Authors: Wendy Roberts
Chapter 10
Sadie refueled her body with a few strawberries and some melon, together with a double
dose of coffee. She was just getting back on her feet to resume work when her cell
phone rang. The number was Owen Sorkin’s. She didn’t want to get blasted again for
the video, but part of her was thinking about the hot kisses he left on her body.
She snatched up the phone.
“Hello?”
“Hi, sexy,” he drawled. “I understand you met with Gayla. Sorry I wasn’t along to
keep her from giving you hell, and also sorry for not being there because I just wanted
to see you.”
“Oh.” Sadie smiled in spite of herself. “Gayla had every reason to be upset but I
swear I knew nothing about the video.”
“I think we both got bamboozled by a couple of charlatans trying to make a good commercial
for Madam Maeva’s.”
Sadie winced.
“They’re not frauds. Really, they’re not.” A line of worry formed between her eyebrows
and she rubbed it away with her finger. “I don’t know why they would—”
“I know they’re you’re friends,” Owen said. “And I didn’t call you up to give you
hell. I’ve already talked to Rosemary Thingvold and she assured me she had no intention
of linking the video to my house, and I believe her because there’s nothing in that
video that I saw that connects it to Halladay Street. Just a couple of weirdos in
comments somehow made the connection because they think they saw something.” He chuckled.
“Whatever.”
“Fine.” She was willing to just let it go. “So, Mr. Sorkin, why did you call?” Sadie
asked in joking formality.
“Well, to ask you out of course, Miss Novak,” he said with a throaty whisper. “And,
hopefully, resume our, um, discussion of the other night.”
Sadie remembered his fiery kisses on her breasts and she blushed crimson.
“That sounds . . . interesting.” Sadie felt nervous. Things were moving too fast.
“But I’m working and, speaking of that, I’ve got to get back to it,” she said hurriedly.
“Okay. When will you be done working?”
“It looks like I’ll be done tomorrow morning some time, and by then, sleep will be
the only thing on my mind.”
“You’re working all night?” he asked incredulously.
“A girl’s gotta do what she’s gotta do,” Sadie said profoundly.
“Are you sure you’re not just trying to avoid me?”
“No, I’m really working.”
But avoiding him
was
a benefit. At this point her emotions were all over the map about Zack. As much as
she was attracted to Owen, she knew she was weak and hurt. It was probably not the
best time to start dating.
“After you’re done working, and you’ve caught up on your sleep, I want to take you
out on a proper date. A movie with us smooching in the back row or at least dinner,
without my business partner.”
Sadie laughed as she struggled to find a way to say no. Then an aching need filled
her chest.
“That’s sounds nice,” she said.
And it did sound wonderful. It’s exactly what she’d wanted to do with Zack. When they
said good-bye she felt awful. She resumed dressing in gear to go back to work, but
before she pulled on her gloves she picked up her phone again. She texted a simple
message to Zack:
I miss you
.
Once inside the room she caught glimpses of Olivia and Opal fading in and out. Clearly
as ghosts they were bumbling fools incapable of mastering the ability to appear at
will. This wasn’t necessarily a bad thing. It meant they’d most likely be able to
move on—if she could ever get them to stick around long enough to chat with them.
In the meantime, Sadie focused on the task of cleaning. She’d already cut away sections
of drywall that could not be cleaned and had torn out over a third of the carpeting
in the room. The furniture, except for the mattress, was all salvageable and probably
a million times cleaner now than it had ever been getting a daily once-over from a
hotel maid.
The arc of blood spatter was far-reaching in cases where multiple victims were stabbed
to death. Sadie found drops of blood clinging to the inside of the antique-looking
lamp shades, behind the mahogany headboard, and in the farthest reaches and corners
of the decorative moldings and baseboards. She alternated being on tiptoe and crouched
low, just to get at some of the out-of-the-way areas, using small brushes to scrub
away the most minute blood droplets.
It was easy for Sadie to pour her energy into her work when she so desperately wanted
a distraction. Her mind instinctively wanted to drift toward dismembered fingers,
ghostly warnings, her breakup with Zack, and sexual tension with Owen. Keeping busy
helped. However, there were not enough bodily fluids in the world for her to scrub
to rid her mind entirely of all her worries.
