Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
Finally I stopped in front of a sturdy gray walking stick tucked into the corner behind the front door, next to another taller and intricately carved stick, which smelled of nothing more interesting than polyurethane.
When I first looked at the stick, it appeared unremarkable and plain, though clearly old. Then I realized that the metal cap wasnât stainless steel: it was silver, and very faintly I could see that something was etched into the metal. But it was dark in the room and even my night eyes have limits.
It might as well have had âA Clueâ painted in fluorescent orange down the side. I thought long and hard about taking it, but decided it was unlikely to go anyplace, having survived OâDonnellâs murderer and the police.
It smelled of wood smoke and pipe tobacco: OâDonnell had stolen it from the forest faeâs home.
I left it alone and began quartering the living room.
Built-in bookshelves lined the room, mostly full of DVDs and VHS tapes. One whole bookshelf was devoted to the kind of menâs magazines that people read âfor the articlesâ and argue about art versus pornography. The magazines on the bottom shelf had given up any pretense of artâjudging by the photos on the covers.
Another bookcase had doors that closed over the bottom half. The open shelves at the top were mostly empty except for a few chunks ofâ¦rocks. I recognized a good-sized chunk of amethyst and a particularly fine quartz crystal. OâDonnell collected rocks.
There was an open case for Chitty Chitty Bang Bang sitting on top of the DVD player under the TV. How could someone like OâDonnell be a Dick Van Dyke fan? I wondered if heâd had a chance to finish watching it before he died.
I think it was because I felt that moment of sorrow that I heard the creak of a board giving way beneath the weight of the houseâs dead occupant.
Other people, people who are completely, mundanely human, see ghosts, too. Maybe not as oftenâor in broad daylightâbut they do see them. Since there had been no ghosts at the death sites in the reservation, Iâd unconsciously assumed that there would be none here as well. Iâd been wrong.
OâDonnellâs shade walked into the living room from the hallway. As some ghosts do, he grew clearer in bits and pieces as I focused on him. I could see the stitching on his jeans, but his face was a faded blur.
I whined, but he walked by me without a glance.
There are a very few ghosts who can interact with the living, as much a person as they had been in life. I got caught once talking to a ghost without realizing thatâs what he was until my mother asked me whom I was talking to.
Other ghosts repeat the habits of a lifetime. Sometimes they react, too, though I usually canât talk to them. There is a place near where I was raised where the ghost of a rancher goes out every morning to throw hay to cows who are half a century gone. Sometimes he saw me and waved or nodded his head as he would have responded to anyone whoâd approached him in life. But if I tried to converse with him, heâd just go about his business as if I werenât there at all.
The third kind are the ones born in moments of trauma. They relive their deaths until they fade away. Some dissipate in a few days and others are still dying each day even centuries later.
OâDonnell didnât see me standing in front of him so he wasnât the first, most useful kind of ghost.
All I could do was watch as he walked to the shelves that held the rocks and touched something on the top shelf. It clicked against the fake wood shelf. He stood there for a moment, his fingers petting whatever he touched, his whole body focused on that small item.
For a moment I was disappointed. If he was just repeating something heâd done every day, I wouldnât learn anything from him.
Then he jerked upright, responding, I thought, to a sound I could not hear and he walked briskly to the front door. I heard the door open with his motions, but the door, more real than the apparition, stayed closed.
This was not a habitual ghost. I settled in, prepared to watch OâDonnell die.
He knew the person at the door. He seemed impatient with him, but after a moment of talk, he took a step back in invitation. I couldnât see the person who came inâhe wasnât deadâor hear anything except the creaks and groans of the floorboards as they
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher