Books by Isis Crawford
A CATERED MURDER
A CATERED WEDDING
A CATERED CHRISTMAS
A CATERED VALENTINE’S DAY
A CATERED HALLOWEEN
A CATERED BIRTHDAY PARTY
A CATERED THANKSGIVING
A CATERED ST. PATRICK’S DAY
A CATERED CHRISTMAS COOKIE EXCHANGE
A CATERED FOURTH OF JULY
A CATERED MOTHER’S DAY
A CATERED TEA PARTY
A CATERED COSTUME PARTY
A CATERED CAT WEDDING
Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation
A Mystery with Recipes
A CATERED CAT WEDDING
ISIS CRAWFORD
KENSINGTON BOOKS
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Prologue
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
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Recipes
Longely is an imaginary community, as are all its inhabitants. Any resemblance to people either living or dead is pure coincidence.
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2018 by Isis Crawford
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.
Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2018932862
ISBN: 978-1-4967-1496-1
First Kensington Hardcover Edition: October 2018
eISBN-13: 978-1-61773-338-3
eISBN-10: 1-61773-338-57
First Kensington Electronic Edition: October 2018
To my cousin, Joan.
Prologue
Susie Katz knew that everyone in Longely thought she was crazy. She knew that everyone hated her, but she really didn’t care. That was the thing with having serious money—you got to do what you wanted when you wanted—and she wanted this wedding.
For a moment, she stopped making her list and looked at Boris, losing herself in the deep green depths of his eyes. Those eyes. She could write a poem about those eyes. Then Boris blinked, and the spell was broken. Susie came to her senses and returned to the task at hand.
“Boris, what do you think?” she cooed. “The Royal Ossetra, at ninety-five dollars an ounce, or the Ossetra President, at two hundred and fifty dollars an ounce?”
Boris tilted his head and said nothing.
“No, no,” Susie said, drinking in his face. “Of course that’s not good enough. What was I thinking of, my sweetums? For my baby boy, only the best, the freshest will do.”
She leaned forward, stretched out her hand, and began rubbing his belly. It was so soft. Like velvet, really. She closed her eyes, enjoying the sensation. A minute went by. Then two. By the third minute, Boris had had enough. He let out a loud mew, flexed his claws, and dug them into Susie’s skin. She screamed and jerked her arm away. Four spots of blood appeared where none had been before.
“Bad Boris,” Susie scolded the cat as she took a tissue from the box on the desk that she kept for such occasions and dabbed at the scratches. She turned to Natasha. “Your fiancé is a naughty, naughty boy,” she told her.
Natasha ignored Susie and began a bout of intense grooming as she watched Boris flick his tail back and forth. A minute went by. Finally, she couldn’t resist. She pounced. Boris hissed. Then he jumped down from the desk, padded over to the armchair in front of it, jumped up, and curled himself up in a ball.
Susie knew she should be mad at him as she reached for the tube of Neosporin she always kept on hand and dabbed it on her arm. He’d really gotten her good this time, but she couldn’t be angry with her baby boy. She loved him too much. Of course, she loved Natasha, too, but Boris was special. He had that indefinable star quality that set him apart from all the other kitty cats.
Susie watched him for a moment, enjoying the way the desk lamp illuminated the steel-blue color of his fur. Then she sighed and got back to what she’d been doing—planning Boris and Natasha’s wedding. She wanted something elegant, something unusual, something that would make her guests eat their hearts out, and something that the cats would enjoy. That was a given.
She’d use the good china for everyone, as well as the Waterford crystal. Wineglasses for the people, and cut-crystal bowls for the cats. What was the point of having that stuff if you couldn’t use it? She especially wanted to make that point to her guests. Susie tapped her pen, a Mont-blanc, against her yellow legal pad while she thought. The noise attracted Boris and Natasha’s attention, and they pricked up their ears. Then Susie went back to writing, and the cats closed their eyes and went back to sleep.
Susie wrote the heading table decorations and underlined it. Beneath it, she wrote the word pom-poms, followed by a question mark. Blue, of course, to match Boris’s and Natasha’s coats. Or maybe she’d use big bows? Or little silver mice? Where had she seen them? Tiffany, she thought. Well, she still had a little time to decide.
She continued with her list. She had to call Gertrude Van Trumpet (the person to go to when it came to officiating cat weddings) and discuss the content of the wedding ceremony, as well as write Boris and Natasha’s vows and firm up the menu with the Simmons girls. They could do the wedding cake, as well. Oh. And the save-the-date cards. She couldn’t forget those! She had to get those hand lettered in copperplate style and out right away. Maybe something like Save April 10 for the Purrfect Wedding.
“What do you think, sweetie pie?” Susie asked Natasha, putting down her pen.
