Phantom: Act 2 – Scene 13
Phantom (Tattered Curtain Series)
Scarlett
By the time Iâve stomped back into Solâs bedroom, heâs nowhere to be found, but a rose gold satin gown lies across his king-size bed. Something tells me the dress will fit like a glove.
Up until a few minutes ago, I was certain I was going to be locked up in this medievalesque underground lair for the rest of my days, so the fact that heâs wanting to go to a masquerade of all things silences my questions. For now.
While Iâm getting ready in the en suite bathroom, I apply mascara, a little blush on my cheeks, and lip gloss. My curls canât be tamed, so I leave them down to do their thing. When Iâm finished, I slip into the trumpet gown and nude strappy heels.
The off-the-shoulder neckline kisses the top of my breasts. My hands move with a mind of their own as they smooth along the curves I suddenly have. The shimmery fabric flares out where a thigh-high slit rests just below my hip. Itâs gorgeous, decadent, and easily the most expensive piece of clothing Iâve ever worn.
But not only is the zipper impossible for me to reach by myself, the off-the-shoulder straps are supposed to crisscross down my spine to tie into a bow at the small of my back. I take a steadying breath, knowing Iâm about to have to let Sol touch me again so he can do the job.
Hopefully I can control myself this time, Jesus.
I leave the bathroom while holding the back of my dress together awkwardly and find Sol sitting on the bed, scratching the right side of his face while he looks at his phone. Heâs already changed into a charcoal-gray suit and white button-down with a rose gold satin tie that matches my dress.
âAh, all done? Letâs goââ He lifts his head up from his phone and does a double take.
His lips part in shock. Mine do the same, although, at the moment, I might be more stunned than he is. The mask he wears tonight doesnât even look fake. It fits him like a second skin, as if heâs rolled it onto his face and adhered to it. Iâve seen plenty of talented makeup artists in the industry, but if I wasnât as close to him as I am right now, I wouldnât know it was a mask at all.
I bite my lip and his gaze darts to my mouth. The hunger in that vivid midnight eye makes my core clench and my barely there thong is already getting soaked.
He swallows, seemingly gaining the composure that is still evading me. âYouâre breathtaking, Scarlett.â
Heat blooms to my cheeks and my gaze falls to the ground. Heâs there in an instant, lifting my chin to meet his sparkling midnight eye. The right one is extremely dark, though almost identical. But I can tell the difference between the man and the fake.
âDonât hide from me, little muse,â he murmurs, searching my eyes. âOwn your beauty.â
If the eyes are a window to a manâs soul, then my demon of music has starlight in his dark depths. Everyone else says his eyes are black as coal, so does that mean Iâm the only one who can see the man inside the phantom?
Settle down, girl. You barely know him, and from what you do know, heâs your stalker.
And my savior.
I canât tell anymore whoâs winning these arguments, my head or my heart. But Iâm relieved to know that I havenât been steadily losing my mind over the past several months.
What I thought were auditory hallucinations was actually Solâs very real piano playing. The music sheets and roses didnât just appear out of thin air, heâd left them after moving silently through my mirror in my room. Sol was behind it all, which means I havenât relapsed into a manic episode. Iâm still healthy, in remission, and not on the verge of psychosis again.
âI um⦠I canât tie this by myself.â
He releases my chin as I turn around for his help. Through the open bathroom door, I can see our reflection in the mirror and easily read the reverence in his gaze as his fingers skate down my bare back.
âMmm⦠yes. When I told the boutique owner to send their finest, this was exactly what I envisioned. Heads will roll if they stare at whatâs mine for too long, but goddamn am I a lucky bastard for getting to look at you all night.â
My heart flutters at his words while my logic tells me I should correct him. That Iâm not his.
But I want to be.
His fingertips send electric shivers throughout my body while he zips me up. When he finishes, he takes his time to tie the dressâs ribbon straps at the small of my back. Once Iâm securely in my dress, he pulls my thick black curls over my shoulder and looks at me in the mirror as he leaves the lightest of kisses on my nape.
