“Merrick’s okay,” Casey said, grinning.
Casey banished memories of Kalin chasing her through this very room and catching her in the kitchen. “Dr. and Mrs. Johnson must have left the house to Merrick for the weekend. Look at that.” She pointed to the trays bearing an assortment of cheeses, chips, pickles, nuts, and sandwiches laid out on the dining room table. She added in tones of loathing, “Party trays. Sheer laziness on Merrick’s part. She ought to be ashamed.”
“Spoken like a true professional. Can you really run a big restaurant by yourself, cooking and all?”
“You bet. The first thing I’d do in here is pitch out all that garbage.” Casey led the way into the modern white kitchen. “Look at this wonderful equipment. Mrs. Johnson is a great cook, and Merrick never learned a thing from her.”
“Merrick believes her brain is too good for anything domestic.” Bonnie dissolved into laughter. “And you’re right. Those trays are still full.”
Casey opened the refrigerator and peered inside. “Look at that. Full of milk and eggs. The possibilities are endless.”
“I can’t believe you.” Bonnie’s short, black curls quivered with mock outrage. “The living room is full of sexy young law students, and you’d rather be back here in the kitchen making something for everyone to eat. You haven’t changed a bit.” Her glare morphed into a grin. “I’m so glad you’re back.”
“The only person I really hoped to see tonight was you. Stick around. I’m about to bless this gathering with something far more interesting than that excuse for party food in the dining room.” Casey straightened and smiled at her friend.
Merrick entered with a good-looking, red-headed man. “Look who’s back, Clay. Casey Gray. Say, Casey, you never graduated from college, did you? What a shame. Dad always said you had a good mind.”
Casey said, with enormous calm, “I graduated from International Culinary College in Baltimore, which was exactly what I had planned to do all my life.”
“It’s a shame so many people think you’re ignorant unless you’ve been to college,” Merrick observed.
Bonnie, who had become a licensed cosmetologist rather than a bachelor of arts or sciences, pressed her lips together and cast her gaze to the ceiling. The red-headed man glanced from Merrick to Casey with mild curiosity.
Merrick added, “I wouldn’t have missed the college experience for anything.”
“I’ve decided you’re right, Merrick. I think I’ll sign up for law school tomorrow,” Casey said, straight-faced.
Merrick’s azure eyes, so like those of her cousin Kalin, went impossibly wide. “You want to go to law school? Do you have any idea what you’re talking about?”
Casey looked at her hopefully. “I’m counting on you to set me straight. I figured that if I apply this week … ”
Merrick, looking horrified, proceeded to set her straight, detailing a process that required about five years, upright ancestors all the way back to the American Revolution, and a mind like Einstein’s. Casey pretended great interest.
“Anyway, if you still want to go to law school,” Merrick finished, “I’ll be happy to show you what courses to take in college to prepare yourself.”
“I’d appreciate that, Merrick. It sounds like a lot of work, but I’m sure it’ll be worthwhile.”
“It’s the best thing that ever happened to me,” Merrick said, in all earnest. She glanced at the large yellow kitchen clock. “Are you sure you have time to bake something?”
“After culinary school I spent six months in Paris training under some of the top chefs. I’m fast. It’ll only take an hour.”
“Have at it,” Merrick invited. “Mom always said you were wonderful in the kitchen.”
Casey wasted no time in shedding her jacket and rolling up the sleeves of her creamy silk blouse. She tied on one of the voluminous aprons hanging on a hook beside the door and ignored Merrick and her male friend.
The red-headed man, Clay, took a sudden interest. “You’re a cook?” He studied Casey from the top of her chestnut head to the tips of her high-heeled pumps. “You don’t look like any cook I ever saw before. Are you as good as Julia Child?”
Casey smiled from the depths of a cabinet. “Wait and see.”
Clay took his cell phone from his pocket and tapped on it. Casey hid a shudder and tried not to think of her own cell phone, lying dead in a charity collection bin in New York. She hated that phone. It symbolized everything she disliked about the city.
Clay looked up from the tiny screen and stared at Casey with the expression of a man who has come across a strange new specimen of womanhood and assessed her thick, wavy hair, large gray eyes, and slender, small-boned figure one more time.
“You’re for real. You managed Chargois in New York.”
“You’re going to stay in here?” Merrick asked him and shot Casey a warning glance. “All right. I’ll be right back.”
