Killer Kitchens (Murders by Design) (9 page)

BOOK: Killer Kitchens (Murders by Design)
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“What was Bonita doing with poison?”

Cookie shrugged. “She was frantic. Said Mrs. Grandese gave it to her. When Jewels picked the baby up she found the vial in his port-a-basket.”

“You might find that hard to prove.”

Jaw firm, she shook her head. “I won’t have to prove a thing. I’ll just threaten to cause a scandal. Then Mr. Grandese can take his antiques and his arias and his gaudy wife and leave town.” Her voice had taken on its usual finishing school edge. She was clearly getting her groove back, and I was glad she was, actually.

“Can you believe I promised to sponsor him for membership in the Port Royal Club? He’s panting to get in, but if he turns me down he never will. Never. Norm and I will see to that.” She sat back on the bench and squared her shoulders. “Right now, he has everyone’s sympathy. He was nearly the victim of a crime. But if people believe his wife tried to kill him, they’ll both be finished here. That’s the last thing that little upstart wants. He has social pretension. I can recognize the type a mile away.”

“I believe you can,” I said, trying not to smile, “but suppose the Grandeses sue you for libel? Besides, even if they don’t, your story will expose Norm.”

“Unless the money hemorrhaging stops immediately, he’ll be exposed anyway. I have nothing...or everything...to lose.” She stood and smoothed her pants over her slim hips. “Talking about all this helped, but remember number one on my to-do list. If you repeat what I’ve just said, I’ll kill you. Now if you’ll excuse me.” She stood and back ramrod straight walked over to a patio door and disappeared inside, leaving me alone on the garden bench.

She’d kill me? Despite the heat of the day, a shiver raced over my skin. No, that would never happen. I forced the stab of alarm down and leaped up. Good grief, what was I thinking? Enough sleuthing for the moment. Tom was still back at the Grandeses mixing mango paint. I rushed across the street and found him dabbing on a fifth version of the shade. No need. The fourth try was perfect—warm and subtle, vivid and discreet. Mango and yet not; tangerine and yet not. Too complex to define, it was, in short, perfection.

“This one, Tom. You’ve nailed it.”

“Excellent. That means we can finish this room in a couple of days and then you can send in the floor polisher. Next we’ll start on the children’s bedrooms.”

“Wonderful. You’re ahead of schedule.”

To tie the neutral-colored public rooms together, I planned to introduce mango and tangerine accessories in the living room. Pillows on those Montoya couches would do that. For sheer sassiness, maybe one or two in a tiger print velvet. But pillows could wait. Right now I had a call to make. If Cookie thought she had me intimidated, she thought wrong. In Dorchester, Massachusetts where I’m from, we don’t kowtow to threats—

The front door chimes shattered my concentration. Somebody had come calling. Cookie again? Well at least I’d had the presence of mind to relock the door and reset the alarm. Heeding Rossi’s warning, at the front entrance I peered through the side lights before opening the door.

No telling who—
Bonita
?

I turned off the security alarm and opened the door. “This is a surprise, Bonita. I didn’t think you were working here any more.”

“I’m not, Señora Dunne. I work for Mrs. Harkness now.”

“You do?”



. Mr. Grandese pays better. But she talks to me more. Woman-to-woman.”

I’ll bet she did. Probably pumping her for everything she knew about the Grandeses. I hoped Bonita would end up getting paid for her efforts, but didn’t bring up that sticky subject.

“Does Mr. Grandese know you’re working for the Harnesses now?”

“He knows or not, what do I care? Here, this is for him.” She held out a glossy red gift bag stuffed with festive-looking purple tissue. “It is for his baby boy. His son.”

“From you? How lovely.”

“No. Not from me. Why would I give gifts to his baby? His baby has a father. My son, my little Tomas, he has no father. And who is to blame for that? That Donny. That Grandese
bastardo
. Here, take.” She thrust the gift bag into my hands. Fairly heavy, it sagged a little under the contents’ weight.

“I don’t understand, Bonita. If this isn’t from you, who is it from?”

She shrugged. “I don’t know. A man came to my house early this morning. A stranger. He said give this to Mr. Grandese for his little son. So I bring.”

“What did this man look like?”

“A man like any other.”

“Young, old, fat, thin?”

“In his thirty years I would say. Big shoulders. Black hair. Well dressed. In my neighborhood we don’t often see such nice clothes.”

Could she be lying? I looked down at the gift then up into Bonita’s dark eyes. “A man was killed in this house. This might not be safe.”

She nodded. “Is safe. Mrs. Harkness opened it. She too was worried. Said it might be a...how she say...a practical joke. I see it. Is a funny gift for a
niño
but is safe.”

“You’re sure?”



.”

I gave the bag back to her. “Then open it. Here on the doorstep.”

I had to give Cookie credit for guts. Or foolishness. In her place I would have called the local bomb squad, never mind examining the contents of this thing. Who knew, maybe she had a death wish.

“I tell you is safe,” Bonita insisted.

“Go on, open it.” I had no intention of bringing this mysterious package anywhere near little Frannie without knowing what it held.

Bonita put the bag on the stone entrance slab, bent down and lifted the gift out of its tissue paper cocoon.

“Oh, my!” was all I could think of to say.

“You think Mr. Grandese will like this?” she asked.

“No. Mr. Grandese will not like this, but he has to see it.”



. He’s a good man. I want to hate him for what happened, but I cannot. That Donny, him I hate.”

“Be careful what you say, Bonita. You don’t want to be accused of...anything.”

“I am not afraid. Mrs. Harkness she told me in your country you need proof to accuse. Is that not true?”

“Yes, but—”

“So let your country prove I poisoned that Donny. Let them prove.”

With the dignity of a duchess, Bonita turned on her heel and strode across Rum Row, leaving me holding the bag.