Natasha opened an eye, meowed, and coughed up a hair ball.
“I see,” Susie said as she cleaned it up. “Maybe you’re right, snookums. Maybe it is a little too cute.”
Having made her point, Natasha meowed again. Then she stretched and jumped off the desk and onto the chair Boris wasn’t occupying.
Susie looked at both of them. “It’s going to be a wonderful event,” she assured them. “You’re going to love it.”
Neither cat looked impressed. They started to lick themselves. Susie was just about to offer them a treat of freeze-dried Copper River salmon when her cell phone rang. She picked the phone off the desk, looked at the number, and then put the phone
down. No need to answer it. She knew what Charlene was going to say.
I mean, good God. More sob stories about her damned birds. Not that that would be her problem soon. None of it would be. Susie tapped her fingers on her desk. If she is so concerned about their getting killed, don’t put feeders out. It was as simple as that. She was sorry about the birds, but cats had been killing birds since the beginning of time.
Anyway, it wasn’t her fault if her cats got out on occasion. It was her niece’s and nephew’s. They couldn’t manage the simplest tasks without screwing them up. For a moment, Susie thought about calling Charlene back and telling her what was going to happen, about the consequences of complaining to the zoning board about her, but after a moment’s reflection, she decided against it. The conversation would just turn into a time suck, and she had better things to do. Charlene would find out soon enough. Susie picked up her pen again and took up where she’d left off.
She had to rent the tent and the tables and chairs, as well as get Natasha measured for her veil and Boris measured for his tux, in addition to having matching diamond-studded collars made for them. Or maybe not diamonds. She tapped her pen on her chin while she thought. Possibly crystals? Or sapphires? Yes. Sapphires would be nice. They’d pick up the blue color scheme she was thinking about. Susie sighed. She also had to decide what the bride’s and the groom’s parties were going to wear.
She wove her pen back and forth between her fingers. So much to do and only four months to do it in. Four months sounded like a lot of time, but it really wasn’t. Especially for a wedding.
Take the vaunted Mrs. Gertrude Van Trumpet. Just thinking about her and her hoity-toity airs brought a smile to Susie’s face. The lady was normally booked for a year in advance. But she, Susie, had gotten her to fit Natasha and Boris’s wedding in. And how had she done it? The way she always did. By knowing things, secret things, things that people didn’t want anyone to know. It had worked for her in the finance game, and it was working for her now. Some people would call it blackmail, but she called it being well informed.
She thought about her successes for a moment, and about where she had started and where she was finishing; and then she thought about her will and the changes she would be making to it, before turning her attention to the gift registry. Should she or should she not have one? Would it be too much? What was too much? Was there any such thing as too much?
Susie was in the middle of debating those questions with herself when the doorbell rang. She looked at her watch. Three o’clock. Bernie and Libby Simmons were right on time. Good. Because if there was one thing she couldn’t abide, it was people who weren’t prompt. At least, Susie thought as she yelled for her nephew Ralphie to answer the door, she could get the menu nailed down. That would be one thing crossed off her list.
Chapter 1
Bernie and Libby looked around the Connor estate as they drove through the gate. It had been at least eight years since the sisters had been there, and they could see what all the fuss in the town was about. The estate, which was situated on a hill, was located on the outskirts of Longely, in a wealthy neighborhood called the Pines. The Pines was known for its classic brick colonials, rolling lawns, brooks, restrained landscaping, and house-proud owners. The Connor estate, now officially known as the Katz estate, had changed that algorithm. With a vengeance.
“Wow,” Libby said, pointing to the eight-foot-high pink neon cat still decorated with Christmas lights, a cat that would have been at home in front of a roadside diner in Vegas but was definitely out of place in this neighborhood. “That’s certainly . . .”
“Visible,” Bernie said, finishing her sister’s sentence for her. She gestured to the other five cats, each in a different garish color, dotted around the immaculate lawn. “They remind me of strippers at a DAR meeting. I can understand why Constance is upset,” Bernie continued. Constance was one of Susie Katz’s neighbors and a regular at A Little Taste of Heaven. (One large coffee with room for cream and a toasted corn muffin, no butter.) “I wouldn’t be happy if I had to look at those out my living room window, either.”
“Well, she’s in good company,” Libby informed her sister. “I heard Charlene Eberhart went to the town board about them. Those cats aren’t cheap, you know,” Libby added.
“No, I didn’t.” Bernie slowed Mathilda down. The road had become a series of sharp turns, and she didn’t want to end up on the lawn. “How much?”
Libby named a figure. She’d gotten the lowdown from one of their customers who had a sister who served on the board.
Bernie whistled. “I’m impressed.”
