Murder Melts in Your Mouth

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Murder Melts in Your Mouth Page 24

by Nancy Martin


  I glanced at the cop, who was already ignoring Sigi’s bluster and shooting frowns in Michael’s direction.

  “Did you drive the car?”

  Michael shook his head. “Nope. But this cop called for backup. And he spotted the Rolls.”

  “Oh, my God.” I clapped one hand over my mouth.

  A second police cruiser slipped through the gate, and the cop got out into the sunlight and walked around Jacque Petite’s silver Rolls-Royce.

  Michael behaved with complete calm when the questions started. Even when a third cruiser arrived, and the cops forgot about Sigi’s bad driving and figured out who Michael was, he answered their questions without getting ruffled. The second cop, though, had a rude manner.

  “What?” I demanded, offended by his behavior and quickly infuriated by their obvious suspicion at finding the son of Big Frankie Abruzzo in their bucolic neighborhood. “Do you keep his photograph on your bulletin board?”

  The first officer said, “Take it easy, miss.”

  “This is entirely my fault,” I told him, turning away from the bad cop. “I suggested we borrow Mr. Petite’s car. He lent it to my sister, you see, and I took the keys from her when—”

  “Who’s your sister?” the rude one asked in a tone that implied she walked the streets with her pimp.

  “She’s Elizabeth Kintswell. At the moment, she’s Jacque Petite’s—that is, they spent a few days—I mean—they’re friends, you could say.”

  “And he gave her a car? That must have been a great few days.”

  “No,” I snapped, “he allowed her to borrow it. And I assumed it would be okay if we—good heavens, he hasn’t reported it stolen, has he?”

  “Nora,” Michael said, “I don’t think you’re helping the situation.”

  “So, Abruzzo,” said the rude cop, “what are you doing here, exactly?”

  “He came with me,” I said. “I take full responsibility for—”

  The good cop angled his body in front of me, gesturing to the veranda. “Why don’t you stand over there, miss? Let Mr. Abruzzo answer the questions for himself.”

  “But—”

  Within ten minutes after consulting with the radios in their cars, the police put handcuffs on Michael and eased him into the backseat of one of the cruisers.

  “This is ridiculous!” I cried. “He didn’t steal the car! If anyone did, it’s me!”

  Even that outburst didn’t save Michael from being hauled off.

  I hitched a ride into the city with Tremaine Jefferson.

  Chapter Twenty-one

  He’d been through it before, of course. Michael had been detained dozens of times, I supposed, and he knew his lawyer’s phone number by heart. I tried to tell myself he’d be out of jail in time for dinner.

  But I was still angry on his behalf.

  I tried to concentrate on the video footage of Cici’s closet. I didn’t know much about camera angles, but I quickly got the hang of telling a story with pictures. I wrote a short introduction and recorded it myself. Then I joined Tremaine and the rest of the video team and helped choose the best shots of Cici’s home and clothes. It wasn’t a tough decision. We decided to use her small talk as a voice-over as the footage rolled. We all smiled at her “That’s a wrap!” sign-off. Cici looked elegant, but also witty and relaxed. The charming piece ran eight minutes, and at five o’clock I watched as the experts loaded the video onto the newspaper’s Web site.

  I slipped out of the video room just as Skip Malone arrived to edit his sports highlights.

  “Did you hear about Jim Hooper?” Skip glanced up and down the hallway to make sure we weren’t overheard.

  “The guy who writes the car column?”

  Skip nodded. “The editor told him he has to go part-time. And his budget’s been cut in half, too.”

  “How can he do his job in half the time?”

  Skip shrugged. “He says he’s going to try freelancing for automotive magazines to make ends meet. It’s not a bad idea.”

  I slipped away, thinking if I were a trained writer, I could try freelancing, too, if I lost my job. But my social expertise didn’t exactly translate to magazines.

