January 2007
A Babe in Ghostland
Jan
.
2007
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A Babe in
Ghostland...
Chapter
One
Seattle,
Washington
If she’d only had the right type of psychic
abilities, Megan Barrows thought later that day, she
would have sensed her doom when Case Lambert stepped
through the doorway to Antique Fancies. Instead, when
the bell over the door dinged and she looked up and saw
him, her hands ceased work on the alabaster lamp she
was rewiring and her heart seized in her
chest.
“Hello,” she said, an uncertain smile on
her lips, attraction turning her shy.
A tight smile briefly graced the man’s
face. “Hello.” His gaze took a
long trip over her tall body and a frown formed between
his brows as his gaze lingered on her chest. She sidled
sideways a few inches, hoping to hide her A-cups behind
the inadequate lamp, her attraction to him fading as
quickly as it had come. So he was one of those
sort.
The man looked away, turning his attention to the late
Victorian tea table beside him, its top loaded with
silver candlesticks. He picked one up and turned
it over to examine the hallmarks on the bottom, then
flipped it around, eyes narrowing as he scrutinized the
plating where it had begun, ever so slightly, to wear
off of the copper core.
Megan pretended to turn her attention back to rewiring
the lamp, just as the man pretended to examine
candlesticks. He was a big guy: 6’3
according to the height markings on the edge of her
door, and with a solid broadness that looked like years
of laboring muscle; no youthful lankiness here.
His squarely masculine face showed signs of weathering,
and his short brown hair was mussed. She had a
brief flash of him driving with the window to his
pickup down, elbow resting on the sill, wind in his
hair, howling along to a country song about the
cheatin’ woman who done him wrong. His
jeans and battered leather shoes, and the faded polo
shirt with a breast pocket made lumpy by some object,
all hinted at someone in one of the
trades.
One thing for sure: he wasn’t a cubicle
monkey from Microsoft.
He set down the candlestick and wandered farther into
the shop, pausing to stare into a lighted glass case
full of small bits and pieces: thimbles,
lorgnettes, spoons, figurines, vases. Perhaps he
was looking for a gift for his wife.
She glanced at his left hand. No ring.
A gift for his girlfriend, then? Mother?
Aunt Esmerelda?
He left the glass case and wandered closer to where she
stood at her work table/cashier’s counter, his
big frame feeling oversized in the crowded, feminine
confines of her shop. The natural assurance of
his stance, the silent assumption that he was master of
his domain - master of her domain – grated upon
her, reminding her of the womanizing dolt for whom
she’d worked while putting herself through
college.
He made a show of casting his gaze over her shop.
“You’ve got a nice place here – nicer
than I expected. Judging from the outside, I
thought it would be full of the usual thrift-store crap
that passes for antiques these
days.”
Megan narrowed her eyes.
“I must have driven by a hundred times, but never
stopped,” he went on, and ran a fingertip over
the gracefully carved line of a chair back near the
counter. He met her gaze, his grey eyes
direct. “I should have. There are
beautiful things here.”
Attraction shot through her again despite her every
thought against it. She blushed and looked down
at the lamp beneath her hands, then away, not sure
where to set her gaze, afraid he might see that his
words had affected her. “The shop belonged to my
mother. She started it when I was a
child.”
“’Belonged’. Did she
retire?”
She glanced up at him. “Died. Two
years ago.”
In his eyes she saw empathy, the tightness round his
mouth loosening. “I’m sorry. I
lost mine a few years ago, too.”
She nodded, acknowledging the shared pain. “But I
have the shop, so in some ways it feels like I see her
every day.”
He raised a brow and looked like he was about to say
something, then shook his head. A moment later he
asked, “So can you make a living at this
business? Doesn’t sound like it pays too well,
especially not in this economy. Haven’t
most of your colleagues gone out of
business?”
She forced a smile at the question. “I get
by. Can I help you find something? Were you
looking for something in particular?”
He ignored her
question, and made a show of again gazing round the
shop. “You ever wonder what the long-dead
owners of this stuff must be thinking, to see their
things for sale?”
She rolled her
eyes. The guy had one great question after
another, didn’t he? “I suspect the
dead have better things to do than watch over their
chipped teacups and sprung chairs.”
His brows rose and
then he laughed, the loudness of it startling her, the
whole room seeming to shake with the vibrations of his
mirth. “So what do you think the dead are
doing with their time?” he asked when the storm
had settled.
A wisp of suspicion
floated into Megan’s mind. A man like this,
discussing the dead with her, of all people?
“I’m sure they’re fighting over the
best dark hallways and attics to haunt, debating the
merits of cemeteries on Halloween, etcetera,
etcetera.”
“You
don’t take it seriously?”
“Do you want
me to?”
The small frown
reappeared between his brows. “You must
have been in a lot of old houses. You ever see a
ghost?”
She tugged at the
fresh wires coming out the top of the lamp and began
attaching them to a new socket. “In most
cases, ghosts can be explained away
rationally.”
“So you’ve never seen one?”
She glanced at him. His expression was
serious. “Have you?” she asked
back.
He looked away from her, towards the front picture
window and its display tableau of desk, chair, and
leather library books, a bust of Dante on the
floor. When he spoke, his voice was quiet.
“Maybe I’ve experienced something.
But nothing I’d swear to.”
Megan felt the lure of the bait he’d just trailed
before her, and with it, the small seed of suspicion
that had been planted in her mind sprouted
leaves. He’d heard something about her,
that made him come in and expect her to want to talk
about ghosts.
His statement begged for follow-up questions, for her
to lean forward and say, ‘Really? What
happened?’ But did she want to get involved
in his problems? No, although he was shockingly
good-looking for a dunderheaded brute. And there
was always curiosity to satisfy.
