Page 10
Story: Walking the Edge
She gestured to his bloody T-shirt. “What happened?”
“I think I heard him.”
Cath jerked her attention to the child panting to a stop. Quick, what had he said? Something about the ghost? She circled the bench and perched on the seat. “You heard Père Dagobert?”
“The pear one.” The little boy nodded so vigorously, his hair flopped in his face.
“Wow. Not many people do.” She grinned and steered the child back toward the cathedral.
Mitch stepped into her side vision, his hands on his zipper, closing off the offending sight. Had he shown her the shirt on purpose? Because he wanted her to be troubled at the sight?
His tactic had worked, but she couldn’t do anything about her feelings now. After answering a few questions from her group, she counted heads and pointed out the matching redbrick buildings that flanked the square. “Look up past the offices on the ground floor, and you will see one of the first uses of wrought-iron balconies in New Orleans. Wrought iron is hammered out over charcoal fires and is known for resistance to rust, a very important quality in this rainy city. The upstairs apartments are still rented, but you have to know someone important to get one. Oh, and there’s a long waiting list.”
An irresistible force pulled her head around. Mitch’s dark eyes—were they really black to match his personality or merely very dark brown?—drilled deep.
Good luck with that.
Mitch continued to watch her with that fake-neutral expression. She tugged on her shawl, but her ensemble didn’t cover nearly enough under such intense scrutiny.
“Are there any ghosts there?”
Jolted, Cath searched her group for the speaker. The website writer must have been watching her too. All her customers did at some time during the tour. She peered up at the Pontabla apartments. “If there are any ghosts up there, they aren’t authenticated. There is a known ghost in the house I’m going to show you next.”
Cath started down the block, rubbing her arms against the cold fog penetrating her pores. Maybe the weather had nothing to do with her frigid insides. She flicked a glance at Mitch and led the way to a West Indies–style house. “Let’s turn here.”
She stopped in front of the plaque on the front wall. “A friend of Jean Lafitte lived here. And some people say they’ve heard footsteps coming from empty rooms.” She gestured to the porch of Madame John’s Legacy above. “Lafitte’s good friend and fellow privateer lived here. Take a moment to read about this for yourselves.”
Mitch had moved to the edge of the group, and he clasped a hand over his bicep, a muscle jerking in his jaw. Her heart clenched. Could the blood on his shirt be his?
She went over to him, her knotted stomach subduing the butterflies for once. Unfortunately, they didn’t die. Not when Mitch’s sexy macho heat surrounded her. “I saw Les grab a knife.” She drew Mitch out of earshot of the others. “Did he hurt you?”
“Surprised you care.” His lips twisted.
“Of course I care.” Good grief. She propped her hands on her hips. “I’m human.”
“Definitely.” His dark eyes raked over her.
A sizzle tracked his gaze. Her heart thumped wildly, and her neck instantly blazed. Did he have to be so obvious?
She’d been told she wasn’t beautiful. Not particularly lust-worthy either. The look he gave her could be another of his power tactics. Could be? She crossed her arms and lifted her chin. “Can’t you tell me? Or do you adhere to a code of honor that forbids sharing pain?”
His eyebrows soared. She must have hit a bull’s-eye.
“It’s just a scratch. Hardly bled.” He dropped his hand to expose a tear in the windbreaker’s sleeve, a white bandage visible underneath. “I only needed a couple of stitches.”
“That’s good. Glad it’s not serious.” She released a bottled-up breath. “But your shirt is so…” She needed to ask this somehow, had to know the worst. “Are you ever going to tell me about my brother?”
“Your brother?” Honest surprise flickered over his face.
“We even have the same surname.” She smirked.
How could she be glib with her heart beating hard enough to explode? “Tell me what you did to Les.”
He straightened as if a weight had rolled off him, but his long mouth thinned. “Not what I wanted.”
She flinched. What did that mean? “Just tell me one thing. Is the blood on your shirt my brother’s?”
