Read Pistols & Pies (Sweet Bites Book 2) (Sweet Bites Mysteries) Online
Authors: Heather Justesen
Tags: #pastry chefs, #murder mysteries, #Sweet Bites Bakery, #Tess Crawford, #Tempest Crawford, #recipes included, #culinary mysteries
“If you think you might need that set of skills in the future.” He sounded hopeful. Since he didn’t know about my new investigation, he must be smelling things in the air.
“Look, you talk to Kat. I’ll check my books and we’ll see what I can do.” He would be a huge advantage in the shop—and might be able to keep away the creepy gas station attendant who always came in for coffee, a muffin and to hit on me.
“Deal. So what else is going on out there?”
“You mean besides me finding another body?” I asked as casually as possible. “Not too much.”
“Another one? Girl, you’re like a magnet. Tell me everything.”
I smiled as I settled in to give him the whole rundown.
The thermostat said eighty-five degrees as I walked through the park toward the skateboarding area that evening. It had been busy at the shop, and I still had receipts to total and dough to prep for the next day, but I was glad for an excuse to get out while the sun was still up, and talking to Michael was as good an excuse as any.
There were six boys on the cement course, and I recognized him right off. Michael looked a lot like his mom with the same sandy hair hanging down to his chin. He was getting in his beard and hadn’t shaved for at least a few days, but it grew in unevenly across his jaw. He had earrings, an eyebrow ring and when he opened his mouth to laugh when one of the guys biffed it, there was a flash of silver which must have been a tongue piercing. I wondered if he really wanted to get all those holes, or if he just did it to be cool. Or maybe he’d done it to make Eric mad. Eric was conservative and traditional all the way.
Holding a bag of leftover cookies, I watched the boys for several minutes. The others seemed to be impressed with Michael’s skills, but though they called to each other, I could tell he wasn’t really part of their group. I couldn’t put my finger on it, but I was sure they hung out in the same place, not together.
One of the guys looked over at me, a black kid with a wiry frame and fingers long enough to rival those of a professional basketball player. “Hey, aren’t you the cake lady?” He nudged his friend, and the others glanced my way.
Michael frowned, but picked up his board and headed toward me. “Mom said you’d stop by.”
“I brought you guys leftovers. Anyone interested in cookies?” I held up the bag. One of the kids snatched it before I even finished my sentence and took off, playing cat and mouse with his friends before stopping at a nearby table to divvy up the booty. “I guess they want it,” I said to Michael.
“Yeah. Who wouldn’t?” He turned his head to the guys. “Hey, you losers better save me some!”
“Yeah, yeah,” a male voice floated back to us, but I wasn’t sure which guy it came from. Michael seemed to think it was good enough, though, because he followed me to a table under the shade.
“I hear Detective Tingey’s giving you a hard time,” I said when he settled in across from me. I tried to act casual as I covertly adjusted the tape recorder I had turned on after I got out of my car. I decided he wouldn’t respond as calmly if I was taking notes and I wanted to be able to remember what he said later.
“Yeah, stupid cops, always looking to pin things on an easy target.” The words sounded parroted, as if he’d said them a lot of times, or as if he’d heard them a lot.
From his friends or his ‘unconventional’ father? I made a mental note to look into his father more. “I know how that feels. Tingey thought I might have been the killer when the bridesmaid died at a wedding I worked at last spring.”
“You? Really? Miss white bread, I work at a bakery, straight from bonnie old England?”
I chuckled. “Don’t call me white bread. I know what that means, and I’m more interesting than that. Besides, my mom’s parents are Guatemalan, and I can speak Spanish.” That was a bit of a stretch. I had learned some Spanish growing up, but since I only remember meeting my mother’s mother once in my whole life, she wasn’t really responsible for my slightly better than terrible Spanish skills. The staff in the hotel kitchen, on the other hand—they could take a lot of credit for my spotty and somewhat creative vocabulary. Chances were this kid wouldn’t know better, though.
“I’m just sayin’.” He shrugged as if he wasn’t embarrassed by my comeback, but the tips of his ears turned pink.
“Yeah. I know what you’re sayin’. Don’t take things for granted, though. There’s more to people than you think. Take you for instance.” I leaned forward slightly on the table, hoping the recorder in my pocket was picking up all of this.
He lifted a palm toward me. “Let’s leave me out of it.”
“Let’s not, since you’re the reason I’m here. Your mom thinks you’re innocent—of this murder, at least. I hear you and Eric weren’t exactly buddies, though.”
“You sound like that cop. So I hated Eric. He was a creep.” He went on to use several colorful words that I hadn’t heard since leaving the hotel job. “I hated him, yeah. Big deal. He always thought everything had to be done a certain way—his way. A guy couldn’t even have a personality around him. It was like living with the Borg.”
That reference surprised me because he didn’t look like a sci-fi geek—especially one who watched reruns from the 80s. But what did I know? “So tell me where you were the day he died.”
“I was here.” He rolled his eyes at me. “Man, I was supposed to be at the big shindig. I told my mom I would be. It was
Eric’s big day
.” He emphasized the words to show just how little he cared. “But he got on my case that morning and I just couldn’t stand it, so I came here, hung with the guys all afternoon.”
“These guys?”
“No, just some guys. People come and go, you know? We don’t all hang together all the time.” Michael shrugged. “I hang with whoever, you know? I don’t care who they are.”
I wondered how much of this was real and how much a façade. Lenny had been all façade when I met him. “You remind me of a guy I know back in Chicago.”
