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The Ghost Wore Yellow Socks
  • Текст добавлен: 8 октября 2016, 10:11

Текст книги "The Ghost Wore Yellow Socks "


Автор книги: Josh lanyon


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Текущая страница: 6 (всего у книги 12 страниц)

* * * * *

Perry was sacked out on the sofa when Nick opened the door to his apartment, but he sat up, hair on end, eyes heavy-lidded.

“Nick?”

“You expecting someone else?”

Perry gave a little chuckle and rubbed his eyes. “I didn’t think they’d keep you that long.”

Nick headed for the kitchen. “Want a drink?”

“Oh. I already brushed my teeth…”

Nick rolled his eyes and took a beer from the fridge. He was staring out over the sink, drinking, when Perry’s reflection appeared in the black window – a slightly rumpled ghost drifting up behind him.

“I’m glad you’re back,” Perry said. “And not just because I’d rather sleep in the gazebo than my own apartment.”

Nick jerked his head in the direction of the fridge. “Help yourself.”

Perry padded barefoot over to the fridge – and Nick resisted the temptation to tell him to put socks on his feet. He’d never considered himself the paternal type, but…someone needed to look after this boy. Once again he wondered what had gone wrong with the friend in San Francisco.

Perry got a beer, found the opener, and uncapped the bottle. He studied the design on the cap, frowning, then took a swig of beer.

“So what happened?” Nick questioned. “You found Tiny in Watson’s closet?”

“That’s pretty much it, yeah. I heard this weird sound. And then kind of a thump. I opened the closet and…he fell out.”

Nick glanced over. Perry’s fingers were white on the bottle cap, his eyes focused on whatever he had seen in Watson’s closet. It had to have taken a hell of a lot of courage to open that door. Against his will, Nick was impressed. Of course, the sensible thing to do would have been run for help.

Not that there were many places to find it in this lunatic asylum.

“We both saw him leave the apartment Sunday,” Nick said. “And you had the locks changed, so he couldn’t have got back in.”

“Somehow he did. We saw him leave, but no one saw him after that, remember? Jane was looking for him. He never came downstairs.”

Nick swallowed beer, considering this.

“But he wasn’t there the night before last,” Perry said, “because I checked the closet. I mean, the door was ajar, so I shut it – but before I shut it, I glanced inside.”

“Why?”

Delicate color rose in Perry’s face. “Oh, you know,” he said vaguely.

And Nick did know. He bit back a grin. Hopefully Foster didn’t watch a lot of scary movies. “So he disappeared Sunday morning and showed up again, dead, in Watson’s closet on Tuesday night?”

“Right.”

“So someone murdered him and somehow – and for some unknown reason – dragged his body into Watson’s apartment.”

Perry said, “He wasn’t dead.”

Nick’s gaze sharpened. “What do you mean he wasn’t dead?”

“When I found him he was still alive,” Perry said unsteadily. “He…died while I was waiting for the ambulance.”

Nick set aside the inappropriate desire to offer comfort and focused on the business at hand. “Did he say anything? Did he say who did it?”

Perry shook his head. “He said, ‘We’re the good guys.’”

We’re the good guys? You and me? Or him and someone else?”

“He didn’t specify.”

“But what the hell does that mean?”

Perry shrugged.

“Sounds like a line from a bad movie.”

Perry gave a tired laugh. “I know. But that’s what he said. At least, that was the only thing I could make out. He said something else, but I couldn’t make out the words.”

“None of them? What did it sound like?”

Perry made a violent gurgling sound, and Nick nearly choked on his beer. “You’re shitting me.”

Perry gave that funny little smile, but said seriously, “It didn’t sound like words. It was just…dying sounds.”

“Yeah. Well…” Once again Nick had that totally out-of-character desire to offer comfort. If he didn’t know it would be a fatal mistake to encourage the kid, he’d have…

But it would be a mistake – so he didn’t.

Foster rubbed his eyes with his fist. “Gosh, I’m beat. I haven’t slept in two nights.”

Nick listened to this without hearing. He said slowly, “What I still don’t understand is how someone managed to lug Tiny inside Watson’s place after the locks were changed.”