She reached the second stage of cleaning somewhere around two in the morning. It was
a relief to know she could work without her hazmat gear and with simple gloves and
cleaning supplies. She had the ozone generator humming away to cleanse the air. After
a break of too much coffee, countered by some bottled water, Sadie renewed her focus
on sending Opal and Olivia into the next dimension, wherever that might be. Sure it
was possibly heaven, but Sadie didn’t like to say for certain, since who knew if hookers
and saints rubbed shoulders in the great beyond?
When she walked into the next room Sadie was pleasantly surprised to see the two sisters
waiting for her.
“We’ve decided we need your help,” Opal said seriously.
“Yeah,” Olivia agreed. “Being a ghost isn’t all we thought it would be. Most people
can’t even see us.”
“What do you mean, most people?” Sadie asked. “How do you know that?”
“We went and did a walk about the hotel,” Opal stated evenly. “We found that if we
both focused on a wall or a door together, we could get through it. So we went down
the hall, and into the lobby. Nobody saw us except some lady. Although sometimes they
pulled their sweaters tighter like we were giving them a chill.”
“Which lady saw you?” Sadie asked curiously.
Olivia shrugged. “Just some woman walking through the lobby.”
Sadie had found that spirits tended to get better at moving about with practice. It
was definitely time for these girls to find that magical stripper pole in the sky.
“I think you’ve made the best decision. Whatever is over on the other side is better
than living in this kind of limbo.”
“But how do we do it?”
“Well, for most, the process to move on isn’t difficult,” Sadie said. “First we need
to think about what’s keeping you here. Is there something you’ve neglected to take
care of? Someone you want me to contact? Family or friends you want a message sent
to for closure?”
“Muffin!” Olivia exclaimed. “Our cat.” She covered her face with her hands. “He’ll
be starved.”
“I’m sure the officers already went to your apartment and would’ve made sure Muffin
wasn’t left alone,” Sadie assured them.
“Will you make sure?” Opal begged.
“Of course. Anything else? Any family I can contact? Location of a will, or anything?”
“No will,” Opal said. “We kept all our cash in a coffee can in the freezer. Our mom
lives in Renton and she works at the Target store there. Could you get in contact
with her and make sure all our stuff goes to her?”
Sadie took down the mom’s contact information but she was sure Petrovich had already
made that call.
“We should give something to WATS, though,” Olivia suggested. “They did so much for
us.”
“True.” Opal nodded and a flap of skin at her throat wriggled with the movement.
Sadie was having déjà vu all over again.
“You mean, Women Against the Streets?” Sadie asked.
“That’s it!” Olivia exclaimed. “The volunteers there are great. They helped by providing
a list of johns that were violent and gave advice on how to get out of the business.
They also got us interested in expanding our horizons by getting us into community
classes and stuff. That’s how we found out about esthetician school. How do you know
about WATS?”
Sadie thought about May Lathrop from the Eminence Hotel. “Let’s just say you aren’t
the first of my clients to make such a request. Did you know May Lathrop?”
“Sounds familiar, but I’m not sure,” Opal said. “What did she look like?”
Sadie described what she remembered about the redhead who died at the Eminence Hotel
but left out the amount of puncture wounds in her body.
“She was killed in the same way at the Eminence Hotel and she also wanted me to give
her stuff to WATS.”
“I think I do remember her,” Olivia said. “She worked a corner up the road from our
apartment, right?” She looked to her sister for confirmation.
“Maybe . . .” She was less certain. “But I do remember a redhead in the acting class
WATS sent us to. . . . Then again, there were a
lot
of girls there. Those acting classes got more popular every year.”
That made Sadie think. “Is there any chance the person who did this to you is connected
somehow to WATS?”
“I don’t see how,” Olivia replied. “They were good people. Kind and thoughtful and
treated all sex-trade workers like real people. Everyone trusts them.”
Sadie would let Petrovich know about the girls’ connection to WATS, but there was
a chance every street worker in Seattle had come in contact with the help center at
one time or another, so she doubted it was the big clue he was hoping for.
