Authors: Peg Cochran
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Amateur Sleuths, #Women Sleuths, #Jersey girl, #wedding, #Mystery, #New Jersey, #female sleuth, #Cozy, #Amateur Sleuth, #church, #Italian
Flo passed the baby to Lucille. “Tony’s gone down to the cafeteria to get a bite to eat.” She glanced at the clock on the wall. “I’d better get home and change. Richie’s picking me up at seven o’clock.”
“I’m glad you’re giving him a chance, Flo.” Lucille rocked from one foot to the other with the baby in her arms. It was like riding a bike—some things you never forgot.
“I’ve been thinking about what you said, Lucille. About maybe settling down for a change. Having someone to keep my feet warm at night. I don’t know if Richie is that guy, but I’ll find out, I guess.”
“Have a good time,” Lucille said as Flo put her cell phone in her purse and got out her keys.
“I have a feeling I will,” Flo said as she left.
Lucille stood and stared down at the little baby in her arms. Her face was still scrunched up like all newborns, but Lucille figured she was the prettiest baby she had ever seen.
She turned to Bernadette. “So, how does it feel, Mrs. Baldini? Now that you’re a wife and mother?”
Bernadette wiped her lips on her napkin. “It hasn’t really sunk in yet.”
“I got to admit, I’m glad you didn’t marry that Taylor character.”
“So am I.” Bernadette looked at her hands in her lap. “I was only marrying him to please you, Ma. I knew it meant a lot to you that I be married before the baby was born, so when Taylor asked me, I said yes.”
“You did that for me?” Lucille freed a hand and wiped her eyes.
Bernadette nodded.
“I wonder where on earth Taylor went to? Does he even know his parents are gone?”
Bernadette shook her head. “I told him. He’s with his boyfriend. He’s happy now. His parents couldn’t accept him the way he is.”
Lucille wondered how she would have felt if Bernadette had come home with some girl and said she was in love with her. Well, it didn’t matter, seeing as how Bernadette was now a mother and a wife.
“Hey,” Frankie called from the doorway. He bent over Bernadette and gave her a big kiss, then went to stand next to Lucille. He looked down at the sleeping baby and grinned. “She’s beautiful.”
“Of course she is.” Lucille looked over to Bernadette. “What’s her name? Have you and Tony decided?”
“Yeah. She’s going to be Lucia, but Lucy for short.”
Lucille flushed with pleasure. “Lucia. That’s beautiful. St. Lucia is the patron saint of the blind.”
Tony Jr. came back from getting something to eat. Lucille almost didn’t recognize him. He was a lot bigger and more muscular than when she had last seen him. She handed him the baby.
“We’d better be going. I imagine you two newlyweds would like some time together.”
“Can you imagine, Lucille? We’re grandparents,” Frank said as they walked to the car.
“Yeah. It seems like just yesterday we was here at this same hospital with Bernadette.”
Lucille was glad when they pulled into their driveway. She was beat. She was going to put together a quick dinner and then put her feet up in front of the television.
Frank put his arm around Lucille as they walked toward the front door. “What do you say we order a pizza for dinner?” He turned toward her. “You look tired.”
Lucille smiled. “I am.”
They went into the house together. Frank stopped Lucille as they were going through the living room. He put both arms around her and smiled down at her. “We’re grandparents,” he said again. “Can you imagine?” He looked at Lucille. “Although I got to say you look pretty young for a grandmother.”
Maybe that Botox had worked after all, Lucille thought as she smiled and put her arms around Frankie’s neck, her head resting on his shoulder. “I should go call Ma,” she said but didn’t move. They stood like that for several minutes.
“Oh, yeah, baby,” the parrot said from the corner.
Keep reading for an excerpt from
the third book in Peg Cochran’s
Gourmet De-Lite Mystery series,
Iced to Death
!