  In a state of anxiety, I tried Michael’s cell phone. No answer. I rushed over to a nearby hotel to cover a party called “Shaken and Stirred.” A disease-of-the-week organization had decided to serve a variety of martinis while entertaining their guests with shock poetry and cutting-edge visual art. They asked a hip gallery to supply huge paintings for decoration. I spoke to the artist, who was mostly nervous that his pieces—old family photos arranged like crime-scene pictures and splattered with paint intended to look like blood spatters—would survive the evening. I noticed a few tipsy guests leaning close to the art to see the details in the Polaroids, so I understood his concern.

  On the other hand, I didn’t like his work much. I thought the shock value outweighed the thematic elements.

  An Intelligencer photographer showed up and snapped a few pictures of the art, the bar and a cadaverously thin young poet who droned her blank verse into the microphone with her eyes closed and a pained expression on her face. Not exactly photogenic stuff. The newspaper used a number of work-for-hire photographers, and their skills varied considerably. I encouraged him to take some shots of well-dressed guests sipping martinis instead.

  Notebook in hand, I interviewed the chair of the organizing committee—who told me with pride how much cash they’d raised for their cause. He was already very drunk. The caterer, I noticed, had run out of food early, while the martinis kept coming. A recipe for social disaster.

  I met a friend in the ladies’ room—Maybelle Collins, a pert blonde who wore a sequined red, white and blue cocktail dress in honor of the upcoming holiday.

  She was pouring her martini down the drain, and she rolled her eyes at me in the mirror. “I’m stuck here until ten. Everyone’s going to be drunk as lords by then.”

  I laughed. “Maybe someone should order pizza.”

  She laughed, too. “Good idea! How’ve you been, Nora?”

  “Busy. But good.”

  “I heard a rumor your parents might be back.”

  “Did you?”

  She pulled the olive out of her glass on a toothpick and watched me in the mirror. “That’s the buzz around the racquet club. I must say, that’s a brave move. Your dad’s been persona non grata for a long time. And your mother!” Smiling, Maybelle shook her head. “Is it true she borrowed Ashland Freeman’s sapphire necklace and never returned it?”

  I decided to strike Maybelle off my list of friends.

  Without waiting for my answer, Maybelle said, “I can’t think of anything worse than having that kind of reputation. Which reminds me. I saw your sister Emma last week. I could swear she was with Hart Jones.”

  I wiped all expression from my face. “Really?”

  “That couldn’t be possible, though. Hart is going to marry Penny Haffenpepper. She was my maid of honor, you know. I’m going to be hers.”

  “How nice.”

  “Her mother has the wedding all planned.”

  I put on a smile. “Does Hart know?”

  No Rhodes scholar, Maybelle glanced at me, trying to decide if I was having fun at her expense. “A lot of people are going to be upset if anyone tries to interfere with that marriage. They’ve been unofficially engaged since prep school.”

  “That’s a long time,” I observed. “How come they haven’t gone through with it?”

  Maybelle stopped toying with her olive and tried to gather her brows despite the Botox. “Penny’s career is important to her. She’s learning the family business. But Hart’s madly in love, and they’re definitely getting married. Her mother tentatively booked Yo-Yo Ma for the music.”

  “Sounds lovely.”

  Wedding by Eva Braun. Poor Yo-Yo.

  Maybe some kind soul ought to save Hart from a Nazi marriage.

  Maybelle said, “At least your life has calmed down, right? You’re no
t dating that mobster anymore? I hear he’s in trouble again.”

  Maybelle’s husband was a newly appointed assistant prosecutor with ambitions for higher political office. It wasn’t hard to guess where Maybelle got her insider information.

  She popped the olive into her mouth and smiled. “Is he rotting in jail yet?”

  “No,” I said. “He looked perfectly healthy when he got out of my bed this morning.”

  I heard her choking on her damn olive as I left.

  Outside, the heat was still as unpleasant as ever. I checked my phone to see if Michael had called me, but the screen was blank.

  Passing an ambulance that had been summoned to help a homeless man with heatstroke, I hiked over to a leafy street of old city town houses that had been refurbished by some well-to-do-dogooders who made the commitment to raise big families in the heart of the city. I found the private home of some friends who were entertaining a visiting historian, in town to present a program for Independence Day at one of the museums. The party had been billed as a “reception,” but I knew better. I heard the music almost a block away. I hoped to make a quick stop since I had a very full dance card.

