Cook's Night Out (14 page)

Read Cook's Night Out Online

Authors: Joanne Pence

Angie was bending over the desk
in the donation room, trying to count up how many tickets they'd sold so far. The sales were going well, despite Reverend Hodge's anxiety. Besides, they still had a week before the big event—lots of time to sell more tickets.

His irritation at the cost of the caterer and the small army needed to cook and serve the hors d'oeuvres and pastries struck her as nothing more than him being cheap. Every time she talked to the caterer, he came up with more exciting food to serve, so of course the cost kept mounting. It was now around $110,000, but who could say no to gâteau Saint-Honoré, even though the fifteen hundred cream puffs—one on top of each piece of cake—added considerably to the cost? It wasn't as if they could give someone half a cream puff. But with Picassos and diamonds to sell, she couldn't allow the food or wine to look skimpy. Considering the cost of wedding banquets, she thought she was doing pretty darn well.

She'd simply have to find cost savings elsewhere. Maybe paper napkins instead of linen would help?

Suddenly, the world went black as hands clasped playfully over her eyes.

She gave a little yelp, pulled free, and spun around with a smile, thinking it was one of the other volunteers clowning around. To her horror, before her stood Axel Klaw.

He put his hands on his hips, his feet apart, and laughed uproariously.

She wanted to tell him he wasn't that funny, but somehow, she couldn't get the words past her throat. The thought of Klaw's touching her made her skin crawl. Finally, not knowing what to do, what to say, or how to act, she grabbed her purse and ran from the room.

Klaw laughed louder.

 

“You got problems, buddy.” Yosh shook his head. He sat beside Paavo's desk as the two filled each other in on what had happened at the Isle of Capri and on Hanover Judd's tale of rumors—most likely from those two rookies.

“We're investigating the dead numbers runners well enough between all of us. It's Klaw, Lili Charmaine, Van Warren, and now a new player—a girlfriend of Klaw's named Gretchen—that I want to find out about.”

“I'm with you, partner,” Yosh said.

Paavo studied him. Looking into the doings of a man such as Klaw and his friends could get dangerous. Not to mention that if Yosh tried to help him on department time and anyone wanted to get nasty about it, Yosh could end up in hot water, too. “Are you sure?” he asked.

“It's no more than you'd do for me,” Yosh said, his gaze direct and open.

Paavo just nodded.

 

Angie's heart eventually stopped racing as she sat in the Senseless Beauty Café and talked with Rainbow Grchek. The café, Angie was pleased to learn, was proving quite successful. Office workers from the financial district and Market Street jogged or walked along the Embarcadero at lunchtime, and often stopped in for something vegetarian or low-fat. Or, if they'd had a bad day at work—which for some people was every day at work—they'd order a scrumptious pastry to lift their spirits.

“Oh, hi! What do you hear?” Angie knew that voice—the sound of fingernails scraping along a blackboard would have been more welcome. She looked up quickly, fearfully, wondering if Klaw was with his girlfriend. Luckily, Lili was alone.

“Hello, Lili,” Rainbow called. “Pull up a chair.”

Lili sauntered over to their table. She wore a short turquoise jacket, a white ruffled blouse, and a teeny skirt that looked as though it had been made out of a band of turquoise spandex. “No time for a calorie fest for me. I'm hitting the stores. Axel will go ballistic if I don't do what I'm supposed to, when I'm supposed to.”

“You mean Axel actually wants you to go shopping?” Angie asked. “That's a switch.” Unless it was to buy better-looking clothes, she almost said, but thought better of it.

“Yeah. He gives me snaps for courageous fashion efforts. Most people say, like, hello-o-o, you've already got more clothes than you can wear in, like, twenty years, but not my guy. That's why I'd do whatever he says, just to show him he's right.”

“That's good, Lili.”

“Yeah. Sometimes I get way bored, though, but what the hey.”

“I can't imagine that he'd ask you to do boring things.”

“He does. He's into athletics in a monster way.”

