Read The Whole Enchilada Online

Authors: Diane Mott Davidson

The Whole Enchilada (14 page)

BOOK: The Whole Enchilada
13.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“We won't defy anything. We can have the event at my conference center. I'll send out a mass e-mail to the congregation, announcing the change in venue.” News embargo or no news embargo, the way information raced around Aspen Meadow, the fact that Father Pete had been stabbed would probably reach numerous parishioners before they even logged onto their computers. “But we need to have this dinner. Father Pete would have wanted us to.”

“Should the supply priest stay for the dinner at your conference center, then?” she asked.

“Yes, please,” I said, and gave the time for the dinner, as well as directions to the center. As soon as I got off the phone, I sent out a carefully worded e-mail to the St. Luke's congregation. I said that Father Pete was in the hospital, and owing to unforeseen circumstances, the fund-raiser for the columbarium would be at my conference center. Directions and my cell-phone number were attached.

I stared at my computer, thinking. Apart from a few special events, the center was closed for most of the winter. I had opened back up at the beginning of June, when a cleaning crew had come in. Since then, we'd had two weddings and another visit from the cleaners. I'd wanted to have the boys' birthday party there, but Marla had insisted on throwing the shindig at her new place. She'd thought the kids would want to swim in the pool, play volleyball, and pitch horseshoes, that all those activities would put them in a great mood for the beginning of summer vacation. And the guests had done all those things. But the conclusion of the party had put a horrid end to that whole good-mood thing.

When Arch and Gus, freshly showered and changed, burst into the kitchen, they demanded to be a part of whatever was going on. Well, what was going on?

I knew one thing: I needed to get away from the house. We all did. I had that major in psychology, didn't I? I felt a twinge of guilt, as I'd promised Tom I would rest and take it easy. But staying at home meant I would, as we say in our business,
stew.
On the other hand, if we went over to the center, and everyone worked, cleaning, setting tables, doing prep for the dinner the next night, and having dinner there, we would feel as if we were working to help Father Pete.

So I told Julian, Marla, and the boys that we were going to have to take the fixings for our dinner that night, and the church meal the next, to the center.

Marla cast a longing glance at the lasagna Julian was now covering with foil. “After I was up late last night, please don't tell me you want me to do more cleaning.”

“You had Patsie Boatfield right there in your kitchen, and she helped you wash those seemingly endless piles of dishes,” I replied cheerfully. “And anyway, what do you think this catering biz is all about? But no, there will be very little cleaning, just dusting and mopping and—” I stopped when she looked stricken. “I'm kidding. But listen,” I said, to soften the idea. “What we're doing is what Father Pete would have wanted. Would want,” I corrected myself.

Julian went out to Boyd's car, which had attached itself to our driveway like a shadow, to tell him where we were off to next.

Before long we had my van, which Marla was going to drive, filled with the foodstuffs for the church's fund-raiser, which was supposed to have been a prime steak cookout—with veggie burgers available. Having lots of people standing around a grill is always very sociable, and feels festive, Father Pete and I had agreed. Everyone was then supposed to have gone into the church to hear about planning their funeral and donating to the columbarium.

I sighed. The best-laid plans, and all that.

Julian was taking his Rover and the lasagna for that night; Arch and Gus followed in the Passat; Boyd was behind them. I left word with Tom's voice mail of our plan. Each one of us had a charged cell phone, I concluded, so please call if he heard anything about Father Pete.

“Have you ever heard of an artist named Yurbin?” I asked, once it was just Marla and me.

“Yurbin? No, should I have?” Marla asked. “Is he an artist I needed to start collecting fifteen years ago, if only I'd known?”

“I catered a reception for a show of his at a gallery once. When I was just starting out in the catering business.”

“And this is important because? I'm sorry, I can't think on an empty stomach, especially one that's been traumatized.”

“I'm pretty sure Yurbin was the uninvited guest who showed up at your place last night. He's an artist. A
collage
artist.”

