Inherit the Word (The Cookbook Nook Series) (21 page)

Mitzi entered last, her hair tousled, her makeup slightly off. She teetered as she tossed her red coat and purse on the vintage table. Was she sick? I considered the theory that Katie, Bailey, and I had drummed up the other night, about Mitzi filling her water bottle with liquor. Maybe she was tipsy.

Before I could check on her, Mayor Zeller stood before the audience and invited the contestants to the kitchen to pick out their final items. Mitzi trailed the pack. Within seconds she returned, alone. She groped through her purse; I assumed she was looking for her recipe. Clearly frustrated, she hurled the purse away. She started toward the exit as if whatever she was seeking might be in her car. She stopped short of the door and pressed a hand to her chest. “He came,” she said under her breath.

I followed her gaze. Her husband, Sam, who had arrived on a bicycle, was wedging his ten-speed into one of the slots of a bicycle rack. He secured it with a sturdy lock and hurried toward the shop.

When he entered, Mitzi threw her arms around him and planted a solid kiss on his cheek, but then, as if she had been doused with ice water, she pulled something from his pocket and split apart from him. “What’s this?” she said in a pitch meant for macaws. She brandished something that looked like a flyer. “Tell me.”

Sam grabbed the paper. “A timetable.” He reinserted it into his jacket pocket.

Mitzi snatched it back and opened it. “Liar. There’s a ticket in here. To San Diego. Are you going to take a trip with
her
?”

Her
who
? I wondered.
Manga Girl?
No way
.

“Babe, I’m going to San Diego for another money management conference. I have to stay current with the trends.”

Battling tears, Mitzi said, “Why did you say it was a timetable?”

“You know how you get.” He reached for her elbow. “Let’s talk privately.”

“I can’t.” Mitzi yanked free. “I’m late. Screw the makeup.” She dashed toward the kitchen.

Sam’s gaze flew from me to his wife and back to me. He shrugged. “She’s nervous,” he said as an apology. “She wants to win so badly. I—”

He halted, his attention snagged by Ellen entering the shop. She was clutching the collar of her coat as if the temperature was close to freezing, which it wasn’t. No daughter. No stroller. No handcuffs.

I moved to her. “How are you, Ellen? I’m assuming you’re cleared since you’re not at the precinct.”

“I’m free, for now. The maid from the motel couldn’t identify me from a lineup.”

“And Norah?”

“She’s watching Bebe.”

That wasn’t what I had meant. I’d wanted to know whether her sister was being held for more questioning. Norah had so much to gain from getting rid of not only her mother but also Willie.

“Find a seat,” I said.

“Oh no. I can’t stay for the contest. There’s too much to do at the diner. I’m sorry to intrude. I had no idea that the contest would be going on today.”

“You’re not intruding,” I assured her. “We haven’t started.”

“Good. I wanted to give you something as a thank-you for standing by me last night.”

Sam joined us. “What happened last night?”

Ellen welled up. I couldn’t imagine the anguish she was going through. Two loved ones lost in a week. “Willie didn’t leave town, Sam. He was murdered.”

Sam looked stunned. He reached for her hand. “What happened?”

Ellen spit out the main points. Sam hung on her every word. “Jenna was there when the police swooped in. She vouched for me. You were such a blessing, Jenna. I know Norah was there for me, too, but you offered a voice of reason to the chief. She listens to you.”

I wasn’t sure I agreed.

“To say thanks, I wanted to give you a few coupons to the diner, if that’s okay.” Ellen fished in her pocket and withdrew a clump of stuff: tissues, Post-its, coupons, and something else—a green cylinder. “What’s this?” She held up a tube of lipstick. “Huh. Sassy Woman Red,” she said, reading the label. “What a name. I guess somebody at work slipped it into my pocket.”

“It’s not yours?” I couldn’t remember ever seeing Ellen wearing lipstick. ChapStick, maybe.

“Remember my coat was missing yesterday? I think one of the staff must have thought it was hers, put it on, and wore it home. Nobody confessed, but it was back on the hook when I went in this morning.”

I glanced from the lipstick to Sam’s face. Mitzi had kissed him, but she hadn’t left a telltale lipstick mark. Mitzi never went anywhere without wearing bright red lipstick. I gazed at Mitzi’s purse lying on the floor. Before rushing to the kitchen, she’d said, “Screw the makeup.” Minutes ago, had she been searching for a tube of Sassy Woman Red lipstick? How had it wound up in Ellen’s coat?

The reason exploded in my brain. “Mitzi,” I said.

“What about her?” Sam asked.

Out loud, I scrambled to fill in the details. Mitzi had borrowed Ellen’s coat. She was the woman the hotel maid had seen going into Willie’s room.

“My wife does not have secret liaisons.”

