It is dark, and it is stormy, and isn’t that a terrible, clichéd way to start this tale? But tonight is both these things, and the weather matches my mood.
These are the thunderstorms of my childhood, of watching the lightning crack atop enormous, ancient trees who laugh at the sky and dare to try their luck against the clouds.
Then, I sat wedged into a windowsill too small for any but a child, safe from the wet and cold, eyes dancing too fast to follow the lightning.
Now, I stand barefoot in the rain, soft grass slick against my feet, dress pressing damply against my body, each step squishing deeper into ever-softening dirt. I hope against hope there will be neither thistles nor rocks, but know the night will end with muddy footprints, smeared with blood.
My path does not remain on a polite, pretentious lawn, but meanders down into deep woods.
Tonight I hunt, in the old ways, the ways of my ancestors. I stalk, and I spin, and seek to find direction. I feel ridiculous.
Inhibition is the first to go. It must, or I will not succeed.
My prey is nebulous, terrifying. Hard enough to pursue the intangible, but to slay it?
My breath quickens at the thought of an unsuccessful hunt, and I pant in rapid, shallow breaths. I reach down and smear mud across my face, wondering briefly how long it will last as the rain smudges it, warm across my cheeks.
Fear of failure keeps me moving, fear of nothing happening, fear of being insufficient, fear of not being enough.
I am melancholy as I wander through the woods, seeking the trail of each memory, confronting each angry voice, each disappointment, each almost enough.
Failure is to admit they are true, to give life to the voices whispering through the woods, lighting-lit and backstopped by memory.
I seek despair, I seek humiliation, I seek confusion.
Each movement firms my resolve, strengthens each step as branches lash with wet venom across my face, and the hunt is all I know.
The moonlight is my sword, rain the chains that bind me to this task, lightning my only guide.
Each step is victory, the path to Valhalla.
I seek annihilation, and this night shall not end without blood.
***
This week’s Odd Prompts challenge was from Cedar Sanderson: You are a big game hunter stalking something. What is it you are in pursuit of, and why is it so terrifying?
My prompt about a widely shared birthday party went to Misha Burnett, and La Vaughn Kemnow also took a whack at it.
This week on Odd Prompts, I rolled with a technical glitch. 🙂
“How was that movie last night?” Alyssa asked as the two teenagers walked along the crumbling sidewalk. Long legs flashed pale and cold under too-short shorts she’d managed to keep her mother from noticing. The chill air bit and made her shiver, but what was early springtime for if not to start on her tan early?
“The romantic comedy I was supposed to go see with Brad? Or the original Dracula from the 1930s that was on the movie channel?” Caroline replied. Her own legs were sensibly covered by dark tights. Curly brown hair with a bright crimson streak bounced atop a black leather jacket.
“That jerk.”
“Yeah, well, he’s an idiot for thinking I’d like that nonsense fluffy crap anyway.”
They kept walking, meandering through the small town’s maze of brick storefronts, budding flowers wafting a faint perfume into the air.
It was early enough they only passed a few others. A café worker arranged wrought-iron chairs in a fenced-in seating area. Alyssa smiled, remembering the restaurant’s brownie indulgence. She and Caroline had splurged late last summer on the giant dessert, before the school year had started. Her mouth watered just at the thought of the deep, rich chocolate scent, vanilla and caramel notes emerging only when it touched her tongue.
“I want to go back there.” She wiped her mouth, hoping the drool was only in her head.
“Yeah, me – whoa!” Caroline raised a hand and bounced off the glass door that opened right in front of her.
Both girls stared at the stout woman with the greying beehive. She’d opened the door with her hip, backing out of the shop without looking. The woman carried an enormous box filled with a wide variety of multi-colored cheese wedges and staggered slightly under its weight.
“Um. Need a hand?” Alyssa tried to blink so she wouldn’t be rude. Her eyes stubbornly remained fixed and wide.
“I’m right here, girls, thank you,” the woman wheezed. She parked the box on top of a shiny green Cadillac and fumbled for her keys.
Shaking her head, Alyssa moved on, Caroline beside her. They didn’t make eye contact until they’d turned the corner, collapsing into giggles by a storefront that had been empty for over a year.
