I bolted up again. When Duff, a departed man who’d followed me home from a bar one night—long story—first saw Mr. Wong, he seemed … surprised. Like he knew him. Or recognized him.
Mission for the moment: Find Duff.
I went to the last apartment he’d lived in. He moved around a lot, but the last time we’d talked, he told me he was back in with Mrs. Allen down the hall. She had a vicious poodle named PP. To PP’s credit, however, he did try to fight off a pack of demons for me. I had a soft spot for him now. Super soft. Like Twinkie guts, only not so marshmallowy delicious.
I knocked on Mrs. Allen’s door, waited a bit, then knocked again. PP was yapping up a storm from behind it, but it took Mrs. Allen a bit to travel that distance, even though her apartment was smaller than mine.
She cracked open the door, the chain still on, until she saw me and took the chain down to let me in.
“Hey, Charley,” she said, and I realized immediately she didn’t have her teeth in.
“Hey, Mrs. Allen.” One thing I didn’t think to come up with was an excuse for being there. “Um, I was just wondering how your … heating system was working. Mine is on the fritz.”
“My heating system.” She practically shoved me inside. “It’s awful. Never works right, and poor PP feels the cold. Breaks my heart.”
She hobbled to her thermostat. “See, it’s on seventy-five, and I know it’s not a degree over seventy-three in here.”
“Okay,” I said, searching for Duff. According to the talk on the streets, I could summon any departed, as I had with Angel, but I didn’t know Duff that well. I didn’t want to just drag him away from whatever it was he was doing. Come to think of it, what did the departed do all day?
“Duff?” I whispered, sidestepping a snarling PP and hurrying over to a bedroom door to peek inside. Nada.
“And this stove still hasn’t been fixed. I told that lazy, good-for-nothing landlord about my stove weeks ago.”
I turned back to her. “Your stove isn’t working?” I tried to walk over, but again had to sidestep PP. I glared down at him and the one fang he had left that protruded out of his gnarly mouth. “And here I thought we were friends.” He snapped at me to make sure I understood the truth of it, so I quickly made my way past. Vicious little shit.
No one in the building besides Cookie and Reyes, including the current manager, Mr. Z, knew I was a proud new owner of a run-down apartment building, so Mrs. Allen didn’t know she was talking to the person responsible for all the repairs.
“No, ma’am, it’s not. See?” She turned on all the burners, and none of them heated up. “How am I supposed to make stew?”
“Well, I’m not sure, but I’ll write that down and go talk to Mr. Z about it.”
“Lazy good-for-nothing. He won’t do anything about it.”
He would now. I’d make sure of it.
“Okay, well, thanks. I’ll let you know what I find out.”
“Thank you, honey. PP always liked you.”
PP snapped at me again, barking until I could take it no longer. I rushed out the door and back to Cookie’s apartment. I knew that Duff had spent some time crashing there, too. I’d never told Cook. It’d only freak her out, and as fun as that was to do, I didn’t want to hear how every noise in the apartment was the dead guy. Her imagination would have run rampant.
I went in without knocking, under the guise of checking on her. She was in her room, changing clothes, and from the state of her closet and drawers, she’d done that a lot.
“I just don’t know what to wear,” she said, tossing aside a nice burgundy blouse.
“That would have been great.”
“No. I don’t like the way it fits.”
“How does it fit?”
“Wrong. What about this?”
“You probably shouldn’t wear orange and purple together on a first date. Just thinking out loud.”
“But it’s a fake date. Who cares?” She picked up a glass and downed half the contents before I smelled the alcohol.
“Cookie, what the hell are you drinking?”
“I made a frozen margarita with Amber’s slushy machine. Don’t judge me.”
I stifled a giggle and looked at my watch. “Oh, my gosh. It’s almost six.”
“Oh, good heavens. I haven’t been on a date in years.”
Cookie put down the drink and started trying on blouses again while I looked for Duff, who was missing in action here, too. She tossed the fifth blouse aside when I walked back in.
“What was wrong with that one?”
“The color. You just said—”
“Right, right. But at this rate, you’re going to be late for January. Get a move on, missy!”
She glared at me. It was the alcohol talking. I could tell. “Hey, do you have any repairs you need done? I’m making a list.”
“Oh.” She straightened and started ticking off a list with her fingers. “My refrigerator is making a funny sound. The faucet in the bathroom leaks.”
“Hold on.” I ran back to my apartment and returned with a pen and paper. “Okay, fridge, faucet.”
“Yes, and the floor in the living room squeaks. Amber’s window lets in a lot of cold air. The ceiling still needs to be painted after that disastrous pool party you tried to have on the roof.”
“That wasn’t my fault. And it was a kiddie pool, for goodness’ sake.”