Chapter Nine
I left Hettie’s condo with a whole new set
of questions, plus the contact information for her daughter, Janet,
and the name of the lumberyard where Dave Enrique—the boarder who
claimed to have seen ghosts in the attic—worked, last Hettie
knew.
Why would the ghosts have wanted Emile Blunt to
remain at the house? Did that have anything to do with his desire
to purchase it? And could they have killed him in his shop across
the street? Could ghosts kill people? Could they even cross
streets?
I closed my eyes and blew out a breath.
Within the last six months I had gone from denying
the existence of ghosts at all to wondering if they could roam the
streets and handle a gun.
Perhaps the real question I should be asking was,
Why should I take the word of a crazy old cat lady?
I had looked up the ghost tour leader, Olivier
Galopin, on the Web last night. When I called the number listed, an
upbeat, French-accented voice on the answering machine said it
would not take any messages but that tours left every night except
Thursday at eight, rain or shine, from the haunted hotel at the
corner of Steiner and Pine. I hung up, frustrated. I didn’t want a
ghost tour; I just wanted to talk with the guy.
After returning a few professional calls, I rang
the San Francisco Ghost Society. They told me they record evidence
of paranormal phenomena, but don’t perform cleansings. For that,
they referred me back to Galopin.
I sat in my car, frustrated. All these phone calls
and I hadn’t really gotten anywhere. What was I doing? If Katenka
and Jim didn’t want me to finish the job, perhaps I should just let
it go. The haunting was not my concern if I was no longer
renovating the historic house. I had other jobs I could be working
on, projects that were starting up that I could push. Running a
construction company meant scheduling—and rescheduling—jobs
according to permits, architectural drawings, environmental
reports, and the availabilities of subcontractors. It was a
juggling act, and the general contractor who let one or two items
spin out of control found herself booed offstage and out of work.
I’d proven very good at keeping my employees working and Turner
Construction in the black, and at transforming crumbling, abused
structures like Cheshire House into showcases of
craftsmanship.
On the other hand . . . even if I
figured Katenka and Jim could hold their own against the ghosts,
could I abandon baby Quinn to the strange happenings? If a ghost
had actually murdered Emile Blunt, and I was one of the few people
around who might be able to communicate with the angry spirits,
could I live with myself if I just walked away?
And finally, what if my father really was named a
suspect? After all, he had found the body . . . and
I myself had been overheard threatening to run the old man down. I
cringed, once more, at the memory.
My phone rang, interrupting my thoughts. It was the
foreman on the Vallejo Street job, the house where I had
encountered my very first ghost.
Good. Work I could handle. And I knew for a fact
the ghost haunting the Vallejo Street house wasn’t out to hurt
anybody.
My first ghostly project was a fine Beaux Arts
mansion, one of a pair built by a man made wealthy during the gold
rush. It featured broad, low arches and monolithic rather than
fanciful details. In marked contrast to Cheshire House, the only
frilly trimmings were the wrought-iron balconies on the front of
the building, which had been reworked by a brilliant metal artist
who based the design on a Greek-inspired laurel-wreath frieze we
copied from one of the carved fireplace mantels.
My friend Matt, who was supposed to be “flipping”
this house, recently had been offered his own reality show, to
document the life of a washed-up musician who was still
good-looking and slightly outrageous, and who surrounded himself
with good-looking, outrageous friends. With the exception of me, of
course. I was happy for Matt at this unexpected turn of events, but
it was annoying to have to deal with cameras and sound people every
time I wanted to talk with him.
“Mel! Great to see you, pet!” exclaimed Matt in his
British accent. Matt gushed like Old Faithful at the best of times;
now, with the camera documenting his every move, he was eternally
pumped up. “Graham and I were just discussing the range of paints
that aren’t off-gassing, which if you ask me sounds a little like
what happens after a midnight trip to the taco truck, am I
right?”
I smiled. An old joke, but we were on camera, after
all.
“Great news—I might not try to flip this house
after all,” said Matt. “With the show and all, I might be able to
buy out the investors and keep the place.”
“Matt, that’s great,” I said, wondering how he
could stand to live in a house where a friend had been fatally
injured. On the other hand, it was an incredible home, a grande
dame in the best sense of the word. And the renovations had been so
extensive that very little had remained of the original walls,
floors, and ceiling where Kenneth Kostow’s messy death had
occurred.
Still . . . another ghost lingered
in this home. I felt his presence from time to time, smelled the
smoke from his pipe, heard the rattling of his newspaper. But he
was a forlorn, sad ghost, not at all like the more powerful
sensations I felt in Cheshire House. This ghost wouldn’t bother
anyone. And in any case, Matt was not the most astute fellow when
it came to the subtle sensations around him, living or not.
