
Spirited Encounters
ONE
âItâs just for one night.â
âItâs Utica.â
A stack of new releases in her hand, Natalie paused on her way to the front of the book shop and glanced back. âAnd? So? Liam, Iâve been there before.â
Her tall dark and handsome boyfriend nodded. âExactly. Thatâs the problem. Remember last time?â
âI donât know what youâre worried about.â She avoided direct eye contact with his piercing green-eyed gaze as she stopped at the front table just inside the entrance.
He followed her. Moving so he was in her line of sight, he scoffed. âWhat am I worried about? You almost died in Utica.â
âWhat? No, I didnât,â she denied and continued to place the books in what she hoped would be a compellingâand lucrativeâdisplay to lure shoppers into the book and wine shop where theyâd part with their money and increase her businessâs bottom line.
His eyes narrowed as he took a step closer. âAre you pretending you donât remember what happened there or are you experiencing short-term memory loss from when you got electrocuted?â
Reaching out, he cupped her face in one big, warm palm, angled her chin up and peered deeply into her eyes.
It would all have been very romantic⌠if he werenât a doctor whoâd recently been awarded a grant to research brain damage.
At this point, Natalie was convinced Liam viewed everyone as a case study. Walking, talking, brains on legs. Including her. Maybe she shouldnât judge him too harshly. He worked with cadavers in his lab, which had to make the concept of a live case study extra intriguing.
In any case, there was no doubt that in the middle of their conversation about her going to Utica, Liam had switched from overprotective boyfriend to research doctor mode.
He was still sexy as hell but she wasnât in the mood to be analyzed for his research. Nor was she going to be told where she could or could not go.
She was an adult. She loved Liam but he was not the boss of herâand he was being overly concerned over nothing. Or at least almost nothing.
Whatever. She was going.
She scoffed at his questioning her memory function. âI remember perfectly well that I did not almost die in Utica. Not even close. I did, however, actually die right here in Mudville. At least, I was technically dead when my heart stopped for three and a half minutes. You might remember that, since youâre the hero who brought me back to life with your doctorly CPR skills. But looking at the facts, Iâd dare say Mudville with its deadly downed power lines is far more dangerous than Utica.â
He returned her scoff. âI beg to differ.â
âAgree to disagree,â she quipped off handedly, but Liam wasnât having it.
He pinned her with a stormy gaze. âNatalie, you were chased by a demon through the halls of the hotel in Utica.â
She held up one finger to interrupt and correct him. âNo. We only guessed it was a demonic presence, but as it turns out, it wasnât.â
âNatalie,â he huffed, his growing frustration clear. âJust being near that thing brought you to your knees. You couldnât breathe. Donât deny it. Harper and Alice were both there to witness it.â
She dismissed his concern with the flick of a wrist. âYes, but after that I was fine. It was all a misunderstanding. He was just a disgruntled spirit who has since resolved his feelings and moved on to⌠to wherever it is spirits move on to. Heâs not even there at the Hotel Utica anymore.â
âThe hotel that operated as a hospital for years before being shut down for gross mistreatment of patients and then reopened as a hotel again. You canât tell me thereâs only one disgruntled spirit hanging around there.â Shaking his head, he folded his arms over his chest.
She was momentarily distracted by her boyfriendâs bulging arm muscles before focusing back on her rebuttal to his latest point.
âIâm not even going to be at that hotel. Iâll be nowhere near it. I booked a room at the other hotel in town. And the fundraiser is being held in the train station. Besides, I have to go. I already told the historical society Iâd come.â
âCall them back and tell them you canât.â
âYou know I hate talking on the phone.â
âThen email,â he returned.
âLiam, I canât do that. Iâm a guest speaker.â
âTheyâll live.â
âThey already promoted that Iâd be there. The least I can do is go and help them raise some money.â
He scowled. âFine. They want money? Iâll write them a check.â
âThatâs very generous of you, and yes, you should. But itâs not the same thing. They think my being there will help sell event tickets. Raise awareness. You know, get people in the door.â
âBecause youâre a celebrity now?â He cocked his dark brows high.
âI didnât say that, but⌠yes.â She felt her cheeks warm. This new-foundâand unwantedâ fame was in direct conflict with her introvert nature.
