Page 9 of Midnight Bayou


  neck—like . . . God, like she’d been strangled. I knew she was dead. I screamed and stumbled back. My legs just gave out from under me.”

  “I need to find out who she was,” Declan declared. “There’s got to be a way to find out who she was. Family member, servant, guest. If a young woman died violently in there, there’s a record somewhere.”

  “I can do some research.” Effie lowered the water and managed a smile. “That’s my job, after all.”

  “If there was a murder, it seems we’d have heard stories over the years.” Remy shook his head. “I never have. Honey, I’m going to take you home.”

  “I’m going to let you.” Effie reached out, touched Declan’s arm. “Come on with us. I don’t know if you should be staying here.”

  “I’ve got to stay. I want to stay.”

  Needed to stay, he thought when he was alone and the whooshing sound of his nail gun echoed through the dining room. He wasn’t just restoring the house, he was making it his own. If a murdered girl was part of it, then she was his, too.

  He wanted to know her name, to know her story. Where had she come from? Why had she died? Maybe he’d been meant to come here, to find those things out.

  If those images, those feelings, had driven others away, they were only locking him in.

  He could live with ghosts, Declan thought as he ran his hand over the side of his first completed cabinet. But he wouldn’t rest until he knew them.

  But when he finally called it a day and went to bed, he left the lights on.

  For the next few days, he was too busy to think about ghosts or sleepwalking, or even those nights out he’d promised himself. The electrician and plumber he’d hired were hard at work with their crews. The house was too full of noise and people for ghosts.

  Frank and Frankie, who were as alike as their names, with beefy shoulders and mud-colored hair, trudged around his gardens, made mouth noises that may have been approval or disgust. Little Frankie seemed to be the brains of the operation, and after an hour’s survey gave Declan a bid for clearing out underbrush and weeds. Though he wondered if they intended to retire on the profit from the job, Declan trusted Remy and hired them.

  They came armed with shovels, pickaxes and mile-long clippers. From the dining room where he worked on cabinets, Declan could hear the lazy rise and fall of their voices, the occasional thump and tumble.

  When he glanced out, he noticed that the tangle was disappearing.

  The plasterer Miss Odette sent him was a rail-thin black man whose name was Tibald, and his great-grandpappy, so Declan was told, once worked as a field hand for the Manets.

  They toured the house with Tibald scribbling in a tiny, dog-eared notepad. When they reached the ballroom, Tibald looked up at the ceiling with a dreamy expression.

  “I always think I’ve put a picture in my head that isn’t there,” he said. “Don’t think I’d ever get used to seeing this kind of work.”

  “You’ve been in here before.”

  “Have. The Rudickers took a bid for me on plasterwork. They’d be the people you bought the Hall from. They had big, fine ideas, the Rudickers. But they never did much about them. Anyhow, they were going to hire someone from Savannah. So I heard.”

  “Why?”

  Tibald just kept smiling at the ceiling. “They had those big, fine ideas, and didn’t see how locals could put a polish on them. Seems to me they figured the more money they spent, the higher the gloss. If you know what I mean.”

  “Yeah, I get it. The way I look at it, you hire local, you’re liable to get people who’re more invested in the job. Can you repair and duplicate this kind of work?”

  “I did the plasterwork in the Harvest House down on the River Road. I got pictures out in my truck, like a reference. You maybe want to take a look at them, maybe go on down to Harvest House and take a study. They give public tours and hold fancy events there now. Do some work in New Orleans, in Baton Rouge and Metairie. Can give you names.”

  “Let’s take a look at the pictures.”

  One look at the before and after shots of various cornices, walls, medallions, showed Declan his man was an artist. For form, he asked for a bid, and after promising to have one written up by the end of the week, Tibald offered his hand.

  “I admit, I’d love to get my hands on that ballroom.” Tibald glanced back over at the house. “You doing any work on the third floor?”

  “Eventually.”

  “Maybe you want to talk to my sister, Lucy. She cleans houses.”

  “I’m a long way from needing a housekeeper.”

  Tibald laughed, took out a pack of Big Red chewing gum. “No, sir, I don’t mean that kind of clean.” He offered Declan a stick before taking one himself, folding it in half, and sliding it into his mouth. “Spirit clean. You got some strong spirits in that place.” He chewed contemplatively. “ ’Specially on the third floor.”

  “How do you know?”

  “Feel it breathing on my neck. Can’t you? When the Rudickers were working on the place, they lost two laborers. Those men just hightailed it out and kept on going. Never went back. Could be one of the reasons they looked farther afield for workers here.”

