thought. âOnly now sheâs his widow.â
Lori nodded. âHis very rich widow.â
I didnât say anything, but my mind was reeling with possibilities. And questions. If money was an issue, Anjelica certainly had a motive for wanting her husband dead. But she hadnât had access to his food. Could she have given him something at home? But heâd spent several hours on the boardwalk looking the picture of health, and he was fine when he came into the restaurant. The most logical explanation was that he ingested something that had killed him while sitting right there at Table Five.
I thought back to Lord Peterâs dictum: If you know how, you know who. Well, we still didnât know how. But I was beginning to have a pretty good idea of who. And I wasnât sure it was a solution I could live with.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
I spent the rest of the day and most of the evening helping Lori and avoiding Timânot hard to do since there was no reason I needed to visit the kitchen. The Casa Lido was so quiet that Massimo and Nando didnât come in, and neither did my parents, much to my relief. It was too hard to look into my momâs worried face or listen to my dadâs false cheer. All I knew was that another day without customers brought us closer to closing our doors for good.
By nine I sent Lori home, her apron pocket not exactly bulging with cash. While cleaning up behind our one table of the dinner service, I noticed that Cal was back and appeared to be packing up his tools.
Heâs finishing now?
This was a man who kept his own hoursâthat was for sure. And it was time I learned more about this stranger whose name was on the short list of those in the restaurant on Tuesday.
I stepped behind the bar and held up a bottle of our best single-malt Scotch. âYou interested?â
âI wouldnât say no.â He dropped his toolbox at his feet and sat at the bar.
I poured him a generous splash and then filled a wineglass with pinot grigio for myself. I came out and took a seat next to him.
âSo itâs been a day around here,â he said. âI heard the widowââor âwidduhâ as Cal pronounced itââmade an appearance.â
âIt sure has, and, yes, she showed up.â I waited for a comment of some kind, but none was forthcoming.
I glanced sideways at him, keenly aware of his forearm resting close to my own, his large, work-worn hand resting on the table. He had taken off his hat, and his shaggy hair was tucked behind his ears; there were deep lines around his eyes that attested to days in the sun. He raised the tumbler, and I clinked my wineglass against his.
â
A votre santé
, Victoria.â He drew out all four syllables of my name in a low drawl, Vic-TOW-ree-uh, lingering over the second and softening on the last. It was an accent one didnât hear much in Jersey, and I couldnât help smiling.
âYouâre a long way from home, Calvin Lockhart.â
He nodded, still staring at the bar. âThat I am,
cher
.â
âYup, between that Saints cap you wear and that
faux
French you just droppedâwhich, by the way, we Northern girls donât find so endearingââ
âIâll remember that.â He flashed me a grin that
was
pretty endearing, though.
âSo are you from New Orleans originally?â
He winced. âGirl, donât ever say âOr-LEENS.â You sound like a straight-up tourist. I grew up in Baton Rouge, but went to the city when I was eighteen. You ever been?â
âAre you kidding? I love that place. The food, the music, just the feel of it.â I leaned my chin on my hand, dreamy-eyed as I remembered my trip there. âI went once after college and fell head over heels for that place.â I grinned at him. âThat city is like a bad boy you canât resistâyou know heâs all wrong for you, and youâll
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