Dead People (10 page)

Read Dead People Online

Authors: Edie Ramer

BOOK: Dead People
4.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“He’ll be there with me, though I don’t know what he’ll do against her.” Cassie shrugged.

Luke would be there with Cassie? Alone? All night

Noooooooo!
 

“Aren’t you afraid?”

“I’m hoping she’ll be calmer and realize she’s made a mistake.” Cassie’s mouth twisted into an expression Tricia couldn’t read, but it made her shiver inside. “Luke told her if she doesn’t behave, he’s tearing the house down and she won’t have a place to stay. Hopefully that will keep her from acting up.”

Tear the house down?
NO! NO, NO, NO!

“Thank you again.” Cassie’s voice seemed to come from far away instead of less than two feet. With a wave, Cassie crossed to her car and opened the driver’s door.

Tricia stood on the sidewalk, her heart pounding an uneven tune in her chest. Beat, beat, beat, skip, beat. Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.

Cassie started her car, then pulled away. Feeling like Moses at the end of his forty-year trek through the desert, Tricia stumbled to her car. In the driver’s seat, she sat for a moment.

Luke was going to ruin everything.

She shoved her hand in her jacket pocked, felt for the napkins and took one out. She opened it, picked out the chewed coffeecake and shoved it into her mouth. She chewed twice and then swallowed. She wadded the napkin up and then dug into her pocket again, taking out another napkin.

If this was all for nothing... She didn’t know what she was going to do. She didn’t hate Luke like she did Mrs. Shay. After the way Mrs. Shay treated her mom, she deserved to die.

Tricia had come too far for to turn back now. She had a Plan A and a Plan B.

Maybe it was time for Plan C.

 

Chapter Fourteen

 

Joe didn’t care for the way the guitar player eyeballed Cassie, as if she were a chrome-plated hot rod and he couldn’t wait to jump in and burn rubber. Good thing Joe had followed her, even though she’d told him not to. May as well get some use out of being dead. He could’ve used this invisible thing when he was on the force.

More than fifty years now, and he still missed a good beer. Hell, he even missed bad beer, the smooth way a cold one went down his throat on a hot summer night, the smell of hops, the bitter edge. He wanted it all. Hot dogs smothered in ketchup and mustard, a warm steak oozing blood, a Cuban cigar, his mom’s black forest cake.

And women. He missed holding a warm woman in his arms even more than he missed sex. Well, almost more. He hadn’t been a eunuch. Even after polio took Mary away.

Sometimes he wondered why he didn’t go and find Mary. Wasn’t she the love of his life? But he just couldn’t let go of earth

Unlike the poor schlubs he and Cassie found wandering around in a mess of emotional confusion, Joe knew he was dead a minute after the bullet slammed into his heart. He’d understood all he needed to do to leave was to let go of earth and fly. But something held him back, a sense that there was something more for him.

Since he’d met Cassie three years ago, this non-bodily existence had gotten easier with someone to talk to. Someone to laugh with. Someone on the same channel as him. Someone who breathed real air.

Sometimes he lay down beside her at night just to hear her little snores. She told him she felt his breath sometimes, but she must be imagining it. The way he figured it, she wanted him to breathe.

Some day, though, he was going to surprise her. He’d been practicing a few experiments the last couple years, but he wasn’t ready for prime time yet. When the ectoplasm disintegrated, he felt like a used condom. He didn’t want Cassie to see him like that.

If the cat with the guitar tried anything on Cassie, Joe might take that chance. No one ever said Joe was yellow when he was alive, and they weren’t going to say it in death either. Hell, it was easier to be brave now.

He had nothing to lose. Mary was gone, his mom, dad and brother were gone.

He kept track of friends, but only one was left, and he wouldn’t live long. Besides, he couldn’t talk to him. Just see him getting older and sicker every day. Not the same thing.

All he had was Cassie.

