Something told me that Monsieur Lavoie was tempted to say he would do just that.

Except that he seemed to have something else on his mind. He glanced toward the front counter where he had a tall spice jar opened, along with a measuring cup, a funnel, and a few smaller jars.

“Yes, yes, you must get your watch.” One hand on each of our backs, he hurried us over to the door that led to the cooking school. “Jim is gone. Everything is cleaned up for the night. I must leave soon. But if you hurry…”

We did. A couple seconds later, we were at the top of the stairs.

With no light except for the glow of the streetlights outside, the room looked like a negative of itself. The stainless steel stoves still glinted, but all the golden warmth was lost in heavy shadows.

Automatically, I felt along the wall. “I don’t know where the light switch is.” Don’t ask me why, but I was whispering. Must have had something to do with the after-hours atmosphere and the dark. “How are we going to-”

“Don’t you worry. I told you I know exactly where I left the watch.” Eve stepped into the classroom. “I’ll just-ow!” I saw her stoop to rub her knee. “Forgot that bench was in the front of the room.”

“And I forgot this.” I felt around inside my purse for the pint-size flashlight I always carried with me. I flicked it on and arced the beam around the room. “Better?”

We had our bearings now, and flashlight in hand, I led the way toward the door in the mural of the Café Jacques. On the other side of it was a kitchen that included the sinks where we’d cleaned up our saucepans and soup bowls.

“You’re amazing, Annie. Honestly.” Eve’s voice came out of the dark behind me. “What else do you have in that purse of yours?”

“Antacids. Gum. Pain relievers-aspirin and ibuprofen.” I went through the list. I don’t know why. Even though we had Monsieur Lavoie’s permission, something about being in the school alone after closing made me nervous, and reciting the familiar litany calmed my nerves. “Paper and a pen. My address book. A roll of quarters, just in case.” I stopped at the door and Eve caught up.

Shaking her head, she pushed open the door. “Like I said, amazing. Have I ever mentioned that? Next time I need to pack for a long trip, you’re the first person I’m going to call.”

It was a threat, not a promise. Every time Eve went out of town-anywhere-she called me to help her pack. It was not a pretty thing, stuffing seven days’ worth of outfits into a bag she was taking for a two-day trip. Still, I always managed to make it work.

Eve headed into the kitchen. I aimed the light in the right direction, and soon after, I heard her satisfied purr. “Ah, here it is! Right where I thought I left it.” In the glow of the flashlight, I saw Eve slip the watch on her arm. She checked the time. “Nine twenty-five already. Can you believe it? The evening went so fast.”

One person’sfast is another’sinterminable. I tried not to think about it or the fact that I had to show up here tomorrow and risk embarrassing myself again. Jim had promised to send us an e-mail tonight for tomorrow’s class: appetizers. I wondered if chips and dip counted.

“Ready?” Eve was already back at the door, and we made our way across the classroom. “We can stop for coffee if you’re in the mood.”

I remembered what she’d said about the time and shook my head. “This late? I’ll never sleep. And I have to get to work early tomorrow.”

There was just enough light coming through the front window for me to see Eve grin. “How did I know you were going to say that?”

We weren’t upstairs that long, but when we got back downstairs to the shop, all but the front window lights were off, and there was no sign of Monsieur Lavoie. For one panicked moment, I thought we’d been locked in. I was already formulating what I’d say to my head teller the next morning to explain why I was late when we heard a noise near the back door.

I peeked outside. Beyla and the man she called Drago were gone. The only one around was Monsieur Lavoie. I was just in time to see him toss something in the Dumpster near the door.

He saw me and just about jumped out of his skin. “Oh! You are done. Already!” He tried for a smile that wasn’t exactly convincing, then waved us outside. “We will lock the door behind you, yes? You have what you were looking for?”

Eve held up her arm, displaying the watch.

“Very good. Then we are ready to say good night, no?” He backed away from the Dumpster, distancing himself from whatever he’d been doing. “I will see you both tomorrow, yes?”

Even before we had a chance to answer, he locked the door and scampered into the shadows.

“Well, that was odd.” I peered into the dark, but the chef had disappeared around the side of the building. In fact, the only sound I heard was that of a car door slamming and an engine starting up. I had no doubt it was Monsieur Lavoie hightailing it out of there.

“Maybe he’s got a hot date.” Eve laughed. “Wish I did. We could head over to that bar on Wilson and see who’s there tonight.”

“Or not.” We stepped out of the circle of light thrown by the security lamp near the back door and into the shadows, heading in the opposite direction from Monsieur Lavoie. “Early morning tomorrow, remember? We’re getting ready for the yearly audit and-”

The rest of my words dissolved in a little squeal of surprise when I tripped over something.

Something big.

I regained my footing and looked over to where Eve had stopped to see what was wrong. She’d been walking on my right, and whatever I stumbled over, she skirted without incident.

I spun around, squinting through the darkness to make out what I had run into. But all that I could see was something that look like a black garbage bag lying right in what had been my path.

“Except it’s too big to be a garbage bag,” I mumbled.

“Huh?” Eve came a couple steps closer. “What are you talking about, Annie? Of course it’s a garbage bag. What else could it-”

My flashlight was still at the top of my bag. I dragged it out and flicked it on.

I slid the beam along the hulking shape and saw that what I’d mistaken for a black trash bag was really a black coat. Leather.

Drago was still inside it. He was sprawled on the pavement, one hand clutching at his chest. His face was pale, covered with sweat, and contorted with pain.

Four

Cooking Up Murder pic_6.jpg

“ANNIE?” EVE LATCHED ONTO MY ARM SO TIGHT, I knew I’d have bruises by morning. Her breathing was fast and shallow, her eyes wide. “Is that what I think it is? Is it who I think it is? Is he-”

I swallowed hard and reminded myself not to go bonkers. That wouldn’t help anybody. Besides, it looked like Eve was on the edge of bonkers herself. And that was plenty for both of us.

I skimmed the light over the body on the pavement. “It’s what you think it is,” I told Eve. “It’s who you think it is. I don’t know if he’s-”

Once upon a very long time ago, I had thought about being a nurse, and I’d done some volunteer work at a hospital. It was the summer between my junior and senior years of high school. Like I said, a long time ago. But some things you learn you never forget.

I bent and felt for a pulse the way I’d seen the nurses on the floor do it. “It’s weak, but it’s there,” I told Eve. I looked over my shoulder at her, my own panic forgotten in light of the fact that now I knew that we had to act, and fast. “Call 911.”

“Call?” In the gloom, I saw the whites of Eve’s eyes. She blinked, stunned and afraid. “Maybe we should just get out of here, huh? Beyla said she was going to kill him, Annie. And it sure looks like she tried.” She darted a look around the dark back lot. “What if she comes after us?”


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