Chapter 1
Giovanna “Gigi” Fitzgerald ladled a generous serving of mushroom barley soup into each of the open containers lined up on her kitchen island. Once filled, they would go into white boxes with
Gigi’s Gourmet De-Lite
written on them in silver script. She glanced out the window of her small cottage, where fat flakes of snow drifted past. According to the radio, accumulation was less than an inch so far, and she trusted her bright red MINI Cooper would make it through okay. She had several hungry customers waiting for the diet gourmet food she delivered for each of their meals.
Reg, her West Highland white terrier, was asleep right next to the heating vent. Gigi smiled. Reg knew how to make himself comfortable. And when she was cooking, he was never far away. If a piece of food happened to hit the floor, his eyes would fly open immediately and he would be on it so fast there would be no time to invoke the five-second rule.
Right now he was snoring softly, his right ear twitching in time to his breathing, a bluish-gray beam of weak sunlight slanting across his belly. Gigi smiled at him. She’d taken Reg on in a spur-of-the-moment decision, but he had turned out to be a wonderful companion.
Gigi put the containers of soup into her signature boxes along with a piece of crusty whole-wheat bread, a small salad, and a fruit compote for dessert.
“Come on, Reg, we’re going for a ride.”
She didn’t have to say it twice—the small dog jumped to his feet immediately, both eyes open and bright. It was hard to believe he’d been asleep seconds earlier. He paced impatiently in front of the back door as Gigi reached for her coat. She carefully loaded her containers into the back seat of the MINI and held the passenger door open for Reg. Reg always rode shotgun, staring through the front window as if he, not Gigi, was responsible for driving the car.
Gigi put the car in gear and slowly backed down the driveway. The wheels slid, then gripped again, and they were on their way. She switched on the windshield wipers, and the snowflakes, which were now coming down faster and harder, were briefly whisked away. The roads were covered with a fine dusting of snow, but here and there ice lurked beneath the surface. Gigi gripped the wheel as she negotiated the narrow winding road leading toward the small downtown area of Woodstone, Connecticut.
Gigi made her delivery rounds as quickly as she could. Flurries of snow continued to fall, and the roads became even slicker. She’d spent most of the previous years living in New York City, where she’d hardly ever needed to get behind the wheel. She breathed a sigh of relief after she delivered the last Gourmet De-Lite container and was able to turn around toward home.
She rounded the corner onto her street, and her spirits rose as her cottage came into view. It was white with a bright red door, dormer windows, and a picket fence.
With a red, white, and green Ralph’s Pizza delivery truck in the driveway.
There must be a mistake. She didn’t order a pizza. Not that she didn’t love it—especially the wonderfully aromatic pies Carlo and Emilio used to make at Al Forno—but Ralph’s was pedestrian fare, full of calories and laden with fat, and something she tried to stay away from.
It had to be a mistake.
A young man in a bright green ski cap and a zip-up plaid jacket was standing at Gigi’s front door, an expectant look on his face.
She pulled into the driveway and stopped. She opened the door to let Reg out of the car and he ran ahead of her, jumping around the young man’s legs and sniffing furiously at the pizza box. Gigi was about to call out to the delivery boy when her front door slowly opened.
“What on earth . . . ?” Gigi was so stunned she stopped in her tracks.
A woman stuck her head out the door. She was tall and thin with dark hair styled in a pixie cut. She exchanged some cash for the pizza box in the delivery boy’s hands and was about to shut the door when she noticed Gigi standing in the driveway, still openmouthed.
“Surprise,” she yelled, waving the pizza box toward Gigi.
“What . . . when . . . how did you . . . ?” Gigi stammered as she approached her own front door.
“You didn’t lock it,” the woman said, making it sound like Gigi’s fault. “Well? Aren’t you glad to see me?” She threw her free arm around Gigi’s neck and hugged her.
“What are you doing here?” Gigi looked her younger sister up and down. Pia was a little thinner than the last time they’d seen each other, and the pixie haircut was new. Gigi liked it. Pia’s eyes were enormous, and the cut accentuated them beautifully. She hadn’t seen or heard from her sister in over a year—not since she had taken off for some artists’ commune in the south of England where they made their own paper and paint and grew their own food.