I met with the faux finishers and the painters,
making sure all the details were coming along well. This was the
fun stage, when months of hard work, scheduling and rescheduling,
and juggling came together in the finishing touches. The exterior
had been done in integral color plaster, which meant never having
to paint—though you had to be okay with the plaster discoloring
here and there due to water runoff, and, in earthquake country, the
occasional crack. But in general the final result was a mellow,
multihued finish reminiscent of historic homes.
Each room here had a different theme, but they were
united by complementary colors. In Cheshire House they would all be
variations of Victoriana, since the designs of those houses
dictated the internal design. But Matt’s house was more open, a
conglomeration of styles. While I was there I spoke to the faux
finishers about coming by Cheshire House with some books and sample
portfolios of classic Queen Anne designs. The head finisher, Dallas
Finkel, was a hardheaded businessman who brought the work in on
time and up to my standards. All his artists were women, because
according to Dallas only women could be trusted not to make a mess
and to get the job done. I tried not to think in gender terms, but
I had to agree with Dallas on this one. The construction site was
dominated by testosterone up until the finishing artistic touches,
which were often completed by women.
As I looked around, I sighed in pleasure. The
building had reclaimed its original character, in the graceful
bones and elegant lines. No wonder Matt wanted to stay here.
I was just wrapping up with Dallas when Graham
Donovan walked in.
“Graham.” I nodded, hoping I didn’t sound as
breathless as I felt.
“Mel. Nice to see you.”
“You, too.
As usual our gazes held a little too long.
Matt noted the interaction with interest. Ever
since we’d become good friends, Matt had been trying to set me up
on dates. I hoped to keep my history with Graham under wraps, but
among the workers were a few who had known me and my dad for
fifteen years or more. And construction workers were gossips of the
highest order.
I pulled Graham outside, where the narrow
passageway between the houses gave us a little privacy.
Unfortunately, this meant we stood close to each
other. I hadn’t been much good at chemistry in high school, but I
sure seemed to be experiencing a lot now. Whenever I was within ten
feet of Graham my hormones shifted into overdrive. He looked good,
and smelled better. But he was cautious in the romance department.
Welcome to the club.
This annoyed me. Or maybe I was just feeling
generally jumpy, what with ghosts on my job site and all. Whatever
the cause, rather than ask the man out as I’d coached myself while
washing dishes last night, I snapped at him instead.
“Hey, what’s with jumping into the Cheshire House
job without consulting me?” I said.
“Remind me?”
“You have so many jobs you can’t tell them apart?
It’s a fabulous Queen Anne on Union Street. Jim and Katenka Daley
are the owners. Surely you remember which of my jobs you’re
poaching?”
“I’m not poaching your jobs.”
“I’m the general contractor. You go through
me.”
“Whoa, back up, Mel. Jim Daley called me in for a
consult. It was only after I arrived that I realized it was your
job site.” He smiled down at me. “I planned on speaking with you,
as I would with any general, but I assumed I’d see you today. And
here you are. Hey, maybe I’m psychic now.”
“Think so? Can you tell what I’m thinking right
now?”
“Anybody ever tell you you’re cute when you’re
mad?”
“No, because I’m always mad. And I’m rarely
cute.”
“Okay, you’re not cute. You’re very scary.
Intimidating. I’m quaking in my work boots.”
I tried, unsuccessfully, not to smile. “So what’s
Jim looking to do? Can you give me the abridged version?”
“Basic stuff mostly, things you’re no doubt already
planning to incorporate: insulation and double-paned windows. That
sort of thing . . .”
I nodded. “And?”
“And what?”
“Graham . . . beans. Spill.”
“He wants solar. He’d prefer wind if we could get
the permits, but I don’t imagine his neighbors would go for a
windmill in the backyard.”
I blew out a frustrated breath.
“It’s not that bad.”
“Easy for you to say. You’re not the one who
has to deal with the decorative shingle patterns on the
roof.”
Some of the most effective green technologies, like
solar and wind power, are wonderful ideas in the abstract, but play
heck with trying to accomplish historical restoration while
maintaining a modicum of aesthetic sensibility. Like many fine
Victorians, Cheshire House was roofed in shingles arranged in a
decorative pattern. Covering them up with massive shiny solar
panels hurt my sensitive feelings—no doubt about that. Other green
techniques, such as using sustainable and reclaimed woods and other
building materials and incorporating water-saving devices were no
problem at all.
