by Maria DiRico
SWIMMING WITH THE FISHES
Mia and Jamie exited the car and walked toward the catering hall. “What’s that?” Jamie asked. He pointed to a large red bundle floating in the water next to the dock closest to Belle View.
“No idea. Maybe it fell off someone’s boat. It could be important. We should see what it is and if we can fish it out.”
The two headed toward the bundle, which bobbed up and down in the water. As they drew closer, Mia’s heart began to race. Oh, no. No, no, no, no.
Jamie grabbed her hand and clutched it. “Is that what I think it is?” he asked, his tone full of dread.
“If you’re thinking . . .”
A wave from an incoming motorboat rocked the bundle and an arm floated to the surface.
“. . . that it’s a body . . .”
Mia saw that the arm was draped in rainbow bracelets. A beautiful, sparkling array of them.
“. . . then, yes. It is what you think it is.”
Books by Maria DiRico
HERE COMES THE BODY
LONG ISLAND ICED TINA
Published by Kensington Publishing Corp.
Long Island Iced Tina
Maria DiRico
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
SWIMMING WITH THE FISHES
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
RECIPES
EVENT TIP
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2021 by Ellen Byron
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.
If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
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ISBN: 978-1-4967-2535-6
ISBN-13: 978-1-4967-2538-7 (ebook)
ISBN-10: 1-4967-2538-7 (ebook)
CHAPTER 1
“M y grandbaby’s having a baby!!!”
Mia Carina winced as Minniguccia Evangelista screeched this into her ear. Becoming a great-grandmother was a huge mark of distinction among the Astoria senior citizen crew. Mia thought of her own poor nonna, Elisabetta, who might never achieve this honor thanks to Mia’s train wreck of a failed marriage and the chronic incarcerations of Mia’s handsome, charismatic, and felonious older brother, Posi. “Yes, I heard all about it,” Mia said to Minniguccia. Which indeed she had, since the mother-to-be was the lovely Nicole Karras-Whitman, one of Mia’s closest friends. “I’m so happy for Nicole and Ian.”
“I’ll be honest. I figured when you’re as old as she is, if it ain’t happening, it ain’t gonna happen.” Mia made a face. Nicole was a year younger than her own thirty-one years. “But,” Minniguccia continued, “I prayed, and I prayed, and I prayed. I even talked all my neighbors into a weekly block rosary. Well, not all. The Feinbergs passed with regrets, but they said they’d put a word in at their temple, however that works. Anyway, the man upstairs came through for me. My grandbaby’s having a baby!!!” Minniguccia screeched this even louder the second time. Mia held the phone an arm’s length away from her ear. “And we’re gonna have one of the showers at your new place, that Belle View Banquet whatever.”
Mia pulled in her arm to bring the phone back to normal hearing distance. “Belle View Banquet Manor. One of the showers? How many is Nicole having?”
“As many as it takes to celebrate this miracle!”
Mia resisted the urge to point out that pregnancy at thirty was less a miracle than a fact of life for her friends, who often waited to start families until they established careers that could support a child or two in the pricey New York tristate area. “Minnie, I’m honored you thought of Belle View for the baby shower.”
“I know you’ll do it up right.”
Mia had only been running Belle View with her father for a few months, but she’d been in the business long enough to know that “I know you’ll do it up right” was code for because we’re friends, you need to pile on the free extras. She was happy to do this for a BFF like Nicole. “We’ll do it up so right,” she promised the great-grandmother-to-be.
“Linda and I are footing the bill,” Minniguccia said, referencing her own daughter, who was Nicole’s mother. “You get together with Nicole, see if there’s anything special she wants, and say yes to it all.”
“I’ll call her as soon as you and I hang up. Do you want her input on everything? Decorations? Guest list? Food?”
“Her mother and I will take care of the decorations. As to the guest list . . .” There was a loaded pause. “Linda is insisting we invite the stepmonster.”
Mia sympathized with the venomous spin Minniguccia put on the word stepmonster. The older woman despised Tina, Ron Karras’ second wife, and with good reason, in Mia’s opinion. In the five or so years since Tina joined the Karras family post-Ron and Linda’s divorce, Mia had never heard a good word about her. This wasn’t completely true. Linda, one of the sweetest women ever to walk the earth, tried her best to find something positive to say about the woman who’d replaced her in Ron’s affections, while her daughter Nicole instantly changed the subject whenever her stepmother’s name came up. It fell to Minnie to articulate animosity toward the former flight attendant, which the octogenarian did with gusto at every opportunity. She’d picked up the word “stepmonster” when it appeared in the zeitgeist and refused to use any other moniker when referring to the second Mrs. Karras. Except for one . . .
“As to the food, it’s whatever Nicole asks for except for one dish I insist we include on the menu since the stepmonster will be there,” Minniguccia said, her tone dark. “Pasta puttanesca. For the puttana.”
