CHAPTER 12
Amy padded out of Roni’s bedroom and glanced at the kitchen clock. Twelve-thirty in the afternoon. Troy and James were both gone, and she was starved. She opened the fridge.
Ketchup. She loved ketchup. Especially Pathmark brand, which was pleasantly sweet. She pulled out the bottle and rooted around in the cabinets. Ritz crackers. A little stale, but no mold. She assembled a cracker/ketchup sandwich and ate, washing it down with splashes of water from her cupped hands held under the tap.
Okay, now that she’d eaten, she could think about what an idiot she’d been last night. She closed her eyes and tried to center herself.
What have I done?
James had ambushed her. He had caught her by surprise. He looked so good down on the sidewalk, looking up at her. So she had decided—idiot, idiot, idiot— they could just screw around. Keep it light. She wouldn’t even give him time to talk. She’d seduce him, get him out of her system, and then move on.
But then he ruined everything.
Why’d he have to ruin everything?
When he stopped, it was like death.
It was like heaven .
Gah! She shoved more crackers into her mouth. Drank more water out of her cupped hands. Then sat at the kitchen table and let her forehead fall to its cool surface.
Maddie led me here to fall in love with James . Amy had suspected it before, but she was sure of it after last night. She had seen people try to resist their soul mates, and it was always like this. They let down their guard for a split second, and they were lost. Devoured. In Romany, the language of the Gypsies, I love you literally meant “I eat you.” And this man had swallowed her whole. Stupid, beautiful chef, she was missing him already.
“Oprah, what am I going to do?”
“Buy the man a ring?” Oprah nibbled at the corner of a cracker, then put it down. “Then let him teach you to cook. Forget Maddie. It’s all settled!”
“Be serious, please!” Amy knocked her head against the table, but it didn’t work. She couldn’t shake the warmth of James out of her system.
“You’re imagining things. You have no proof that Maddie has anything to do with this. You have no proof that he’s your One True Love.”
“Except for the way I feel. I’ve got to find Roni.”
“Then quit stuffing your face and lolling around feeling sorry for yourself and get to work!”
Right. No time to think about that man’s hands on her hips. The look in his eyes as he devoured her. The intense tenderness when he told her no.
No one ever said no to her.
Last night, she had laid with him for hours, unable to sleep, her head on his chest, listening to him breathe deep and even. It felt so good to be held by a man like James. A man who wasn’t a jerk. A man she wasn’t even conning.
Which is why she panicked and fled to Roni’s bedroom. Terrified of what she had felt in his arms. Leave first, before he can leave you.
She had never felt so at peace with a man.
Which is why I have to find Roni, get Maddie, and get the hell out of here .
Oh, please don’t let James be my One True Love. If he was, and she fell, Gypsy lore said Maddie would be forbidden to her forever. She had to think of Natasha. Think of Magda. She had to think of herself and her future.
An hour later, Amy pushed through the doors of the dusty pawnshop. The store was empty but was so cluttered that Amy had to turn sideways to move down the narrow alley to the counter. A full set of leather Gucci luggage brushed her legs. Luggage. Now there was something that no self-respecting Gypsy would ever carry. Wear what you need on your back, then steal the rest when you arrive.
“Hello? Anybody home?” Amy leaned over the counter.
Footsteps, then a man. Potbelly. Bald spot. Whiff of Budweiser cologne.
In a word, perfect.
He looked her over lazily. “Help ya?”
Amy could tell from his sleepy blue eyes that she had him at hello. No one better for info than a horny middle-aged male. It almost wasn’t fair.
A memory of James rose in her mind, his eyes on hers.
Oh, for crying out loud. I’m not flirting; I’m conducting business, she chided herself, mortified that she felt responsibility toward James.
“I’m looking for gold,” she said, fingering the feathers on an Indian headdress hanging over the cash register. The man didn’t need to know she was really looking for the town’s most desperate Gypsies so she could get a lead on Roni. And the most desperate Gypsies always came to pawnshops—standard operating procedure from the Gypsy survival manual. The closest shop to Roni’s house would mark the beginning of her trail.
