Saffron Nights

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Authors: Liz Everly

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Saffron Nights
L
IZ
E
VERLY
eKENSINGTON
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
This book is dedicated to all the food writers out there,
testing recipes, gathering information,
and working hard to find just the right word.
It seems to me that our three basic needs, for food and security and love, are so mixed and mingled and entwined that we cannot straightly think of one without the others. So it happens that when I write of hunger, I am really writing about love and the hunger for it, and warmth and the love of it and the hunger for it . . . and then the warmth and richness and fine reality of hunger satisfied . . . and it is all one.
—M. F. K. Fisher
Chapter 1

J
ackson Dodds,” the voice said over the security intercom. It was him—the “rock star” photographer just named “America’s Most Eligible Bachelor” by
TimeNews Magazine,
the one with the mysterious past and a womanizing reputation. If only the public knew him like Maeve did. He was always late, almost always sarcastic, and completely unfocused—except when it came to taking pictures.
Jackson and Maeve’s partnership was an arranged one—brought together by their agent. They’d worked on three books together—the last one a best-seller—and had yet to meet. They had e-mailed, chatted on the phone, texted, and even Skyped once or twice. But they had never met in person. It hadn’t been necessary—nor did it matter to anybody, least of all Maeve. She was unimpressed with his ego.
This time was different. A newly proposed book on aphrodisiacs had gotten a good deal of important attention. Maeve and Jackson would be traveling to investigate them, reporting back on a blog, then putting together a book. Chef Paul, their other partner, was charged with creating new recipes based on their findings. The project was a dream come true for Maeve. Few publishers were coughing up decent advances these days, let alone helping to foot the bill for an international research tour.
This is why the meeting was called: Big news about the project, Alice had said, though Maeve had learned that her agent was prone to hyperbole.
Where was Alice?
The door flew open behind Maeve. A man sauntered in, right past Maeve, and looked out the window at the Manhattan skyline, his camera bag hanging from his shoulder.
“Great view,” he said, almost to himself.
Maeve stood. “Um, Hel-lo Jackson.”
Jackson turned and looked at Maeve, taking all of her in—like she was a chocolate cupcake and he was the hungriest man on earth. His eyes rested on her breasts. Of course. How cliché.
“Ever hear of eye contact?” she said, rolling her eyes.
“Yeah,” he cleared his throat. “I didn’t know you, ah, had such”—he gestured with his hands across his chest.
“Grow up, Jackson. Jesus,” she said, falling back into the couch, arms folded, legs crossed.
Maeve was torn between being pissed at his amateurish behavior and a bit flummoxed by his incredible confidence and charisma. She had no idea. He was like a magnet. She could feel the energy pulsing from him as he sat next to her. And she felt it immediately when his blue eyes washed over her. It emanated from his eyes and every pore in his body. Of course, it emanated for every woman, she reminded herself. Now all the fuss about him made sense. You just had to be in the same room to feel it.
“Where’s Alice?” he asked.
She shrugged her shoulders. “Sherri said she’d be back, but that was forty-five minutes ago—when the meeting was actually scheduled, by the way.”
“I’m always late,” he said, grinning. “Sorry.”
“You say that every time.”
“Well, Alice knows that about me, so maybe she scheduled it that way.”
The audacity. Of course, he thought she scheduled the meeting to accommodate him.
“Yeah, well, I have things to do. I’ve been sitting here a while. If they want this book on aphrodisiacs to be written on time, they need to give me a little time for research. For me, it’s not simply a matter of click, click, click . . .”
He waved her off. It was a conversation they’d had before. “Look, you do what you do. I do what I do. Let’s leave it at that. Okay?”
He sat so close their shoulders were touching. She moved over a bit farther toward the arm of the couch. She could still smell him. It wasn’t cologne or aftershave. Was it his soap? Or just his smell? Clean, with an undertone of muskiness, saltiness.
Of course he noticed and grinned. “I won’t bite you,” he said, laughing. “Unless you, ah, want me to.” He gave her that look again—his eyes moving along her body as if she were nude.
“Stop looking at me like that,” she said. “I’m your partner. And besides, you’re wasting your time.”