“No, Sam. I think she had another intention. Does she own a revolver?”

“You can’t believe—” He inhaled sharply. “How dare you.”

I realized Sam shouldn’t be listening in on anything that I theorized about his wife, but I wasn’t an officer of the law, and I couldn’t slow down. I felt like I did whenever a great idea came to me at the advertising agency. Blabbermouth with Brains, Bailey had dubbed me. “What if Mitzi killed Natalie because she was jealous that you and Natalie were having an affair?”

“Natalie? What?” Sam sputtered. “We were talking about Willie.”

I mentioned Bailey’s theory that Willie must have figured out who had killed Natalie. “What if Willie was blackmailing Mitzi? He set an appointment at the motel to discuss terms.”

“My wife couldn’t have killed Natalie. She doesn’t have a mean bone in her body.”

I was pretty sure she did. She had thrown cheese at Lola. She had hurled curses at Natalie. Maybe she had a drinking problem and, therefore, had no recollection of what she had done.

“No, no, no.” Sam’s face turned three shades of purple. “She’s innocent. Mitzi was home with me Sunday night. The entire night. She donned her mud mask at eight on the dot. It stays on for a full hour.” He stabbed a finger to make his point. “Afterward, she removes it and devotes an hour to massage with a special cream. She’s got this whole thing down to a routine.”

“Sam—”

“I’m not lying to protect her. She was home. And while she was in the bathroom primping, I was calling around town searching for Willie. Everywhere. I called bars, restaurants. Ask anyone. Mitzi never left the house.” He whirled on Ellen. “You’re lying about the coat.”

Ellen blanched. “No, Sam, I wouldn’t.”

“Maybe you’re in league with your sister. I’ll bet she’s the mastermind. She blackmailed Willie. She told him to meet her at a motel where no one would recognize either of them. Willie agreed.”

“No,” Ellen said.

“Norah stole your coat,” Sam continued, undaunted. “She put that lipstick in the pocket to frame my wife.”

Ellen gasped.

“Or how about another scenario?” Sam said, his voice growing nasty and ominous. “Maybe the two of you killed your mother, and then you both conspired to do away with Willie.”

“Why would they meet him at a motel?” I said. “Why not get rid of him at home?”

“I don’t know. Because . . . because he was running scared. Because . . .” Sam splayed his arms. “None of this makes sense. Natalie dying. Willie dying. Any of it. All I know is that I will not have you accuse my wife of murder. This is not right. No matter how you spin it, I’m”—he sucked air through his nose—“ashamed of you, Ellen.” Without another word, he pivoted and marched toward the kitchen.

Ellen sagged against me. Every ounce of her shook.

Chapter 21

I
STEADIED ELLEN
and held her at arms’ length. Her eyes grew misty. Customers in The Cookbook Nook started to stare.

“Let’s get you some water.” I ushered Ellen toward the hallway leading to the kitchen, popped a paper cup from the water cooler, and poured her a cupful.

Ellen slugged down the water. “Sam has never turned on me before, Jenna. He’s always been supportive.”

“Of course he’s going to defend Mitzi, first and foremost. He’s her husband.”

“Whenever my mother criticized me”—Ellen hiccupped—“Sam took my side. He’s been like a father.” She began to weep. “I didn’t kill my mother and husband.”

“I know you didn’t,” I said as quarreling thoughts argued in my mind. Had she or hadn’t she? Only her hairdresser knew for sure.

Ellen crumpled the water-cooler cup. “You won’t believe what Mitzi did this morning.”

I said, “She came to the diner, am I right?”

Ellen’s eyes widened.

“She needed to return your coat,” I went on.

“No. That’s not—”

“Mitzi was the one who borrowed it. She wore it to the motel.”

“I didn’t see her with the coat. You’ve got to be mistaken. What I was going to say is Mitzi cornered me in the kitchen and said she was interested in purchasing the diner.”

“She wants to buy you out?” Granted, with Mitzi’s wealth, she could afford to buy a lot of businesses, but why would she want to?

“Mitzi said she thought it would be good for Sam and her to own something together. She said that a couple that
cooks
together
sizzles
together.”

From all indications, Mitzi and Sam’s marriage was suffering. Mitzi had self-confidence issues. She worked hard on her looks. She worried that Sam was messing around with other women. She had blown a gasket when she found that ticket in Sam’s pocket. Sam could deny, deny, deny and defend his wife as a knight should defend his ladylove, but why had he lied to Mitzi about the ticket in his pocket?

“I can’t believe this,” Ellen said. “Mitzi—”

“Hush.” I put a finger over my mouth to caution her.

Mitzi and the other grill contestants were returning from the kitchen. Each carried a basket loaded with food items. They took their baskets to the portable cooking stations. Sam trailed the pack, giving Ellen a vile look as he passed.