Angie had doubts about pursuing this conversation any further. She could well imagine some of the athletics Klaw liked to pursue with Lili. “I didn't know,” she said finally, curiosity outweighing good taste—as usual.

“He hangs with a bunch of joggers,” Lili said.

“Joggers?” That was the last thing Angie expected to hear. “Jogging can be boring, I guess.”

“He wants to open a string of health clubs.” Lili clearly relished the fact that someone was listening to her. “I thought, like, okay, whatever you want to call them is okay with me.”

“So they're not health clubs?” Angie was growing more confused by the minute.

Lili's gaze grew almost shrewd. “If Axel says they're salami sandwiches, that's what they are.”

“Of course.” Angie wasn't about to alarm Lili.

“Now you're talking. Of course, if those investors I met in Las Vegas tried to jog, we'd have to call for oxygen fast.”

“I didn't know you were both in Vegas.”

“Oh, yeah. I was onstage, even. Actually, Lili Charmaine isn't my real name. It's my show name. But then, I got to be so last-season, I was fired. What could I do? I gave a few shows one-on-one, if you know what I mean.”

Angie got it. “I'm sorry,” she said.

“It's okay. Showgirls are twenty, twenty-one. I'm thirty-two. Not that anyone could tell.”

Angie could.

“That's why,” Lili continued, “I'm way grateful to join the reverend. I can talk to the girls who'll come here when the place gets going. I'll steer them right. Make a difference. Does that make me sound like a retard?”

“Not at all,” Angie said, looking at Lili in a whole new light.

“Axel thinks I'm mental, but I tell him that's way harsh. Then he says, what do I know?”

“I think you'd be an asset to the mission,” Angie told her.

“Thanks, Ang. I'd like to show Axel and his investors what I can do.”

Talk of the investors brought Angie back to wondering what Klaw was up to. “If Klaw had investors in Las Vegas,” Angie asked, “why didn't he just stay there? I would have thought he wouldn't want to leave.”

“You are so totally in the dark. Nobody cares about health clubs in the desert. It's way hot. If you don't, like, spend all your time sitting around and drinking, you'd wither up and die. That's why it's got a major jogger drought.”

Back to jogging. Angie's head was spinning. “But you don't need a health club to jog.”

“Hey, that's truly sublime.” Lili stared off into space awhile. “I never thought of that.”

Give me strength
, Angie thought. “Does Axel jog?”

“Get outta town! No way! Actually, he sends me to meet the joggers. They're all, like, giving me stuff for him all the time.”

“What kind of stuff?” Angie probed.

“Don't ask me. He'd go ballistic if I touched it. Anyway, I've got to haul ass. I'm stopping at a palm reader's.”

“A palm reader's?” Angie would have assumed Lili was joking, but something told her Lili didn't joke. Did Axel have something to do with palm readers, too?

“I found a cute little shop. I was freaking. You know what she said?”

“I can't imagine,” Angie murmured, realizing this had nothing to do with Axel, but was pure Lili.

“It's so fab. I'm going to meet a handsome man and get rich.”

“Really? How exciting for you.”

“I can't tell Axel, though—I mean, Alex. I mean, he's cute, but even
he
don't think he's handsome. Anyway, sometimes I just don't think this relationship is a major forever-after.”

“I've had days like that,” Angie admitted.

“Well, so long, Ang.” Lili stood up to leave.

“Don't tell Axel we talked, okay?” Angie asked. “He might not like to hear you were delayed going shopping.”

Lili smiled. “That's cool. Bye.” With that, she left.

Lili might not care what her visits to Axel's friends were all about, but Angie was eager to find out. Health clubs? Joggers? She didn't think so.

Paavo made a quick about-face
as he approached room 450 of the Hall of Justice the next morning. A reporter from the
San Francisco Examiner
, the city's afternoon paper, was pacing the hallway. The woman's beat was city government, and she was having a field day investigating rumors of a top homicide inspector's alleged involvement in deaths resulting from numbers racketeering.

