Secondhand Spirits (2 page)

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Authors: Juliet Blackwell

BOOK: Secondhand Spirits
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“As a matter of fact, there is. I brought you a housewarming present.”
“Thank you, but that's not necessary.”
“I'm happy to do it.”
“I'm afraid I can't accept.”
“Oh, but I insist.”
“I said
no
, thank you.”
“You don't know what it is yet.”
“That's not the—”
“Pleased ta meetcha.”
I whirled around to find a misshapen creature perched, gargoylelike, atop an antique walnut jewelry display case. He was small and bent, with a muscular body and scaly skin, a large head, a snoutlike nose and mouth, and outsize ears like a bat's. His fingers were long and humanlike, surprisingly graceful, but his enormous feet had three toes and long talons. His voice was deep and gravelly.
“I'm your new familiar,” it said.
“I'm afraid not; I'm a so—” I turned to give Aidan a piece of my mind, but he was gone, the door slowly swinging shut. The bell had once again failed to ring. I swore under my breath.
“A
so
what, mistress?”
“Excuse me?”
“Before you started swearing you said you were a
so
.”
“I wasn't swearing.”
“Were, too.”
I blew out an exasperated breath. “I'm a solo act. I don't need a familiar.”
“You're a witch, ain'tcha? Ya gotta have a familiar.”
“Says who?”
“It's in the handbook.”
“There
is
no handbook. Besides, I'm allergic to cats.”
“I'm no cat.”
“So I've noticed. But I'm probably allergic to . . . . creatures such as yourself, too. Run along home to your master.”
“Can't.”
“Why not?”
“ ' Cause you're my master now, mistress.” The creature attempted a smile, which took shape as a grimace.
“I'm serious. Now
scoot
.”
The grimace fell from his gnarled greenish gray face. Had it been possible, he would have paled. “You don't want me?”
“It's nothing personal. I just don't need—”
“Don't send me away, mistress!” he begged, jumping down from the display case. Even at full height he didn't reach my belly button. He dropped to his knobby knees and clasped his hands, gazing up at me in supplication. “
Please
don't send me away. I'll be good, mistress, I swear.”
“I can't have a goblin in the shop!”
“I'm not exactly a goblin.”
“Gnome, then.”
“Not really a gnome, either . . .”

Whatever
you are, you'll scare away customers.”
“Howzabout a pig?”
“A pig?”
With a sudden twist of his scrawny shoulders, he transformed himself into a miniature Vietnamese pot bellied pig. He grunted, wagged his curly tail, and darted around the counter.
“Hey! Get back here, you—”
“Bless the Goddess, isn't he
sweet
!” Bronwyn squealed, nearly knocking over a rack of 1950s-era chiffon prom dresses in her haste to cross the room. “Where'd he come from? I've always wanted one of those! George Clooney had one—did you know? They're
very
smart.” Bronwyn scooped up the squealing swine and held him to her generous bosom, where, I couldn't help but notice, he stopped kicking and snuggled right in, his pale pink snout resting on her ample cleavage. “What's his name?”
I sighed. I had a million things to do today. Evicting a piggish gnome—or a gnomish pig—was not one of them.
“His name's . . . Oscar,” I said off the top of my head, thinking of the
Sesame Street
character. The ugly little fellow seemed as if he would feel at home in a garbage can. “But he's not mine. He's a . . . loaner. He's just visiting.”
Bronwyn and Oscar both ignored me.