***

Outside the wind howled, a fall storm building up. Inside, Cassie’s emotions howled, another storm building up, and she didn’t know what would happen when it broke. The family room was snug, too snug. She felt stifled, not because of the barometric pressure, not because of the memories from the last time she was here, but because of the man sitting across from her on the sofa, one ankle crossed over his knee, his shiny guitar across his lap. The picture of a man at ease, confident, with no fear.

Cassie wasn’t afraid either. Not of Isabel. Not of Luke. He was a mere man. The guy who was going to give her the lovely check once Isabel left the house. That’s the only thing she wanted from him.

Yeah, right.

She inhaled, trying to center herself, trying to block out the wind rattling against the windows and the pricking of her skin, her awareness of Luke sitting across from her in his jeans and black shirt, looking like the original bad boy.

A crackle in the air made Cassie start and peer around the room. “Isabel? Are you here?”

“You see something?” Luke asked.

“I
feel
something.”

“Isabel?”

She tilted her head slowly, trying not to lose touch, but the energy faded, thread by thread. “You don’t have any other dead people around, do you?”

“Not that I’ve seen.” There was a dryness in his tone, as if his vocal chords had gone through a few rounds in the dryer. “This is the strangest conversation I’ve ever had. And I’ve talked to drunks and junkies who were flying in strange worlds with black skies and blood red grass.”

“Ghosts are my life. It’s what I do.” She shrugged. “You talk to addicts, I talk to ghosts.”

His mouth quirked. “Ghosts have to be more interesting than drunks.”

“I’ll put that in the book I’m writing.”

“You’re writing a book?”

She thought of
I Talk to Ghosts
by her nemesis, currently number twenty-two on the
New York Times
best seller list. “Isn’t everyone?” Even the fakes. She smiled, her teeth gritted together. “You’re making it hard to concentrate on Isabel.”

“Okay, I’ll shut up.” His hand hovered over the guitar and his fingers jiggled but they didn’t touch the guitar strings.

She looked away, but she still felt
him. Like humidity, the sense of him surrounded her, clinging to her. Pheromones, she told herself. Thick in the air, thick on her skin.

In response, she radiated estrogen. She couldn’t stop it anymore than she stopped her heart from beating. It obviously was the time of the month when her body arrowed in on the most masculine guy in sight and shouted “I’m fertile! Come and make babies with me.”

Ah, Joe, if only you were alive.

“Isabel, come on out,” Luke called. “Now’s your chance to tell us your darkest thoughts and desires.”

“How can she resist that offer?” Cassie asked.

“Beats the fuck out of me.” He flopped back against the sofa cushions.

She gave a laugh that sounded sexual to her own ears. Oh God, no.

“Isabel.” She made her voice a plea. Dead people didn’t always understand logic, but they understood emotion. She sent a silent message.
Come before I do something stupid.
“We want to help you. Come to us, talk to us, we’ll listen to you.”

Something moved in Cassie’s peripheral. When she turned her head, she saw a blur and then it was gone.

“I know you must be confused,” she continued, “wondering what happened. Ask me questions. I’ll tell you everything you want to know.”

The nebulous presence thickened. A shimmery form hovered next to the yellow lamp by the window, not quite ready to come out of the ether.

Ordering her body to cool down, Cassie focused on Isabel. Isabel needed coercing. Or maybe she needed it laid out for her—the make or break plea. Cassie specialized in them.

“I know you heard me last night telling Luke someone killed you. I’m sorry you had to find out that way and I understand your denial. Come on out, and I’ll tell you to your face.”

 

Chapter Fifteen

 

Isabel stopped herself from gathering her ectoplasm and becoming visible. She stopped herself from standing in front of them, her hands on her hips, her legs apart. She stopped herself from screaming at them to leave her alone, even though the words were on the tip of her almost-not-there tongue in her almost-not-there body, vibrating in her almost-not-there brain.

GO AWAY. GO AWAY. GO AWAY.

But what if she disappeared again? What if this time she didn’t come back? What if she died for good?

