I also wondered if it was possible Dolce had seen MarySue without her shoes. If so, why hadn’t she mentioned it to me before? Was I really the only one in the world who’d seen both pairs of shoes? If so, it was too bad I couldn’t tell the difference between them. Was that a testimony to the skill of Harrington Harris?
When I got home, I put in a call to Detective Wall. How could I not? I had to know what happened. Didn’t I deserve to know what had happened? After all I’d been through. Of course he didn’t answer, so I left a message asking for a follow-up. I hoped he wouldn’t give me the official line about how this was none of my business.
He didn’t call me back that night, and I had to go to work the next day. After the fashion show, it seemed the energy had been sucked out of the shop. The customers who’d been there last night were nowhere to be seen. I didn’t blame them. If I hadn’t had to work, I’d be home too, sipping lemonade on my patio and watching the sailboats bobbing in the Bay. And getting lost in a vampire novel, which was my favorite way of forgetting my troubles, which were minor compared to being bitten by a vampire and turning into one. Although Nick’s aunt seemed to do all right posing as a vampire. She had a good job and seemed to lead an interesting life.
By the end of the day I’d refreshed all the outfits we’d worn in the fashion show the night before and hung them back on hangers. I didn’t notice any uptick in sales thanks to the fashion show; in fact, there was a decided slump, but you never know what the future might bring. I still hadn’t heard from Jack Wall, and Dolce hadn’t heard from Harrington or Patricia even though she’d tried repeatedly to call them. We speculated that they were both locked up or they were out on bail or it was a big mistake and Jack Wall apologized profusely and gave them complimentary tickets to the Policeman’s Ball.
“Any plans for tonight?” Dolce asked me as I got ready to leave at five. Since there was no one in the shop but us, I knew she wouldn’t ask me to stay late, and I didn’t see how I could face another minute pretending all was well.
“No, actually not. I have a date to go to Alcatraz tomorrow with Dr. Jonathan. But tonight it’s just me and some reruns of
She nodded as if she felt terrible that someone my age would have to spend Saturday night watching a dated Australian soap opera where the sexy doctors flirt and cure patients at the same time. Maybe she thought I hoped it would give me an insight into the life of sexy Dr. Jonathan Rhodes.
As for Dolce, she’d acted more or less normal today, but I was sure she was just as tired as she looked. “What about you?” I asked.
“I’m going to do a little bookkeeping in my office. I’ve had to let our accountant go. No reason I can’t handle it myself. It’s not like we’re taking in thousands every day.”
I frowned. “Business is down, isn’t it?” I asked.
She nodded sadly. “Don’t worry about it,” she told me. “We’ll pull out of it. On second thought, I might just go to bed and not get up until Monday. I’ll have the Sunday papers delivered along with Chinese food from the Grand Palace.”
“Good for you,” I said. “You deserve to be pampered after what you’ve been through.”
“What we’ve all been through,” she said with a weak smile. “I wish I’d never seen those silver shoes.”
Puzzled, I said, “But you didn’t.”
“I mean I wish I’d never heard of them. Never ordered them, never sent you to pick them up.”
“If I hadn’t, MarySue would be alive today,” I mused.
“Are you sure she isn’t?” Dolce said, her gaze somewhere far away. “There are times when I feel her presence, hear her voice saying, ‘I have to have those shoes.’ ”
As for me, I could almost hear Dolce’s voice saying she’d get the shoes back . . . “If I have to hunt her down.” Is that what she did? Is that why she went to the Benefit?
“Get some rest,” I told her, and then I hurried down the front steps without a backward glance. I had planned on going straight home to rest and recuperate, but an evening at home suddenly seemed dull and boring.
I walked down the street. The bars were filling up with people my age. The restaurants had lines waiting outside. I could stop in for a drink or dinner. But the usual activities of swinging singles, like flirting and hooking up, didn’t hold much attraction. Then I remembered Detective Wall said he served dinner to the homeless at Saint Anthony’s Dining Room on Saturday nights.
I could have taken the bus, but when a cab pulled up in front of a popular hangout and some of the beautiful people got out, I got in and gave the name of the famous church in the Tenderloin, one of San Francisco’s worst neighborhoods. I’d avoided the area since I arrived in town thanks to Dolce’s warnings that it was full of drug dealers, addicts, prostitutes and other lowlifes, but it was time to step out of my comfort zone and see how people who didn’t wear Gucci, Pucci or Ralph Lauren lived.
Thirteen
Saint Anthony’s was more than a church. It was a school, a job training center, a nursery, a homeless shelter, a health care facility and a cafeteria. I saw the line for the cafeteria snaking around the block the minute I got out of the cab. I went to a side entrance and told a woman at the door I was there to volunteer.
“Are you with the Sons of Norway Lodge contingent?”
“Are they serving dinner?” I asked.
She gave me a funny look as if to say, “You don’t look the least bit Nordic, and if you didn’t know they were serving dinner, then you probably aren’t with them.”
“I mean I wasn’t sure if it was lunch or dinner. Actually I’m volunteering with the police department.”
She studied a list in her hand.
“Detective Jack Wall,” I said. “He should be here.”
“Is he expecting you?” she asked.
“He always needs help,” I said. That much was true. Whether I could help him or he could help me remained to be seen. “In any case, I’m a whiz at scooping mashed potatoes.” Surely mashed potatoes would be on the menu, wouldn’t they? At least I hoped so.
“Okay,” she said finally. “Pick up your apron in the closet and your hairnet.”
“Got it,” I said and hurried by before she could stop me. By following another woman, I found the closet and an apron and a hairnet. Now all I needed was to find Detective Wall. To say that he was surprised to see me behind the steam table was putting it mildly. Still he was not one to display his emotions, so he just nodded when I squeezed in between him and a large burly fellow whose name tag said “Tim” and who seemed to be in charge of mixed vegetables.
“Are you new?” Tim asked with a friendly smile.
“First time tonight,” I said, tying my apron around my waist. “I hope I won’t spill anything.”
“What are you doing here?” Jack Wall muttered under his breath. “What’s in it for you?”
“Why does anyone volunteer? I came to help out. Is that so hard to believe? That I’d do something useful besides dress rich women. I could ask you the same thing. Is this part of your job?” I took a tray and heaped a pile of potatoes on it. I smiled at the woman across the counter, and she thanked me.
“I like to keep an eye on my parolees,” he said under his breath.
“Point them out. I’ll give them an extra scoop,” I said.
“I thought I told you not to meddle in official business.”
“I’m not. I’m simply . . .”
“You’re not simply anything.”
I bit my lip. How could I answer that? “Sorry,” I muttered. “I’ve been trying to get in touch with you.”
“Not now,” he said.
I wanted to show him I was not only patient but also sincere about doing a good job, whether selling women’s clothes and accessories or feeding the hungry, so I paid attention to the potatoes and I even went back to the kitchen to refill the tray when we ran out. Everyone in the kitchen was friendly, and the customers, if you could call them that, were so grateful I considered signing up for a weekly slot. I asked myself if it had anything to do with the proximity of the sexy cop working next to me, but I couldn’t be sure of my motives. Not until this Jensen case was over. Then maybe I’d be able to think clearly and I’d have no reason to see Jack Wall unless one of us wanted to make an effort and admit it had nothing to do with either of our jobs.
“You can’t be surprised I want to talk to you,” I said when there was a brief break in the line of people