“Sorry,” I said after a moment when I realized
Graham was waiting for me to say something further. “I was
hoping—”
“I wanted to talk to you about—”
We began talking at the same time and then paused,
each waiting for the other to finish.
“Everything okay out here?” Matt interrupted, the
cameras tailing him loyally.
Relationship, Interrupted. Story of my
life.
“So I have to know,” Matt said under his
breath a few minutes later. “What’s going on with you and
Graham?”
“You don’t have to know anything, and
nothing’s going on. Do you want semigloss or high gloss paint on
the bathroom woodwork?”
Matt and I were flipping through paint chips, and I
was forcing him to decide, once and for all, on the paint schedule.
The schedule was a flowchart of what paint type, gloss, and color
goes where, which was very useful when painting an entire house.
Trim, walls, doors; things like mantelpieces and special
transoms—everything needs to be thought out. In Matt’s house I was
excited about a wall of silver gilt in the master bedroom that was
to be hung with beautifully framed original drawings from an art
deco dress-design book. Last month Matt had acquired the antique
book from, and paid a nice commission to, my friend and personal
costume designer, Stephen.
“Whatever you say. Semi is fine.” Matt dropped his
voice again. “So this thing with you and Graham. Is this a past
tense situation?”
“No tenses, past, present, or future.”
He raised his eyebrows and cocked his head,
signaling that he didn’t believe me.
“Could I ask you something, Matt?”
“Anything, pet.”
“If I did have something I didn’t want to talk
about, what would possibly make you think I’d say it in front of
the cameras?”
“Hmm, I see your point. Boys, why don’t you take a
break?” He ordered the cameras away. “Now tell me. What’s going on
between you and Graham?”
“Nothing,” I repeated with a smile.
He gave a dramatic sigh. “You’re as bad as Graham.
He won’t tell me a bloody thing. The pair of you should be working
for the secret service. Mark my words: I’m going to get one or both
of you drunk one evening and worm the truth out of you.”
I smiled some more as I filled in details on the
paint schedule. Matt and I had met some time ago—his son, Dylan, is
a good friend of Caleb’s. But since working together on his house,
not to mention our adventure with murder and ghosts, we’d grown
closer. He was impulsive, overly dramatic, and a tad
self-obsessed—like most celebrities I’d met—but was also profoundly
sweet and kind.
His determination to fix me up, however, might
strain that relationship.
“Anyway, it’s just as well. I have someone I want
to introduce you to. He’s a brilliant fellow—I really think you’ll
like him.”
“Why would I like him? I don’t like anybody.”
“You like Graham,” he said with a wicked
smile.
“Matt, seriously, keep out of it.”
“And you like me.”
“Your word against mine.”
“I know you like to think of yourself as a loner,
but it’s not so.”
I refrained from grunting. Barely.
“Just meet him for a drink tonight.”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“Because we’re giving a party for my dad’s friend
Stan tonight. And besides that, I don’t go on blind dates. Plus, I
dealt with a murder this morning. It’s been a long day.”
“You dealt with a what?”
“It was the neighbor across the street from a job
I’m working on.”
Matt looked at me, his blue eyes worried.
Unfortunately, he was no stranger to violent death. “Are you
okay?”
“I’m fine. Thanks. It had nothing to do with me,” I
hastened to add.
“And there’s been no . . .
aftermath?” Matt asked. I had told him an abridged version of the
ghosts I had seen in this house, months ago.
“I haven’t seen the victim, if that’s what you’re
asking. But . . . I’m afraid there may be
something in the Daleys’ house, though it’s not the location
where the murder occurred. So I doubt the ghosts had anything to do
with that, right?”
“I have no idea. But if you’re thinking there are
malevolent spirits, shouldn’t you walk away?”
“I can’t. There’s a young family living in the
house. And besides, I guess I’m supposed to communicate with these
things. Maybe that’s why they’re appearing, because they know I can
see them.”
“You really think so?”
“Truthfully, I have no idea. I’m making this up as
I go along.”
“Hey, have you heard of the ghost-whisperer guy who
leads tours out of the Eastlake Hotel?”
“His name’s come up a few times recently. Do you
know him?”
“A little, only through TV connections. He’s been
working on getting a series himself, so he came over once to check
out what it’s like to live with cameras. Seemed like a good guy. He
might even be on the up-and-up. Oh, hey,” Matt added with a light
in his blue eyes, “he’s sort of cute, darling
accent . . . and I think he’s single.”
“See you later,” I said, gathering my notes and
giving Matt a hug and a reluctant smile. “You matchmaker,
you.”