1 Death on Eat Street (20 page)

BOOK: 1 Death on Eat Street
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“Why do I put up with you?” I stared into his unhappy face.

He licked my nose to apologize, and I forgave him.

“I’m going to feed you right away, and I want you to use the litter box before we go.” There had been a minor potty accident yesterday. I knew he’d needed more time before I rushed him out of the diner.

He looked like he understood. When I put his food down, he ate right away. I left him there, and went to take a shower and get dressed. The weather forecast looked good again for that day. It was supposed to continue to be clear until Thursday. That would give me a nice day for my Chef Art event. I planned to call everyone I could think of to come out to the Biscuit Bowl tomorrow.

I was a little worried that I might tell everyone that he would be there, and then he wouldn’t show. On the other hand, if no one knew he was coming, my publicity would be limited to the people going in and out of police headquarters.

It seemed to me that I was better off taking a chance that he wouldn’t stand me up.

He probably wouldn’t, I thought as the water from the shower sluiced down over me. After all, I could still press charges against him for kidnapping. I didn’t want to do that. I wanted Chef Art as my friend, not my enemy—unless he was a killer. That was yet to be seen, as my mother always said.

I put on a clean pair of jeans and a Biscuit Bowl T-shirt. I’d had dozens of the shirts made when I first started out. It was too bad the company I ordered them from hadn’t done a good job sewing them. I could only wear each one a couple of times before it began to fall apart.

I still had a few new ones for Wednesday. I knew the sizes I had would fit me and Delia. I wasn’t sure about Ollie. I had to remember to have him try one on so I could be prepared for tomorrow. My plan was to go out and buy him a plain blue T-shirt, if nothing else, so at least the colors would match when we were on TV.

I dried my curls as I was thinking about adding sage to the savory biscuits. I was making glazed strawberries for my sweet biscuit bowls.

I realized I hadn’t seen or even heard Delia since I got up. Maybe her alarm clock wasn’t working or she needed an extra nudge. Like she’d said, she was used to going to bed at this time and not getting up until noon. It was quite a time shift for her.

I went over to her bed and put my hand down to shake her.

There was no one there.

TWENTY-ONE

I turned on the big light. Maybe she’d walked around me in the dark to the bathroom.

No.

I searched the diner, even the back part that I didn’t use. She wasn’t anywhere inside.

I turned on all the lights and went back to the rollaway bed.

Delia wasn’t there, but something else was.

Chef Art had promised me an invitation to the benefit dinner at his home. The invitation, printed on harvest yellow stationery, in flowery script font, was on the bed in her place.

I called the police.

It only took a few minutes for Officers Schmidt and Gayner to respond.

I met them outside. “My roommate, Delia, has been kidnapped.”

Officer Schmidt nodded and yawned. “You know, another hour and we would’ve been off duty.”

“What makes you think she’s been kidnapped, ma’am?” Officer Gayner asked.

“You know the kind of things that have been going on here.” I didn’t feel like I needed to brief them. “I got up this morning. She was gone. All I found in her place was this invitation.”

Officer Schmidt looked at the invitation. “You’re a lucky lady. My wife would kill to be invited to one of these dinners.” He smiled at his partner. “I’d kill not to have to go with her.”

“Was there a disturbance during the night? Did anything out of the ordinary happen?” Officer Gayner at least tried to be responsive. “Was the diner broken into? Any sign of a struggle?”

“I don’t think so.” I tried to think if I’d heard anything last night. I was so tired, I wasn’t sure I would’ve heard any noise, unusual or not. “Maybe you should look around. I don’t know what I’m looking for.”

The two officers went inside and examined the area where Delia had been sleeping. I noticed that her few personal belongings were gone, too. Maybe she’d left. Maybe she’d decided that working with me was too hard.

“I don’t see any sign of a struggle,” Officer Gayner observed. “Have you tried to call her?”

“I didn’t think of that.” I took out my cell phone and called her number.

All three of us heard her phone ring. It was on the floor under the rollaway bed.

“She wouldn’t have left without it.” I tried to make a point. “Her whole life is in that phone.”

Officer Schmidt took out a notebook. “What does she do for a living? What’s her name?”

“She works with me here in the diner and on my food truck. Her name is Delia Vann.”

The officers exchanged knowing glances.

“She’s good-looking, light brown skin, long hair?” Officer Schmidt asked.

“Yes. That’s her,” I agreed.

Officer Gayner said, “Yeah. We know her. She’s working with you now?”

“Yes. Can you call something in so everyone will look for her?”

