If Cooks Could Kill Part 8
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"It is fun."
Nona rested one hand on the counter, the other on her nearly nonexistent hip and angled toward Angie. "Maybe you've gone about this the right way," she said. "You've found a regular guy, maybe not real exciting, but basic, a guy who believes in things like marriage." Angie's eyes narrowed as Nona gave a toss of her head, making her hair whiplash away from her face. "Here, I've been going out with artists, chefs, restaurateurs, even a couple of film directors-poor ones, which is why they're here instead of Hollywood. What good has it done me?"
"I don't know how 'basic' Paavo is-"
"I'm not getting anywhere! These men are so busy trying to figure out themselves, they can't begin to take on the problems a woman might have, especially a strong businesswoman like moi." Nona ran a hand through her hair. She was a melodramatic nightmare.
Angie had had it. She turned back to the chef, whose eyes were starting to glaze over. If she wasn't putting out big bucks for the meringue, he'd have bounded back into his kitchen the minute Nona started talking. She addressed him. "It isn't as if my fiance jumped onto the marriage bandwagon first chance he got, believe me, and-"
"You know what I mean, Angie," Nona interrupted. "At least there was hope for the two of you." She folded her arms. "All right. I'll admit it. Much as my life, my dates, my s.e.x life have been wild and successful and exciting, I wish I knew someone like Paavo."
Angie did a double take. She tossed her recipe at the startled chef, giving him a quick thumbs up. He clutched the recipe to his chest and escaped.
Then she faced Nona, her mind quickly racing through the unmarried homicide inspectors she knew-and just as quickly came up with the perfect match. "No problem."
Dennis sat at a table at Fior d'Italia, a large restaurant near saints Peter and Paul's Church on Was.h.i.+ngton Square. He was early for their lunch meeting, but he was anxious to see Max Squire. He'd left word at the Forty-Niner office that if anyone should try to reach him, to give out his cell phone number. Sure enough, Max had called, and they'd arranged to meet.
The waiter, a young man with sandy-colored hair, one gold earring, and a well-scrubbed demeanor, brought him a Johnny Walker Red and water and put it on the table. "Say, you aren't Dennis Pagozzi, are you?" the man asked.
Pagozzi focused on the earring. "Yeah, I am."
"Wow! I watch the Forty-Niners all the time on TV. Can't buy a ticket"-he chuckled-"even if I could afford one! Man, seeing you here is great. Want to order? Wine? An appetizer? I'm Scott, by the way."
"Let's give my friend a few minutes to show up," Dennis said. "In fact...here he comes now."
Scott turned and tried not to look shocked as he glanced from Max back to Dennis, as if to be sure he had the right man. "I'll show him to your seat," he said, baffled.
Dennis could understand why. Max's gaunt appearance stunned him, as well. He'd seen beggars better dressed.
He stood. "Good to see you, old buddy," he said, hand outstretched.
"Dennis!" Max shook his hand, his lips smiling, but his eyes hard. "Thanks for seeing me. I wouldn't have contacted you if it weren't important."
The waiter hovered near. "Can I get you something to drink, sir?"
Max glanced at Dennis's Scotch and began to shake his head when Dennis said, "Johnny Walker red-a double-for my friend."
"Thanks," Max murmured as Scott rushed off.
"So how you been?" Dennis asked.
"Well...not so hot, as you can see," Max said, gesturing at himself. "But that's not the reason I wanted to talk to you. You see-"
"Wait. After we order lunch. I didn't eat breakfast today." The waiter brought Max his drink, and Dennis ordered antipasto, soup, pasta, and prime rib for them both. "That okay with you, Max?" Dennis asked.
"Sounds great."
"And don't take too long," Dennis said to the waiter. "We're two hungry guys here." Scott dashed toward the kitchen, about ten feet off the ground.
"So, things haven't come together for you since that trouble a few years back?" Dennis asked.
As the table became loaded with bruschetta, baked brie, and roasted garlic, Max turned the conversation back to Dennis and his football career, as if he didn't want to talk about his own troubles. Not when he had a chance at a feast.
It wasn't until they were well into the prime rib that Max said, "Veronica Maple was released from prison three days ago."
Dennis tried to act surprised. "I heard she was expected to get out around this time. I didn't know exactly when. Why do you care?"
Slowly, Max lay down his fork and knife. "Don't play dumb. I know you kept in touch with her."
"But I didn't!" Dennis protested.
"She told people you did. People in the prison."
"Why would I? She meant nothing to me. Think, man! She ripped me off, too."
Max looked, at first, as if he didn't believe him. But then his eyes softened, questioning. Should he trust Veronica and her prison cronies over Dennis? Had he forgotten that Dennis had been the only one to help him in any way three years ago?
