Killer Kitchens (Murders by Design) (6 page)

BOOK: Killer Kitchens (Murders by Design)
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No, we were both in the clear. At least I hoped to God we were, and that the chief wouldn’t take Rossi off the case. For if anyone could solve it, he was the man.

Having succeeded in calming myself, I went back to the presentation boards. Definitely historic Putnam Ivory on the living room walls, classic white on the woodwork, and we’d retain the dark walnut-stained hardwood floors. They were in perfect condition. Altogether my plan would create a neutral envelope against which each Federal piece would be as prominent as a five-carat diamond in a Tiffany setting.

The furniture placement did present a design challenge, though. As you entered the living room, the far wall overlooking the pool was all glass. So placing the magnificent Townsend desk straight ahead as the focal point wouldn’t be feasible. I’d have to center it on the right wall and place the largest of the inlaid chests opposite. An oil painting over the chest would balance the visual weight of the Townsend...an oriental on the floor...the Zuber paper would give me more than enough color ideas for rugs.

I’d float twin sofas in ivory linen in the center of the room—one facing the pool and one with its back to it. Very sleek, very minimalist, very Juan Montoya. A coffee table in glass would visually disappear, not war with the antiques and yet be serviceable...unless Francesco wanted to use one of the blanket chests for that purpose. No, that wouldn’t be sophisticated enough. What if...

The Yarmouthport bells on the shop door jangled, interrupting my fragile concentration. I glanced up. A prince of prep in khaki pants, rep tie and striped shirt, and with a gait like an overgrown puppy, loped over to Lee. Could this be Cookie’s friend’s son? No. Even Cookie wouldn’t have the nerve to send him here when I’d refused to take him on as a client.

Oh
, yes,
she
would
.

I flung down my pen again. At the rate I was going, completing the presentation boards would take roughly the same time as finishing the Sistine Chapel.

“Mrs. Dunne handles the designing,” Lee said to him. “Right now she’s in the middle of a project. But if y’all want to look around for a moment, I’ll see if she’ll see you. Who shall I say is calling?”

He murmured something I didn’t catch and, reaching into his shirt pocket, removed a business card and handed it to her.

Well, well. He looked like a recent college grad, twenty-one or-two at the most. Lee put the card on my desk.

Nikhil
Jamison

Licensed
Broker

Harkness
Investments
,
Inc
.

Harkness? This lad worked for Norm? My interest in Cookie’s young friend suddenly shot to the ceiling.

 

Chapter Sixteen

Intrigued, I said, “I’ll be happy to speak to speak to Mr. Jamison, Lee.”

He heard me and crossed the shop to my drafting table with a few long-legged strides. “Mrs. Dunne, I’m Nikhil Jamison. Cookie Harness sent—”

“—you to me,” I finished, trying not to show my exasperation. And clearly failing. His smile faded. Contrite, I stood and extended my hand. This kid wasn’t responsible for Cookie’s arrogance. “Nikhil’s an unusual name,” I said, making nice, before sinking back onto my chair.

“I know. My parents honeymooned in Mumbai. Guess they used to call it Bombay. I came along nine months later.” He flushed a deep magenta and added, “I have to explain my name to everyone I meet.”

Ah
,
a
kindred
spirit
. “Me too.”

He gave me a shy smile. “Yeah, I’ve heard of divas, but you’re my first Deva.”

“It’s really Devalera. My father wanted a boy and got me instead. He named me for his political hero, Eamon Devalera of Ireland. By the time I was six, I could recite Devalera’s whole history.”

Nikhil laughed, showing me a big, bright smile and a wealth of understanding.

“Why don’t you have a seat?” I indicated the gold Chiavari chair across from my desk.

He perched on the edge and ran a nervous hand through his tousled blond hair, rumpling it even more. How appealing. I liked him on the spot and guessed that like most twenty-something guys, he was uncomfortable in a design shop.

“How may I help you?” I asked.

He gulped in a lungful of air. “I...um...have this girlfriend,” he began.

