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Authors: Cleo Coyle

BOOK: Roast Mortem
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“I think he was counting on that. Just one more reason Josie could never return to her old life. But when Bigsby died, Lane knew his time was up. He probably could have gotten away with it—if the wheels of bureaucracy had ground as slowly as usual. But you and James messed that up, jeopardized everything. He killed James and tried to kill you to buy himself enough time to escape with Josie—and the millions he'd already stolen . . .”
I stopped talking when I realized Michael's attention had drifted.
“Noonan . . .” he whispered. “That lad's my last . . .”
“What do you mean?”
“Forget it.” He shifted again. “Anyway, Clare, I want you to know . . . I'm not proud of the way I acted the other night. I owe you an apology.”
“No, you don't.”
“Yes, I do. And you're not the only one—”
The sound of a throat clearing stopped Michael's words. I turned to find a broad-shouldered detective leaning against the doorframe. It appeared he'd been listening a while.
Mike Quinn glanced briefly at his cousin. Then his arctic blue gaze locked onto me.
“Hi, Clare.”
I couldn't find my voice.
“Sully gave me a ride over,” Mike said. “Filled me in pretty good. Sorry about your car.”
“I'm not.”
Mike opened his arms and I went into them. When we were through embracing, I noticed Michael on the bed. Despite his pain—and for the first time since I'd arrived—the man was smiling.
Mike released me and approached his cousin. I held my breath, watching the two stare at each other.
Finally, Michael lifted his hand and held it there.
With a silent nod, Mike shook it.
EPILOGUE
SIX
weeks later, Madame and I were heading back over the Queensboro Bridge. This time, I'm happy to say, her art-dealer boyfriend, Otto Visser, was driving.
We were attending the opening of Osso Buco
Pronto!—
a nouvelle Italian restaurant. The location was Long Island City, but the event looked more like a gallery show in SoHo than the launch of an outer-borough eatery (even one with a Manhattanesque ironic name). Oh, sure, there were trays of samples from the restaurant menu, and a brigade of food writers (online and print) were in attendance, but there were just as many members of the art world here, and for very good reason.
From our corner booth, Madame and I joined the applause when Lorenzo Testa appeared in a wheelchair pushed by his daughter. Grinning tearfully, he joined Dante Silva and the other young artists who had diligently worked to re-create his original mural. (For reference, they'd used blowups of the digital photos that Dante had shot just before Caffè Lucia burned.)
As Enzo rolled by to pose for the press, I caught sight of Lucia's impressive engagement ring, courtesy of Oat Crowley.
According to Madame, Enzo couldn't be happier that his daughter at last had chosen a man over a boy. (Of course, I didn't see that she had much choice, given the third point of that particular fire triangle—Glenn Duffy—was now facing twenty-five years to life.)
“What happened to your man Otto?” I asked Madame, after the restaurant's young chef-owner proposed a toast to Enzo. “I lost track of him . . .”
Madame pointed across the large, crowded space to a tall, dapper fellow, leanly built with thinning but still-golden hair. “He's over there, dear, explaining to that
New York Times
reporter how it took Dante and
six
of his friends an entire month to recreate what my old friend envisioned and painted by himself.”
Madame drained her champagne flute and shot me a sly smile. “Of course, what Otto is really doing is laying the foundation for Enzo's public show this summer at his Chelsea gallery.”
“Whatever works,” I said (my new go-to catch phrase).
The paintings to be shown at the Otto Visser Gallery weren't new. Enzo was still weak and recovering from his stroke; it would take lots of time and therapy before he could paint again. What the world was going to see, for the first time, were the canvases Enzo had painted of his wife—a subject to which he'd lovingly devoted himself for decades. And though the artist himself remained reluctant to part with any of his creations, Enzo at least agreed to a public show, which wasn't bad publicity for Otto, either.
After a few rounds of Prosecco and trays of delightfully seasoned morsels, Madame found me again.
“So where is your noble knight this evening?”
“Another undercover operation,” I said. “He phoned to tell me he's running late.”
“The wheels of justice perpetually grind, don't they, dear? Well, if he doesn't make it, Otto and I will be happy to give you a lift home.”
“Thanks. Matt made the same offer a little while ago— in front of Breanne, unfortunately. I told them I'd take the subway.”
“Well, he knows you don't have that little Honda anymore—”
“Yes and that's fine. I've decided to live without a car for a while. After crashing two of them in one day, I probably couldn't get affordable auto insurance, anyway.”
As I sipped my sparkling wine, I noticed Tucker and Esther bantering (or bickering—who could tell?). They shared a booth with Kiki and Bahni, Dante's fawning apartment mates. The girls looked thrilled that their boy was finally getting some critical attention from the press. I was happy for Dante, too, but worried I was about to lose one of my best baristas to the fickle arms of the art world.
“Did you notice that sign across the street when we came in?” Madame asked. “It says the Pink Mirage is coming to Long Island City.”
I nodded. “Dean Tassos isn't stupid. He closed the Red Mirage to relocate in this hotter area. Did I tell you that Valerie Noonan is working for him now?”
“That lovely girl from the bake sale?”
“Yes, she's overseeing the activities at all of Dean's catering halls . . .” My eye wandered back to another section of the astounding mural, one of Enzo's later editions to the sprawling piece. Madame noticed my interest.
“That particular image intrigues you, I see.”
“Self-portraits always intrigue me.” Enzo had painted himself into his mural, a stylized figure peering into a mirror. “But I suppose it's really two self-portraits, if you consider the mirror . . .”
“That's right . . .”
“And the face in the mirror has a different expression than the one looking in—impish, slightly mischievous. More like a dark doppelganger than a reflection.”
“Yes, I see that . . . now that you mention it,” Madame said, slipping on a delicate pair of glasses. She glanced at me. “So how is that fire captain?”
“The former captain, you mean. I hear he's very happy as a civilian now, up in Boston . . .”
At the urging of his little brother, Michael Quinn resigned from the FDNY and took a job consulting for the company where Kevin Quinn worked. (Now I knew what Michael meant when he'd told me James Noonan was his last. James was the last man he intended to lose under his command.)
Madame nodded. “Best for everyone, I think, that the man's not going to be tempted to drop by the Blend for your espressos . . .”
“I agree,” I said. “And I'm sure Mike would, too.”
 