“Oh, man. How much cheese do you need?”
“I hope she’s having a party,” Caroline replied. She sat on the brick windowsill. “Oh, damn, I just ripped my tights. Stupid rough brick.”
“Goes with the rest of your vibe.”
“Should’ve known better,” she grumbled. “That’s still a lot of cheddar to eat by yourself.”
“Hey, look at this,” Alyssa said.
Caroline twisted and gazed at the sign in the window. Last week, the glass had been dull and dusty. This week, a black cloth shot through with silver thread filled the display.
“Huh. Coming soon. The Dark Rose. A goth clothing store.”
Alyssa shook her head and twisted her lips a little. “I don’t know. Sounds weird.”
The brunette’s lips hinted at a smile. “You don’t have to come if you’re scared.”
“Probably filled with weirdos. C’mon. Let’s go. I want to get a coffee.” Alyssa stood up and looked at her friend expectantly.
“Yeah. Sure.” Caroline stood, her eyes still fixed on the sign.
“You coming?” Alyssa’s voice called impatiently, already several feet away. She turned back and tapped her hand on her bare leg.
“Yeah, yeah,” Caroline said.
Her gaze lingered on the painted plaster skull next to a black rose, surrounded by artfully puddled fabric.
“I’ll be back,” she whispered.
Thesis Cat’s work badgering her procrastinating human is complete. It’s naptime!
In this week’s odd prompts challenge, Misha Burnett and I traded writing ideas. I suggested he detail why someone was both prickly and poisonous. He challenged me to explore the old gods’ return after a young girl is removed from a cult. However, I seem to have forgotten about the “twenty years later” part...
“Blast the rotting spots!” Savannah swore, and glanced sideways to see if anyone had overheard her. She tossed the book aside onto the wooden plank floor.
Her brown eyes met Hugh’s, across the porch steps. Her shoulders slumped for a moment before remembering no one here would care, in this strange neighborhood filled with cookie-cutter houses and bread with no personality trapped in shiny, colorful plastic bags.
“Why do you say that?” Hugh asked. “You say it like it’s a swear.” His eyes were half-shut under long lashes she envied.
Savannah turned her head and studied him with narrowed eyes. His face was blank, but she thought his core was tense. Perhaps he was interested after all. Perhaps he was bored. She couldn’t tell.
“It is a swear,” she muttered.
He closed his eyes but didn’t move away. “I don’t understand it.”
“Everyone tells me not to talk about it, but nobody will tell me why.” Savannah leaned back against the railing and tried to imitate his laid-back posture. She breathed in the scent of new grass and damp earth.
He sighed. “So tell me.”
She glanced up over her shoulder. The back door was open with only a screen to stop the words she was tired of holding inside, but she didn’t care anymore.
“You know that I’m a foster kid.” It wasn’t a question. They were all foster kids here.
He nodded.
“My parents were part of a big church. In that compound with all the buildings. Mama Rosa says it’s a cult,” she said.
The carefully pronounced words felt odd in her mouth. A cult meant bad, meant weird, meant crazy. This was the crazy place, with its trimmed unnatural hedges and carefully planted gardens, not a weed found between the perfect, uncracked sidewalks, covered with pastel chalks.
Hugh opened his eyes. “So?”
“So, it’s a swear in the church,” Savannah said. She glared at him and frowned. She gave up on copying his cool don’t-care pose and kicked a stubby leg out over the porch stairs.
He was unfazed. “Okay, so it’s a swear. Why were you swearing?”
“This history book doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t match anything I ever learned before. I was a good student until I came here.”
She felt her eyes starting to water and stared out into the yard with its too-perfect leafy green tree, fresh with early spring buds. So what if the swing hanging from a thick branch was fun? It wasn’t home, filled with the smell of sourdough bread baking and the sounds of chanting.
Savannah tried not to blink and failed. Water dripped slowly down the right side of her face. She pressed closer to the railing and rubbed her face against the round wooden pillar, hoping Hugh wouldn’t see.
He grunted. “Least you can read it.”
