There were a couple of mounted cops down the street, so she slid into a bar. She ordered a beer quickly, and turned her back to the street.
The mounted cops went by.
Stella finished her beer, paid and tipped-she always tipped well-and started out on Duval again.
She swore when she walked right into him.
“Stella,” he said.
He was one of her few johns who wasn’t married. He was a creep. She knew it. Maybe other people didn’t.
“Hey.”
“You smell like stale sex, Stella. Bad booze, bad money and stinky, old sex.”
“Fuck you,” she said, and pushed by him.
Her heart thundered for a minute. He could do bad things if he wanted. But it was broad daylight. Hell, it didn’t matter what the light was.
She quickened her pace, but when she turned around, he wasn’t there. She kept on moving, and passed the church.
She heard the sound of a siren. Damn, the cops!
The ice-cream parlor was right ahead.
She ran inside it, her back to the street.
She winced. Danny, yeah, Danny was supposed to be here!
It didn’t matter; she just needed to stand here for a minute. She set her hands on the counter. It was sticky. She shoved her hands into her pockets, making a face.
The cop car was passing.
Then Danny was back. With that way that he looked at her.
“Ice cream? Really, Stella?”
The way that he looked at her…
He was sad, he was angry.
“Danny-”
The cop car was gone.
“Danny-oh, whatever!” she said.
She turned away, and decided that she really had to get off the main streets. She hurried outside and around the church. She could hear a car, and she started running, paranoid now.
She cut through one of the yards. Damn it-she knew too many men in this town. Knew them too intimately.
Maybe he was in a car. He might have gotten his car, and he could be following her in it now.
No. Why on earth would he do that?
To harass her.
He was a creep.
She cut into a yard and crawled through palms and crotons that grew heavily there. She looked at the street. No car.
She started to turn around, aware of a sound behind her.
She wasn’t able to turn. Something came over her head. A plastic bag. She grabbed at it, incredulous. Hands wound around her neck. The world began to grow black.
It couldn’t be happening…
She was vaguely aware of sirens. She tried to fight; to live. Help was coming. The sirens came closer, closer…
And the sound moved away. Help might be coming for someone, but not for her.
And the blackness swamped over her.
“You’re falling apart-you are simply falling apart,” Bartholomew said. “I’d slap you across the cheek to wake you up and make you see clearly-if I could,” he added sternly.
They were just inside the house, and he was clearly agitated.
“All this time, I keep asking you about the lady in white. She ignores you, you ignore her. Now you have this new ghost appearing and disappearing, and you’ve gone straight to pieces.”
“She’s not just any ghost,” Katie said. “And you saw her last night.”
“I didn’t see her today.”
“You weren’t with me down there when I was diving with David. You’re afraid of the water!” Katie accused him.
“I’m not afraid of it. I can swim,” he argued indignantly. “I can’t see why I should go down getting soaked and wet when there’s no reason for it.”
“Would you really get wet?” she asked. “I mean, do ghosts get wet?”
“It’s the thought and the memory,” he said, and shuddered. “You swim when your boat sinks, when you’re under attack, when it’s your only recourse. Not for the pleasure of it!”
“Wow. How dirty and icky were you?” Katie asked.
“I bathed!” he protested. “When possible. I wasn’t repulsive in the least. I had amazing hygiene habits for my day and you are getting completely off the subject here. Katie, you must stop being so hypnotized by this ghost!”
“You don’t understand. It’s a true pity that you don’t go into water for the pleasure of it, and you didn’t follow David and me down on that dive. Then you’d understand. The ghost is Tanya. She’s trying to communicate with me-she just doesn’t know how. It’s very bizarre, really. She’s trying so hard to reach out. But…I understand her a bit because…there’s something in her eyes. She can materialize, but she fades so quickly. I can see her try to whisper, but she’s so hard to hear. Maybe she hasn’t been a ghost long enough-”
“Ten years,” Bartholomew noted.
“And the lady in white, the one who fascinates you? She doesn’t know how to communicate and she’s been a ghost for nearly two hundred years, I’d reckon.”
Bartholomew plopped down on the sofa in the parlor. “You be careful, or they will lock you up. I don’t enjoy jails-modern or otherwise-and I know that I wouldn’t at all enjoy a mental hospital.”
“Oh, that’s just great-coming from you. Bartholomew, Tanya was in my bed this morning.”
“Very rude,” he said. “I would never dream of disturbing the sanctity of your private quarters!”
Katie ignored his words. She hurried on. “And then in the water. Bartholomew, I told you, you had to have been there. She appeared slowly in the sea dust, as if she gained her image from the particles of plankton and microscopic debris… She formed right behind him, and she looked so, so sad, and she touched his shoulder and his cheek. I could have sworn that there were tears in her eyes.”
“In the water?” Bartholomew mocked.
“She looked sad, as if she was crying-yes, in the water! She wants me to know, even if she can’t tell me who did do it, that he didn’t.”
“That’s ridiculous. She was murdered. If she knows who did do it, she needs to tell you.”
“Maybe she doesn’t know. Her attacker might have struck from the back.”
“Then if she doesn’t know who did do it, how does she know that it wasn’t David Beckett?” Bartholomew demanded.
“She might have known where he was at the time of her death-and if he was nowhere near her, it couldn’t have been him.”
“Well, you do need to stop running about in a trance. He will think that you’re as daft as a loon!”
“I will. I have it under control. Now.”
“I certainly hope so,” he said. He looked at his pocket watch. “Time’s a-wasting, my dear.”
She spun on him and started up the stairs.
David washed down his equipment, rinsed himself off and headed back to the house for a real shower. After that, he went out to find Danny Zigler.
He was serving ice cream. He grinned at David. “Hey.”
“Hey.”
“Ice cream?”
“You know what, I’ll take a shake. Vanilla.”
“Cool.”
David paid him, adding a handsome tip.
“Hey, thanks, David, you don’t have to go overboard. I’m not a charity case, you know. I keep working.”
“Yeah, I see that. I was so surprised to see you at O’Hara’s last night. I thought you were doing the ghost tours. And, hell, the crowds on weekends are huge. Didn’t think you could take time off like that.”
“Yeah, I miss doing the weekend tours. Thing is, all the companies out there have hired on too many people. Most can work weekends, around their other jobs, you know? I can work weeknights, and to be honest, I don’t like an overcrowded tour. I like to be able to tell the stories good, you know? And when there are too many people, half of ’em don’t hear you, and when you repeat all kinds of stuff, you lose the whole effect,” Danny said.
“I know what you mean. Too many in a group, and you just don’t get the effect,” David agreed. “Well, thanks. See ya, Danny. Oh-you working at O’Hara’s tonight?”
“I start at ten there. I am taking out an eight-o’clock tour tonight.”