Officer Schmidt put away his notebook. “We can’t file a missing persons report for forty-eight hours anyway, unless there are extenuating health issues. Sorry.”

“But she’s not just missing.” I stopped Officer Gayner from leaving the diner. “She wouldn’t leave without saying anything. And why would she leave behind the invitation to Chef Art’s benefit dinner and her cell phone?”

I could tell Officer Gayner wanted to believe me. He was sympathetic. “I’d like to help you. My hands are tied. If she doesn’t turn up in forty-eight hours, go to the police station and file a report. The chances are she’s decided not to work with you anymore, and didn’t know how to say it. It happens. As for her cell phone, she’ll pick up another one—one where you won’t be able to reach her. Sorry.”

I couldn’t believe it. They walked out of the diner and got back in their car.

“What’s going on?” Ollie frowned when he saw the police car.

“Delia’s gone. I think someone took her. I know she wouldn’t have left on her own without saying anything.”

I went through the whole thing again with Ollie. He looked through the diner, and even in the food truck. There was no sign of her.

In the meantime, I called Miguel to let him know what was going on. He was there when Ollie and I were done looking around the outside of the diner.

“I’ll make some coffee,” Ollie volunteered. “There has to be another explanation for Delia going missing.”

We sat down at the counter with mugs of coffee, Delia’s cell phone, and the invitation to Chef Art’s benefit dinner.

“Tell me again what Chef Art said to you in the car when he picked you up.” Miguel pulled out a notebook and a pen.

I repeated my conversation with Chef Art. “I didn’t want to mention this yesterday. Delia swore me to secrecy, but I think things have changed.”

I told him and Ollie what Delia had said about dating Chef Art and that he had picked her up there the night Terry was killed. “I remember seeing the green Lincoln pull out of the back parking lot. I was standing on the corner, talking to her. She got in the car and it took off.”

“Why didn’t Delia say something?” Ollie asked.

“She didn’t want to make an enemy out of Chef Art,” I told him. “She said the police wouldn’t go after him and she’d be stuck with him being angry for no reason.”

Ollie jumped to his feet and slammed one fist into another. “I’ll show him an enemy. Let’s go out to his mansion right now and drag him out. He’ll tell us where she is.”

“I think she went with him,” Miguel quietly said.

“What?” Ollie turned on him. “She wouldn’t take off like that. She liked being here. She told me so herself.”

“I’m not saying she didn’t like being here,” Miguel added. “I’m not even saying she went of her own volition. She may have agreed to go with him to spare Zoe any further problems.”

“That’s stupid,” Ollie fumed, walking from one end of the room to the other.

“Look around. The door wasn’t smashed. Delia walked out without saying anything. The fact that she left behind the invitation Chef Art said he’d send Zoe tells us he was here. That doesn’t mean he had to hurt her to get her to go with him.”

“You’re speculating,” Ollie said. “I still think we should drive out there and demand to see him. Then we can ask him some questions.”

“Chef Art probably has security people,” I told him. “They won’t let us in.”

“What about the police?” Ollie demanded. “Delia’s missing.”

I told him how the police had felt about that. “They won’t help for at least forty-eight hours.”

“We have no demands, just the invitation,” Miguel argued. “We have no proof that she didn’t go of her own accord.”

“Chef Art is supposed to come to police headquarters tomorrow and help me promote my food truck.” I realized as I said it that the chances were that he wouldn’t show up now. There was no point in calling anyone and telling them about an event that wouldn’t happen.

It was depressing. I was also afraid for Delia. I may have been part of making Chef Art feel that he had to kidnap her. Maybe he hadn’t really believed me about not having the recipe after all. If he hurt her—I didn’t even want to think about it.

It was eight
A.M.
by this time. I would’ve missed the breakfast crowd but could’ve still driven the Biscuit Bowl to police headquarters for lunch. I probably would’ve been there before most of the other food trucks anyway. My heart wasn’t in it that day.

Ollie stalked back to the homeless shelter. Miguel told me he had a few friends who might know something more about Chef Art and the Jefferson recipe. I asked if I could go along. Otherwise, I was bound to sit and eat all the food I’d made for that day. I’d end up five pounds heavier and still depressed.

“That’s fine,” he said. “I can’t guarantee anything. Since the theft of the Jefferson recipe has also involved at least two murders, we have to assume Chef Art is playing this close to the chest.”

“How will he announce that he has the recipe? Won’t the police want to talk to him?”

“Probably,” Miguel said. “If he uses the benefit dinner to announce that he’s found the recipe, he can’t keep it. The only way it could help him would be with publicity. If he wanted to keep the recipe in his personal collection, he’d have to keep his mouth shut about it.”