Being on that ghost hunter show filmed at the Stanley Theater in Utica had destroyed any anonymity sheâd had before. Completely tossed out the window all sheâd done to hide her new ability as a ghost whisperer from everyone in her life except Liam.
But when considering all the attention sheâd received since thenâboth good and bad but all of it unwelcomeâthis invitation wasnât horrible. Seriously, she was going to be a featured guest at a fancy black tie fundraising event in the gorgeous historic train station just an hour and a half away in Utica.
Heck, it might even be fun.
Sheâd lead a ghost tour of the train station, give the guests a good show, enjoy a cocktail or two and, hopefully, some tasty hors dâoeuvres, then be home the next morning.
Simple.
Apparently, Liam didnât agree. He still scowled as he said, âSend Alice. The old bird is as big a âcelebrityâ as you are. Or get Harper to go. She was a best-selling author even before that ghost show you were all on together.â
She had to admit, his use of air quotes around the word celebrity hurt a bit, but she moved past it. âItâs not the same and you know it.â
âBecause you can talk to ghosts and they canât?â
âYes. The organizers want me to lead a ghost tour. But besides that, Harper is traveling for some book thing. And Alice is⌠well, Alice.â
The quirky octogenarian with no verbal filter or social compunctions had spawned more than one viral meme since her memorable appearance on the show.
After proclaiming on video her love of Gas-X, and demonstrating nightly why she needed it, Alice had become internet famousâor was the word infamous more accurate? The manufacturer of the product had even sent her a case of the stuff after the clip went viral. But Natalie didnât think Alice was the right one to woo wealthy donors into parting with their money at a fancy party.
Before Liam could lob at her any more reasons she shouldnât go, Natalie added, âAnd the nice ghosts from the Stanley Theater will all be there with me.â
âOh, great. Iâm sure theyâll be very helpful. And maybe the ghosts from the old New York State Lunatic Asylum, also conveniently located in Utica, will hear about it and join you too. That should be fun. You can have a big old ghost gathering.â
Liam scowled while Natalie tried not to be impressed at the level of digging Liam had done just to boss her around. Sheâd done a little research herself. That asylum heâd mentioned had opened in the eighteen hundreds and closed in the nineteen seventies.
âWhatâs the big guy bitching about now?â
Natalie startled at the male voice behind her. She spun to see Gabe standing just inside the window heâd silently slipped through.
âHe doesnât want me to go to Utica,â she explained to the ghost, then heard the huff from Liam.
âI take it somebody is in here with us,â Liam grumbled.
âYes. Itâs Gabe,â she answered.
âGood. Maybe youâll listen to Gabe when he tells you not to go since you wonât listen to me. He was there for the supposedly not demonic presence.â Liam pursed his lips in what would definitely be considered a pout on a less manly man.
âHeâs so funny when heâs jealous.â Gabe chuckled, enjoying Liamâs displeasure too much, as usual.
âStop,â she warned her ghost best friend low.
Gabe rolled his eyes. âFine. No more teasing the big guy. But thatâs what heâs worried about? Harriet got rid of that spirit. Heâs goneâ
Natalie nodded to Gabe. âExactly.â
âOf course, that doesnât mean there arenât others,â Gabe said. âIn fact, there probably are more dark entities given the history of some of those buildings. Harriet told us all about it. Liamâs right. It doesnât hurt to be careful.â
Natalie scowled. She hated when the two men in her lifeâor rather one man and one ghostâganged up against her.
âBut if Liamâs so worried, why doesnât he just go with you?â Gabe asked.
She shook her head. âCanât.â
âWhy not? He doesnât punch a time clock. He runs a cadaver lab, for Godâs sake. His test subjects have nowhere else to be since theyâreâyou knowâdead. He canât leave to go with you for one day?â
âNope.â
âWhy not? Has he got an appointment? A scheduling conflict?â Gabe let out a snort.
Natalie lifted one shoulder. âActually, yes.â
âWhat, is he having a âmeeting of the mindsâ with the refrigerator full of brains heâs carving up over there?â Gabe chuckled at his own joke.
She laughed along with him. âMaybe.â
âAs riveting as your half of this one-sided, one-word conversation is, I canât hear your bestie. Would you like to fill me in on the discussion since I have no doubt itâs about me?â Liam asked.
