Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
loving relatives, most ghosts are prisoners, and usually of themselves.
Murder victims who can’t release their fury at their unfair end. Victims of
loss who won’t let go until they find something long gone. Greedy spirits
who would rather guard treasures even in death than admit they were
mistaken to hoard it in life, or confused spirits who can’t recognize that their
time here ended long ago.
Ghosts embrace their helplessness,
become
their helplessness, until it
tethers them into place like invisible manacles. Fury. Loss. Greed.
Confusion.
And guilt.
Guilt must be the chain that imprisoned Richard Pemberley.
Some spirits cling to their own remorse so desperately, they think it’s
their route to absolution instead of their prison cell. It’s as if they can’t
change the past, so they do penance by punishing themselves. I wondered
what Richard had done that he could never, never forgive himself?
Worse, I had to figure him out in order to somehow ease his guilt, send
him away. Away to where he really belonged.
Away from me.
That shouldn’t be
so
hard, right? I barely knew the . . . ghost.
“You realize I’m going after her anyway.” I tried for my usual casual
competence and, for some reason, only managed hopeful uncertainty. “I
can’t not try. And it sure would help if before we—I mean, if you’d tell me
what I’m up against.”
For the first time since the verandah, he dropped his hold on me. He
also turned his back, his shoulders stiff. I could see that the torn back of his
vest had a strap that should have tied but hung loose. It struck me as sad,
that little extra touch of disarray on so formal a man. Worse, for a moment I
feared that he would vanish, and I felt a rush of preemptive loss at the idea
of it. Because whether I barely knew him or not, he
did
matter.
He mattered a lot more than any ghost should to someone whose job it
was to eventually send him on.
I stepped after him, placed a hand between his shoulder blades, and
tried not to take it personally when he flinched. “Please help me do this?”
“You do not know,” he announced tightly, away from me, “what you
are asking.”
Which was probably true. “So explain it to me,” I pleaded.
He turned back, and now
I
almost flinched from the misery on his
handsome, haggard face. “You will hate me,” he whispered.
“I doubt that.” I offered my hand, but he just stared at it. I said, “I don’t
even hate Lance.”
His eyes closed with his rueful laugh at my admittedly weak joke. But
when they opened, I saw his resignation. “I shall hold you to that.”
And he took my hand.
Even braced, I felt his guilt. But I also felt—frighteningly,
happily—that he cared about me, too.
That moment, when his fingers curled around mine, is when I really
sensed how deep I was getting here, how dangerous my evening had
become.
But it wasn’t the danger of ghostly violence that made my heart ache.
“Not here,” Richard warned, glancing over his shoulder at the house
and whatever she-demon lurked within. “Let us walk to the beach.”
We weren’t far from the Gulf of Mexico—the whole island of
Galveston is only 3 miles across at its widest point. I nodded and let him put
my hand on his arm so we could stroll like people used to do back in the day,
but it only lasted until we met our first passerby.
Then my hand fell, right through where Richard had been—still was,
actually, but suddenly incorporeal.
“I think,” he explained, “that their inability to see me counters your
ability to do just that. Your spirit sight gives me substance. But the
converse . . .”
Damn. We had to walk side by side, instead—sometimes catching each
other’s hands when, literally, nobody was looking.
Walking with Richard felt . . . formal, yes. But that formality, his
unwillingness to open up to me, soothed me with an honesty I hadn’t
expected. Before, I’d always looked for a guy with a great sense of humor
and a quick wit, which is why I’d been so easily drawn in by Lance
Charming. Lance had been everything I’d asked for and nothing that I
needed. At Richard’s side, letting him just stay silent for a few blocks, I
began to wholly appreciate what people mean when they say that still waters
run deep.
Here was an old-fashioned gentleman who placed himself between me
and passing traffic as if guarding me were his job by default—just as he was
doing with Manon and the house. As frustrating as it was for him to
question my right to endanger myself for the greater good, I also felt
surprisingly . . . cherished.
Near as I could tell, his reasons for talking to me had less to do with his
own selfish needs than with helping me, protecting my well-being . . . even if
his confessions might ease his own guilt and, in doing so, loosen whatever
chained him here.
So whose well-being hadn’t he managed to protect?
“You died in the 1900 Hurricane, didn’t you?” I asked. A few more
blocks of this easy, formal silence, and I wasn’t sure I’d have the
self-discipline to focus on my job.
He surprised me by saying, “Not exactly.”
I stopped. But—his dress, while timeless enough to pass for other eras,
did especially fit the turn of the century. What with the sand on his pants, the
water-stained clothing, and his unshaven chin, he’d obviously been through
something
rough. “Then how?”
“I should tell this from the beginning.”
Was it wrong to hope that this would be a long story, to extend our
evening together before I would have to . . . ? But I didn’t want to think
about that. It wasn’t even evening, yet. We had plenty of time.
“That’s probably best,” I half-teased. “From the beginning.”
So tell me, he did.
Richard’s abashed description of his “wild” youth had nothing on the
Spring Break crowd, but in his time, values had differed. What little he told
me of the vivacious Manon Boulanger made him blush, which made me like
the sociopathic ghost even less. He described ending their relationship, her
shit fit, and the day of missives. He had, he admitted, abashed, seen but not
truly marked the storm flag.
“I woke the next morning,” he continued, “to encroaching water. It did
not trouble me. Locals called such floods ‘overflows,’ part of island living.