“I’m not surprised to hear that,” I replied causing his cheeks to flush deep red again.

“She’s coming to Naples next month, after she graduates from Vanderbilt. We met there. I graduated last year...and I...I want to ask her to marry me, but...um...my apartment is such a dump that—”

“You’re afraid she’ll take one look, turn around and run away.”

“Something like that. The way the place is looking now, for sure she won’t want to stay.”

“If she’s in love, she will.”

He glanced down at his hands. “I can’t take that chance.”

With his pink cheeks, his shy smile and the sincerity that oozed from his every pore, I didn’t think he had a thing to worry about. But that wasn’t what he’d come to hear, so I asked, “Where do you live?”

“On Tenth Avenue. A rental in the Azalea Building.”

“I know the area well. Great location. Near all the action on Third Street South.”

“Yeah, it’s a cool spot. That’s why I’m leasing there.”

His apartment was in what I called the flower complex. Named for a different blossom, each building part of a cluster of two-story structures set inside a wide swath of grassy lawn. The units were modest but affordable and quiet.

“Tell me about your place. Start with the size and the number of rooms.”

“Roughly one thousand square feet. A bedroom.” Cute, he listed that first. “Living room, small kitchen, small bath. And a patio.”

“Appliances?”

“Oh sure. Pretty new.” He shrugged. “They all work, anyway.”

“How about furniture?”

“A bed.” Funny how that topped the list. “A queen size. A guitar. A couple of plastic lawn chairs. A flat screen TV on a stand. It was a graduation gift. That’s about all,” he said, his expression telegraphing that the dismal list meant I’d turn him down.

“Now for the sixty-four thousand dollar question. How much do you have to spend?”

“Fifteen hundred,” he said without hesitation. “For everything. I can’t go over that figure.”

As I studied him across the desk top, he paused, clearly torn about whether he should say more. He must have decided to go ahead for he added, “My trust fund doesn’t kick in until I’m twenty-five. So until then, I’m on a tight budget. My dad thinks being strapped builds character or something.”

He flushed yet again. An endearing habit, but I wondered how it would play out in the competitive world of investment counseling. Still, despite the boyish flush, he knew his fiscal limits and obviously had no intention of going over them.

“What was your major at Vanderbilt?” I asked, suddenly wanting to know.

“Economics with a business minor.”

“Ah, so that’s why you’re with Harkness Investments?”

He nodded. “The Harknesses are old family friends. Norm’s giving me a chance to prove myself, so to speak.”

“Sounds good,” I said, though after what I’d overheard at Chez Grandese, I wondered if working with Norm
was
good.

“It’s excellent training, and Norm is a great teacher except that—” On the edge of a verbal cliff, Nikhil skidded to a halt. “I’m not such a swift learner.”

I smiled. He hadn’t finished his original thought, but his cover-up had been lightening quick. Nikhil was a lot brighter than he let on and a lot less innocent than his frequent flushing indicated. I liked him. I liked him a lot.

I eased back in the ergonomic chair and swiveled for a moment before hitting him with the facts. “Fifteen hundred isn’t much to work with.”

“I know.”

“Out of that I take twenty percent off the top. So...” I leaned over the desk, “...that leaves twelve hundred to convert an empty, dated apartment into a...” My turn to skid to a halt.

“...love nest,” he finished with an outsized grin. “Can you do it?”

Yes, I did like this kid. And I liked the way he’d just challenged me.

“As they say in Harvard law school, ‘You bet your sweet patootie I can.’”

He laughed, didn’t flush, and said, “Done!”

I held up a palm. “But only with sweat equity.” I pointed a finger at him. “Yours.”

“I’m not afraid of hard work.”

“Good. You’re going to have a chance to prove it. So...when can I see your apartment?”

