she couldnât possibly explain why she so badly wanted to stay in the house.
Alone.
At last the good-nights were ending. Robert Adair continued to look troubled. She kissed his cheek. âWeâll have dinner soon, howâs that?â she whispered to him.
That seemed to brighten him. He nodded.
âItâs really good to see you back, Leslie,â he said gravely.
âBack in New York. Back with us all,â Ken Dryer added.
She smiled. âThis is home,â she murmured.
Finally they left and she was alone in the house.
She stood in the entry. She could still hear the street noises, muffled by the fence and the thick walls of the house. The sound of a horn, a shout, a car alarm. The usual.
She forced those noises into the background and tried to hear the house itself.
Nothing. Everything was quiet. Not even an old board creaked.
Hastings House had stood for more than two centuries. It had seen war, peace, life, loveâ¦and death. It had to be filled with a few spirits. It had been witness to a revolution, to a civil war that had torn a country apart. It had been there in 1812 when a fledgling nation had faced its first major confrontation following its independence. It had witnessed riots, the teeming disturbance of a world gone crazy in the caste war pitting old immigrants against new. World wars had come and gone, and the Cold War after them. It had survived the tragedy and trials of the twenty-first century.
There had to be spirits hereâ¦.
But she heard, sensed, nothing. The house was silent.
âMatt?â she whispered hopefully.
But there was no reply.
She closed her eyes, prayed, hoped, waited.
Nothing.
At last she went up to bed.
There are no rules, Nikki had told her once. No one really knew what lay beyond this world.
She lay awake as long as she could, still and expectant.
But nothing happened, and without even noticing the transition from wakefulness, she finally fell asleep.
4
A t three in the morning, Joe was trolling the streets, driving slowly, looking for his one hooker in a veritable sea of them.
Heâd started doing the basics immediately. Checking and double-checking the information Eileen had given him, making appointments, sending e-mailsâ¦
Heâd read the magazine article several times over but had found nothing but an allusion to a long-ago rumor of an extramarital affairânot enough to make an intelligent grown woman go berserk, surely. The reporter was currently on assignment overseas, so there was no way to get hold of him to see how much he really knew.
Joe didnât think he was going to get much help from that quarter, anyway.
The secret to Genevieveâs whereabouts was out here somewhere on the streets.
One of the notes Eileen had given him referred to a hooker Genevieve had tried to help in the course of her job and had actually spoken about to her aunt. Didi Dancer. Probably not the girlâs real name, butâ¦
Five foot four, huge breasts, tiny waist, liked to wear a skin-tight red skirt and leather jacket when she worked. Spiked heels. Her vanity was her hair, long and a rich, vibrant brown; she wouldnât be hard to spot.
He saw the woman and pulled over to the curb. She noticed that he was driving a Lexus, and he noted the hard smile that curved her lips as she walked over to the car. She leaned against it, arching her body suggestively as she did so.
âHey,â she said. Then her hard smile eased a bit. âSo, good-looking, what are you up to tonight?â
âIâd like to talk to you,â he said.
She had pretty features. Her skin was dry and taut, though. Too many cigarettes. Maybeâprobablyâtoo many less legal substances, as well. âTalk? Sure, honey, everyone wants to talk.â
He smiled; her own grin deepened. âHey,â she said again, her voice growing husky. âYou really are good-looking, sugar. Maybe we can work out a good dealâfor