She wouldn’t acknowledge his weakness, but was grateful he’d shared. Foster kids had to stick together. She’d been here only two weeks, but even she knew that.
Something moved in the woods behind that perfect tree and the rope and tire swing. “Hey, you see that?”
“What is that?” Hugh sat up. “Something yellow. Big, too.”
Branches crackled as the big yellow blob emerged from the woods, crashing through the undergrowth.
“Oh, sweet holy pudding,” Savannah breathed. She jumped to her feet.
Hugh rose more slowly. “Was that another swear?”
“They were right,” she said, jumping up and down.
“Who was right?”
Savannah couldn’t keep the grin off her face. Her bare feet danced over the worn wooden porch. “My real parents were right. Mama Rosa can call it a cult all she wants, but they were right!”
Hugh backed toward the door. “Uh-huh.”
She stepped down and spread her arms wide. “Hail and blessings, holy giant banana!”
Thesis Cat has been protesting the lack of attention this degree has caused since she was a kitten.
This week on Odd Prompts, I challenged Cedar Sanderson to tell us what’s hidden amongst the wildly patterned tiles. My prompt came from Becky Jones, who asked me to explain the horrifying sight of a dragon carrying a human.
Flemming scowled at her easel and bit her lip, letting out an unladylike snort. She didn’t know why the view wasn’t magically transposing itself onto the canvas. The view itself was exceptional, after all.
She stood on a stone balcony several hundred years old, with
enough wear to make it nostalgic and feel like home but not enough that one had
a sense of danger. The balcony itself had graceful pillars that arched, supporting
a roof loosely woven of grapevines. Careful pruning of the natural lattice by
the gardener meant filtered daylight shone through, perfect for midmorning painting.
Roses twined up the stone legs of Flemming’s distant ancestor, buds opening layers of shell-pink with centers of a pale yellow reminiscent of aged books. Their scent wafted sweet and floral from his endless watch over the stairs to the grounds below. The balcony’s ivory stone railing overlooked a view to the orchards, next to herb and vegetable gardens that were laid out with mathematical precision.
Beyond, a valley filled with shades of green now that the last of the morning fog had slowly disappeared, overpowered by gentle sunrays and soft light. Moving splotches of white sheep roamed in the distance, urged on by spotted dogs and the children deemed responsible enough to move past egg collection and message delivery duties. Mountains covered in a mix of towering evergreens loomed in the distance, jagged under an open azure sky. A deep blue river bisected the scene, its meandering path burbling and life-giving.
In short, Flemming could not ask for a more picturesque
setting for her new hobby. It would, however, help if her new hobby would
cooperate.
Palette in her left hand, she took an exaggerated step
toward the canvas, currently filled with splotches of approximately the correct
color in each location. Biting her lip, she extended an arm, paintbrush
tapering to a blob of paint, and stabbed at the work. It left an emerald streak
behind.
Baring her teeth in a rictus grin, she tilted her head and
squinted luminous, faceted eyes toward the new addition. Yes, that was better.
Extending the palette like a shield, she smashed the brush through the next
color and continued, tail twitching merrily.
An hour later, she had both made progress on the painting and frightened one of the gardeners into fainting. And – Flemming stopped with a jerk that nearly put a mountain in the wrong place. She’d painted Giselle into the sky without meaning to do so, but with one horrifying addition.
She glanced up. Yes, there was her friend, winging her way
inbound, presumably for the landing area near the statue of Great-Uncle Fjorinak.
Flemming hissed, and steam came from her ears. There was a human
on Giselle’s back! An abomination, intolerable, an insult to all dragonkind. Her
tail lashed rapidly against the stone floor, scales flashing in the filtered
sunlight.
She tossed the palette aside. It landed against the balcony
with such force it shattered into several pieces, smearing paint against the
pale stone. Brush still in hand, she stomped over to the landing pad.
“What is the meaning of this?” she shouted at her friend,
and then drew in her breath, horror-struck.
Giselle looked at her miserably, thick rope twisted around
her body. “This idiot tried to lasso me, Flem. Like a common cow. Not even from
the good herd for feast days. Like the cull herd that always has at least one
calf accidentally drown itself.”