Amy looked around at the amazing display of electric guitars. Musicians were even worse at keeping their money than Gypsies. Too bad there was no musician survival guide.
The man behind the counter hesitated, sucking his lips to his teeth with an annoying chirping sound.
Amy leaned forward to study the digital cameras and elaborately carved knives in the counter display case. A little more forward. An inch more. Perfect.
The man gaped into her cleavage.
Amy gave him her best bedroom-slow smile and nodded.
He rushed to unlock the display case and fished out a tray of bling-bling chains and diamond rings.
Amy barely glanced at it. “I was looking for something a little more exotic.” She looked at him as if he, with his fringe of graying-yellowed hair and wet, pale eyes, was the most exotic hunk of man she’d ever laid eyes on. “What’s your name?” she asked.
“Um.”
In his mind, he was already making love to her. She urged him on with her eyes. That’s right. Right there. I like it like that, you big strong man. “Bubba? Buddy?”
“Oh. What? No. Um. Dave.”
“Davey, I want to see jewelry with a woman’s head in profile. Or anything with a horseshoe that has the ends pointing up. I want a piece that has raised flowers or filigree. Do you know what that is, Davey? Filigree?”
“Sure. Um—”
“It’s twisted metal, honey. Metal that winds around and around and around.” She demonstrated by taking his hand and drawing the twist on his palm with one bright red fingernail. She described as many Gypsy motifs as she could think of until she could see the sweat rise on his palm. Bingo.
It’s not cheating on James because this is fake. It’s a means to an end. It’s okay. But then why did her stomach feel so constricted?
“I have something, but I can’t—that is, I promised—” Davey stumbled.
“Who did you promise, sweetie?” Amy had to use every ounce of her energy not to vault over the counter and throttle the guy. “Here’s the thing, darling. I don’t want the jewelry.”
“No?”
I want you, you gorgeous specimen of pure testosterone , she said with her eyes. With her mouth she said, “I want to know, if you have a piece like that, who it belongs to, and if she said anything about when she was coming back or where she was going.”
“Um.”
Amy sighed. This was getting tiresome.
Dave looked doubtful but willing to be persuaded. No Gypsy wanted to give up their jewelry; that brought on the worst rotten luck. Been there. Done that. So whoever had brought in whatever it was Davey didn’t want to give up had made him promise to try to hold on to it. Good. A desperate Gypsy was a Gypsy Amy could work with.
“My promise is golden if I seal it with this.” Amy reached over the counter and grabbed poor Davey by the scruff of his shirt.
“I have a gun—” he began.
She winked. “I bet you do, big boy. I bet it’s a big one.” She was about to press her lips to his, when she thought of James. Something stirred in her gut. Guilt? Who cared if she kissed this slob for info? Certainly not James. Plus, she didn’t owe him a thing.
And yet.
She pulled Davey closer. She could see the individual beads of sweat drip down his forehead. Kiss the fool and get this done.
But she couldn’t.
Oh, hell .
She let Davey go. “Tell me who gave you this jewelry,” she said angrily. Her anger was completely at herself for wimping out because of James, but Davey didn’t know that. He turned white, then red, then started to talk.
Two minutes later, she left the store with an address and directions scribbled on her palm. Now she just had to find this Madame Prizzo who had come in with Roni to sell Davey the jewelry.
She’d know everything she needed to know about Roni by the end of the day.
The old Gypsy who had helped Roni pawn the gold, Madame Prizzo, lived in a trailer wedged under the Schuylkill expressway just outside of Philadelphia, exit 338. Follow the abandoned R6 train tracks; veer off past the cemetery, down the abandoned streambed and to the river.
What a mess. And that wasn’t just the trailer. Madame Prizzo must have been eighty, and she looked every day of it and then some.
“Why are you looking for Roni, my child?” the old woman cooed. She collected skulls, and they covered every surface. Birds, squirrels, dogs . . . humans? Yep, in the corner, its dome shiny as if it’d been rubbed repeatedly for good luck.
Amy shivered and focused on a tiny bird skull. Its bones were like spiderwebs. “She’s got something that belongs to me. I want it back.”