“And that doesn’t include the hefty donation Susie Katz made to the town coffers to have Charlene’s complaint go away.”
“I’m shocked, simply shocked,” said Bernie, parroting a line from Casablanca. “I guess when you have that much money, you get to do what you want,” she observed as she continued up the road that led to Susie Katz’s house. “She could probably buy the whole town if she wanted to.”
“Thus it was, and thus it will ever be,” Libby replied.
Bernie glanced over at her sister. “You’re getting cynical in your old age,” she remarked.
Libby laughed. “I learned it from you.”
A moment later, the sisters arrived at their destination. Bernie parked next to the house, and she and Libby got out.
It was a gray afternoon in early January, and a cold wind had sprung up off the Hudson. It blew up the valley and wound itself around the hills before creeping under the Simmons sisters’ upturned coat collars.
“It’s colder than I thought,” Bernie remarked as she and Libby walked up to the entrance of Susie Katz’s house and rang the bell. They stamped their feet to keep warm as they waited to be let in.
“I wish we were catering a wedding,” Libby said.
“We are,” Bernie observed as she jammed her hands into her pink peacoat and wished she’d brought gloves with her.
Libby put the hood of her old parka up, noting the frayed edges as she did. “For people.”
“This will be easier,” Bernie told her.
“That’s not the point,” Libby objected. She blinked her eyes. The wind was making them tear.
“Maybe this will bring us more business.”
“Great. Just what I want us to specialize in. Pet weddings,” Libby grumbled.
“It could be lucrative.”
“I don’t care. I don’t want to bake dog biscuits.”
“I’m talking about Susie, Libby. Maybe this could be our foot in the door.”
“She doesn’t entertain,” Libby objected. The catering community was small, and everyone knew what everyone else was and wasn’t doing.
“But she used to,” Bernie replied. “Maybe she will again.”
“I’m not sure I want our foot in the door, Bernie. I hear Susie’s pretty weird.”
“Eccentric,” Bernie answered. “If we were living in an English village, she would be called eccentric.”
“Catcentric in this case,” Libby corrected. “But we’re not living in an English village. We’re living in Westchester.” She pointed to the pictures of cats Susie had had painted on the shutters and the door of the stately hundred-year-old brick colonial. The effect, Libby reflected, was like adding hot fudge sauce to pommes soufflées. “I mean, why buy a house like this and do this to it?” Libby asked, gesturing to the painted cats and statues.
Bernie shook her head. She didn’t have an answer.
Libby sneezed. She hoped she wasn’t getting sick. “She changed her name, you know.”
“I do.” Bernie had read Susie Katz’s bio in People, too.
The headline had proclaimed SUSIE, LARGER THAN LIFE, which she was, in all senses of the word. According to the article, Susie Katz, née Susie Abrams, had made a killing on Wall Street, after which she’d retired, moved up to Longely, bought the old Connor estate, and become a semi-hermit. The movers and shakers of Longely had expected a slew of parties
once she’d settled in—she’d been the hostess with the mostess when she’d lived in New York City—but according to local gossip, the only people she saw on a regular basis now were her niece and nephew and her staff.
A moment later, Susie’s nephew Ralph Abrams opened the door. Bernie judged him to be in his early thirties. He was tall and skinny, with a thatch of light red hair, a prominent Adam’s apple, and thick glasses that magnified his eyes. He was wearing a pair of jeans held up with a pair of red suspenders, and a tucked-in flannel shirt with a dusting of cat litter around the cuffs.
“Sorry it took so long,” he told them after introducing himself. “I was feeding some of the cats.”
“I can hear them,” Libby said.
Ralph smiled. “Yes, they do have a lot to say.” Then he added, “Susie will be here in a minute. It just takes her a while to locomote.”
“No problem,” Bernie said as she and Libby stepped into the hallway.
When she and her sister had been here eight years ago to cater an engagement party for Mr. and Mrs. Harriman’s daughter June, the walls had been painted a pale green, the furnishings had been Stickley, the paintings on the walls had been landscapes, and the floor had been black-and-white marble tile.
The floor was the only thing that remained the same. Now the walls were a bright electric blue and were covered with cat portraits, while the furnishings were midcentury modern. Intensive redecorating had also occurred in the living room. If the Harrimans’ furniture had looked as if it had come directly from the showroom, Susie Katz’s looked as if it had come from a grad student’s apartment. The armchairs were sagging, the sofa had a blanket thrown over it, and the tables were scratched and dented.
And then there were the cats. They seemed to be everywhere, perched on the living-room chairs and sofas, lounging on cat trees, sniffing at Bernie’s and Libby’s heels, or watching them from a suspension bridge made of rope that hung a foot below the ceiling.
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