We set a viewing date for early the following Saturday morning. I confess the project intrigued me. One of the reasons I’d opened my own business, in addition to making money—no sense in being a hypocrite about that—was to help people with modest budgets create lovely environments. To make their lives better, more joyous—happier, I guess is what I mean. While that didn’t make me Sister Mary Deva of the Order of Heavenly Designs, it went a long way toward boosting my morale and giving me the feeling that my work was meaningful. Nikhil’s project was a variation on that theme. In his case I’d also be playing cupid. I loved the very idea.

While Lee wrapped a Steuben bowl for a customer needing a wedding gift, I rose and strolled toward the door with Nikhil. Before we reached it, the bells on the handle jangled, and Rossi stepped into the shop.

“What a nice surprise,” I said delighted to see him. He looked heavy eyed and harried like he hadn’t had much sleep. Or any at all.

“Nikhil Jamison,” I said, “this is Lieutenant Victor Rossi of the Naples Police Department.”

Nikhil shot a startled glance my way before reaching out to shake Rossi’s hand.

He seemed so taken aback, I explained, “The lieutenant is a friend of mine.”

“Oh, I see.”

Why was he so relieved? “Nikhil is an investment broker,” I told Rossi. “He’s with Norm Harkness’s firm.”

“Interesting field,” Rossi said. “For those who know what they’re doing. Afraid I don’t have that talent. Congratulations.”

Nikhil reddened at Rossi’s compliment. “I’m just learning the business. Norm took me in as a favor to my dad.”

“Is that right? Know each other, do they?”

Baggy eyed or not, Rossi segued right into detective mode, staying low key, non-threatening, letting the suspect talk until he revealed something significant.

Wait a minute. What suspect?

His ploy worked. Nikhil said, “Yes, the families go back a long way. Mrs. Harkness and my mother were roommates at Miss Porter’s. And her father and my grandfather were business partners for years.”

“Investment banking?” Rossi asked, offhand like he was only casually interested, only making polite conversation—the fox.

“No, jewelry manufacturing. Costume jewelry for the most part.”

Anyone who didn’t know Rossi well wouldn’t have noticed his whole body stiffen for an instant. A millisecond only, and though he quickly stifled his surprise, from his reaction in that one split second I knew he’d heard something revealing. But what?

“Are they still in business?” he asked, his voice disarmingly soft.

“No, they sold it a few years ago and retired. Foreign imports did them in.”

“The way of the world,” Rossi said with a shrug.

“Yes, well, I’d better get back to the office. Good to meet you, Lieutenant, Mrs. Dunne. See you on Saturday.”

“I’ll be there,” I said.

When Nikhil left, Rossi sent a quick glance Lee’s way. She was deep in conversation with the Steuben customer. “How’s Lee doing?” he asked quietly.

“What can I say? She’s lonely.”

“Do you think a one-way ticket to Paris and four thousand in cash would be enough to reunite those two?”

“Yes, I’m planning to—”

“Good.” He actually smiled. “I’ll get to the bank and take care of it but not today.”

“Wait up a bit, Rossi, I have an idea.”

“Tell me later, sweetheart, I have to run. I came in to tell you the coroner contacted me this morning. Donny was poisoned. Cyanide.”

“Murder?”

At my stupid question Rossi just shrugged. “Until proven otherwise.” His jaw tightened. “I want you to drop Grandese as a client.”

“You know I can’t do that.”

“Can’t or won’t?” He cocked an eyebrow. “For me?”

“Aw, Rossi, that’s not fair.”

“True, but I had to try one last time. Enter that house as little as possible, and above all, do not eat or drink anything while you’re there.”

“Fine. I won’t. But if there’s that much danger, what about Jewels and the baby? And Francesco? What about him? I’m convinced he was the intended victim. Nothing else makes sense.”

“Is that so?” Rossi treated me to a maddeningly superior grin. Which I guess I deserved. Me and my theories. “At the moment their welfare is out of my hands,” he said. “However, as soon as I leave you, I’m heading for Rum Row to talk to them.”

“How about Chip and AudreyAnn and Bonita? What does this mean for them? Norm and Cookie too?”