Casey ignored the pair and opened each cabinet in turn, then studied the contents of the freezer. She abstracted a box of frozen puff pastry and laid it on the cabinet to defrost.
“You aren’t going to be any fun for the rest of the night,” Bonnie complained. “Aren’t you even going to use a recipe?”
“If I were you,” Casey said, from deep within the recesses of a tall cabinet, “I’d go visit in the living room for a while. I’m going to be busy for the next hour or so.”
“I’d rather visit with you.” Bonnie sat down at the table.
Casey came out of the cabinet clutching a box of cake flour. “I’m about to produce something that will be worth the wait.”
“You’re going to bake a cake?” Clay regarded the cake flour with awe as Casey seized a measuring cup and poured out exactly two cups of flour.
“I’m going to bake a
gateau
.” Casey set a pan of water on the stove and turned on the gas. “I don’t think anyone here has ever eaten a French
gateau
.”
Bonnie stared. “Well, I’ll be.”
Clay’s green eyes followed Casey. “Ah. Now I know who you are. You used to date Kalin McBryde, didn’t you?” His tone let Casey know Merrick had been talking.
“That was back when Bonnie and Merrick and I were in high school.” She smiled and measured sugar, then stood on the tips of her toes to reach a copper bowl hanging on the wall, which she took to the sink and cleaned carefully with salt and vinegar. “Are you in law school with Merrick?”
Clay declined to answer.
Merrick entered the kitchen and ran a red-tipped hand through her silvery hair. Upon seeing Casey cracking eggs into the copper bowl under the interested gaze of her current flame, she said, “What’s up, gang?”
“We were determining who was in law school with you.” Casey poured in sugar, set the copper bowl over the pan of now-boiling water on the stove, and beat it energetically with a wire whisk.
“You’re making a cake like that?” Merrick watched the operation, then seated herself beside Clay and sighed with overdone nostalgia. “I remember when my cousin Kalin used to take loaves of homemade bread Casey had baked back to school with him. Kalin is Walter McBryde’s son. You know, the great criminal attorney.” She looked at Bonnie.
“We know.” Bonnie managed not to laugh.
“Casey, did you know Kalin just sold a book?” Merrick asked. “He told Dad last week. I didn’t even know he wrote. Did you?”
“Casey used to read all his manuscripts,” Bonnie said.
Merrick’s eyes opened wide, and she looked with disbelief from Bonnie to Casey.
Casey’s heart leaped with an emotion she tentatively identified as joy. She tested her batter by lifting the whisk and allowing a trail of batter to fall. “That’s wonderful news, Merrick. I’m very happy for him.”
She fought to blank out the image of Kalin, black brows drawn together in a straight bar, eyes blazing, clutching a thick stack of paper and arguing with her over whether or not his cowboy hero should have a girlfriend.
Clay glanced at his cell phone. “No wonder the poor guy can’t make a go of his practice. He should have gone to work for one of the big law firms if he can’t cut it on his own.”
“I can’t understand him.” Merrick frowned. “With his name and connections, he could be as rich and powerful as his father.”
Casey switched off the heat and transferred the copper bowl to the table, where she continued to whisk. “Kalin always said he couldn’t defend a client he suspected was guilty.”
She smiled at the memory of Kalin getting into trouble when he refused to lie about running his Viper over a flowerbed.
“Cheez,” Clay said beneath his breath.
“Most of us have to remind ourselves that in our legal system, each person is entitled to the best representation,” Merrick hastened to explain.
“Kalin never wanted to go to law school in the first place,” Casey said. An image of Kalin’s hopeful, tanned face and bright blue eyes as he’d told her his plans for writing several Western novels a year overlaid the thick foam she was whisking.
Merrick stood, thinning her reddened lips angrily. Her chair scraped the floor as she shoved it back. “That’s ridiculous, Casey Gray. The truth is, you were holding him back. It’s a good thing he realized that before it was too late.”
Merrick, Casey remembered, truly believed law school was the culmination of a worthy upbringing, reserved for the select few with the money and connections to get in. The attitude had reaped a lot of good-natured mockery for Merrick in high school.
Casey sifted flour over the thick foam in the copper bowl and folded it in, French-style, with her fingers, well aware that Merrick felt personally attacked. She poured the batter into a springform pan she had sitting ready with a steady hand.