“Oh, yeah? Picasso was a collage artist, too. So what?”

“When did Holly go to art school,
exactly
?” I asked. “Do you remember?”

“After she got divorced from George. It would be in the Amour notes, wouldn't it?”

“Maybe. I'm just wondering how close they were. Or weren't.”

The six of us spilled out of our vehicles in the conference-center parking lot. Julian and Boyd said I was not allowed to carry anything. They and the boys took boxes, as did Marla—without grumbling, for once—and marched inside. I limped. Since we were so close to the solstice, the late afternoon light was still bright gold. The mountains, enveloped in a thick veil of pine pollen, appeared very far away. If I hadn't been in so much pain of every kind, I would have enjoyed it.

“We'll eat first,” said Julian, smoothly taking over as chief executive, once we had all the food for the next night stored in my conference kitchen's huge refrigerators. He shimmied the lasagna out of the oven. The salad lunches he'd made for us were a memory, and the six of us fell on the rich layers of melted mozzarella, fontina, ricotta, tomatoes, onions, and mushrooms, as if starved.

Julian commissioned Boyd and the boys to help him with the dishes, to give Marla a break. She was so effusively grateful that I laughed.

“Don't worry, I'll be busy,” she said indignantly, and pulled out her cell. She then began working her lines of communication, asking friends if they knew anything about Kathie Beliar. Also, had they ever heard of an artist named Yurbin? If not, could they please call their friends, and so on. Marla didn't say
why
she wanted information about Kathie and Yurbin, but her pals knew if she was calling, something was up.

I couldn't bear not to be doing
something
. I stared at the tables in the dining area, trying to figure out how I was going to make the twelve people who'd made reservations for the fund-raiser feel comfortable in the vast space.

But then something odd happened. Maybe people had read the e-mail from me, and were responding to that. But I didn't think so. What was more likely was this: the sheriff's department had by that time made several hours' worth of inquiries of parishioners. I could imagine the drill: “Your priest, Father Pete, has been attacked. Do you know anyone with a grudge against him? Who, exactly?”

So St. Luke's parishioners began calling my cell. They weren't phoning because they knew Marla and I had discovered Father Pete and Kathie Beliar. Nor, bless them, did they want the inside scoop on what had happened to Father Pete. No: they wanted to make reservations for the dinner. By the time I got off the phone an hour later, I had reservations for an additional ninety-eight people, putting us at one hundred ten. No one wanted veggie burgers, either.

Marla shook her head. “Now that our priest has been stabbed, parishioners suddenly care about what he's been begging them to do for a couple of months. There's Catholic guilt and Jewish guilt and now there's such a thing as Episcopal guilt. Go figure.”

I took a deep breath, balanced on my good leg, and looked around the dining room. “Unless you know something about manna that I don't, you're going to have to tell me where I'm going to get eighty-some prime steaks on short notice. And don't ask: I know Tom will veto a potluck.”

“Probably even a buffet,” said Marla, unhelpfully.

14

O
ne hundred ten people?” Tom asked in disbelief when he came in at midnight. “You're kidding.” He searched my expression in the pale aura from the maroon-and-yellow lamp he'd given me for my birthday. “You're not.” His look turned tender. “Miss G., you still look exhausted. Call the dinner off, won't you?”

I swallowed. “I can't. Father Pete wouldn't want us to. Listen, we donated all the steaks and veggie burgers we were going to use to the freezers of Aspen Meadow Outreach. We'll figure something out. It'll be fine. Julian has been his usual amazing self. Plus, Boyd, Arch, and Gus have been great. So, do you have any news on Father Pete?” My throat began to close. I managed to say, “Is he . . . awake?”

“They did surgery to repair both lungs. He woke up briefly, but lapsed back into unconsciousness before our guys could question him.” Tom's shoulders slumped. When he said he was taking a shower, I followed him into the bathroom.

