
“You wished to steal it,” she repeated, her tone uncompromising.
“All right, have it your way. I wished to steal it.” He met her gaze. “Now, why did you come?”
Those clear, fierce eyes slid away from his own. “I had to see if it was still there.”
“Why?”
She didn’t reply.
“It would be wise of you to answer me.”
Her defiant gaze shifted back to him, and her tone was scornful as she echoed his own lie. “Why, I heard it was magnificent, and I wanted it for my home.”
The girl had courage. She was still frightened, and yet she refused to yield. He was careful not to show the flicker of admiration he felt. “Shall I go to the garden and fetch your brother? I’m sure he would tell me why you’re here.”
“Leave him alone!”
“Then tell me the truth.”
She burst out, “Because it was mine!”
Christ! He hid the excitement that jolted through him. “The pope would not agree. Everything in his churches belongs to God and so to him.”
“It is mine,” she said fiercely. “My grandmother gave it to me before she died last year.”
He was careful to keep his expression impassive. “How kind of her. And what right did she have to bestow such a gift?”
“She created it. She said the church did not pay us for the work, so it was still ours.”
“I fear she told you a falsehood. The Window was created by Anton Pogani, a great craftsman.”
She shook her head. “He was my grandfather, but it wasn’t he who was the craftsman, it was my grandmother.”
His brows lifted. “A woman?” Surely no woman could have had the artistry and skill to create the Window’s twenty-three panels portraying man’s climb from the earthly plane to Paradise.
“That’s why she had to let him lay claim to the work. They would not have accepted the work of a woman. It is always our women who do the work.”
“Always?”
She nodded. “For over five hundred years the women in my family have worked with glass. We’re trained from the time we leave the cradle. My mother said I have a special gift, and when I’m grown, I will be as great a craftsman as my grandmother.”
