Read Killer Pancake Online

Authors: Diane Mott Davidson

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Detectives, #Women Sleuths, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Cooking, #Mystery Fiction, #Colorado, #Humorous Stories, #Cookery, #Caterers and Catering, #Bear; Goldy (Fictitious Character), #Women in the Food Industry

Killer Pancake (11 page)

BOOK: Killer Pancake
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Julian."

"What about those demonstrators? Think this could be something they'd do out of spite against Mignon Cosmetics?

Because Claire worked for them?"

"At this point, nothing can be ruled out. We're getting the demonstrators' names and addresses. The usual drill."

My glass was long empty. I needed something else to do with my hands. So I set about assembling ingredients for a fruit cup - luscious, ripe cantaloupes, strawberries, grapes, bananas. I chopped and sliced and arranged the fruit in concentric circles, trying to bring a similar order to this chaos of news.

At length I poured myself another glass of cider and said, "Remember the guy I dumped the vegetables on?"

Tom's smile was enormous: back to his old self. "One of your better moments, Miss G. What about him?"

"And remember Frances Markasian?"

"Goldy, how could anyone forget a reporter who looks like a Caucasian Bob Marley and dresses like a class in salvage?"

I told Tom that Frances seemed to have ferreted out the activist to interview him and that his name was Shaman Krill. Not only had Frances somehow learned that Julian was only the most recent of Claire's many boyfriends, but she also seemed, like

Tom and the state troopers, to believe Claire's death was no accident. Tom turned the stove off, held up one hand, and dug out his trusty spiral notebook.

"Other boyfriends. Thinks Claire was run down. How'd she come to these conclusions, did she say? Maybe I should give her a ring."

"Right, and get an earful about her First Amendment right to protect her sources. Then she'd never tell me a thing. You should have seen her: I hardly recognized her this morning, all decked out in an expensive new dress and tame hairstyle."

He snorted with disgust. "Why was she at the Mignon banquet? Since when is southeast Furman County the beat of an

Aspen Meadow reporter?"

I shrugged and sipped cider. "She said she'd heard rumors about Prince & Grogan having problems. How that translates into attending a cosmetics lunch I don't know. And please, don't ask what kind of rumors, because I already asked her and she's not saying. But I'm going down there day after tomorrow for the food fair, and tomorrow I need to pick up my check from the

Mignon people - "

"Oh, Goldy, no - "

"I'm just going to ask - "

"Okay, ask." He reached over and took both of my hands in his.

"You know I think you have a great mind for these investigations. That's why I like to talk to you about them. I want your ideas."

"Sure." He kissed my cheek. "I do, doggone it. You love to talk to people and they love to talk to you. Great. You have insights. Also great. I just don't want you getting into danger."

"You act as if I'm trying to take over your job or something."

He laughed. "Are you?" Then he answered his own question. "Of course you're not. Take catering. I help you chop, right?

Sometimes you even give me a little scoop to measure out cookie batter. Small jobs. Helpful jobs. 'Cuz that's all you'll trust me with, right? I don't tell you what to serve or who to serve it to. Correct me if I'm wrong here. Because you're the caterer and I'm the cop."

"Please, Tom. Let me help Julian by asking around. He loved Claire so much."

He frowned, then held up a warning finger. "Okay. On two conditions. You don't go into situations that you know are going to be dangerous. And two, if I tell you to back off, you do."

"I thought you said your work wasn't dangerous - "

"It isn't when I'm doing it. It could be for you."

I set out the forks, knives, and plates before replying. Then I said calmly, "Okay. But I'm telling you, Tom, I'm going to help

Julian. Frances Markasian and I are friends, remember. Or at least sometimes we act as if we are. I have an idea where she might have found out some of these things." I told him that I'd chatted with Dusty Routt, the Mignon sales associate, at the banquet. I'd even introduced her to Frances. After hearing about Claire's death, Frances would have felt no qualms about contacting Dusty for information.

"Routt, Routt, that name is familiar. R-o-u-t-t? There was a big bank job done in the early fifties here in Colorado by a guy named Routt. How old is this Dusty?"

