Read Murder on the Half Shell (A Red Carpet Catering Mystery Book 2) Online

Authors: Shawn Reilly Simmons

Tags: #female detective, #food mysteries, #murder mystery books, #Women Sleuths, #mystery books, #cozy mystery, #culinary mysteries, #murder mystery series, #murder mysteries, #amateur sleuth, #british chick lit, #english mysteries

Murder on the Half Shell (A Red Carpet Catering Mystery Book 2) (14 page)

BOOK: Murder on the Half Shell (A Red Carpet Catering Mystery Book 2)
8.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Chapter 20

  

Penelope seethed as she walked, furious at Shane for speaking to her the way he did. When the anger began to wear off, it was replaced by a feeling she couldn’t quite describe. It was something like sadness, mixed with anxiety and fear. Glancing out at the perfect blue ocean, the gold sunlight dancing on the waves, she wondered how she could be feeling such a toxic cocktail of emotions in such a beautiful place. Penelope had never walked off of a set during filming. She’d never called in sick and she was rarely ever late. Priding herself on her strong work ethic, she was usually the first one on and the last one off a set during filming. She had a strange floating feeling, like she was skipping school or had run away from home.

She walked past Rose’s place without even looking inside. Penelope always stopped to at least wave hello to Rose, but she wasn’t in the mood to be social. When she came to the empty building that was supposed to one day be Craw Daddy’s she saw that the door was padlocked and the police tape across the doors fluttered in the warm breeze. Seeing the building brought on another wave of sadness and Penelope quickly looked away.

She walked into Josie’s Shrimp Shack and took a seat at the empty bar, propping her forearms on the cool wood.

“What can I get for you?” Jonny Daniels emerged from the kitchen and stepped behind the bar.

Penelope said, “A beer.”

Jonny laughed and looked at the long row of beer taps. “Anything specific?” He hooked a long strand of black hair behind his ear and smiled at her.

“Surprise me,” Penelope sighed. The adrenaline had worn off after the incident with Mrs. Lambert and now she was feeling uncharacteristically tired.

Jonny drummed his fingers on the bar for a second then poured her a lager in a frosted pint glass. 

Penelope thanked him and drank her beer in silence.

“You’re Miss Sutherland, from the movie, right? Regan’s boss?”

Penelope nodded tightly and drank another gulp, wiping foam from her lip. “That’s me,” she said sulkily.

“I saw you the other night talking to Regan and he told me later who you were. You guys finished early today, huh? Regan was saying he probably wouldn’t be back until dinner.”

“They’re still working. I’m on break,” Penelope said.

“Oh, okay. You want something to eat?” Jonny asked, looking around for a menu.

“No, thanks,” Penelope said.

“Regan really loves working on a real movie set,” Jonny said. He pulled a wet pint glass from a dish rack and began wiping it off with a bar towel, setting it next to some matching ones on a narrow shelf right behind the bar.

“He’s a great cook,” Penelope said. “He was up on the truck today, preparing the main courses.”

“Cool. I know he wants to take on more responsibility,” Jonny said, genuinely pleased.

Penelope thought for a minute and asked, “If Regan decided he wanted to go into cooking full-time somewhere besides here, how would you feel about that?”

Jonny picked up another pint glass from the rack to dry. “If that’s what he really wants to do, it’s fine by me. But this place is pretty much the only kitchen on the island to work in, except for the Inn.”

“How would you feel if he wanted to leave with us, come on the road with a theatrical catering crew, see more of the world?” Penelope asked.

Jonny paused a moment, thinking. “I’d be all for it, to tell you the truth. His mom would miss him, I’m sure. But if it made him happy, and he remembered to come home and visit once in a while…then I think we’d be okay with it.”

“It’s different here than anyplace I’ve been,” Penelope said. “I was talking to Bradley about going off to college recently.”

Jonny nodded. “Yeah, you’d like for your kids to stay, make a life close to you, but the options are limited. Which is part of the charm of the island, I guess.”

Penelope drank her beer and fell silent.

“I’ll be right back,” Jonny said, eyeing her pint glass and heading out to help his customers seated outside.

Penelope slid off her stool and went to the ladies room while he was gone. When she returned to the main room, she stopped to look at the picture of Josie up over the bar.

Jonny walked back in, his arm loaded down with dirty plates. “That’s my mom and me,” he said, nodding up at the picture.

Penelope smiled. “You were a cute baby.”

“Another?” he asked, eyeing her glass.