“They’re all on my call list. See you sometime next week,” he said wryly, giving me a distracted little nothing of a kiss on the cheek.

“While we’re on the subject, why did you stiffen up when Nikhil was talking?”

He glanced down at himself. “Did you do that?”

Men
.

 

Chapter Seventeen

Despite his flip parting comment, Rossi had looked harried when he left the shop. No wonder. He not only had a crime to solve, he had a career to protect—his own. Once again, the realization that I was responsible for our involvement in the case ate at me like acid.

Mea
culpa
.

Slumped next to me in the passenger seat, Lee kept sending anxious glances my way. She looked tense, poor thing. She hadn’t had any fun since arriving back in Naples, only work and sleep and longing for her love.

I returned her worried looks with a smile. The biggest, most dazzling I could muster. Even faked smiles are better than frowns, and she rewarded me with a timid one in return.

“What do you say we go out for dinner?” I asked. “My treat.”

A little light leaped into her eyes, but she said, “Yesterday y’all bought a barbequed chicken from the Publix deli. There’s a lot left.”

“Screw the chicken, Lee. Let’s shake our moody blues.”

She shook her head. “You sure are using colorful language,”

“Damn right. That’s why we have to get you back to Paulo before it rubs off.”

She smiled, and I pulled a U-ee and headed back into town.

“How about the Irish Pub, our old watering hole? The food’s far from gourmet, but the people watching is great, and they pour a mean glass of cheap white wine.”

She giggled. Music to my ears.

“Young lady, you’re going to be in Paris with your husband before you know it. Guaranteed.”

“Oh, Deva.” Lee heaved a sigh. “If only I could be.”

She could, if Rossi had anything to do with it. Unless I beat him to the punch, but first I had to carve out some time to get to Treasure Island Antiques. Then, not only would I surprise Lee, I’d knock the socks off Rossi with a little secret I had in mind. I was as sure of that as I was of my own name. It felt good to be sure of something for a change.

As we cruised along Fifth Avenue South, a parking slot opened up—a minor miracle—and I eased the Audi into it.

In the warm April evening, the flower-perfumed air hinted that summer was ready to muscle its way into southwest Florida. Another month and the humidity would be relentless. But for now the palm fronds waved in the balmy breeze like fans, and the tourists strolling the open square wore the satisfied look of travelers who had hit perfect weather.

We sat at a table on the pub terrace overlooking Sugden Square and ordered two house chardonnays and an appetizer plate of nachos. After sipping our wine and snacking on the nachos, we decided on two of the house specials, Black Angus burgers. Bad for the hips, good for the soul.

I had a second glass of chardonnay so Lee drove home, chatting about Paulo all the way. Back at Surfside, quiet prevailed, not even a gecko scurried along the walkway. With no hope of seeing Rossi that evening, I slid a DVD into the player and settled down with Lee to watch
Titanic
yet again.

An hour into the show, just when Leonardo DiCaprio in a borrowed tuxedo bent over to kiss Kate Winslet’s hand, a scream rent the quiet spring night.

Then another. And another. Lee and I leaped off the couch.

“AudreyAnn,” I said, racing out of the condo. With Lee right behind me, I tore across the lawn and barged into Chip’s lanai.

“He’s dead,” AudreyAnn screamed. “He’s dead.”

“Who?” I asked, knowing, knowing.

“Chip.” Her voice rose to a banshee shriek. “He’s dead, I tell you. Dead!”

“Where is he?” Lee asked quietly, somehow realizing that calm was the best antidote to hysteria.

AudreyAnn pointed a trembling finger. “In there. The bathroom. Omigod.”

We made a mad dash through the condo, careening to a stop in the bathroom doorway. A raw iodine odor clogged the air, and on the floor, the tiles, the bath mat, every garment Chip wore ran slick with blood. On his left wrist, a gash like an open maw oozed more blood.

“A tourniquet,” I shouted. “We need a tourniquet. AudreyAnn, get a tie.”

Shocked lifeless, she stood without moving.

