Grand. Drake wasnât lying when he kept insisting it wasnât his. But you knew that putting the gems there would once again point to Drake as the thief because of his tight relationship with Gritty.âShe quickly put in, âA relationship that doesnât look like divorce to me.â
Hugo flinched.
âSo the box ended up in the evidence locker. You didnât want to lose the jewels, so you used Houdini-type escape magic to break in and out of the room and the courthouse.â I didnât know how he got the key, but as George had said about Houdini, I was pretty sure there was one hidden on Hugo somewhere. . . . I instinctively glanced down at the soles of his shoes, nice-looking dress shoes with a small heel. It seemed possible that the heels could have been hollowed out.
It was Bess who said what I was thinking. âIn many ways, you are a better magician than Drake Lonestar.â
âI know!â Hugo stood and paced the room. âItâs true. I can do escape and illusion. So why donât I have the big show? Why donât I have the cash? Why didnât I get the girl?â
Hugo was growing angry, and it made me nervous.
More than anything, I wished the police would come rushing in just then. I also realized that I hadnâtyet persuaded Hugo to actually confess, so I took a deep breath and plodded on.
âAll those lies. Drake trusted you to be his friend! You convinced him the lies were to protect him from fans, but really they were so you could steal millions and frame him for it.â
Hugoâs face flushed, and he pumped his fist. âListen, I met Gritty first. I was in love with her, but like everyone else, she was dazzled by Drake.â He grimaced. âGritty picked Drake over
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