Instead of battling his way to his desk, Paavo went down to the Police Administration offices. He still smarted every time he remembered Angie's calling him obsessed with Klaw. It wasn't obsession. But maybe he had jumped to the correct conclusion overly soon.

In the files area he looked up the records of Richmond station officers Mike Kellogg and Eric Rosenberg. Both records were so clean they sparkled. Not the slightest hint of notoriety lingered over either one of them, and they'd been among the highest scorers at the police academy.

So why were they under his feet with every step he took? Why were they watching him so closely?

He was pondering those questions when Rebecca Mayfield burst into the files room. “Paavo, I was hoping I'd find you here.”

“What's wrong?”

“Sutter and I are the on-call team this week. Last night we got a summons to go to a restaurant—the Isle of Capri. The owner, Frankie Tagliaro, had been murdered. One bullet, back of the head. I thought you'd want to know.”

 

“Ah, Angie, I'm so glad you're here,” Reverend Hodge said, bursting into Auction Central. Angie sat at a desk going over the donations list. “We've got to cut back on the food bill. It's too much. Whoever heard of pâté de canard en croûte at an auction? Whoever heard of pâté de canard en croûte at anything? I don't even know what it is. All I know is, it's too damned expensive for us.”

She leaned back in her chair. “It's boned, stuffed duck in a pastry crust—beautiful, elegant, and worth every penny. No one will eat much, but they'll be impressed nonetheless. You must remember, Reverend Hodge, penny-pinching is not a noble trait.”

“Who's penny-pinching? I just don't want to end up in the poorhouse.”

“You've got all those fine donations.” Angie had been over this with him time and again. “You don't have to worry.”

“But every time I turn around, the bill for the caterer goes higher.”

“You told me you wanted to impress the patrons with fine food, didn't you?” she cried.

“Impressing them is one thing. Stuffing them to the gills with all this expensive food is another!”

She rubbed her forehead. “It'll be worth it. Trust me.”

He pulled at his hair. “Right now, it's all I can do to get people to spend two hundred lousy dollars for a ticket! I spend all my time publicizing the damn—oops!—I mean, darn thing. Maybe this was all just a bad idea! Maybe I should forget the whole thing!”

“You're right,” she said, her voice clipped.

He dropped his hands. “What?”

“I said you're right.” She stood. “I quit. I'll call the caterer and tell him to forget it. You can refund all the ticket money. Mary Ellen tells me you're keeping it in some special account, so giving it back should be easy.”

“Now wait, Angie.” He darted to her side and got down on one knee. “Don't be hasty. I mean, you shouldn't jump off the train before it reaches the station. Give it a chance.”

She slowly lifted one eyebrow. “Are you sure?”

He sighed, and his look told her he realized what she'd done. He stood and dusted off his knee. “I'm sure. So tell me, how's the centerpiece coming?”

She sat down again. “Well…I haven't quite settled on one thing.”

“That's understandable. What are you thinking about?”

She wasn't sure how to break this to him. “Well…I haven't quite thought of anything yet, either.”

“I see.” The Adam's apple on his skinny neck bobbed up and down a couple of times. “I'm sure you'll come up with something soon. Something meaningful.”

She blanched. “You wanted attractive…now you want meaningful, too? We've got only six days left. That might not be enough time to be too meaningful.”

“Don't worry. God will guide you.”

“You've got that right.” She folded her arms and slouched down in the chair, knowing more hours would
be spent racking her brain. “Whatever the centerpiece is, God only knows.”

 

HOMICIDE INSPECTOR QUIZZED ON
GAMBLING TIES

by Doris Grant

Examiner
Staff Writer

Homicide inspector Paavo Smith came under increased scrutiny today as the investigation into his alleged gambling activities broadened. Charges of payoffs and kickbacks have been made based on finding Smith's name on the tally sheets of two murdered numbers racketeers, Patrick Devlin and Dennis O'Leary. Also, last night's murder of Frankie Tagliaro, a restaurant owner with ties to the numbers racket, became connected to the case when word got out that Smith was found at Tagliaro's restaurant during a raid a few days ago by the vice squad. Vice inspectors allegedly allowed Smith to leave the scene.