Literally.

 

Chapter Twenty-One

As soon as Bonita disappeared inside the Harkness house, I dug the cell phone out of my tote and punched in Francesco’s number. Jewels picked up on the first ring.

“Baby sleeping?” I asked.

“Almost. Francesco’s rocking him now.”

“Sorry to disturb him, but I have a baby gift here for you.”

She related the message to her husband then said, “Frannie said to come up. He’s putting the baby down now.”

“Fine. Be right over.” Leaving Tom and his crew working in the dining room, I grabbed the gift bag, reset the door locks and climbed the outside stairs to the apartment over the garage.

No attempt had been made to make it attractive. It was what it was, a convenient pad with a king-sized bed and a baby crib in a corner of the single bedroom. In the main room a couple of lounge chairs faced a flat-screen TV. Baby bottles and jars and cereal boxes littered the miniscule kitchen galley. No Federalist furniture anywhere in sight.

Francesco saw me glancing around and said, “Yeah, it’s a dump all right. See why I want your guys on the job? We gotta get outta here before I go nuts.”

“Oh, it’s not so bad.” Jewels quietly closed the bedroom door. “The baby should sleep for a couple of hours.”

“Thank God. Kids are killers, you know that?” Francesco slumped onto one of the loungers and raised the foot rest.

“I wouldn’t know.” I held the bag out to him. “Here’s your baby gift.”

“Oh Frannie loves packages,” Jewels said.
A
sweet
girl
.

He took the bag.

“Before you open it you should know that—”

“Hey, this was swell of you, Deva. We didn’t expect no presents.”

“It’s not from me,” I began, but too late.

He’d already ripped the tissue apart and, reaching in, pulled out a toy truck with a shiny aluminum grille, black headlights and a chrome yellow body. A small piece of paper had been taped to the body of the truck with the word
Propane
inked on in black.

“What the hell.” He reached in again and yanked out a fistful of play money. Some of the fake currency fluttered from his fingers and fell to the floor. Every one was a replica of a thousand dollar bill.

Sitting up straight, Francesco dumped everything out of the gift bag. A card had been tucked into the tissue layers. He stuck a blunt fingertip under the envelope flap and ripped it open. A moment only and he turned white as the undershirt he was wearing.

“Somebody’s after my kid.”

“What does the card say?” Jewels hurried over to take it from his shaky hand and read aloud, “‘Enjoy your boy for as long as it lasts.’ Oh my God, they’re going to kill our baby.”

As quietly as she’d closed the bedroom door, she crumpled to the floor in a dead faint, her head barely missing the edge of the kitchen counter.

Faster than I would have thought possible, Francesco leaped from his lounger and rushed over to her. “Come on, Jewels. Come on,” he pleaded, crouching over her body, patting her hands, her cheeks. “Get some water from the sink over there,” he said to me. “I’ll splash her up. That might do it.”

I ran to fill a glass with tap water and gave it to him. A few drops on her face and Jewels’s eyes fluttered open. “Frannie? Is everything all right?”

“Yeah, sweetheart, everything’s fine. Some asshole having fun is all. But we’ll get him. Don’t worry, we’ll get him.” He helped Jewels sit up, propping her against the kitchen cabinets. “You really love my kid,” he said to her, awe in his voice. “Me too. I love him too.”

Still kneeling beside her, he looked up at me. “Deva, call that lieutenant. Tell him to get over here fast.”

I rang Rossi’s number and quickly explained what had just happened.

“I’ll see you in a few minutes,” he said.

“No, I can’t wait. I have an appointment. But before you hang up, there’s something else you should know.” While Francesco tended to Jewels, I stepped outside and told him about Cookie Harkness and the cyanide.

After I finished giving him the clue of the century, all he said was, “Deva, I am not pleased.”

“God, Rossi, you sound like a grouchy parent. I’ve just handed you a fantastic lead.”

A sigh heaved it way through the line. “What you’ve given me is a headache.”

“But—”

“The veiled threat to the Grandese child bears looking into, but possessing cyanide is not against the law.”

“Not even when a person is murdered with it in the same house?”

“Not even. Unless we can prove that a person with access to the house used the poison for an evil purpose. Furthermore, are you certain of the contents of that vial? Or that Mrs. Harkness told you the truth?”

“Well, no.”

Another sigh. “Keep the bottle in a safe place until I can get it from you and have some tests run.”

“I put it in my purse. It’ll be safe enough there. So this
is
a breakthrough.”

“No, your word against Mrs. Harkness’s is a stalemate. I have told you repeatedly to stay out of this. You’re not listening.”

“Not obeying, you mean, like some medieval housewife.”

“No, like a modern, intelligent woman who knows her own limits.”

A silence echoed through the line. Not even a sigh this time. He was right, of course. “I apologize.”

“Accepted. Is there anything else you want to tell me?”

“That’s about all. Oh, one other thing. Cookie said if I told anybody about our conversation she’d kill me.”

“Deva, I—”

“Have to go. Sorry I can’t wait here for you, but my appointment’s in a half hour.”

I hung up quickly without telling him who I was meeting. He didn’t have to know everything. After all he had his secrets, and I had the right to a few of my own.

 

Chapter Twenty-Two

An hour later, wrapped in a hospital gown, all thoughts of Francesco and Jewels and little Frannie fled my mind as I perched on the edge of Dr. Elizabeth Enright’s examining table.

“When was your last internal exam?” she asked.

“A few years ago, before my husband’s death. Since he died, I haven’t had one.” My voice trailed off.

“Are you aware that one ovary never developed?”

“Yes, but I was told that wouldn’t be a problem.”

She nodded. “Alone, no. But unfortunately it’s not the only problem. From what I’m able to determine, the second ovary may be compromised as well. Without more tests I can’t be certain, but—”

I took in a quick breath of antiseptic-laced air.

