Eat, Drink, and Be Buried Read online




  DON'T MISS THESE DELICIOUS CULINARY MYSTERIES BY PETER KING

  THE GOURMET DETECTIVE

  SPICED TO DEATH

  DYING ON THE VINE

  DEATH AL DENTE

  A HEALTHY PLACE TO DIE

  AVAILABLE FROM ST. MARTIN'S/MINOTAUR PAPERBACKS!

  AND TURN TO THE BACK OF THIS BOOK FOR AN EXCERPT FROM THE NEXT GOURMET DETECTIVE MYSTERY

  ROUX THE DAY

  AVAILABLE IN HARDCOVER FROM ST. MARTIN'S MINOTAUR!

  ST. MARTIN'S

  MINOTAUR

  MYSTERIES

  Mouth-watering Reviews for Peter King's Culinary Mysteries

  DYING ON THE VINE

  "The highlights here ... are a series of lovingly described meals, paired with name-brand vintages or surprisingly good local wines."

  - Kirkus Reviews

  "King spins another light mystery treat."

  - Publishers Weekly

  "Salivating scenes of Provence's superb food, coupled with lore about truffles, wine, and aristocracy, add sustenance to Dying on the Vine."

  - Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel

  DEATH AL DENTE

  "Wines and meals to die for."

  - Kirkus Reviews

  THE GOURMET DETECTIVE

  "Leads readers on a cook's tour of haute cuisine, replete with tantalizing descriptions of food and its preparation, robust wit and an appropriately culinary murder."

  - Publishers Weekly

  Don't Miss these Tasty Culinary Mysteries by Peter King

  The Gourmet Detective

  Spiced to Death

  Dying on the Vine

  Death Al Dente

  A Healthy Place to Die

  Available from St. Martin's / Minotaur Paperbacks

  Peter King

  Eat, Drink and Be Buried

  A Gourmet Detective Mystery

  CHAPTER ONE

  The two eyed one another, warily, like tigers before a fight. Silence hung heavily all around them, disturbed only by a faint metallic clink. The hushed ambiance bristled with bloodthirsty anticipation, prickling like sweat on a muggy day.

  There was no movement except for the flags, dazzling in scarlet, black, and gold. They whipped languidly against their posts.

  The first sound came like trumpets, shrill and clear, as sharply authoritative as barked parade ground orders. The two stirred, getting positioned, oriented, lining up like sharpshooters on a target.

  The quiet that followed was like a great blanket of snow, then the trumpet notes slashed out again but sounding different this time. The two erupted into motion.

  Slowly at first, then gaining momentum, they raced toward each other, faster and faster, hurtling forward like projectiles.

  Sound swelled up from every corner now. Voices urged on the two, strident and screeching, many infused with a lust for blood. Every eye was intent on the combatants, gleaming with expectancy. Fists shook in encouragement, arms waved wildly.

  The ground began to shake and the roar of the crowd swelled. The clanking and snorting could hardly be heard over the noise of the spectators. The combatants rushed toward each other at dazzling speed, metal juggernauts on a collision course that could end only in death and disaster.

  Harlington Castle had begun to stage its "Medieval Days" about ten years earlier. First it had been banquets, then the jousts and the tournaments were added and were an immediate success. The accouterments of the Middle Ages followed-the fairs, the animals, the village with its glassblowers and blacksmiths, its potters and weavers, the wandering minstrels, the jugglers and stilt walkers, the midgets and the dwarfs.

  The castle itself was the last feature to be brought from the sixteenth century to the twenty-first century. The music room rang once more with the notes of the clavichord and the cembalo, the harp and the cremona. The kitchens were equipped with every modern device, but the appearance of older times was maintained. As for the meals the kitchens produced ... that was where I came in.