Iâm this close to being totally okay with remaining his captive and living in this modern medieval lair forever. But he pulls away, leaving me bereft of his touch, and mad that I almost gave in so quickly again. Sol Bordeaux is quickly teaching me that even when Iâm sane, Iâm one complex bitch.
I swallow and turn to face him, studiously ignoring the desire on his face, even though itâs tempting me to throw all caution to the wind.
âExquisite, ma chère.â
âYou donât look so bad yourself, Mr. Bordeaux.â
He grimaces. âSol, please, little muse.â
âSo thatâs a no to calling you my demon of music? And what about the Phantom of the French Quarter?â I tease. âHow did you get that nickname by the way?â
His lips quirk up. âYouâll see me in action tonight. Come on, we should go before it closes.â
âBefore what closes?â
âMiss Mabelâs shop.â
I frown because that answer means absolutely nothing to me, but I donât ask him to elaborate, instead, resolving to just go along for the ride for once.
He walks down the hallway and I follow close behind him. When we get to the door, he pulls out his phone and types in a code. The door whirs and clicks, and all three latches unlock simultaneously, even the highest one. Iâm afraid to ask why he has one so high up.
âItâs so intruders on the other side donât realize thereâs another lock to break. Doors are at their weakest where the lock connects to the frame. It makes the door easier to kick in if the lock is only in the center, but when the dead bolt is also at the top, itâs much more difficult.â
âHow did you know I was wondering that?â
Right now, his smirk is one of the only ways I can tell that heâs wearing a mask because while the left side lifts up, the right remains unnervingly still, frozen in a neutral state of bland disinterest.
âI watch people, Scarlett. Itâs what I do. I deal in secrets and protection. Knowing what people are up to is my job.â He brushes his fingertips against my cheek and I barely resist the temptation to curl into his palm. âAnd you have a very expressive face, at least to me. If I didnât know you better, I wouldnât believe that you have even an ounce of darkness in you.â He bends low and brushes his lips against the shell of my ear. âBut we both know better, donât we, mon amour?â
My lips fall open, and my heart pounds with questions and the endearment. Before I can ask him how he knows my darkest secrets, he pushes me aside gently with his arm across my chest.
âGet behind me, Scarlett.â
I do as Iâm told without thinking of defying him and as he opens the door and peers out, it takes me a second to realize I have no desire to even try to run away.
âFollow behind us,â he orders crisply.
I peer out from behind Solâs waist and see a figure with flames on its face, emerging from the dark.
My heart races at the strangerâs arrival, not to mention how harsh Solâs tone was. It makes me realize how gentle heâs been with me.
âYes, Phantom,â a husky alto responds. The woman is tall, maybe six feet, although thatâs got nothing on Sol. Her long, sleek black ponytail falls down her back and her mask of fire, intricately painted to shimmer and shine with reflective light, glows against the dim illumination from the corridor behind me.
âI remember you from last night. Um⦠thank you for, you know, helping,â I whisper dumbly. âIâm Scarlett.â
The mask only covers the top half of her face, revealing a twitch of a smile. âAnd Iâm Sabine. But letâs keep that between us, shall we?â
âCome, Scarlett,â Sol commands in that tone Iâm realizing he saves just for me.
He takes my hand and leads me out the door. Sabine closes it behind me and Sol presses a button on his phone screen to rotate the locks back in place. I follow him blindly through the dark tunnels while Sabineâs light steps pad behind me.
The stone passage is lit by industrial-style Edison bulbs, protected by metal caging, the same ones that line Solâs hallway in his apartment. Rushing water resounds in the distance as we stick to the left side of the dim walkway.
âIs that a river? Underground?â
âWeâre below sea level down here,â Sol explains. âMy great-grandfather wanted dry pathways for his ventures during Prohibition, so he had an architect and city planner in his pocket who helped divert the runoff and flood waters into these underground channels that lead to the Mississippi River. The French Quarter is already slightly above sea level compared to the rest of New Orleans, and in the past, these channels have helped prevent disastrous flooding in the streets above us.â
âWhoa, what happens if I fall in? Will I get swept into the Mississippi?â
Sol tugs my hand against him, as if heâs afraid I could speak that accident into existence.
