“I’m treating this site like any other I’ve been summoned to seal.” She was not going to surrender her life to a run-down hotel; no way, no how, no vacancy. “I’m writing down everything I know, and I’m prioritizing everything I have to do.”
Head cocked speculatively to one side, Dean grinned. “I wouldn’t have thought you were the ‘lists’ type.”
“Oh?” Both eyebrows rose. “What type did you think I was.”
“Oh, I guess the ‘dive right in and get started’ type.”
Either he hadn’t heard her tone, or he’d ignored it. Claire took another look at his open, candid, square-jawed and bright-eyed expression. Or he hadn’t understood it. “Well, you’re wrong.” His smile dimmed, his shoulders sagged slightly, and his head dipped a fraction—nothing overt, nothing designed to inflict guilt, just an honest disappointment. She felt like such a bitch, her reaction completely out of proportion to his. “But how would you know differently?” Impossible not to try and make amends. “I do have something for you to do tomorrow, though.”
“Sure.” His head lifted, erasing the fractional droop. “What?”
“The G needs replacing on that sign out front.”
“No problem.” Smile reilluminated, he glanced down at his watch. “I’d better get going, then; it’s almost time for the game on TSN.”
“If he had a tail, he’d be wagging it,” Austin observed dryly as Dean’s work boots could be heard descending the basement stairs. “I think he likes you.”
Claire found herself typing to the rhythm of heels on wood and forced herself to stop. “I’m his new boss. He just wants to make a good impression.”
“And has he?”
“How can you make such an innocent question into innuendo?”
The cat looked interested. “I don’t know. How?”
The room was completely dark. The air smelled faintly of stale cigar smoke. The silence was so complete, the noises her body made were too loud to let her sleep. The cat was taking up most of the room on the bed.
That, at least, she was used to. The rest, she decided to do something about. Slipping out from under the covers, she felt her way over to the window in the outside wall.
There’s nothing out there but the driveway. No harm in opening the curtain a bit and letting in some air.
It wasn’t that easy. After forcing her will on a heavy brocade curtain that didn’t want to open and struggling with the paint that sealed the sash, Claire managed to shove the window up about half an inch. Breathing heavily, she knelt on the floor and sucked an appreciative lungful of fresh air through the crack. As her eyes grew accustomed to the dark, she made out a window across the drive, the silhouette of pointed ears and, beside them, a pair of binoculars resting on their wider end.
No wonder Augustus Smythe had kept the curtains so emphatically drawn.
A thump behind her warned her to brace herself for the furry weight that leaped onto her lap and then onto the windowsill.
“Could I have a little light here?” Austin murmured.
“What for?” Claire asked as she cast a glow behind him. “You can see perfectly well without it.”
“I can,” the cat agreed placidly. “But he can’t.”
Across the drive, the pointed ears flicked up and Baby threw himself at the window.
Claire doused the light, but the damage had already been done. Baby continued to bark hysterically. She grabbed the cat and let the curtains fall closed as a lamp came on and a terrifying vision in pink plastic curlers snatched up the binoculars.
Austin squirmed out of her arms and jumped back onto the bed. “I think I’m going to like it here.”
CAN WE USE THE CAT?
DON’T BE RIDICULOUS.
FOUR
AUGUSTUS SMYTHE HAD WANTED his breakfast every morning at seven o’clock. He’d had a bowl of oatmeal, stewed prunes, and a pot of tea, except on Sunday when he’d had a mushroom omelet, braised kidneys, and indigestion. Guests, and in his experience there’d never been more than one room occupied at a time, ate between eight and eight-thirty or they didn’t eat at all.
Dean found himself in the kitchen, water boiling and bag of oatmeal in his hand before he remembered that things had changed. He’d been feeding Claire like she was a guest, but she wasn’t. Nor, he’d be willing to bet, was she the stewed prunes type.
She wasn’t only his new boss, she was a Keeper; a semimythical being monitoring the potential eruption of evil energy out of a possibly corrupting metaphysical accident site in the furnace room. Cool. He could handle that.
The question was: What did she want for breakfast?
“How should I know?” Foiled in his attempt to gain access to the refrigerator, Austin glared down at the fresh saucer of wet cat food. “But if she doesn’t want the kidneys, I’ll take them.”
The hot water pipes banged at a quarter to eight. Dean had no idea how long women usually took to get ready in the morning, but his minimal experience seemed to indicate they were fairly high maintenance. He waited until eight-thirty, then brewed a fresh pot of coffee.
At nine, he began to worry. Austin had eaten and disappeared, and he’d heard nothing more from Claire’s suite. By nine-thirty, he couldn’t wait any longer.
Had she fallen getting out of the shower? Did that sort of thing happen to the semimythical?
Tossing his apron over the back of a chair, he walked quickly up the hall, ducked under the edge of the counter, and hesitated outside her door. If she’d gone back to sleep, she wouldn’t thank him for waking her. Maybe he should go away and wait a little longer.
If, however, she were lying unconscious by the tub…
Better she’s irritated than dead, he decided, took a deep breath, and knocked.
“Come in.”
It took a moment, but he finally spotted Austin on a pie-crust table beside a purple china basket of yellow china roses. “Is Claire…”
“Here? No.”
“She went out?” He hadn’t heard the front door.
“No. She went in.”
“In?”
“That’s right. But I’m expecting her back any…” The cat’s ears pricked up and he turned to face the bedroom. “Here she comes. I hope she picked up those shrimp snacks I asked for.”
Brow furrowed, Dean stepped forward. He could’ve sworn he heard music—horns mostly, with an up-tempo bass beat leading the way. Through the open door, he could see an overstuffed armchair and the wardrobe Mr. Smythe had used instead of a closet. Obviously Claire hadn’t quite caught on as her clothes were draped all over the chair.
The music grew louder.
The wardrobe door opened and Claire stepped out. Several strings of cheap plastic beads hung around her neck, and a shower of confetti accompanied every movement. She didn’t look happy.
“What do you bet they were out of shrimp snacks,” Austin muttered.
Glancing into the sitting room, the Keeper’s eyes widened. “What are you doing here?”
“I live here.”
“Not you.” She dragged off the thick noose of beads and pointed an imperious finger at Dean. “Him.”
“You were in the wardrobe.”
It wasn’t a question, so Claire didn’t answer it “Don’t you ever knock?”
“I did knock.” Flustered almost as much by the implication that he’d just walk in to her apartment as by her emergence from the wardrobe, Dean jerked his head toward the cat. “He told me to come in.”
Austin stretched out a paw and pushed a pottery cherub onto the floor. It bounced on the overlap of three separate area rugs and rolled unharmed under the table.
Claire closed her eyes and counted to ten. When she opened them again, she’d decided not to bother arguing with the cat— experience having taught her that she couldn’t win. Bending over, she flicked confetti out of her hair. “If that’s coffee I smell, I could use a cup. It isn’t safe to eat or drink on the other side.”