“Ah . . .” Madame Prizzo closed her eyes and touched her fingers to her temples.
Oh, give me a break. Did this woman really think Amy would fall for pretend-Gypsy hocus-pocus?
“She has something you desire,” the old woman sang.
No shit. Amy had to get to Les Fleurs to chop, a task she was getting disturbingly fond of. Was James right? She could learn the restaurant biz? “Roni has a spirit-voice that used to belong to me.”
Madame Prizzo’s eyes went wide.
Good. The woman seemed genuinely surprised. Amy waited.
“I don’t know where Roni is, but the spirit-voice I can find.” She held out a shaking hand holding a smudged business card: MADAME ALEXANDRIA PRIZZO, CHANNELER. UNDER I-76, EXIT 338. FOLLOW THE SIGNS. FOLLOW YOUR SOUL.
Could this old hag really channel Maddie? Now, there was an intriguing thought.
Amy studied the card. Madame Alexandria Prizzo . This woman was one of the most renowned channelers on the East Coast. Amy tried to keep her face neutral as she took in the new possibilities opening before her. If she talked to Maddie, maybe she wouldn’t have to find Roni. Hope rose in Amy’s gut, then fell. Maddie had never said a word that wasn’t a name.
Except once, unforgettably, when she said, “Good-bye.”
Why would Maddie start talking now, even to Madame Alexandria Prizzo?
But what if she did? Amy carefully put down the bird skull. The bones that hinged the beak blew in the breeze of the small movement, as if the bones themselves could still fly. “Okay. Let’s do it.”
“Cash. One thousand dollars.”
Amy expressed proper shock and indignation, although she wasn’t really in the mood to bargain.
“Okay. For you”—Madame Prizzo took Amy’s hand—“five hundred.”
“I don’t have it on me.” Amy had left her stash of tips at Roni’s, taped under the silverware drawer. It wasn’t even close to five hundred dollars. “You get me Maddie now, I’ll bring the cash tonight.” To come up with the money, she’d have to resteal the jade flower she had put back after chopping carrots with James.
The old woman smiled. She had four brown teeth interspersed between the yellow ones. “You bring the cash, then I’ll get you your precious voice. Friday. Midnight. We do it then.”
Amy rolled her eyes at the notion of midnight. Imbuing the proceedings with details like midnight was straight out of the con-a-gadje handbook. Plus, making her wait until Friday was pure con. The passage of time heightened the suspense and the desire to know. She’d raise the price back up to a grand when Amy showed up on Friday.
Amy couldn’t stand the charade another moment. “You don’t have to play Gypsy with me,” Amy said. She pulled out her pendant and flashed it at Madame Prizzo. “Let’s do it now. I’m good for it.”
Madame Prizzo studied the pendant while Amy enjoyed the shock on the old woman’s face.
Then it was Amy’s turn to be shocked when the old woman reached into her mouth and, with an effortless click, pulled out her fake teeth to reveal a gorgeous set of pearly, bleached-white teeth that smiled up at Amy. “Why didn’t you say you were Rom in the first place?” Her voice had lost most of its rasp, although it was still rough from cigarettes. She strode across the trailer, discarding padding as she went—her enormous heaving bosom, her butt pads, her hump.
By the time she had reached the opposite side of the trailer to flick on the overhead lights, Madame Prizzo was the paragon of vigor and health. “Call me Alex.” She moved from surface to surface, blowing out candles. “When Davey called and said he sent you, he didn’t mention you were Rom. Probably had no clue.”
“By the time I left Davey, I don’t think he knew who he was himself,” Amy bragged.
Madame Prizzo nodded in approval as she unwrapped layers of skirts to expose a pair of tight gym leggings. She shrugged out of her black polyester grandma blouse to reveal a body-hugging white athletic jersey. The last thing to go was the gray wig, which Madame Prizzo—Alex—arranged carefully on the human skull. The stylish, peroxide-blond buzz cut made the transformation from hag-Gypsy to lunch-at-the-club Grandma Alex almost complete. “I play tennis this afternoon with the girls. In fact, I ought to be on my way there now. We’re getting Chinese takeout after. Lunch special from Susanna Foo. Do you play doubles? What did you say your name was?” She was bending over the sink, washing off her stage makeup.
