The medics covered Donny with a blanket and lifted him onto a gurney. Francesco, his head between his knees, stayed on the floor where he’d been dumped. After giving little Frannie to Bonita, Jewels knelt beside her husband and put an arm around him, cooing to him in the same soft voice she used on the baby. Like the baby, Francesco responded, smiling weakly at her one moment, wrapping an arm around her the next. Tears streamed down his cheeks. Facing the grim reality of a loved one’s death, he was as heartbroken as anyone I’d ever known, and my own heart went out to him.
Clinging to each other for support, Cookie and Norm ambled into the kitchen, two sheets to the wind as my Irish nana used to say. They must have been ransacking the bar while the rest of us were caught up in the crisis.
“What’s the matter?” Norm wanted to know. It came out “Whasha matta?” so nobody bothered to answer him.
“Is there a problem?” Cookie asked. “Ish there a problem?” Nobody answered her either.
“A physician will need to determine the cause of death,” Alex said. “Do we have a next of kin present?”
Rossi pointed to Francesco. “Mr. Grandese there was the deceased’s employer. You might ask him.”
Clipboard perched on her knee, she crouched on the other side of Francesco. “I have a few questions, sir.”
“Shoot,” he said wincing at his own word.
“What is the deceased’s name?”
“Donatello Grandese.”
What
?
“A relation?”
Ignoring the tears streaming along his face and soaking into his chest hair, Francesco said, “My cousin. He was a good man, made some mistakes in life but paid his dues. I promised our
nonno
...our grandfather...I’d look out for him. Some job I did, huh?”
At that moment I wanted to tell him he
had
done a good job. Not only had he tried to help Donny, he’d reached out to Chip and Bonita too. Whether he knew it or not, Francesco was a nurturer.
Alex murmured a few words of comfort and continued writing on her clipboard. After asking several more questions, she had Francesco sign a release. “As soon as cause of death is determined, the coroner’s office will be in touch with you.” She stood, gave him a copy of the release form and pocketed her pen.
Mike got behind the gurney, but before he could wheel it out of the kitchen, Francesco sprang to his feet. “Give me a minute,” he said. The medics stepped back, and lifting the blanket from Donny’s face, Francesco kissed both his cheeks. “
Ciao
,
bambino
,” he whispered.
Clearly, cinderblock Donny had been a kind of little brother to him. As if he couldn’t bear the sight of seeing Donny leave forever, Francesco covered his eyes with his hands as the medics wheeled the gurney out to the waiting ambulance.
Bonita broke the silence that had fallen like a lead weight over the kitchen. “I’ll put the baby to bed,
señora
?”
Jewels nodded and said, “Let’s leave the kitchen, everybody,” and taking her husband by the arm, she drew him outside to the terrace. She eased him onto a patio lounger, went over to the bar and held up a Courvoisier bottle, checking see if there were anything left in it.
Norm
and
Cookie
? Satisfied that there was, she poured two fingers of cognac into a plastic glass and brought it back to Francesco.
“You’ve had a shock, honey. Drink this. It’ll make you feel better.”
He looked up at her with love in his eyes. “You’re taking good care of me, sweetheart, not like me with Donny.”
“Don’t blame yourself. He’s in God’s hands now.”
“Thash right,” Norm agreed.
“You still here?” Francesco asked, peering over at him in the half dark. “Why don’t you go home? Take your wife with you.”
“Thash an insult.” Cookie struggled to her feet.
“Just leave,” Francesco said. “Party’s over.”
I blew out a breath. Despite his world class furniture, Francesco wasn’t going to be Mr. Popularity in the ’hood anytime soon.
“We’ll be going too,” Rossi said. “We’re sorry about what happened. Call me at the station if you need me. Anytime.”
Stretched out on the lounger, looking too used up to move, Francesco took a swig of his cognac. “Appreciate it, Lieutenant.”
I patted Francesco’s shoulder in farewell and gave Jewels a kiss on the cheek. “If there’s anything I can do...anything at all, let me know.”
“I will, Deva.” And climbing onto Francesco’s lap, she laid her head on his chest and snuggled against him.
As Rossi and I walked toward the kitchen, my heart beat a little faster than usual. No telling what shape Chip and AudreyAnn would be in.
Surprise! Peace reigned in the room...or at least quiet. No dish throwing. No shouting. No sobbing in angst. Not even any wheezing. Chip stood at the sink, scrubbing the ravioli kettle, while AudreyAnn stacked the dishwasher.
“You guys all right?” Rossi asked.
“We’re okay,” Chip answered, his voice noncommittal.
AudreyAnn continued to drop silverware into the dishwasher basket without saying anything.
“There for a while AudreyAnn had a meltdown,” Chip said, sending a guarded glance her way. “Her problem is she’s got a big heart. She loves everybody. Can’t stand seeing anyone in trouble.”
She shot me a wary-eyed look. Woman-to-woman we both understood each other. A year ago, when she had the affair with Dick Parker, the former owner of Surfside Condominiums, Chip concealed the truth from himself with the same statement. Almost word-for-word. Was he so much in love with her he consciously denied she was a serial cheater? Or so needy he refused to acknowledge the truth to himself? Poor Chip. Either way, I felt sorry for the guy and returned AudreyAnn’s suspicious stare with a shrug.