“What about your team?” I asked from outside the shower stall. “Did they find out anything?”

“Why don't you take off your clothes and come in here? Then I'll tell you everything. I'll be careful of your leg.”

I smiled in spite of all that had happened. Grief had temporarily emptied me of joy. Now I longed to be close to Tom. I unwrapped the bandages on my leg and slipped into the steamy stall.

“Oh, I like what I see,” Tom said.

I laughed as he pulled me to him. I clasped his middle. We made love slowly, carefully, because of my leg. I almost collapsed when I shook. But Tom caught me.

“That was very nice.” He carefully toweled my back. “Let me put some ointment on your leg and rewrap it.”

I allowed myself to be tended to, then pulled on pajamas and slid between the sheets. “Seems to me,” I murmured, when I was next to him, “that you were going to tell me what your team had found.”

Tom sighed and tucked our quilt around my shoulders. “Kathie Beliar is pretty much a blank. Thirty-five years old, divorced a decade ago, moved up here from Aurora, according to the few friends we could find in her address book. She claimed she wanted to start over. She didn't seem to have any enemies, at least that we could find. No one with a grudge. Even the ex-husband didn't hate her. He just said she didn't want to be a housewife. She moved into a little place up here, then was a substitute teacher for a while. But she didn't like how hard it was to control kids. So the
Mountain Journal
hired her to sell ads. She took on office work for a couple of real estate companies. One of the real estate agents sold a piece of women's fiction, and that lady got so much attention—again, according to these same friends—that Kathie suddenly announced to anyone who would listen that
she
was going to be a
poet
. But as far as we can tell, she never got anything published. There was a slender file of . . . I suppose you would call it verse . . . in her house. We're talking twenty-some poems, mostly along the lines of the breeze in the trees making her knees freeze, then she sneezes.”

“Walt Whitman's reputation will remain intact, then.”

Tom chewed the side of his mouth. “Kathie's friends? They seemed to feel sorry for her. They said she used to talk incessantly about becoming a published poet. But the only file thicker than the poetry one was the one containing rejection letters from literary magazines.”

All the hostility I'd had for Kathie Beliar evaporated. In place of the anger I felt sadness . . . and again, distress with myself, that I'd been so angry and judgmental.

Tom said, “When the poetry thing didn't work out, according to her pals, she was going to open a stable and raise show horses. Apparently she got the idea from a home buyer who came into the agency. He bought a huge, classy place, with a lot of acreage. Kathie volunteered to help out in his stable. ‘Until,' she told her buddies, ‘I can get established.' She mucked out stalls, cleaned tack, and bugged the owner incessantly to allow her to show his horses. I mean, like in horse shows.”

“I'm from New Jersey, remember. I know from horse shows. But I wasn't aware Kathie was into equestrianism.”

Tom's damp hair touched my cheek. “She wasn't. We asked the stable owner about her. He hemmed and hawed and said he didn't want to speak ill of the dead. Finally he confessed that he'd told her she couldn't ride, because, well, she was terrible at it. She quit in a huff, and he said he felt bad about it. But he simply could not allow her to be the one riding his mounts in shows. Kathie gave up on the stable-owning pipe dream and went back to working for a real estate agency. Apparently some of the clients there talked about how great your parties were, how you were just the
best
caterer, but, wait for it now. Don't get angry. They said you were
not cheap
.”

“Oh, for God's sake,” I said hotly. “Anyone who goes into catering for the money should have his or her head examined. Sometimes I think that means me, frankly.”

“Miss G., I'm telling you what Kathie's friends said. And here's the interesting bit. Kathie also told her friends she thought Holly was the most gorgeous, glamorous person around. Working for the real estate company,
Kathie
was the one who set up the rental for Holly. Holly had told her you were her friend. It was as if Kathie became convinced she'd make a mint catering, and become glamorous and gorgeous at the same time, if she could undercut you. She took a weekend cooking class in Denver, but never worked in a restaurant or for a catering company, as far as we can tell. She just decided, boom, to be a caterer, just the way she was going to be a glamorous poet or a glamorous owner of show horses. So she didn't need the breeze to freeze her knees as she carried her poems to the post office, or get stuck on a truck when she had stables to muck—”

“Tom.”