Balancing her ghost best friend and her real live boyfriend had proven challenging since she started to see the dead well over a year ago. She would have thought it would have gotten easier by now. It hadnât.
Natalie spun back to Liam. âGabe says he agrees with me that the problematic spirit moved on after Harriet spoke with it and you have absolutely nothing whatsoever to worry about.â
âGotta love how you relay just the parts you want him to hear and not the rest.â Gabe cocked up a brow beneath his ever-present hat.
She ignored Gabe and focused on Liam. âSo, see? Itâs perfectly safe for me to go.â
âYou know, Nat, if youâre lying Gabe does have the means to relay the truth to me.â Though he couldnât see him, Liam glanced over her head in the direction of where Gabe stood. âI can trust you to do that. Right, Gabe?â
Gabe smiled and said, in spite of the fact Liam could not hear him, âYes you can, big guy.â
She narrowed her eyes at the ghost. âTraitor.â
Gabe lifted a shoulder. âCome on, Nat. You know what they say. Bros beforeââ
She raised one finger in warning. âDonât you finish that sentence.â
Gabe smiled wider but kept his mouth shut.
It didnât matter. Gabe and Liam could bond all they wanted, but she was going to Utica. Alone. And everything was going to be fine⌠she hoped.
TWO
âI canât believe they didnât invite me to come,â Alice Mudd huffed out, arms crossed as she glared at Natalie from the sidewalk outside the shop.
Today the eighty-something-year-oldâor possibly ninety-year-old since no one was really sure and everyone was afraid to askâwas dressed in her usual day-to-day outfit. The blindingly white sneakers set off an orange sweatsuit sporting a tropical pattern featuring big pink flowers and bright green leaves.
Florida rest home casual was Aliceâs signature look even though they lived in upstate New York. Only the colors and patterns of the pants, shirt and zip-up changed. But even todayâs explosion of color couldnât brighten the dark expression on Aliceâs face at being snubbed by the event organizers.
âIâm sure itâs nothing personal, Alice. Itâs only because of myââ Natalie stopped mid-sentence.
Because of her what? Whatever this new ability to speak to the dead was, she wasnât sure she could put a name to it. Talent? Skill? Curse? All applied.
Natalie cleared her throat and began again. âItâs just because they want me to make a big show for the donors by talking with the ghosts.â
âHumph. I remember Harper and I practically had to drag you to Utica to be on the ghost show. Seems like now you donât need me or Harper anymore.â Aliceâs pout had Natalie glancing down guiltily at the car keys in her hand.
âYou could come with me as my plus one, if you wantedâŚâ The moment the words were out of her mouth, Natalie regretted them.
âWhoop! I thought youâd never ask.â Her steps short but quick, Alice hustled to the corner of the old train depot that Natalie had converted into the book and wine shop. She emerged from the side of the building with a suitcase in her hand. âIâm ready to go.â
âYouâre already packed.â It wasnât a question. More a statement of resignation on Natalieâs part as Alice dragged her ancient looking suitcase toward the car.
âYes, I am. So unless youâre waiting around to say goodbye to Doctor McHottie, itâs time to hit the road.â
âI already said goodbye to Liam.â
âI bet you did. Wink.â As she said the word, Alice did indeed deliver an exaggerated, open-mouthed wink.
It was the same trademark Alice wink that had also gone viral on social media in various memes made from clips of the show theyâd been on. Liam was right. Alice was a bigger star than Natalie. And for better or worse, Alice was going to be at tonightâs fundraiser.
It was going to be interesting.
Speaking of the fundraiser⌠âAlice, tonightâs event is fancy. Did you pack something dressy to wear?â
The suitcase Alice had brought for their one-night visit was big enough to hold half of Aliceâs wardrobe, but Natalie had a suspicion it could very well be filled with nothing more than a rainbow of sweatsuits and a monthâs supply of Gas-X.
âOh, sure.â Alice nodded. âI always carry something dressy with me. You never know when youâll get invited someplace classy and need it.â
Natalie cringed as she considered what Alice considered dressy and classy. âUm, itâs not a bedazzled sweat suit, is it?â
âNo, but I do have one of those for tomorrow.â
When Alice didnât elaborate on what tonightâs outfit actually was, Natalie drew in a breath and let it out on a sigh. âOkay.â
With that, she let the subject drop and started the carâs engine. She wasnât the fashion police. It wasnât her responsibility to dress Alice for the fundraiser.