“Yes, please,” Penelope said.

He returned to the bar and set a new frosted glass down in front of her.

“I saw a picture of your mom in a yearbook over at the Inn. She was Homecoming Queen?”

Jonny laughed. “Yeah, I’ve seen that picture. She and Dad were pretty decked out.”

“So your parents met in high school?” Penelope asked, relaxing slightly.

Jonny nodded. “I think they knew each other growing up on the island, but I heard that Dad didn’t really notice Mom until high school. Then he pulled all these crazy romantic stunts to get her attention, leaving flowers at her house, stuff like that.”

“So they started this place together?” Penelope asked, looking around the Shrimp Shack at all of the old black and white photos.

“After high school they got married, had me and opened this place. It used to literally be just a shack on the beach when they started. We added on the deck and made other improvements over the years.”

“It’s a unique spot, that’s for sure,” Penelope said. “Jonny, if you don’t mind me asking, what happened to your mom? I heard she passed away.”

Jonny paused for a moment, his mood dipping a bit. “Unfortunately, she died in an accident. She didn’t suffer, which is good.”

Penelope thought Jonny’s words sounded rehearsed, like he’d spoken them many times before. “I’m so sorry to hear that.”

Jonny smiled wistfully. “Thanks. I was just a baby so I don’t remember her. But that’s what happened. And then my dad died a few years later. Also in an accident, on a boat out in the ocean. My family is very accident prone.”

Penelope wasn’t sure how to respond to his attempt at levity while discussing the deaths of his parents, so she just took another sip of beer.

“That one’s going down quicker than the first one,” Jonny said.

Penelope smiled and polished it off, setting her glass back on the coaster and shaking her head when he asked her if she wanted another.

“Was your dad by himself out on the boat when he…” Penelope trailed off.

“Died? Yes, he was out fishing, alone, and then he was gone. Fell overboard, is what I was told. Never found his body either. That can happen too, depending on the currents and how far out he was. Bad luck, really.”

“That’s so sad, Jonny, I’m sorry,” Penelope said.

“It was a long time ago,” Jonny said. “I’ve made my peace with it, and I’ve had a good life regardless.”

“So your father remarried after your mom passed away?”

Jonny leaned on his fists on the shiny wood bar. “Yep. Got married to Jeanne from the Inn. That’s how it went. They were all friends, back in school, a pretty tight-knit group.”

“Are you and Jeanne close? She was your step-mom for a little while.”

Jonny shrugged and smiled. “Sure, she’s a sweet old lady. Honestly, all of that happened when I was really little. By the time I got to school, everything had settled down. All the tragedy was behind me.”

Penelope nodded and took another sip of her beer.

“You guys can sit anywhere,” Jonny said to a group of four that came through the front door. They opted for a patio seat and he went out to get them settled.

Penelope’s phone pinged in her back pocket and she reluctantly pulled it out to look at the screen. There was a text from Francis that read, “All good here. Lunch is cleared. Restocking the trucks now.” Penelope sighed and put the phone facedown on the bar without responding and stared at the small puddle of froth resting in the bottom of her glass. After a few minutes Penelope groaned inwardly and turned her phone back over, swiping it to life. She responded, “Thanks, Francis. Heading back in a few to help close up.”

Chapter 21

  

Penelope walked back down Ocean Avenue to the Inn, feeling much more relaxed than when she headed to Josie’s. She still felt a feeling of dread somewhere deep down, something tugging at the back of her mind, in her gut. She thought about Jonny’s parents both dying so young and shivered, folding her arms loosely over her chest. As she passed by Emilio’s empty building she saw him standing outside on the sidewalk, staring up at the roof. When he saw her approaching, his shoulders dipped and he put his hands on his hips.

“Chef,” Penelope said tightly. He looked exhausted, like he’d been up all night.

Emilio shook his head and studied his shoes. “Here we go again. You know, I think the biggest mistake I made was stepping foot on this little strip of sand. This island is beautiful when you look at it from the outside, but I think once you’re inside it might actually be Hell on earth.”

“Are you sure that’s the biggest mistake you’ve ever made?” Penelope asked sarcastically. “I can think of a couple more.”

“What are you talking about?” Emilio snapped at her.

“I think you know. I talked to Summer. I know what you two did back in school, you can stop lying about it now,” Penelope said, letting the disgust she felt slip into her voice.

“I’ve already told you a million times, nothing happened between me and that little liar, or anyone else,” Emilio said.