She quickly added, “There are no signs of malignancy or tumors. Simply a somewhat undeveloped organ. Was that never explained to you?”

I gripped the padded edges of the table. “Years ago, before I was married, I remember something being said about it. At the time, I didn’t take the news seriously. Babies were far from my thoughts then. In later exams, the subject wasn’t an issue.”

“That’s unfortunate, be—”

Unable to hold back, I burst out with, “Doctor, will I ever be able to have children?”

Her eyes, large and gray and fringed with paintbrush-thick lashes, took on a sympathetic sheen. “All things are possible, of course. I’ve seen women with reproductive organs similar to yours who did...on a few rare occasions...become pregnant and carry to term.” She shook her head. “But realistically speaking, the odds are greatly against that outcome.”

“Would hormone treatments help?” The desperation in my voice was clear even to me. The sympathy in Dr. Enright’s eyes deepened.

“In my view I’m afraid the answer is no, but you might want to get a second opinion. In fact, I encourage you to do so.”

I clutched the opening of the gown, nodding as if I agreed. A reflex action. I was staving off the blow she’d just dealt me. “It sounds like children aren’t in my future.”

Leaving the portable table that held her laptop, she came over to rest a hand on my shoulder, a gesture intended as a comfort, but wasn’t. “Many people consider adoption a viable alternative.”

“Yes, there is that possibility...but one other question, Doctor. I asked to have my late husband’s medical records faxed to you. Have you received them?” Though the air conditioning was set low enough to make me shiver, my hands were sweaty. I wiped them on the wraparound gown.

“Let me check.”

Dr. Enright left the examining room, closing the door behind her. I stared out the window at a sweeping view of a manmade lake and beyond to a stand of scrub pines that reminded me of Cape Cod. Jack and I had honeymooned in a beach cottage on Falmouth Bay. A month of utter magic. When I hadn’t become pregnant then, I should have known...I shivered in my thin clinical gown.

“Here they are.” Dr. Enright returned with a folder full of printouts and sat back behind her computer table. “What in your husband’s history do you wish to know?”

“I wasn’t getting pregnant, so he had a fertility test a few years ago. Can you tell me the results?”

She looked up, her heavy lashes sweeping wide open, her surprise telling me I should already know the answer. But without further questioning, she poured over the sheets, flipping back several pages. “Ah, yes...your husband consulted the Ranier Group at Mass General. They’re considered the best in this field.” She looked impressed and read on for another minute before glancing up again. “He had no fertility issues at all. His testosterone was in the high range. He would have had no problem fathering—oh...” She took one look at my expression and snapped the folder closed. “You didn’t know? You believed he was sterile?”

“He lied,” I whispered, my voice as cold as my skin.

She stood and quickly closed the space between us. “Are you all right?”

After two double whammies, no, I wasn’t all right. “I’m fine,” I said, fighting back tears.

She placed a hand on my shoulder. “You have every right to be upset. Don’t hold it in. This is a women-for-women practice. We’re not ashamed of tears in here.” Her voice gentled to a murmur. “You have my permission.”

Too numb to weep, I said, “Jack should have told me the truth. I deserved to know. He pretended our infertility was all his fault.”


Fault
isn’t the word,” she chided softly.

“He didn’t trust me with the truth. That’s what it comes down to.”

“Mrs. Dunne.” Dr. Enright stood in front of the examining table where I was still perched precariously. “From what I’ve read in this report and from what you’ve told me, your husband’s lie, as you call it, was an act of love. He was protecting you from a devastating realization.”

“He had no right to do that.”

“He obviously thought he did. Mrs. Dunne...?”

At the question in her voice, I glanced up from my fists clenching and unclenching in my lap.

“Your husband is no longer with us. Questioning his motives is fruitless. To dwell on the past will do no good. Look to the future.”

She meant well. But she didn’t understand.

“I trusted him completely. I believed he never lied to me. Not once. Not about anything.”

She rose from the stool and extended her hand. We shook like two businesswomen settling a contract. “I’m sorry I wasn’t able to tell you what you wanted to hear. If you ever want to come in just to talk, my door will always be open. Now I’ll go and let you get dressed.”

She left and, like a robot, I mindlessly pulled on my bra and panties, then shrugged into the outfit that Rossi liked best on me—a pencil skirt and matching tee in a tawny bronze silk. He said the color looked great with my hair. He loved me in skirts. And why with my legs did I ever wear slacks anyway?

Rossi
. What would he think about all this? Would he tell me again that he didn’t care? That it didn’t matter? Could I believe him if he did? Could I believe any man?

I clasped on the chunky, faux gold necklace and slid into my Jimmy Choos. My one and only pair of Jimmy’s, they were holding up well. As if that mattered. As if anything mattered.

Lower than the price on a markdown sale, I drove home. Inside the condo, I kicked off my heels, slumped on the living room sofa and dialed Treasure Island Antiques. A woman answered, and I asked to speak to Randy. A fifty-something Englishman with a Cockney accent and a sharp eye for a deal, he’d adore taking the Irish furniture off my hands. The sooner that happened, the better. I wanted to get rid of it all. Every damn piece. Not out of consideration for Rossi, not to finance a trip to Hawaii. To get every vestige of Jack out of my life. He’d lived a lie and betrayed me day by day for years. I’d never forgive him for that. Never.

After a pause, Randy picked up. “Treasure Isle.”

“Just the man I want to talk to. This is Deva from Deva Dunne Interiors.”

“Marvelous! ’Ow are you, luv?”

“Fantastic, Randy. I have some things to sell I think will interest you. Can you come to my home and have a look at them?”

“For you, luv, anything. When?” A little frisson of expectation had risen into his voice.

“How about now?”

