Ms America and the Mayhem in Miami (Beauty Queen Mysteries No. 3) (24 page)

BOOK: Ms America and the Mayhem in Miami (Beauty Queen Mysteries No. 3)
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CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

It comes to me in the middle of a fitful night. Pepper spray. That’s the answer.

I don’t want to buy a gun. But I do want a way to protect myself. And pepper spray will help me do that.

I crawl out of bed, careful not to wake Jason, and crouch on the floor clutching my cell phone and doing a wee bit of research. I get excited when I learn pepper spray can be purchased in pastel-colored cylinders the size of lipsticks, complete with sequin detailing. Those have my name all over them.

I return to bed calmer. When I wake up for good, there’s no sunlight outside my windows but nevertheless I’m alone. A note on the duvet informs me that Jason has gone for a run.

So my husband is now a man who jogs before dawn. Wow.

I find Pop sitting at the kitchen island nursing a mug of coffee. He was an early riser when he was a cop and he still is in retirement. We exchange sleepy greetings. I’ve downed a few restorative sips of java when he jolts me fully awake. “I think I’ll head back today,” he says.

“No! Why? I thought you wanted to stay through the pageant!”

He shrugs. “I’ve already stayed longer than I expected to.”

“But I don’t want you to go!” I know I sound like a petulant 6-year-old but that is how I feel. And if he leaves I’ll lose my chance to make up for how little time I’ve spent with him here in Miami. “In fact, I was thinking you could help me with something.”

“What’s that?”

Since I’ve already told him the basics about Peppi’s murder and my suspects, I jump right into explaining who Alice Dilling is and how she hid her friendship with Peppi. But even before I get around to asking his advice on how I might approach Alice, he starts shaking his head.

“I don’t like you getting involved in that stuff, Happy. You know that.”

“I know but—”

“It’s nasty. It’s ugly. It’s not the sort of thing ladies should be thinking about.”

I throw up my hands. “Pop, that is such an old-fashioned way of thinking! You know how many women are in the police force now? How—”

“I’m old-fashioned then. Fine by me. Seems to me you should keep your eye on what’s really important. Jason and Rachel.” He sets his jaw in a stubborn line.

“They are front and center. That hasn’t changed.” This is a battle I’m not going to win. I should just give up. “But at least say you’ll stay in town. Let’s do something fun later.”

He’s mumbling something noncommittal when a panting Jason returns from his run. “What’s up with him?” Jason wants to know when Pop uses the interruption to slip out of the kitchen.

I sigh. “It sounds like Pop’s ready to bolt back to Ohio. Plus he doesn’t want to help with my investigating. And he kind of told me I’m neglecting you and Rachel.”

Jason props his hands against the island so he can stretch out his Achilles’ tendons. “He doesn’t really think you’re neglecting us.”

“Do you?”

He grins. “I didn’t think so last night.”

I give him a playful slap. “Now don’t get mad but I’m about to say something you won’t like.” I explain my preference for pepper spray over a pistol.

“You’re right, I don’t like it. But as a first step I’ll take it. Especially since I got no time. I gotta hit the showers and get to the airport ASAP.” For his private-jet flight to Charlotte with a NASCAR star. This is not the Jason of old. “Drive me?” he asks.

Not long after, I’ve thrown on workout gear and am dropping Jason off at an executive airport about a half hour southwest of Mario’s manse. We stand outside the Durango and hug, the wind whipping our hair. I find myself not wanting to let him go. It’s like when we were teenagers and Happy Pennington’s life began and ended with Jason Kilborn.

“You gonna take care of yourself?” he asks me.

“On the way back to the house I’ll buy pepper spray.” The cute sequined kind will have to wait. For now I’ll procure a no-nonsense, unadorned canister.

“I love you,” he murmurs and we get to kissing but good. Now it’s really hard to let him go.

But let him go I must. I watch my husband sling his duffel over his shoulder and make for the low-slung hangar-like terminal building. He looks very dashing, I will tell you. Even my mother might give him that. He turns to wave and I mouth another
I love you
. Even if I’d yelled it, he never would have heard me above the roar of a private jet streaking into the sky from the runway beyond.

I do as I promised and become a pepper-spray owner. The clerk takes me behind the store to train me in the proper way to use it. I also stop by the bagel shop and pick up a dozen, though by the time I return to the house everybody else has eaten and my father has disappeared. I scarf a toasted sesame seed bagel slathered with butter while re-reading Iris Flowers’ columns about Alice Dilling.