“You’re not cull herd,” Flemming protested automatically,
staring with unblinking amber eyes. Her paintbrush dangled loosely from her claws.
From Giselle’s crimson side, a human covered in metal banged her ribs with a sword. “Stop that, you little twerp,” she snapped.
“Did the human keep doing that while you were in the air?” Flemming
asked curiously. “He must not want to live.”
Giselle snorted. “Well, I’ve brought you a snack, then. Get
me out of these ropes, would you? And what were you doing when I winged in? You
looked like you were fencing with a board.”
Flemming’s mouth gaped open with toothy grin, similar to the
one that had caused the gardener to faint earlier. “I’ve taken up painting,”
she said proudly.
The metal-clad human stopped banging on Giselle’s ribcage and turned his head toward the sapphire dragon. Flemming glared into the darkened visor. “Do you have opinions, human snack?”
“I’d love to see your work,” Giselle said warmly. “But after you get me out of these ropes. Flem, please.”
“Of course,” Flemming said. She set the paintbrush at the
statue’s feet and moved over, slashing a claw at the ropes.
Giselle sighed in relief as the tangled ropes came free and
piled at her talons.
Her free hand snagged the metal human’s shoulder as he got
to his feet. She pushed him toward Giselle, claws digging into the pauldron
with the creak of tearing metal. “Here’s your snack.”
“Our snack,” Giselle said. “You can have the head. Now, let’s see this painting –”
“Wait, wait, wait, hang on,” Marcus said, interrupting his
older sister’s tale. “Dragons can’t paint. This whole story is ridiculous.”
“Of course they can,” Sarah insisted from her lofty eleven-year-old viewpoint. “They have the internet. She watched instructional videos.”
“Fine,” he said with a grumble, breaking off a piece of his
cookie and leaving crumbs on the table. “Dragons can have art. But knights are s’posed
to win.” Marcus stuffed the cookie in his mouth.
“Not from the dragons’ point of view,” Sarah pointed out
primly. She eyed his crumbs with distaste and picked up her own gingerbread man,
careful not to smudge the frosting.
He grabbed a second cookie and frowned up at her with grumpy
brown eyes. “The knight’s not a snack.”
Sarah dunked her gingerbread man into a glass of milk head
first. “Isn’t he?” She bit off the head before it could disintegrate and gave
her little brother a toothy smile.
Marcus’ eyes lit up. Smashing the cookie down on the low table, he let out an earsplitting roar. “Let’s play dragon next!”
nother Mike, who wrote about Aphrodite riding sidesaddle on a goose, challenged me with this: “He was bent over, praying, with his hands together, when the other hands grasped his in support. He blinked, and then noticed that the hands holding his were blue…”
I sat down intending this to be a monkey’s paw, “be careful what you wish for” story. One in which Jonas wishes to hide his problems, and looks up to find a zombie’s blue, rotting hands happy to distract him. I’ll have to explore undead religious proclivities another time, because this spilled out instead.
Jonas
froze in horror, as a resounding crash echoed within the cavernous Guildhouse.
The wooden balconies populated with heads poking from each of the cubbies,
peering into the open middle where the great loomworks rested.
The
loomworks never rested long, only stripped of their precious weaving long
enough to deliver the highborns’ work and restring for the next commission. The
list of commissions was very long, and the only reason an orphan off the streets
had ever been taught to read or figure.
He
was one of the few thin, limber, light enough to clamber up to the adjustable
fiddly bits at the top and resize the work. He was not entrusted with the weaving.
Guildmaster did not permit soiled hands such as his to handle the delicate base
fabrics or tapestries hung upon the great loomworks.
He
turned, every inch a momentous effort of sheer will, creeping unwilling eyes to
stare at the wreckage of wood collapsed upon the lobby. He’d just adjusted the
frame, and clearly something had gone horribly, miserably wrong.
No
one else moved. The weavers at the small looms on the balconies stared openmouthed.
Guild Officials stared from the trading desk, where they displayed sample wares
and bargained for gold.