That was the other name Minniguccia called Tina: puttana. The Italian word for “whore.”
Mia heard Minniguccia spit to punctuate the insult. “Pasta puttanesca is a delicious dish,” she said diplomatically. “I’ll tell our chef, Guadalupe, to dig up the best recipe she can find.”
“With an extra helping of puttana.” Minniguccia spit again.
“I’ll get in touch with you after I talk to Nicole,” Mia said, aiming for the high road by not responding to Minnie’s vitriol. “Dad and I will make sure the shower is a beautiful, memorable ev
ent.” But, Mia thought to herself, given the fractured family dynamics, not too memorable.
After a hearty string of epithets unleashed against the despised Tina in both English and Italian, Minniguccia signed off. Mia texted mom-to-be Nicole an invitation to meet, flavored with a string of baby-themed emojis. She got an instant reply of How’s tonight? followed by hearts and exclamation marks. Mia confirmed, then peeled her thighs off the plastic covers that still encased the gaudy furniture she’d been gifted with by a neighbor who had decamped Astoria’s 46th Place for a senior living facility on Long Island.
“Ouch. I really gotta get rid of this stuff. It’s the worst.” She said this to Doorstop, the ginger Abyssinian cat currently splayed out over the gaudy rug Mia had also inherited from her former neighbor. Doorstop, who treated all the plastic-covered furniture with disdain, ignored her. But Pizzazz, the beloved parakeet Mia let flutter around her apartment, chirped what she took as agreement, then pooped on the couch. “My sentiments exactly,” Mia said to the bird. She grabbed a paper towel and cleaned up the tiny mess. The one benefit of the slick, uncomfortable cushion covers was that it made this task easy.
Mia had a good reason for the delay in de-plastic-ing her furniture. Business at Belle View Banquet Manor, the catering hall she ran with her father, was brisk. The May and June calendar had boasted weddings every weekend, as well as smaller events, July was going well, and August looked to be a repeat of the previous successful months. Two murders at the manor in early spring hadn’t hurt business and may have helped. It’s like they say, Mia thought to herself while showering, the only bad publicity is no publicity. She toweled off, then headed to her bedroom, stepping over the prostrate Doorstop. Mia pulled on a pair of black linen capri pants and a snug purple tank top. She sniffed the air, suddenly redolent with the scent of butter and Italian sausage. “Mia, vieni,” her grandmother yelled from the apartment below in the two-family home the women shared. “Come. I made breakfast.”
“Sto arrivando,” Mia yelled back. “I’ll be there in a minute.” There was no animus in either woman’s voice. Yelling to each other was simply the way the Carina family had always communicated.
Mia scurried down the stairs and made her way through a small foyer into her grandmother’s modest first floor digs. Elisabetta Carina, dressed in her uniform of tracksuit and sneakers, stuck a fork into a sausage sizzling on top of her forty-plus-year-old oven and deposited it on a bed of fried onions and peppers already gracing a plate next to a pile of buttery scrambled eggs. Mia took a seat at the room’s decades-old dinette set. Elisabetta tore a hunk off a loaf of fresh Italian bread and added it to the plate, which she placed in front of Mia. “Mangia. Eat.”
“Si. Grazie, Nonna.” Mia dug into the heavy breakfast, vowing to follow it up with a lunch of carrot and celery sticks. At least one meal in her day needed to be low-cal and less artery clogging.
Elisabetta fixed herself a plate and took a seat across from Mia. “Did Minnie call you?”
“Yes. She and Linda are gonna host a baby shower for Nicole at Belle View.” Mia sawed off a chunk of sausage and speared it, along with some peppers and eggs. “I’ll finally get to meet the infamous Tina.”
“Tina. Puh.” Elisabetta made a stink face, then spit, as Minniguccia had done earlier. “Puttana. She stole Ron from right under poor Linda’s nebbia. Linda’s an angel. Never says a bad word about her. But we know what she is, a—”
“Puttana,” Mia chorused with her grandmother. “I’ve heard that word more in the last hour than in my entire life. I almost feel sorry for this Tina.”
A look of horror crossed Elisabetta’s face. She threw her hands in the air. “Marone, no! Never even think that. We are, what, how do you kids say it? We’re Team Linda.”
“Linda’s insisting Tina be invited to the shower, so I think she’s made her peace with the situation. So, it’s more like we’re Team Minniguccia.”
“This is why I don’t like sports,” Elisabetta grumbled. “Too many teams.”
Mia used the chunk of bread to wipe up stray splotches of butter and olive oil. “Grazie per calazione, Nonna. Breakfast was delicious. I’ve gotta get to work.”
Elisabetta curled her upper lip. “It’s Sunday. The day of rest. The only place you should be getting to”—she pointed one finger at Mia and one in the direction of Perpetual Anguish, the Catholic church catty-cornered to the house—“is church.”
“I’ll go next weekend.”