“Maybe there’s a secret passage,” Perry offered.

“Yeah, right.” But as Nick considered it, his brows drew together. “Is that possible?”

“I don’t know. I never heard of any hidden passages.” Perry yawned, belatedly covering an inspiring glimpse of filling-free teeth and healthy tonsils.

“Are there blueprints of the house somewhere?”

Perry blinked at him like the question didn’t compute.

“Go back to bed,” Nick advised. “You look ready to keel over.”

Perry said, “Night, then,” and stumbled off to the sofa.

He was drifting off when a thought occurred. He pushed up on elbow calling, “How did your interview go?”

“Great,” Nick said. “I got the job.”

“Wow, that is great,” Perry said hollowly and buried his head in the pillow.

Nick finished his beer, tossed the bottle, and headed for his own bed.

* * * * *

Perry woke and lay blinking at the blue rain shadows rippling across the ceiling. Another day in Paradise, as his pop used to say.

He stretched, and the blankets drew up, leaving his bare feet exposed to the cold. Shivering, he curled up once more. Nick kept his thermostat too low; Perry felt chilled and cramped after a night on the sofa.

Actually he couldn’t remember when he’d last had a good night’s sleep. Before Frisco. Before Marcel turned out to be mostly a figment of his imagination.

Rising, he found a saucepan in Nick’s cupboard, filled it with water, and left it heating on the stove while he hurried across to his own apartment for a change of clothes and a tin of hot chocolate.

A glance over the banister showed him a deputy sheriff walking upstairs. He recognized him as one of the two who had shown up the night he had discovered the body in the bathtub. This was the younger man. “Abe” the senior partner had called him.

“Morning,” Deputy Abe said laconically. His expression indicated he remembered Perry quite well too – and was equally unimpressed.

“Morning,” returned Perry, drawing back. He’d had a vague idea of grabbing some of his things out of Watson’s apartment, but that would have to wait.

Letting himself into his own rooms, he used his peak flow meter and noted the results on the asthma chart pinned to the fridge – pleased to note that despite the stress and strains of the past week, he was still safely in the green zone – grabbed clean clothes and the tin of Nestlé’s Quik and dashed back to Nick’s.

Nick’s bedroom door was closed, Nick apparently still fathoms under after the long, nearly back-to-back trip to and from Los Angeles. Perry showered, shaved, and changed into clean Levi’s and a forest green thermal Henley. He knew the color suited him; he had bought it for the vacation with Marcel. He examined himself in the mirror. Despite the uneasy night’s sleep, he looked better than he had recently. But then he felt better – mostly because Nick was back.

Last night he’d been too tired to tell him what he’d learned about the house’s history – last night none of it had seemed relevant – but this morning he couldn’t wait to hear Nick’s thoughts.

Pouring himself a cup of cocoa, he sat down at the table and glanced over the notes he’d made at the library the day before. He was still reading when Nick padded in.

Unshaven, bleary eyed, he stalked over to the gas range. “’Morning,” he growled.

“Good morning,” Perry said cheerfully. “There’s hot water.”

“I see that. I take coffee with my hot water.” He scowled at Perry’s mug. “Tell me those are not bunny-shaped marshmallows.”

Perry blushed.

“Don’t you drink coffee?” Nick sounded disbelieving. “Couldn’t you at least make coffee for those of us who don’t like bunnies in our morning beverage.”

“I don’t know how to make coffee,” Perry admitted.

Nick turned that red-rimmed gaze on Perry. “You’re not kidding,” he said at last.

“No. I don’t drink it, so I never learned.”

Nick shuddered. He turned on the taps and filled the stainless coffeepot. “How’d you sleep?” he asked over the rush of water.

“Okay,” Perry said, trying to repress a grin. He enjoyed Nick’s company – even when Nick was feeling grouchy.

Nick finished filling the coffeepot and sat down at the table. He nodded at Perry’s notes. “What are you doing?”

“I was at the newspaper morgue yesterday. I learned some things about the house.”

“Like what?”