“A tie, a tie!”

Lee ran into the master bedroom, yanked open the closet and came back with a silk necktie. Grabbing a pair of bath towels off a wall rack, I flung them on the blood-soaked floor and knelt on them. I wrapped the tie around Chip’s forearm, shutting off the blood flow, hoping to God I wasn’t too late. His face was as white as one of his chef’s aprons.

I glanced up at AudreyAnn hovering in the doorway, wringing her hands. “Did you call 911?”

Her mouth hung open. “No. I never thought—”

“Get to the phone!”

She didn’t move.

“Hurry up! He’s dying.”

She just stared at me. Without waiting for her to snap to, I jumped up and dashed into the kitchen. I yanked the phone off the hook and gave the emergency responder the vital information, begging her to hurry.

“I’ll go out to the street and flag them down,” Lee said.

I nodded. Every second counted. Trailed by a catatonic AudreyAnn, I hurried back to the bathroom to keep a vigil over Chip. His face had turned from white to gray. The seconds were eternities, though I knew only a few precious minutes had passed before the familiar siren wailed onto the Surfside tarmac.

“This way,” I heard Lee call. “In here.”

I stood and took AudreyAnn by the arm. It felt like a piece of wood under my hand. “Let’s get out of the way,” I said as two male ERU medics rushed into the bathroom.

I don’t think she heard me, but she allowed me to lead her like a meek little lamb...
AudreyAnn
?...into the living room. I eased her onto Chip’s oversized lounger and perched on the couch beside Lee, my fists balled in my lap.

Dear
God
,
not
Chip
.
Not
sweet
,
lovable
Chip
.

While the medics attended him, AudreyAnn gazed straight ahead, eerily unmoving. She didn’t even blink. I eyed her uneasily for a few minutes then finally asked, “Are you all right?”

She slowly turned her head in my direction and looked at me without recognition as if I were a stranger who had somehow, for some unknown reason, decided to pay a social call.

“He killed himself for me,” she said, her voice filled with awe. “For me. Imagine a guy doing that.”

I stared at her, unbelieving. So Chip’s suicide attempt was a tribute to her ego? A notch on her gun? Disgusted, I shook my head and got up to pace away my nervous tension. One of the medics, the one with
Bill
sewn onto his shirt pocket, strode into the living room.

I hurried over to him. “How is he?”

“He’s lost a lot of blood, but his vital signs are steady. We’re giving him a plasma transfusion before we move him.”

“He’s going to make it then?”

“His chances look good.”

I turned to AudreyAnn. “Did you hear that? Chip’s going to live. He didn’t kill himself after all.”

Hiding her face in her hands, she collapsed over the arm of the lounger and, shoulders shuddering, wept like a baby. In between sobs, gasping for breath, she blurted, “Thank God, thank God. I don’t know what I’d do without him.”

Lee sent me a little knowing glance that said maybe, just maybe, Chip had done the right thing—convinced the love of his life that she needed, really needed, him.

“Can someone answer a few questions for me?” Bill asked, shifting from one foot to the other, looking like the deluge was making him a little uncomfortable.

“I can,” AudreyAnn said, wiping her eyes with the back of a hand. “I’m the patient’s next of kin.”

Wrong
. But who cared about the legalities? To Chip, AudreyAnn
was
kin, and if she thought so too, this might actually turn out to be a win-win situation.

“Do you know any reason why the patient...” he consulted his clipboard, “...Mr. Salvatore, would attempt suicide?”

“Yes, I do,” AudreyAnn said, her chin rising. “He thinks I don’t love him.” She smiled, more to herself than anyone in the room. “But I do. I just found out.”

Bill flicked a male eye over her Junoesque form and continued writing. No comment, just that eye flick. But I read flicker very well. So apparently did Lee. She winked at me.

Bill took down the rest of the information he needed and went back to the triage site in the bathroom.

AudreyAnn sniffled a few times, but continued to sit straight as an arrow in the hideous defecation-brown lounger. When Chip recovered, I’d have to speak to him about getting a new chair.