“It’s my brother’s.” A muscle jerked in his determined jaw.
“I think I heard him.”
Cath jerked her attention to the child panting to a stop. Quick, what had he said? Something about the ghost? She circled the bench and perched on the seat. “You heard Père Dagobert?”
“The pear one.” The little boy nodded so vigorously, his hair flopped in his face.
“Wow. Not many people do.” She grinned and steered the child back toward the cathedral.
Mitch stepped into her side vision, his hands on his zipper, closing off the offending sight. Had he shown her the shirt on purpose? Because he wanted her to be troubled at the sight?
His tactic had worked, but she couldn’t do anything about her feelings now. After answering a few questions from her group, she counted heads and pointed out the matching redbrick buildings that flanked the square. “Look up past the offices on the ground floor, and you will see one of the first uses of wrought-iron balconies in New Orleans. Wrought iron is hammered out over charcoal fires and is known for resistance to rust, a very important quality in this rainy city. The upstairs apartments are still rented, but you have to know someone important to get one. Oh, and there’s a long waiting list.”
An irresistible force pulled her head around. Mitch’s dark eyes—were they really black to match his personality or merely very dark brown?—drilled deep.
Good luck with that.
Mitch continued to watch her with that fake-neutral expression. She tugged on her shawl, but her ensemble didn’t cover nearly enough under such intense scrutiny.
“Are there any ghosts there?”
Jolted, Cath searched her group for the speaker. The website writer must have been watching her too. All her customers did at some time during the tour. She peered up at the Pontabla apartments. “If there are any ghosts up there, they aren’t authenticated. There is a known ghost in the house I’m going to show you next.”
Cath started down the block, rubbing her arms against the cold fog penetrating her pores. Maybe the weather had nothing to do with her frigid insides. She flicked a glance at Mitch and led the way to a West Indies–style house. “Let’s turn here.”
She stopped in front of the plaque on the front wall. “A friend of Jean Lafitte lived here. And some people say they’ve heard footsteps coming from empty rooms.” She gestured to the porch of Madame John’s Legacy above. “Lafitte’s good friend and fellow privateer lived here. Take a moment to read about this for yourselves.”
Mitch had moved to the edge of the group, and he clasped a hand over his bicep, a muscle jerking in his jaw. Her heart clenched. Could the blood on his shirt be his?
She went over to him, her knotted stomach subduing the butterflies for once. Unfortunately, they didn’t die. Not when Mitch’s sexy macho heat surrounded her. “I saw Les grab a knife.” She drew Mitch out of earshot of the others. “Did he hurt you?”
“Surprised you care.” His lips twisted.
“Of course I care.” Good grief. She propped her hands on her hips. “I’m human.”
“Definitely.” His dark eyes raked over her.
A sizzle tracked his gaze. Her heart thumped wildly, and her neck instantly blazed. Did he have to be so obvious?
She’d been told she wasn’t beautiful. Not particularly lust-worthy either. The look he gave her could be another of his power tactics. Could be? She crossed her arms and lifted her chin. “Can’t you tell me? Or do you adhere to a code of honor that forbids sharing pain?”
His eyebrows soared. She must have hit a bull’s-eye.
“It’s just a scratch. Hardly bled.” He dropped his hand to expose a tear in the windbreaker’s sleeve, a white bandage visible underneath. “I only needed a couple of stitches.”
“That’s good. Glad it’s not serious.” She released a bottled-up breath. “But your shirt is so…” She needed to ask this somehow, had to know the worst. “Are you ever going to tell me about my brother?”
“Your brother?” Honest surprise flickered over his face.
“We even have the same surname.” She smirked.
How could she be glib with her heart beating hard enough to explode? “Tell me what you did to Les.”
He straightened as if a weight had rolled off him, but his long mouth thinned. “Not what I wanted.”
She flinched. What did that mean? “Just tell me one thing. Is the blood on your shirt my brother’s?”
“It’s my brother’s.” A muscle jerked in his determined jaw.
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