“Well, it is supposed to be haunted…” At Nick’s expression he added hastily, “But that’s not the interesting part.”

Nick scrubbed his face with his hands. “Give me the interesting part.”

He had square, capable hands. They were tanned – Nick was tanned everywhere as far as Perry could see even though it was late autumn now. He’d have liked to see if Nick was brown under those flannel shirts and jeans; he’d have liked to feel those square, capable hands on his body. He brought his thoughts up short, a little shocked at his own shallowness. Here he was, just two days after losing the love of his life, and he was fantasizing about another man.

A straight man at that.

Although…sometimes the way Nick looked at him made him wonder. Perry wasn’t vastly experienced, but he did know what that certain alertness, that awareness, meant in another person’s stare. It started in kindergarten and never stopped as far as he could tell.

He realized that Nick was now looking at him, waiting to be brought up to speed, and said hastily, “Back in the thirties there was a big robbery on the estate, and a bunch of jewels and money were stolen from guests by a gangster by the name of Shane Moran. No one ever found the loot.”

“So what…the ghosts of the robbed guests are haunting the halls of Alston Manor?”

“No. Shane Moran is supposed to haunt the grounds. He was killed in a shoot-out in Witch Hollow Woods.”

Nick groaned. “Lemme guess. He was shot for wearing a loud yellow sports jacket?”

Perry laughed. “Maybe. But the guy in my bathtub was not wearing costume dress. That coat came from Big and Tall World, I’m betting.”

“The Sopranos Collection,” Nick said.

“Hey.” Perry looked thoughtful. “He did look like a gangster, sort of.”

“Not everyone with a taste for checks and plaids is actually a criminal, although I can see why you might think so.”

Perry laughed.

“Jesus, you’re chipper in the morning,” Nick complained, but he didn’t seem unduly upset about it. He rose. “Eggs and bacon okay?”

Perry was considering Nick’s first comment. His mother used to say he was “sunny natured,” and he guessed that was true. The last few days had been spent in a fog of misery after the fiasco with Marcel, but his natural optimism was beginning to reassert itself. He was amazed to realize he had barely thought of Marcel today until this very moment.

“I guess I’m kind of a morning person,” he informed Nick.

“I’ll keep it in mind,” Nick said. “Scrambled or fried?”

“I think I’ll just have cereal.”

“I don’t think so,” Nick said. “You need to eat real food. No wonder you have asthma.”

“Asthma doesn’t have anything to do with eating.” Perry was slightly amused, slightly defensive.

“No? Well, I’m not a doctor, but it seems like the better shape you’re in, the fewer problems you’d have with your breathing. Do you ever work out?”

“I hike a lot. In the woods.”

“You need to work out,” Nick informed him. “Weights. Build your muscles. You have to be able to take care of yourself in this world.”

While Nick delivered his lecture on fitness, he cracked eggs, chopped onions, grated cheese. Bacon popped on the stove. Coffee perked. It was homey. Cozy. Perry warned himself not to enjoy it too much.

“Did you tell the cops about this stuff?” Nick asked.

“I didn’t think of the secret passage till I was talking with you.”

“Not that,” Nick brushed aside the notion of a secret passage. “I mean the stuff about the missing jewels. That’s what you think is going on here, right? Someone is looking for Shane Moran’s missing loot.”

He raised his eyebrows at whatever he read in Perry’s face. “Kid, it wasn’t that hard to follow where you were heading.”

Perry couldn’t help it. Nick was so damned sharp and savvy. He couldn’t imagine what it was like to be someone like that. Someone who always knew what to do – and the best way to do it.

“I tried,” Perry said. “The sheriff kept interrupting me and asking about Tiny.”

Nick put the plate in front of Perry. “Eat up.”

Perry shoved his notes aside and picked up his fork. “You’re a good cook.”

“My grandmother taught me to cook. She thought it was important for a man to be able to make himself a home-cooked meal when he wanted it. Thank God she did. My wife was the worst cook ever born. She made MR rations seem appetizing.”

“I didn’t know you were married.”

“Divorced.” Nick added curtly, “Got the papers Saturday.”

“How long were you married?”