“Give me your address and I’ll be right over.”

*

That night was Lee’s last in Florida before she left for Paris. Rossi and I invited her to the casually glamorous Bayside Grille for a farewell dinner. We dined on the second floor terrace overlooking Naples Bay, the salty breeze wafting through the air and mingling with the calypso chords of a Caribbean guitar. Chatting happily, brimming with love and expectation, she kept the conversation going.

Pleased by what he’d wrought, Rossi smiled across the table at her, every once in a while sending an inquiring glance my way, wondering, no doubt, why I was so quiet, probably attributing that to Lee’s departure.

Wrong. I was delighted for Lee but dreading what I’d have to tell him tomorrow, after we put her on the plane to Paris. Still, on the way back to Surfside I gave him the vial I’d found in the desk and let him quiz me about my conversations with Cookie, Bonita and the Grandeses. I answered as best I could, but truth to tell my mind was elsewhere.

*

The following morning we watched the Boeing 747 roar down the runway and lift into the sky, carrying Lee into the future on silver wings. I would miss her in my life and in the business too. Her hugs and a whispered “I’ll never forget this” still echoed in my heart as the plane disappeared, a glittering dot in the distance and then...nothing.

The time had come. I wanted to talk to Rossi in a public place while I still had steel in my spine. I drew him to a wooden bench near a glass wall overlooking the runways. A tall Royal Palm in a huge concrete pot cast a shadow over us as we sat on the stiff seat.

Rossi took my hand. “Feel sad about Lee leaving?”

I shook my head. “I’m happy for her, but not with some news I got yesterday.”

Taken aback, he jerked upright on the bench. His hand tightened on mine. “What is it?” His eyes narrowed as he peered into my face.

I hesitated, not eager now that the moment had arrived to plunge a knife into our relationship.

“For God’s sake, what’s the matter? You know you can tell me whatever it is.”

“I know.” On the pretext of smoothing my skirt over my thighs, I slipped my hand out from under his. “I saw my GYN yesterday. She told me chances are I’ll never have a child.”

His chin snapped up. “That’s all? Christ, you scared me. I thought you were dying.” His shout caught the attention of an elderly passerby. She sent him a startled glance and scurried away from us.

“What do you mean, ‘that’s all?’” I snapped back. “Don’t you understand? Babies are out for me. No son. No daughter. Not ever.”

The anger ebbed from his face, and the fear. He reached for my hand again, and though I tried to pull it free, he wouldn’t let go. “I understand what this means to you. The finality of it. But this isn’t the end. There are other options for having a family. You could—”

“—adopt?”

“Yes. Exactly. You loved little Frannie the minute you held him.”

“True, but I’ll never be able to give a man a child of his own.”

“That won’t matter to any man who cares for you.”

“Well, it does to me.”

“To me, you’re what matters.
You
.” He shook his head. “I can’t believe we’re having this conversation again. I thought the subject had been put to rest.”

No question he was beyond upset, but I’d come this far, and I’d finish what I had set out to say. “The way our relationship has been heating up lately, I thought you should know.” I freed my fingers and balled my hands in my lap. “I prevented one man from having a family. I will never do that to another one.”

“Oh, so that’s it? You’ve cooked up a foolproof excuse to keep me—or any guy—at arm’s length. You lost Jack and you’ll never let anybody take his place. All this other stuff is nothing more than a smokescreen.” He stood and flung his arms in the air. “So, the mystery’s solved. One anyway.”

“Yes, it’s solved. There was nothing wrong with Jack. He kept me from knowing the truth about myself, but now that I do—”

“You’re going to push me away.” His sarcasm had turned cold and precise. I’d never seen him like this. Well, what did I expect, hugs and kisses?

I stared into his frozen brown eyes. “Try to understand.”

He shook his head. “No. You can stop right there. I understand all right. What you don’t understand is that you’re putting a wall between us. A wall of your own making.” His jaw clenching, he glanced out the window. Another glittering bird was about to take flight. An instant only and his attention swiveled back to me. “You’re worth ten women put together. A hundred. A thousand. Why won’t you believe me? Do you think I’m lying to you?”

With my fingers still clutching each other as if for support, I said, “Jack lied, and I never thought
he
would.”

“I see.” Rossi bent over me, his face level with mine, and spoke in his quiet detective’s voice. “I never met your Jack, but I always thought he sounded like a hell of a guy. I still do. He protected you.”

“I don’t need protection,” I yelled.

A couple of teenagers strolling toward Concourse D heard me and giggled. Rossi ignored them. “The hell you don’t. Jack knew you better than you know yourself. And so do I. You’re scared. Scared to live.”

“I am not!” I leaped up, heart thundering. “I’m not a complete woman.”

Disgust and disappointment mingling in his eyes, he said, “I’m beginning to think that’s true. But not for your reasons. You don’t need me in your life. So let’s make the break starting now.” He stood and shot me a little quasi-military, two-fingered salute. “It was nice while it lasted. I’ll take a cab back to town.”

He strode off, shoulders hunched, the pink and red blooms on his Hawaiian shirt looking anything but cheerful, his shoes hitting the terminal floor like echoing hammer blows.

 

Chapter Twenty-Three

“Hey, Deva, wait up.”

Chip
. I hadn’t talked to him since he’d been released from the hospital. Though the week since I last saw Rossi had been a killer, and I didn’t feel much like chatting, I slowed my pace across Surfside’s parking lot. He caught up to me by my front door, wheezing and puffing but not as badly as I remembered. A bandage circled his left wrist.

“How are you?” I asked him.

He drew in a ragged breath. “Never better. Lost ten pounds. Been working out. I...uh...want to apologize for putting you through that bathroom incident.”

I patted his good arm. “I understand. You’d had a lot of stress. It got to you.”