âToo bad Harp couldnât come,â Alice said as she buckled the seat belt.
âYes, it is,â Natalie agreed with a twitch of her lips as she remembered how annoyed Harper would get on set when Alice insisted on calling her âHarpâ for short.
After that short conversational interlude, Alice occupied herself withâsurreallyâplaying silently on her smart phone.
Natalie should have been grateful. An hour and a half of silence had to be better than ninety minutes of making small talk with Alice.
Apparently Natalie wasnât the kind of person to be comfortable with silence in the presence of another person. They made it to the entrance to the highway at the end of town but hadnât even gotten to the sign for the next exit yet when Natalie couldnât take the quiet any longer. âAlice, you can turn on the radio if you want.â
âNo, thanks,â she answered, then set her cell down in her lap and stared out the side window, looking perfectly content to watch miles of nothingness speed by at sixty-five miles per hour.
It was going to be a long, awkward drive.
That thought alone had Natalie trying again to make conversation. âIâm excited to be going back to Utica again. Iâve only been there twice. Once for the show, then again when Liam and I went back for a visit. But I bet youâve been there a lot.â
âNot since the DMV took my license away for no good reason, I havenât,â Alice answered with a scowl.
Crud. Natalie had broached a touchy subject.
She scrambled to bring the conversation back to safer territory. âBut when you were younger, you must have gone there, right?â
âOh, sure. My older sister Agatha and I used to take the train to Utica.â
âThe train from Mudville? From, like, the train station that I now own?â Natalie asked, intrigued.
Nowadays only the occasional freight train rumbled by, which was for the best actually. Every train shook the building. It was like living through a mini earthquake every time, multiple times a day until she feared the wine bottles would vibrate off the shelves. The books would survive a fall but the wine wouldnât. For that very reason she made sure no merchandise at Once Upon a Vine Books & Wine sat anywhere near the front edge of the display shelves.
âThe very same. Back before they shut down the line in 1960, your place was a passenger depot. Weâd get on in Mudville, switch trains in New Berlin, then get off in Utica. Agatha and I would have a meal, visit the shops, see a show, then come home.â
Surprised, Natalie glanced at Alice. âAt the Stanley Theater?â Where theyâd spent a week together filming the ghost show, yet Alice had never mentioned even once sheâd been there before? Likely many times.
âSure. Sometimes. And the other theaters too. There was a whole theater district in Utica until they knocked them down in the sixties. Or was it the seventies? Only the Stanley was saved.â
Natalie tried to imagine a young Alice and her sister, dressed up to the nines. Out on the town for dinner and a show in a theater district that no longer existed. âWow. That must have been amazing back then.â
âIt was.â Alice nodded, her voice sounding dreamy, as if she were lost in the past, until she said, âOops. Sorry. Better crack a window. But donât worry, I packed the Gas-X for later.â
THREE
âHey, Alice!â
âAlice! Over here.â
âAlice, who are you wearing?â
Paparazzi. In Utica. And they were swarming Alice. But she was handling it like a pro, smiling and twirling for them to display a dress that was so old it was back in fashion again.
Tonight was surreal and theyâd only just arrived at the train station for the event.
If Natalie were a better person, sheâd text Liam and tell him heâd been absolutely correct about Aliceâs celebrity. That after her memorable participation in the reality show, Alice was no doubt a bigger star than Natalie was.
There were two reasonsâat least in her own mindâNatalie wasnât going to do that. One, Liam didnât need any more fuel for his ego. The I told you so gene was strong in that man. And two, Natalie had never disagreed with Liam. She would freely admit Alice had stolen the show quite a few times during that week theyâd spent locked in the Stanley Theater with the cast and crew, not to mention the resident ghosts.
Yes, Natalie had the ability to see and hear the dead, but Alice had an innate knack for stealing the scene. But when choosing who would be better at sweet talking potential donors at a fundraising event, Alice was not even in the top ten choices from the showâs castâand there were only eight members in the cast.
âAlice is a star. How are you feeling about that, Nat?â
Natalie spun at the question and smiled when she saw the familiar face.
