Prime Cut (35 page)

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Authors: Diane Mott Davidson

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

BOOK: Prime Cut
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"I'm going to go take a shower, if you don't mind," Wanda confided once she had Pru settled on a chaise lounge in her sitting room. We were standing in the small condo kitchen. "There's something about a funeral that just... makes me want to get out of my clothes and start over." She placed Andr‚'s old tea ball stuffed with leaves into one of the many teapots and checked the water she'd set on to boil. "You'll tend to her if she needs anything? She just wanted to see you again, since you've called so many times."

 

 

"No problem," I said softly. "It's unlikely our visit will be disrupted by visitors this time. Has anyone called to bother you in the last week?"

 

 

"Two more real estate agents appeared, plus that horrible caterer dropped by again." She shuddered and carefully poured the steaming water over the tea ball. The scent of orange and black pekoe wafted upward. "I told Litchfield if he had the nerve to come here again I'd report him to the police. He hasn't been back."

 

 

"Wanda," I said suddenly as I glanced around the kitchen, "where are Andr‚'s cooking tools?"

 

 

"You mean the ones he kept in his red box?" When I nodded, she answered, "The police brought them back, along with his apron and pans. Pru had me put them in the spare bedroom. Why?"

 

 

"No reason." I took the tray. "Thanks for the tea." Pru was fast asleep by the time I returned to her sitting room. With her head tilted back, her mouth slightly open, she looked as young and innocent as a bride. I put the tray down and sat on an ottoman by the chaise lounge. When I heard the shower water running, I quickly went looking for the spare bedroom.

 

 

It was upstairs, a spotless, sparsely decorated room featuring white curtains and chenille bedspreads. My heartbeat sped up as I pulled open the closet door and heard it creak. I held my breath; Wanda's shower continued to run. Andre's red metal chef's toolbox had been placed on the floor of the closet.

 

 

The old metal hinge squeaked when I cracked back the top. Again I froze and waited for some response in the house, but heard only running water. I opened the partitions of the box that I knew so well: butcher and paring knives, balloon whisks, can openers, butter-ball scoop, vegetable brushes and peelers, garlic press, spatulas of all sizes, old wooden spoons. Only one item was missing: Andr‚'s salamander.

 

 

Although Andr‚ had never used the bottom compartment for tools - he liked having his tools out where he could see them - I lifted the top layer just to see if I'd missed something. The spoons clanked and the metal layer scraped the sides of the box as I heaved the compartment free. When it was finally out, I gaped, uncomprehending, into the bottom of the box.

 

 

There was what I sought: Andr‚'s salamander. But next to it was a tool I'd certainly never seen Andr‚ use in a kitchen: a crowbar.

 

 

22

 

 

What to do? My thoughts raced. I did a double-check of all the tools; nothing else was unusual or out of place. The water stopped. I hastily closed the box, slid it back into place, shut the closet door, and descended the stairs on tiptoe. Pru slumbered on. I poured two cups of ultrastrong room-temperature tea and slugged one down. When Wanda reappeared, I motioned toward Pro and then whispered that I would find my way out.

 

 

I sprinted to the van and drove back to our house. Tom and the boys were not yet back from the reception. Hunger knotted my stomach. Cook, I told myself That will help you figure this out.

 

 

Cook? I surveyed the buckled rectangles of plywood that covered two thirds of the counter area; the rest was just gaping holes revealing cabinet drawers. The new floor, still unfinished, looked like it belonged in a barn. I did not have the foggiest idea where my recipes were, but I knew Arch well enough to predict that no matter how much food they had at the reception, he would want dinner. Not because he was hungry, but because the comfort of order, including meals served at regular times, had been one of the ways he'd restructured his universe after our family life had first fallen apart. So I decided to make Slumber Party Potatoes, his favorite.

 

 

Within ten minutes, I had started bacon cooking, scrubbed four potatoes in the main-floor bathroom, shuttled them along with washed broccoli out to the kitchen, and placed them in the oven. I trimmed the broccoli stems and set them in a small amount of boiling water just as the thick slices of bacon began bubbling in my saut‚ pan. Despite a messed-up kitchen, despite Craig Litchfield's attempts to undermine my business, I still loved to cook.