  Tibald shrugged, chewed his Big Red. “Could be the reason they never finished up those big, fine ideas.”

  “Do you know what happened on the third floor?”

  “Nope. Don’t know of anyone who does. Just know a few who wouldn’t go up there, no matter what you paid them. Any plasterwork needs doing on the third floor, you give my sister, Lucy, a call first.”

  They both turned at the sound of a car coming down the drive. “That’s Miss Lena’s car, and Miss Odette with her.” Tibald’s grin spread as the ancient MG stopped beside his truck.

  “Afternoon, ladies.” Tibald walked to the passenger’s side to open the door for Odette. “Where y’at?”

  “Oh, fine and well, Tibald. How’s that family of yours?”

  “Nothing to complain about.”

  Lena climbed out as Declan opened the door. Her jeans were intriguingly snug, worn with a shirt the color of polished turquoise. “My grandmama thought it was time to pay a call.” She scanned the drive, noted the number of pickups. “What did you do, cher? Hire yourself an army?”

  “Just a battalion.” She smelled of jasmine, he thought. She smelled of night. He had to concentrate on basic manners or swallow his gum. “Can I give you a tour?”

  “Mmm. We’ll get to it. Tibald, you say hey to Mazie for me, won’t you?”

  “I will. Gotta be on my way. I’ll get that bid to you, Mr. Fitzgerald.”

  “Declan. I’ll be looking for it. Miss Odette.” Declan took her hand as Tibald climbed into his truck. She wore a cotton dress the color of ripe squash, and a dark green sweater against the mid-winter chill. Today’s socks matched it.

  She smelled of lavender and jingled with her chains and bracelets. Everything about her relaxed him. “Welcome to Manet Hall. Such as it is.”

  Odette winked at Lena when Declan kissed her hand. “We’ll take a look at it when we’ve finished out here. Heard you hired Big Frank and Little Frankie,” she said, nodding toward their pickup. “How’re they working out for you?”

  “They seem to be doing the job. I don’t know how.” He studied the patchy front gardens with his thumbs hooked through his belt loops. “I can’t catch them actually doing anything, but I blink and a couple truckloads of underbrush are gone. Would you like to walk around the grounds?”

  “I would. Lena honey, get those spirit bottles out of the trunk. We’ll hang them on these live oaks to start.”

  “Spirit bottles?”

  “To keep the evil spirits away.” Lena began lifting bottles half filled with water from her trunk.

  “Should I be worried about evil spirits?” Declan asked.

  “An ounce of prevention.” And taking two, Odette moved off toward the trees.

  “Spirit bottles,” Declan reported, lifting one. He’d seen them hangi
ng outside the shotgun house. “Just how do they work?”

  “It’s an old voodoo trick,” Lena told him. “The clanking sound they make scares the evil spirits away.”

  Testing, he bumped two together. It sounded pleasant enough, he thought, and not particularly scary. “You believe in voodoo?”

  “I believe in that ounce of prevention.” She strolled off, small and curvy, to join her grandmother.

  Voodoo or old glass bottles, he liked the way they looked hanging from his trees. And when he tapped two together again, he liked the sound they made.

  It took nearly an hour to wind their way around the house and into it as there had to be conversations with the landscapers, inquiries about their family, speculation on the weather, discussion of the garden.

  When he finally got them into the kitchen, Odette fisted her hands on her hips and nodded. “That’s a good color, like a nicely baked pastry crust. Most men, they don’t know anything but white. Brings out these good pine floors.”

  “I should have the cabinets ready to install next week.” He gestured toward the dining room. “I’m using pine there, too. With glass fronts.”

  Lips pursed, Odette walked in, ran her hand over a cabinet. “This is nice work, Declan. You got a talent.”

  “Thanks.”

  “And it makes you happy.”

  “It sure does. Would you like to go into the parlor? I’ve got a table in there. We’ll have some tea.” He glanced up as something heavy hit the floor above. “Sorry about the noise.”

  “Work’s rarely a quiet activity. Lena and I will just wander along, if you don’t mind. We’ll find the parlor.”

  “You can’t miss it. It’s the only room with a table.”

  “He’s a very nice young man,” Odette commented as she and Lena walked out of the dining room.

  “He is.”

  “Good-looking, too.”

  “Very.”

  “Got a hot eye for you, chère.”

  Now Lena laughed. “He does.”

  “What’re you going to do about it?”

  “I’m still thinking. Lord, what a place.” Lena trailed her hands over a wall. “Doorways wide enough to drive a car through. It makes you cry to see how it’s been let go.”