The costume designer had died in his prime but at least had the good fortune of living out his afterlife in the theater. âBobby LaRue. Iâm so glad youâre here. How are you?â
âWell, Iâm still dead but otherwise Iâm fine. We all are. Of course Evie and Vinny have been driving us all crazy since they got married. Fighting at the top of their lungs one moment, then sneaking off to âmake upâ the next, if you catch my meaning.â
Natalie laughed. âThat sounds about right.â
The two dead movie stars from the dawn of the golden age of cinema had had a volatile, sexually charged relationship before they decided they were in love, as well as in lust, with one another. Why would their posthumous marriage change anything?
âThe others should be along soon,â Bobby said as his gaze dropped down to take in Natalieâs outfit. The unspoken critique was clear in his expression.
Natalie sighed. âGo ahead. Say what you have to say about what Iâm wearing.â
He tipped his head to the side. âEh. It could be worse. It could also be better.â
For a man who was destined to eternally be wearing the same purple leisure suit he died wearing in 1981, heâd always had a lot to say about Natalieâs clothesâusually none of it good.
Natalie pulled her mouth to the side. âThanks.â
âAlice, on the other hand, looks fabulous. Iâm going to need you to ask her for the story behind how she got an authentic Halston original.â
âIs that what it is?â Natalieâs gaze shot to Alice, who she had to admit really had come prepared with an appropriate outfit.
âYes, my little fashion-challenged lumberjack. It is.â
She frowned at the insult. âHey. You donât get to call me that. Iâm not wearing my Ugg boots today.â
âNo, youâre not. And thank God for small favors,â Bobby said as he glanced down at her black knee-high leather boots. âItâs obvious you have a boot fetish but do you own any actual shoes?â
âYes.â She pouted.
âNot clogs. Not sneakers. Not those God-awful croc things.â Bobby gave a little shudder. âI mean real shoes. Iâd settle for just a plain neutral-colored pump with a stiletto heel. Or maybe a peep toe or a sling back.â
âIâm sorry to disappoint but to be fair, Iâm known for my ability to communicate with you lovely spirits, not for my fashion sense.â
âObviously.â
Natalie sighed. Good thing sheâd grown a thick skin when it came to ghostly insults. Sheâd give Bobby a pass. Being dead had to be frustrating. Even so, she glanced down at herself one more time. Her boots were perfectly appropriate. As was her A-line, tea-length, black satin cocktail dress with three-quarter sleeves.
âLooks like Alice has an admirer.â Bobbyâs comment brought Natalieâs head up.
She expected to see one of the older male guests. What she saw was a young man, barely twenty years old if she had to guess, dressed in a dirt and blood-stained military uniform. He hung along the edge of the train stationâs main lobby, his gaze focused solely on Alice. No one else seemed to be looking at him except for Natalie and Bobby. Not even Alice had noticed his intense stare.
âHe must beââ
âA ghost? Yes,â Bobby supplied.
âWhat uniform is that?â
âArmy. World War II, Iâd guess. And might I say that I find it kind of comforting that youâre as ignorant about historical fashion as you are contemporary.â Bobbyâs thinly plucked dark brows rose in judgment.
Natalie didnât have time to spar with the designer. She was too intrigued with Aliceâs admirer.
âIâm going to talk to him,â Natalie declared.
Bobby let out a sniff. âAnd say what?â
âIâll ask him what his interest is in Alice. I mean, he might have technically been in existence for a hundred years, but heâs got a body that looks like heâs too young to legally order a drink at the bar and heâs ogling a woman old enough to be his great grandmother. Thereâs got to be a story there.â
âAnd youâre just going to march over and demand to know what it is?â Bobby asked, eyes wide.
âNot demand. Just ask nicely.â
âAsk nicely, she says.â Bobby snorted. âNot all spirits are as nice as moi. Do you not remember what happened at the Hotel Utica? Because I seem to recall Vinny and I having to find you a priest to banish that demon before he did permanent damage to you livings.â
Et tu, Bobby? Were all the males in the universe psychically connected when it came to harping on her safety?
âYou sound like Liam now. It wasnât like your ghost priest performed an exorcism or anything. He and Harriet just spoke with theââ
âDemon entity,â Bobby said.
âDisgruntled spirit,â Natalie corrected a bit more loudly. âAnd he left on his own accord.â
âIf you say so. And speaking of that hunka, hunka burning love of yours, is Liam coming tonight?â Bobby asked, glancing around hopefully.