Oscar
. Aren't you just a
darling
? Aren't you Bwon wyn's wuvey-dovey piggy-pig-pig?” She crooned to the creature in the high-pitched, goofy tone humans reserve for cherished pets and preverbal children.
Oscar snorted and rooted around in her cleavage. Bronwyn chuckled. I sighed.
A plump woman in her mid-fifties, Bronwyn had fuzzy brown hair and warm brown eyes. She favored great swaths of gauzy purple clothing, lots of Celtic jewelry, and heavy black eye makeup. The first time I saw her I couldn't decide whether she was a delightfully free spirit or just plain nuts. Shortly after I opened my vintage clothing store, Aunt Cora's Closet, she had approached me about renting a corner of the shop for her small herb business. I welcomed the company: Bronwyn was a so-so herbalist and an amateurish witch, but she had lived in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood since its hippie heyday and knew
everyone
. She would be my entrée into a new and unfamiliar city.
Besides, Bronwyn had been one of the first people I met upon my arrival in San Francisco, and she had welcomed me with open arms. Literally. Bronwyn was a hugger of the bear variety.
Finding a safe place to call home wasn't an easy task for a natural witch from a small Texas town. For years I had traveled the globe, and finally came to the City by the Bay at the suggestion of a parrot named Barnabas, whom I'd met one memorable evening in a smoky bar in Hong Kong.
“The Barbary Coast,” he'd said, gazing at me with one bright eye from his perch on the bar. “That's the place for you. But be careful!”
“Of what?” I'd asked.
“The fog,” Barnabas had replied, holding a banana in one foot and peeling it with his beak. “Mark my words. Mark the fog.”
“What about the fog?”
“Mark the fog! Mark the fog!” he'd screeched. “Hey! Son of a bitch bit me! Whiskey! Whiskey and rye till the day that I die! Set up another round! Who's buying?”
That was the problem with parrots, I had thought as Barnabas waddled off to harass the bartender. They're smart as heck and never forget a thing, but they do like their booze.
I can't normally understand animals when they speak, so I assumed he was either a shape-shifting elf—like the pig currently snuggling in Bronwyn's ample arms—or I had been drinking
way
too many mai tais. But either way, I took the incident as a sign. I packed my bags and headed to San Francisco, a city that is home to so many beloved lunatics and cherished iconoclasts that for the first time in my life nobody noticed me. Or so I hoped. The unsettling appearance of Aidan Rhodes the male witch and Oscar the familiar might make keeping a low profile a challenge.
I watched as Bronwyn embraced the wriggling pot bellied pig with her typical unguarded, openhearted enthusiasm, wishing I could do the same. I didn't know quite what to make of my new housewarming gift. What might a male witch want from me? And why would he bring me a familiar, of all things?
The door opened again, its bell tinkling merrily as my inventory scout walked in.
“Maya!” gushed Bronwyn. “Come meet our sweet little Oscar.”
“Jumpin' Jehoshaphat, what is
that
?” Maya recoiled. Twenty-three years old chronologically, but closer to forty on the cynicism scale, Maya had dark dreadlocks dyed bright blue at the ends, ears edged with silver rings and cuffs, and an aversion to makeup because, she'd explained earnestly, it was “too fake.” Why the bright blue hair didn't strike her as equally artificial I wasn't sure. Maya attended the San Francisco College of the Arts part-time, but her passion was visiting the elderly of her community and recording their stories for an oral history project.
I had met Maya a few weeks ago as she sat on a blanket on the sidewalk, halfheartedly peddling the 1940s-era beaded sweaters some elderly friends had given her in their attempt to “make a lady out of her.” That quest was doomed to fail, but in the course of our conversation Maya and I discovered we had mutually beneficial business interests: Now she scoured her friends' closets and attics for inventory for my store, and I paid her a generous finder's fee.
“I believe it's called a Vietnamese potbellied pig,” I said. “Apparently George Clooney has one.”