âNever get too close, pretty muse. I canât lose you,â he mutters so low under his breath, I doubt Sabine heard him. âThe channels reroute excess water to pipes that span like a labyrinth underneath the French Quarter and end at the mouth of the Mississippi. While there are sections of the maze where you must hold your breath, you could survive the thousand-foot distance as long as you move swiftly with the current and keep your head close to the oxygen at the pipeâs ceiling. But most people donât know that.â
I snort. âDo a lot of people like to swim down here?â
His silence makes the hair on the back of my neck stand at attention.
âSome are given that choice, yes. Others choose to fight their way out.â
I gulp as I try to piece together what heâs saying. âSo when people come down here they either swim⦠or fight. Who do they fight, and why?â
Minutes go by where I only hear the ominous rushing water a mere few feet away from me.
âThey fight me, Scarlett. As for the why⦠letâs just say people donât choose to come down here. But when they do, Iâve made sure they deserve it. Thatâs the Phantomâsââ
ââmoral code,â I finish for him, remembering our conversation about justice earlier. âWhatâs, um, the success rate for choosing to swim?â
He pauses and I swear heâs literally trying to calculate the numbers before he finally answers.
âLow.â
âAnd what about the second choice?â The option where people fight for their lives. âWhatâs the success rate there?â
âNone,â he answers quickly, not even needing to do the math. âSo far, the latter option has a zero percent success rate.â
âAnd yet, the bastards keep choosing it,â Sabine sneers.
Damn⦠the Phantom of the French Quarter really is the Bordeaux familyâs enforcer.
Questions bombard my mind, but Iâm not sure I want to know the answers yet. Heâs said before that whoever gets his brand of justice deserves it, but just how many people have deserved it over the years?
My chest aches, but my heart is a glutton for punishment when it comes to Sol because I donât feel bad for the people who have lost their fight down here. For some reason, I trust the Phantomâs judgment in choosing a criminalâs fate. Especially, since he gives them a way to earn their freedom while still being guilty. No, I donât feel bad for them.
I feel bad for him. My demon of music.
How many deaths can someone be responsible for in their lifetime before their soul is black as night? Is there any coming back from that?
We continue down the walkway, and I try my best not to observe everything with my head on a swivel. But I canât help my curiosity, even in the dark, so when we finally stop in front of a wrought iron spiral staircase I nearly crash into Sol.
âCareful, little muse,â he murmurs warmly before climbing the steps, still holding my hand.
âWhere does this go?â
âAll the way up to the roof, but we wonât need to go that far.â
He settles on the first landing outside another steel door, and keeps my hand in his as he presses another button on his phone screen. Once itâs unlocked, he opens it, and Sabine and I fall back in step behind him.
The cool, damp stone smell is immediately replaced by that of wood and varnish. The darkness still prevails as I try to see in the small corridor.
âWhere are we?â
âWeâre inside the walls of the opera house. These hidden paths were how patrons and liquor traveled in secret from the house to Madam Gâs speakeasy. Of course, it was her grandmotherâs then.â
âMadam Gâs family has owned Masque this entire time?â
My conversation with Rand feels like a lifetime ago, even though it was literally just yesterday. Heâd said the Bordeauxs are extorting Madam G, but with everything I know about the Phantom of the French Quarter so far, Iâm not sure I believe that anymore.
âYes, Madam Gâs family, the Gastoneauxsâformerly the Laveausâand the Bordeauxs have a long, beneficial history together. My great-grandfather rebuilt the burned-down French Opera House for his wife. Madam Gâs grandmother wanted a safe place for trusted family and friends to gather without scrutiny. Building the hidden speakeasy at the same time as the New French Opera House was the perfect answer.â
âIf Madam Gâs family owns it, why do they have to pay you rent and protection money?â
Sol snorts and narrows his eyes at me before taking a left turn. With each passing step, the cacophony of sounds from Bourbon Street filters in louder and louder through the walls, but I hear Sol over it all.