âNo. Alice is my date tonight.â And Natalie intended to discover what was up with her dateâs admirer.
The young soldier had moved closer to Alice now. Within touching distance as Alice juggled a drink, her purse, a napkin and a loaded plate of appetizers. He only had eyes for her and Natalie needed to know why.
There was definitely a story there and she was going to find out what it was before this night was over.
With the curiosity killing her, Natalie took a step in Aliceâs direction.
âYouâre going to talk to that soldier, arenât you?â Bobbyâs question came out sounding like more of a statement.
âYup.â Ignoring the less than subtle judgement in his tone, she said, âYou coming?â
âOf course, I am. Donât be silly.â
She smiled. Chalk one up for Bobbyâs love of gossip and a good story. With any luck, Aliceâs mysterious soldier was going to provide both.
FOUR
âUm, hi. Can I ask youââ
âHoly mother of God.â The young soldier pressed a hand to his chest on a gasp. âYou can see me?â
âYes.â
âBut youâre a living,â he said still looking baffled.
âYes, she is,â Bobby agreed. âLong story short, she died very briefly and when she woke up she could see and hear us spirits.â
âThatâs⌠quite a story,â the young man said, eyeing Natalie.
âIt is. Iâm thinking you have quite a story to tell as well. Would you mind if I asked you a few questions?â she began.
âI guess that would be all right. What dâyou wanna know?â
âIâm sorry. I should introduce myself first. My nameâs Natalie. This is Bobby. And you are?â
âFrankie Donovan. Private. Tenth Army infantry division.â
âFrankie. You seem to have an interest in my friend Alice.â
âAlice. So it is her. I thought so. It had to be.â He shook his head in amazement. âAlice. Here. After all these yearsâŚâ
âUm, how do you know Alice?â Natalie asked.
His gaze dropped shyly. âI⌠weâŚâ Frankie opened and closed his mouth again, apparently at a loss for words.
âOoo. This is going to be good.â Bobby rubbed his hands together. âCome on, kid. Stories are meant to be shared.â
Frankie raised his eyes to Bobby, then shifted his gaze to Natalie. âI guess itâs okay. Itâs been so long. Itâs just, a man doesnât kiss and tell.â
âTold you it was going to be good.â Bobby elbowed Natalie in the side, but his elbow did nothing but pass through her.
She shivered from the sensation but kept her focus on Frankie. âWhat happened so long ago, Frankie?â
âIt was 1945. Spring and the weather was perfect. I was home here in Utica on leave for a week visiting my family. I was killing time, having an egg cream at the soda counter inside the drugstore when I spotted her. Alice. Though I didnât know her name at first. She was in town with her sister to see a show and she was the most beautiful girl Iâd ever seen.â
Natalie pressed her hand to her chest at the romance of it all. âSo you talked to her.â
Frankie laughed. âYeah, we talked. For hours. Her sister was so mad. They had plans to do things and I guess I got in the way, but I didnât care. I was shipping out with my unit in just a couple of days. We were headed to Japan. I was young but I knew enough to live every second like it was my last. Turns out, it was a good thing I did.â
âYou were killed,â Natalie guessed in barely a whisper.
Expression somber, he nodded. âBattle of Okinawa. Weâthe deadâwere eventually shipped home. My parents buried me here.â
âAnd your spirit stayed tethered to your body.â Natalie sighed. âI am sorry.â
He lifted one shoulder. âItâs not so bad. I got to see my family and friends againâeven if they couldnât see me. And now Alice again. After all this time.â
He glanced in Aliceâs direction, then looked back at Natalie.
âI kept her with me though. Then and now.â He tipped the combat helmet heâd held clutched by his side so Natalie could see. There, tucked safely inside was a picture of Frankie smiling in a fresh, clean Army uniform, his arm looped through that of a girl who could only be a young Alice.
Fighting tears, Natalie swallowed, then said, âWow. But I donât understand how you recognized her. 1945 is a long time ago.â
He smiled sadly. âYes, it is. But Iâve seen her a few times since that first time. After IâŚpassed. She and her sister continued to come to Utica once in a while. Itâs one reason I started hanging around the train station. Then she stopped coming.â
He visibly shook the memories away then focused on Natalie again.
