Now You See Her

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Authors: Cecelia Tishy

BOOK: Now You See Her
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are
used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2005 by Cecelia Tichi

All rights reserved.

Mysterious Press

WARNER BOOKS

Hachette Book Group

237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

Visit our website at
www.HachetteBookGroup.com
.

First eBook Edition: April 2009

ISBN: 978-0-446-56128-0

Contents

Copyright Page

Acknowledgments

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Chapter Twenty-seven

References

About the Author

For Bill, my partner in crime

Acknowledgments

A book is a team effort, and I thank Bill Tichi first and foremost for unflagging zest for plot and being first reader. Susan
Robinette, mystery reader extraordinaire, helped keep an eye on the big picture, and Thad Davies cued the time travel, while
the Nashville chapter of Sisters in Crime is the best mix of readers and writers. I thank my agent, Meredith Bernstein, for
keen editorial advice as well as adroit agenting, and my Mysterious Press editor, Beth de Guzman, for the level of editing
that’s often said to be a thing of the past. Not so: Beth eyed the manuscript line by line and challenged this author to meet
the higher standard. Bill Betts’s copyediting of the finished manuscript has been scrupulous, and I am grateful for his eagle
eye. Like every writer across the broad spectrum of mystery fiction, I thank the readers who support our death-dealing enterprise.

Chapter One

T
hey say nighttime fog is romantic, but a woman walking alone on dark city sidewalks gets a Jack the Ripper feeling to the
marrow of her bones. The streetlights cast a sick haze. You can’t see a damn thing in any direction. And footsteps are approaching
right now—coming from behind, amplified in the fog.

I speed up, just three blocks from my destination on Marlborough. The steps get closer. A woman was murdered walking by the
Charles River last month, less than a mile from here. Point of fact: the steps pound harder, faster, a man’s stride. He’s
broken into a run, catching up.

Or closing in? Should I thrust at the groin with my umbrella? Smash his nose with the heel of my hand?

Or is it two people running? I hear many footsteps, so it’s hard to tell. One or two? The murdered woman was struck from behind
while walking, bludgeoned to death. I veer to the curb and stop, silent, invisible, I hope. The soles strike hard enough to
crack cement.

Then a noise erupts in the fog just feet from where I stand—a sudden grunt, a scuffle. A cry of pain sucked in and stifled.
Muffled? Gagged? A gargling sound too. It’s over in a flash. A sound bite.

I don’t move. It feels like forever. The steps recede, but with a new sound—a scraping. Dragging a heavy bag? A body? Every
muscle in my body clenches.

What did I hear?

I force myself down Dartmouth to Marlborough, fighting fear as I hurry along a vapor trail of odors—exhaust fumes, balcony
barbecues. Also garbage, pet waste, mildew.

At 9:06 p.m. this third of May, I meet Meg Givens at the Marlborough townhouse front door. Huge relief just to get here. Sensibly,
she drove. We stare at this house in somber silence, and my pulse rate hikes back up. Neither of us wants to be here tonight.
No one comes to greet us. There’s no welcome mat beneath our feet. Not a single lamp glows from any window, upstairs or down.
A small campaign sign for the Massachusetts governor’s race pokes from the tiny front garden, but the whole townhouse is dead
black, and I don’t expect the interior to be a bit cozy and welcoming, not with the task ahead of us.

Meg’s Lanvin wafts in the thick air, along with hints of something rotting. Compost? Sewage? Rain starts falling, thick drops
mixed in the fog and mist. Should I tell her about the footsteps? The sickening sound, the dragging? As a Realtor, Meg found
a tenant for my upstairs flat, but she’s not a close friend. Why didn’t I drive tonight?

“I appreciate your willingness to do this, Reggie,” she says. “So let’s get going.” Meg keys in. We step into the pitch-black
interior, and a sweet, sharp odor hits my nostrils.

Gas. “Meg, gas. Let’s get out of here.”

“They should’ve left a light on.” Her nails scratch the wall like chalk on a board.

“Out. Now.”

“Here, got it.” Click.

Light flares to reveal a front room sectional sofa in hot orange and wall-mounted hunks of scrap metal. No, they’re armor:
a breastplate, a visor, a mailed glove. It’s like a dismembered knight. Then I see the chandelier, a massive work of medieval
blades, halberds, swords, knives. Some are fused, others swing free. The whole fixture hangs from slender wires. We’re ankle-deep
in a rug that needs mowing with a John Deere.

“My God, a hall of armor. What do I smell?”

“It’s sandalwood, Reggie.”

Not gas, but sandalwood. The joke’s on me. I’m wound way too tight from the weather and the footsteps and noise…and those
ghastly blades that look ready to crash. “Meg, I think somebody just got mugged.”

“Muggings in the Back Bay are fairly common, Reggie. Should’ve warned you about the scent. I recommend citrus air fresheners,
but this couple loves sandalwood. It’s the night noises that wake them up. Random noises.”

“That’s it, Meg—some disturbing noises that I heard when I was walking over here.”

“You walked? Reggie, I forget you’re new to the city. I’ll drive you home. I insist. And this shouldn’t take us long. The
owners are out for dinner. They prefer we leave by ten. Let’s get to it.”

I wrench my mind to the task at hand. Let go of that sidewalk incident, forget the weaponry of the Middle Ages, focus on the
here and now—which feels, however, like a setup for failure. I tried to duck out of this, but Meg begged me. “You say these
people hear slamming doors?”

“Hard slams, Reggie, always late at night. The noises started the week they moved in. I sent our firm’s best handyman. Every
door latch works perfectly. I hope you can help. Are you ready to start?”