  I am a food-finder. I locate hard-to-find food ingredients, I track down rare herbs and spices, and seek out substitutes for foods that have become expensive or unobtainable. A newspaper columnist wrote an article on me and dubbed me "The Gourmet Detective." The only detecting I did was in the kitchen, the herb garden, and the delicatessen-at least, that was how it was supposed to be. The fabric of life is inextricably interwoven with food and cooking, however, and now and then I would find myself embroiled in cases that led to theft, trickery, and even murder.

  Another of my activities which I particularly enjoy is that I am often called upon to advise on meals to suit special occasions. In this case, the occasion was the Middle Ages. Initially, Harlington Castle had served fairly simple meals that reflected the comparatively simple times. Roast baron of beef, roast chicken, potatoes, and everyday vegetables like peas and carrots had comprised the bill of fare.

  A change had to be made when portions of the castle were restored to provide accommodation. In many European countries, old manorhouses, monasteries, and abbeys had been converted into pleasant hotels that still had the feeling of tradition and a few crumbling walls for confirming effect. Some of these had become havens of good food and sophisticated cooking.

  Harlington Castle now provided charming and spacious rooms furnished with antiques, tapestries, and carpets, but still incorporating every modern convenience. Such accommodation, they decided, required food of a comparative quality, and they determined to offer the same quality in the banquet room as they did in the castle dining room.

  So the chicken and the beef had to go, in their more primitive forms anyway. I had been called upon to review the menu and strike the right compromise between tasty, sophisticated food and medieval dishes. I had had the same kind of commission at other castles and stately homes. It was an enjoyable way of spending a few days in an unusual environment while being paid for it at the same time.

  I had arrived here at the castle in the late afternoon, and after dinner, I had been invited to watch the jousting tournament. It was an exciting spectacle. The brilliant colored flags were now being stirred by some internal mechanism and fluttered bravely as if in a stiff breeze. The magnificent horses snorted and stamped, shaking their gaily decorated manes with pride.

  The crowd was thoroughly into the whole thing, shouting and yelling, on their feet as the knights closed in, lances leveled, the horses' hooves thundering and kicking up clods of earth. The lance of the Black Knight-he was the combatant receiving all the boos-missed the helmet of Sir Harry Mountmarchant by inches as the two roared by each other. Sir Harry's lance hit a glancing blow on the side of his opponent's breast armor and the crowd bellowed approval.

  The perfectly trained mounts skidded to a standstill, haunches down, hooves churning deep furrows-must be a lot of work for gardeners here, I thought. They turned and stood for a moment, puffing clouds of steam (how did they do that? I wondered). Sir Harry flipped up his visor and looked around for support. It was unnecessary: the crowd was with him one hundred percent. The Black Knight jabbed his lance into the air furiously and the crowd jeered. I presumed that was the medieval equivalent of the digital gesture of derision, deplorably popular in modern sport.

  The trumpets chopped the air, clean, sweet sounds calming the crowd's frenzy and alerting the jousting knights into readiness. The horses, superb actors and beautifully rehearsed, pawed the ground, dipped their plumed manes as if eager to engage the enemy, then stood motionless, waiting for the signal.

  It was only seconds but it apparently seemed like minutes to the hushed crowd. Just as impatience was about to set in, the trumpets blared, and amid a roar from the assembly, the two riders rocketed their steeds into action. Again, the metallic figures raced at
each other and this time both scored hits. Sir Harry half-fell from his saddle; the crowd "ooh'd" loudly until he regained his position with a lithe swing.

  Twice more, the spectacle was repeated, until with a shivering crash, Sir Harry hit the Black Knight full on the chest armor and knocked him off his steed. It trotted away and the Black Knight climbed unsteadily to his feet. Cheers of approval went up as the valiant Sir Harry-no man to take advantage of an unhorsed opponent-slid from his saddle and approached the Black Knight, drawing his long broadsword.

  The Black Knight looked as if he had recovered now. He drew his own weapon and the two huge swords clashed, with a noise that was amplified electronically amid a shower of glittering sparks, probably generated chemically.