“So tell us how to do this thing,” Opal prompted.
Sadie walked them through the process as she knew it. She told them to close their
eyes and let go of their worldly problems and focus only on a white space filled with
love and acceptance.
“Will we be together over there?” Olivia asked, her lower lip quivering with emotion
as she looked at her sister.
“Absolutely.” Sadie had no proof, of course, but it felt like the right thing to say.
She watched as they simultaneously reached for each other’s hand. The young women
gazed out at each other dreamily.
“I’m thinking about that time we went to the beach when I was ten,” Opal said quietly.
“That was such a great day. We built sand castles and played in the surf until the
sun went down,” Olivia added. “When I close my eyes I can smell the salt in the air.”
They both closed their eyes and their bodies became more and more transparent and
a shimmer of light appeared around the edges of their shapes before they completely
disappeared from view.
Sadie smiled happily. They’d made it over. She felt a momentary buzz of exhilaration
zip through her body and she clapped her hands with pleasure. It had taken a while
for Sadie to come to the realization that her calling wasn’t mopping up after the
dead; it was helping them over. The joy she felt when helping spirits go over was
more rewarding, fulfilling, and elating than anything else she could imagine. It made
the grisly and gruesome side of her job worth it.
While she’d been cleaning, Sadie had moved a lot of the furniture and now she found
herself humming as she returned some of the objects back where they belonged. She
happened to catch a glimpse of her reflection in the mirrored armoire, and she let
out a squeak of surprise when she saw the flutter of the curtains behind her.
Sadie whirled to see the spirit of Marlene in front of the window gazing at her forlornly.
“He’s already planning on another,” Marlene said in her distant, echoey voice.
“Another victim?” Sadie demanded, walking toward her. “How do you know?”
But as Sadie attempted to close the gap between them, Marlene was gone, leaving behind
only large goose bumps on Sadie’s arms. There was nothing left to do in this room
except haul bins of debris and allow the ozone generator to purify the air. Sadie
stepped back into the connected safe room. She showered and scrubbed until the coppery
scent of blood no longer radiated from her pores. Wrapped only in a towel, she crawled
beneath the pristine down duvet and dropped into a dead sleep.
Hours later somebody was knocking at the door and Sadie’s world was still foggy with
sleep.
“Can you get that, Zack?” Sadie murmured, and her arm flailed to the other side of
the bed but dropped onto the cool, empty sheets. No Zack. She sat up and rubbed her
eyes, remembering now she’d fallen asleep at the Pacifica. The knock came again followed
by, “Room service.”
Sadie snagged a housecoat from the closet and wrapped it around herself before opening
the door.
A good-looking young man with blond, stylish hair and chiseled features hustled in
with a full tray.
“Good morning, ma’am,” he said, walking to the back of the room to place the items
from the tray onto the table, then busing what remained of the last night’s goodies.
“Sorry to disturb you, but I was instructed to deliver promptly.”
“No problem.” Sadie stifled a yawn behind her hand. “Your boss wanted to make sure
I wasn’t slacking off.”
He looked at her in the housecoat and smiled, exposing rows of brilliantly whitened
teeth.
“I wasn’t. Not really,” Sadie said, smiling back. “I’m mostly finished but needed
to catch some sleep before I left.”
“You’re cleaning next door, right?” He nodded in the direction of the connecting room.
“Yes,” Sadie replied. “Mostly done now.”
“I heard it was awful. Like a horror movie.” He smiled when he said it, like most
people who sensationalized crime scenes into a Hollywood movie format in their minds.
“It was sad. Very sad,” Sadie answered, and that wiped the bright smile off his face.
“Could you let Ms. Hummel know that I’ll be down to see her shortly?”
He nodded and made his way to the door.
Sadie went to her purse and dragged out some bills for a tip.
“By the way, do you remember a young woman, possibly a teen, who worked in housekeeping
named Marlene?” Sadie asked, handing him a couple dollars.
“No, I don’t think so.” He shook his head. “There was a Marlene who was a waitress
last year but she wasn’t young. Maybe thirtyish like you.” He blushed, realizing his
blunder. “Not that you’re not young, I mean—”