âYou think anyone can tell Madam G what to do? Her family has been running this town before mine even stepped foot on its soil. Weâve always worked together. And why would she ever pay rent on what she rightfully owns? Who told you that?â
Itâs on the tip of my tongue to out Rand, but thereâs obviously bad blood between the two of them. Getting in the way of either is the last place I want to be, even though it seems Iâve somehow already landed smack dab in the middle of their feud.
I let several steps pass by before giving the most noncommittal, true answer I can think of. âYou know⦠just heard it around town.â
Sol grunts. âWell youâve been misinformed. Always verify your sources, Scarlett. My brother and I provide legal, financial, and physical protection to those who are loyal to us. There are always factions in the city trying to rise up and harass business owners out of the French Quarter. Some will do anything to steal the success this city can provide. Ever since Hurricane Katrina, weâve grown and weâre thriving again. Some people want to take it all for themselves, and some simply donât want us to flourish at all.
âBut beyond all that, Madam G is family. Her daughter, Maggie, is my sister-in-law and her granddaughter, Marie, is my niece. Ben and I would run security for Madam G for free, but her family line has always been proud and powerful. Sheâs no different and she refuses the âfamily discount,â as she puts it, so Ben and I just put all the money she gives us in a trust for Marie when she turns twenty-five.â
âOhâ¦â Thatâs all I can come up with after Sol thoroughly demolishes Randâs accusations.
Sol doesnât seem to notice my silence as his phone lights up again. He pushes through a door that I hadnât even realized was right in front of us.
âWait here,â he whispers before slipping inside.
âTheyâre different than the rumors, you know.â
âAh! Jesus.â My hand flies to my chest at the sound of Sabineâs voice behind me. âScared me to death.â
âI get that a lot. But seriously, donât believe everything you hear. The Bordeauxs are honest to a fault, so whatever you do hear, be sure to ask one of them first. I know I wish I had.â She mutters the last part, but I still manage to hear.
Sol reappears and grips my hand again. âCoast is clear.â
He leads me out of the dark corridor into a garage. A shiny, black Aston Martin is parked inside, and he rounds the trunk to open the passenger-side door for me.
âGet in, please, little muse.â
Something about the word please coming from this huge enforcerâs lips nearly makes me laugh, but I bite it back and slide into the car, waving goodbye to Sabine as I do.
Before he closes my door, I hear him call out to her. âWe will be back shortly.â
He closes the door before I hear her respond and then the next moment he settles into the driver seat and presses the lift on the garage door remote, revealing the intersection of Toulouse and Bourbon on the other side.
Itâs been a year since I let loose and partied on Bourbon Street. Now Jaime has to practically force me to leave my dorm. I canât remember the last time I ventured into the chaos. Nausea churns my stomach at the thought of braving it again, but the feeling dissipates as Sol steers away from the parade of people in the road.
As if he knows what Iâm thinking, he squeezes my hand.
âIâm sorry, little muse. But the good thing is you were diagnosed and youâve been working hard on your treatment. Itâs paid off. Youâre getting stronger every day. Trust me.â
His words warm my chest until a parked cop carâs blue light shines in the rearview mirror. That, plus his words, flood my thoughts like a deluge, filling in the gaps of one of the many holes in my memory that I havenât been able to access since that night.
Until now.
A dark-haired stranger with a mesmerizing gaze calls to me from outside the police SUV.
âIâm sorry, little muse.â
I blink back into the present and snatch my hand away from his.
âWait a second⦠were you⦠were you there that night?â
The fact that I canât see the expressive side of his face right now is frustrating as hell, but his tense posture tells me what I need to know.
âScarlett, I can explainââ
âOh my god, you were! But that was only a week after I moved into the dorm. I hadnât even heard you play yet. It was still jazz music and mania back then. Why were you there?â
He swallows before taking a right. âIâm the Phantom of the French Quarter. It was brought to my attention that you were sickââ
âBy who?â
He shakes his head. âThat doesnât matter. My men are everywhere and one of them was concerned enough to involve me. I did my best to get you out of there before you got in trouble⦠but I failed.â
Those last three words fall between us like a boulder, crushing my chest.
