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
you want.”
Our gazes held for a long, last time. Then, to my surprise and relief,
Lance just nodded. “Okay. Got it. I had to try.”
“And you won’t go summoning Richard again or trapping him in magic
circles, or anything like that?”
Now, oddly, Lance’s gaze met Richard’s. Richard shook his head.
Lance ignored him and said, “I don’t think I’ll get the chance to try.”
“Wait,” interrupted Dawn, who’d been remarkably quiet until now.
“What?”
Lance looked sorry—honestly sorry—to be saying this.
“I’m pretty sure that when we send Manon on, Richard goes on too.”
NO.
I wasn’t ready to face that. And yet, when I turned on Richard,
sympathy and regret darkened his eyes, too. I reached for him—but as long
as the others watched, we couldn’t touch. He did try. But his own big, male
fingers wafted right through mine, less substantial than a projection.
“That is my belief,” he admitted. “I am sorry, Penelope.”
But . . . but we had to go in and exorcise Manon before she could do
more damage! Maybe I could say
never mind
, and put off the job in exchange
for another day with Richard. But what if the other ghost of Sorrow’s End
hurt someone in the meantime? It would be my fault.
Besides, a day wouldn’t be enough. Or a week. Or a month.
Damn, but I was jealous of this French flirt who had spent a whole
summer with Richard. She’d put him into danger by not evacuating with her
father, and now she got to have him for eternity, while I hadn’t even had a
day
?
“Everyone look away,” I heard myself command. “Look away until I
tell you otherwise, okay?”
Dawn wore a grin as she pivoted. Teddy might not have understood the
occult reasoning behind my demand, but he did what Dawn did. He even
turned Lance first, by the shoulders.
Hesitantly, I again extended my fingers toward Richard’s.
Our fingertips met, lingered—
In that moment, what I sensed from him was love.
Then we were in each other’s arms, solid and real and together, holding
on as if we would never, never part. For a few breaths, at least, I pretended
that was true. His hard hold on me trembled, but not with fear. I buried my
face in his sandy chest, and he leaned his forehead on my hair, and we
just—held on.
“I can’t just let you go,” I pleaded, aware I was crying, not caring.
“Please don’t go with her. Please.”
“I doubt I have a choice,” he reminded me, somehow both grim and
gentle. “If I had, I would stay. Please know that. But . . . why should we be
special? I cannot count the hurricane survivors who lost loved ones—wives,
children, husbands, wrenched from their arms by the water. Some powers
are too strong for even the most determined of us to fight, and my darling,
death is one of those forces. So when I do leave, you must promise me
something.”
He even stepped away from me, which felt like a blasphemy, though he
held my elbows, and I clung to his arms.
“You must promise to breathe,” he instructed. “Promise to put food in
your mouth. Keep living so that life remains with it. Give fortune a chance
to find you again. Because . . . apparently, good fortune returns, Miss
Hamilton. I had the good fortune of meeting you.”
He said that last with a sad smile. He lifted my hand to his lips, kissed
my fingers, rubbed them once against his bristly cheek. Then he backed
wholly away.
“Please put on your amulet,” he asked softly. “This has needed doing
for a century, and we must put it no off longer.”
So at least he’d stopped fighting my intention to help.
At least when I put on my own amulet, he didn’t vanish. Unlike Lance,
I wasn’t using some magic to hold him—certainly not somewhere other
than here—so the amulet didn’t have any affect there, either. But when I
lifted my fingers to his unshaven cheek . . . ?
They brushed right through him. Ghost-be-gone, indeed.
I told the others they could turn around but wouldn’t let them come in
with us. Neither Teddy nor even Dawn had power over ghosts—and I
didn’t trust Lance not to take off his amulet and manipulate Richard again.
When Richard and I entered Sorrow’s End, the house looked as neat
and empty as it had yesterday morning. After the chaos that Manon had
thrown down on us yesterday, the stillness felt especially ominous.
I took a deep breath to center myself. “Yesterday, before Lance . . .”
“Summoned me?” offered Richard, examining our surroundings.
“Yes. You never finished telling what happened or how . . .”
How he’d
died
.
He seemed to make a decision. “I told you Manon was an occultist? She
had tried—had worked magic to bring me back to her.”
That, I hadn’t expected. “Magic?”
“Manon used dark powers to call both me and the storm. If I had not
rejected her . . .”
My God. And here I’d thought Lance’s guilt trips had been bad.
Richard looked down at me for a long, dark moment. I got the
impression that worse things had happened in Sorrow’s End than I’d ever
imagined.
There wasn’t just one tormented spirit connected to this house.
RICHARD MOUNTED the stairs ahead of Penelope, torn between dismay
that she was in danger and gratitude for her effort. She’d become so much
more than the first woman to speak with him, to kiss him, after so very many
years.
“After she told me what she’d done, Manon collapsed. She seemed
dead.” He knew he must finish his story . . . but must he finish all of it?
He’d stood in the doorway, paralyzed by horror, unwilling to approach
her shrunken form for longer than seemed sane.
“Meanwhile, the storm shook the house like a dog with a rat. Water
rose over the second floor. Here.” He pointed at the steps as they passed the
landing, then pointed higher. “Then here. And then, everything went still.
The wind died. The waves gentled.”
“The eye of the storm,” said Penelope.
“I did not know of such things at the time. But in the silence . . .”
He shook his head, wishing she need not hear this part. But he would
not be a coward, not in front of her. “In the silence, I heard Manon croaking
some kind of chant in a garbled, foreign tongue. That’s when I knew she still
lived. I heard an odd clicking, and when I finally approached her, I saw that
she continued to scrawl a snarl of symbols and sigils onto the floor.”
