Lainey had her head tilted to the side when I finished speaking. “How many times has this happened?”
“I don’t remember,” I lied.
“Really? I sure would.”
“You’re making too much out of it.”
“Maybe, but I love a good mystery, and you have to admit this is mysterious.”
I shrugged and changed the subject. “What do you want to do now? Work out on the machines? Visit the sauna? A massage?”
My friend looked around. “This place sure has a ton of machines.”
“That’s why Tony likes it. Being a gadget freak extends to his physical activity. Me? I think I preferred my old club.”
“Why didn’t you stay on there?”
I shrugged. “My old one was women only. I get to see Tony little enough. We might as well exercise together.”
Lainey’s eyes took in the weight training room and the mostly shirtless young men trying to outdo each other physically, while appearing uninterested in what the guy at the next machine was doing.
“Lots of eye candy here,” she grinned.
I shrugged again. “I’ve got what I want — at home.”
“Well, I don’t. Why don’t we use a few of the machines now that we’re thoroughly warmed up?”
Clad in spandex, it was crystal clear to all that she still had an amazing figure. I hated her, but the guys present obviously didn’t.
I’m seldom the most beautiful woman in the room. In profiles done over the years, the most common description of me referred to my “strong features.” At least I’m tall and I have nice skin and thick brown hair, which I unfortunately have to keep short for performing.
So as I watched from the sidelines, Lainey was never without at least one stud muffin helping her understand how to use a machine that I was certain she knew better than they did.
“Do you need somebody to spot for you?” a male voice asked from behind me.
I was sitting in the decidedly low-tech area on one of those benches for doing presses, thinking mostly about whether I should continue or treat myself to a massage.
“I’m not sure what I want to do.”
“You might as well do something while you wait for your friend.”
Deciding to be virtuous, I laid back. “Well, okay, if it’s not too much trouble.”
The weights on the bar over my head looked about right, so I stuck my arms ups and got a firm grip on the bar. It was obvious at once that the weight might be a bit too much, but my stubbornness rose up.
I began lifting and dropping the bar slowly and smoothly. Normally I do ten reps, followed after a short rest by twenty, and then another ten.
At ten, I placed the bar back on its hooks and lay there for a minute or two, sweating as I watched Lainey teasing the boys on the other side of the room. The first club I joined was coed and that quickly drove me to a females-only club. It’s no fun getting hit on every time you showed your face in the door. Being less lithe, I’d never attracted the crowd Lainey could, but it seemed as if every visit one male or another would latch on to me, hoping to get lucky.
Taking the bar down, I began the next set. I knew I was in trouble around number twelve, but stupidly I kept on. At fifteen, I began wobbling a bit.
It happened at eighteen. I managed to get my arms extended, but unevenly, and then my left started to give out. From where it was, the bar would have crashed down right across my neck or face, neither a very good option. At the last second, the man I hadn’t really bothered to look at reached down and plucked the bar out of my hands.
“Thanks,” I gasped, sitting up. “I can’t believe how fast that happened.”
“That’s why there’s a rule about always having a spotter. I’ve heard of people doing bench presses having some spectacular accidents.” He smiled. “One should always be aware of the dangers that surround us. Things can bite back.”
“That’s a pretty grim outlook on life.”
He shrugged. “It pays off in the long run.”
Getting to my feet, I said thanks again.
My saviour was in his late thirties and relatively handsome, with a fit body and large mustache that was beginning to go grey. Looking at him reminded me that we were probably close in age. Colouring was now a permanent part of getting my hair done.
“You seem tired,” he said, stating the obvious.
“Residual jet lag.”
“Where were you?”
“Rome.”
Lainey was finally crossing the room.
“Looks as if you had a bit of trouble over here,” she observed wryly.
“Nothing we couldn’t handle,” the man answered for me.
She looked at me curiously. “Ready to hit the showers and get something to eat? I’m starving.”
“We’re going to leave now,” I said unnecessarily to the man. “Thanks again for your help.”
He laughed. “You’ve said that three times now. It was nothing.”
Towels around our necks, Lainey and I headed for the women’s change room.
“You know that guy?” she asked.
“Never seen him before in my life.”
“Lucky for you he was around.”
Lainey and I wound up indulging in massages, my treat. By the time we walked out of the building straight into a frigid wind whistling down the canyon of buildings along Wellington, it was closer to lunch than breakfast, so I was correspondingly more hungry than usual. That’s precisely the situation in which I’ll overeat.
I needed someone around to poke me in the ribs if I yielded to temptation, not to mention that control would go right out the window that evening at Nonna Lusardi’s. Nobody can resist her cooking.
“We’re not that far from the Eaton Centre,” I said as we walked east. “Why don’t I call Tony and see if he can grab an early lunch with us?”
Even though he’d gotten considerably more serious about singing since our marriage, my husband still worked nearly full time at a computer store in Toronto’s big downtown mall. I would have been constantly exhausted keeping up a schedule like his, but Tony thrived on it. The big problem to my mind was that he could seldom come on the road with me. Other than the occasional luxury of a long weekend run out to wherever I might be, we were often separated for weeks. Neither of us liked the situation, but there you are. Sometimes it felt like such a struggle to make it all work.
