Bitter Spirits (Roaring Twenties #1)(17)
And maybe suckle one or two of the fingers that had been wrapped around his necktie.
“Mr. Magnusson?”
“Winter,” he corrected, turning around. A white cloud billowed from her mouth, and standing between them was the thing. “Was this what you wanted me to see?”
It looked the same way it had every day that week: a man with dark hair and a beard, wearing an old-fashioned suit. Usually at this point, Winter would be intently studying the ghost, but right now all he could do was stare at Aida and the breath wreathing her face.
This was the third time he’d seen the ghost, but it was still startling.
“At least you know Velma’s antidote worked, because your ghost couldn’t be less interested in either one of us.” She studied the ghostly man as he went through the same motions he did every day—talking to himself without uttering a sound, putting his hand over his heart. A few moments more and he’d be heading toward the windows.
“I can see through his feet, so he’s definitely an old ghost—they usually fade after time. Rare that one sticks around for more than a decade or two. Oh, look, he’s got a wooden hand.”
Huh. Damned if she wasn’t right. Now that she’d pointed it out, Winter could see wood grain beneath paint.
“How long does he stick around?” she asked.
“Another half a minute or so, then he jumps.”
“Jumps?” She glanced at the window. “Suicide?”
“Would seem so.”
“Did a man kill himself in this house?”
“No idea. A San Francisco judge built the house after the earthquake. My parents bought it a few years ago.”
“Interesting. Would you like me to get rid of it?”
“That’s why I called you out here.”
Not because he craved an excuse to see her again.
“Your wish, my command, Mr. Bootlegger.” She smiled so beautifully, he nearly forgot all about the ghost standing between them. As whorls of white puffed from her mouth, she reached out with splayed fingers and touched the man. He crackled, then simply . . . disappeared.
Gone.
Along with her snowy breath, which petered out after a couple of exhalations.
Winter stared at her, unable to speak. “Well done,” he finally managed to say.
Aida folded her arms under her breasts and looked him straight in the eye, one side of her bewitching mouth cocked in a self-assured smile. “That’ll be fifty dollars.”
• • •
Two nights later, standing behind a folding screen in her dressing room at Gris-Gris, Aida was still giddy about that fifty dollars. Well, not so much the money as the wicked postcard collection. And not so much the postcards as the way she’d felt when Winter towered over her like some erotic heathen god. For the umpteenth time, she reminded herself how reserved he’d been after she’d banished the ghost in his study. He barely said another word, just handed her some bills from his pocket—who carries around that much cash?—then clammed up when his housekeeper came in the room.
“You haven’t heard from him since,” she murmured to herself as she tugged a beaded green gown over her head. It was a straight-cut gown with a dropped waist, a nice fit, but it had a line of buttons in the back that she couldn’t reach. Should’ve thought of that before she put it on. Maybe one of the chorus girls would help her. A knock sounded on the door. She peered around the side of the screen to see Velma’s head poking into the room.
“Oh, good. You’re dressed,” the club owner said.
“Actually, I’m glad you’re here, because I need help reaching—”
Velma didn’t wait for the end of her sentence, just swung the door open while speaking to someone in the hallway. “She’s all yours, but don’t hold her up. She’s due onstage in fifteen minutes.”
Aida slipped back behind the screen and stood on stockinged tiptoes to see over the top.
It was him.
Damn.
“Velma!” she called out.
Her boss just shrugged and shut the door, leaving her alone with Winter Magnusson, who was looking warm and handsome in a smoky brown suit and chocolate coat.
“Hello, Miss Palmer.”
She tried to prop her arm on the screen in an attempt to look casual and slipped. As if her heart wasn’t already beating fast enough to make its way into a Poe story. “Err, hello.”
“You are dressed behind there, aren’t you?”
“Just putting on . . . shoes.” Shoes? She winced. “What brings you by? Another ghost?”
He squinted at her for a moment, probably wondering why she wasn’t coming out from the screen, which would be the normal thing to do if she were dressed, then held up a dark bottle. “Krug. Champagne. From France.”
What were they celebrating? Her discovery of his erotic postcard collection?
“Just a token of thanks for getting rid of my ghosts, since I didn’t pay you for the prostitute.”
“The what?”
He stilled. “The first ghost. The night we met.”
Oh. “How did you know she was a prostitute?”
He tapped the bottom of the bottle against his gloved hand, then walked to the dressing table and set it down. “Hope you like it.”
“I adore champagne, and if it’s the same stuff you sell to Velma, it’s terrific.”
Jenn Bennett's Books
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- Summoning the Night (Arcadia Bell #2)
- Kindling the Moon (Arcadia Bell #1)