 

 

Craig Litchfield. He'd shown up in the most unlikely places, including at Andr‚'s house the day he died. I knew he was a smarmy competitor, but was he engaged; in something even more sinister than stealing clients? Someone was sabotaging my food up at the cabin. I was fairly certain the same vindictive prank had been played: on Andr‚. Could the prankster be Craig Litchfield?

 

 

Could Litchfield have been so insane as to get through the locked gate, or climb the fence of the Merciful Migrations property, to try to harm a competitor? Or could he have hired someone to do it? And could that person have meant merely to scare Andr‚ and gone too far? I couldn't believe that Craig Litchfield would be willing to take a homicide rap, but then again, as I'd learned so often with The Jerk, some folks won't hesitate to use violence in order to get their way.

 

 

I turned the sputtering bacon slices. Fat popped in the j pan, and a tiny, stinging droplet spattered my forearm. I frowned and rubbed the spot. That first morning we had worked together at the cabin, Andr‚ had given me such meticulous instructions in caramelizing - "burning sugar" - for that day's dessert. He was always careful in the kitchen, citing tales of cooks who had sliced fingers or burned their hands or faces. He'd warned me repeatedly about burns. So, on the morning he died, I'd say the chances he had burned himself with his own salamander were slim, unless he had had cardiac symptoms while he was doing the caramelizing.

 

 

I finished flipping the bacon and turned down the heat. So the burns on his hands still bothered me. What else? The fact that he was even preparing more crŠme br–l‚es that day was a puzzle. Andr‚ always brought backup food. So why would he have been making still more crŠme br–l‚es in the kitchen? Had he come to the cabin to prep the fruit, and then been told he needed to make a lot more custards? Who could have delivered this message, and when? Had that same person interrupted Andr‚ as he was making the crŠmes? Maybe even seen him using the fiery-hot salamander? And why had Andr‚, or someone else, hidden or stored the salamander and a crowbar in his toolbox? Had the crowbar been used as a weapon, or for something else?

 

 

I turned off the heat under the broccoli and tried to envision Andr‚ that last morning. Maybe he'd been working in the kitchen and heard somebody in the great room. Could he have seen someone tinkering with the flat that so nearly crushed Leah? Maybe he'd seen or heard something, picked up a crowbar, tiptoed out to the great room, and... And what? And tried to hurt somebody with it? What about the hot salamander? And the nitroglycerin? Were the slight bruises in his mouth nothing, as the coroner seemed to think? Or had someone forced him to swallow the pills?

 

 

Slurnber Party Potatoes

 

 

4 large baking potatoes

 

 

2 tablespoons (¬ stick) butter

 

 

3 tablespoons all-purpose flour

 

 

1 tablespoon chicken broth granules

 

 

1 « cups milk

 

 

1 cup grated Cheddar cheese

 

 

1 pound fresh broccoli, trimmed of sterns and separated into florets, lightly steamed

 

 

1 pound thick-sliced bacon, cooked until crisp, drained, and chopped

 

 

Preheat the oven to 400øF.

 

 

Scrub and prick the potatoes in 3 or 4 places with a fork. Bake them for about 1 hour, or until flaky.

 

 

While the potatoes are baking, melt in a large skillet over low heat. Stir in the flour; cook and stir just until the flour bubbles, 2 or 3 minutes. Add the chicken broth granules, stir, and then gently whisk in the milk. Heat and stir constantly over medium heat until the sauce thickens, about 10 minutes. Add the cheese and stir until it melts, 2 or 3 minutes.

 

 

Split each of the hot potatoes in half and place them on a platter. Place the steamed broccoli florets and, chopped bacon into bowls. Pour the cheese sauce into a large gravy boat. Diners serve themselves assembly-line style, ending with the cheese sauce.

 

 

Makes 4 to 8 servings

 

 

I drained the fragrant, sputtering bacon slices and the bright green steamed broccoli florets, and tried to construct a different scenario. What if Andr‚ had brought the crowbar with him, in order to try to find something? That would surely explain why he'd come early, with all the food made in advance. But what would he have been seeking? Andr‚ had never seen the letter hidden in the old wall, the letter which had pointed toward using Winnie's stolen cookbook to make rolls. To find treasure. He had never shown the least interest in either American history or weapons, and it seemed highly unlikely he had any regard for Charlie Smythe's old rifle. But he had had some glimmer of what was going on when he'd asked for a photocopy of Winnie Smythe's cookbook. Why? What made the cookbook so important? If Andr‚ had known something - something Gerald Eliot had known, too - what could it have been?