A small, pudgy, redheaded boy on the third floor balcony snickered into the clattering silence, rocking back and forth on elbows propped on the rickety balcony. He clearly knew the punishments the Guildmaster liked to give. No one would spare a thought for the orphan boy’s cries.
Jonas whirled and pelted from the hall, stumbling over limbs grown too long as he tore through the streets. He landed on his knees, bruising them against the cold stone floor the Temple of the Moirai.
He bent over, praying to The Three, aware the Guildmaster would punish him for breaking the great loomworks. He could not even fathom the depth of this punishment, having destroyed the primary source of this Guild District’s wealth.
Worse – if he could no longer climb with impunity, he had no value to the Guild. Jonas shuddered at the faint memory of life on the streets.
Wetness
struck his cheeks, and he blinked furiously, unwilling to admit weakness. Now
was a time for strength. He needed to prove his value to the Guild.
He
just had no idea how to do it.
Jonas
closed his eyes, hands clenched together, hoping the three statues’ cold eyes would
soften if he only prayed hard enough. He felt warm, rough hands close over his.
A man’s voice, harsh with years and commanding, begin the Chant of Respect to The
Three. Jonas stumbled over the familiar words.
“…and
– and to each our allotment, which we shall not struggle, for we know The Three
have measured what – what is to be.” Jonas opened bleary eyes, struggling not
to sniffle.
His
eyes widened further to see the hands still grasping his. Blue!
“Look
at me, boy,” the voice commanded.
Jonas
lifted his eyes to see a perfectly ordinary, study workingman. Brown eyes that
looked like they laughed often, crinkled at the edges. A tidy beard, streaked
with more white than the remaining muddy brown. And hands dyed blue, arms
streaked in paler shades up to the elbow.
The
man laughed. “It’s from the indigo, boy. The blue dye. You get used to it after
a while.”
Jonas
lowered his eyes.
“Hey
now, eyes up.”
Jonas
suspected this man could be heard over a thousand looms if he wanted, but his tone
was kind and quiet, not even echoing in the stone-walled temple.
The
bearded man took pity on him and released his hands. “Your reaction was
interesting,” the man said casually, settling back and studying the statues of The
Three.
Jonas
studied the statues, shooting the man a sideways glance, uncertain.
“As
if you were afraid of the Guildmaster.” The man studied his indigo hands, as if
examining the calluses.
Shuddering,
Jonas looked away.
“Boy,
you don’t have to worry about being strapped for this. Accidents happen.”
He couldn’t stop the panicked mewl that emerged from his throat. Accidents did not simply happen with the Guildmaster. The worst he’d done before now was eat a pear uninvited, and he’d been whipped on a weekly basis or more.
“Someday
I’ll share the stories with you, boy. Over a mead, when you’re a bit older. The
point is that you learn from your mistakes.”
The man stood up and reached out a hand. “Like learning to build looms from scratch, so you can fix them, and know when they weaken.”
Jonas stared upward, confused.
“I’m the Grand Guildmaster, boy.”
Jonas straightened, tongue-tied.
He still didn’t take the outstretched, unwavering hand.
“I’ve heard stories about this district. Bad stories, and too many of them. I’ve come to take control and fix things here.”
Jonas dared to hope. He reached
out, tentative and unsure.
The man grasped it in a firm grip.
“And if you’re to become my apprentice,
I’ll need to know your name.”
This week, I challenged Cedar Sanderson to explore theta brain wave stimulation. Leigh Kimmel asked me to explore people duplication, but I suspect I went in a different direction than intended.
“Darling, don’t forget to close the blinds,” Choi called to her husband from where she brushed her hair in the other room.
Her husband walked out of the nursery, but lingered in the hallway. “The twins are out of the light and sleeping,” Adam said. He leaned against the doorjamb, stubbing a toe repeatedly against the wooden floorboards.
“Finally.” Choi looked at her husband with exhausted eyes. “There’s
so much more work with two. I can’t believe we got duplicates.”
He coughed, and looked away. “About that.”
The hairbrush landed on the bed with a distinct thump. Choi
braced herself against the edge of the bed, ready to launch herself across the
hall. “What’s wrong?”