“Yeah, is he amazingly popular and incredibly handsome too?” He smiled as if he thought he was being charming.
“No, not much. But he has a girl who really cares about him, a career he loves and he’s straightened his life out. First he had to spend some time in county lockup to figure out he wasn’t headed where he wanted to be. He’s brilliant, and one of the best pastry chefs I’ve ever worked with—or he will be someday, when he’s soaked up everything he can learn.” I really wanted to have him working for me again. He was more than just an employee and I’d missed having him around.
Michael sneered. “He’s a baker? What kind of job is that, anyway? I mean, it’s all good for you if you like it, I guess. But it’s kind of wussy, don’t you think?”
I shook my head at him. Some kids never got it. “You care what other people think about you?” I already knew the answer, and that it would be a lie.
“No, I do what I want. Who cares about the rest?”
“So if you had something you loved—something you were really good at, that made other people happy and gave you a reason to get out of bed—besides to hang at the skate park, wouldn’t you want to do it?”
He scuffed his oversized, untied shoe on the cement beside the table. “There’s nothing like that for me, man. Not everyone has a vocation, or whatever you call it. Some of us are just happy to be free.”
“True enough. If that makes you really happy, why not? But I’m just sayin’, don’t let what
other
people think determine what’s good enough for
you
. If you like it—and it’s legal,” I thought I better add that caveat, “do it, even if it seems wussy. We all have to learn that sometimes. Even wussy girls.”
His expression was dismissive, but he didn’t take his searching gaze off me, so maybe I reached him after all. Or not. “Whatever, lady. So what are you doing here, anyway? Just come to check my alibi? ‘Cuz the cops have already talked to me.”
That didn’t surprise me since I’d been tied up at the shop while Tingey had been free to run his investigation. “Nah, I thought I’d see if I could figure you out. And I wondered if you had any ideas besides the one your mom’s pushing.”
One of the guys loped over with the goodie bag, which was clearly weighted down by a couple of cookies, at least. Looked like Michael got gyped, but if he didn’t know, I wasn’t going to tell him.
“Thanks, dude, I’ll be back out there in a minute.” Michael looked back at me. “Maybe I have an idea or two. The detective, he could be in on it. Maybe my brother Daron or the Easter bunny. Seems to me that anyone with half a brain would have wanted the weasel dead. Heck, the way he went on about always wanting fresh food with no preservatives probably made
you
want to puke.”
He wasn’t going to be helpful now, so I leaned back on my bench and matched his tone. “Yeah? You have any idea where I can find the Easter Bunny? Cuz I’d really like to know what he’s got against an auditor. You think maybe he got in trouble with the league of stupid holiday animals?”
Michael chuckled. “You’re all right, you know that? Look, I know Mom’s putting a lot of pressure on you to figure out what really happened. I didn’t do it, but I don’t know who did—I wasn’t around.”
That was obviously all I was going to get out of him. Time to wrap up. “You remember Eric having an argument with anyone in particular? Anyone who was mad?”
“Besides Roper? Yeah, lots of people. People he audited, people who didn’t like his politics, the contractor from the building, some of the other city councilmen. People who worked in the city offices. I’m not saying he hacked all of them off enough that they would want him dead, but he’s not exactly the kind of person people get along with. I have no idea why my mom ever got together with him. Or why they married. Or why she stayed.”
That comment piqued my curiosity. She seemed plenty distraught in the store, but maybe that was due to the suspicion hanging over her son rather than sorrow at losing her husband. “Was he mean to your mom?”
“Nah, he never raised his voice and he never said anything mean. He just used that tone that says ‘I’m very disappointed in you and I hope you learn to do things right next time.’ Man, I hate that. Even though I didn’t care what he thought, I still hated it. She seemed to think he was all that and a bag of chips, but I don’t know why. My dad is way cooler than Eric was.”
He stood from the bench, stepping on the end of his skateboard so it popped up where he could reach the other end. “Look, I don’t know nothing about any of it. I’m glad the jerk’s gone, even though my mom is crying about it, but I wouldn’t have killed him. I’m outta here in less than a year. It wasn’t worth making a fuss about. Find someone who had something real to lose.”
I watched him dig into the bag of cookies and pull three out, eating each of them in two bites as he joined the other guys on the cement. I wondered for a minute if he had a point. Maybe there was a more obvious suspect we were overlooking.
My phone rang the next morning, and I was happy to see Lenny’s number on the display. “Hey, have you made a decision?”
“Yeah, I’ve got some savings. I don’t need much. I’ll quit today and be on my way tonight if you can keep me in menthols.”
I hated his smoking habit, and he had cut down significantly when I was his boss, but apparently he hadn’t kicked it entirely. “No food, no gas for your car, no rent, just smokes, huh? Well that I can probably manage, especially as they aren’t as expensive here.” I had spent over an hour with my books last night trying to figure out what I could pay him and still break even for the month. With trepidation, I’d texted him the figure.
It would mean no new shoes (the love of my life) for a long time, but my Ferragamos didn’t exactly get to spend a lot of time outside my closet when I lived, ate and breathed my shop anyway. “I might be able to do better than what I told you if we get a nice order or two, but that’s all I’m sure I can pay you per month. Basically you’ll be working for peanuts.”
“Fine. I’ll call Karen and quit now. I’ll see you tomorrow night, or maybe the morning after that. Could I crash with you for a night or two until I find a place of my own?”
“Of course.” I couldn’t help but notice he kept speaking of himself in the singular. “Um, just you? What about Kat? Is she coming later?”