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Authors: Adam Selzer

BOOK: Just Kill Me
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I look different too, of course. Last time she saw me I was dressed as an old lady for a role in
Arsenic and Old Lace
. And the time before that I was just a kid.

“Holy shit!” Cyn says with a laugh, as I approach. When we hug, she runs her fingers through the red section of my hair that hangs just below my shoulders, beneath the dark brown.

“So, you're all graduated and everything?” she asks.

“Yep. Last month.”

“College?”

“Doing a couple of years at junior college to get the boring stuff out of the way cheap,” I say. “Did you finish your archaeology degree?”

She nods. “Not exactly using it, though. Just driving an excursion van at a nursing home by day, and the tour bus at night. And for this I have racked up six figures in student loans.”

“Ouch.”

“Seriously, if you can find something better to do than college, do it. I don't know if working for us would make you enough of a living, but you never know. We're working on some initiatives that could make this ghost tour thing a lot more lucrative.”

When you cross the Chicago River downtown, you're out of the Loop proper and into a neighborhood called River North, which is mostly tourist traps. The Rock and Roll McDonald's, a two-story cash cow on Clark Street, looms large before us. In the blocks approaching it, happy tourists in
Ohio State University T-shirts walk five abreast. A guy with a giant nose tries to sell necklaces that I assume were stolen by orphans. A dude with a clipboard and some pencils offers to draw people's portraits. A guy in a frog suit poses for photos outside of the Rainforest Cafe across the street.

“All tourist crap around here,” says Cyn. “And at night it turns into douchebag central. The McDonald's isn't really a McDonald's so much as a place for nightclub refugees to pee. It's also the city's designated tour-bus parking spot, though, so here we are.”

A motley assortment of buses are queued up along the road. First we pass a black bus that says
AL CAPONE TOURS
on the front, then two sleek motor coaches that say
DARKSIDE CHICAGO TOURS: GHOSTS, GANGSTERS, AND GHOULS
. Then comes a double-decker sightseeing bus, and a rickety old school bus painted midnight blue with the words
MYSTERIOUS CHICAGO: AUTHENTIC GHOST TOURS
in yellow vinyl lettering. It brings up the rear of the group like it's the Littlest Tour Bus trying to tag along with the big kids.

Standing in front of it is a young guy who looks like Houdini, only with darker skin and more facial hair: Ricardo. He's talking with a couple of curious tourists in University of Georgia hats.

“We drive people around to murder sites, disaster sites, body dumps . . . all sorts of places that are supposed to be haunted,” he says. “We tell you the stories, then you get off
the bus and see if any ghosts show up. It's really the best way to discover the city. If you're here on vacation, it's the thing you'll remember the most about your trip a year from now. Guaranteed.”

“Do y'all, like, have people jumping out from behind bushes and stuff?” asks the woman.

“Nothing of the kind! We are the
authentic
ghost-tour company. See, I got my start working for those other guys, and I can tell you right now, their stories aren't anywhere close to accurate. We tell the truth here. It's all meticulously researched.”

“How do you tell the truth on a ghost tour?” asks the guy. “Just tell people that ghosts aren't real?”

Now Ricardo folds his clipboard up in his arms and gives the guy a very, very serious look. “Sir,” he says, “every time someone says ‘I don't believe in ghosts,' there is a little ghost somewhere that falls down dead.”

“Uh, Rick?” says Cyn. “They're already dead.”

“True,” says Ricardo, lightening right up. “So no harm, no foul, I guess. What do you say, folks?”

“Y'all are hilarious,” says the woman. “Maybe tomorrow night.”

And they walk away to take selfies in front of a bronze statue of Ronald McDonald.

“Hey,” says Cyn. “Did you notice she called you ‘y'all' when there's only one of you?”

He nods. “In the south, the plural form is ‘all y'all.' ‘Y'all' is singular.”

“Nice,” says Cyn. “Because we are large, we contain multitudes.”

“Don't call me large,” says Ricardo. Then he looks at me and asks, “This your new recruit?”

