Read Prime Cut Online

Authors: Diane Mott Davidson

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Detectives, #Women Sleuths, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Cooking, #Mystery Fiction, #Murder, #Colorado, #Humorous Stories, #Cookery, #Caterers and Catering, #Bear; Goldy (Fictitious Character), #Women in the Food Industry

Prime Cut (28 page)

BOOK: Prime Cut
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18

 

 

"Did you all tell the police Gerald found a rifle?" I asked breathlessly.

 

 

"Of course we did." She tilted her head. "Leah has it hung out in the living room. Haven't you seen it? Of course, I wanted it for the museum. You must try to talk her into donating it, Goldy. No one will ever see it, way out here in Blue Spruce."

 

 

The Winchester. Yes, of course I had noticed the rifle on the wall.

 

 

Hanna narrowed her eyes. "Leah kept asking, Why would an outlaw hide his rifle in a wall?"

 

 

But of course I did know. Or I thought I did. Tom had concealed his extra Colt.45 and his own Winchester '94 behind a false wall he'd built in our garage. Then, if someone broke in, his valuable firearms wouldn't be stolen. Or be in the hands of someone who could use them for crime. But it didn't take a week to get to those weapons; Tom's rifle could be accessed by removing a rectangle of drywall in mere minutes.

 

 

To Hanna I said, "That was it? The rifle was the only thing Eliot found in the wall?"

 

 

"I think so." She shrugged, a tiny gesture of impatience that I interpreted as we need to get on with our business. "Now, we need to talk about the schedule for the shoot," she reminded me. When I nodded, she pushed her cup and saucer away, pulled out a black loose-leaf notebook from the dark briefcase, and hooked black half-glasses over her nose. This woman's fashion palette was so limited, she might as well have worked for a mortician.

 

 

The somber notebook held about twenty plastic-encased pages. Hanna flipped through the sheets, each of which contained a photocopied sketch of that page's layout in this publication, the first of three Christmas catalogs that P & G would be mailing to its customers. Hand-drawn outlines of bed and table linens, jewelry, shoes, belts, and handbags, splashed across the accessories section. Ian had finished up the still-life shots the first week, before Andr‚ came on board, Hanna told me. The proofs for these pictures were paper-clipped onto the sketches.

 

 

Then came the fashion sketches, with printed notes about what shot should fill each section. Santa in chair with boy in reindeer pajamas. Yellow bikini & blue maillot for cruise section. Snugged within each plastic envelope were three or four flash-lit Polaroid shots of the items to be modeled. Suspended from coat hangers, the cruise outfits, nightwear, chinos, sweaters, blouses, coats, and dresses looked painfully unglamorous. Hanna flipped through to show three pages of women's clothes, two of men's. Each page represented a day of shooting. There were only two pages left. Barring any more equipment failures, the P & G Christmas shoot should finally finish by the next day, Thursday, or, worst-case scenario, Friday. Andr‚ had been making between six and eight hundred dollars a day, depending on how many people showed up for each meal. I closed my eyes. I would have preferred that Andre be alive, of course. But I'd known him long and well enough to be sure he would have been glad that I was the one taking over his booking. I also knew he would have rejoiced that this new income would be enough for me to recoup the money lost to the Harrington and Hardcastle refunds.

 

 

To my surprise, I'd recognized the outfits from the two pages with Santa and the children. Even I had to admit these pedestrian outfits had looked pretty good when worn by adorable kids. Especially when those kids were being visited by Santa himself. The trick, of course, lay in seeing that the clothes were still the same bland outfits. Most folks, of course, were fooled. And that was why models were paid so much. It was also, I reflected sadly, why bad caterers - who only care about presentation and not the quality or taste of their food - were able to stay in business. If I ever resorted to that kind of cheating, I hoped to be stripped of my spoons.

 

 

Hanna pointed to the lingerie page. She explained that a black push-up bra with matching panties, a white lace bra and half-slip, and a pastel green granny-style nightgown were to be the outfits of the day. Zowie! I was so glad I hadn't brought Arch. I told Hanna we were going to offer girdle cakes at the coffee break.

 

 

"That's pancakes to you and me," I translated. "Fine, then. But at least now you are aware there will only be today and tomorrow or Friday for catering. Depending on how things go. So, that's it. I'll take more coffee, if you don't mind."