 

 

I cut a stick of butter in half and set it to melt in another pan for the cheese sauce. Had there been a tidbit of gossip Andr‚ was waiting to share with me - something that had made someone on the set dislike Leah enough to try to kill her? I turned that over in my mind for a moment, and discarded it. Any gossip he had, he would have told me instantly as soon as the paramedics left on Friday, when we worked together. That day, instead, he'd clucked sympathetically to Sylvia's tale of woe about the robbery. He'd talked to Julian about his work with the Resistance during the war, and helped us prepare and serve the coffee break goodies. What else? Andr‚ had gasped later in the morning. I'd thought he was having another attack. But he hadn't been.

 

 

I quickly grated a heap of Cheddar cheese. What had immediately preceded this appearance of a seizure at the museum? He'd been staring with a disconcerting intensity at the smashed cupboard which had held the missing cookbooks. What else? He had read Charlie Smythe's letter to Winnie from Leavenworth. So what?

 

 

I stirred flour into the butter for a roux, and waited until that mixture bubbled over low heat. Gently cook the flour, Andr‚ had admonished me so many times, gentleness is one of the secrets of the sauce. I added seasonings and hot milk to the roux and delicately 'whisked the sauce. Outside, Tom's car turned into the driveway. I stirred the cheese into the thickened sauce and watched it turn golden.

 

 

"Oh, Mom, thanks!" cried Arch, dashing into the kitchen. "Slumber Party Potatoes, and we're not even having a slumber party!"

 

 

Tom kissed and hugged me and announced that he'd had plenty to eat, and that he had some work to do in the kitchen. Was there any way Arch and Julian and I could eat outside? Arch said he needed to feed Jake and Scout and give them fresh water. Julian quickly offered to help me set up on the deck. When we finally had scraped the outdoor chairs together, covered the picnic table with a bright tablecloth, set out silverware, plates, bowls of crisp bacon, steamed broccoli, hot cheese sauce, and steaming potatoes, Julian abruptly declared that he needed a break and was going to go back to the rec center to swim laps. He left without eating a bite.

 

 

I raised my eyebrows at Arch, who had finished his animal care duties. "Any reason for the sudden interest in swimming?"

 

 

Arch dabbed cheese sauce on half a potato and licked his fingers. "Rustine's not there, if that's what you're asking, Mom. Rustine said there was too much chlorine in the pool, and it would wreck her hair, so she didn't go in. Neither did Julian. And Lettie saw some friends from school, so she didn't really talk to me very much."

 

 

"Arch," I said, "there's something I need to talk to you about."

 

 

"Oh, brother. Now what?"

 

 

"Did you print out my client list and all my schedules, assignments, and prices for your father?"

 

 

"No! No way!"

 

 

"Did you print it out for anybody?"

 

 

"Yeah," he said immediately. "That guy who's trying to do Dad's finances? Hugh Leland? Mr. Leland called when you were on a job. He said he couldn't figure Dad's portion of my tuition at Elk Park Prep while he was in jail until I faxed him a copy of your client list and prices, to verify that you couldn't pay the tuition."

 

 

"Arch, that is complete baloney. Your dad pays the tuition, as ordered by the court."

 

 

"Well, that's not what Mr. Leland said, Mom."

 

 

"Please, hon. Please don't give out any information about me, or us, or the business, to anyone." I heard the sharpness in my voice, but couldn't suppress it.

 

 

"I'm sorry." Arch looked stricken. "I was just doing what I thought I was supposed to do, Mom."

 

 

I swallowed my anger. Despite what he had done, it was impossible to blame my son: He'd just been trying to help. And yet, John Richard's ability to manipulate him appalled me. I glanced upward, trying desperately to think of something else to talk about. On the roof: Arch's ham radio antenna still dangled like a forgotten spider web. "How was Lettie's ham radio set? Did it work any better than yours?"

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