A Temporary Ghost (The Georgia Lee Maxwell Series, Series 2)

BOOK: A Temporary Ghost (The Georgia Lee Maxwell Series, Series 2)
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Praise for Georgia Lee Maxwell and A TEMPORARY GHOST
:

“The debut of Georgia Lee Maxwell is an all-around delight… a brisk and witty book full of sharply unexpected events and packed with wonderfully robust characters.”

—Publishers Weekly

“[Michaela Thompson] has given us a fresh new heroine in Georgia Lee Maxwell … She is a delight, a bright and funny lady with a breezy narrative voice.”

—Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine

“Georgia, bright and kooky, is an engaging narrator and her adventures come thick and fast.”

—London Times Literary Supplement

“Witty, thoroughly enjoyable crime novel.”

—Jewish Gazette

 

A TEMPORARY GHOST

A GEORGIA LEE MAXWELL MYSTERY

By MICKEY FRIEDMAN

 

booksBnimble Publishing
New Orleans, La.
A Temporary Ghost
Copyright 1989 by Mickey Friedman
Cover by Andy Brown
ISBN: 9781625172129
www.BooksBnimble.com
All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Contents

Praise

Title Page

Copyright Page

Start Reading

Dedication

Our Guarantee

Also by Michaela Thompson

A Respectful Request

How about a Free Book?

About the Author

AVENUE GABRIEL

Think of ghosts, and the image you conjure is the standard Halloween version: filmy, white, briefly glimpsed in a dark place, leaving the suggestion of a chilly breeze behind. Yet a ghost can be more subtle. A ghost can be felt but not seen, present but not acknowledged. It can exist in pauses and silences, inhabit a gesture or an expression, liquefy in a tear. So a ghost can pervade and control.

There’s another kind of ghost, too, which is the kind I was.

I didn’t want to be one. It was going sour already. I should never have accepted, but money is a potent argument. My friend, Kitty de Villiers-Marigny, tried to cheer me up.

“It’s a free trip to Provence. How bad can it be?” she said.

I slid down in my chair to rest on the base of my spine, a posture I used to assume at the age of six when Mama served okra for dinner. On the table in front of me now was a brioche at which I had, uncharacteristically, only nibbled, and an unfolded piece of paper with a few lines of typing on it. The paper was a letter I’d received yesterday from New York. “I wish I’d never gotten into it,” I said.

All the windows to Kitty’s balcony— an entire wall of them— were open to Paris in May. Above the spreading green leaves and candle-like white blossoms of chestnuts in full flower I could see the frivolous-looking wrought iron roof of the Grand Palais. Muted traffic noise from the Champs-Elysées across the park drifted in and combined with the sound of a voice crooning Portuguese endearments in the kitchen.

Kitty shook her abundant red hair in a gesture of dismissal. I thought she was more worried than she let on, but maybe it was projection. She was wearing a crinkly, elasticized mini-dress in shocking mauve, with a cluster of artificial cherries pinned to her bosom, and against all odds she looked smashing. Kitty dressed for success, but success at what remained a question. Next to her outfit, my cotton sweater and plaid traveling slacks looked like something from the previous century. “It’s probably sour grapes from a writer who lost out on the job,” she reassured me.

The letter I’d gotten said, “A killer shouldn’t profit from her crime. If you help Vivien Howard, you’re a killer, too.” I hated anonymous communications. Especially when they hit a nerve.

“The deal was written up in a couple of places. I guess it could’ve made somebody mad,” I said, whistling past the graveyard.

“Sure it could. You got a plum!” Kitty’s enthusiasm was a shade too hectic.

“There’s a law about criminals profiting from books about their crimes. The Son of Sam law,” Jack Arlen said. He poured himself more coffee and started on his third brioche. Nothing was spoiling
his
appetite.