When the mayor reintroduced the contestants to the audience, a notion came to me. What if it was true, and Mitzi did want to buy the diner? “Ellen, did Mitzi talk to your mother about purchasing the place?”

“I don’t know. Mother never discussed business with me. She confided in Sam.” Ellen sighed. “Willie would’ve been happy to sell. He said the diner would never help us build a nest egg.”

“Didn’t Sam mention yesterday that the diner’s finances are in great shape?”

“Yes, but Willie . . .” Ellen fingered her hair. “You guessed right, Jenna. Willie and I were struggling financially. He didn’t know how to cut back his spending habits. He is . . . was . . . a got-to-have-it-now kind of guy. He was always short on cash.”

“I saw him arguing with a bank teller the other day. Do you know what that was about?”

“He was probably asking for a loan. We have debt.” Ellen gazed at her raggedy fingernails. “I was seriously considering Mitzi’s offer—”

“Until Sam laid into you,” I said.

“I don’t think Mitzi has a clue what owning the diner could do to her marriage.” Ellen’s voice rasped with fatigue. “Ever since Mother died, Willie was angry and on edge. He . . .” The regret was clear. “If Mitzi wants it, I’ll sell it. Good riddance,” Ellen said with finality.

“Don’t talk like that.”

“I can’t be a waitress forever.”

“You’re an owner now. That’s much different. You have authority and prestige. What about your theme days? The scuttlebutt around town is how much fun everyone had at your Fifties Day event. You could do other decade themes. The Gay Nineties, the Roaring Twenties. Mitzi would never come up with these ideas.”

“It’s nice of you to try to cheer me up”—Ellen sniffed—“but it’s not working. I’d better talk to Norah. We have to make plans. For a funeral. For—” She sank into herself. Her eyes filled with tears. “What am I going to tell our little girl? Willie wanted the world for her.” She pulled her coat tightly about her and trudged out of the shop.

I returned to the Grill Fest and watched while Mitzi, her face flushed, dominated the event with her grilled cheese concoction as well as her foodie stories. The sandwich she had fashioned, made on cinnamon-swirl bread with Monterey Jack cheese oozing out the sides, won the votes of every judge based on visual appeal and flavor. By the end of the round, the judges ruled that Lola and Flora would be eliminated, and Tito, thanks to his zesty taco-style grilled cheese, would battle Mitzi for first prize.

• • •

LATER THAT AFTERNOON,
The Cookbook Nook cleared of customers, and the contestants and judges—minus Rhett, who had urgent business to attend to at Bait and Switch—convened in the hallway to dine on cream cheese sugar cookies.

I spied Mitzi exiting the ladies’ room. Though she had made it to the finals of the Grill Fest, she didn’t look happy. Where had Sam gone? Had he slipped away before her name was announced? Mitzi teetered but steadied herself using the wall for balance, and then rummaged in her clutch purse. She pulled out a cell phone, dialed, and waited. When she didn’t reach whomever she was calling, she hung up without leaving a message and jammed her cell phone back into her purse. Had she called her husband? Was she imagining him rolling around on a mattress with another woman? Had her suspicions and jealousy turned her into a murderer?

“Hey hey, everyone.” Keller, carrying a sizeable brown ice cream vat on his shoulder, forged into the group. “Cold stuff coming through.”

When Katie, who had been chatting up the mayor, caught sight of Keller, her cheeks flushed peppermint pink. She righted her toque and toyed with a few curls around her face. “Hi, Keller.”

He grinned. “Where do you want this?”

“The usual place.” She hitched a thumb.

“Got it.” Keller strode into the café and made a hard left toward the kitchen.

I sidled up to my pal. “Aha. Your secret is out, and here I thought you made all your own ice cream.”

“Whenever we have a run on a flavor, I call Keller. His ice cream is excellent. Today we ran out of fudge pecan swirl.”

Quietly I sang, “Katie’s got a boyfriend.”

She swatted me.

“Go help him.” I gave her a push.

She resisted. “No. Stop it. He’ll be back.”

And he was, in seconds. He walked with big loping strides. Without a vat of ice cream balanced on his shoulder, he reminded me of a gigantic puppy—big paws, floppy hair, sweet, soulful eyes. “Did I scare the folks away?” He laughed in his charming, yuk
-
yuk way.

“You didn’t scare everyone away.” Katie tittered.

During the time Keller had gone to the kitchen, Lola, Flora, and the mayor had departed. Pepper was doing her best to clandestinely snitch the last few cookies off the tiered tray. Mitzi was having a heated discussion with Tito, who was twirling his keys around his index finger and looking like he wished he could split without being rude. Watching the keys go round and round made me think briefly of the key David had given me. Tito was a reporter. Could my key fit a reporter’s desk? No, David hadn’t been a writer; he had hated writing anything, even a grocery list.

