Aunty Lee's Deadly Specials (4 page)

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Authors: Ovidia Yu

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Cultural Heritage, #General

BOOK: Aunty Lee's Deadly Specials
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“She’s not good at taking no for an answer,” Mathilda had said wryly when Aunty Lee
told her who her latest catering job was for. Aunty Lee had continued the weekly long-distance
phone calls to Mathilda in London after her father’s death. She wanted Mathilda to
remember her roots in Singapore, and besides, she liked the girl.

“You didn’t marry the boy, so you must have said no, right?”

“Why do you think I’m staying out of Singapore until she’s married him off to someone
else? Actually she never talked to me. She was bugging my parents and implying that
unless they accepted her offer, they would never find a nice Chinese boy willing to
marry me after sending me away to become all Westernized.”

Naturally Aunty Lee was curious to see what Leonard Sung looked like. But there was
no one in sight as she pushed the gate open.

“Hello. Hello.” Nina spoke into the gate intercom but there was no answer.

“The gate’s not locked. Why don’t we just go in and start setting up?” Cherril suggested.

Nina started to say they ought to try calling first but Aunty Lee was already pushing
the gate open, eager as a little girl to start the day’s catering adventure.

Once inside the gate, Aunty Lee looked around with interest. Did the Sungs really
have a private chapel and baptismal pool on the grounds? People said they had turned
to religion after their son got sick. But the only pool she could see was the small,
blue-tiled swimming pool, along one side of which the line of buffet tables was standing.
And the small building on the other side of the pool . . . could that be the famous
chapel?

The house itself was clearly a luxury mansion. Aunty Lee herself lived in a good but
somewhat lower-class bungalow. Built on the sloping inner reaches of King Albert Park,
the main Sung residence was on the highest level, while the architect had made the
most of the sloping land behind the house by creating a series of living spaces linked
by external sheltered stairs as well as what looked like a chairlift. An outdoor kitchen
complete with cooker, barbecue pits, and an enormous freezer was located on the stone
patio by the swimming pool on the lowest level, where the back gate was located. Across
the pool the front of the smaller building (which looked more like a guesthouse than
a chapel) had French windows facing the pool and patio. These were coated with silver
reflective film, so Aunty Lee looking in saw only a distorted version of herself.
A sheltered stone staircase linked the guesthouse and small circular gravel driveway
leading from the back gate to the main building and there was also the chairlift.
Aunty Lee wondered whether it was intended as a granny flat—you were close enough
to have dinner with your family and have grandchildren dropping in but you had your
own toilet and space for mah-jongg games. Aunty Lee did not miss having children,
given all the exam worries that came with them, but she would have liked to have had
grandchildren to spoil . . .

Despite these pleasant thoughts, something about the little pool house made Aunty
Lee uneasy. Was it because she could not see what was going on inside? She knew some
people valued privacy above everything else. But too much privacy also meant that
no one could look in to make sure nothing was wrong. A fall, for example, could mean
lying there helpless for hours or more.

Cherril came to Aunty Lee’s side, snapping her out of her daydream. “Should we bring
down the extension cables for the blender and chillers or wait and see if they provided
them? They said they would, right?”

“Better to bring everything.” It was not that Aunty Lee did not trust people who didn’t
do their own cooking—she just trusted her own instincts and equipment more.

It was still early. A few guests appeared, making their way down the stone staircase
and admiring the landscaping in little clusters. Cherril supplied them with drinks
(tea, coffee, fruit juices, and her mocktails) while Aunty Lee and Nina spread out
the tablecloths and plugged in the food warmers.

“It’s going well, isn’t it? Isn’t it fun?” Cherril said so happily that even Aunty
Lee did not have the heart to remind her that the hungry (or just greedy) hordes had
not yet descended with their demands. “I’m just going to bring in the rest of the
coffee flavoring syrups.”

