Latte Trouble
A minute later, his friend collapsed, too.”
    “Were they eating? Drinking?”
    Tucker spoke up. “They shared a latte.”
    Her piercing stare shifted from me to Tucker. “A latte? What kind?”
    “Caramel-chocolate,” Tucker replied. “That’s mostly what we’re serving at this party.”
    “What’s in this latte?”
    Tucker shrugged. “Espresso. Steamed milk. Caramel-chocolate syrup. Whipped cream. And a chocolate-covered coffee bean on top.”
    Detective Starkey paused rather meaningfully. “How about Amaretto?”
    “Amaretto?” replied Tucker. “In a caramel-chocolate latte? No, Detective, no Amaretto.”
    “And you’re sure about that, Mr…?”
    “Burton. Tucker Burton. And, of course I’m sure. I made that latte myself.”
    A shout interrupted us. “The medical examiner’s here, Detective.” It was Officer Langley calling over from his post at the door. Two more uniformed officers had arrived as well.
    “I’m busy here, Officer. The M.E. knows his job. Tell him to do it,” Starkey replied without shifting her gaze from Tucker. Then she reached out and put her hand on Tuck’s shoulder. “And do you know who brought Mr. Flatt his beverage, Tucker Burton?”
    Wait a minute, I thought. What’s happening here? Starkey’s intense gaze was holding Tucker like a hunter drawing a bead on an unsuspecting deer. “Tucker, don’t answer that!” I blurted out. But it had already overlapped with his—
    “I did. I brought it.”
    “Ms. Cosi, I’m not speaking with you at the moment.”
    The detective’s words were a little too sharp, a little too loud. I didn’t care. Tucker was family, and I wasn’t going to watch him railroaded. I stepped up to the woman. “Tucker isn’t obligated to answer anything.”
    At nearly six feet, the chic Detective Starkey towered over me like an imposing stiletto, but I didn’t care. My façade and vocabulary, not to mention my current address, may have improved as much as hers since my own working-class childhood, but the old ways died hard—and I’d bet a thousand goomba dollars my old neighborhood was ten times tougher than hers.
    “He’s my employee,” I knocked the woman’s hand from Tucker’s body. “And I’m the one responsible for the drinks served here.”
    Detective Starkey reacted but not in the way I’d expected. One blond eyebrow arched and she studied me with the detached interest of Mr. Spock examining a strange new life form.
    “Clare, it’s okay,” said Tucker. “I’ll answer your questions, Detective. I’ve got nothing to hide.”
    “Did Mr. Flatt say anything to you when you served him the latte?” asked Starkey, dispassionately resuming the interrogation as if I’d never existed. “Did he complain about the taste, perhaps?”
    I crossed my arms and made unhappy groaning noises. Tucker ignored me. “No, detective, Ricky didn’t complain about the latte. And I didn’t serve the latte to him, Ricky took it off my tray.”
    Starkey’s blond eyebrow arched again. “Ricky? That’s the victim’s first name? So you knew Mr. Flatt?”
    Tucker sighed. His narrow shoulders seemed to sag inward. “I…I knew Ricky.”
    “Under what circumstance did—”
    “Rachel!” Detective Hutawa keened from across the room. “The doc wants to speak with us, pronto.”
    Detective Starkey flinched. What she probably wanted to do was curse a blue streak. Instead, she held up an index finger to Tucker. “I’ll be right back,” she promised. “And, Ms. Cosi? Do me a favor.”
    My arms were still tightly crossed. “What?”
    “Kill that damn music.”
    I watched the woman saunter across the room, then go into a huddle with her partner and another man in khaki pants and a blue blazer. Beyond them I spied Matteo, with Breanne Summour stuck to his side like an expensively dressed carbuncle. I stepped to the end of the counter and slammed the speaker system’s off switch. Everyone looked up as the pulsing electronica pounded its last beat

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