  When I knocked, nearly panting from the heat, the door was opened by the host, Barry Castor, wearing a Statue of Liberty spiked hat on his head. He gave me a kiss on the cheek. “Nora, you look fantastic! Come in where it’s cool!”

  By day, Barry was an avuncular college professor. He knew how to mix academia with good times at night, however. Escorting me past a jumble of photos of his six blond, whirling-dervish children in exotic locations, he shouted over the music, “How’s your sister Emma?”

  “How in the world do you know Emma?”

  “My daughter Trish took a couple of riding lessons from her last fall. Loved every minute of it! Well, except for the dislocated shoulder. I was hoping we could get a few more of the kids on ponies this summer, since we’re not taking that trip to Cairo after all. That is, if we can afford Emma’s services.”

  Barry’s wife was a bank executive who pulled down a sizable salary and had inherited part of a scented-candle fortune, so I assumed the family could afford a few riding lessons, if not a whole horse farm, if they chose.

  “I’ll tell her to call you.”

  “Thanks!”

  The party included dancing to Motown music on the Castors’ postage-stamp-sized patio. I found cold beer and a limbo contest in the kitchen, where the visiting scholar humped his way under a broomstick held by two giggling grad students. I nearly stumbled over the Castor daughters playing poker on the hallway floor with a college dean of admissions. All four of them were gnawing on pretzel sticks dipped in mustard.

  At that moment, I found myself wishing more than anything that Michael hadn’t been rushed off by the police. This particular party would have been a good one to ease him into meeting some of my friends.

  My phone rang, and with my heart lifting, I stepped into a narrow pantry to answer it.

  “Nora!” Libby’s voice crackled in my ear. “We’re coming to pick you up!”

  I checked my watch and found it was nearly eight.

  “Libby, what are you planning?” I still had to reach the Chocolate Festival Gala.

  “Never mind that,” she snapped. “Just tell me where you are.”

  “What’s wrong?”

  “Just tell me where the hell you are!” she shouted. I heard a horn blare.

  I told her where we could meet, and half an hour later her red minivan came to a screeching stop in front of Naked Chocolate, my favorite hangout. I gathered up my purchases—a few choice treats—and went out into the muggy night.

  The side door of the minivan slid open.

  “Get in!” Libby shouted.

  I climbed into the backseat. Up front, Emma had her head in a plastic bag.

  In the backseat beside me was Tierney Cavendish, white-faced and firmly buckled with the seat belt.

  “What are you doing here?” I asked him.

  “Praying,” he said. “Your sisters are nuts.”

  “Close the door,” Libby commanded. “We don’t have much time!”

  “Where are we going? Em? Are you okay? Are we taking you to the hospital?”

  “To the morgue,” she groaned. “I ran out of ginger ale.”

  Libby whipped the van into traffic and through a yellow light. “There’s a mini-market!” Libby pointed at a corner store. “Nora, run inside and buy her some Canada Dry!”

  I did as I was told. I bailed out, ran across the street and shoved my way to the front of the line of people buying lottery tickets and cigarettes. Despite the heat, everybody was in a good mood and let me pay quickly. When I climbed back into the minivan, I twisted open one of the plastic bottles and passed it to Emma. She grabbed it without thanking me.

  Libby turned around in her seat. She was wearing a black T-shirt with white lettering. It said, YOU’RE ONLY AS STRONG AS

  THE TABLE YOU DANCE ON. “All right,” I said. “What in the world is going on?”

  Libby’s face was alight with purpose. “We just found out where Hart Jones is tonight.”

  “What’s a heart jones?” Tierney asked, mystified. He was dressed in one of Michael’s shirts—too big by several sizes—and he hung on to the door handle to keep himself from being thrown from his seat by Libby’s wild driving.

  “He’s a person,” I said. “Hartfield Jones. The banker you met with for lunch the other day, remember?”

  Tierney looked surprised. “Why are we looking for him?”

  “We heard a bulletin,” Libby reported. “Tonight Hart is going to propose to whatsername Haffenpepper.”