 

 

I poured her a refill and commented, "You seem to manage the uncertainty of when you'll be shooting pretty well."

 

 

Her eyes glimmered with seriousness. Her thin lips set in a slight scowl. "I need to work. So I have learned to deal with people's idiosyncrasies. Or at least, I make a very good show of working around people's weaknesses," she said proudly.

 

 

Oh, right, I thought, remembering her caustic words to Bobby Whitaker during the cattle call. I said, "Do you miss working with the folks at the museum?"

 

 

"No, actually." Without warning her voice turned bitter. "I am sorry for all the years I gave to the Home- stead, with no thanks from the historical society, and certainly no monetary appreciation. I know you're keenly aware of how divorce can leave you financially stranded, Goldy. I certainly did not expect my husband to leave, forcing me to live from paycheck to paycheck in my midfifties. I did not expect to have to buy a used station wagon from a person selling it by the side of the road. I did not expect to be living in a tiny apartment at the Swiss Inn, that my parents used to own! And of course, I did not expect to pay a lawyer more for an hour of his time than I spend on a month's groceries." She gave me a mirthless, knowing smile. "And I guess in my heart, I hoped the historical society would give me a little monetary gift when I left. Of all people, I am aware of the funds they can spare. But the society did not see fit to do so."

 

 

"It's tough," I murmured sympathetically. When you suffer through a postdivorce reduction in circumstances, it's a miracle if your attitude doesn't turn to vinegar.

 

 

"I was lucky to find this job," Hanna went on, her voice defiant. Her tone was threaded with the old authority. The implied message was: And I'll be damned if anyone's going to take this job away from me.

 

 

"Hanna, I am happy for you." Impulsively, I hugged her, but when she remained as stiff as a board, I realized an embrace was a bad idea. I stepped back. "Did you enjoy working with Andr‚? He helped me become a caterer back when I, too, was lucky to find a job. Did you like him?"

 

 

She twisted her mouth to one side as if trying to decide how to say something negative. "Oh, Goldy. Andr‚ was an old man with a lot of stories to tell. He told them whether people were interested or not. I would tease him because he talked too much. When he would tie up one of the photo people with his chatter, then you had two people who were not working." She picked up her briefcase, as if I had lured her into the same idleness. "My only concern has to be that the shoot run efficiently." She marched out of the kitchen before I could ask just which photo people Andr‚ had tied up with his chatter.

 

 

As soon as she left, I asked Boyd about the rifle. He said Fuller's people had looked at the Winchester, and found that it was clean of fingerprints and had not been fired. I told him what Rustine had said about Gerald's claim that he'd found a weapon that would make them rich. Boyd said a gun only made you rich if you used it to rob a bank. Great.

 

 

By nine-thirty, Boyd and Julian had set out a crystal bowl mounded with homemade granola and another containing a glistening array of sliced strawberries and kiwi. Crystal pitchers contained cream and skim milk. Carafes of coffee, decaf, and hot water were poised above lit cans of Sterno. I nestled assorted juices and waters into a table-size ice bath. Julian and Boyd had scuttled back to the kitchen, claiming they needed to assemble lunch. I suppressed a chuckle. Apparently, both men were embarrassed to appear openly interested in Rustine's lingerie shoot. They would have been disappointed, I reflected, after I watched Rustine go through her paces. The mother of all granny gowns concealed everything. Since I'd just seen the Polaroid of the gown hanging forlornly on its coat hanger, I knew it was quite ordinary, despite Rustine's coy looks, dipped shoulder, and hands on hips. Behind his camera, Ian prompted Rustine with That's it, baby. Keep it coming. That's it. Don't lose it now. Rustine simpered and kept moving through her poses. I wondered if the lace-trimmed gown could survive the restless insomnia a worrying cop's wife endured every night, while waiting for her husband to come home with his bulletproof vest intact.

 

 

Back in the kitchen, I put these thoughts out of my mind and returned to that old soul-restorer: working with food. I hummed as I mixed the cottage cheese, buttermilk, and egg mixture with the sifted dry ingredients to make the girdle cakes. On the griddle, they would rise, develop a crunchy exterior and featherlight interior, and bring joy to the heart, no matter what you were wearing.

 

 

"I'm not staying out there to serve," Julian announced fiercely, his cheeks pink. "That blond girl, Yvonne, is mean as a skunk. When I asked her what she was doing today, she told me to trot on back to the kitchen and mind my own business. At least Rustine pretends to like me."