“I can’t just accost Alice Dilling about Peppi,” I tell Shanelle when she swings into the kitchen adorably outfitted in cropped white skinny jeans and a sheer black print chiffon blouse with an elastic-banded peplum.

“That girl won’t tell you diddly,” Shanelle agrees. “Especially if you go talk to her with all those seeds stuck between your teeth.”

Dislodging sesame seeds is another thing long fingernails are good for. I can’t believe people say they’re impractical. “You remember how Iris’s column said that Alice fired most of her staff because she couldn’t figure out who spilled the beans about her bulimia? I wonder if Iris will tell me who tipped her off. Whoever did must have a beef with Alice and might give me really good info.” Then the trick will be to figure out how much of it is true.

“All you can do is ask. By the way, we’re all ready to leave for Paloma’s. I cannot tell you how much sewing we still got to do.”

“I cannot believe today is already Wednesday.” That means tomorrow we move back to the pageant hotel. Meaning out of Mario’s. Sob! “I’ll see you at Paloma’s later. I need to ask her about Peppi’s drug problem.”

Shanelle grimaces. “Better you than me, girl.”

Iris buoys my hopes by answering my call. “I was taken by your information about Jasmine and Peppi,” she tells me, referring to the tidbit that Peppi failed to honor her financial obligations to Sugarbabies. “Have you learned anything new?”

“I’m hoping you can help me with that,” I begin, and plead my case.

For a while Iris balks. “I haven’t divulged my source to anyone. Including Alice, who was irate that I wouldn’t tell her.”

“I’ll give you the inside track on whatever I find out.” I have to promise that three times before Iris finally caves. She informs me that Alice’s former sous chef Ned Silver was her source and that I can find him at his new gig, a South Beach restaurant called Bistro Chardonnay.

“Alice hates Bistro Chardonnay,” Iris whispers. “The food is excellent.”

Even though I’ve just finished breakfast Iris’s recommendation gets me thinking about lunch. I shower quickly and select my black skinny jeans and a white square-neck stretch-knit tee with elbow-length sleeves. Again I festoon my ear lobes with my dangly Tahitian-style earrings and my feet with black stilettos. Talk about footgear that goes with everything.

My first stop is Paloma’s home. I drive there at the speed limit but lament every passing mile. I decide I must be gentle but upfront with Paloma about her daughter’s drug problem. I don’t see any other way to approach it. Plus I’ve never been the type to hint around.

Raoul waves me through the tall iron gates per usual. Once I arrive at the house, Paloma’s housekeeper escorts me to the second-floor sewing room. Shanelle, Trixie, Rachel, and the mistress of the house are all there.

Like the rest of the home, the space is magnificent: cheerful mint green walls; a picture window providing not only a Biscayne Bay view but plenty of natural light; inventive shelving for fabrics, threads, and notions; and two large tables perfect for measuring, cutting, and pinning fabric. I find Trixie and Rachel behind gleaming white sewing machines and Shanelle and Paloma in rocking chairs sewing buttons onto nearly completed outfits. The four of them are a picture of happy productivity.

Which Happy Pennington is about to disturb.

We chat for a while about their progress and then I ask Paloma if she and I might catch up in the other room. She is dressed entirely in black but seems less distraught, which makes me feel slightly less awful about the topic I’m about to broach. “How are you doing?” I ask as we settle in the two-story library.

“Every morning I get out of bed. That’s the most anyone can expect of me.”

“I really appreciate you letting Rachel spend so much time here, and now Trixie and Shanelle, too. I hope that hasn’t been too much of an imposition.”

“We do what we must.” She gives me a penetrating look. “I hope you’re here to tell me you can prove what Hector has done.”

“Not yet. But I’m making progress.” She does not look pleased. I forge ahead. “Paloma, I need to ask you about a very difficult subject.”

“That is all I have in my life now. Difficulty.”

I take a deep breath. “I understand your daughter had a drug problem. Serious enough that—”

“Perpetua had no drug problem. You are misinformed.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

Total denial. Okay. I clear my throat. “I know this is a painful topic—”

Paloma grows more animated. “Who told you this? Hector?”

“No, not Hector.” I don’t want to reveal that my source is Iris Flower the gossip columnist. That makes me seem kind of kooky, even though Iris might well have her information right. “Are you saying Peppi never spent time in a rehab facility?”