“Of course, we’re only speculating that Chef Art took Delia to keep it a secret that he has the recipe.” Miguel and I got in his car after I’d locked up the diner. “It makes more sense that you’ll go to the dinner and Delia will be there on his arm, wearing an expensive dress. I didn’t want to say that in front of Ollie. I think he likes her.”

“In other words, she was protecting him because they might have a relationship.” I nodded, thinking about what the two policemen had said earlier. “I really thought she liked Ollie, too.”

“She probably does.” He pulled the Mercedes into traffic. “But Chef Art is a wealthy man who lives in a mansion and travels the world. Why wouldn’t she want to be with him?”

I could see how she could feel that way. What else did she have? My offer of working in my food truck and sleeping on a rollaway bed in a pantry didn’t seem like much compared to it.

“I’m going to make a quick stop at my office, if that’s okay,” Miguel said. “I left my briefcase there last night.” He parked the car and I went inside the building with him. It was part of the shabby-chic area of Mobile. The buildings were older but had a flair to them that came with age and money being spread around to make them popular.

I liked the area, especially the little cafés and restaurants that had opened on the ground floor of some of the buildings. They were too pricey for me to rent, which was how I’d ended up being in the old shopping center that should probably have been torn down years before. There was also a problem with higher crime rates here.

“This is nice,” I said as we walked into his office. It was very low-key, nothing extra. Only one painting of Mardi Gras on the wall.

We heard a noise outside the closed door. It sounded like someone was trying to get in.

“Do you think that’s Delia?” I whispered.

“I don’t know. Let’s not take a chance.”

Miguel and I hid behind a partial wall that separated the main part of the office from the small area that held a fax and copy machine.

I was hoping he might have a gun. I knew he didn’t when he picked up a baseball bat. I grabbed a toner cartridge and crouched down behind the wall with him.

The front door opened. All the muscles in my body tensed. My heart was slamming against my chest. We watched as Don Abbott walked right by us. He seemed intent on going through the papers on Miguel’s desk.

I stared into Miguel’s face and mouthed, “
What now?

I wasn’t embarrassed to admit that I was afraid. Unlike us, Don probably had a gun, and wouldn’t mind using it if he found us.

The way he was going through every drawer and every tiny scrap of paper made me think it would take him a while to reach the area where we were hiding. He’d get there eventually. I wished we had some kind of plan.

Miguel did. He walked boldly out of the room with his hand in his jacket pocket. I wished he’d told me what he’d planned. I didn’t know what to do.

“Mr. Abbott!” Miguel got his attention.

Don turned around sharply, an angry look of surprise on his face. “I thought you weren’t here. Let me have it, Miguel. I figure you have the recipe. It won’t do you any good unless you know who the buyer is.”

I was relieved to see that Don didn’t seem to have a gun, either. He put his hands up, like they do in the movies. Did he really believe Miguel’s hand was a gun in his pocket?

“Tie him up, Zoe,” Miguel said in a harsh voice.

I knew he was trying to get the upper hand with Don before he discovered the trick. I wouldn’t have guessed it would really work.

I didn’t waste time thinking about it. I found a curtain sash that was loose. Don sat down on a chair, and I used the sash to tie him to it. He smelled awful. I held my breath as I pulled the sash as tight as I could. I didn’t know how long it would hold him. I hoped Miguel had a second part to this plan.

Once Don was secure in the chair, Miguel took his hand out of his jacket pocket and frisked him. No one had a gun. That was a relief.

Don shook his head. “Man, that’s one of the oldest tricks in the book. I really thought you had a gun!”

“And you fell for it,” Miguel said. “Why are you here?”

“I guess for the same reason you two are here—the recipe.”

“Why do you think I have it?” Miguel stared intently at him.

“You’re the only one I could think of that I haven’t searched. I was thinking Biscuit Girl gave it to you.”

“Biscuit Girl?” I couldn’t believe he called me that.

“Yeah. I was pretty sure that Terry slipped it to you.”

I started to correct his assumption.

Miguel stopped me. “We want part of the money.”

Don laughed in his greasy way. “I
knew
it. Nobody’s above a million dollars. We could split it, you know? You give me the recipe, and I’ll tell you who we’re supposed to take it to.”

“You start,” Miguel insisted.

Don didn’t look happy about that. He launched a colorful protest, but Miguel ignored him.

“Okay. Fine.” Don looked around the room. “I didn’t know where Terry hid the recipe. But I knew he wrote the location down for me to find in case he got in trouble. He had some girl make it into beads.”

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