Penelope took a step closer to him and glared. “Watch your mouth. You can’t talk about her that way.”

“I can if she’s going to keep lying about me,” Emilio countered. “She’s not supposed to be saying anything anyway. If she keeps it up, I can get my money back.”

“What money?” Penelope asked.

“The settlement she got from me and the school. I had to pay out part of my severance to her. You’d think that would be enough…got her set up in a nice apartment in the city; heard she has a great job too.”

“Chef, tell me to my face, and don’t lie, or leave anything out. Did you sleep with Summer Farrington back at school?”

Emilio pulled his sunglasses from his face and closed the gap between them. “No, I never touched her. Or the other girl.”

“Christine,” Penelope said, not breaking the stare. “Her name is Christine.”

“Yeah, Christine,” Emilio said, looking away first. He sighed and stepped away from her, leaning against his empty restaurant space.

After a few minutes of silence Emilio said, “Let’s see,” he started ticking items off on his thick fingers. “My favorite former student thinks I’m a perv, the future of my restaurant is up in the air because dealing with these island locals is a nightmare, my business partner has been taking showers in my bathroom and don’t forget the little detail about me being accused of kidnapping two teenage girls. I’ve gone from the top of the world to rock bottom in the space of a few days.”

Penelope shifted her weight and looked down at her feet. “Shane has been taking showers in your bathroom?”

“Yeah, he let it slip at that party yesterday that there was a leak in the bathroom upstairs. Yeah, there’s a leak in the bathroom, in the master suite shower that he has no business being in.”

“So that’s why you attacked him?” Penelope asked.

“Skinny little bastard, trying to step in my shoes, while I’m in jail, no less. In jail for something I didn’t do, by the way,” Emilio reminded her. He was overheated and angry, and Penelope kept her distance.

“So, besides the leak in the shower, do you have any proof Shane and Dominique are having an affair?” Penelope asked carefully.

“No,” Emilio admitted. “She denies it, of course. Dominique says she asked him to stay over at the house because she’s afraid to sleep out there by herself. But she said he slept downstairs on the couch. So how would he know about the leak?”

“She told me the same thing, that she didn’t like being in the house alone at night,” Penelope said. “Did she have an explanation for him knowing about the leak?”

“Yeah, she says she asked him to take a look at it the next morning, to see if it was okay for her to take a shower.” A fresh wave of anger seemed to wash over him. “She never even told me she asked him to sleep over. Why would she keep that from me? They’re obviously hiding something.”

“Chef, maybe it’s as simple as what she’s saying. I saw your reaction at the party. Maybe she just didn’t want to make you angry over something that has an innocent explanation. Don’t you trust Dominique?”

“Of course I trust her. It’s him I don’t trust. I see the way he looks at her. At all women. He acts like such a tough guy, but I know how he really is. He’s afraid of appearing weak and that makes him angry,” Emilio said.

“Look,” Penelope said, feeling a surprising wave of pity for her former teacher wash over her. “It’s not my place to say, but if you believe your wife, you should trust her too. Can you let the thing with Shane go?”

“But how am I supposed to let it go? Shane is entwined in our lives now. We’re married to him, with this restaurant and partnership, all the papers I’ve signed. If everything goes south, I’ll never be able to pay back the money he’s put up for this.” He waved at the empty building.

“You have to trust you made the right move, Chef,” Penelope said. “And if you haven’t, you’ll have to make another choice to make it right.”

Emilio’s phone rang in his back pocket and he pulled it out to look at the screen. “Hello,” he said after glancing at the number. “Yes, I’m at the restaurant.” He put the phone down and looked at her. “That was my attorney. Because Sabena Lambert died this morning and they’re amending the charge to negligent homicide.” He shook his head and sat down slowly on a nearby bench. After appearing to be lost in thought for a moment, he said, “I told you. We’re in Hell, Penelope.”

BOOK: Murder on the Half Shell (A Red Carpet Catering Mystery Book 2)
8.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Forever and Always by Beverley Hollowed
The Goodbye Man by A. Giannoccaro, Mary E. Palmerin
Red Cloak of Abandon by Shirl Anders
The Mystery Woman by Amanda Quick
The Rising Moon by Nilsa Rodriguez
Interlude in Pearl by Emily Ryan-Davis
Dido and Pa by Aiken, Joan
The Stockholm Octavo by Karen Engelmann
The Buddha's Return by Gaito Gazdanov