  Sir Harry Mountmarchant took a mighty swing, but his opponent ducked and moved, looking for an opportunity. He feinted from the right, then swung backhanded, and a groan of agony came from Sir Harry, cleverly orchestrated by the loudspeakers. He recovered quickly, though, and fought on bravely.

  The end came when the Black Knight started a side blow which he switched to an overhead slash. It bounced off Sir Harry's big shoulder guard, whereupon the black-clad villain treacherously pulled a hidden dagger from his belt and attempted to plunge it into Sir Harry's midriff.

  This was a move highly unpopular with the partisan crowd, but their fears were unfounded. Sir Harry clamped a hand firmly on the hand holding the blade, pushed the other back, then aimed a prodigious swing of his broadsword at the other's neck.

  The clash of metal on metal rang throughout the arena. The Black Knight was rooted to the spot and Sir Harry's blow was powerful and unerring. A crunching, skin-tingling sound could be heard and the shouts from the crowd faded almost instantly as the glittering blade severed the neck of the helmet completely.

  Moans of horror trickled into the air and hundreds of eyes watched in helpless fascination. The helmet bounced on the grass and rolled away, leaving a trail of blood behind it.

  It fmally came to rest upside down, exposing a grisly, gory tangle of flesh that still dripped, running over the black metal and soaking into the soil.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Its the crowd watched in stunned horror, four pages ran out, costumed in yellow jackets with blue piped sleeves, baggy blue pants, and ankle boots. They brought a stretcher, loaded the body onto it, and were about to trot away from the arena when one of them pointed to the helmet lying there, still oozing blood. Another page ran back, retrieved it, and stood it on the chest of the deceased. They left the field hurriedly.

  Before they had departed, I had already left my seat and gone to the large tent with the scarlet, gold, and black colors of the Harlington family flying over it. One section of it was partitioned off and the pages were removing the body from the stretcher and placing it facedown on a wooden cot. A man came hurrying in. I presumed he was a doctor.

  As he approached the body, I witnessed one of the modern improvements to the suit of armor. It had probably taken two or three hours to get a knight of old into, and out of, his armor. But technology had progressed and fitted several quick release clips down the center of the back. The doctor snapped these open quickly and the metal suit opened up like a clamshell, coming apart in two halves.

  I was not prepared for what happened next and received one of the biggest shocks of my life as a tiny figure came to life, rolled sideways out of the armor suit, and leaped out. I leaped too, and he saw me and laughed.

  He was a dwarf, not much over four feet high, and the face was that of a fifty-year-old man. He was as agile as a circus performer and I realized that was exactly what he was.

  "Scared you, didn't I?" he chuckled in a voice like that of a character in an animated cartoon. "Thought Sir Harry had knocked my bloody head off, didn't you?"

  I was recovering slowly. "Your head was bloody," I conceded. "Bloody, convincing, and bloody convincing. How many times a day do you have it knocked off?"

  He chuckled in a fair imitation of Donald Duck. "Only once most days, but when Henrik has been on the bottle, I have to take his fall too. He's the other dwarf around here," he added contemptuously. "We've got a few midgets but they can't do this kind of work."

  He had powerful shoulders for his height and strong arms that were normal length. His head too was normal, while the rest of him was undersized. He had the face of a person who has endured some very hard times. It was lined and his skin was coarse. His eyes glittered with, well, perhaps not hatred of the world but certainly contempt for it. "I'm Eddie," he said. He sat on the edge of the cot and pulled off his boots. He wore only a gray singlet and gray pants.

  "I thought that was a doctor come to confirm that you were dead." I had just noticed that the man had left the tent after releasing the dwarf from his metal container.

  "Don McCartney, Entertainments Director. Everybody gets to do all kinds of jobs in this show."

  "Must be hot in that suit," I cormniserated.

  "Midsummer it's like an oven in there. Not too bad today." He gave me a glare of suspicion. "Who are you? Don't allow strangers back here during a performance."

  "I advise on foods. I set up the menus when this place first started and now the Harlingtons want them changed, bit more medieval."

  He grunted, no longer interested.