  “Who?” Tierney asked.

  “She’s a beer heiress,” I said.

  From the front seat, Emma added hoarsely, “Her mother’s Eva Braun.”

  None of that information helped Tierney. He looked as confused as before—maybe more so.

  “Anyway,” Libby said, “tonight he’s going to ask her to marry him again.”

  “Again?” Tierney asked. “Is that bad or good?”

  “Bad,” I said. “Because he’s falling in love with Emma.”

  Libby said, “Men do that a lot.”

  “Then why is he proposing to somebody else?”

  “Because all men are fools,” Libby said. “He’s making the safe choice, the boring choice, the choice that will perpetuate a Philadelphia stereotype. His life has no meaning.”

  Emma stopped gulping ginger ale and sat back in her seat. She tried deep breathing to quell her nausea. “If he marries her, his life will have no sex. She’s a dead fish in bed.”

  I said, “We need to get to Hart before he proposes, so Emma can tell him she’s pregnant.”

  “She’s pregnant?” Tierney looked aghast.

  “I’m not telling him that!”

  “You have to, Em,” Libby said sternly. “He has a right to know.”

  “And besides,” I added, “Eva Braun has the wedding all planned.”

  “My God,” Libby said. “This is a mission of mercy!”

  “I’m not telling him. I’m not ready.”

  “You’ll never be ready,” I said. “But you’ve got to grow up and take responsibility. For once, Emma, put yourself in someone else’s shoes.”

  “Whose?”

  “Hart’s!” Libby and I cried together.

  Tierney said, “Maybe he really does want to marry the other woman.”

  “You don’t know her,” Emma snapped. “She’s vacant and selfish. He’s only marrying her because her family has skyboxes for hockey and the Sixers.” She looked surprised at her own outburst.

  “Lib,” I said, “how do we know he’s going to propose tonight?”

  “His sister told Ellie Pargenter, who phoned her daughter, who e-mailed Rawlins’s girlfriend, who text-messaged him—”

  “I get it,” I said. “It’s amazing the bride-to-be hasn’t heard by now. What does the ring look like?”

  Libby too
k me seriously and frowned. “I don’t know.”

  I sighed. “Do we know where he is going to propose?”

  “That pretty gazebo in Fairmount Park. On the hill, with the view of the river. You know the one?” Libby refastened her seat belt and put the minivan into gear.

  “The gazebo with the rosebushes planted all around it?”

  Libby pulled into traffic, but kept talking. “That’s it. We’re headed there now. The city is setting off some pre–Fourth of July fireworks at ten o’clock. We figure Hart’s going to propose just before that.”

  “And we’re going to be there?”

  “Yep.”

  “What are we going to do?” Tierney asked.

  “Stop him, of course. He only needs to look at Emma one more time to be convinced he can’t marry Eva Braun’s daughter.”

  Emma, who looked sweaty and sick with her hair sticking up and her shirt falling off one shoulder, said, “Slow down. I’m feeling sick all over again.”

  I said, “Why is Tierney coming along?”

  “We kidnapped him,” Libby said. “Tit for tat.”

  He said, “I was minding my own business, hiding out at your boyfriend’s house, when they came along and ordered me into the van. I thought they had a gun. Turns out, it was a tube of sunscreen.” He showed me a container of Banana Boat, SPF 45.

  “Oh, for heaven’s sake, Libby!”

  “It was in the glove compartment! It was the only thing I had. We need a man along, and Emma thought of Tierney. And, after all, he should be initiated into the family.”

  Tierney said, “Isn’t hazing illegal now?”

  I said, “Why do we need a man?”

  Libby said, “I have it all figured. I’m going to park down over the hillside, and we’ll climb up to the gazebo so they don’t see us coming. I might be in superb physical condition for a woman of childbearing age, but how are we going to get Emma up there without somebody strong to boost her over the fence?”

  “That’s not a fence up there,” I said. “It’s a wall. Eight feet high, at least.”

  “I have a ladder in the back.”

  I peered over the backseat of the minivan and saw my kitchen step stool on the floor. “That’s not going to help,” I said.

 

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