“Someone told you hateful lies! I demand to know who it was!”

I notice Paloma dodged my question. I try a different tack. “How well do you know Peppi’s friend Alice Dilling?”

“I should have known!” Paloma looks like she’s about to spit fire. “Do not speak that name in my home!”

“I’m not saying that Alice Dilling told me—”

Paloma slaps the arm of her chair. “You are wasting my time! What did I tell you to do? Prove that Hector killed my Perpetua! Now I’m hearing crazy talk that I don’t want to hear!” She pauses and her lips tremble, then she catapults from her chair and points her finger at my face. “It’s time for you to go. And don’t come back until you are ready to tell me what I want to hear.” She sweeps from the library.

It’s safe to say that did not go well. In seconds the housekeeper scurries in to escort me to the front door. At least I’m the only one being kicked off the property.

I get back in the Durango and point it toward South Beach. What did I learn from that interchange? That Paloma knows Alice Dilling—or knows of her—and doesn’t like her one bit.

Unfortunately this talk produced no information about Peppi’s purported drug problem. I can’t put any stock in Paloma’s denial. If anything, her defensiveness makes me more convinced that Peppi had a drug habit. I have the same reaction I did Sunday when Paloma spoke in such glowing terms about all things Peppi. Her account struck me as unrealistic. Whitewashed, even. It was a mother’s love speaking and not a clear-eyed appraisal of Peppi’s life.

I wonder if I can probe Hector on this subject. Now that he thinks I’m in love with him, he might be willing to share intimate family secrets. But I fear his judgment of Peppi will be as falsely negative as Paloma’s is positive.

I soon find myself at my next stop: Bistro Chardonnay. What a fine name for a restaurant. It may be in South Beach but it looks like an eatery you’d find in Manhattan: narrow, deep, and dimly lit, with small tables huddled together on a black and white parquet floor. To me it seems terribly stylish, in the best of all possible ways.

Even though it’s a tad early for the lunch crowd, the door is propped open. A young man is busily setting upturned chairs back on the floor. He asks if he can help me.

“I’m hoping Ned Silver is here.” I did a little research on sous chefs and figure Ned must be in the kitchen overseeing the prep work. I gather the sous chef is pretty much the right arm of the executive chef and runs the place when the big dog isn’t in.

“I’ll get him for you. And you are?”

I give my name and nothing more, hoping curiosity will draw out Ned Silver.

It doesn’t take him long to emerge. He is tall and skinny with a receding hairline and circular wire-rimmed glasses. Though he’s wearing a white chef jacket I can easily imagine him poring over a beloved stamp collection with a magnifying glass.

I give him my brightest smile and warmest handshake. “I won’t keep you long. I know you’re busy.” I urge him away from his hovering coworker. “Iris Flower gave me your name. Please don’t be angry with her. I’m helping with the investigation into Peppi Lopez’s murder and I know she and Alice Dilling were good friends.”

“You must be a private detective,” Ned says, and sends me a look of admiration.

I decide not to disabuse him of that pleasant notion. “Can you tell me anything about the friendship between Alice and Peppi?”

“Not really.” He grimaces. “I couldn’t believe it when I saw that poor woman was killed. I saw her around the restaurant a few times and she seemed perfectly nice. It’s hard for me to believe a viper like Alice had a friend like her.”

“Why do you say that? Alice is hard to get along with?”

“That’s putting it mildly. The woman is a tyrant. A slave driver. A money-grubbing cheat.”

I watch him get worked up. I hope he doesn’t start foaming at the mouth.

“She’s a controlling you-know-what,” he goes on. “She can’t stop screaming, pays her people nothing, and expects total loyalty. I’m so glad I’m out of there.”

Boy, Ned Silver may look mild-mannered but he hates Alice Dilling with a passion. “I see you’re not high on her but why did you tell Iris Flower about her bulimia? You had to know that was going to hurt the restaurant.”

“I couldn’t stand her ego anymore! She wants people to think she’s got everything all buttoned up but nothing could be further from the truth. You know who makes things work? The people who work for her, and she treats them like dogs. And while they’re busy cleaning up her messes, she’s sucking up to customers and reviewers.”

“It sounds like you feel she stood on your shoulders to make the restaurant a success.”

“Exactly! And did I ever get one word of thanks? All I heard from her was you’re fired!”

I nod. I’ve come to the right place if I’m looking for somebody willing to dish the dirt about Alice. “You called her a cheat, too. What do you mean by that?”