“Too long.” His tone indicated that this topic was now off-limits.

Perry ate his breakfast silently while Nick stared out the window. The phone rang and Nick went to answer it. Perry heard him pick up, and then after a moment of silence, say curtly, “We’ll be right over.”

Nick stuck his head in the kitchen.

“That was Stein. He said he heard someone walking overhead in your apartment so he tried ringing. No one answered. He called here to find out if you’d moved back or not. I said we’d meet him over there.”

“Why didn’t he tell the deputy?”

“He said the deputy is gone.”

“He’s probably in my apartment.” Perry’s eyes widened as he watched Nick squat down, open the cupboard beneath the sink, and pull out a pistol. Nick shoved the pistol in the back waistband of his Levi’s with the casualness that bespoke great familiarity with weapons. Perry’s father had handled his weapons the same way.

Nick glanced at him, the lines of his face hard and businesslike. “Why would he be?”

It took Perry a second to remember his comment about the deputy. “I’m probably a suspect.”

“I give the police more credit than that.” And with that Nick was on his feet and out the door.

Perry pushed away from the table to follow reluctantly.













Chapter Eight

The trip from Nick’s tower room to Perry’s took about a minute. Reaching Perry’s apartment, they found the door slightly open.

Nick pulled his gun, planted one hand in Perry’s chest, and whispered, “Stay here.”

Perry was happy to obey. He watched Nick start forward. Nick glanced back at him, and an expression of exasperation fleeted across his set face. He jerked his head backward, giving Perry to understand he was supposed to get out of the line of potential fire.

He plastered himself against the wall behind Nick, heart hammering hard. His chest was getting that tight, itchy feeling. God, please not now… He fought the desire to cough.

Nick kicked open the door and slipped inside the front room, gun at the ready. He pivoted alertly to the left, swung to the right – never mind the gun, he was a weapon all on his own, Perry thought, watching his progress through the crack in the door.

Nick disappeared out of Perry’s line of vision.

Perry waited. His eyes fell on something he had missed as he watched Nick. A pair of feet stuck out from behind the kitchen counter. Someone lay on the kitchen floor.

A wave of dizziness hit him; he closed his eyes and leaned back against the wall.

Another body. They ought to change the name of this place to Homicide House.

When he opened his eyes and looked again, Nick was stealthily cutting from the hallway into the bedroom.

A moment later he stuck his head around the corner.

“Get in here, Foster. Someone knocked Stein out.”

Stein? How did he get up here so fast?”

“I don’t know. I just know he’s here and unconscious.”

Stein was making an effort to sit up when Perry and Nick joined him on the kitchen linoleum.

“What the hell happened?” he muttered.

“Someone cold-cocked you,” Nick replied. “Did you see who?”

Stein felt the top of his head. “Shit, what’d he hit me with? A baseball bat?”

A visible lump rose out of his iron gray part.

“Probably that,” Perry said, pointing to the fireplace poker, which was wrapped in a paint-spattered rag.

“I guess I oughta be grateful he wasn’t trying to kill me.”

“He?” Nick questioned.

“He or she.”

“What happened?”

“The door was open so I walked in.”

Why?” Perry asked.

Stein admitted, “I guess I just assumed it was you two. Anyway, I heard a movement behind me. He must have been behind the door. I turned and he slammed me over the head.”

Nick asked, “But you didn’t see who it was?”

Stein shook his head, then winced.

“The bedroom window was open,” Nick said.

“He must have got out that way,” Perry said, meeting his eyes. “Otherwise we’d have seen him going down the stairs.”

Nick nodded slowly. “Unless he started downstairs before we left my place. He’d have to be moving pretty fast. See if you can locate the deputy. He’s got to be here somewhere.”

“Maybe he’s disappeared, like Tiny,” Stein mumbled.

Wide-eyed, Perry turned back to Nick, who shook his head. “Nah. No way. He’s either inside Watson’s apartment, or he’s snooping around downstairs.”

Perry jumped up and raced down the stairs. He reached the landing and was starting down the second flight when someone called, “Hey, Foster! Where’s the fire?”