âSo, one of your men called and you tried to save me? From myself?â I swallow to get past the lump in my throat. âThatâs⦠thatâs it?â
He pauses to merge onto Basin Street before he answers. âThatâs it.â
âOhâ¦â I sag into the seat. âYouâve been trying to help me this whole time?â
âI failed you once, Scarlett. I refuse to fail you again. You just have to trust me.â
I nod slowly and my nose scrunches while I try to organize all this information in my mind. While Iâm thinking, I stare out at the shops and restaurants whizzing past my window, one by one, until I finally make my decision.
Solâs methods may be completely unorthodoxâa.k.a. illegalâbut everything heâs done has been in my best interest. When he speaks, my heart and body trust him completely, sometimes obeying commands before I even register what heâs said. Itâs just my mind thatâs hanging on to those last threads of doubt. Itâs time I trust him there, too.
âOkayâ¦â I exhale out all my tired objections, ready to turn over a new leaf. âWhere are we going?â
He shifts slightly and I can see the lopsided grin lift the left side of his face. âTreme. I have some business to take care ofââ
Business? Like what? And with whoâ
No. Nope. No more questions. Just trust the man for once.
âSounds⦠good.â And with that, I finally give in.
As if to punctuate the end of our conversation, Sol activates the Bluetooth speaker and a beautiful piano piece by Ludovico Einaudi filters through the speakers.
âI love Primavera! Itâs one of my favoritesââ I stop midsentence when I see his right ear lift, as if that side of his face is trying to smile, too. âLet me guess. You knew that, didnât you?â
âGuilty.â
A chuckle escapes me. âIs there anything you donât know about me?â
âNot for long, if I can help it.â
I laugh outright at his honesty and sit back to hum the music. We take a few turns into the Treme neighborhood, and somehow Sol patiently resists ramming the drunken revelers that permeate New Orleans this time of night.
After a few more songs, we both get lost in humming a rendition of âThe Flower Duetâ from the opera Lakmé. Iâve used it as an audition piece before, so the words come easily to me, but when Sol finds the low harmony in his deep voice, our own duet gives me goose bumps and my stomach flips with excitement over our sound. When the song finishes, we let the next begin, but weâre too busy grinning like fools to sing.
âSo tell me, my demon of music. Where the hell did you learn to sing like that? Did you go to Bordeaux Conservatory too? Or does talent just run in the family?â
He huffs a laugh. âIt definitely does not run in the family. My father couldnât carry a tune in a bucket, and my brotherâs even worse. My mother loved to sing, and I wanted to please her, so I learned music at the French boarding school Ben and I attended.â
âSeriously? Rand went to boarding school in France. Was it the same one?â
Sol sucks his teeth and I immediately regret the question. The anger that rolls off him makes me shudder, but when he answers me, his voice is just as soothing as ever. Not a trace of that underlying rage is aimed at me.
âYes, we went to the same boarding school. Randâs attendance was meant to be an olive branch between his family and mine. Our families were competitors during Prohibition and thanks to some shady business dealings on both sides, the Bordeauxs and Chatelains have been rivals ever since. My mother wanted things to be different with us, and my father could never say no to her, so they struck a deal with the Chatelains. They forced us to go to school together, away from their feud, so that our generation would be the first without conflict.â
âBut that didnât happen,â I hedge.
âWe have a truce.â He squeezes my hand before resting our clasped fingers where my dressâs slit reveals my thigh. âBut thatâs not your concern. Not tonight, at least.â
A truce⦠I like the sound of that. Could that mean their hatred for each other can be set aside? Iâll have to wait and save those questions for another night.