“True, but it never will again. No need.” He stopped talking and, forehead wrinkling, he stared at me for a moment. “You okay? You’re kind of pale.”

“I’m fine, Chip. Thanks for asking.”
My
buddy
.
He’s
worried
about
me
.
What
a
prince
of
a
guy
. “Really. I’m fine.” No need to add to his woes by telling him about mine. He didn’t look convinced, so I tried for a smile.

“If things got to you too I wouldn’t be surprised.” He tilted his head, and with concern flitting in his eyes, he ran a finger down my cheek. “You sure you’re not upset about anything?” His worry was challenging my reserves. Not daring to speak just then, I shook my head, relieved when he changed the subject. “You moving or something? I saw a truck here yesterday.”

“No. I’m not moving. I just sold some stuff.”

“Redecorating?”

“You could say that...my entire life.”

“Hope that means good things. Sounds serious.” When I didn’t reply, he cleared his throat. “I’ve got some news for you.”

“Oh?”

He inhaled then noisily exhaled. “I got married last Saturday.”

“You did! Wow! No need to ask who the lucky girl is.”

“Nope. AudreyAnn finally said yes.”

I flung my arms around him and kissed his round, teddy bear cheek then let him go just as fast as I had grabbed him. “Uh-oh,” I said, smiling for real this time. “I can’t do that anymore. Your
wife
might object.”

He grinned big time at “wife.”

“I’m so, so happy for you.”

“Me too.” He blushed. “She’s all I ever wanted. And you know the best part?”

His good news had lifted my spirits. “Tell me, I’m all ears.”

“She wouldn’t wait to see if I keep that hidden money. Said it didn’t matter.” His eyes shone like it was Christmas and Santa had granted his every wish.

“Well, somehow I think you’ll have AudreyAnn
and
the money. No one’s claimed it yet, have they?”

“No not yet. Grandese’s lawyer contacted Simon Yaeger last week. Looks like he’s not going to make a play for it either.”

“Francesco told me the same thing, and I’m so pleased.”

“Yeah, the restaurant building’s a total loss then somebody tries to kill him and gets his cousin instead. Grandese could be pretty bitter, but I guess he’s not.”

“I’m just glad he’s not going after the money.”

“Me too. Simon said the legal fees would’ve chewed up a lot, and I want to help Bonita and do things for AudreyAnn. You know, give her luxuries she’s never had.” He drew in a raspy breath, his happiness clouding over for a moment. “I sure hope the police find that killer soon. I’m a cook. You know what happens to a cook when somebody’s poisoned in his kitchen?”

I patted his arm again, hoping to telegraph that I understood. “I can guess.”

“At first, the money didn’t matter much, but now it does, especially if I can’t get work as a chef.”

“That money’s yours. I saw you pull it out of the wall. So did Rossi. I’ll testify for you in any court in the state.” Unless a former owner could prove he’d hidden the money—which was unlikely—every one of those Grover Clevelands belonged to Chip. And I
would
be happy to testify to that. Rossi would, too, I was certain, but the time when I might speak for him was past.

“Thanks. I knew I could count on you.”

I would also be happy to finish the Rum Row project. To get the Grandeses and their problems out of my life. Actually I had no choice but to finish it or risk losing Deva Dunne Interiors. And now more than ever I needed my business. It was the only thing I had left.

“Are you listening, Deva?” Chip asked, bringing me back to the moment. “Will you come?”

“What? Sorry, my mind was wandering.”

“AudreyAnn and I are hosting a wedding reception next Saturday. Here in the Surfside Club Room. We hope you and Lieutenant Rossi can make it.”

“I’d love to, but I don’t know about Rossi.” I took a deep breath before admitting, “We broke up.”

His mouth rounded into a stunned O. “When did this happen?”

“A week ago.”

He let out a whistle then paid for it with a wracking cough. When he caught his breath, he said, “No wonder you’re looking pale. That’s a heavy decision, but on the upside, wait’ll Simon Yaeger hears about this. He’s always had the...he’s always been crazy about you. And he’s already said yes to Saturday.”

I groaned inwardly. The last thing I wanted right now was a fix-up. Not even one with glamour boy Simon. “I’ll be there too. Wouldn’t miss your celebration for the world.”

Though I didn’t want to be rude and cut our conversation short, I’d had more than enough for one day. I needed to get inside and collapse on my couch. Tomorrow I’d start scouring the local art and antiques shops for Francesco’s Hudson River oils, lighting fixtures, rugs and other accessories. The sooner I did so, the faster I’d be through with the whole project. In the coming days, the Closed sign would be in the shop window far too often. What a time to be without an assistant.

On the other hand, working around the clock would keep me too busy to dwell on Rossi.

Rossi
.
What
have
I
done
?

Before I could make an excuse and duck inside, a shiny black Lincoln Town Car with tinted windows purred onto the tarmac. Since Dick Parker sold the building to Simon, we had a few new condo owners, some I hadn’t met yet. Maybe this was one of our new neighbors.

The driver turned off the motor, and two men in business suits got out and slammed the doors. Though they were blocking vehicles in the carport, they left the Lincoln where it was and strode over to Chip and me.

The younger of the two, a man of about thirty-five, his beefy shoulders straining the seams of his pinstriped suit, reached us first. Close behind him, an older man, early fifties maybe, in double-breasted black serge brought up the rear. Neither one smiled. Neither one said hello.

“We’re looking for a woman,” Pinstripes said to Chip. “An AudreyAnn Baranski. You know her?”

Uh
-
oh
. AudreyAnn had said two men in business suits kept calling on Donny. Were these the same two?

I shot an alarmed glance at Chip, but except for a puzzled frown, he appeared clueless. AudreyAnn mustn’t have told him about Donny’s creepy visitors.

“Who wants to know?” I asked.