“I’m ready, but are you certain there’s no object or artifact left in the house from previous owners?” She shakes her head
no. As I’ve told her, I work hands-on. To start off, I need something tangible to hold. Bare-handed, it probably won’t work.

“Just give it a try, Reggie.”

Closing my eyes, I try to clear my mind and concentrate on rhythmic breathing. And I wait. We wait together. Five minutes?
Fifteen?

Meg’s knuckles crack. She whispers, “How’re you doing? Any vibes?”

“Nothing so far.”

“Take your time. I’ll lower the light.” She turns the dimmer, and the room goes sepia. Minutes pass.

“Anything?” I shake my head. “Maybe if you sit down? Or walk into other rooms? Are you concentrating?”

“I’m concentrating.” But I sound as tense as I feel in this nineteenth-century Boston townhouse whose owners think it’s haunted.
That’s why I’m here this gloomy evening. I’m supposed to ID the ghost.

The fact is, I sense nothing but a mix of sandalwood and Lanvin. Maybe there is no resident ghost. Or maybe my sixth sense
is blocked, since I’m both empty-handed and distracted by the sidewalk episode. In either case, no vision, no spirits.

Meg twists the dimmer down to brownout and stands close. “Let me prime the pump. I’ll tell you some terrible things, Reggie.
These quaint Back Bay houses the tourists love—the slate roofs, the ornamental ironwork, the old brick—the naive tourists
think they’re so charming. So do our clients.”

Her voice drops low and gets grainy. “How wrong they are. Dark secrets haunt these houses. We Realtors know the true stories
of Back Bay murders. Daggers, Reggie, and poisonings from tonics laced with mercury.”

Is she making this up just to coach me?

“Imagine this, Reggie: under the Victorian facades, under the stiff collars and lace, are crazed opium addicts, jealous younger
brothers cut from parents’ wills. Fratricide, parricide. A cousin in formal evening attire trampled by a carriage horse. A
beloved uncle strangled. On a night like this, Reggie, angry spirits can stir. They can slam doors. And psychic powers can
summon them. You, Reggie, can hear them if you concentrate.”

I try. I imagine a rearing carriage horse, the uncle whose eyes pop as the killer crushes his windpipe. I picture it all.
So would you. Which doesn’t make it psychic.

“You don’t feel anything?”

“Wait—” Behind closed lids, I see pricks of light and hear a sudden whoosh. Ghost? No, the ventilation system. “Meg, my sixth
sense is vacationing.”

My laugh sounds brittle. Wrapped in her own troubles, Meg can’t possibly know why I’m on edge. It’s not only the sidewalk
scare in the fog but also my entire new Boston life. Or, as my businessman ex used to say, the whole enchilada.

Stifling her disappointment, Meg runs a hand through her dark brown hair. Her face is heart-shaped, dark eyes quick. She’s
wearing a purple dress with a brooch shaped like a festive red hat, oddly jaunty in this somber scene. “It was worth a try.
Anything to block a lawsuit.”

“You really think they’d sue? For ghosts?”

“Or disturbing their peace, whatever. The wife is convinced the house is haunted. They paid top price in last year’s hot market
and spent big bucks renovating. A lawsuit could drag on for years and cost a fortune. As the listing agent, I could be named
as a defendant. Even if they don’t sue, they could smear our firm. The husband is a new player in big development deals in
the city. They’re political people. They host fund-raisers. You saw the yard sign outside for the primary.”

We move through the dining room, and suddenly, I recognize the pattern in the wall covering: neat rows of clenched fists.
“Aren’t these the fists of the Black Power movement?” She nods. “They papered this room in Black Power salutes?”

“This paper was custom-milled in France.”

“Are your clients black?”

“He is. They moved in two months ago, even though the kitchen’s still not done. Here, sit down a minute while I write them
a note.”

We’re now in the kitchen, a construction zone of tile and stainless steel. I verify that all kitchen door latches do work.
“The new owners are the first to complain about the slamming, right?”

Her pen stops. “Why do you ask?”

“A house can have a history.”

“Reggie, the whole Back Bay is historical.”

“Let me ask this: I won’t say ‘haunted,’ but is the house notorious for unexplained incidents? Do the Realtors gossip about
its ‘dark secrets’?”

She pauses and taps the pen. “Nothing specific, but for some reason, this house goes on the market every few years. For Realtors,
it’s a merry-go-round with a brass ring. The insider joke is, who’s next to grab the sales commission?”

“What do the sellers have to say?”

“When they leave? The usual, job transfer, out-of-state move.”

“No compaints about night noises?”

“A seller wants a good price, Reggie. And ‘ghost’ isn’t on the disclosure sheet.” Meg meets my gaze. “Some of the Realtors
are … shall I say, a bit superstitious? One of our younger agents did some research on the history of the house, and we teased
her because she got so obsessed and moody and complained about cold and chills. Bad for business, I told her. We called her
Igloo Sue.”

“What did she find out?”

“We never knew. She met a pilot and moved to Dallas, one of those whirlwind romances. Personally, I think the problem is the
style of the house. It’s the only neo-Medieval on a block of Italian Renaissance. It doesn’t get enough light on the first
floor. That’s my theory.” Meg finishes the note and manages a grin. “Guess you’re not a ghostbuster psychic, Reggie.”

“Guess not.” My faux buoyance hides a certain angst. Not about this Marlborough house in particular, but my health as a psychic.
True, this gift has bruised and scraped me raw, scarred my arm, nearly killed me, yet it has provided a surge of energy the
NFL could use in Super Bowls. The care and feeding of my sixth sense is topmost priority.

But on that sidewalk, I felt plain fear, and in this house, nothing. At the moment, I’m a psychic flatliner who can’t handle
the city on a foggy night.

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