“Sorry. Kathie had taken notes on the parties she'd heard you were catering. Marla had talked about giving the boys' birthday bash at her fabulous new house. The St. Luke's fund-raiser had been opened to the Aspen Meadow community. So our theory is, she thought if she copied you but charged less, she'd become Holly's glamorous new best friend, and have a built-in clientele.”

“That is just too bizarre.”

Tom shrugged. “Those same friends we tracked down? They said she talked about nothing except becoming a caterer
like Goldy Schulz
.”

I thought of one of those Zen-type sayings I'd learned from my mentor, André:
Talking is not doing. The more you talk, the less you do.

“But,” Tom was saying, “since Kathie had also been energized about being a poet, and then about training show horses, they pretty much ignored her. That might explain why she was so eager to take over the birthday party at Marla's, as well as the church dinner. She wanted to
prove
that she was serious.”

“But she's not . . . she wasn't . . . even a parishioner at St. Luke's.” I took a deep breath. “What about Father Pete? Any idea why
he
was attacked? I mean, do you even know who was stabbed first?”

“Our blood-spatter guys have already developed a theory. The perp attacked Father Pete first. The hit punctured his right lung. He spun around, staggered into a wall, then slipped on his own blood and fell.” I shuddered, and Tom stopped talking. “You sure you want to hear this?” I nodded. “Near as we can tell, Kathie tried to run away. The killer caught her by the hair, reached around and stabbed her in the heart. Father Pete had recovered a bit by then, we think. He stood up and tried to fight the attacker. So the perp knifed him in the other lung. How Father Pete avoided drowning in his own blood, we don't know. But after the second assault, he passed out. We figure that's when the guy, or very strong woman, broke into the secretary's locked desk, got the key to the church files, and rummaged through them.”

I had a brief vision of poor, dear Audrey Millard, the church secretary. Lovely as a mountain bluebird, older, single, she was devoted to Father Pete and would be devastated by the attack. I made a mental note to call her, if Tom would allow it. “What was the attacker looking for?”

“Miss G., if we knew that, then we'd have a better idea of who, or what, exactly, we're dealing with here. Our guys are trying to reach the church secretary now.” He stopped talking again. “Audrey Millard?”

“Yes. One of your guys should stay with her, I think. She . . . may come across as fragile. And she may
be
fragile. But she has a good memory. She'll probably be able to help you regarding any questions you have about Father Pete.” I took a deep breath. “I know it's late,” I said apologetically. “But did you hear my message to you about Yurbin?”

He said he had, but the investigation at the church had taken priority. So I began to tell him about Yurbin, collage artist. Tom turned the light back on, and scribbled in his notebook. When I was done, he called the department about Audrey. Also, the night crew still working on the Holly Ingleby case should be told about Yurbin, who might know something about Holly.

“Think your guys will be able to find Yurbin?” I asked, once Tom was back beside me.

“The guy shows up at a party Marla hosts . . . that's followed by a homicide? If he's listed somewhere, anywhere, we'll find him.” He added, “Audrey Millard? She fell apart when she heard about Father Pete.”

J
ulian beat us into the kitchen the next morning. He was reading my computer screen, but offered to make us both coffee. Tom said he would do it, then gazed around in sudden amazement at a dozen-plus loaves of frozen homemade oatmeal bread now thawing on our counters.

“Oh,” said Julian, blushing. “I just took them out to thaw, because I thought we would need them tonight.” He looked at me, puzzled. “Dad's Bread, Goldy? I thought your father had passed away.”

