Roast Mortem (2 page)

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Authors: Cleo Coyle

BOOK: Roast Mortem
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Tucker Burton, my lanky, floppy-haired assistant manager, had arrived on time for his shift and was just tying on his Village Blend apron. A part-time actor-playwright and occasional cabaret director, Tuck loved being a barista in the Italian tradition, which (like a good bartender) had as much to do with convivial customer interaction as it did with temperature and pressure.
“Excuse me, Clare,” he said, “but where is Gardner again?”
“Trapped in his car,” I replied, “on the New Jersey side of the Holland Tunnel.”
Tuck pointed to Esther. “And why can't our resident slam poetess stay and work another hour until he shows? I'll bet my Actors' Equity card she's been late to more than a few of her classes.”
Esther's wine-dark fingertips went to her Botticelli waist. “Excuse me, Broadway Boy, but I am not simply taking this class. I am a TA and need to be there on time.”
“For what? Introduction to Baggy Pants and Bling 101?”
“Urban Rap's Influence on Mainstream America!”
“Who's the professor? Eminem?”
Esther smirked. “The man has a PhD from Brown in linguistics and is heading my program in the semiotics of urban expression.”
“Yeah? And I know what seat he holds: the Snoop Dog Chair.”
“Okay, you two, enough!” I turned to Tucker. “Let her off the hook.”
“But it's not very fair to you, Clare. You've been here since eight AM.”
“And I can't leave you here alone, can I? Traffic is traffic and Esther is a teaching assistant now. Her shift's over and she has to go.”
“Thank you!” she said.
I caught her eye. “Just call Vicki Glockner, okay? Tell her I'll give her double time until Gardner can get through that tunnel.”
“Will do, boss,” Esther promised, and she was gone.
Now my focus was back on that customer line. As Tuck manned the register and the single-cup Clover machine, I turned out the espresso drink orders: one Skinny Lat (latte with skim milk); one Breve Cap (cappuccino with half-and-half); 3
doppios
(double espressos); one Cortado (a single shot caressed with steamed milk); two Flat Whites (cappuccinos without foam); one Americano (espresso diluted with hot water); two Thunder Thighs (double-tall mocha lattes with whole milk and extra whipped cream); and a Why Bother (decaf espresso).
When the crush finally eased, I turned to the octogenarian sitting on the other side of my counter. Madame Dreyfus Allegro Dubois was looking as stylish as ever in a springy apricot pantsuit, her silver-gray hair coiffed into a super-naturally smooth twist.
“I'm so sorry,” I told her, sliding a
crema
-rich espresso across the blueberry marble.
“Why should you be sorry, dear?”
“Because we're going to be
very
late.”
“C'est dommage,”
Madame said, lifting the demitasse to her peach-glossed lips. “But Enzo will understand. Managerial setbacks are an inescapable aspect of New York's miseen-scène.”
“You mean like bureaucratic bribes and obscene levels of sales tax?”
Madame's reply was an amused little shrug. The woman's Gallic aplomb was admirable, I had to admit, but then what was a minor traffic delay to someone who'd seen Nazi tanks roll down the Champs-Élysées?
Given that I was half her age—with duskier skin, Italian hips, and a preference for discount store jeans—Madame and I made an incongruous pair. At our core, however, we weren't so different, which was why our relationship had survived my late-teen pregnancy and hasty marriage to her wayward son, his drug addiction and recovery, our rocky divorce, and my decade spent in New Jersey exile before returning to Manhattan to run her beloved coffeehouse again.
The latter development was the reason I'd agreed to drive Madame to Queens today. A valuable piece of Village Blend history was waiting for us at Astoria's Caffè Lucia, and we were both determined to reclaim it.
Just then my thigh vibrated—actually the cell phone in my pocket next to my thigh. I answered without checking the screen.
“Gardner?” I asked, hoping my jazz-musician barista was calling to say he'd finally blown through the Holland Tunnel.
“It's Mike.”
As in Mike Quinn, my boyfriend (for lack of a better word). He certainly wasn't a
boy
and he was much more than a
friend
, although that's the way we'd started out. The phrase “Mike is my lover” would have been accurate, but it sounded absurdly decadent to the ears of a girl who was raised by a strict Italian grandmother.