“In that case, it doesn’t matter, does it?” she said. “Kalin went to law school and can now rise as far as his ability takes him.” She popped the pan into the oven she had preheated, then cleaned her fingers without concern.
Placated, Merrick returned to her chair. “I don’t know what’s gotten into him. He simply refuses to work at it. What did you do to him?”
“What did I do to him?” Casey repeated, amused. “I haven’t seen Kalin in five years, so if he isn’t progressing as you think he ought, it’s by his own choice.” She gathered up bowls and the whisk and carried them to the sink. Poor Kalin. Why was he practicing law when he disliked almost everything having to do with it?
She’d known this party would be difficult. Busying herself with familiar tasks in the kitchen helped, but with Merrick discussing Kalin, not even the kitchen was a haven.
“I’ve always wondered, Casey,” Merrick said, after sitting a moment in thoughtful silence. “We thought you weren’t leaving for culinary school until the fall, but instead, you left the summer you graduated from high school. Did you leave early because Kalin broke up with you?”
Despite a lifetime of knowing Merrick’s tendency to tread in areas angels avoided, Casey hadn’t expected anything this nosy. She saw only one way to stop the discussion. “Of course.” She smiled and rinsed out the copper bowl. “I thought it would be better all the way around if I left early. That way, Kalin wouldn’t have to run into me every time he came to Winnie to go fishing or hunting with your dad.”
Merrick went speechless for once as she belatedly sensed her audience’s discomfiture.
“Wise move.” Clay stared at Casey after according Merrick one bored glance. “Obviously, McBryde is hopeless.”
Casey measured eggs, milk, and sugar into a pan with great outward calm and applied the wire whisk to the mixture.
“That was very thoughtful of you, Casey.” Merrick’s face glowed bright red.
Casey bit her lip and maintained a straight face. To the accompaniment of dead silence, she took a wooden spoon from a drawer, transferred the pan to the stove, and stirred.
“By the way, Merrick.” Casey took pity on the blond. “Did you make it to the Rice Festival? Who won the cooking contest?”
“Heavens, I have no idea.” Merrick looked relieved. “I was busy in school, so I didn’t come home, but I did hear Teddy Buckley won the Rice Eating Contest. Isn’t that about like him?”
Casey, pleased with the success of her diversion, kept stirring while Merrick and Bonnie exchanged reasonably friendly comments on Teddy Buckley.
Merrick looked up suddenly. “You know, Casey, it’s really amazing how little you resemble your father.”
At that, Bonnie prepared to wade into Merrick, and Casey gave her a warning glance. “I hope I don’t resemble him at all.”
It was hard to tell whether Merrick was trying to deliberately humiliate Casey, or whether she was being her usual tactless self. Casey reflected with inward laughter that it was a good thing she had prepared herself to deal with Merrick’s habit of dredging up one’s darkest secrets for discussion. Merrick’s boyfriend, Clay, was likely to transfer to another law school very soon, judging from his expression.
“Well, why on earth not?” Merrick leaned forward. “He was so handsome, besides being a movie star. Unless, of course, he wasn’t your father. Did you ever contact him before he died?”
“I was too young then.” Casey’s tone reflected major disinterest. She bent to peer in the oven window at her cake.
Bonnie took the cue. “How’s the cake, Casey? Are you sure you didn’t leave something out? Like the baking powder?”
Casey smiled. “This cake won’t need any.”
“Her father was a movie star?” Clay let his eyes wander appreciatively over what could be seen of Casey beneath the big apron. “I believe it.”
“Derrick Davenport.” Merrick looked proud to be the one revealing this tidbit. “Casey’s mother, if you can believe it, went to Hollywood when she was about eighteen to become an actress. Instead, she wound up pregnant and publicly begging Derrick to marry her. He got out of it, which always made me wonder. Did he leave you anything in his will, Casey?”
Clay stared at Casey’s profile. “She must have been very beautiful.”
Casey remained unmoved. “No, he didn’t leave me a thing, which is just as well. I wouldn’t have taken it.”
Merrick clearly found this hard to believe. “Do you think he really was your father, or was your mother just making it up?”
“I don’t know,” Casey said in non-encouraging tones. “He never had anything to do with me, nor I with him. So far as I’m concerned, both my parents died at my birth.”