In an action bound to stir controversy even more, Smith remains the lead investigator of Dennis O'Leary's murder. The investigation is said to be stalled. Chief of Police Lawrence Creighton says the matter is being looked into. Smith had no comment.

Paavo was dialing Angie's number when he was summoned to Lieutenant Hollins's office. He had wanted to tell Angie about Tagliaro's murder so that she could explain it to her father in a way that would leave him feeling no responsibility for the man's death.

He got her answering machine and hung up. She was
probably at the mission. He'd call there as soon as he finished with Hollins.

When he walked into Hollins's office, he was surprised to find Assistant District Attorney Judd there waiting for him.

“Have a seat, Smith,” Hollins said.

“Well,” he said, taking the chair indicated, “I guess the two of you are here to give me the same rousing endorsement as the chief of police did in this afternoon's paper. I can't tell you how touched I was by his support.”

Hollins gave Paavo a look that was filled with compassion. “We've worked together a lot of years, Paavo,” Hollins said. “I know you, I know all my men, almost as well as I do my wife. And probably a hell of a lot better than I know either one of my kids. I trust all of you. I'd trust you with my life, and I want you to know that.”

Paavo leaned back in the chair. Why was it that talk about trust made one instinctively wary? “I feel a whole lot better now.”

Hollins ignored the sarcasm. “With that statement in the paper about your being at Tagliaro's restaurant when it was raided, everything's hit the fan. The DA's ordered an investigation. Already he's got a call from someone, a woman—she didn't identify herself—but she said he should look at the deposits made to your savings account at the Bank of America. Judd's been told to do it.”

Paavo could scarcely look at Judd, whom he'd once considered a friend. Yosh had filled him in on their talk, on the way Judd had asked Yosh to do what he could to prove Paavo's innocence. Paavo might have felt differently if Judd had talked to him first instead of talking to his partner, and now his boss. He turned to Judd and said only, “Did you?”

Judd squirmed uncomfortably under the intense
scrutiny. “No. We'll let you do that. Have the statement faxed to me from the bank.”

“So there's no danger of my tampering with the results, is that it?” He didn't raise his voice, didn't speak with any emotion, and that seemed to make his words, his unspoken accusation, even more chilling.

“So there'll be no question in anyone else's mind,” Hollins said emphatically. “I know there's nothing to any of this nonsense. The thing is, I want to find out what's going on and who's hassling you.”

“You're not the only one,” Paavo said. He stood, his gaze piercing first one and then the other. “Any more accusations I should know about?”

Hollins pulled out a cigar and chewed it for a while. “We understand you were good friends with Frankie Tagliaro.”

“Friends? Good Christ, who's feeding you these lies? I never saw the guy before Angie and I went to dinner there the other night.”

“Why'd you pick that place?”

“Why?” Should he go into the whole story about numbers and Angie's father with these two? Would that make him sound less guilty, or more so? “We eat out at a lot of different spots.” Even to his ears, the excuse sounded lame. “It was on the way to my place.”

Hollins and Judd's eyes met. “Get that bank statement so we can straighten all this out,” Hollins said. “In the meantime, I'm giving Yosh your cases. You're not suspended. You can come to work, ride with Yosh if you want, but don't handle anything on your own. Is that clear?”

His frustration beyond the breaking point, Paavo left without another word.

 

Angie needed to give serious thought to the centerpiece the reverend wanted, and decided that an iced mocha decaf latte made with nonfat milk—generally known as a Why Bother—would be the way to do it. She was walking from the mission to the Senseless Beauty Café when her eye caught a page-one story in the
Examiner:
“Restaurant Owner Murdered.”

Her blood froze. Not long ago there had been a rash of murders that left the restaurateurs of the city reeling, many of whom were her friends. Dropping a quarter into the machine, she pulled out a newspaper.

