Punch, Pastries, and Poison - Harper Lin (free e reader TXT) š
- Author: Harper Lin
Book online Ā«Punch, Pastries, and Poison - Harper Lin (free e reader TXT) šĀ». Author Harper Lin
We chatted for a few more minutes before hanging up. I wrote Mrs. DāAngeloās name down on my notepad in neat letters then stared at it for a while, tapping my pen on the paper. I had my list. Now I just needed to decide what to do with it. The right thing to do was to give it to Mike. He couldnāt possibly be upset with me for making it when all Iād done was call my friends and ask them who they remembered seeing, could he?
I stared at the notepad a little longer and picked up my phone again. Slowly, I opened my list of contacts. My finger hovered over Mikeās name. I knew I should tap it, but I did so only after a good bit of deliberation. There was no point in having made the list of names if I didnāt turn it over to him, was there? It wasnāt like there was anything I could do with it.
My call went straight to voicemail. I hung up without leaving a message, knowing that heād see the missed call and call me back if he was so inclined. And if he didnāt, that was his fault.
Still holding the phone, I looked at my list. Then back at the phone. I knew Mike didnāt want me meddling in the case, but surely it couldnāt hurt if I just made a couple of calls... Could it?
Chapter 21
Mrs. DāAngelo answered on the first ring. āDāAngelo residence,ā she said in her clipped tones.
āHi, Mrs. DāAngelo, this is Fran Amaroāā
āFrancesca! How lovely to hear from you! How are you, my dear? I heard about the incidents at your cafĆ©! How awful! How terrifying that must be for you! I canāt imagine what you must be going through! And that poor girl! Persephone, the paper said her name was. Such a lovely name but so tragic. You know your Greek mythology, Iām sureāā
She went on for several minutes about the ancient story of Persephone and how she was the cause of winter, and wasnāt it just so poetic and her poor motherāDemeter, of course, not our Persephoneās mother. She barely paused for breath and certainly not long enough for me to get a word in.
I started to worry that Mrs. DāAngelo would just hang up when she was done, as she did when she snagged you for one of her speeches out in public. Sheād show up, grab onto your arm with her long nails, regale you with whatever she was thinking, and then disappear, leaving behind only the nail imprints in your arm and a cloud of heavy floral perfume.
āBut Iām just on my way out to my Ladiesā Auxiliary meeting. Weāre working on a fundraiser for the Cape Bay Historical Societyāwhich Iām also a member of, of course. Weāre doing such good work. It was lovely talking to you, Francescaāā
I cut her off before she could hang up on me. āActually, Mrs. DāAngelo, I wanted to ask you about my birthday party the other day.ā
The line went silent, and I thought that maybe I hadnāt caught her in timeāor that sheād hung up on me anyway. I had just pulled the phone away from my ear to see if the call was still connected when she finally spoke.
āWell, yes, dear, thatās what we were just talking about. You received my donation, didnāt you? I wrote quite a generous checkāā
I interrupted her again, not wanting to give her the chance to really get going. āI donāt know, actually. The police are holding it as evidence until the end of their investigationāā
She started huffing and puffing, but I didnāt let her interrupt.
āI did know you attended, though, which I wanted to thank you for.ā
The huffing and puffing slowed down a little bit but didnāt stop entirely.
āAnd I also wanted to make sure that you werenāt affected by whatever made everyone else sick.ā On the spur of the moment, I decided to downplay my knowledge of the poison punch.
āOh, no, dear, I abstain from all alcohol. And tobacco. I try to limit my vices as much as possible. An occasional dessert here or thereāsuch as one of your lovely baked goodsābut nothing too heavy or indulgent. Itās not good for oneās constitution to give in to temptation.ā
I was about to interrupt her again, but she kept plowing ahead.
āThat was why I was so upset about those young people smoking! I told your girl about it, you know, the older brunette one, not young Samantha. Dean Howard and that Karli girl, Jack and Donnaās daughter. I would have thought they raised her better than that, but who knows with children these days. Dean always was a handful. A bit of a disappointment to his father, but his mother was a pushover and never could discipline him. But regardless of upbringing, itās not appropriate for those people to be getting their nicotine fix in a public place, no matter how much they think itās okay because the cigarettes have computers in them now instead of lighting them with a match. Drugs are drugs, and I simply cannot tolerate their use in my presence. That was why they outlawed it. Well, not because of me personally, but because drugs shouldnāt be used in public. Itās a terrible example for the children. Whyāā
I finally managed to get a word in. āMrs. DāAngelo, didnāt you say you were going somewhere? I wouldnāt want you to be late because of me.ā
āOh, goodness, yes! Thank you for reminding me! It was lovely speaking to you, Francesca. We really should catch up more often. Call me anytime. Bye-bye now!ā
She hung up, and I tried to catch my breath from the whirlwind conversation. Talking to her was always dizzying, but it was somehow even more overwhelming over the phone. Maybe it was just the sheer effort of keeping up with the flood of words.
I took a stretch break and made myself a fresh latte with a swan as decoration this time.
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