Ever the detective, Rossi asked, “So tell me, Chip, what exactly happened to Donny? I mean, how did it play out?”
“Nothing unusual. At least not at first.” Chip removed the kettle from the sink and wiped it with a towel. “He brought in a couple of dishes and stood by the island there scarfing down Francesco’s leftover shrimp. Next thing I know, boom, he’s on the floor. Isn’t that right, AudreyAnn?”
Wordless, but tearing up, she nodded.
“Just like that? No warning?” Rossi asked, disbelief in his tone.
“That’s right,” Chip said. “One minute he’s fine, enjoying the shrimp, the next minute he’s down. I guess heart attacks work that way.”
The discarded shrimp dishes still cluttered the island.
“You have any plastic wrap?” Rossi asked.
“Sure, in that drawer over there.”
Rossi opened the drawer, tore off a sheet of wrap and draped it over one of the shrimp dishes. The one without salsa stains. “If you don’t mind, I want to have this examined.”
AudreyAnn, big-eyed, stopped filling the dishwasher and stared at Rossi. “Poison?” she whispered.
Rossi shook his head. “Probably just some bad shrimp. E. coli can be toxic. Best to be sure.”
*
“You knew Donny was Francesco’s cousin, didn’t you?” I asked as soon as Rossi and I were alone in what he called his party car, a vintage BMW he kept as shiny as his badge.
“Yes.”
“And you don’t think E. coli killed him, do you?”
“I’m doubtful. It doesn’t work that fast.”
“Poison?”
“I hope to God not.” He spoke in that professional I-can’t-tell-you-anything tone I hated.
“But you think it is.”
He sighed. “Deva—”
“A lecture’s coming.”
He drove as he always did, staring straight ahead, no nonsense, no sideways glances, all attention on the road. “I’m a cop.” Well, he did pull his glance off the road for a nanosecond and swiveled it over to me. “There will be times when I can’t share information with you. That won’t mean I don’t trust you. It will mean I’d be violating security. Or placing you in danger. Or both. So bottom line, don’t ask. My silence in a police matter will never mean anything personal against you.”
I leaned toward him, straining against my seatbelt. “So you
do
think this is a police matter?”
Another sigh, louder this time. “You didn’t hear a thing I said.”
“I heard every word. But
until
this is a police matter, why can’t you answer me?”
I knew I had him. The logic in that was fabulous.
He shook his head
and
sighed. “All right, rather than argue, I’ll make an exception this one time.” A pause then, “According to what Chip saw, Donny went down fast. No warning. No chest pain. Just a sudden collapse. I’m not saying that doesn’t happen, but I want it checked out. The autopsy should clarify the cause of death. If there’s any trace of a foreign substance—”
“You mean poison?”
“—in the body or on the shrimp dish we took that will confirm—”
“—your suspicions.”
“Or disprove them. Satisfied now?” He turned right onto Gordon Drive.
I wasn’t ready to give up my bone. “That’s why you didn’t let Jewels give Donny CPR, isn’t it? Just in case there was poison residue on his lips.”
“Yes. Just in case.”
“But why would anyone want to kill Donny?”
“If someone did kill him, that’s what I’ll be paid to find out.
If
being the operative word. He had a long rap sheet plus some creepy pals. Maybe Francesco hired him to help straighten him out. Who knows? And now, Mrs. Dunne, home to bed?”
He definitely took his attention off the road that time.
All along Gordon Drive, night mist from the Gulf enveloped the car, wrapping us in a velvet cocoon redolent with sea salt and jasmine. Alone with Rossi and at peace for the first time in hours, I wanted the road never to end, the drive to go on forever, the moment to last an eternity
But reality intervened. “I need to get back to Surfside, Rossi. Lee’s been alone all evening, last night too. Sorry, but...” To take the sting from my words, I reached over to stroke his thigh. He grasped my fingers and drove with one hand on the wheel. A first. He was breaking his rules left and right tonight.
“I know Lee needs you. This situation won’t go on forever.”
“No,” I murmured, happy that he understood, stretching against the seat belt again to give him a big sloppy kiss on the cheek.
“It better not go on, or I’ll be turning into a gentleman caller.” He barked out a laugh. “Tomorrow let’s grab a bite after work. I want to discuss a plan I have for helping Lee.”
I relaxed the rest of the way home, and when we got to Surfside, Rossi released both seatbelts, took me in his arms and kissed me crazy.
By my front door, not wanting to say good-night, I leaned against the building’s stucco wall and flung my arms around his neck. He pressed into me. Hard. One more kiss then he dragged himself away. “Call you in the morning. Sleep well.”
He climbed into the BMW and drove off, his rear lights glowing like tiger eyes in the night. That was when it hit me, and waving my arms and shouting his name, I ran after the car. He didn’t hear me, and I stood on the tarmac watching his lights turn into pinpricks in the dark. All the trauma of the evening must have unhinged me. I’d forgotten to tell him I overheard Francesco threatening Norm. And so had Bonita. Also I wanted to share my theory about what the threat might mean. Francesco was the one who was supposed to eat that shrimp. He was the one who should have died, not Donny.
That meant somebody murdered the wrong man. Could the killer be Norm Harkness?