 
A
short time later, the party wound down and the dining room emptied. I was still alone. No call from Mike, no sign of him, either.
As the lights dimmed, Madame and Otto moved to the back of the restaurant to give their final farewells—and I spotted a familiar trench coat coming through the front.
“Hi, Clare.”
“Hi, Mike.”
“I'm sorry, sweetheart, I wanted to get here sooner, but . . .”
“That's all right,” I said. “You're here now.”
Mike sniffed the air, still aromatic with butter and lemon, rosemary and thyme, sizzling seafood and caramelized garlic.
“The party's over, right?” he said.
“Why?” I asked. “You hungry?”
“Starving.” He held my eyes. “Feels like I haven't eaten all day.”
“I can fix that.”
He smiled. “I know you can.”
Then Mike reached out his hand, fingers open. I placed mine in his and we found our way home.
AFTERWORD
ALTHOUGH
the firefighters of New York City use plenty of specialized equipment in the course of their hazardous and heroic work, including personal escape ropes, the spike device in this novel is not one of them. As mentioned in the acknowledgments, however, a very real incident did inspire the creation of this plotline.
On January 23, 2005 (a day known in the FDNY as “Black Sunday”), two members of the department lost their lives in the line of duty—and four more were very badly injured—because they did not have escape ropes. After that terrible day, the FDNY changed its policies and now provides high-heat resistant ropes to their firefighters.
This true, tragic incident left a lasting impression on me and my husband as we began to consider how the life and death of any firefighter may hinge on something as simple as possessing a single piece of reliable equipment.
Like the spike device we invented, the charity in this book is a fictional creation, but there is a very real firefighters' charity that I'm pleased to tell you about right now.
The Terry Farrell Firefighters Fund is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing firefighters and their families with financial assistance for their educational, medical, and equipment needs. This charity was formed in honor of Terry Farrell, a decorated firefighter with FDNY Rescue 4 who perished on September 11, 2001, while fighting fires and rescuing victims at the World Trade Center.
Originally based in New York, this charity is currently expanding with chapters in other areas of the country. To find out more about the Terry Farrell Firefighters Fund, including how you can help simply by buying a specially labeled bottle of Jim Beam bourbon or purchasing a
California Firehouse Cookbook
, visit the fund's Web site at
www.terryfarrellfund.org
RECIPES & TIPS FROM THE VILLAGE BLEND
Visit Cleo Coyle's virtual Village Blend at
www.CoffeehouseMystery.com
for coffee tips, coffee talk, and the following
bonus
recipes:
* Crunchy-Sweet Italian Bow Tie Cookies
* St. Joseph's Day Zeppoles
*
Brutti Ma Buoni
(“Ugly but Good”) Italian Cookies
* “Malfatti” (ravioli filling without the dough)
* Dutch Baby Pancake (Bismark)
* Honey-Glazed Peach Crostata with Ginger-Infused
Whipped Cream
* Mini Italian-Style Coffeehouse Cakes
(with Coffeehouse-Inspired Glazes)
* Pistachio Muffins
* “Stuck on You” Linzer Hearts
* Three-Alarm Buffalo Wings with
Extinguisher Gorgonzola Dip
* Puerto Rican-Style
Pernil
(Pork Shoulder)
And more . . .
GUIDE TO ROASTING COFFEE
COFFEE
roasting is the culinary art of applying heat to green coffee beans in order to develop their flavor before grinding and brewing. The entire process is highly complex, but this brief guide should give you a helpful overview—as well as something to consider the next time you sit down to enjoy a cup of joe.
 