“I’ve no idea how I happened to see Georges Boulanger’s buggy
heading for the wagon bridge to the mainland. Perhaps I looked out my
window at the exact right time. But see it I did, its roof down to avoid being
upset by the wind, weaving against the gales even so, and I intercepted it.
“You see, Manon was not with him . . .”
He’d run down the flooding road, its uneven paving of huge wooden
beams seemingly made to trip the unwary pedestrian. He’d shouted after the
carriage, his words stolen by the squall. Only when Boulanger’s team of
matched bays balked at flying debris had Richard managed to catch up.
“Where is your daughter, sir?” he’d demanded, squinting upward
through the driving rain. Run-off soaked his shoes and wicked up his pants
legs.
“Her, she does not leave her room. She pines. She cannot face the
world,” admitted Boulanger with a Gallic shrug. “She is headstrong that girl,
n’est ce pas
?”
And her father was
leaving
? “With all due respect, sir, you cannot desert
her. Not with a storm coming!”
“She shall be fine. Two of our servants have stayed.”
They drove on, left Richard with rain pelting him like hail. Behind him,
an upstairs window—blown from its sill—smashed to the street below.
He wondered if Boulanger had taken this route on purpose, but that
was absurd. Boulanger could easily have knocked on his door rather than
leaving this meeting to chance. He displayed no concern despite the fact he
left a young woman, his own daughter, to fend for herself in an increasing
violent storm.
A lady, even one Richard found increasingly distasteful, ought not be
left alone in such weather.
Still, this was no more business of his. He couldn’t dismiss the idea that
Manon was manipulating him in some way. Her letters were so obsessive in
her demands, so confident that he could not resist her. They’d almost
felt . . . threatening.
No. He could not let Manon or her father’s careless execution of his
responsibilities trap him into going to her now that he was finally clear. He
wouldn’t
.
Instead, when two friends found him and suggested a streetcar ride to
see the waves, he joined the crowd. The surf forced the car to stop blocks
from what had been the beach, but even so far from the water’s edge, what
looked like snow flew in white handfuls across the ground, resolving itself
into sea foam. Brown, angry waves leapt in blasts higher than tall buildings.
As if the sea would not stop at the beach . . .
“I WONDER,” MUSED Richard now, slowing his step. We had crossed
the busy Boulevard to stroll along the Seawall. It ran eight miles along the
currently tranquil Gulf with concrete steps occasionally leading down to the
rocks or narrow strips of beach fifteen feet below. I took the first set of
steps we reached, which so late in the season provided shelter against most
unseeing eyes, and finally took my escort’s arm again.
There, that was better. The passing cyclists and skateboards up top had
seemed surreal, against my escort’s tale, anyway.
Richard didn’t draw away from my touch. “I’ve often wondered how
things might have changed, had I gone to Manon earlier. Or had I never
rejected her in the first place. Or had I not led her on.”
“You can’t blame yourself.” I meant that literally. Blaming oneself was
one of the heaviest chains with which a ghost could fetter himself to our
world. “You weren’t her fiancé or even her beau, anymore.”
Not that I had personal reasons for wanting to believe that the end of a
relationship equaled the end of one’s responsibility toward the other person.
And yet . . . ?
Holding on to this man’s solid, steady arm, I wasn’t thinking a lot about
Lance. Richard’s stiff, proper posture made something as simple as the way
he tucked my arm closer to his side feel like a full-on hug. That reminded me
of kissing him, only hours ago.
When he turned his head toward me, I saw the pain in his gaze and felt
frivolous to have even been thinking of kisses.
“You weren’t responsible,” I insisted, and in his case, I believed it
completely. No one who could feel that much pain and guilt could ever have
been truly responsible for something horrible.
He eyed me now, still in profile but his eyes cutting down to me. “Of
course I can. You have no idea what happened.”
“She died in the hurricane, right? She stayed behind just to spite you,
and she died with the thousands of others, and you both think you’re to
blame.”
Even a spoiled beauty like Manon deserved my sympathy. A girl should
be able to throw a fit without dying for it. But that made her a victim of the
storm not of the man—the ghost—beside me.
I would find a way to help her move on, to help them both move on.
But I was increasingly reluctant about that second part! In fact, as we
watched the Gulf in the orange sunset, soothed by the cry of gulls, the
rhythm of the surf, I leaned my cheek against Richard’s shoulder. He let me.
But he said, “We think we are to blame because we are to blame.”
Oh really? “Then tell me.”
“I still remember that afternoon as nighttime,” he admitted softly. “Full
dark took the island as the storm swallowed us. The Gulf to the south and
the Bay to the north met, deadly even in the middle of the island, destroying
buildings at the edges.
“I first took shelter at a friend’s home. We dragged in strangers who
were being pummeled by the wind whenever we could until perhaps ten of
us were trapped upstairs by a rising tide that filled the parlor, the kitchen.
And yet, in such perilous conditions, I could not forget Manon. At the time,
I blamed my own guilt, my own . . . honor.”
Watching him from his shoulder, I saw him curl his lip in self-disgust.
“Each hour we expected the storm to pass. Each hour, we saw it
become unimaginably more fierce until, unable to bear my imagined guilt, I
knew I must go to my damsel in distress.
“I had to climb out an upstairs window—the press of water locked the
downstairs doors as surely as that of a prison. So I jumped. Even as I landed,
stumbled, and went under, I recognized my recklessness. But the maelstrom
washed me immediately away from my shouting friends, away from the
groaning building even as it floated dangerously off its foundation—then
collapsed inward, no longer structurally sound. I tried to get back to them,