Pia waved the pizza box under Gigi’s nose. Gigi had to admit, it did smell good. She just hoped none of her clients had seen Ralph’s delivery truck in her driveway! She tried to set a good example by eating healthily herself.
“What are you doing here?” Gigi asked again.
Pia made a face. “Let’s get comfortable first and I’ll tell you everything. I’ve brought a bottle of plonk—cheap red wine,” she explained, obviously noticing the look of bewilderment on Gigi’s face.
Gigi followed her sister to the kitchen, still half stunned by Pia’s sudden appearance. A battered suitcase and stuffed backpack had been tossed willy-nilly into the living room. Gigi felt her jaw clench. She cherished her cottage and took the time to keep it neat and tidy.
“Got any paper plates?” Pia pulled open drawers and cabinet doors and then slammed them shut. She opened the red, green, and white pizza box, which she’d placed on the counter, and pulled out a slice. “Sorry, but I can’t wait. I’ve been dying for some decent food ever since I left the States. It was all roasted root vegetables and dandelion salads in that commune. I’ve been pining for some good junk food.” She took an enormous bite of the pizza.
Gigi grabbed plates and napkins from the cupboard and set them out on the island. The pizza really did smell good. She hesitated, and then finally helped herself to a piece.
“To answer your question,” Pia said around a mouthful of pie, “there was this guy.”
Gigi groaned. With Pia, it was always
some guy.
Gigi carefully blotted her slice of pizza with some napkins and then took a tiny nibble from the end. It wasn’t as bad as she expected. As a matter of fact, it tasted heavenly.
Pia twisted the top off the bottle of red table wine she’d brought and waited while Gigi fetched wineglasses.
Pia filled a glass for each of them. “You have no idea how wonderful this is. In the commune, we each had one ugly handmade brown mug that we used for everything. Even the elderberry wine ended up tasting like coffee.” She shuddered. “I did do some amazing work there though.” Pia helped herself to another slice of the pie. “And it was good with Clive while it lasted.”
“What happened?”
Pia heaved a dramatic sigh and rolled her enormous green eyes. “I thought I had found my happily ever after, but it turned out he was cheating on me with that witch Blythe, whose family owns the property the commune is on.”
“I’m sorry.” Gigi looked at her sister. Somehow she didn’t seem particularly brokenhearted. “How . . . how long are you staying?” The words stuck in Gigi’s mouth, and she took a big glug of her wine. It went down the wrong way, and she began to cough.
Pia shrugged. “Don’t know really. Until I’m on to the next good thing.” She pouted prettily. “You don’t mind, do you?”
“Er, no. No. Of course not,” Gigi said insincerely.
• • •
Gigi’s cottage was small, but she’d always found it more than roomy enough for her needs. After only four days with her sister in residence, however, the space was beginning to feel terribly cramped. There was only one full bathroom and a tiny powder room, and Pia thought nothing of leaving her wet towels draped over the bath or her dirty clothes strewn across the floor. Gigi’s tiny guest room was already awash with Pia’s things. Her sister didn’t seem to feel the need to put anything away nor to make the bed. Whenever Gigi passed the room, the sheets were in a tangle and the comforter was in a pile at the foot of the bed.
Gigi was working on boxing up her Gourmet De-Lite lunches when she glanced at the clock. Surely Pia would be up soon. Gigi had saved her something for breakfast, but it was already nearly lunchtime.
“Good morning,” Pia called suddenly, startling Gigi. She was dressed in a pair of black leggings, over-the-knee suede boots and a long, hand-knit-looking tunic.
“I’ve got some breakfast frittata left for you if you want,” Gigi offered.
Gigi looked at Pia’s long, thin legs and wondered, not for the first time, why she couldn’t have gotten some of the same genes.
“Thanks, but I’m going out. I have a lunch date.” Pia smiled enigmatically.
“Really? Who?” Pia seemed to attract men like magnets attracted metal.
Pia grabbed her coat, which she’d left draped over one of the kitchen chairs, and began to put it on. “I’ll tell you when I get back.” She winked at Gigi. “This could be the real deal, but I don’t want to jinx it.”