Had
one,” Bronwyn corrected me.
“Okay . . .” Maya said. “Why?”
“A friend couldn't keep it,” I said. “It's only here temporarily. Sort of a foster situation.”
“We
eat
things like that in my neighborhood,” said Maya.
“Hush, child!” scolded Bronwyn, clapping her hands over the pig's ears and whispering, “He'll
hear
you.”
“He's a pig, Bronwyn,” Maya pointed out. “In case you didn't notice.”
“He's not
deaf.
And he's a
special
pig.
I love
my little Oscarooneeroo.”
“Hey, whatever floats your boat,” Maya said with a shrug and an enigmatic smile.
Today Maya was taking me to meet a woman who had lived in the same home for more than fifty years and who, according to Maya, had never thrown away a single item of clothing. That description was music to my ears. Hunting down high-quality vintage clothing was a competitive sport in the Bay Area, and elderly pack rats were my bread and butter. Besides, I was on a mission lately: I needed to find the perfect wedding dress.
Not for myself, mind you. Me and romance . . . well, it's complicated, to say the least. But Aunt Cora's Closet was my first attempt at running a legitimate business, and I was so determined to do well that I wasn't above giving the Fates a nudge. On the last full moon I anointed a seven-day green candle with oil of bergamot, surrounded it with orange votives, placed malachite and bloodstone on either side, and, after scenting the air with vervain and incense of jasmine, I cast a powerful prosperity spell. Two days later the fashion editor at the
San Francisco Chronicle
called me with a
fabulous
plan: Her favorite niece was getting married, she wanted to outfit the entire wedding party in vintage dresses, and could I be a doll and help her out?
As my grandmother always said,
Be careful what you wish for.
After weeks spent haunting estate sales, thrift stores, and auctions, I had managed to rustle up several options for each of the eleven bridesmaids, as well as a half dozen gowns that could be altered to fit the bride. But, anticipating bridal jitters, I wanted to have plenty of options on hand. Maya's lead on two more gowns, if they were in good condition, would bring the selections up to eight. Surely one would catch the bride's fancy.
The bridal party was scheduled to arrive tomorrow at two o'clock for a mammoth try-on session, and Bronwyn suggested I make the afternoon an event by closing the store to passersby and serving mimosas, which sounded like a good idea. I hoped. I wasn't what you'd call an experienced hostess.
In fact, as we used to say back in Texas, I was as nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rockers.
“Lily, you ready to go?” Maya asked.
“Sure am.”
I grabbed my 1940s cocoa brown wool coat from the brass coat stand near the register and pulled it on, securing the carved bone button at my neck. It was only four in the afternoon, but a wall of fog was creeping in, dropping the temperature a good fifteen degrees in the past five minutes. Late-afternoon or early-evening fog is not unusual for San Francisco since it sits on a thumb of land between an ocean and a bay. Still, recalling Barnabas's warning—
Mark the fog
—I wondered if the weather had anything to do with Aidan Rhodes's visit. Spooks loved the fog.
The thought gave me pause. If Aidan's witchcraft was powerful enough to command the weather, I would have to be careful around him.
“Go ahead and close up if we're not back by seven,” I said to Bronwyn, gently tugging on Oscar's ear. “And
you
behave yourself, young man, or I'll send you right back to where you came from.”
“Don't you
listen
to her, Oscar Boscar Boo. Mama Bronwyn won't let mean old Aunt Lily send you
anywhere
,” she crooned to my would-be familiar as Maya and I walked out into the cool March mist.
Shape-shifting creatures and meddlesome witches aside, the quest for really cool old clothes must go on.
Chapter 2
When we exited the store we decided to leave my vintage cherry red Mustang convertible sitting at the curb, instead choosing to take the more practical purple van in the driveway. The graphics on the side read:
AUNT CORA'S CLOSET
VINTAGE CLOTHING AND QUALITY
ACCESSORIES
CORNER OF HAIGHT & ASHBURY
BUY—SELL—TRADE
IT'S NOT OLD; IT'S VINTAGE!
I steered while Maya guided me across town. Along the way, she gave me the scoop on what to expect.
“The source is Frances Potts. She's lived in her home near Hunters Point for fifty-two years, ever since she married Ronald. The Pottses lived together, one great big happy family, for years.”
“Potts, Frances and Ronald,” I repeated. “Got it.”
“Frances and Ronald had two daughters. They lost one as a child—so sad; that just seems so wrong, doesn't it?—but the other married well and has a couple of kids of her own. Anyway, the in-laws died not long after the little girl, some thirtysomething years ago, leaving the house to Frances and Ronald. Ronald died not too long after that; don't know from what. Must've been pretty young, don't you think?”
“Seems like. So it's just Frances? She never remarried?”
“Nope. And she inherited everything from her in-laws, including from her mother-in-law's sister, Bessie. And like I told you, Frances has never thrown
anything
out.”

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