There’s a restaurant Tony and I frequent just inside the doors of the Eaton Centre near Trinity Church. It was the first place we ever had a quiet talk together, so it was special to us, and more often than not when we met for an impromptu lunch or after-work drink, we gravitated to it.
Since Lainey and I gawked at more than a few shop windows along the way, Tony was waiting by the time we got to our usual booth. As always, he was banging out text messages on what I called his “superphone.” I had one, as well, but I could barely make heads or tails of it past a few basic functions. I needed a twelve-year-old to show me the fancy stuff. Tony lacked the necessary patience with his Luddite wife.
“Hi there, lover boy.” I pecked him on the forehead before sliding in next to him.
As Lainey sat down across from us, he looked up and smiled, sliding his beloved gadget into the inner pocket of his sport jacket.
“Glad to see you’re willing to give us your full attention,” I remarked.
“Marta, don’t start with that again. You made your point perfectly clear last time.”
I put my hand on his, sorry I’d given him that unnecessary dig, especially in front of someone else. I hate it when I’m talking to someone on the phone and I can hear them tapping away on their computer in the background, their attention divided. It makes me feel like a second-class citizen. It’s even worse when they do it right in front of you, as Tony had on numerous occasions before I finally said something.
As we looked over our menus, he asked, “So did you do anything besides the gym this morning?”
“With all Laine
y’s flirting, it’s lucky we even got out of there,” I responded, giving my friend a playful dig.
“There happened to be a lot of good-looking ‘talent’ there. I was just behaving like any other red-blooded girl. Besides, you’re a fine one to talk.”
“About what?”
“I’m not the one with a secret admirer.”
Now it was Tony’s turn. “What’s she talking about?
“You know, those roses that keep showing up.”
He nodded. “Ah, right. It’s the talk of every backstage on the continent.”
If there’s one thing about Tony, he can give as good as he gets. Return point scored, I thought sourly.
Lainey said, “He’s exaggerating, of course, isn’t he?”
“No, I’m not. Old big mouth here,” Tony answered, nodding at me, “made the mistake of telling Natalia Petrov. She’s the biggest gossip in opera.”
I shook my head. “I’m sure no one cares.”
“Somebody asked me about it at a rehearsal last week,” Tony answered.
Our server came by and took our orders.
As soon as she was out of earshot, Lainey leaned forward. “Tell me everything, you two. I’m sure I didn’t get the whole story from Marta this morning.”
“Did she tell you how many she’s gotten?” Tony asked.
Lainey shook her head. “She said she didn’t remember.”
Tony raised his eyebrows.
I answered, “All right. One for every role I’ve taken on since that first bouquet in Philly.”
“You mean all over the world?”
“I got the most recent one in Rome last Saturday night.”
“Same kind of roses and message?”
I nodded. “This guy must buy his gifts in bulk.”
“So you’re sure they’re from a male?”
“The handwriting certainly seems to be male.”
“I’m sure it’s male,” Tony added.
Lainey frowned. “Why?”
He flashed the smile that melts my heart every single time. “Marta’s a beautiful woman. How could he not take a fancy to her?”
She picked up her fork, pointing it at him in mock menace. “You have something to do with this, don’t you? Come on! Confess.”
I pulled her fork down. “He’s sworn up and down he knows nothing about it — and I believe him. To be honest, though, the whole thing is getting a bit creepy.”
“How so?” Lainey asked.
“Nobody ever sees the bouquets delivered.”
“Really?”
“After getting the fourth one, I asked someone backstage to keep an eye on my dressing room door. Unfortunately, it seems my secret admirer somehow knew that, and the bouquet was left in the tenor’s dressing room. With my name on the envelope this time, he just assumed it had been left in the wrong dressing room and delivered it to me himself.”
“Big blowhard tried to make out like it was his gift for Marta,” Tony added. “Damn tenors.”
We all laughed heartily. My husband is one of that breed himself.
“I’ve sort of had enough of it,” I admitted.
Lainey shook her head. “Why? You’re getting these lovely bouquets from someone who obviously travels a lot and loves opera. He’s got money and he’s a big fan. What’s wrong with that?”
“Why doesn’t he step forward, then? It’s like he’s toying with me.”
“You’re saying you think the guy is obsessed with you?”
“Yeah. Sort of, I guess. And that last bouquet, the one I got in Rome …”
Tony shifted in his seat. “Marta, it’s nothing.”
“Tony thinks I’m being silly.”
“About what?” Lainey asked.
“The blossom on one of the roses was nearly torn off.”
“An accident when it was being delivered?”
Tony nodded. “That’s what I told her.”
“You didn’t see it. It looked to me as if it was done on purpose, like someone pushed with their thumb and nearly snapped the blossom off the stem.”
“Marta’s attaching too much significance to it,” Tony said, leaning across the table and speaking in a low voice, “because she feels she didn’t sing very well that night.”
“I was tired. I’d been away from home for nearly three months.”
