Mike winked her way. He was a handsome blue-eyed devil in his early thirties with broad shoulders and a ready smile. He'd given her an estimate the day before, and Tate had been trying to convince her since then that Mike must be a lothario, a serial killer, or an escapee from a mental ward-whatever he thought would convince her to hire someone else. Eric had threatened to run a background check on the man. She sighed.
"Good to see you, Ms. Belle. I'm going to start in the bathroom today. You have a lot of old knob and tube wiring to bring up to code. You're damn lucky this place hasn't burned down yet. Don't be surprised if your homeowner's insurance won't renew you until it's fixed. It's happened to more than one resident in the Quarter."
She winced. Naturally, building codes had changed a great deal since the house had been built. Her grandmother had renovated the house since taking possession of it, but the wiring hadn't been terribly out of date then. Drywall and paint or wallpaper had covered what people now considered an electrical sin. Still, as low as Mike's estimate had been, it chafed. Satisfying the city and changing things she really couldn't see was rapidly depleting her design budget. Unfortunately, it was a safety issue, so she merely smiled. "Let me know if you need anything."
Mike shrugged. "Oh, I'm sure I'll see one of your … friends before I see you. They seem mighty interested in watching whatever I happen to be doing."
As he walked into the house with a grin, Belle groaned.
For three days, Eric, Tate, and Kell had been steadfast. They worked. They cooked. And they tried to seduce her. When she went out to buy supplies for the renovation, at least one of them came along. She'd tried sneaking out yesterday, but Eric had been smiling and standing by her car, swearing he needed a break.
Despite their argument about her employment contract, none of them had tried to rope her into resuming her old job. Belle had noticed a don't ask/don't tell policy. As long as she didn't ask when they were leaving, they didn't tell her to pick up a case file and get busy.
Instead, both he and Tate had caught her alone and done their utmost to tempt her to kiss them. They'd invaded her space with their big, male bodies and stared down at her with hungry eyes, reminding her of everything she'd almost had. When she'd weakened enough to melt against them, when she could feel her blood humming and her sex aching, then the bastards would walk away, reminding her that she knew where to find them and they'd welcome her anytime.
Something had to give, and she worried it would be her. She'd spent three restless nights knowing that they were just down a flight of stairs. She'd also spent three nights dreaming of dead girls swinging from a rope and the monster who dragged them to their deaths.
She shivered, despite the heat of the day. It was morbid, but she couldn't seem to stop the terrible dreams. She'd even gone so far as to check into the house's history on a local historical website. It hinted at the home's colorful past. Those tales were more rumor than anything, but the police reports on file corroborated Gates's story. All the deaths had been suicides, not murders.
"I'll be leaving now, Miss Wright. Thank you for allowing the interns to help with the inventory. We'll get this mess put behind us so you can move on. The most important thing is to find your grandmother's papers. She told me she had a life insurance policy, but I don't have the name of the insurance company or the policy number. I'll need to file on your behalf so you can receive the funds." Mr. Gates looked nervously around the house as though he thought someone might jump out and yell "boo." Belle found his demeanor unsettling.
A cool breeze brushed past her legs. Cooler than cool, really. In fact, it felt like an arctic blast. Mr. Gates obviously felt it as well because he stiffened and took a giant step back to the threshold of the front door.
"I think that's my cue to leave." The lawyer's eyes had gone wide. He swallowed nervously. "Expect the interns shortly."
Belle frowned. The guy was really freaked out about the house. She'd noticed that when she'd first come here. That cold draft probably wasn't anything more than the air conditioning being temperamental. The HVAC expert would be here in thirty minutes. Problem solved.
Unfortunately, now she'd have a group of wet-behind-the-ears wannabe lawyers parading through her house. So what was one more, especially if he managed to keep the temperature in the house stable? If necessary, she would shut off the rooms with exposed wood and pray she didn't have to spend more than the rest of the funds her grandmother had left.