“I'm sorry, Mike, I can't talk—”
“Yes, you can, dear.” A hand touched my shoulder. I turned to find Madame behind me, tying on a Blend apron. “Take a break, Clare.”
“But—”
“No buts. My hands are clean.” With a wink, Madame showed me. “And as you know, I've done this a few times before.”
I would have argued, but I really did need to take five, so I pulled off my apron and grabbed her seat on the customer side of the bar.
“Are you still driving to Queens?” Mike asked.
“Slight delay but yes,” I said. “Why?”
“I've got another meeting on the undercover operation,” he said. “It may run late, but I was still hoping to see you tonight.”
“Just come by the duplex,” I said, happily accepting the freshly pulled double from my employer. “Use your key. You still have it, right?”
“I still have it.” He paused. “So how's your head?”
“Better,” I lied, and took a reviving sip of the
doppio
.
In fact, I was still recovering from the Quinn family's St. Patrick's Day bash the night before—“
The
annual event,” or so I was told by Mike's clan. He was the only cop among a family of firefighters so he didn't always attend (cops had their own gatherings), but this year Mike wanted to introduce me around.
While the beer flowed like Trevi, I was regaled with heroic stories about the “Mighty Quinn,” Mike's late father, a fire captain. Then Mike's mother asked me if I'd be willing to contribute some coffeehouse specialties to the FDNY's upcoming Five-Borough Bake Sale, and she promptly introduced me to the head of the coordinating committee—a lovely (and very sharp) woman named Valerie Noonan.
“And have you made your decision yet?” Mike asked.
I could almost hear him smiling over the cellular line, but I couldn't blame him. I'd called the man three times today, obsessing over what would impress his family more: my cinnamon-sugar doughnut muffins; blueberries 'n' cream coffee cake pie; or honey-glazed peach crostata with fresh ginger-infused whipped cream. There were always my pastry case standbys: caramelized banana bread; almond-roca scones; and mini Italian coffeehouse cakes. (Ricotta cheese was my secret ingredient to making those tasty little loaves tender and delicious.) They were absolutely perfect with coffee, and I topped each with a different glaze inspired by the gourmet syrups of my coffeehouse: chocolate-hazelnut; buttery toffee; candied orange-cinnamon; raspberry-white chocolate; and sugar-kissed lemon, the flavor found in my Romano “sweet,” an espresso served in a cup with its rim rubbed by a lemon twist, then dipped in granulated cane—the way the old-timers drank it in the Pennsylvania factory town where I'd grown up.
“I think I should make them all,” I said.
“All?”
Am I trying too hard?
I thought.
Probably.
Then I remembered tomorrow was March 19, the feast day of St. Joseph (patron saint of pastry chefs). Every year my
nonna
would fry up crunchy sweet bow tie cookies and set them out with hot, fresh, doughy zeppolinis in her little Italian grocery.
That's it!
“I'll make champagne cream puffs!”
“Champagne cream puffs?”
“Zeppole dough baked in the oven and filled with Asti Spumante-based zabaglione!”
“It's a bake sale, sweetheart, not a four-star dessert cart.”
Just then our shop bell rang and a young woman with fluffy, crumpet-colored curls walked across our main floor. “Hey, everyone!” Vicki Glockner waved at me.
“Mike, I've got to go. My relief is here.”
“Okay,” he said, “but that's why I called. It's my turn to relieve you. Don't worry about cooking tonight. I'll get us takeout.”
 
 
BY
the time I drove down the Queensboro Bridge ramp, dusk had fully descended, and streetlights were flickering on, their halogen bulbs pouring pools of blue-tinged light into an ocean of deepening darkness. Madame and I had been late getting started. Then a pileup on the bridge left me inching and lurching my way across the mile-long span. Now we were more than an hour behind schedule.
“Do you want to try calling again?” I asked, swinging my old Honda beneath the subway's elevated tracks.
“It's all right, dear,” Madame replied. “I left a message apologizing for our tardiness. Let's hope Enzo picks it up.”