Aunty Lee was steadying the chafing pan that Nina was plugging in under the table
(“Madam, a lot of rubbish underneath here. All their cleaners and bottles of everything
they just push underneath the table!”) when she saw the electric gates slowly open
as Cherril returned with two bags of syrup bottles looped over her shoulders. Cherril
looked surprised but pleased. Of course there would be a remote control for the gate
somewhere, Aunty Lee thought, most likely in the family cars. She was just going to
warn Cherril to watch out, a vehicle might be coming, when a black car turned sharply
off the road and charged through the gates. The car’s passenger mirror caught on the
handle of one of Cherril’s bags, pulling it taut against her shoulder and dragging
her after the car at a stumbling run.

“Don’t fall under the wheels!” Aunty Lee shouted. “Stop! Stop the car! Stop!” She
dropped the chafing pan and started to run toward the car, desperately waving her
arms and wishing she had spent more time with her Active Elders exercise group. Cherril
had dropped the other bags and was frantically trying to loosen her arm. Fortunately
the bag handle snapped. The car continued up the side slope to the house, leaving
a trail of broken glass and syrup stains and a shaken Cherril in a heap on the drive.

By the time Nina and the other guests reached her, Cherril was sitting up and saying
she was all right. There were red welts on her arm from the bag strap and painful-looking
scrapes and bruises on her legs but nothing worse. The electric gate slowly swung
shut.

“Do you want to go home?” Aunty Lee asked. “Nina can drive you back. You should rest.”

“Of course not. This is my first big job. But all my coffee syrups are smashed!”

“I don’t think the driver even saw you,” one of the guests said. “Nowadays, with tinted
windows, with stereo system and shock absorber and noise cancellation system, you
hit something, also you don’t know until you get home and find your car dented.”

Or bloody, thought Aunty Lee. That was another disadvantage of too much privacy. Sometimes
you didn’t know what damage you were doing. Or perhaps you didn’t care.

4

Preparing the Buffet

The food looked and smelled good, laid out on the heating pans. The early guests had
been calmed down and, drinks in hand, were chatting in little clusters. Aunty Lee,
Nina, and Cherril set to work clearing up the mess of broken glass and syrup concentrate
on the driveway.

“It’s nothing compared to what we used to get during in-flight turbulence,” Cherril
said lightly. “Once you get used to clearing up coffee and cake smears on the cabin
ceiling and broken glass and vomit on the cabin floor without spoiling your makeup
and manicure, nothing on the ground is too much to handle. Since this is a driveway
and they don’t have a dog or children, we don’t worry about the glass dust, okay?”

Even Nina could not fault Cherril’s cleanup. If Aunty Lee had had any lingering doubts
about working with Cherril, this dismissed them. It was important that a team be able
to handle disasters together, but this was seldom tested till it was too late. Perhaps,
Aunty Lee thought, it would be a good idea for all restaurants to plan a disaster
as part of the staff screening process. Perhaps she could come up with a restaurant
staff training guide and take on apprentices at Aunty Lee’s Delights. Perhaps this
could become the next big reality-TV hit that everybody looked down on in public and
watched in secret . . .

“What are you thinking, madam?” Nina asked suspiciously. Nina believed they should
only take on jobs they knew they could do and knew they would make a profit on.

“Nothing,” Aunty Lee said. “Can you believe we were afraid Cherril couldn’t do real
work?”

“What’s that?” Cherril asked.

It was Nina’s turn to say, “Nothing,” She tied up the final bag of stained newspaper
and glass shards and took it out to the bin.

“You look so delicate, Nina thought you are not strong enough to do real work,” Aunty
Lee explained. “And I thought you look so thin, how can you work in a restaurant if
you don’t like to eat?”

“Oh, I eat a lot but I never get fat,” Cherril said.

“You are lucky. I have a Budai figure,”

“Budai?”

“Laughing Buddha. The fat, happy Chinese Buddha, not the thin, sad Indian one. You
rub his tummy, it is supposed to bring money and good luck. But I don’t have to rub
his tummy, I got my own.” Aunty Lee rubbed a hand over her own middle section, making
Cherril laugh. “Healthy, wealthy, and wise.”

“Well, it seems to work!”

Aunty Lee, with all the energy she put into her curiosity and cooking, was one of
the happiest people Cherril had met in her new life.

Things were not as happy up in the grand Sung house.