“And you were out late the night before at a party,” he teased, “and not accompanied by your husband, I might add.”
We all laughed again like a bunch of fools and my unease scattered like the cast after the final curtain of a production.
Our food was delivered at that point, and the chatter around the table segued naturally into what was happening back in Montreal, at McGill, and in Lainey’s life — her love life, as it turned out. I should have guessed that’s why she was so hot to come for a visit. She finally had a new guy.
For January in Toronto, there wasn’t all that much snow. If I hadn’t been feeling so rundown, I would have gone along with Lainey’s suggestion that we walk back to my condo, which is across from St. Lawrence Market on Front Street. After the lunch we’d had, a brisk twenty-minute walk would have burned off some of the calories, a real consideration since we would be dining with Nonna Lusardi in a few hours.
Lainey possesses a cab whistle to die for. I swear I’ve seen her nail a cab in under a minute in the pouring rain on a Montreal street, in the middle of rush hour, on a Friday. Mere mortals couldn’t have stopped one of those cabs — even by throwing themselves in front of it.
Needless to say, that early afternoon she had two cabs hovering within ten seconds of putting her fingers up to her lips. We piled into the back seat of one in great spirits.
“I’m thinking I might lie down for an hour before Tony gets home from work,” I told her. “I’m still a bit whacked from the past several weeks, and the delay on my flight home didn’t help.”
Lainey patted my hand. “You’ve always got a good book or two sitting around. Or I could watch TV. Just make sure you don’t sleep all afternoon. We’ve hardly begun to catch up.”
“Yes, and we should do it when Tony isn’t around. Did you notice his eyes rolling up in his head when we were talking about all those McGill people he’s never met?”
“He was a real trooper,” she said with a laugh.
We were still giggling like schoolgirls when the cab decanted us in front of my building. Sam, the building’s doorman, rushed out from behind his desk to open the door. He always does that no matter how many times I’ve ask him not to. It can get pretty awkward since not every tenant in the building receives that treatment.
“And how are you today, Madame Hendriks?” he asked. “You must have gone out before I came on duty this morning.”
“I was out the door well before nine. Were any packages delivered for me? I’m expecting some music.”
“Not a sign of anything for you. If it arrives, do you wish me to bring it up, lickety-split?”
I sighed. Samatar really was incorrigible. A refugee from Somalia, he’d spent the last eight years learning English and moving from one crummy job to another until he landed on our doorstep. He’s a wiry little guy who takes his job very seriously, ministering to all the tenants as if we are family. Because he considers me a “celebrity,” I get the star treatment.
“If it arrives, just make sure my husband gets it when he comes home from work. That would be really helpful.”
“That is all right then. Mr. Tony will be getting the package if it is delivered. You can be sure of that!”
“I know, Sam. Thank you so much as always,” I said over my shoulder as the elevator arrived down at the lobby.
Waiting for a workman to get off, I watched Sam return to his seat behind the large wooden unit to the right of the front door. When no one was in the lobby and nothing required his attention, he always sat, back straight, eyes forward, hands folded in front of him. There was monitoring of the many security cameras to do, but he never seemed to be paying any attent
ion to the screens. I often wondered what was going on in his mind as he sat there so patiently.
Walking down the hallway to my door four floors up, Lainey was chattering away about how much she was looking forward to dinner.
“Everything will be homemade,” I told her as I unlocked the door. “Tony asked his nonna to make her incredible rabbit and wild mushroom ravioli for the pasta course, and wait until you taste —”
Lainey was paying no attention and crashed into my back as I stopped short, my hand still gripping the door handle.
My condo’s front door opens into the dining area. Beyond that is part of the L-shaped living room. On the right-hand wall that separates the dining room from the rest of the living room I have a long walnut buffet for dishes and such. Above it, running the full length, I’d had a series of short glass shelves installed on the wall to display some very special gifts I’ve received over the years, most of them fragile and very dear to me. When the lights above the shelves are on, it makes quite a spectacular backdrop to a meal, if I do say so myself.
In pride of place on one of the middle shelves had stood my most amazing piece, a large Murano glass vase of blues and greens with threads of gold: delicate, ornate, and utterly breathtaking. I’d always been too frightened to use it for flowers and held my breath every time somebody picked it up for a closer look.
At that moment it lay on top of the buffet and all over the floor, shattered into hundreds of glittering chunks, completely and forever destroyed.
Chapter Two
Tony’s voice drifted around the corner from the dining room. “It looks as if the shelf above your vase just gave way. I always said that damned soapstone bear was too heavy to put on a glass shelf, no matter how thick.”
I had a blazing headache. Both Lainey and my husband were trying their best to cheer me up (other than that last rather unhelpful comment), but I just couldn’t snap out of it. They didn’t know what that glass vase meant to me.
Lainey came into the living room with yet another cup of tea, setting it down on the table by my elbow.
I smiled despite the ache in my head and my heart. Anytime anything is wrong, Lainey whips out tea, convinced it’s the only panacea for making everything better.
Masques and Murder — Death at the Opera 2-Book Bundle Page 30