“We’ll be able to tell them apart now,” Adam replied. His tone was measured and reasonable. “Their personalities aren’t developed enough to be helpful otherwise.”
She glared at him, her mouth twisted. “I told you to keep them out of the sunlight!”
“They’re fine, dear. We just also might want to boost whichever one faded with a little paint. As long as neither fades entirely, right?”
“Paint.” She spat the word as if he’d suggested poison.
“Oils, maybe, or acrylics. Not watercolors. Something more permanent than mimeograph ink.”
His eyes were filled with the hope of a child who knows he won’t get a treat, but still can’t resist asking.
It was a long few minutes before Choi sighed. “But I did so love the smell.”
Mine was from Misha Burnett. ” A forensic necromancer interviews a murder victim. Unfortunately, the testimony of the deceased is inadmissible in court. What information could the victim provide that would give the police a lead on finding evidence that could be used to convict the killer?”
Before we get to that, Thesis Cat continues to do her job in guilt-tripping me to get back to work.
Guarding toaster pastries is important work.
Onto the story!
I stared down at my body and blew out a frustrated sigh of non-existent air. Guess I didn’t need oxygen anymore, but automatic habits die hard.
It still annoyed me further. Counting to ten didn’t help. It
was all I could do not to stamp my foot like a toddler in the midst of being
denied a cookie.
Yeah, realizing I’d never have a cookie again didn’t help the urge.
I tried again. “Hey. HEY. Heeeeeyyyyy.” I waved my hand in
front of the cop’s nose. “Look, dude, I know you can see me. Ever since that
asteroid hit, everyone can see ghosts until they cross over.”
He’d blinked at the word “dude.” Good. I’d been trying for a
reaction. Maybe offending him wouldn’t help my case, but I’d been pleading and
begging for help for twenty minutes, ever since the cops showed up.
Let me tell you, it’s really weird to walk into your
neighbor’s house, uninvited, through the wall, and ask them to call the cops because
you’ve just been murdered.
Walked right through a whole cabinet of creepy china figurines,
too. The memory made me shudder. I guess ghosts can do that, still.
“C’mon, man. I can give you a name, a description, even the
reason why and where he works. I thought I was getting out of the guy’s way. He
wanted to back into the parking space.”
I kicked my own ribcage, but my foot just passed through. The
cop put up his hand like he was trying to block me. I hoped it made him feel
freezing cold. Serves him right for ignoring me.
“I was meeting a friend for lunch and told him about what
happened. I figured at worst parking lot guy would have spit in my food. Gave
me a look and a shake of the head every time he walked past the table.”
The uniform studiously continued to study my dead body, placing
evidence markers by blood splatter. He looked everywhere but at me.
“Nametag said Devon, from Mika’s Diner. Over on Greene street.”
A throat cleared behind me. Tall, stubble, greying brown
hair, sharp blue eyes that missed nothing but looked exhausted. He wore a rumpled
suit and a faded black trench, with a badge slung around his neck on a cheap
chain. He jerked his head at me, and I heard the officer first on scene breathe
his own sigh of relief.
Lucky bastard, his exhalation had real air in it.
I followed what had to be the homicide detective into what
until an hour ago had been my living room. He sat on the couch and waved at hand
at my favorite chair like he owned the place.
I raised an eyebrow.
“You want someone to talk to you or not?” His voice reminded
me of rusty barbed wire, quick with a comeback and ready to give you tetanus if
you were too much of an idiot.
I sat.
“No one will listen,” I started. “I know exactly who did it.”
“Yeah, but don’t you watch the news, kid?” He slumped back against
the cushions, leaning on the armrest and studying me as he settled in.
I blinked. “What?”
“I’m saying Fiddler v. Tennessee,” he said. “I’m Joe,
by the way. Joe Brighton. Homicide detective. Fourth Precinct.”
“What the hell is Fiddler v. Tennessee?” I asked,
frowning. I didn’t like where this conversation was going.
“Supreme Court case. We’ve been watching it for the past couple years. Right after the asteroid hit a decade ago and everything changed, right? This guy says ghosts are no longer humans, therefore they’re no longer sentient.”
I snorted.