Leave it to Jack. Jack’s sleeves were rolled up, his tie loosened. There were a few gray bristles on his cheek where he’d missed a spot shaving, and his abundant salt-and-pepper hair could’ve used a serious trim. From looking at him, you’d never have guessed that within an hour he would be face-to-face with the president of France, albeit at a press conference.

I rose to the bait. “Vivien Howard is not a criminal. She was never even indicted, much less tried, much less convicted. She had an alibi, the evidence was all circumstantial…” If I said it vehemently enough, maybe I’d convince myself.

“Right, Georgia Lee. You’ll have to take that point of view if you’re going to write it
her
way.” He grinned wickedly and patted me on the arm. If he got me mad enough, maybe I’d quit being upset about the damn letter. “
If you help Vivien Howard, you’re a killer, too.”
Great.

I pulled a bite from my brioche and dribbled honey on it. I
was
going to write it Vivien Howard’s way. That’s what I was being paid for, wasn’t it?

The Portuguese crooning in the kitchen went up a delighted octave. My tortoiseshell cat Twinkie must have done something darling, like twitch the end of her tail.

Kitty, Jack, and I had met for a good-bye breakfast at Kitty’s apartment on the Avenue Gabriel, an occasion that would have been more festive if my hate mail hadn’t cast a pall. In truth, I’d been shaky about the project even before, but my doubts had been overwhelmed by rampant greed. Vivien Howard was determined to work with me and nobody else. She’d stamped her foot until she got what she wanted. And the South of France was supposed to be beautiful this time of year.

“You have last-minute jitters,” Kitty said.

“Who wouldn’t?” said Jack. “Going down there to spend a month with a murderess.”

I was too edgy for teasing. “Look, Jack. If you’ve got proof she did it, call the New York police. If you don’t, I suggest you shut your big fat—”

“Whoa, Sweetheart! Relax.”

I relaxed, or made an attempt to. Outside Kitty’s window, the chestnut leaves rippled slowly in a languorous breeze. Paris had never looked more beautiful. And here I was leaving for Provence, to spend a month with a— with a woman named Vivien Howard, preparing to ghostwrite
Vivien Howard: My Story.

Inarticulate murmurs of approval came from the kitchen. Twinkie had probably consented to nibble on some foie gras if Alba, Kitty’s housekeeper, fed it to her by hand. The empty cat carrier stood open in a pool of sunlight on Kitty’s Oriental rug. Twinkie would be at least as well off here as she was in the Montparnasse studio we shared. I wished I could stay here with Kitty and eat foie gras, and let Twinkie take the T.G.V. to Provence to be a ghostwriter.

“Maybe she
did
kill him,” I said fretfully. “The creep who wrote the letter seems to think so.”

Having undermined me, Jack now hastened to shore me up. “As far as the law goes, she’s clean as a whistle. Some chump is pissed off because she got a fancy book deal.”

“Yeah.” A former anxiety, displaced since the letter arrived, resurfaced. “I don’t even know if I can work this way— I’ve never done it before.”

“Look.” Jack leaned forward, “pep talk” written all over him. “You’ve got your recorder and tapes, right?”

“Check.”

“You’ve got your typewriter, paper, notebooks, and pencils.”

“Yep.”

“You’ve got a fat file of clippings, and you’ve read them all.”

“Uh-huh.”

“Last but not least, you’ve been paid a fair amount of dough up front.”

“True.”

“So what you do”—he hitched himself closer—“you turn on the tape recorder, ask her some questions, listen to what she has to say, and write it up.”

Kitty snorted. “Inside tips from the grizzled veteran journalist.”

In fact, all three of us were veteran journalists, although Jack, ten years or so older than I, was more grizzled. He was right, too. I, who had celebrated my mid-life crisis by quitting my job as society editor of a Florida newspaper to move to Paris and live in genteel poverty writing the “Paris Patter” column for
Good Look
magazine, and who had further managed to become notoriously involved in theft and murder within months of my arrival, should be able to handle a ghostwriting assignment. Not to mention a crummy letter telling me that if I did the job I was a killer.