Frankie Tagliaro was the dead man. Poor Frankie. He had gotten involved in something way over his head and had paid the ultimate price for it.

She wondered why Paavo hadn't called and told her about this. He must have known. A call from him so that she could tell her parents before news of the murder came out in the paper would have been helpful. The thought of her father's reaction to the news worried her.

She turned back to the mission to call home, but then realized that if there was any connection between Tagliaro and Klaw, she didn't want Klaw and his cronies to overhear her conversation. She went to her car and used her cellular phone.

Serefina answered.

“Mamma, did you hear about Frankie Tagliaro?” she asked.


Sì
. It was on the radio. Your father is upset.”

“Tell him the murder had nothing to do with the money Frankie wanted to borrow from him.”

“You're sure?”

“I'm sure. Paavo knows all about it.”


Dio, grazie
, I was so worried. So, why was he killed?”

Good question
. “The police aren't saying, Mamma.”

“Then how do you know it wasn't because of the money he owed?”

Oops
. “He was killed…because…he got Don Corleone angry with him.”

“Corleone? I don't know any Corleones in San Francisco,” Serefina said.

“Be grateful, Mamma,” Angie whispered confidentially.

“Don't worry, Angelina. Marlon Brando and Al Pacino wouldn't hurt a fly.”

“Oh, dear.”

“Next time, tell the truth.” Serefina abruptly hung up.

 

The Bank of America branch near Paavo's house in the Richmond district was one of those small neighborhood banks where, years ago, the tellers knew all their customers and probably knew more about them and how they lived than any of those customers cared to consider. Now, though, Paavo didn't recognize a soul in the bank. His salary went into his checking account by direct deposit, and between checks, credit cards, and ATMs, he managed to spend it without any banker's face-to-face intervention.

He asked for a printout of his deposits into savings for the past three months. He expected the list to be a simple one, since he hadn't made any deposits in that time. Everything he earned went into checking, and between money for property taxes and money to fix a busted water pump and put a new clutch in his car, he hadn't had enough left over to bother moving into savings.

The bank teller keyed in his account number and waited a moment, then hit a button. The printer began to clatter and in a short while produced a five-by-eight sheet of paper. He took it from her and stared, unbelieving. One transaction was listed. It was dated the day
after he and Angie went to Frankie Tagliaro's for dinner. The amount was five thousand dollars.

“How was this deposit made?” he asked.

“How?” she repeated absently.

He was out of patience. “ATM? Wired from another bank?
How?

She looked at the codes, then excused herself and went to speak to her manager. When she returned she said, “As best we can determine, you made it.”

Would this madness never end? It made him wonder if someone was running around impersonating him. “Why do you think that?” he asked, trying his best to sound patient and reasonable.

“The codes. They tell us that you came to the bank and personally deposited this into your account.”

“Do you know for sure I was the depositor?”

“Well…we don't require a signature or ID to put money
into
an account, especially when the transaction is cash. It's your account, someone made a cash deposit, so naturally we assumed…”

“And if it wasn't me, can you tell who did make the deposit?”

“I'm sorry, sir. The bank doesn't require—”

“I know. Forget it. I need this statement faxed.” He handed her Hanover Judd's fax number.

“There'll be a charge for this service, sir,” the teller said.

It took every ounce of his control for him to thank her for her help and tell her to deduct the charge from his account.

 

Angie sat in the mission's dining hall. Although the reverend had big plans for it in the future, right now only the volunteers used it. She was busily going through catalogues and books on wedding receptions in hopes of
coming up with some innovative ideas on centerpieces. Oh, yes—meaningful ideas as well.

Other books

A Reluctant Bride by Kathleen Fuller
Run (The Hunted) by Patti Larsen
Marrying Up by Wendy Holden
Memory by K. J. Parker
Listed: Volume IV by Noelle Adams
[Brackets] by Sloan, David
This London Love by Clare Lydon
Ángeles y Demonios by Dan Brown