“You say that every weekend.”
“We’re super busy, which is a good thing. It keeps Dad out of trouble.” Mia’s father, a lieutenant in the Boldano crime family, had received Belle View as payment for a gambling debt, and was under orders to run it as one of the Family’s legitimate businesses. Mia was determined to help him succeed.
“Si,” Elizabeth acknowledged reluctantly. “Fine. Go to work. But next week . . .” She pointed to the church again, then to the heavens. “Dio sta guardando. God is watching.”
With this ominous warning lingering over her, Mia headed outside. She opened the front door to an assault of hot, humid summer air, which put the kibosh on her plan to bike to Belle View. She debated calling Evans, the catering hall’s sous and dessert chef, for a ride. He’d moved into an elderly neighbor’s upstairs apartment, the term “elderly neighbor” applicable to pretty much everyone on the block except for recent buyers who were part of Astoria’s gentrification boom. Mia balanced her full stomach against the scariest-ride-at-the-amusement-park that was a trip on Evans’s motorcycle, and opted for other means of transportation.
She checked the Pick-U-Up rideshare app knowing that she wouldn’t hear from Jamie Boldano, the non-mobbed-up son of the Family who was driving to put himself through a graduate psychology program. Despite their mutual attraction, Mia and Jamie seemed to have settled into the friend zone. He was at the beach with his girlfriend Madison, a junior editor at a Manhattan fashion website. Madison had a 1/64th Hamptons share, which seemed to translate into spending a single night at a tiny house miles from the beach with a dozen other people. Still, imagining Jamie and Madison together anywhere made Mia sad. She cursed the relationship PTSD she’d been saddled with, courtesy of her adulterous late husband, which left her wary of embarking on another romance—even one with someone as close to her as Jamie.
Mia shook off the blues and checked her phone again. The app showed no other Pick-U-Up drivers nearby, so she called a cab, which appeared a few minutes later. The route to work passed street after street of the sturdy, red-brick post-war homes that made up Mia’s neighborhood. The driver stopped at a red light and Mia gazed out the window while they waited for the signal to change. When she was a child, her father had told her that the Italian bricklayers who built the homes occasionally threw in a whimsical touch like arranging a few bricks to spell their initials or a shape of some kind. Mia still enjoyed seeking out the cheeky masonry messages. By the time the light turned green, she’d found the initials A.R. and the image of a winking eye, all created by cleverly arranged red bricks.
The driver deposited Mia in front of Belle View, a facility whose nondescript mid-century exterior belied its lovely location on a tiny peninsula overlooking Flushing Bay Marina. Mia listened to the rhythmic thumping of water against the boats docked at the marina. The roar of a jet taking off from the LaGuardia Airport runway, which also happened to be in Belle View’s eyeline, drowned out the peaceful sound and brought Mia back to earth. She pulled open one of the catering manor’s double glass doors and stepped inside. Mia did a visual sweep of the lobby, taking a moment to enjoy the upgrades that a series of weddings, Sweet Sixteens, galas, and assorted parties had funded. The white walls gleamed from a recent paint job and the ornate crystal chandelier glistened from a detailed cleaning. Giant urns standing sentry by the entry to the Marina Ballroom were now bolted to the wall to prevent them from skittering across the tiled floor whenever a plane departed from or landed at LaGuardia. Mia threw away a few leaves that
had fallen to the ground from a floral display filling one of the urns, then headed down a hallway that led to the catering hall offices, which had yet to reap the benefits of Belle View’s modest success. She dropped into the battered office chair in front of her ancient computer and began sorting through the hundred or so emails requiring her attention.
* * *
By the time she finished confirming and placing orders, e-talking nervous brides off the ledge, and locking in an event for Le Donne Di Orsogna, a social club for women descended from the immigrants of Orsogna—which happened to be the picturesque Italian town her family hailed from—hours had passed. Mia checked the time and uttered an exclamation. She was already late to meet Nicole. She texted an apology, then called a cab. Messina Carina, you must learn to drive, she scolded herself as the cab, under orders to make time, careened down Grand Central Parkway. It pulled up in front of a slightly shabby bar whose exterior hadn’t been altered since its opening sometime in the nineteen-fifties. Mia jumped out of the cab and hurried inside. Her friend Nicole waved from a worn red Naugahyde booth. She stood up and the two women hugged, Nicole’s burgeoning belly between them.
“Look at you,” Mia marveled, gesturing to her friend’s stomach.
“Six weeks away,” Nicole said, holding up six fingers. Blessed with the best of Italian and Greek genes, she was a Mediterranean beauty, with olive skin, curly brunette hair, and a dimpled smile. She was carrying high and wore an elegant black maternity dress.
Mia made eye contact with Piero, the bartender and restaurant proprietor. He mimed “got it” and poured a glass of Chardonnay. “This place isn’t fancy, but the food is fantastic.”