  "How do you see inside there?" I asked him.

  "A visor in the chest, see?" He demonstrated, opening it. I fingered the suit. "It looks so heavy, yet it's so light."

  "Heavy enough when you're in it. Made of aluminum; they treat it to look like steel."

  "It's evidently strong enough to resist a lance hitting it at the combined speed of two horses-and that must be nearly a hundred miles an hour. A wonder it doesn't go right through you."

  He grinned, pleased to be able to expose a few secrets. "The tip is rubber and the lances are sprung."

  "Sprung?"

  "Yes, there's a spring inside them that cushions the shock. The lance squeezes into itself, like one of the old telescopes. You don't notice that in all the excitement."

  "It's exciting all right. You had that crowd breathless."

  He smiled proudly. "We put on a good show. Best in the country, lots say."

  "Even the helmet, with what I thought was your head inside it, rolled away very convincingly. Ended up with the gory end exposed, too."

  "Helmet's weighted at the top to make it do that. Leave nothing to chance, that's our motto."

  The man I had thought to be a doctor came back into the tent. "Don McCartney," he said. "I know who you are. Saw you when you arrived yesterday. Sorry I had to rush out just now but we had a problem with one of the horses."

  "Horses get better attention than we do," grumbled Eddie, but he was apparently not as callous in that direction as he pretended as he went on, "Not Primrose, is it?"

  "She's his favorite," grinned McCartney.

  "No she's not," Eddie retorted hotly. "She's the only horse that doesn't step on me when Sir Harry knocks me off."

  "None of them step on you. You're too small."

  Eddie snorted, made a mock fist at McCartney, and swaggered out. McCartney watched him go. He was late middle-aged, with the bearing of a military man.

  "Have to take care of the horses too, do you?" I asked.

  "I spent twenty-five years in the Guards, in the cavalry," he said, confirming my guess. "So I know a bit about horses. Primrose had a limp when she came off after this show but she's okay. Just a momentary strain. Happens often."

  He had a strong face and a firm jaw. "Must be an interesting job," I said to draw him out more.

  "When I was with the Guards, we had a photographic unit attached to us for a while. We made some training films, couple of recruiting films too. When the film studio at Elmtree wanted to use a couple of our squadrons, I got assigned to liaison.

  "We worked out a few stunts, you know the kind of thingmen shot by arrows, falling off horses. The horses needed training as much as the men. When I retired, I heard abou
t a job going here. Did some stunt work at first, then got promoted to this."

  "You do a fine job," I said. "I was convinced that the Black Knight would need his head sewed on for tomorrow's performance."

  "Took us a while to work out that trick." McCartney smiled.

  "You must get the occasional fainter in the crowd when that head rolls."

  "Very occasional-and not only women." He picked up the discarded portions of the suit of armor and hung them on a wall rack. "Haven't been able to teach those two dwarfs to keep the dressing room tidy," he complained. Turning to me, he asked, "Going to be around long?"

  `Just a few days. I'm working on revising the menus, as you know. We're going to start introducing some of the new dishes right away, then add a few more. It may mean working with some new suppliers in the case of foods you haven't served before. Might take a little time to get them acquainted with exactly what we want. We'll be putting on some medieval banquets for special events. Then there's the kitchens, they'll be called on to cook some dishes that are new to them."

  "Not going to get too revolutionary, are you?" he asked, smiling.

  "Oh, no. There won't be any elephant ears or larks' tongues."

  From another part of the tent, voices were being raised. I saw McCartney frown. The voices subsided. "That's good to hear," he continued. "The customers have enjoyed the food, although I know the committee has decided that we could bring in more people if we offered some interesting old foods, well, new foods which at the same time were-you know what I mean-traditional."

  "That's right. Previously, the food was different but not excitingly so. Now we want to really get people interested in eating what people ate in the Middle Ages. But we're bringing it up to date by making use of modern knowledge of tastes and flavors."

  "I suppose that's what Miss Felicity had in mind when she started the Plantation," McCartney said.