It was Deputy Abe back in his chair outside Watson’s apartment door.

Perry skidded to a stop and stared down the long hall.

“Where were you?”

The deputy raised a coffee mug. “Downstairs. Getting something hot to drink. This place is like a morgue.”

“Mr. Stein was knocked out upstairs in my apartment.”

“Who? Stein? What was he doing in your apartment? Where were you?”

“I was staying with Nick. Mr. Reno.”

“The SEAL?” The surprise in the deputy’s voice was not flattering. Perry flushed. Not that there was anything to be embarrassed about – unfortunately.

He said shortly, “Mr. Stein heard footsteps. He went up to investigate.”

“Why didn’t he call me?”

“He couldn’t find you.”

The deputy looked uncomfortable. “Oh, yeah. I was…er…talking with Ms.… um…Bridger.”

Miss Scarlet in the kitchen, Perry thought, grimly amused. He waited for the deputy to set aside his mug and then led the way back upstairs.

“A lot of screwy things happen in this house,” the deputy commented.

“Tell me about it,” Perry muttered.

They found Stein on his feet, though listing a bit, refusing offers of paramedics.

“An ice pack,” he said. “Coupla aspirin. I’ll be good as new.”

“You could have a concussion,” Nick said. “I’d get checked out if I were you.”

“No, you wouldn’t,” Stein said caustically.

And Nick’s cheek creased in a reluctant smile. “Maybe not,” he agreed.

The deputy asked all the obvious questions while Stein grew more impatient and gray with each passing moment.

“How many ways can I say it?” he asked finally. “I didn’t see a goddamned thing.”

“I’m just trying to do my job,” the deputy said, injured. “This is what they pay me for.”

“Is that so? I’m not impressed with how my tax dollars are spent. When I was on the force…”

They all tuned out at that, Deputy Abe turning a jaundiced eye on the informal gallery of Perry’s paintings. As Stein’s reminiscences wound down, he asked, “Are these worth anything?”

Perry shrugged.

The deputy frowned at a painting of a field of berries ripening in the autumn sun. “I don’t see the point of painting something like this when you can just take a photograph.”

“It’s not the same thing,” Perry said.

“No, because a photograph is more accurate.”

“Art isn’t just about accuracy. It’s about interpretation. It’s about –”

Nick said, in the tone of one making a real effort, “I don’t think an art critic broke in here.”

The deputy shrugged as though personally unconvinced.

“This is the last time I do the neighborly bit,” Stein grumbled. He was headed slowly for the front door. He gestured to Nick. “Next time I’ll let you take point. You seem trained for it.”

That reminded the deputy. “By the way, do you have a permit for that cannon?” He was eyeing Nick narrowly.

“Yep.” Nick smiled tightly. “I’m the law-abiding type.”

The deputy held his gaze, then turned to Perry. “Anything missing?”

“No.”

“You haven’t checked,” Nick pointed out.

Perry gave him an ungrateful look and walked quickly down the hall to the bedroom.

The deputy said, “I guess I’ll poke around a little. See what I turn up.”

“You could check the bedroom window for fingerprints,” Nick suggested.

“I’m glad you thought of that,” the deputy drawled. “What would the sheriff’s department do without you?”

Perry returned. “I don’t think anything’s missing. I can’t tell that anyone was even in here.”

“Come on,” Nick said. “Let’s leave it to the professionals. We don’t want to make life harder for them than it already is.”

* * * * *

“That’s it,” Perry said as they reached Nick’s rooms, and the door slammed shut behind them. “I’ve had it. I can’t stay here. I’ll never feel safe here again.” He began to pace, rubbing the palms of his hands nervously up and down his thighs.

“Whoa. What’s this about?” Nick reached out and grabbed Perry’s shoulder, bringing him to a stop.

Perry regarded him with those fawn-colored eyes. He looked scared and angry, and his voice shook as he said, “I don’t know what it’s about. That’s the whole trouble. But there’s something wrong here. Can’t you feel it?”

Nick was feeling something all right – and it was most definitely wrong – but that didn’t stop him from slowly drawing Perry toward him until their mouths were so close he could feel Perry’s quick breaths against his lips.