“At least they’re Americans. No language barrier,” I said, trying to buck myself up.

“You’ll love Provence. It’s wonderful,” Kitty said. She’d been a high school cheerleader in Ames, Iowa, and still had the attitude.

Twinkie emerged from the kitchen and sat next to her carrier, washing her face. Sunlight gleamed on her broad back and washed over the open glass shelves covering one wall, where a collection of pre-Columbian statues brooded. These had been assembled by Kitty’s estranged husband, the renegade aristocrat Luc de Villiers-Marigny, apparently on the basis of prominent sexual apparatus.

Jack lit a cigarette, a nasty habit he had, and stretched luxuriously, freeing his shirttail. “So where is your Dark Lady hiding out exactly?” he asked.

The sobriquet came from
New York
magazine, which had run as a cover a close-up of Vivien with the superimposed words “Carey Howard’s Dark Lady.” It seemed that Carey, Vivien’s violently deceased husband, had wooed her with Shakespeare’s sonnets. Judging from the photo, the adjective could refer only to her black hair, since her face, far from swarthy, was very pale. She looked every day of her age, which, I had excellent reason to know, was forty-five. I knew her age, her birthday, the ages and birthdays of her son and daughter, and a lot of intimate details of her personal life that, under normal circumstances, would have been none of my business. I knew more about Vivien Howard, whom I’d never met, than I knew about Kitty, who was my office mate in a broom closet on the Rue du Quatre-Septembre, and best friend. What I didn’t know was what nobody (who was telling) knew: Did Vivien kill her husband?

I answered Jack. “Where will we be? In the Vaucluse, near the foot of Mount Ventoux. Staying in a converted farmhouse outside a village called Beaulieu-la-Fontaine.”

“Cozy. She owns a farmhouse in Provence?” As he spoke, Jack was glancing at his watch.

“I gather she borrowed it.”

“Who’ll be there?” Kitty licked honey from her fingers.

“Vivien and the lover—”

“The same lover? The artist?”

“Same lover, Ross Santee. The daughter, Blanche—”

Jack was getting to his feet, not listening. “Look at the time. I’m due at the Elysée at nine.”

Since the Elysée Palace, the official residence of the French president, was only a block from Kitty’s sumptuous digs, he’d be able to make it. He grabbed his jacket, gave me a hug, and kissed the top of my head. “Knock ’em dead. Don’t give them a chance to do it first,” he said, and then he was out the door.

“Take care,” I said, too late for him to hear me. Jack’s goading, slightly sadistic teasing was typical of the cranky mood he was in these days. As Paris bureau chief of the Worldwide Wire Service, he was taking a lot of out-of-town assignments. Kitty and I knew his marriage was shaky, but he never talked about it. He hadn’t mentioned a girlfriend, but chances were he had one somewhere.

“What time is your train?” Kitty asked.

“A little after ten.” My bags and coat were by the door.

“Another cup?”

“Half.”

She poured and said, “Twinkie and I will be fine. Don’t worry about us.”

“I won’t.”

The letter and envelope lay on the pink flowered tablecloth amid the white porcelain. She picked them up and looked them over again. The message was typed. The address was typed. “Mailed from New York,” she said.

“Where all of them are from. Where the murder took place.”

She folded the letter, replaced it in the envelope, and handed it to me. “If you want out because of this, go ahead and quit. Nobody would blame you.”

“I’d have to pay the money back. The agreement says if the project falls apart because of me, I have to pay my part back. If she pulls out, I get to keep it.”

“So pay it back. No amount of money is worth your peace of mind.”

Her sentiment was laudable, but when the check arrived I had paid off several bills that had been making me go dry-mouthed every month. I had also had my Florida condo repainted and taken care of roof damage caused by a near-hurricane, two items my tenant, usually a sweetheart, had been screaming about. I had also allowed myself the luxury of a trip to the dentist. “Pay it back” was easy for
Kitty
to say.

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