“Yeah. Megan Henske,” says Cyn, as she puts her hand on my shoulder. “Megan, meet Ricardo Torre.”

“What's up?” I ask.

He looks me up and down, like he's checking to see if I have good birthing hips or something, then says, “What are you, like, eleven?”

“Eighteen,” I say.

“Rick, be nice,” says Cyn. “She's got a good head on her shoulders. And she's lived in a funeral home all her life, so you know she's death-positive.”

“Yeah,” I say. “I'm a black-diaper baby.”

“I'm just fucking with you.” He laughs, waving a hand. “Much love. You look great. You know much about Chicago history?”

“Enough,” I say. “And I could learn more.”

“She's good at researching things,” says Cyn. “She and I used to play on the
OED
all the time. She knows what a gingerbread-office is.”

“And a thunder-mug,” I add.

Rick looks at Cyn, then at me, and asks, “What is it?”

“A chamber pot.”

He nods thoughtfully, then says, “What about ghosts? You know much about ghosts?”

“Well, I hate to make one fall down dead, but I don't really believe in them.”

He seems to loosen up when I say that; he stops leaning forward and lets his shoulders fall back.

“That's actually good,” he says. “We tried out a couple of people who were hardcore believers, and it didn't go well. We had this one guy who kept waving holy water around and saying he was helping ghosts ‘cross over.' I was like, ‘Dude, you're an adult.' ”

“Not to mention you kind of need ghosts to stick around, not cross over, right?” I ask.

“Exactly!” He points at me and nods to Cyn, like he's saying,
Well done, scout.

“Ghosts are real, though,” says Cyn. “Rick and I used to know one back home in Magwitch Park. She didn't look nearly spooky enough to be a tour attraction, though. Just like a regular person.”

“And her being real doesn't mean every ghost story is real,” says Rick. “One percent, tops. For all I know she's the only one.”

“So you never see ghosts on the tours?”

“We see some weird stuff. I couldn't swear they were really dead people in front of a panel of scientists. But some weird stuff.”

A few more tourists walk up and start asking Rick a question, and Cyn leads me away.

“Come on,” she says. “Let me show you the bus.”

The seats in the Mysterious Chicago bus are half duct-tape, and two of the windows are cracked, but the ceiling is really cool—they've painted a giant map of the city with markers, showing famous disaster sites, the dens of various antique serial killers, and old neighborhood names like “Little Hell” and “Satan's Mile.” A few of the landmarks are jokes, like “South Side: Birthplace of Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” and “Rick and Cynthia's Apartment.”

I wipe a smear from a window with my sleeve. “So, are you and Rick . . . you know?”

She glances at the back of his head through the window in a way that makes me think he's her unrequited love, but she says, “Sometimes we are, sometimes we aren't. Sometimes we aren't but we still sleep together. It's complicated.”

“Got it.”

“What about you? You seeing anyone?”

“Not exactly seeing, but I have a long-distance thing with a girl in Arizona.”

Just as I say that, as if by telepathy, Zoey sends me another “good luck” text and a drawing of me dressed as a Disney villain, summoning lighting and thunder from the balcony of my castle.

I would have preferred a picture of
her
, but she's really
paranoid about that sort of thing. She's never sent a photo, or done a voice chat, or anything like that.

Which, of course, means that there's a pretty good chance that she's not who she says she is. Maybe she's really a guy. My hunch is that she's transgender and afraid to tell me, even though I've told her again and again that I'll be okay with anything she is. All things being equal, I think I like girls the best, but you know how you automatically go for chocolate over vanilla most of the time, except sometimes it's a choice between a smooth, creamy vanilla made with real vanilla beans and some crummy dollar-store chocolate that tastes like chalk, and then you're like, “well, I guess vanilla this time?” And sometimes there's strawberry, too, and that just fucks the whole thing up? It's like that.

All I care about is that Zoey
gets
me. She loves my fan-fic stories instead of being freaked out by them—even the darker stuff that I worry is going to make her run off screaming. And if I follow in Mom's footsteps as a funeral-home owner, that won't scare her off either. From previous crushes and aborted attempts at relationships, I've learned that people putting up with your weirdness is important.