Pinstripes gave me a slow, insulting, head-to-toe eyeball check. Blood boiling, I gave him a slow body scan right back, deliberately moving my glance from his receding hairline—I let my eyes linger there—down his bristly face, along his torso where I stopped a second to smile. Let him figure out why. Then I then dragged my inspection from his legs to the toes of his pointy shoes. And up again into his eyes, which had narrowed into slits.

I was playing with fire and knew it.

Rossi would have had a fit if he’d seen me antagonize this hostile-looking stranger. I gave a mental shrug. He would never know about it, would he?

As Black Serge folded his arms across his chest, Pinstripes reached into his jacket pocket and removed a badge. He flipped open the leather cover and flashed a piece of metal at us. “FBI,” he said. “Looking for a Miss Baranski.”

Chip gulped. “There’s no one here by that name.”

“You sure?”

“There’s an AudreyAnn Salvatore.”

“Big woman. Big—”

He stopped short of using the T-word, but Chip flushed and said, “My wife’s an ample woman, if that’s what you mean. What does the FBI want with her?”

“A chat.”

“What about?”

Black Serge moved forward. “Just tell us where she is.”

Chip backed up a step. “She’s out doing errands. Shopping.”

“She got a cell phone?”

Chip nodded. “Sure, but—”

“You’re going to give her a call.”

“Is that so? You can’t barge in here like this and—”

“You saw the badge.”

“What’s the penalty for impersonating a federal agent?” As if I were simply making polite conversation, I directed my question at Chip.

“We got a wiseass here,” Pinstripes said, snarly of a sudden. He upped his chin at Chip. “Which one of these doors is yours?”

Chip stood there, blank faced.

“Come on. Come on.”

Chip pointed to 103. “That one.”

“Let’s go.”

“I didn’t invite you in.”

“We’re inviting ourselves. You too.” Pinstripes grabbed my arm in a half nelson. At least I think it was a half nelson. Judging from his iron grip, he could have flung a tire chain around me.

“I’m not going anywhere with you goons.” I tried to pull away, but if anything, his grip tightened. “This is kidnapping. A federal offense.”

“Don’t take that attitude. We’re just waiting on Miss Bar—
Mrs
. Salvatore.”

I could have screamed. I should have screamed, but that’s when Black Serge pulled a gun on us, and with the muzzle pressing into my back, I followed Chip into condo 103.

 

Chapter Twenty-Four

The minute we were inside, Black Serge waved his gun in the general direction of the defecation-brown lounge chair. “You. Sit over there,” he said to Chip.

His face ashen, Chip slumped into it.

Another gun wave. This time at me. “You over here.”

Stiff as a plank, I took a seat on the couch. Pinstripes hunkered down next to me and flung an arm across the sofa back. “Relax,” he urged.

I upped my chin at Serge. “Tell him to put that thing away and I might.”

“Shelve it,” Pinstripes said to Serge, his arm slipping around my shoulders. “They won’t give us any trouble. Not the redhead anyway. Isn’t that right?” He squeezed my arm. His touch made my skin crawl. I twisted away from him and balanced on the edge of my seat.

The gun disappeared into Serge’s double-breasted jacket. “Give the little lady a call,” he said to Chip.

“On one condition.”

Chip had the guts to demand conditions? Good for him.

“Yeah? What’s that?”

“You don’t hurt her.”

“You in love or what?”

His jaw like stone, Chip said, “Those are my terms.”

“Yeah. Yeah. Just get her here.”

“No way.” Chip wasn’t about to relent. Push a mild, peaceable man too far, and what you get is immovable stone. I didn’t know whether to cheer or cry.

Serge shrugged. “One way or the other, the little woman’s got a surprise coming. So we wait. Unless we speed things up.” His eyes took on a gleeful shine. “Get rough with you. Or...” his glance swiveled over to me, “...her. Yeah, her.” He took a step closer to me and pulled out the Glock.

My heart leaped into my throat. What was he going to do, pistol-whip me? Whatever he had in mind, no question he meant business. In the cool air-conditioned living room, beads of sweat broke out at my hairline, and my hands clenched into fists.
Right
.
Terrific
weapons
against
an
armed
thug
. I glanced across at Chip. His lips were trembling.

As Serge approached the couch, Pinstripes pulled me against his chest. This time I didn’t twitch away. “Take it easy,” he said to his partner. “Don’t hit her in the face.”

“Don’t lay a hand on her anywhere.” Chip huffed out a sigh so deep he had to have dredged it up from his belly. “I’ll make the call.”

I knew he didn’t want to. From the ashen look of him, I could tell he was scared he’d lose AudreyAnn, the most precious thing in his life. But to save me from harm, he was willing to risk endangering her. An act of love—
for
me
—that I’d remember for the rest of my life—however long it lasted. I unclenched my hands and sent him a wobbly smile.

He returned it with one just as shaky then under Serge’s relentless stare, he removed his cell phone from his pants pocket.

“Don’t let on you got company,” Serge told him. “Just tell her you want her home. You got a surprise waiting. That always brings the chicks running.”

A muscle quivered in Chip’s jaw, but he carried out Serge’s order to the letter.

While we waited for AudreyAnn to show, his buddy tried to strike up a conversation with me. But I was having none of it. I didn’t care how much he liked redheads. The creep. He had the personality of a dead weed. Or a rattlesnake.

So I kept quiet and kept shrugging away from his roaming hand, praying all the while that we would get out of this alive. I tossed AudreyAnn’s name into the prayer, too, even though she was undoubtedly the cause of our terror.

We waited in morbid silence for what seemed like forever. Then flip-flops slapped the stone pavers, and a second later in came AudreyAnn, her arms filled with Publix Market bags, her face filled with anticipation at the surprise Chip had in store.