Perry’s mouth was pink and unsteady. He gazed up into Nick’s eyes and then lowered his lashes, relaxing in Nick’s hold. He didn’t make a move toward Nick, he just waited docilely for whatever was going to happen, to happen.

Christ, he was young. Nick tried to remember what it felt like to be that young – he didn’t think he had ever been that young. Too young, too passive, too inexperienced.

A total twink. Cute, though.

Nick let Perry go, stepping back. He looked away so he didn’t have to see the disappointment on the kid’s face.

Perry sucked in a sharp breath and looked up. He didn’t speak. The silence took on a strained quality.

“Look,” Nick said briskly. “By the time I leave here, this will all be sorted out. There’s only so many possibilities, you know?”

Perry had turned away and was facing the rain-speckled window. His shoulders were rigid. He said roughly, “Really? When are you leaving?”

“I’ve got a few loose ends to tie up. It’ll be a couple of weeks.” Nick was surprised to hear himself say this after telling Roscoe and the guys that there was nothing to keep him from pulling up stakes immediately.

But he couldn’t walk out and leave Foster in this jam. No fucking way was he leaving him until this thing was past crisis point.

Perry sighed. His shoulders relaxed, and he turned to face Nick. “Well, personally, I think if it’s going to get sorted out, we’re the ones who’ll have to do it. I was thinking maybe I would try the historical society today. See if I could find some more information on the history of the house.”

This aggressive, hands-on approach took Nick aback and didn’t quite jibe with his image of Perry Foster as a damsel in distress. Still, he was relieved beyond measure that the kid was taking his withdrawal calmly. He had been on guard against an emotional outburst. Foster’s calm redirect to the problem at hand was unexpected – and welcome.

“What about getting hold of a copy of the blueprints?” Nick asked.

“There won’t be blueprints for the original structure,” Perry said. “Before 1900, builders didn’t draw up elaborate plans like they do now. Not with the kind of specs architects provide these days. There might be some kind of plans from the renovations done when Alston bought the place in the twenties.”

“Would Mrs. Mac have them?”

“Maybe. But do we want her to know we’re looking that closely into the history of the house?”

Once again, Nick was nonplussed by this unexpected shrewdness on Foster’s part.

“What are our other options?”

Foster considered. “We could try the building inspector’s office at Town Hall. They must have filed for permits when they did the last bunch of renovations, when the house was gutted for apartments. That was probably done in the last twenty years or so. I’m not sure when Mrs. Mac took over.”

“Does she own the place or does she manage it for someone else?”

“Now that you mention it, I don’t know.” Perry thought it over. “Everyone sort of assumes she owns the place. Maybe she doesn’t. We should find out. And we could also check out the fire insurance maps while we’re at Town Hall. Some of those date back to the late 1800s. You can get a good three-dimensional view sometimes. Something that would indicate the outlines of buildings, the placements of doors, windows, porches –”

“You’re still thinking secret passage,” Nick said. He wasn’t jeering at the idea as he had before.

“I guess so, yeah. Somebody got upstairs past the deputy.”

“The deputy could have been downstairs a lot longer than he’s saying – or even realizes.”

“True.” But clearly Perry was only giving lip service to this idea, because he added, “We could try the city archives too, or maybe the library. Definitely the historical society. The house has always been one of the important ones in the area, even back when it was Hennesey Farm. I’m sure some version of the plans will be in historical records somewhere.”

“You seem to know a lot about this stuff,” Nick said curiously.

Perry’s expression grew vague. He said, “I was studying to be an architect for a while. It wasn’t my thing, though.”

“Your thing is painting,” Nick said, watching him.

“Yes.” Perry changed the subject. “The other possibility is what they used to call pattern books. A lot of turn of the century builders got their ideas from stock plans published by different companies. But I don’t think those would give us a clue to any secret passages or hidden tunnels. Those would probably be unique to the house.”

“Okay,” Nick said, reaching for his jacket. “Sounds like we’ve got a plan. Let’s start with the historical society and work from there.”