“A while ago,” I said, then explained that the loaves were from a recipe of my father's. Unfortunately, Dad hadn't written down how he'd actually made the bread. He'd only taped the recipe he used—as a jumping-off point, he'd proudly told me, as he kneaded and slapped the dough—onto an index card. The now-crinkled bit of newsprint was almost illegible, as the tape, brown and curling at this juncture, had pulled off several apparently crucial words in the recipe. I'd made numerous guesses as to what the missing words were. As many times as I'd made the bread, I not only had ended up with a dough that was much too sticky, I also hadn't quite hit the taste or texture that my father had produced, seemingly without effort, in his own lovingly tended loaves. I concluded by telling Julian that it wasn't until Tom had stood beside me and pressed down on the tape, then guessed correctly at the missing words—
add two additional cups flour
—that the right combination of ingredients had revealed themselves.

Tom smiled. “Goldy was almost there.”

“Super,” Julian said. His face turned serious. “Now. Do we know what's going on with Father Pete? Nobody's called.”

Tom put a cappuccino in front of me, swiftly texted the department, and moved outside to care for our animals. When he returned, his cell pinged. “ ‘Priest stable. Still unconscious,' ” he read aloud. “Okay. Let's talk about this dinner tonight. Nobody brings anything. No buffet, no grill, no food standing out anywhere where people can mess with it. We think it's possible Holly Ingleby and all the birthday guests were given tainted food, but we don't know how or by whom.”

Julian said he'd made lists of what we could cook on short notice . . . for dinner for one hundred ten. Tom listened to Julian run through possibilities. Maybe people could bring salads? Julian asked. Tom shook his head, as I knew he would. “Whatever the two of you decide to cook for tonight has to be plated up in the conference-center kitchen and brought out to the tables. Also. Tonight? I'm posting Boyd plus Sergeant Jones at your conference center, Miss G. Not only are Holly and Kathie Beliar dead, but Father Pete is teetering on the edge, and we don't have a clue as to who booby-trapped Holly's deck. We don't even know if any of this is connected. The
only
thing Holly, Kathie, Father Pete, and you have in common?”

I looked at him and waited.

Tom said, “St. Luke's.”

“Pretty tenuous connection,” I said.

Tom was adamant. “Our two sergeants will watch you at all times. I don't want
any
volunteers helping. No one will have the chance to doctor the food.”

“But you don't even know—” I began.

Tom's expression was severe. “You either do it my way or you cancel this fund-raiser.”

Julian intervened, ever the peacemaker. “Not to worry! How about this? We do a vichyssoise first. You have a dozen containers of frozen stock, and enough leeks, potatoes, and whipping cream to outfit the French armed forces, who would no doubt appreciate that we're making a French soup. The only challenge will be getting it thoroughly chilled by tonight. This bread will be thawed soon, so it'll work. Plus, you've got another dozen loaves in there.” He gave me a quizzical expression. “Your freezer also has a mountain of zipped plastic bags of chocolate cookies. Where did
those
come from?”

I sighed. “Christian Brothers High School Bake Sale. They told me to bring a few loaves of bread and a dozen cookies. I thought I'd doubled my father's bread recipe, but it ended up making quadruple the number of loaves I was aiming for. And the cookies? CBHS had asked for so few, I was sure they must have said a
dozen dozen
. They didn't. But it was fun. I was experimenting with extra-bittersweet chocolate and had a whole lot left over.”

Tom raised an eyebrow at me, as if to say,
A dozen dozen?
I ignored him. Math skills had never been my long suit. Not only that, but Tom had been asking me for a while to get my hearing checked.

BOOK: The Whole Enchilada
13.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Valise in the Attic by Jan Fields
Vortex by S. J. Kincaid
Thug in Me by Karen Williams
Boone: A Biography by Robert Morgan
Saint Errant by Leslie Charteris
Silenced by Kristina Ohlsson
Facing the Music by Larry Brown
Child of a Hidden Sea by A.M. Dellamonica
Revenge by Joe Craig
A Life In A Moment by Livos, Stefanos