  “Let go? I don’t know. Seems to me it’s just been waiting. Isn’t this just like a man,” she said when they stepped into the parlor. “Living with one table and two chairs. Bet he hasn’t fixed a decent meal for himself since he got here.”

  Lena cocked an eyebrow. “Grandmama, you’re not going to make me feel sorry enough for him to cook his dinner.” Amused, Lena wandered to the window. “It’s beautiful, what you see from here. Imagine what it would’ve been like to stand here when the house was in its glory. Horses coming through the allée, those funny old cars rumbling up the drive.”

  “It’ll be beautiful again. But it needs a woman—just like that boy needs one.”

  Lena toyed with the little key that hung around her neck. “I said I’m still thinking. Chilly in here yet,” she added. “Needs a fire going.”

  “I’ll build one,” Declan told her as he came in with a pitcher of over-steeped tea and plastic cups.

  6

  It was a good hour, Declan thought. And not counting Remy and Effie, his first real company.

  He liked having them there, the female presence in his parlor with the fire he’d built crackling cheerfully and the late afternoon sun fighting through the dust on the windows.

  “I’m going to come back,” Odette told him, “to see your kitchen when it’s finished.”

  “I hope you’ll come back often. I’d be glad to show you the rest of the house.”

  “You go on and show Lena. Me, I’m going to walk on home.”

  “I’ll take you home, Grandmama.”

  “No, you stay awhile.” However casual her tone, there was a sly look in her eye. “I want to walk, then it’ll be time for my nap.” As she started to rise, Declan got up, offered his hand. And made her smile. “You got a pretty manner about you. You come back and see me when you’re not busy. I’ll make you some sauce patate—potato stew—before you get so skinny your clothes fall off your bones.”

  “I got the phones hooked up.” He dug in his pocket for a scrap of paper, found a pencil in his shirt pocket and wrote down the number. “If you need anything, just call.”

  “Yes, indeed, a very pretty way.” She turned her cheek up, inviting his kiss. When he walked her to the door, she gestured for him to lean down again. “I approve of you sparking my Lena. You’ll have a care with her, and most don’t.”

  “Is that your way of telling me I don’t have a chance with you, Miss Odette?”

  She laughed and patted his cheek. “Oh. If I was thirty years younger, she’d have a run for her money. Go on now, and show her your house.”

  He watched her walk by the trees with the spirit bottles dangling.

  “You like my grandmama,” Lena said from the parlor doorway.

  “I’m love-struck. She’s wonderful. Listen, it’s a long walk to her place. You ought to—”

  “If she wants to walk, she walks. There’s no stopping her from doing anything.” She wandered to the front door to stand beside him. “Look there, it’s Rufus come to walk her home. I swear, that dog has radar when it comes to her.”

  “I kept hoping he’d come around.” He turned to Lena. “Bring you with him. I started out two nights this week to go to your place, and talked myself out of it.”

  “Why’s that?”

  “There’s persistence, and there’s stalking.” He reached up to twirl her hair around his finger. “I figured if I could hold out until you came by here, you wouldn’t consider getting a restraining order.”

  “If I want a man to go away, I tell him to go away.”

  “Do men always do what you tell them?”

  Her lips curved into that cat smile that made him want to lick at the little black mole. “Mostly. You going to show me this big house of yours, cher?”

  “Yeah.” He caught her chin in his hand, kissed her. “Sure. By the way.” Now he took her hand as he led her toward the staircase. “I have Miss Odette’s permission to spark you.”

  “Seems you need my permission, not hers.”

  “I intend to charm you so completely, we’ll slip right by that step. Fabulous staircase, isn’t it?”

  “It is.” She trailed a red-tipped finger along the banister. “Very grand, this place of yours, Declan. And from what I’ve seen of it, I realize you’re not a rich lawyer after all.”

  “Ex-lawyer. And I don’t follow you.”

  “You got enough to put this place back, to keep it—you do mean to keep it?”

  “Yeah, I do.”

  “Then you’re not rich. Step up from rich. You’re wealthy. Is that the case?”

  “Well, money’s not a problem. It doesn’t buy happiness, either.”

  She stopped on the landing and laughed. “Oh, cher, you think that, you just don’t know where to shop.”

  “Anytime you want to help me spend some of it.”

  “Maybe.” She looked down over the banister toward the grand foyer. “You’ll be needing furniture eventually. There’s some places I know.”

  “You have a cousin?”

  “One or two.” She lifted her eyebrows at the noise and cursing from the end of the long hall.

  “Plumber,” Declan explained. “I had him start on the master bath. It was . . . well, it was an embarrassment of avocado. If you know anyone who wants some really ugly bathroom fixtures, let me know.”