âOkay⦠so tell me about boarding school. What was it like?â
âAhh, boarding school, where rich kids learn how to work hard and play harder. When I wasnât being a hellion, I studied music and martial arts. Also fencing, but that was just so I could beat my brother. He never trained as much as I did. Still doesnât. But Ben was an overachiever everywhere else. My passion was to make music and travel the world. Ben wanted to save it. When we quit boarding school at fifteen, we turned to private homeschooling. After that, Ben went to LSU and Loyola College of Law. I took up the security side of our family business and I compose music whenever I can, jazz and blues mostly.â
âUgh, I wish Iâd studied jazz. Thatâs my dream. Jazz and music composition. Iâve always wanted to go solo, but I⦠I havenât yet,â I finish simply, not wanting to go into all my inner doubts right now.
âYou would be amazing at it,â Sol answers. âYour vocals are a dream for opera, but with your voice and your knack for writing lyrics⦠Scarlett Day, you were made for your own spotlight.â
My cheeks heat. âMy dad always talked about how hard it wasââ
Sol snorts. âHeâs right. It is hard. But you work hard at what you love. That combination will make the difficult things worth it when you achieve your dream.â
His words sink in as he keeps driving, and our conversation settles into a comfortable silence with the music playing in the background until the car slows.
He pulls into a parallel parking spot on a street with a mix of shops and cozy shotgun houses.
âWeâre here.â
Heâs already out of the car and rounding the hood to open my door before I can ask where âhereâ is. He helps me step up onto the sidewalk and rests his large hand on the small of my back, sending tingling warmth up my spine.
âHopefully this will answer some of your many questions.â
Finally.
He leads me to a small shop with a cute sign hanging over the door. Saintâs Petals is written in cursive in the center of a pink hyacinth. Sol opens the door for me, letting me enter first, and I inhale deeply as the earthy scent of fresh-cut flowers fills my nose. Sol wraps his arm around my waist and ushers me in. A bell rings to signal our arrival and he promptly lets go before taking a step away from me. The air inside feels chilly without his warm touch.
âIâm coming, hold your horses.â A woman with a thick New Orleans accent warns us from the back of the shop. Only a second passes until a rotund, elderly woman with sun-weathered skin appears, smiling at us before putting on her glasses. When she does, she claps.
âOh, well donât you two look prettier than a picture? Mr. Bordeaux, I was wondering when we would get a visit again. Iâve just been sending those roses through errand boys, but I know theyâve appreciated the tips.â
âShe loves them, Miss Mabel. Iâd like to get her another dozen today.â
âSheâ can speak for herself, I think. But I watch in silence, trying to figure out where this piece of Solâs life fits in the puzzle Iâve been putting together.
The womanâs rheumy eyes crinkle as her smile grows wider. âWell isnât she a lucky lady? Consider it done. I know my Simon will be disappointed he missed you, but he had treatment today so heâs feeling under the weather.â
âIâm sorry to hear that. Anything I can do?â
She fiddles with her sugar skull necklace as she shakes her head. âOh no, itâs just treatments and time right now. Thank you though, sweetheart, youâve always been such a thoughtful boy. You take after your momma that way.â
Sol smiles again. âHey, donât tell anyone, though. Youâll ruin my reputation.â
âOh, no need to worry about that. Your secrets are always safe with me. But tell me, whoâs your friend, honey?â
I hold my hand out to shake hers and open my mouth to answer but Sol interrupts me.
âThis is Maggieâs friend, Miss Mabel. I thought Iâd show her the shop where the Bordeauxs get all their flowers, but if you donât mind, weâre on a tight schedule. Iâd hate to keep you open past closing. Is everything ready for tonight?â
Maggieâs friend? I press my hand to the sudden ache in my chest.
âSure is. All delivered and set up.â
She begins to chatter Solâs ear off as she prepares a bouquet of white roses in a vase, going on about anything, everything, and nothing in between. The woman has to be the Jaime equivalent of Tremeâs neighborhood gossip. To Solâs credit, he listens, asks questions, and seems genuinely interested. When sheâs finished, Sol hands her his black card and she turns around to ring him up.