“Oh yeah . . . that’s right. You have that British boyfriend you never see,” he said.
Maeve grimaced. She hadn’t heard from Mark in ages. He was finishing up his book tour in the UK. She hadn’t seen him in months, and the last time she heard from him was—what, two weeks ago?
“That’s none of your business,” she said, pushing her glasses back up on her nose. Damned things needed to be fixed—if only she had the time.
He stood up and walked back over to the window. “Did you see the view?”
Maeve walked over and stood next to him. She had no idea he was so tall and broad shouldered. He reached up and tucked a stray hair behind his ear with his long fingers.
“Look at the way the light is streaming on the building over there,” he said. “Golden.”
His almost black hair was pulled into a ponytail that hung down his back, and as the sun came through the widow, his hair almost looked red. He tilted his head as he looked at her. His eyes smoldered, seemed to call to her.
Well, she wasn’t falling for that. She met his eyes, with one of her eyebrows cocked. “As if,” she said, but she held her place next to him at the window.
He laughed. His dimples were deeper in person. His square chin jutted out as he bit his lip. “Worth a try,” he said.
Just then, Alice’s harried assistant, Sherri, opened the door and poked her head in. “I’m sorry. Alice sends her regrets. She’ll be here within the hour,” she said through what seemed like tears.
“Sherri? What’s going on? Is Alice okay?”
“Oh yes,” she shook her head. “Alice is okay, but she’s in shock. You’ve heard the news, haven’t you?”
Maeve and Jackson just stood there. “What news?”
“It’s Chef Paul. He was murdered.”
Chapter 2
“W
hat?” Maeve said, her face draining of all its color.
“Jesus,” Jackson said. “What the hell happened?”
“Nobody knows any of the details yet. Alice is working on it,” Sherri told them before leaving the room.
Chef Paul Delvechio was not simply Maeve and Jackson’s third partner—he was the chef their projects hinged on. Most chefs used ghostwriters for their books, but Paul insisted Maeve get the writing credit. He created new recipes based on the traditional cuisine at the locations Maeve was writing about. She worked closely with him to create, write, and test the recipes, and craft the descriptions of food. He preferred to stay out of the limelight. His love of the kitchen and his food superseded any kind of love for publicity. How many other chefs did they know who were like that? Zilch.
Jackson’s nerdy but tough-cookie of a partner wilted in front of him. Was she going to faint? His arms went around her, propping her up, and he led her to the couch. Damn. She was an armful—a delightful one. “Maeve? Can I get you something? Some water?” He gently touched her cheek. So soft.
She looked at him and the confident amber eyes of a few moments ago looked haunted, vacant, and moist with tears. She sunk into his chest and sobbed. Jackson was at a loss—how to comfort her? Ever since he was a child, with an over-emotional, alcoholic mother who had embarrassed him in public as a matter of course, he had shied away from any intense emotions. But he managed to hold Maeve and rub her back as she cried, despite how awkward he felt.
“Maeve? Are you okay?”
She finally broke away from him and rummaged through her purse for a tissue. She blew her nose and took a deep breath.
“I’m sorry,” she managed to say.
Maeve’s hands went to her chest. Her nails, short and cropped, gleamed against her tight pink sweater. What the hell? How was he not supposed to look at her breasts, there on display, peeking out in all their rounded glory?
“Hey,” he said. “It was a shock. I get that.”
“I loved Chef,” she said looking out into her own distance. “He was an amazing man. Much like my dad.”
Maeve may have thought Jackson was an asshole, but he did know when to shut up. He knew about her father’s death and how it affected her family. She’d had it rough. Then several years later, her mother had passed away, right before their first book was published. Heartbreaking.
Though he hated to admit it, he had been nervous about meeting Maeve in person. He’d managed to
not
be in her presence for so many years. And he liked it. Smart women scared the shit out of him.
“I’ve traveled with him a bit,” Jackson said. “But we never hung out. He seemed kind of quiet. Or something.”
Chef did warn him about the “sexiest bachelor” label. A few years ago, he had been named the “Sexiest Chef” in America. “Women and food, man. Women love a man who cooks and everywhere I went . . . well, let’s just say there was plenty of both. At first, it’s intoxicating. But it gets to be old.”