One peek around the living room and she knew. The groceries plummeted to the floor. A bottle smashed and red wine leaked out over the tiles.

Serge pointed to the widening red circle. “Too bad.”

“What are you doing here?” AudreyAnn whispered, terror siphoning the blood from her face.

“You know these guys?” Chip asked in a voice no more than a hoarse whisper.

She nodded without looking at him.

Pinstripes eased off the couch and sauntered over to her. “You got something of ours. We want you should give it to us.”

AudreyAnn’s chins trembled. “I don’t have anything of yours.”

Chip hoisted himself out of his chair, ready to leap on Serge.

The thug reached into his jacket and brandished the Glock. “Stay,” he snapped.

Chip eased back down. “Don’t hurt her.”

Serge cocked his head at AudreyAnn. “You hurt?”

“No,” she said, sounding like she wasn’t sure.

“We’re looking for a notebook. Small. Black. Lots of numbers. A few names. A few initials. You take anything like that out of Donny’s place?”

The blue in AudreyAnn’s frightened eyes lit up. “I took Donny’s little black book to kind of...well...get back at him. I thought it was full of his old girlfriend’s numbers. I called a few, but nobody sounded like a girlfriend. A couple of guys said they never even heard of him.”

“You still got the book?”

She sent a glance Chip’s way, pleading for understanding. “I think so.”

“Go get it,” Serge said. And to his thuggy partner, “Go with her.”

“It’s in my underwear drawer.”

“Should be fun,” Stripes said, taking her arm and marching her into the bedroom. Chip followed them with his eyes, so pale and shaky he looked like he was ready to pass out.

“She’ll be all right,” I said with a confidence I didn’t feel.

He didn’t answer just drooped back onto the lounger and closed his eyes. In the bedroom, a drawer squeaked open, and a moment later, Pinstripes strode into the living room, AudreyAnn in tow, a black notebook in his hand.

“Got it,” he said. “Let’s go.”

“Not so fast,” Serge said. “Any pages missing?”

“Oh yeah.” Pinstripes quickly flipped through the book. “Everything’s here.”

His hand on the front door handle, Serge turned to us. “Keep this little party to yourselves. Understand?” He shrugged. “Otherwise, who knows?”

Hi partner tucked the notebook in his jacket pocket and winked at me. “I meant it, babe. Love that red hair. Why don’t you believe me? Would I lie?”

I shot him a filthy look. “Why not? Better men than you have.”

“Better at what?”

“Before you go, I have a question for you,” I said, getting daring now that they were leaving.

“You want a date?”

“Franceso Grandese said to thank you for the toy truck. The baby loves it.”

“He got it, huh? How the hell did you find out?” As something struck him, he stepped back into the living room. “Bonita tell you?”

Serge frowned and jerked his chin at the door. “Come on. Who cares about that? Let’s go.”

“Yeah, yeah, we’re out of here,” Stripes said, heading for the foyer.

The instant the door clicked closed behind them, I raced over and rammed the deadbolt home, though truth be told, Serge’s Glock could shoot off the bolt, the lock and half the door with no trouble at all.

Before Chip could rise out of his lounger, AudreyAnn ran to him and climbed onto his lap, sobbing. His arms reached around her...with only a little difficulty...and they snuggled together, blocking out the world and everything in it. That included me.

I hated to intrude on AudreyAnn’s moment of comfort—I wasn’t jealous, I swear—but I had to say what was on my mind or bust. “Chip.” No response. “Chip.”

He peered at me over his wife’s heaving shoulders.

“You need to call Rossi. Tell him about this.”

“No. They warned us not to say anything.”

“So what? They’re criminals. You can’t listen to them.”

He shook his head. “I can’t take the chance. They might hurt AudreyAnn.”

“They might hurt
all
of us. You’ve got to notify the authorities. Donny was
murdered
, Maybe over that little black book. Who knows? This is too dangerous to ignore.”

“No.” His voice was as firm as I’d ever heard it.

“Be reasonable. You’re a person of interest in Donny’s death. So is your wife. Me too. I’d call Rossi in a heartbeat, but I can’t right now. You have to do it. Or AudreyAnn does. I insist.” I plopped back on the couch. “I’m not leaving until you do.”

AudreyAnn sat up, rubbing a sleeve across her watery eyes. “Deva’s right. Those guys used to show up at Donny’s place in Miami. I think he was scared of them too. Always jumpy as a frog around them.”

“They have something on him?” Chip asked.

She shook her head. “I don’t know. I never heard what they talked about, but I think they were forcing information out of him. I’d peek through the blinds when they stood outside. Donny did most of the talking. They did the listening.” She wiped her eyes again. The sleeves of her T-shirt had to be soaking wet by now. “Sometimes he’d take out the book and read from it. They’d write down what he said. Numbers, I guess. Before they left, they always gave him an envelope.”

“An envelope?”

She nodded. “Money, I’m pretty sure. He’d take me out for a fancy dinner that same night. Every time.” She glanced warily at Chip, assessing his reaction, but he sat poker faced, listening. “Those were the only nights that happened.”

“The police need to hear this,” I said. A delayed reaction to the danger we’d just escaped had me sweating again in the cool air. “We can’t have thugs showing up on our doorstep. Maybe next time they’ll do more with that gun than wave it in the air. We know they drive a black Lincoln Town Car. The police can trace it. Apprehend them.”

Chip shook his head. “Do you know how many black Lincolns there are in Florida? Thousands.”

“I’ll bet they’re heading for Alligator Alley and the East Coast. I could chase them while you call the police. They should be easy to spot.”

“You’ll never find them. It’s pitch black outside, and we didn’t get the plate number.”

Clearly he had no intention of playing cops and robbers, but I wasn’t ready to give up that fast. “We can describe them. Say we think they’re from Miami.”