Or what if Luke got mad? He was a hard man. The only softening she’d seen since he’d moved in nearly two months ago was when he talked to his sulky kid. If Isabel said the wrong thing to him, he’d smash the house into toothpicks.

He made her feel confused and uncertain, just like Thomas. The richest, most handsome man in town married her, and she’d thought all her dreams had come true on her wedding day.

But she quickly realized her dreams were false. She was like Princess Di but without the kids, the adulation and the rich lover.

Then Thomas did the nicest thing for her. Much nicer than asking her to marry him.

He died.

Leaving her everything.

And the power switched to her. Sycophants came knocking at her door, finally giving her the respect she was overdue.

Standing at his gravesite, she’d almost loved him.

But now she was nothing again. Luke could tear down the house and she’d be homeless.

Except...

If she played ball with them, they’d be indebted to her, wouldn’t they? Could she take the chance?
 

“Isabel,” Cassie said. “Isabel.”

A guitar plucked. “Isabel, come out and play,” Luke sang. “Isn’t it time you had your say?”

She shuddered. Could it get any worse than this? Maybe if she talked he’d shut up.

“Why should I believe you?”

His laughter cut off and his head jerked toward her direction.

Cassie looked her way but didn’t blink. “Because dead people only stick around when they’ve died before their time. Since you weren’t in an accident, you must’ve been killed.”

“How can I believe you? How do you know for sure?”

“I’ve seen dead people my whole life, and not one has died of natural causes.”

“You must be popular during Halloween.” She put scorn in her voice before she remembered she had to be careful.

“Not really.” Sadness settled over Cassie’s features. “Not Halloween or any other holiday. But this isn’t about me, it’s about you.”

Isabel empathized with Cassie, though she fought it. She knew what it felt like being unpopular. Thomas’s friends snubbing her because she wasn’t one of the elite of Bliss
.
As if she didn’t know the truth. They wanted him for their sisters, their daughters or their selves.

A plunking sound distracted her, the guitar. Glancing at Luke, she saw him looking at her. She moved to the side...and his eyes followed.

Peering down, she saw her body, almost solid. Opaque.

Oh noooooooo! Oh nooooooooooo! Oh noooooooo! It was happening again. Changing without choice or control. In another second, she might disappear again.

She waited, not daring to think beyond the string of “Oh noooooooos!” screaming in her mind. But nothing happened. Just a heightened sense of fear.

“Do you have proof that I was killed?” she asked, curiosity driving her along with a need to keep her mind busy.

Cassie shook her head, the sadness not lifting. “Not a clue.”

“If this were a game show, you’d have gotten the gong by now.”

“This isn’t a TV show, it’s life.” Cassie pushed up from the couch, standing slowly. “Or death. No one’s going to vote me out of here, but someone voted you off the old-fashioned way. Murder.”

An idea came to Isabel. “Prove it.”

Cassie blinked. “What?”

Luke smirked at Cassie, and Isabel paid attention. She’d thought there was something between them. Like a fighting couple on TV, attracted to each other but refusing to admit it.

“Remember when you said you weren’t Nancy Drew?” Luke asked Cassie. “Looks like that’s going to change.”

Ignoring him, she lifted her chin, her mouth firm and her eyes steady. “If I prove it, you’ll go?”

“Prove it and I’ll listen to you.”

“That’s not a promise.”

“I don’t have to promise anything.” Isabel felt herself puffing up, floating a foot above the floor, her anxiety replaced by pleasure. Talking to Cassie like this, having the upper hand, was more fun than breaking things.

“It’s a lousy offer.”

“Take it or leave it.”

Cassie stared a long moment before she nodded, her mouth set more firmly, her tone harsh. “I’ll take it.”

Other books

Expecting Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse
Circles in the Dust by Harrop, Matthew
Fire by Deborah Challinor
Visions by Kay Brooks
Swallowing Grandma by Kate Long
Troubled Waters by Rachelle McCalla
Childish Loves by Benjamin Markovits
Andersonville by MacKinlay Kantor