“She’s the kind who, if she can get something by you, she will. Her employees, vendors, you name it. She thinks everybody in the business does that. Worship the almighty dollar. She still owes me back pay. I’ll never see it.” He pauses to take a deep breath. “Sorry. I’m just babbling. I wish I could tell you more about her friend. I know that’s what you’re really here for.”

“Did you ever see any friction between Alice and Peppi?”

“Not really. Though it’s hard to believe Alice gets along with anybody.”

“The other day, before I knew those two were friends, I mentioned Peppi to Alice and she acted as if she barely knew her. I can’t figure out why that would be. Do you have any idea?”

“Not a clue.” He pauses to think. “I do know it was Peppi who roped Alice into judging that pageant. Alice will do anything that’ll get her good P.R. She even helps out at a senior center.” He shakes his head as if that’s too hypocritical to be believed.

“In the end, though, Alice pulled out of judging the pageant because of a crisis at work.”

“I’ll say! Like trying to keep the restaurant afloat.” He lets fly a nasty laugh.

I’ve gotten as much out of Ned Silver as I’m going to. “Well, thanks so much for your help. And congratulations on your new job! Iris said the food here is terrific.”

He gives me his card. “Let me know when you want to come by and I’ll set you up. It can be hard to get reservations.” He winks as he walks away.

I’m getting the idea that getting fired by Alice Dilling was one of the best things that ever happened to this guy. I’m thoughtful as I meander back to the Durango.

There can be no doubt why he took the bulimia story to Iris. He felt used and abused by Alice. As far as he’s concerned, his hard work helped her restaurant succeed but not only did she give him zero credit, she fired him and cheated him out of money he was owed.

But I also have to remember that Ned must feel competitive with Alice. He probably wants to be in her position someday: a head chef with his own restaurant. Maybe that explains why he’s so harsh on her.

And Alice is a woman in a male-dominated business. Maybe she’s overly tough to prove herself. Or maybe she’s just perceived that way because she’s a woman, and the exact same behavior from a male boss would be respected.

I settle myself in the Durango, pondering what I’ve discovered. I realize I harbor sympathy for Alice because of the bulimia. I’ve known so many beauty queens who suffer from eating disorders and they are so hard to beat. Plus Alice seemed nice when I met her. Then again, I was a customer at her restaurant so I would have been someone she “sucked up to,” according to Ned.

One thing I still can’t explain. Why did Alice act as if she barely knew Peppi when in fact they were close friends? Was it because of a shared history in rehab, no doubt a part of her life Alice does not care to revisit? Addiction and rehab do not jibe with the “everything is all buttoned up” picture that Ned said Alice wants to create.

That leads me to a shocking thought. Maybe Ned invented the bulimia story to try to bring down his reviled boss! If the addiction/rehab story is true, maybe he figured everyone would believe that Alice Dilling has a bulimia problem. Maybe that’s how competitive
he
is.

Wow. It’s not just murder that’s ugly. Business can be, too.

Before I pull out into traffic, I put in a call to Detective Dez. I was unable to reach him earlier but this time he answers his cell. In the background I hear music so I conclude he’s not at the station, unless Miami P.D. headquarters is really festive.

“I have an appointment. I can’t talk now,” he mutters.

I ignore that. “Have you been able to get the information we need from the Hotel Roca? About whether Hector checked in Friday and—”

“Meet me at Serenata Restaurant. In two hours. Not before. You can find it?”

Now I hear the hum of conversation and the clink of dishware. “You’re telling me you got the info?”

“What do you think I’m telling you?”

“Then I can find it.”

“See you then,” he breathes.

I hope he’s not lying. I’ll find out soon enough. Anyway, a girl’s got to eat.

A girl knows what else she’s got to do. Think. Stare at her Suspects Spreadsheet and think.

I do some cell phone research and find out that Serenata Restaurant is upscale, Mexican, and downtown. I make my way there, slide the Durango into a metered space, and head for the Starbucks a few doors beyond the restaurant. A cappuccino is likely to aid the thinking process. A vanilla almond biscotti is almost certain to.

I’m strolling past Serenata’s large front windows when who do I see inside at a front table throwing back her head and laughing?

Consuela Machado, that’s who! Next question: who in the world might she be lunching with?

You guessed it.

Detective Dez.

BOOK: Ms America and the Mayhem in Miami (Beauty Queen Mysteries No. 3)
9.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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