âIâve got your regular Sunday bouquet of burgundy snapdragons just about ready for delivery bright and early in the morning, too. People donât buy fresh flowers like they used to. Iâm hoping once the economy picks up that more husbands will treat their wives like you do, Mr. Bordeaux.â
His wife?! Heâs been talking about sending flowers to his wife?
Jealousy pricks my heart, but when I try to step even farther away from him, he reaches out and tugs on the ribbon straps of my dress, effectively keeping me in place unless I want to unravel.
âThings will look up soon enough, Miss Mabel. Have a good night and make sure those bouquets keep arriving to the house. I know my wife, Maggie, loves them,â he says with a pointed look to me.
He must want her to think heâs Ben! But why? Her glassesâ lenses are thick, and at this distance with his mask, Sol looks just like his brother. But why would he need to walk around town looking like Ben?
I immediately feel a weird mixture of relief and embarrassment that I was jealous of Benâs wife and the Bordeaux menâs affection for her. First of all, I adore Maggie. After the shit Montyâs put her through this year, she deserves a daily flower delivery. Second, I have absolutely zero claim over this man walking me out of this gorgeous flower shop. The fact that I care at all has me confused as hell.
Sol lets go of me to grab the flower vase before telling Miss Mabel good night. After we walk out, he moves to open my door and helps me slide inside, placing the vase on the floorboard safely between my legs so it doesnât spill. When he closes my door I hear a low whistle outside.
Sol straightens and presses his key fob. The doors lock with a chirp and he walks briskly toward an empty space between two shotgun houses. His head is on a swivel, taking in his surroundings, and his hand hovers over a bulge on his right side.
Is that a gun?
My heart rate picks up and my breathing comes in pants as I try to remember any and every rumor Iâve ever heard regarding the Phantom of the French Quarter.
He glides to the house and stops feet from it. I maneuver in my seat to try to glimpse around a tree in my way, but I can only make out a short, skinny man in a hood. When he turns his head, his face reflects off of the lamp light and I gasp.
Ben?
But, no⦠it canât be. Is it a mask? Do other people have the same mask Sol has? Is this one of his shadows dressing up like him?
I try my hardest to hear, but of course, I canât make out a thing when theyâre twenty feet away. Sol nods at whatever the guy is saying and digs in his pocket before handing the guy a wad of cash. The Bordeaux look-alike takes it and counts it as he runs off toward Saintâs Petals.
What the hell is going on?
Once the other man is gone, Sol glances around before striding back to the car.
Shit, I have twenty feet to decide how to play this. Do I ask questions? Do I want to know the answers? What will he do once I know them?
Iâve had a macabre sense of justice for as long as I can remember. My dad wasnât always on the right side of the law, and the police never did us any favors. When my father was murdered, I hadnât been able to tell the cops the whole story, but theyâd known enough to try to find the murderer. And yet, the case is still unsolved after a whole year.
But my instincts tell me I can trust the man who saved my life rather than turn me over to a psych ward. I can trust the man who protects his city, buys women flowers, and genuinely wants to know how well an elderly couple is doing.
When he hops into the car, I only have one question.
âWhy did you let her think you were Ben?â
He starts the engine and the glow of lights in the car lets me catch a glimpse of a smile reflecting off of his tinted window. âHave you ever seen a phantom?â
âNo,â I reply slowly.
âNeither has Miss Mabel.â He lifts his face and that smirk kicks up his lips. âAnd yet, somehow the Phantom of the French Quarter knows everything there is to know about Treme.â
I nod before it finally clicks. âSo if youâre Ben in public, then you can keep a beat on the city, but the Phantom of the French Quarter can stay just that. A phantom. One that runs on rumors and the smoke and mirrors act. And since you rarely go out, it would be news around town if you did, so you like to stay in the shadows.â
âExactly.â
I smile, feeling like Iâve finally figured this man out, at least a little bit. âSo where to next? I canât be this dressed up with nowhere to go.â
His shoulders relax, as if heâs grateful not to answer more questions right now. He pulls out of the parking space and flashes me another sexy, lopsided smile.
âMasque.â