“Amy Burns. From Baltimore.” She waited for her name to register, but apparently Madame Prizzo had never heard of her. Guess she didn’t watch Oprah . She shook off her disappointment. “The channeling,” she reminded Madame Prizzo.
The older woman pulled her BlackBerry out of a Coach purse that had been stashed under the sink and pushed a few buttons. “I have twenty minutes till we lose the court. No time now. Come back tonight. Why don’t you meet me at my condo downtown? I have a place with a view of Rittenhouse Square. This place is just for clients. Oh, no, shoot. I have a channeling with a manicurist from Wayne here at ten. So meet me here, afterward. I want to discuss Roni. It’s very worrying, the voice. It’s all we’ve been talking about for days, except for—” She stopped, then pulled on a pair of Nike tennis shoes and laced them up. “I couldn’t channel the voice for Roni. I tried but no dice. But if it was your spirit-voice before it came to Roni, maybe it will show for you. It’s worth a try. What does the voice want, anyway? All those names. It’s maddening. I told Roni to go to Pittsburgh to meet with an expert. We raised the money for her to go by selling her gold.”
“Does the voice sound like an old woman? English accent? Did Roni say?” Amy asked, trying to catch Madame Prizzo in a lie.
“No. She said it sounded young, kind of singsong. She didn’t mention British.”
Amy felt dizzy. She tried to hide the emotions that were flooding her by staring out the dingy window into the gray winter sky. Everything she had suspected was being confirmed. It was one thing to guess at it, but another to know it: Roni had Maddie, and she didn’t know what to do with her. None of the local Roms did. So she had set off for expert advice.
She was so close.
Which meant it was doubly important to keep James far, far away. At least until Roni could tell Amy the name of her One True Love.
Amy looked at her watch. “I gotta split. I’ll come after work. I’ll get here as quick as I can.”
“Great. C’mon. I’ll give you a ride back to town.”
Amy followed Madame Prizzo to her car, a white Mercedes hidden behind a mountain of discarded rail-road ties.
As Amy climbed into Madame Prizzo’s spotless car, she thought about how it was all starting to come together.
So why did she feel so empty and gray?
Roni watched Amy get into Madame Prizzo’s car, then stepped out from behind the trailer. Her fingers were numb from cold, but they were shaking from fear. It was all starting to come together. So why did she feel so terrified?
Was it because Amy had found Davey and then Madame Prizzo in the blink of an eye? That was so not part of the plan. Amy was smart. Terrifyingly smart.
Especially with men. Seeing James leave her apartment this morning had shocked Roni to her toes. Again, not part of the plan.
Roni had spent the morning trying to figure out if James being with Amy mattered. She reread whole sections of The Art of the Con , her new Bible, finally finding what she was looking for: The intended mark must be as vulnerable as possible.
No woman could feel vulnerable with James by her side. Not that Roni would know from experience; James had never given her more than a glance. Jealousy at Amy’s easy power over James filled her. Roni never got the good ones. She got the scum who said they loved her and then split, leaving her with nothing.
Her hand patted her stomach.
Well, not nothing. Something. Something she had to hold on to this time.
Which was why it was time to bring Madame Prizzo into the con. She had hoped she wouldn’t have to do that, because then she’d have to split her earnings. She and Troy and the baby needed everything. But Roni knew she was floundering. Amy was too smart. She had maneuvered into Troy’s and James’s lives like a shadow, pushing Roni out as if she’d never even existed. Then, Amy had found Madame Prizzo as if a trail of breadcrumbs had been left for her. Amy was like her complete opposite, the one who got what she wanted, fearlessly.
Oh, stop feeling sorry for yourself. Amy was the enemy. She had to remember that.
Madame Prizzo would know what to do.
At least Roni hoped so, as she couldn’t stand this tension, or her shaking hands, much longer.
Great food begins in the imagination.
—JAMES LACHANCE, The Meal of a Lifetime
Hungry for More
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