Mabel came out of her son’s room and slammed the door hard. Yet another maid had said
she wanted to leave. It was the third one since Leonard’s return. They were supposed
to take care of the housework but they all gave Leonard as their reason for leaving.
The girls said he shouted at them, threw things at them, and tried to “hug and kiss”
them. Mabel had tried to talk to Leonard, who said only that the stupid sluts deserved
it. Even as a boy, Leonard had always had his moods and what Mabel thought of as his
indulgences, but he had always kept them out of sight. Mabel knew, of course. She
had paid his bills and settled charges with compensation money. And she had been careful
not to give her husband the details. Leonard was a strong and charming personality,
full of talent and potential. It was not his fault he didn’t fit into Singapore’s
strict academic system or America’s moralistic, politically correct system. Mabel
knew that after her son had sown his wild oats he would settle down. And with her
support he would make her proud of him.

But that had not yet happened. Now the poor boy was so weak she could not be angry
with him. Instead she was angry with her husband for not doing more to save their
son. Henry was the doctor but Mabel was the one fighting to save Leonard’s life. Mabel
would do whatever it took to give Leonard back his health. She knew her son was not
perfect but he was her son.

Mabel looked at her phone screen. She had persuaded Henry, who was paranoid about
security, to install monitoring cameras all over the house. This way she could make
sure Leonard was cared for when she was at the office. Leonard, propped up on a chair
and cackling gleefully, was throwing something at the maid who was changing his bedsheets.
Mabel looked more closely. Leonard was tearing pages out of a book. He crumpled and
smeared the papers in his soiled adult diaper before throwing them at the crying girl.
Mabel knew that despite the pay raise she had just offered, the girl would be leaving.
But at least Leonard was laughing.

Mabel switched cameras to see how many people had arrived. She needed a decent number
of classy-looking people present. Aunty Lee, the caterer, was there too. The stupid,
fat old woman was chatting with Mabel’s guests as though she was one of them. Mabel
Sung and her husband had been acquainted with the late ML Lee. ML had gone to the
right schools, worked with the right people, and lived in the right district. At one
time Mabel Sung had considered the Lee children worthy matches for her own. If only
they had had a mother who understood the importance of good connections, Mabel was
sure something could have been worked out, but Rosie Lee had been no help at all.
“Leave them to work it out themselves,” she had said irresponsibly. As though children
knew more than their parents. But at least she was supposed to be a good cook. Leonard
had complained that their Filipina maids didn’t prepare real Singapore food. He was
too weak to eat out and he didn’t like reheated dishes. If Mabel hurried, she had
time before the meeting to bring Leonard something from the buffet, just to make him
happy and keep him quiet for a while.

“Mabel, I have to talk to you.” Sharon caught Mabel as she came down the stairs.

“Not now. I’m busy.” It still jarred Mabel when Sharon called her “Mabel.” At Sung
Law it was a rite of passage when she graciously gave new staff permission to “call
me Mabel,” though few took advantage of the honor. When Sharon confronted her with
“Do I have to go on calling you ‘Mrs. Sung’ forever?” she had simply said “Of course
not” and Sharon had started calling her “Mabel.”

“Mabel—”

Mabel winced again. Sharon had been offended when reminded to address her as “Mrs.
Sung” instead of “Mum” at the office and this was payback. Mabel was careful not to
show she minded or noticed.

“Mabel, this is important. It’s about the firm and it’s not just important. It’s serious
and it’s urgent. There are big problems!”

“Then you go and take care of them. That’s what I made you partner for.”

“Mabel, it’s serious. It looks like there’s money missing. Will you please listen
to me for once? This is more important than some stupid party.”

“I have to get your brother something to eat before the food gets cold. There’s no
money missing, don’t say things like that and frighten people. It’s all just paperwork,
this account or that account. Probably GraceFaith just put something in the wrong
place.”

“Or maybe GraceFaith is the one who took it. I don’t know why you trust her so much.
If you were running the company properly, you would get a trained lawyer or at least
a trained accountant.”

Mabel Sung did not bother to defend her assistant. “Ask GraceFaith to explain everything
to you. I don’t know why she isn’t here yet. I told her to come early and help set
up. Give her a call and tell her to hurry up but don’t bother her with your questions
until Monday.”

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