âSheâs older now, of course. But sheâs wearing the same ring. The same necklace. And believe it or not, one time she came to the theater, decades ago, she was wearing that very dress.â
Natalie shook her head. âThatâs incredible.â
âSee. Take note. Thatâs the power of fashion,â Bobby whispered.
âShush,â Natalie reprimanded him, then turned to Frankie. âDo you want to talk to her? I could relay to her whatever you wanted to say.â
His eyes widened. They were pale blue beneath the shock of curly blond hair that rested on his forehead. He shook his head. âNo. I donât think so. But thank you for offering.â
âOf course.â Natalie nodded, her heart breaking for the young soldier. And for the young Alice in the picture.
He moved as though to leave, then he pivoted back. âHas she had a happy life?â
Natalie delivered a teary smile. âI can honestly say Alice Mudd is the happiest person I know. She lives life to the fullest. I can only hope to do as well myself.â
âGood. Good.â He tipped his head to Natalie, then he moved away through the crowd. Although Natalie had a feeling heâd be somewhere nearby watching for the rest of the night, lost in his memories.
âOh my God, Bobby,â Natalie squeaked past the lump in her throat.
âI know. Rip my heart out, why donât you,â he agreed.
âI have to say something to Alice.â
âDo you though?â Bobby asked. âSoldier boy didnât want to.â
âNo, butââ
âYouâre going to anyway,â Bobby completed Natalieâs thought.
âHush. Iâve been given this⌠ability for some reason. Maybe this is it. Maybe he can move on if I talk to Alice. Perhaps this is his unfinished business.â
âHis what?â Bobby choked. âYou donât still buy into that theory, do you? That we only hang around if we have unfinished business? If that were true, Evie and Vinny would have moved on when you solved their murder.â
âBut they were in love and didnât want to move on.â Done debating ghost theories with Bobby, Natalie said, âIâm talking to her. You donât have to come if you donât approve.â
âHell if Iâm not coming. Approve or not, this is the most exciting thing to happen around here since the first time you stepped foot in Utica. Iâm not missing it.â
With Bobby in tow, Natalie moved across the room to where Alice had moved on to perusing the table of bite-sized sweets laid out for the guests.
âAlice.â
âNat. You missed it. They had tiny cannoli.â She leaned in conspiratorially. âBut donât worry. I put a bunch in my purse for later.â
âOh. Okay. Thanks.â Pushing away the slightly disturbing concept of eating one of Aliceâs purse cannoli, Natalie said, âAlice. Do you remember coming here with your sister to see a show in the Spring of 1945.â
âOf course, I do. I told you about that in the car.â Alice frowned. âAre you having memory loss? You should talk to Doc Hottie about that.â
âNo. Iâm fine. Do you remember meeting a handsome young soldier on that trip?â
The question had Alice pausing just a beat and looking at Natalie a bit strangely. âYes.â
âFrankie Donovan?â Natalie prompted.
Alice nodded. âI was fifteen. He was going to turn eighteen that summer. He was shipping out in a couple of days with his unit. We spent most of the day together. He walked us to the train that night and before we boarded, he kissed me goodbye. It was my first real kiss. I gave him my address so we could write but he never did.â
Throat tight, Natalie said, âHe never wrote because he couldnât. He wasâŚkilled in battle.â
âHeâhis ghostâwas here? You talked to him?â
âI did. Then he left.â
Alice nodded again, slowly. âI think I need to visit the ladies room.â
As Alice moved away, Natalie lost her battle to control her tears. She spun to face Bobby.
âOh my God. This is the saddest story Iâve ever heard,â she whispered.
âI know. Right?â Bobby agreed with a sniff.
âNatalie!â
She turned at the sound of her name. The sight of Liam standing there and looking amazing in a tuxedo made her weak in the knees.
Swiping the tears away, she asked, âLiam, what are you doing here?â
He gripped both her shoulders and pinned her with his gaze. âI finished my meeting early so I came to be with you. But whatâs wrong? What happened? Why are you crying?â
âIâm crying too. You can comfort me,â Bobby said with a lascivious look in his tear-filled eyes while standing too closely to Liam for Natalieâs liking.
âIâm fine. Itâs just AliceâŚâ Natalie began as Liam wrapped his arms more tightly around her.