* * * * *

Jane was taking delivery of a pizza as they reached the front hall. She paid the girl in her brightly colored uniform and locked the door against the rain and wind, starting as she spied Nick and Perry.

“The breakfast of champions,” Nick remarked, taking in the familiar logo on the flat pizza box.

“Hey, it’s after noon,” Jane said. “Besides, I like pizza for breakfast.”

“You’re not going to work again?” Perry asked.

“No.” She lowered her voice. “I just heard about Mr. Stein getting clobbered in your apartment.”

“He said he heard someone walking around in my rooms,” Perry said.

“And he went upstairs to investigate? That was civic-minded of him.”

Nick scrutinized her. “Why do you think he went upstairs?”

“I have no idea,” Jane said. “Maybe he did hear someone walking around, but everyone in this place is starting to act very strange. I noticed Miss Dembecki wandering around in the garden a while ago, and I had to call to her four times before she came inside. I hope she’s not losing it. I don’t think she has any family.” Jane resumed normal speaking tones. “So where are you two off to?”

“Town,” Perry said succinctly.

“You might want to rethink that. There’s another storm on the way.” She shivered. “Mr. Teagle thinks the bridge will flood out for sure.”

“Gee, wouldn’t it be too bad if we couldn’t get back,” Perry said sarcastically.

“Oh, but it would!” Jane said. “You’ll miss the séance.”

Perry, who had one hand on the door handle, stopped. “What séance?”

“D – Mr. Center – has agreed to conduct a séance tonight here in the house.”

“You gotta be kidding me,” Nick said.

At the same moment, Perry demanded, “A séance? Why?”

Jane said defensively, “Why, because of the haunting, of course!” But she was avoiding his accusing gaze.

“That’s ridiculous,” Perry said with unusual heat. “A ghost never hit Stein over the head. No ghost shot Tiny.”

“I never said a ghost hit Stein over the head. Not that I would blame them.”

“Whose idea was this séance?” Perry demanded, his pale face flushing with angry color. “Who are you supposed to be contacting in the spirit world?”

Jane looked impatient. “Your ghost, of course.”

Perry’s mouth parted, and he seemed to struggle for air. Nick put an unobtrusive hand on his arm. The younger man was shaking. “He isn’t mine! Anyway, he wasn’t a ghost.”

“David says it was.”

“He wasn’t there! I was.”

Jane was now red as well. “Well, sweetie, sometimes it takes an expert to tell the difference.”

Perry’s mouth moved, but no words seemed forthcoming. He seemed genuinely at a loss – or maybe just inarticulate with anger.

“You’re not going to win this argument,” Nick told him, his hand tightening on the tensed arm. “Come on.” He opened the door and thrust Perry outside.

“You’ll be back in time for the séance, right?” Jane threw after them. “You’ve got to be here, Perry. David says we need your presence.”

“Don’t wait up for us,” Nick told her and closed the door on her indignant face.

“Everyone in that fucking house has gone insane,” Perry cried as they ran across the flooded scraggy lawn. “Why doesn’t anybody see what’s really going on here?”

They reached Nick’s pickup. Nick unlocked the passenger door and ran around to his side. Perry was still fuming as Nick started the engine.

“Just cool down,” Nick said, a little amused. “Nobody can make you do anything you don’t want to.”

Perry stared at him in open astonishment. “Do you really believe that?”

Nick considered. “I’m not talking about death and taxes, but yeah. Up to a point, yeah. Sure as hell no one can force you to attend some psychic tea party if you don’t want to.”

Perry made a small, bitter, and dismissive noise, turning his face to the steaming window.

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Nick shot a quick, curious glance his way.

“Nothing.” Nick looked his way again, as they bumped onto the long covered bridge, but Perry’s expression was lost in the darkness of the tunnel. Nick could feel the buzz of his emotions like an electrical field.

“What’s with you?”

“Nothing.”

“What’s wrong?”

Perry said quietly, “People have all kinds of ways of forcing you to do what you don’t want to.”

“I don’t even know what we’re talking about,” Nick said. “I’m not going to let anyone force you to take part in some hocus-pocus bullshit. You can count on that.”


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