"Julian's age. She lives down the street with her mother, little brother, and grandfather. Maybe the grandfather-is a bank robber, although in our little town, that's just the kind of news folks love to spread, and I haven't heard a thing. Not only that, but our church helped build the house they're in. A bank robber doesn't sound like the kind of person they like to have living in houses built with charity money and sweat equity. But... don't you remember my telling you Julian had dated Dusty a couple of times?

Then she was expelled from Elk Park Prep, and they sort of broke up. At a party on Memorial Day, she was the one who introduced him to Claire."

"Let me get this straight." Tom was scribbling in his notebook. "This Dusty... Routt works for the cosmetics people and used to go out with Julian? When Julian met Claire, Dusty had already been dumped? Why was Dusty expelled, do you know?"

I pursed my lips. "Nope. Julian was always too embarrassed to ask her. You know how that school is, it was all kept very hush-hush."

"Another fact the local gossip network seems to have missed," he observed. "And Frances mentioned Claire Satterfield, former boyfriends, and the guy you trashed with roasted vegetables in the mall garage, all in the same breath? Like she thinks there's a connection?" He looked at his notebook and considered. "Sounds like somebody's doing a lot of speculating."

I ignored this. "I'm just saying the rumor is, there seem to have been former boyfriends. Would Shaman Krill have had enough time to get back up to the garage and his precious demonstrators if he'd been driving the truck that hit Claire?"

Tom stood up and ladled a spoonful of crepe batter into the hot pan. It emitted a delicious hiss. "Don't know yet. We're going to have to pace it out, time it. Are you going to call Arch to eat or should I? Think he should hear us talking about the investigation? Think he'd feel bored? Left out?"

"Talking about the investigation? Boring? You don't know Arch." I could well imagine a police-band radio becoming the next craze. When I called to the TV room that dinner was ready, Arch pleaded loudly that he was watching a rerun of Antonioni's

Blow-Up and could we just save him some on a plate?

"It's a real complicated film," he yelled helpfully. Before I could say anything, Tom called back that that would be fine. I murmured that the crepes might toughen with microwave reheating, but he shrugged my worries away.

"What about Julian?" I asked.

"What about me?" said Julian from the doorway. He slumped into a kitchen chair. He still wore his serving outfit, and his face was gray with exhaustion. I had not heard his customary footsteps on the stairs. "This looks good," he said in a tired voice as he regarded the fruit tray. "And before you ask, I'm okay."

I tossed a salad while Tom filled the cr�pes and put them in the oven. While I poured more cider, Tom said, "Julian? How much of our conversation did you hear?"

Julian's face reddened. "Oh, probably most of it."

"Then I need your help," Tom said matter-of-factly. "If you know the worst already and you're not going to pass out on us, then maybe you can answer some questions."

"I don't know the worst already," Julian shot back fiercely. He glared at Tom. "The worst I know is that she's dead and we don't know who did it, okay? That's the worst so far. What else is there?"

Tom continued calmly. "Do you know if Claire had other boyfriends?"

"Yeah, she had some. I don't know who they were. But she was here on a twelve-month visa, do you think she was just going to spend all day behind the Mignon counter and then go back to her apartment and sit around?"

"Julian, please." I set a glass of cider in front of him. He ignored it.

"Well, do you think I knew her every move? I mean, come on!"

"Do you know any former boyfriends who were jealous of your relationship?" Tom asked.

"No."

"Do you know anyone who could have thought of Claire as an enemy?"

Julian rubbed his brow so hard 1 feared he might bruise his skin. "Look," he said finally, "I just know they were investigating shoplifting at the store."

"Did she report any shoplifters?" Tom asked. He wasn't writing.

"No," said Julian with a sigh. "I don't think so."

"What about these other men? Anybody shady that you knew about?"

"Claire just told me she'd seen other guys. But she also said she had admirers. Male admirers," he added dejectedly.

"Who?"

"Oh, Tom, I don't know." Julian gestured helplessly. His bleached hair caught the light, and he looked suddenly childlike.

"She used to laugh when she told me men were always after her. She said she was glad to have a glass counter between herself and them. One time she teased me and said she'd managed to get rid of the guy who pestered her most. But she was so pretty, I guess you'd have to expect..." He didn't finish the thought. "And as for being bothered, well, sometimes she thought somebody was playing weird practical jokes on her at the counter - "

"Like what?"

"Like getting into her stuff, I don't know... she just said some of her stuff was missing, that's all."