He nodded. “Yeah, I agree. But it’s got an impact. Means ghost
testimony doesn’t hold up in court.”
“We’re not in court,” I pointed out. “We’re in my living
room. Next to my dead body.”
“Yeah, but that uniform in there? Steve’s a good guy. He’s
wearing a body cam that records everything, all right? Means he can’t talk to
you without it getting caught on camera. That’s a problem.”
“How come you can talk to me?” I asked, stiffening with
belligerence.
He crossed his legs in a figure four. “To answer your question, what conversation?” he asked, looking around.
“I’m just getting a sense of what you were like as a person. Talk to myself all the time, you know. Part of my detecting process.”
“I’m no longer a forensic necromancer, after all. No specializing in talking to dead people and getting their testimony, not anymore. I’m just a homicide detective now.”
He tapped slender fingers together, then pressed two fingers to his mouth like he wished they were holding a cigarette.
Snarling, I leapt up. “You mean you can just ignore me and
that’s somehow okay?”
Joe didn’t bother making eye contact. “Exactly. And Steve and
the other uniforms have to, or they get in trouble.”
Pacing, I struggled with my options. “This is so unfair. I
should fight this in court.”
“Good luck finding a lawyer who’ll take that on,” Joe said. “Non-person,
remember? Did you add a provision in your will for hiring a lawyer to represent
your ghost’s interests posthumously?”
I choked, then remembered I didn’t have to care about that. “Did
I what?!”
He leaned back against the couch even further, like the weight on his shoulders was real and tangible. “I see you were a reader. Mysteries.”
“What’s that got to do with anything?” I asked, starting to
feel the fight drain from me. “You can’t use anything I tell you.”
“Unless you find a way to get me something I can use that’s
not your direct testimony.” Joe made eye contact at last. “Don’t suppose you’ve
got anything that would help with that, do you?”
I stood firm, feet planted, and whistled high and loud. Joe
winced, but I didn’t care. I knew Wilbur would come to our whistle, no matter
how afraid he was of the strange man on the couch, or how traumatized he’d been
after seeing me stabbed.
I glared at Joe. “I do this, you take care of my dog. You
take him in or find him a nice warm home. Not some shelter that’ll put him
down, not some terrible owner that’ll make him fight.”
He nodded, once, short and sharp. “Everybody’s got a
bargain.”
Studying him with new eyes, I realized his relaxed posture was
studied tension, held to contain a tightly wound spring. “You’ve done this
before.”
A shoulder shrugged inside the trench.
I turned away at the sound of slow feet and a slight whimper.
There he was, my 155-pound bundle of oversized bloodhound joy. Covered in my
blood splatter, and maybe some attacker DNA.
“Wilbur, sit.” I gave his head a caress, trying not to
notice that I couldn’t feel his fur, that I had to hold my hand just above his
ears to keep from sticking my hand through his brain. Poor guy’d been through
enough tonight.
I looked at Joe. “He’ll sit for you if you swab his teeth. And
fur, I guess.”
He nodded, and waved over a tech I hadn’t noticed in the door.
“Bloodhound got a nose on him?” He gave Wilbur the pet I couldn’t,
scratching gently around the ears. Joe looked at me briefly over the tech’s
head, but there was compassion in the look. He knew what I wanted, but could
never have again.
“He does,” I said sadly. “He trained for it before I got
him, but his temperament was never quite right. The nose is there. But he’s a
bit of a scaredy-cat.”
The tech stood up, avoiding looking at me as she packed away
her samples from my dog.
“Wilbur,” I said. “Time to get to work.”
Joe nodded in approval, and got up to follow my bloodhound.
It was three hours later when they came back. I’d apologized to Steve the uniform by then, who made a few random nods and commented out loud to his partner what a shame it was that I’d ended like this.
I was sitting on the front porch when Joe arrived, Wilbur
bounding up behind him. He sat down on the stoop next to me, stroking the dog’s
head.
“He was a very good boy,” Joe said softly, mumbling a
little. I guess outside, he tried to keep up appearances more.
“He always is,” I said sadly, holding out a hand for Wilbur
to sniff. He didn’t seem to mind that I wasn’t corporeal.