“If they’re smart, they’ll switch cars before heading across the alley.”

“Who said they’re smart? Make the call. Ask for Lieutenant Rossi. Don’t force me to do it, please. Tell him they’re the ones who sent the toy truck.”

“The what?”

“Just tell him what I said. Don’t you understand? They could be Donny’s killers.”

 

Chapter Twenty-Five

With both AudreyAnn and me staring him down, Chip reluctantly made the call. Then, pocketing his cell phone, he said, “The lieutenant will be right over. I hope you’re happy now.”

“That’s a stretch, but I am relieved.” I headed for the foyer.

“Hey, where you going?”

“Home. If the lieutenant needs my input, he knows where to find me.”

“But you have to be here,” AudreyAnn sputtered. As I went out the door, Chip was already explaining why I didn’t want to see Rossi just then.

My thoughts scattering like buckshot, I walked into my condo and careened to a stop.

Oh
,
that’s
right
.

No more tall case clock.

No more hunt board.

No more five drawer chest.

No more inlaid mahogany table.

Gone were the Sheffield silver, the rose medallion bowls, the brass candlesticks, the Tabriz rug.

Gone was every vestige of John Douglas Dunne.

Gone, too, was the grace, the loveliness, the subtle sheen and polish of Jack’s family heirlooms. A much-needed check had replaced them...though actually, nothing ever could.

I flung my bag on the living room sofa and dropped onto the cushions. The sofa, the club chairs and the glass coffee table were all the furniture that remained. A pair of lamps stood on the floor. The Pembroke tables that had held them were gone too. The room was as barren as I was.

In the center of the floor where the rug had sat, the tiles were duller than the rest. On one wall a dark square marked the spot where Jack’s portrait had hung. In what I admit was a childish fit, I’d hid it from sight in the back of my clothes closet. Now, after all these changes, the living room needed to be repainted and the floors polished, but that wouldn’t happen any time soon. For the foreseeable future, the effort of getting through my days—and nights—would take all my energy. The condo could remain stripped and bare forever. What did I care? It matched my mood.

Heartsick, I stared at the dull tiles, unable to stop wondering if Rossi would ring the bell and ask a few questions about the mysterious visitors. It would be a perfect excuse to see me. I half feared, half hoped my chimes would ring, that he’d stand on my doorstep, dour, glowering, eager to see me. If that happened, I knew I’d melt. My resolve of last week was already turning into slush.

Motionless as a stalked mouse, I sat still listening to the tomblike quiet of my empty home without the strength or the will to move. I had parted from a man I was crazy about. Yes, I’ll admit it—Rossi had gotten under my skin. But that didn’t make the loss easier to bear. Worse, lingering in the back of my mind was his crazy accusation that I was afraid of life.
Wrong
. For once Rossi was dead wrong. Honesty and doing the right thing were what this was about, not fear. Or were they?

The more I stared, the more I realized the tiles
had
to be polished. They’d drive me crazy if I left them like that. And the walls should be repainted. Maybe I’d go for a different color scheme. Something fresh and new. Off with the old. On with the new.

Well, if I had any fear in my heart at all, it was for Rossi, not for myself. I couldn’t bear disappointing him. As I must have disappointed Jack. I lowered my head to my knees and cried the tears I’d held in all day, soaking my skirt right down to the hem.

In a while, deep voices exchanged a few words outside...Rossi and Chip...then a door closed, plunging me back into silence.

I sat like that for over an hour until once again footsteps sounded on the pavement then faded into nothing. So Rossi didn’t want to talk to me. Just as well. A clean break. But I knew how diligent he was about his work. No matter what his personal reasons for avoiding me might be, if he thought I could add anything to what Chip and AudreyAnn had told him, he would have knocked on my door.

His judgment, as usual, was correct. The night before Lee left—the last evening we were together—I’d told him everything that had transpired at Rum Row. As for the unwelcome visitors to Chip’s condo, I knew no more than Chip did. Less than AudreyAnn. Interviewing me would have been a foolish waste of Rossi’s time.

Wouldn’t it?

In the gathering gloom, the damn tiles merged into a single, featureless mass. Maybe I should drag out to the kitchen and fix something to eat. Except for black coffee, I’d had nothing since last night’s dinner.

But I sat without moving, trying to put Rossi out of my mind, and also trying to unravel the skein of events I’d been entangled in since the day Tomas died. His death might have been a tragic accident, but no question about it, Donny had been murdered. Whether the victim of a fatal error or not, he was dead nevertheless—the unlucky one who had unwittingly saved Francesco’s life.

No saint, in the past Donny had had several skirmishes with the law and obviously knew the two men who harassed us today. And they obviously knew Bonita. What could the connection be? The night Donny died, they weren’t present to slip him the cyanide. Furthermore, their weapons of choice were guns not poison.

So what about the cyanide? I revisited the Cookie possibility. If she’d gone into her father’s factory and stolen some, when had she done so? The business had been sold several years ago. Would she have kept poison on hand for years in case she ever needed to commit a murder? No, too weird, the act of a deranged mind, and Cookie struck me as totally rational. And totally rigid. Except when in her cups.

And then there was Norm, who liked the ponies. By loaning him money, Francesco had fed his habit, perhaps to keep Norm under his thumb. But if Norm were the murderer, killing Donny was a stupid mistake. Had he erased Francesco, he would likely have erased his debt along with him. Maybe that had been his original intent but somehow the dirty deed got botched.

I slid farther down on the couch, kicked off my sandals and stretched out.

It was silly to even consider Bonita a killer. In the first place, how would she get her hands on cyanide? Besides, even if she had, I couldn’t believe she was ruthless enough to use it. Nor Jewels either, pregnant with Francesco’s baby and loving little Frannie as if he were her own.

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