"I'm on your side in this," Dennis said. "I always have been."
Max ran his fingers through his greasy hair. "She's still got the money. Most of my clients were paid off like you were. The insurance company did right by you, didn't it?"
"Hey, Max. Calm down. They did okay."
"It's just me. I'm the one she ruined." His fists clenched. "I can't wait to get my hands on her!"
"You've got to forget about her. This isn't going to do you any good. Leave the city. Keep away from her."
"I won't do it. She's got what I want!"
"Max, let me give you some money." He pulled out a wad from his pocket. "How much do you need? Five hundred? A thousand?"
"It's not what I need now. It's the whole thing. She stole eight million dollars from my clients! Do you know what that did to me? To my reputation?"
"Here. Forget the eight million. It's a thousand. It's all I got with me-except to pay this restaurant-but you need more, you let me know. You were the greatest, Max. You helped me invest my money and make nearly twenty percent return on it. You stopped me from doing a lot of stupid stuff I wanted to do. If it weren't for you, I'd have nothing." Dennis placed it on the table by Max's plate.
Max stared at the money. "Tell me this. Did she contact you?"
Dennis waited a long time before he whispered, "No."
Max's eyes bored into him, colder than Dennis had ever seen them. "Tell me how to reach her."
Dennis slowly shook his head. "I don't know."
"d.a.m.n it, Dennis! If you're lying!"
Dennis noticed that the other customers looked up, concerned. "Forget her! She'll only cause you to do something that'll get you into more trouble."
"Like what? Kill her? Believe me, I'd love to. Once I get my money back."
"Max, listen to me." Dennis picked up his money and held it toward Max. "Take this money and leave town. Do it."
Max stood and knocked the money away, sending the bills flying across the restaurant. "I don't want your G.o.dd.a.m.ned money! I want what's coming to me!"
Dennis stood as well, as Max stormed from the restaurant.
"I'm so sorry," Scott said, crawling around the floor picking up hundred-dollar bills. "Was he threatening you?"
"No. Not at all. He's just very upset." He left two hundred on the table to pay for lunch and a substantial tip. "When the pre-season games start, call the 'Niner office. There'll be couple of tickets waiting for you."
"Oh, wow. Oh, man!"
Dennis hurried from the restaurant and looked up and down the sidewalk for Max.
Connie's college helper was scheduled to work at Everyone's Fancy, so Connie took the opportunity to go to Angie's. She wanted to tell her about her date with Dennis.
Had Angie ever been right about the guy. All morning she'd been unable to keep still, leaping around the shop as if it were a step aerobics cla.s.s, thinking about him. He was so cool.
Angie wasn't home. Didn't that just figure? The one time she had something exciting to tell her best friend about, said friend skipped out on her. What nerve!
Connie got in the car to go back home. The weather was clear, crisp, and warm, and going back to her solitary apartment wasn't her idea of a good time. She drove, enjoying the day, and soon found herself in North Beach, driving down the street where she'd found Max Squire pa.s.sed out.
Whenever she thought about him, she still felt like a dork over the way he'd snookered her. Nothing like that had happened to her since high school, and then it had been over s.e.x, not money.
Of course, her ex-husband had been the champion at really s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g her. Compared to him, Max was a piker.
Even in her family, B.M., or before men, it was her beautiful younger sister, Tiffany, who got all the attention and love from their parents. Tiffany had been no more than a secretary, but a secretary in San Francisco's City Hall, where she hobn.o.bbed with local politicians. That made all the difference.
Such a job was far cla.s.sier than working first as a Bank of America teller or later as an insurance agent for All Farm, like Connie had done. Tiffany talked to their folks about political intrigue. Connie talked about the need for liability insurance. Who was she kidding? She was dull, even to herself.
During that time she met Kevin Trammel. Like her, he had only a high school education, but he belonged to a construction workers' union, made good money, and was handsome as sin. Even Tiffany could scarcely keep her eyes off him.
Connie knew he'd had problems with drugs earlier in his life, but he told her he'd been clean for over six months when they met. They dated another four months, then went to Reno and got married.
Soon after, winter came, and construction slowed. Kevin spent more and more time at home, while Connie went off to work. Money was tight. Two couldn't live as cheaply as one, especially when Connie's pay was low, and when he worked, Kevin's was comparatively high. He was used to buying what he wanted, without a wife or anyone else to answer to.
She wasn't one to sit by with her mouth shut while he blew their money. The resulting fights were scary. Connie shuddered to remember how close to violence each came. That should have been a sign of both their immaturity and inability to cope with crises. And more important, their incompatibility.