She parted her lips
to speak, and then caution laid hold of her tongue,
forbidding her from taking the tempting bait.
“Was there something special you were looking
for?” she asked, nodding towards the shop at
large.
He stood straighter, her answer clearly not the one he
was expecting. Then he shook his head and laughed
again, the sound softer this time and strangely
warming.
He dug into his
breast pocket. “Would you be able to give
me an appraisal on this, and maybe tell me something
about it?” he asked, pulling a small gold pocket
watch out of his shirt and handing it to her.
“I think so,” she said, surprised he had a
legitimate reason for visiting her shop.
She’d convinced herself he wanted to pick her
brain about ghosts. That’s what she got for
thinking too much of herself and her talents!
Megan took the watch and let it lie flat in her palm,
feeling its heavy weight, the gold warm from his
body. She ran her finger over the small dents
along one edge, and smiled.
“It’s a lady’s watch, meant to be
pinned to her bodice. 1880, 1885, I think.
English.” She wound it a few turns and
heard the soft, regular ticking begin.
“Still works. It’s a lovely little thing,
probably worth about three hundred
dollars.” She started to hand it back to
him.
“How much would you give me for
it?”
She pushed her hand at him again, offering the
watch. “You don’t want to sell
this.”
“Sure I do.”
She shook her head. “Someday you’ll
have a daughter who’d love to have a piece of
family history like this.”
“Family history?”
“I assume it belonged to your grandmother. Or a
great aunt,” she added, wanting to make the
ownership sound more like a guess than it
was.
He stared at her a long moment, then nodded. “It
was my maternal grandmother’s. But I have no use
for it, and I’m not one for holding onto
something just for the sake of it. It’s
just a watch. And it’s
dented.”
“But you know what those dents are from,
don’t you?”
He shook his head.
“They’re the marks of a teething
baby. Your teeth? While your grandmother
held you? You – or someone – used her
watch as a teething ring.” She shrugged,
knowing she had sounded too certain. And she
wasn’t that certain. Her imagination often
led her down the wrong path. “It’s an
educated guess. She must have been a doting
grandmother to allow it, if I’m
right.”
“Just a guess, huh? A pretty damn good
guess!”
Megan crossed her arms over her chest. “You knew
they were your teeth marks.”
“You’re the first antique
‘expert’ to know what those dents were
from.”
“You were testing me?”
“Just like to know who I’m dealing
with,” he said, grinning. “What else
can you tell me about the watch?”
“What do you want to know?”
“I don’t know. Surprise me. Do
some Sherlock Holmes-like deducing.”
“Sherlock Holmes?”
“Yeah.”
“I’m not a detective.”
“Come on. Try.
“He was
fiction.”
“You
surprised me with the tooth marks. Do
it
again.”
Was he serious?
Well, what the hell.
She enclosed the watch between her palms and closed her
eyes. The trick was to let the images and
snatches of sound come to her, not to force them.
Not to think. She made her mind into a blank silver
screen.
Bit by bit, a vague story began to emerge.
“I can tell you what anyone else might guess,
given the probabilities,” she said, opening her
eyes. “Your grandmother’s family
emigrated to the US. She was moderately well-off and
she valued her family. She cared for people, both
emotionally and physically.”
That was what she said aloud, but in her mind a much
fuller picture of a woman had emerged: a girl of
thirteen coming across the ocean with her mother; the
girl growing into a young woman who took up nursing and
married a doctor; the young woman becoming a
middle-aged widow who held together her family with
every last ounce of her love.
“That’s it?” he said.
“’They were immigrants’ and
‘she valued family’? Anyone could have
guessed that.”
“Which is what I told you before I spoke, in case
you’ve forgotten.” She stared at him
in silent challenge.
After a long moment he reached out and took the watch
back. “Sure you don’t want to buy
it?” he asked quietly. “A hundred
bucks?”
“I wouldn’t take it for five cents. Please
keep it; I’m sure your grandmother would have
wanted you to pass it down. Someday you’ll
be glad you still have it.”
“Is that a prediction?”
“It’s experience.”
“My grandmother didn’t… say that to
you?”
Suspicion grew a bud and bloomed. “How
could she?”
“I was told that you might have access to…
The Other Side,” he said, hunching close to her,
his eyes widening.
She stared at him.
He stared back. A smile cracked his composure and
he stood straight. “I call it that for lack of a
better term. You probably call it the
‘Sixth Plane of Ethereal Existence’ or
something.”
She set her jaw. “Just what is it that you
want, Mr.-?”
“Lambert. Case Lambert,” he said,
sticking out his hand. “And you’re
Megan Barrows?”
She frowned at him.
“You aren’t Megan Barrows?” His
expression lightened, delight sparking the grey depths
of his eyes.
“I’m afraid I am.” She shook
his hand, watching with her own delight as the
disappointment pulled at his features. Her
perverse enjoyment faded as she felt the warmth and
strength of his hand surrounding her own, his calluses
rough against her skin. A zing of a different
delight went straight down to her loins. How long
had it been since she’d been with a man, his body
warming hers against the night? Too
long.
His grip was firm but gentle, showing he knew it was a
woman’s hand he held, with finer bones than the
meaty paws of men. No sixth sense information came to
her from his touch; it was not the way her gift
worked. The living kept their secrets from her,
and she was left like any other woman with only her
native skill at gathering impressions. If she
could touch a frequently used personal object of his,
however, she might get somewhere.
He released her hand. “What is it you’re
looking for, Mr. Lambert?” Megan asked, cradling
her own hand against her stomach as if she could hold
the warmth of his touch.
“I’m looking for you.”
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