“There’s another reason he fell to pieces,” AudreyAnn said, glancing over a shoulder to see if Bill was anywhere in sight, “but I didn’t think the medic needed to know.”

“What was that?” I asked.

“Lieutenant Rossi came by today. Told us Donny was poisoned. Did you know that? Poisoned.”

I nodded as a sole tear trickled down her cheek.

“Chip said even though he was innocent, when word got out he’d be finished as a chef. How could he reopen the restaurant with a poisoning hanging over his head? So whoever killed Donny, killed Chip’s dream.” She heaved a shuddering sigh. “If only Lieutenant Rossi had stopped there. But he didn’t. He probed and probed...he wouldn’t let up.”

“What do you mean, wouldn’t let up? That’s not his style.” I’d seen Rossi’s questioning technique.
Sotto
voce
, calm, quiet. To be interviewed by him was to get the velvet glove treatment...but I had to admit the velvet glove covered a verbal fist of iron. “I guess he had to get at the truth. But what more could Chip tell him?”

She pointed a finger at her chest. “Not Chip. Me.”

“Oh?”

She heaved another sigh. “He asked how well I’d known Donny before the...uh...murder.”

“And you did know him well, didn’t you?”

“Yes, I knew him all right.”

“I’m curious. How on earth did you two meet?”

Her eyes misted over, whether with memory or regret I couldn’t tell. “At the Island Grill on a girls’ night out. Donny bought me a mai tai and stayed to talk. Said he had come over from Miami with his boss. Francesco had business interests here and was looking for a house. Thought he might relocate to Naples. Donny wasn’t happy about that idea until he met me...then everything changed...for both of us. I drove over to Miami with him one night and—”

“The rest, as they say, is history,” I finished.

She nodded then bit her knuckle to stifle yet another sob. “But our relationship was over weeks ago when he...when he...”

“Asked you to move out?”

She looked over at me, eyes widening in surprise. They were a striking shade of bright blue. Funny I’d never noticed before. Guess like everyone else I had trouble getting up above the
carpe
diem
on her T-shirt.

“How did you know he kicked me out?” she whispered.

I shrugged. “Lucky guess. Obviously something happened to bring you back to Naples. Besides, I never believed you left to go live with your aunt.”

“Chip did, though. He wanted to, I suppose,” she said, a spark of insight that stunned me. “So he was shocked when he found out about Donny. I tried all afternoon to convince him the six months had been a disappointment, but he wouldn’t listen.”

“Well the night Donny died, you did give an Academy Award performance over his body.”

“I know.” She actually looked embarrassed, remembering. “His death tore me up. A guy with a build like that. But I meant what I told Chip. I was over Donny. For good. He had a lot of baggage, and I didn’t need that.”

“What kind of baggage?” While AudreyAnn was in a confessional mood, I wanted to keep her talking. She might say something that would help Rossi.

“Oh, I don’t know. Nothing I could put a finger on. A bunch of phone calls. He’d walk outside to talk, but I heard Francesco’s name come up a lot. And Donny had visitors he warned me not to mention to anyone.”

“Visitors?”

“Yeah, always two men at a time. In business suits. Who wears business suits in Florida except lawyers and bankers? These guys didn’t look like bankers. Toward the end, I wanted to leave anyway...I got scared. Something was going on, but I never found out what.”

“Do you think they wanted to harm Francesco?”

She shook her head. “I don’t know, but with those two I think anything’s possible.”

The medics wheeled Chip through the living room on a gurney. Suspended from a pole, an IV drip fed liquid into his intact arm.

AudreyAnn jumped up. “I’m riding in the ambulance,” she told Bill and, bending over the stretcher, she kissed Chip’s cheek. “I’ll make everything up to you, honey, every day for the rest of my life.”

Though flat on his back and semi-conscious, whether he knew it or not, Chip was sitting in the cat bird seat.

BOOK: Killer Kitchens (Murders by Design)
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