Before winter ended, he was back on drugs. He stopped in spring when work started up again, but then he pulled a back muscle and had to lie around the house while it mended. Drugs helped ease the pain, he said. Connie lived in dread of going home each day after work, wondering whether she'd find the loving man she'd married, or his evil twin, waiting for her.
Even worse was when he wasn't home when she got there, and she'd spend the evening worrying about the mood he'd be in when he returned. His good moods, eventually, simply weren't good enough, and the tension grew fiercer.
Ironically, she wanted to stay married to him through this time. She remembered the man who had charmed her, and she wanted him back. She tried to do whatever she could think of to get him back, including going to Alanon meetings.
For two years she tried, but the stress, financial strain, and unhappiness became too much. She contacted a divorce lawyer.
Kevin couldn't believe she'd abandon him that way. He needed her, while all she wanted was a husband she could depend on. Luxuries meant nothing to her, and she would have been perfectly happy with a couple of kids and a comfortable home. The kind of warm family life she'd never known. Was that too much to ask?
Was she bitter? Could she have gladly sent him through Angie's commercial-strength meat grinder? Never doubt it for a minute.
When All Farm Insurance downsized, she took her severance pay and used it to buy Everyone's Fancy. By that time, her parents were gone, and soon, her sister would be, too. Her little shop became everything to her.
The whole mess b.u.mmed her out until she met Angie and life began to pick up again. She'd lived like a loser because she'd let herself feel like one. Around Angie, she was different. Heck, Angie looked at her with respect-Connie ran a business, while Angie couldn't find the right job or business, no matter how hard she looked.
Respect didn't mean that Angie wasn't always after her to do something to add a little zing to the shop. Maybe she should think about ways to spruce it up, make it more inviting for return visits, and attract more drop-in traffic. Maybe Angie would be willing to help.
Connie would be sure to ask her.
Thoughts of past travails flew out of her mind as, with a jolt, the current one appeared in front of her.
Max was walking along the sidewalk, and running toward him was Dennis Pagozzi! The two were supposedly friends, so it shouldn't have been a shock to see them together, but it was.
They seemed to argue a moment, then quickly calm down.
It was all Connie could do not to drive onto the sidewalk-and into Max. Seeing Dennis with him made her wonder about him, as well, and if he got in the way of her fender, she couldn't say she'd be too broken up.
Instead, she drove as fast as she could to the corner and turned. Almost immediately, she realized she ought to take a look at what the two were up to, or at minimum, follow Max to demand her money back. By the time she drove around the block to where she'd spotted them, however, they were gone.
Chapter 9.
Angie entered the offices of KYME, otherwise known as "Why Me?" radio, and approached the large reception area with a high, circular desk. Beyond reception were the executive offices and recording studio where Angie had once worked on a call-in talk show, Lunch with Henri, with chef Henri LaTour.
She was there now to pick up a list of top floral arrangers in the area. Last week, one of the station's talk-show hosts discussed big-events planning-weddings, bar mitzvahs, baby showers, graduations, and engagement parties. Angie telephoned and spoke with her on the air, and the host offered a list of decorators who specialized in floral arrangements, but it hadn't arrived. Most likely, it was stuck in clerical h.e.l.l-the place requests wait for clerks to find the time to fill them.
There are some things a girl shouldn't have to wait for, and choosing the right help for her engagement party was one of them.
She explained why she'd come to the receptionist, who went off to search for Adrianne Marceau's list. As she waited at the desk, one of the station managers, a young curly-haired fellow with horn-rimmed gla.s.ses and a bowtie, walked in.
"Angie!" he cried. "Joel Witcomb. Remember me?"
"How can I forget?" she asked. Back when she worked there, she wasn't allowed to say a word on the show, just listen to Chef Henri mangle recipes. "I'm here to pick up floral recommendations because I'm-"
"You were such an angel to help us in the past here," Joel said. "I can't believe we let you go."
"Well, we all make mistakes!" She laughed, and he actually joined her. "Not that such things matter in the least anymore, because I'm-"
"I'd like to remedy that," he said with a toothy smile. "Pierre Takizawa, our current chef, will be leaving on Friday. His ratings just aren't what we'd hoped. We're going to be playing CountryWestern music in that time slot until we get a replacement, which I pray will be soon, or we'll have no listeners left at all."
The other name for KYME popped into her head in neon colors: cwime. As in that station's broadcasts were a cwime to anyone with eardrums.
"As I said, I'm here for the floral arrangers, because-"
"I think you could do it," Joel enthused. "Instead of the Dixie Chicks, let's put on the Angie Amalfi Hour! You could talk about Bay Area restaurants, and also perhaps present a favorite recipe each day. What do you think?"
If Cooks Could Kill Part 8
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If Cooks Could Kill Part 8 summary
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