Jackson didn’t believe that, then, and he wasn’t sure he did now. He loved the effect he had on women. He didn’t care who knew it. And it intrigued him that Maeve seemed unaffected by him.
“Chef Paul was intensely private,” Maeve said, then sighed. “I don’t know what I’m going to do without him.”
“Whoa,” Jackson said. “What kind of shit are you talking? You’re a hell of a writer and you might as well be a chef.”
She smiled at him. Something in him softened. From what he could tell from photos and Skype, she rarely smiled, but when she did, he was surprised to find she had dimples, which added an interesting element to her heart-shaped face and her high cheekbones. Yeah, he’d always known Maeve was gorgeous, but it was easier to keep any hint of sexuality at bay when they weren’t in the same room. The glasses didn’t bother him in person. But over Skype, he could never see her eyes because of the glare from her desk lamp.
“Well, thank you, Jackson. Writing is one thing, but the cooking? I was always on the phone with him getting his advice as I cooked.”
“I bet you know more than you think you do.”
She smiled at him again—this time it was a full-blown smile. Damn. Was this the same woman who ended a Skype conversation with him the other day by throwing her arms in the air and saying “Bite me, Jackson”?
And the same woman he was kind of afraid of? At least he’d gotten over his nerves about this meeting. Well, he’d replaced those concerns with others. His biggest concern before they’d heard about Chef’s murder was hoping he could sit still and make sense of what she and Alice were talking about during the meeting, that his mind wouldn’t wander to images. The images in the room. The light playing against shadows. The color of the walls changing against the light. He thought in pictures, not words, so he was grateful for these two attractive women.
“Where is Alice?” he said, getting up from the couch and pacing in front of the desk.
“And what’s going to happen with the project?” Maeve said, as if her mind had suddenly cleared. “I mean our contract specifically calls for the three of us, and I’ve already started the preliminary research.”
“That’s the question of the day,” Jackson said. “What’s next?”
“And who would want to kill Paul? I just don’t understand . . .”
“Nor do I,” Alice said as she walked into the room. “But he was poisoned, probably by some kind of mushroom in Brazil. They won’t even allow his body back into the States. His services will be held in Mexico, anyway. It’s where he wanted to be buried. Some island there, I think. I expect you both to be there and will have your flight booked soon.”
She walked around to her desk and flopped into her chair. The woman looked as if she had just rolled out of bed. Her clothes were wrinkled, her hair barely brushed and unkempt, which was not like her. She cleared her throat. Her hand trembled slightly when she picked up a pen and tapped it on her desk.
“I’m, ah, so shocked. Poisoned? Chef? Murdered?” Maeve said.
Alice managed to nod. “None of the toxicology reports have come back yet, so we don’t know exactly what it was. “
“Well, then how do they know he was poisoned?”
Alice shrugged. “There’s all kinds of rigmarole . . . international agencies involved. Investigating.”
“Jesus,” Jackson said. “Was his wife there? Kids?”
“Yes. His wife. They were in the wilds of Brazil. The kids are in school at home. His wife found him, evidently, as he was dying. So awful,” Alice said.
“He must have eaten something—I mean, on his own. You know how he is. The man would eat the most disgusting things. I’m sure nobody poisoned him. Who would want Paul dead?”
Alice looked away from them. “Paul was a lot more complicated than either one of you knew. He had a life outside of work. But still . . . he was loved everywhere. I wonder the same thing.”
“I’m sure the authorities have a reason for their investigation?”
“He was a famous chef and he was poisoned—whether it’s his fault or someone else’s, they will need to get to the bottom of it,” Alice said.
“Where does this leave us?” Maeve asked.
Jackson was glad she’d been the one to ask.
Alice cleared her throat. “I’m not sure, frankly. I need to review the contracts and speak with the publisher. We’re playing phone tag this morning.”
“You mean they might choose not to go forward?” Jackson said.
“Well, it’s such a great idea. High-end concept. I’m sure they will give the matter serious consideration. But without Chef . . . I just don’t know.”
“Alice,” Sherri stuck her head into the office.
“Please excuse me,” she said, and barely managed to lift herself from her chair.

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