“Where’s your amazing bicycle, Keller?” Katie said, stressing the word
amazing.

I was tempted to roll my eyes at her but stopped. Who was I to judge her flirtation skills? I wasn’t very good at the social sport myself.
Practice, practice, practice
.

“It’s right out there,” Keller said. “Don’t you see it on the sidewalk?” He yuk-yukked again.

Pepper whirled around and gave him the evil eye. “You.” She must have recognized his distinctive laugh. She bounded toward him while jabbing a finger. “How many times have I told you, young man—”

“Not to park my bicycle near your shop,” Keller finished.

“That’s right. It’s an eyesore.”

“Sorry, ma’am.”

“C’mon, Pepper,” I said, using the tone my aunt employed whenever she needed to rein in Pepper. “He’s a capitalist. You like businessmen.”

“Door-to-door high jinks like his reflect badly on the community.”

“They do not. They show the younger generation of Crystal Cove that not everyone needs a four-year degree to be successful.”

“Bah,” Pepper muttered.

Bah yourself, you sourpuss
, I wanted to say, wishing I could inject her with a happy serum. Was there a five-ingredient recipe for something like that? Why didn’t Pepper understand how entrepreneurs were good for our town? We had a slew of craftsmen in Crystal Cove: knitters, potters, bakers, and artists. Keller’s mother, although she adored her son, hadn’t been able to help him with college finances, so after high school, Keller had worked days and attended the junior college at night, taking basic economics classes. The day he graduated, he purchased his ice cream–making bicycle. The next week, he opened his alfresco business and became an instant hit.
Novelty
, as my first boss said,
cannot be purchased
.
Promoting novelty is a requirement of citizenship
.

“It’s okay, Jenna,” Keller said. “I don’t need you to fight my battles.” He removed his baseball cap and addressed Pepper. “I’m really sorry if I’m being a nuisance, ma’am. I wanted to stop in and say hi to Chef Katie.”

Katie uttered a teensy peep. Her peppermint-tinted cheeks flushed strawberry red.

“I’ll be moving the bike in three shakes of a lamb’s tail,” he went on. “Thanks so much for understanding. If I can make it up to you, I’d be glad to stop by Beaders of Paradise later this week and bring you your favorite ice cream. What is it, by the way?”

Pepper grew calm, as though someone had put her into a trance. “Dark chocolate,” she said in a soft, girlie voice.

“Done. With an extra dose of chocolate.”

Pepper nodded politely, then exited.

Shocked and thrilled, I glanced over my shoulder, fully expecting to see my aunt stroking her amulet. She wasn’t there. Hmm. Had I somehow inherited her gift of persuasion?
Abracadabra.
A girl could get used to that kind of mental power.

“Who moves to the next round?” Keller said. “I assume Spa Lady will.”

“Spa who?” I said.

Keller hitched his chin toward Mitzi, who was still lighting into Tito. “About a week ago, I saw her running out of the spa. You know the one.” He did a hula-type move with his hips.

“The Permanent Wave Salon and Spa?” I said. A month ago, I’d had the luck to become personally familiar with the place.

Keller nodded. “That’s it. Spa Lady—what’s her name?”

“Mitzi,” I offered.

“Yeah, she looked so ridiculous. She had on this terry cloth robe and turban.” His fingers drew a coil above his head. “And a blue mask.” He dragged his hand in front of his face.

I’d bet he was great at playing charades:
Two words. First syllable.

“She was flagging me down as if her life depended on it. She caught up to me right in front of The Pelican Brief Diner. She wanted ice cream. Rocky road. Tons of almonds. It’s my best seller. I scooped her a cone, but it was a warm day. When chocolate started dripping all over her, she went nutty—forgive the pun—worried that the spa would be mad that she’d soiled their robe, so she rushed into The Pelican Brief Diner to clean herself off.” He shook his head.

“She likes to keep up her appearance,” I said.

“You’re telling me. She’s got a real thing for body stuff, because a couple of days later, I saw her heading into the tanning salon.”

“The Golden D’or.”

Keller tapped his nose as if I had guessed the right charades answer. “That was the day Willie caught up with her.”

“Willie?”

Keller stroked his jaw. “Come to think of it, Willie was steaming. He accused Spa Lady of something. She yelled, ‘How dare you.’ Willie said something back. I could only hear Spa Lady because she was facing my direction. She said, ‘You’re loco!’ Willie made a money gesture.” Keller showed us by rubbing his thumb against his fingers. “Spa Lady hauled back. She almost slapped him, but she didn’t. Like this, you know?” Keller demonstrated.

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