Factors of flavor:
According to food chemists, roasted coffee has one of the most complicated flavor profiles of all foods and beverages with over eight hundred substances contributing. Many factors influence the taste of the coffee you drink. Coffee beans grown in different microclimates of the world, for example, will display vastly different characteristics with flavors that may range from deep notes of chocolate to bright overtones of lemon.
Botany also plays a role. Coffee comes from a plant (genus
Coffea
) with ninety different species. Only two of those species (
Coffea arabica
and
Coffea robusta
) are primarily grown as cash crops, but different varietals (or cultivars) within those species are cultivated all over the world. Kona, Geisha, Blue Mountain, and Bourbon are just four examples of the many Arabica varietals.
Finally, the journey coffee takes from the seed to your cup will also influence its flavor. Let's begin our coffee trek with . . .
 
The coffee cherry:
Your cup of joe begins its life as a seed or pit within the fruit or “cherry” on a coffee plant. (The coffee plant is often called a tree but is really a shrub.) The cherries on the coffee plant will ripen from green to yellow to red. They are then picked, either by hand or machine.
 
The coffee bean:
Each coffee cherry contains two green coffee beans, which grow with their flat sides facing each other. The exception is the coffee cherry that contains a “peaberry,” which is a single, rounded seed. (The peaberry is rarer and for a variety or reasons considered to be of better quality than regular coffee beans.) Once coffee is picked, it must be “processed” as soon as possible to prevent spoilage.
 
Processing:
Most coffee drinkers never consider this un-glamorous step in the seed-to-cup journey, but how coffee is processed can greatly affect its final flavor. Before the hard green coffee beans can be roasted (which will turn them brown), they must be extracted from the skin and pulp (or flesh) of the fruit surrounding them. This is usually done by a dry, wet, or semidry processing method.
 
Dry, natural, or unwashed processing:
This method of processing coffee is the oldest and is still used in many countries where water resources are limited. After the cherries are picked, they are spread out to dry in the sun for several weeks. The outer layer of dried skin and pulp is then stripped away, usually by machine. This method is used in Ethiopia, Brazil, Haiti, Paraguay, India, and Ecuador. Because these beans are dried while still in contact with the coffee fruit, they tend to have more exotic flavor profiles than wet processed coffee. They often display more fruity or floral characteristics, for example, and are heavier in body.

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