And really, really hard to find.

Long-distance invisible girlfriends might be all I ever get.

While I answer Zoey's message, I look at the pictures that are set up in the space above the bus windows and below the map on the ceiling. They're shots of what I guess are supposed
to be ghosts—odd shadows and blurry, vaguely humanoid forms glowing in alleys, stairwells, and dead-end streets.

“You get these shots on the tours?”

“Most of them. We only get a picture that I'm really impressed with every now and then. Even with most of these, we know what they really are, and we're pretty up front about it. That shot that looks like a guy in a hooded robe on the staircase is really just a reflection of Rick's ear.”

I can think of good explanations for most of the pictures without much effort. The rest could just be outright fakes, but that doesn't seem like Rick and Cyn's style. And I appreciate that. I'd been thinking I'd have to tell people that pictures of their flash bouncing off of windows are actually “spirits” on this job. If I don't, the gig is a lot more attractive to me.

I take an empty seat up front as customers start checking in. When the bus is about a third full, Cyn gets in the driver's seat and tests the microphone.

“So, what do you guys wanna see?” she asks.

“Ghosts?” someone asks, like they aren't quite sure.

“Ghosts!” says Cyn. “Perfect. Now, who brought someone we can murder?”

People chuckle, but not enthusiastically. They all seem like they're tired from a long day at Navy Pier and the Hard Rock Cafe, or whatever tourist places they've been to.

One girl holds up three fingers,
Hunger Games
–style, and says, “I volunteer as tribute.”

“You can't volunteer
yourself
as a victim,” says Cyn. “That makes it a suicide, not a murder. We've gotta control these variables. That's science. Look it up.” Then she sits down and ties her hair into a low ponytail.

While we wait for the last couple of people with reservations to arrive, Rick comes onboard, takes the mic, and starts warming the crowd up, making friends with everyone.

“Did you all see this in the news?” he asks, holding up one of those free weekly papers. “Someone broke into President James Garfield's tomb in Cleveland and stole a dozen commemorative spoons. Spoons! Who gets buried with spoons? And who busts into a tomb and steals a bunch of spoons?”

“Maybe they aren't really spoons,” I suggest.

“What else would they be?”

He puts the mic in front of me, and I take it.

“Maybe some stormy night, an old woman showed up at the White House and offered President Garfield one single rose for shelter,” I say. “And when he sent her away, she turned his staff into flatware, so whoever stole them was just, like, rescuing them. And now the cops will never find the spoons, because they're human again.”

Ricardo's face breaks into a grin. “Okay. You, I like,” he says.

Score.

A minute later the last parties show up, and it's time to get going. Rick introduces Cyn as “ ‘Switchblade' Cynthia Fargon, my roommate, my oldest friend, and the best damn driver in
the city.” Then he says “All right, you guys wanna go see something scary, or what?”

“Yeah!” people shout.

“All right, Cyn. We're gonna start out at the men's room of the Greyhound station.”

“Got it.”

“After that, we're going to your house.”

“It's your house too, doinkus,” says Cyn. “Screw your courage to the sticking place, team.”

And he navigates us out from behind the DarkSide buses, down Clark Street, and toward the Loop. The guy in the frog suit at Rainforest Cafe waves as we pass.

Chapter Two

A
s we head toward the first haunted stop of the tour, Ricardo points out some sites of interest along the way. Just south of the Rainforest Cafe is a spot where a brothel owner named Tillie Wolf was stabbed in the face with a sharpened umbrella stick in 1898. The next block has the spot where a gangster named Hoops-a-Daisy Connors was shot through the eye and the groin one unlucky evening in 1929.

Then he points out the fire station that was built over the site of the old prison where they used to hang people, and tells the story of a guy they tried to bring back to life with electricity after they hanged him in 1882, just to see if they could.

“And all of this is to give you fair warning,” he says, “that this is gonna be an inspiring and uplifting tour for everyone tonight. We're gonna talk about puppies and ponies and horsies and kitties and rainbows and flowers and sunshine and unicorns.”

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