“Led us straight to one Devon Nelson, who works at Mika’s Diner.
Idiot still had the knife in his hand, smeared with your blood. He’d tried to
wipe it off on his own shirt, thinking it would blend in since it was a dark
color.”
I leaned back and kicked my legs down the steps. “All over a
parking spot?”
“Yeah. Confessed and everything.” Joe kept his head bent over
Wilbur.
I sighed. “Feels pretty dumb. Now what?”
Joe grimaced, his face contorting on the side I could see. “Now
you either move on, or hang out and do whatever you didn’t get a chance to do
in this life.”
“I thought I’d know what to do,” I said. My voice must have
been sad, because he looked up finally.
“Nobody really does,” he said.
He stood up, and Wilbur looked at me, tongue lolling and
ready to give me a good lick.
I reached out and cupped my hand around his long, droopy ear,
wishing I could feel the warmth.
He turned to walk away and paused halfway down the cracked concrete
walk. “Come visit Wilbur anytime.”
Couldn’t argue. It wasn’t like I could feed the dog, or walk
him through the wall when he needed to go out. I watched as Joe rolled the dark
sedan’s window down for Wilbur, who loved to let his ears flop in the wind.
I wondered what it took for someone to talk to the dead each
day, and what more it cost to have to hide it.
I have successfully distracted Thesis Cat with a giant cardboard box. Time enough for a quick jot of words inspired by one of this week’s Odd Prompts spare challenges. Huzzah! Creative writing has such a different mental flavor.
This week’s prompt: “The ghost of the Savoy at Mussoorie haunts not for justice, but for…”
“Sorry to interrupt, but I’ve never been to India before,” I
said to the woman seated on the heavily embroidered chair in the Savoy’s lobby.
“I don’t know if it’s the thing to do here. Tipping, I mean. Do you know?”
She looked up from her book, her eyes wide and surprised. She
blinked before opening her mouth. I had the feeling she didn’t talk much, and
her voice confirmed it, rusty with disuse.
“American, aren’t you?” She nodded her own confirmation at
my outfit before I could reply. “One of your dollars should do it these days, I
believe.”
Her voice was properly British, reminiscent of tea and
crumpets. She was dressed in a rather old-fashioned getup, but the wide-brimmed
hat was practical for the sun, and I’m sure the dress was cool in the heat. A
proper lady, even sitting stiffly upright while reading. Straight out of the
Empire, that one.
“Thanks,” I said, annoyed with myself for passing judgment when
she’d been so helpful. “Listen, can I buy you a drink, maybe a scone, as a
thank you? I’d have gone through hundreds, and been swarmed.”
The woman set down her book and reached back to smooth a
curl, looking amused. “Thank you, but I must decline.”
“As you wish,” I said, surprised at the depth of hurt I felt
at a stranger’s slight. My face must have shone it as I picked my bag up from
the tile floor.
“I do apologize if I’ve offended you. It’s not what you
think,” the woman said, standing and smoothing her long skirt. “I’m much past such
mundane needs as the flesh requires.”
“Ah,” I mumbled, unsure what to say. “Um, that sounds nice.”
She walked with me as I headed toward the check in counter. I was starting to wonder if I’d made a mistake. India was known for spiritualism, sure, but this was a business trip.
“It’s been so long.”
Her voice improved with use, I noticed.
“No one’s noticed me in ever so long.”
I gave her a sideways glance, questioning. She smiled sadly,
her face wan under her enormous straw hat.
“I only wanted to play the grand piano,” she said, and her voice
was soft, grief-stricken.
“One last time, like my darling and I used to spend our
evenings before he was taken from me. I shouldn’t have minded being murdered so
much if I’d been able to play just one more time.”
She looked at me again, and this time I noticed the hollows
in her cheeks, her sunken eyes, her skin that tightened and discolored before
my gaze.
“I couldn’t find him without the music. It’s been so long. I
can’t remember the song any longer.”
I stopped walking and stared at the woman turned wraith, her dress now faded and flimsy rags, her clenched hands skeletal.
She bared her teeth at me in what must have once been a
smile, turned, and walked through the lobby’s grand piano.