It felt so good to have him there with her. Have him holding her like he was never letting go. After hearing Alice and Frankieâs story, sheâd never take for granted ever again the fact she was blessed enough to have Liam in her life, every day, safe.
He pulled back again, eyes wide. âOh, no. Natalie, what happened to Alice?â Liamâs tone dipped low as he said, âIs she⌠sheâs notâŚâ
Realization hit. âOh, God. No, Liam. Sheâs not dead,â Natalie whispered the last word.
âThen whatâs wrong?â he asked, rubbing those big warm hands up and down her arms.
Natalie was having trouble concentrating. Liam looked damn good in a tux. âDo you own that?â she asked, fingering his lapel.
He frowned then realized she was asking about the tuxedo. âYeah. I was in a buddyâs wedding a few years back. It was easier to just buy one rather than rent– Why are we talking about my clothes? What happened to Alice?â
âI will admit, he cleans up nice. Not that I wouldnât like him dirty tooâŚâ Bobby licked his lips.
Forcing her mind off the ghost ogling her boyfriend and back to Liamâs question, Natalie said, âI just found out something really sad about her past and I had to tell her but Iâm not sure how sheâs dealing with it. She excused herself to the ladies room but I think she might be upset.â
âWhat did you find out?â he asked.
Natalie repeated the heart-wrenching story to Liam, tearing up again during the telling.
She let out her breath in a huff when sheâd finished relaying the tale. âI donât know. Was I wrong? Maybe I shouldnât have told her. Dammit. I hate this. I wish I never got this stupid power to be able to talk to ghosts.â
âHey, Natââ
Natalie spun to face the woman. âAlice, youâre back.â
âOf course, Iâm back. Where would I go? You drove me here.â After a cock of her brow that clearly said, duh, Alice turned to Liam. âHello, Liam. Hubba-hubba. Youâre looking good.â
Liam smiled. âThanks, Alice. So are you.â
Meanwhile, Natalie was trying to decide if Alice was really good at hiding her emotions or if she just had no heart because Natalie and Bobby seemed much more affected by Frankieâs story than Alice did.
âThanks, doc. Nat, the head guy of this shindig asked if youâd be starting your ghost tour soon.â Alice hooked a thumb in the direction from which sheâd come.
The tour completely forgotten until now, Natalie wasnât going anywhere until she knew Alice was okay. âAlice, are you all right?â
âSure. Why wouldnât I be?â
âI just⌠I mean Frankie⌠He wasâŚâ
âHer long lost love? The one who got away? A love that traverses time and the veil between the living and the dead?â Bobby supplied not so helpfully.
Natalie did her best to ignore the ghost chatter only she could hear. âI just thought you might be sad. That he died.â
âNatalie, everybody dies eventually,â Alice said matter-of-factly.
âYouâre right. Of course. I just thought you might be sad for… what could have been.â
âNatalie, if Iâd dated Frankie back then, if heâd made it home and we got married, my life would have turned out completely different. I doubt I would have gone to college. I wouldnât have had a career teaching. Instead of Mudville, we would have lived here in Utica where he had a job waiting in the family business.â Alice shook her head. âNo. I like my life the way it was. The way it is now. Iâm happy and a person canât be happy if they have regrets.â
âWise words, Alice,â Liam said as he squeezed Natalieâs waist with one big warm hand. âYou should listen to her, babe.â
Subtlety wasnât Liamâs forte. That comment was no doubt in response to her saying she wished she never got the ability to talk to the dead and that she regretted telling Alice about Frankie.
âI do have one question though,â Alice began. âWait. Two actually.â
âOf course. Anything.â Natalie nodded as she tried to remember every word Frankie had said so she could relay them to Alice.
âOne, is Doc Hottie sharing our hotel room tonight and two, does he sleep in the nude?â Alice asked.
âBoth excellent inquiries,â Bobby said. âIâd like to know the answers as well.â
Surprised once again by Alice Mudd, Natalie couldnât help but smile.
This was her life now, strange though it was, and just like Alice, Natalie knew deep down that she wouldnât want it any other way.
What is this mysterious event that happened with Natalie, Liam, Ghost Gabe, Alice and the others during the filming of that ghost show in Utica? Find out in Cadaver Lab: Spirited Shenanigans.