He loved Penelope for her expression of horror. “She was
still
casting a
spell?!”
“She peered at me . . .” Fevered. So very needful, she’d frightened him.
“And she asked me to love her. And I, in my pride . . .”
In his ego, in his absolute horror, he’d said,
You must be mad, you vindictive
bitch
.
“You told her where to shove it?” suggested Penelope, and he wished
he could kiss her while she wore that amulet.
“But you see, I ought not have. She regained enough strength to stretch
her arms upward, and hell descended upon us.”
“So it was real magic.”
Richard coughed out a poor imitation of a laugh. Lightning had struck
downward, through the attic ceiling and then—through her. As it exploded
in flames, the wind peeled the burning remnants of the roof off like bark off
a dead tree. Shockingly cold rain drenched them both, dousing a spattering
of fires. A gale slapped him to the floor. “It was real magic.”
He’d crawled toward her, screamed for her to stop. He could not make
out her words, through the torrent, but understood her demand.
Love me
.
“Avoiding my own personal hell was not worth the lives of others.
Innocents were dying because I had rejected her. I had no idea how many
until later, but even the few hundred I believed were dying was too many. So
I said I would love her. I would marry her. I would do anything she
asked . . .”
And she’d screamed,
You lie!
He’d grabbed her. Shaken her. But her lips continued to move in the
ungodly chant, and the rain drenched down across them, across whoever
might yet remain on this accursed island—and it was his fault. He’d struck
her, then, gentlemanly behavior forgotten. She just laughed and chanted,
continuing to call the tempest, committing suicide and taking the whole
island with her. So, God help him . . .
No. That part, he could not admit.
“By morning, she was dead,” he told Penelope, hearing the stiffness in
his own words.
“And you’d promised yourself to her,” she guessed, still innocent, still
so very generous in her assessment of him. “So you’ve been stuck here, ever
since. Oh, Richard.”
“The water had gone down by then, by morning,” he forged on. “So
those of us who had survived began to gather in what was left of the
downtown . . .”
He could tell that she suspected he’d left something out. But he
continued, recounting the shocked numbness of everyone he met, of
himself.
They’d quickly organized to search for survivors but discovered only
death. No mere hundreds had been lost, but thousands. The island had been
reduced to rubble. Hills of splintered wood covered everything, including
most of the water, as well as a strange, foul-smelling slime. They’d had to
clear walkways through two-story-high piles of debris just to continue their
search.
Most of the bodies were naked, their clothes stripped away by wind and
waves, as if the storm were some rapacious villain who’d defiled them.
Perhaps it had. If being churned about amidst the wreckage had not
disfigured them, the Texas heat quickly did. Two thousand corpses. Then
three thousand corpses.
All of them the responsibility of shaken, grieving men, survivors with
little food and less clean water.
All of them his fault.
“So we drank liquor,” Richard admitted. The sight of Penelope,
listening with wide, wet eyes served as a life preserver to his sanity. The hell
of stacking human bodies like the
things
they’d become had felt eternal. The
stench had filled his nose and mouth despite the rags they wore like bandits.
Several times a day, someone realized a friend had died by recognizing a
piece of jewelry, a shoe.
But it
had
ended, he tried to remind himself. The island had survived.
People as true and good as Penelope lived here, now.
“We tried to load them onto a barge and bury them at sea. Too many
slipped our effort to weight them and washed back to shore. Eventually, we
had to build bonfires up and down the beach.”
Bodies burned with black smoke. And then, as he’d stared at one of
their rough cremations—he’d thought, unseeing—the pile had shifted as its
weight changed . . . and Manon Boulanger’s bloated corpse had rolled over
on the pile, as if turning to stare accusations at him.
Penelope stopped as they reached the landing in front of the attic, the
one that had not proven so safe as they’d hoped only the day before. “I need
to hug you now.” She even reached for him, but—
Richard didn’t consciously flinch away. He simply found himself half a
foot further from her, as if he’d vanished and reappeared.
They stared at each other. Apparently Dawn’s amulets worked. “For
your safety, I will forego the embrace.” Not that he deserved it, anyway.
As they stood there, the attic door squeaked open, wide on its hinges.
Manon was clearly waiting for them.
Richard went first.
THIS TIME, I WAS forewarned. I knew that the spirit of a vindictive,
sociopathic magic-user who’d all but trapped Richard into some kind of
bond had opened that door.
Still, I didn’t feel anything in the airy, quiet, sunlit attic.
Less
than
anything.
So it shocked the hell out of me when a lyrically French voice purred
down at me from the rafters, from the floors, from the corners, all layered
over each other like an Auto-Tune. “Girl.”
Lance was the one who legitimately talked to the dead—and more
specifically,
heard
them. I’d always been the one who
sensed
them, who felt
their stories and struggled to make them hear me until I got a strong
impression of their passing. Richard was the only ghost I’d ever
conversed
with, and him I could see. But Manon was so powerful that she spoke in
audible, echoing words. “You will translate for me, yes?”
“Translate?” I don’t speak French, so if she meant that, we were in
trouble.
“My beloved Richard—he cannot hear my voice.”
She said the name like
Ree-SHARD
. Only then did I notice that the man
we apparently both loved—each thought we loved, in our own way—was
staring at me in confusion, not swiveling his head toward the space around
us the way I had.
“Since you died, you mean?” I asked, encouraged that we’d at least