"Did she say that she suspected anybody?"

"No!" Julian snapped, and Tom backed off.

The oven buzzer went off and I took out the cr�pes. I requested that we put off the discussion of the investigation. Endless talk about crime can put a damper on the appetite. And we hadn't even told Julian about Marla yet.

The crabmeat in wine sauce was succulent, wrapped inside the thin, tender pancakes. But Julian, who occasionally ate shellfish as part of his not-strictly-vegetarian diet, consumed next to nothing. He had gone from furious to sullen. Over dinner I broke the news to him about Marla. I tried to make it sound as light as possible, with a good prognosis and quick recovery.

Julian's mood went back to anger. "What can we do? Is she going to need us to help her when she gets out? I thought heart attacks only happened to old people."

I felt a wash of relief that he did not react with either a fit of despair or more shock. "Yes, we'll all have to help. You especially, Julian, you know how much she adores you. And she's not old."

I shifted the topic to business. While Tom had a second helping of cr�pes, Julian and I pushed our plates away and did the final planning for catered events coming in the next three days. Despite the crises breaking all around, or maybe because of them, Julian seemed desperate to be preoccupied with food service. Maybe it was a way of reasserting control. Day after tomorrow he would do a Chamber of Commerce brunch, and we talked about preparing lamb with nectarine chutney and avocado salad. He even asked earnestly if he should be taking notes. I said no; the menu, supplies needed, cooking and serving times were all in the kitchen computer. I wanted to embrace him in his pain. But I had learned from Arch that hugging teenage boys is a precarious enterprise.

When we had finished eating, Julian made a pitcher of iced espresso, a drink we'd all taken to imbibing after dinner in the unusual heat. Since I'd had latte as soon as I got home from the banquet, more caffeine would surely wire me for the night. But worry about Marla and the events of the day ought to guarantee insomnia anyway, I reasoned. I set aside a covered dish for Arch, and took the brownies and peach cobblers that I'd stashed for the banquet out to the front porch.

I loved our porch, although the only time you could use it in Colorado was the summer and early fall. Mercifully, the evening air had cooled. Savory barbecue smoke drifted through the neighborhood. As soon as Tom and I were sitting in the old redwood chairs he'd brought from his cabin, baby Colin Routt started to wail again from down the street.

"Poor kid," Tom commented. "I just read an article about preemies. They have a hard life, all the way through."

"Especially when they're born at under one pound and their dad takes off for parts unknown," I said.

Dusty Routt appeared in the tiny dirt-covered yard holding her little brother, or, more correctly, half brother, on her shoulder. She was jiggling the infant up and down, but the motion failed to comfort him. Then the mellow notes of jazz saxophone again floated out of the house's screened porch, and the tiny baby was immediately quiet.

"Music therapy," Tom and I said in unison, and then laughed. When Julian appeared with crystal glasses filled with espresso and ice, we thanked him and sat listening to the jazz filtering through the dusky air. I sipped the cold, dark stuff and waited for one of them to speak.

Julian popped a brownie into his mouth and pushed off on the porch swing. After a moment he addressed Tom and me.

"She was under a lot of pressure."

"What kind?" asked Tom without missing a beat, as if we had not stopped talking about Claire twenty minutes earlier.

Wisely, he didn't reach for his notebook.

Julian shrugged. "Pressure to sell. That was the main thing. You know, Prince & Grogan carries Mignon exclusively in

Colorado. Not only that, but the Mignon counter is the only million-dollar cosmetics counter in the state. If the saleswomen don't sell there, they get fired." He grimaced.

"Pressure to sell," repeated Tom.

Julian sighed. "They live off those commissions. "Lived."

"Julian," I said, "don't - "

He waved this away. "Plus what I mentioned. You know - pressure to watch for shoplifters." His tone was resigned.

"There was a lot of theft there. It was a big problem in the store. Credit card fraud, employee theft, shoplifting, you name it. Claire introduced me to the guy who was in charge of security. Nick Gentileschi. He was okay, I guess. She was helping him with something."

"What?" Tom said, too sharply, I thought. "Helping the security guy with what? The shoplifting investigation?"

"I don't know!" Julian cried. "If I don't even know the identity of this admirer who wasn't bothering her anymore, how do you think I know what she was doing with security?"

BOOK: Killer Pancake
12.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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