Enzo was “Lorenzo” Testa, the owner of Caffè Lucia. He'd called Madame that morning, telling her he'd been cleaning out his basement and came across an old Blend roaster and a photo album with pictures of Madame and her late first husband, Antonio Allegro. While Madame was thrilled about the photos, I was itching to get my paws on the old Probat, a small-batch German coffee roaster, circa 1921. Enzo had bought it used from the Blend in the sixties.
“So this man worked for you and Matt's father,” I asked.
Madame nodded. “He came to us fresh off the boat from Italy. An eager aspiring artist.”
“Marlon Brando-ish? Isn't that how you described him?”
“More Victor Mature, dear. The young female customers absolutely swooned when they saw him in our shop or Washington Square Park—that's where he liked to set up his painter's easel.”
“So he was hot stuff?”
“Oh, yes. Smoldering male charisma, liquid bedroom gaze . . .
Oo-la-la . .
.”
Oo-la-la?
I suppressed a smile. “Is that why I'm the one driving you to Astoria to meet with him instead of Otto?”
“My. Don't
you
have a suspicious mind?”
“I think we've already established that.”
“Well, the answer to your question is
no
. My Otto would have taken me, but he has a very important business dinner lined up this evening so I'm a free agent.”
“Uh-huh.” The last time Madame characterized herself as a “free agent” she was in East Hampton, enjoying a fling with a septuagenarian expert on Jackson Pollock.
“And, besides,” she added. “I've wanted you to meet Enzo for ages. Given your background, I thought it was about time.”
“Whatever became of Enzo's art career, anyway?” (Myself an art school dropout, I couldn't help wondering.) “Did his work ever sell?”
“Oh, yes. Enzo's female admirers bought many of his paintings. Restaurants and caffès hired him, too. At one time, you could see his trompe l'oeil frescos in dozens of pizzerias around town. But most of them are gone now. Irreplaceable because Enzo stopped selling his work.”
“Why? What happened?”
Madame shrugged. “Life.”
“Life?”
“His lover became pregnant,” she said, glancing at the fast-passing rows of storefronts. “The same year her father died. Angela asked Enzo to marry her and take over her family's caffè in Queens, save them from financial ruin.” Madame shrugged. “Enzo adored her . . .”
I nodded at Enzo's story (half of it, anyway) because I knew just how many hours it took to run a successful business, and just how much love it took to give up on a dream. Suddenly, without having ever met the man, I liked him, very much.
“Caffè Lucia is a pretty name,” I said.
“He renamed the place for his daughter. A lively, outspoken child, as I recall; all grown up by now. And sadly, last year, Angela passed away during their annual visit to Italy . . .”
As I turned onto Steinway Street, I noticed Madame glancing at her watch.
“This trip isn't over yet,” I warned.
“I know, dear. I'm looking.”
Parking
is what we were looking for, and I didn't see a single open spot. Eyeing the crowded curbs, I rolled by cell phone shops, clothing stores, and restaurants with Greek, Italian, Cyrillic, and Naskh signage. Finally I turned onto the tree-lined block where Caffè Lucia was located, and Madame began waving frantically (because attempting to find parking in this town could turn even the most urbane cosmopolitan into a raving maniac).
“There! There! A spot on the right! Get it! Get it!”
“Fire hydrant,” I said. “I'll circle again—”
“Look! Look! That car is leaving! Go! Go!”
I zoomed into the spot, right behind a mammoth SUV. As I climbed out from behind the wheel, I could almost feel the adrenaline ebbing from my bloodstream. (Not quite as stressful as driving a golf cart through a war zone, but close.) Unfortunately, I wasn't off the battlefield yet. More trouble was heading our way—in size-twelve Air Jordans.
“Hey, lady!” (The greeting was quintessential Jerry Lewis but the accent was definitely foreign.) “You can't park here!”
A scowling man barreled toward us, gesturing wildly.
“Excuse me?” I said.
“You have to move your car!”
Stone black eyes under tight curls the color of Sicilian licorice; a slate gray leisure suit (sans tie) over incongruous white tube socks. I couldn't place the guy's accent, but that was no surprise. While this area used to be primarily Greek and Italian, more recent arrivals included Brazilians, Bosnians, and natives of Egypt, Yemen, and Morocco.

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