 

 

I murmured sympathetically and skimmed oil onto my electric griddle. I was studiously avoiding conversation with Rustine. I did not want anyone at the shoot even to suspect that she wanted me to act as her informal P.I. I hustled the griddle out to the central room, set it on a table, and plugged it into one of the numerous crooked wall outlets. Yvonne sauntered across the set in black bra and panties while Ian fixed his lens and swore. I frowned and remembered Rustine's words from the first day: The blonde's... wearing flesh-colored falsies. Was Yvonne dishonestly stuffed now? And how far had I come from pondering questions of eschatology while catering to the Diocesan Board of Theological Examiners?

 

 

Ignoring these mental digressions, I retrieved the batter and waited for the signal from Ian and company to start heating the skillet. With any luck, the bra shoot would only take twenty minutes. But the voices on the far side of the room rose suddenly, as did the level of activity. There was general scurrying and knocking into chairs. My heart sank as I gave the batter a gentle stir and wondered if we were in for another ruined meal.

 

 

"I told you so, didn't I?" muttered Rustine at my elbow.

 

 

I jumped and barely avoided spilling the batter. "For heaven's sake, Rustine! You told me what?" No wonder Andr‚ had a heart attack, I thought uncharitably, as I righted the bowl.

 

 

Rustine, now clad in a tightly cinched sky-blue terry-cloth robe, gestured toward the far side of the room. Yvonne, in the lacy bra and panties, sat slumped on a chair beside one of the fiats that formed the artificially lit three-sided stage that had been constructed for the day's shoot. What - mountains were too suggestive a backdrop for department store lingerie? In any event, Yvonne blended in with the flats, which were painted a very light, neutral beige. Hanna, Ian, Rufus, and Leah were huddled in a hasty conference. Behind them, the day - contractors - female stylist, younger male hair-dresser, older male makeup artist shook their heads in bemusement.

 

 

Lingerie-Shoot Girdle Cakes

 

 

1 egg

 

 

1 « cups or more buttermilk

 

 

« cup cottage cheese

 

 

« cups all-purpose flour

 

 

2 teaspoons baking powder

 

 

« teaspoon baking soda

 

 

1 cup blueberries, plus more for serving

 

 

Butter and maple syrup for serving

 

 

Oil a large skillet or griddle (the Scots call it a "girdle," hence the name) and preheat it over medium, heat.

 

 

In a large bowl, beat the egg lightly. Stir in the buttermilk and cottage cheese.

 

 

Sift together the flour, baking powder, and baking soda. Sift again into the egg mixture. Stir in the dry mixture very lightly, mixing only enough to combine. If the mixture is too dry, stir in a small amount of additional buttermilk. Gently stir in the blueberries.

 

 

Scoop the batter into pancakes into the hot, well-oiled pan. After the cakes have set on one side, lightly. loosen them with a metal spatula to make sure they do not stick. When the edges of the cakes appear dry, flip the cakes carefully to cook until cooked through and golden brown on both sides. This can take from 2 to 5 minutes per side.

 

 

Serve immediately with butter and. maple syrup or more fresh blueberries.

 

 

Makes 8 to 12 cakes

 

 

"She doesn't have any cleavage!" Rustine whispered. "She may be blond, but it's not enough. She can't fill that bra." Rustine lifted her chin and shook her red hair in triumph. Up close, I could again see that her face was flawlessly, if heavily, made up. "They're going to have to use me. That's great, because we need the extra money."

 

 

"Why will you make extra?" I asked innocently. She stared at me as if I had just offered to don the black bra and underwear myself. "Because more skin shows in a lingerie shot. They have to pay extra, and especially for yours truly, who will now be used for both shots."

 

 

"Ah." I cocked my head toward the set. "How close would you say we are to the coffee break?"

 

 

She frowned, then assessed the conference.

 

 

"Dammit!" Ian was yelling at Rufus. "Why can't you check out the equipment before we start?" Ian stomped toward his tripod, then tripped. Flailing wildly, he crashed to the floor. "How many times," he shouted angrily at Rufus, "have I told you to get rid of Eliot's damn air compressor? Are you brain-dead? Were you deprived of oxygen at birth, Driggle? Get that damn thing out of here!"
BOOK: Prime Cut
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ads

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