Shadow Rising
Page 17
Three blocks more and the Lexus turned into a large circular turnaround, pulling through what had once been a gated drive. The gates hung open, half yanked off their posts. Up at the house, I could see lights glowing from within the two-story mansion, and Chase’s car was already there, on the side of the drive away from the house. It sat alongside a black BMW and what looked like a silver Camry. The tires of the cars had rutted the road, and mud puddles sparkled under the glow of a series of lampposts.
I pulled in behind Camille and jumped out of the car, hurrying over to her. “You feel anything?” I asked, staring up at the foreboding mansion.
Morio frowned, worrying his lower lip. “There are spirits. I can feel them from here. They aren’t just in the house but on the grounds. In fact, remember Harold Young’s place?”
“How can I forget? That was a house of horrors.” I didn’t want to remember. Some memories—some people—were better off being pushed to the past and left there.
“This is worse.” Morio looked around at me, his eyes glowing. “This…is scary big.”
Camille slid her arm through his and nodded. “He’s right. I guess we should go in. I don’t want to be out here when the ghosts begin to walk.”
We headed across the drive, careful to avoid the ruts and muddy water, and dashed up the wide stairs leading to the veranda. A long porch ran the complete length of the house and curved to both sides. My guess was that it completely encircled the mansion, bound on the outside by a white—or what had once been white—banister. The steps creaked, a symptom of old age, and as we reached the door and knocked, I felt a give in the porch floor that strongly suggested it would soon be time to change it out for a new one.
The door opened. Chase was standing there. He silently stood aside, letting the others enter.
I paused, unable to cross the threshold. “You have to invite me in, Chase.”
“Oh shit, that’s right. Come in, please.” He nodded me through and I was able to pass the invisible demarcation line. Contrary to popular rumor, the owner of the building didn’t have to be the one issuing the invitation—just someone who was already welcome in the home. Nor were private residences off limits if they were used in a public manner—like a frat house, for example, or an apartment above a grocery, or a law firm housed in a home.
As I entered, it struck me that a lot of mansions were laid out in similar patterns. A grand staircase in the center of the foyer, a left and right wing off to the sides. But unlike Sassy’s mansion, or even the grand hall of the Rainier Puma Pride, this one had seen better days.
Old paper that had once been a deep crimson, with ovals containing yellow pineapples in their centers, hung in strips, curling off the walls. It looked like the new owners were helping it along, but I could tell that—along the molding at the ceiling—it had started to peel on its own. The crown molding was worn, and I thought I saw mildew on one end. The staircase was badly in need of a makeover, the polish long gone from both steps and railing. The chandelier—whatever it had been—had been removed and it looked like a new one was ready to go up, sitting to the side in a pile of plastic wrap.
Camille raised her eyebrows. “Real fixer-upper.”
“Looks like they’re diving into the project.” I turned to Chase. “Who are these people? You said they’re friends of yours?”
He nodded. “Fritz and Abby Liebman. I’ve known Fritz from when we were in the police academy together. He decided to switch fields and go the lawyer route. Abby works from home. She’s an artist and illustrates bird-watching guides for several major publishers.” He nodded to the right of the stairway. “They’re in the living room, waiting. Let’s go.”
We followed him down the dark hall until we came to an open door. As we entered, I noticed that one entire wall had been gutted, with the exception of a load-bearing beam. We were looking into another room, just as spacious. The wallpaper had been fully stripped; primer spackled the walls. The lights were hanging from the fixtures. A sander sat on the floor—which was stripped of its stain and polish—and so much dust filled the air that Camille and Delilah started to sneeze.
A woman leaped up from her place on one of the footstools that was covered by a tarp—all the furniture in the room was swathed in plastic. She was short, about five three, with short red hair. Sturdy, she looked like an athlete. She bobbed her head at us.
“Hi, I’m Abby. I’ll get some lemonade. I forget just how bad the dust is in here—I guess I’m getting used to it.” She started through a side door, then paused. “Chase…Fritz, would one of you come with me?” The quiver in her voice belied her nervousness.
Fritz stood up and dusted his hands on his jeans. He didn’t look like a lawyer, but more like a lumberjack. But he had an easy grace about him and a winning smile. He glanced at us. “Let me help Abby and we’ll be right back. Make yourselves at home.”
As they left the room, we scouted places to sit. The furniture looked old and dilapidated, and I suspected that it had been here when they bought the place.
When Fritz and Abby returned, he was carrying a tray with glasses and a pitcher of lemonade on it, and she held a plate of cookies. But before they could reach us, Fritz suddenly let out a shout. From where I was sitting, I could see the imprint of hands against the back of his shirt, as he went stumbling forward. I leaped up as he hit the floor, the pitcher and glasses shattering as they bounced off the tray onto the hardwood.
“Fritz!” Abby shoved the cookies into Chase’s hands and went down on her knees on the other side, fear washing across her face.
Glass was everywhere. Camille and Morio stood, holding hands and closing their eyes, as Delilah reached down to help Abby.
“Fritz, are you hurt?” I didn’t see any blood, and he blinked, so he was conscious. But the shove had been pretty hard and I was worried that he might have broken a leg or arm.
He shook his head, struggling to sit up. I helped him avoid the shattered glass and lifted him up and over to the sofa, where he leaned forward, stunned.
“Damn, you’re strong.” He glanced up at me. “I’m okay. I think I am, at least.”
Rozurial spied a whisk broom and dustpan in the corner and went to work sweeping up the broken glass after he used a drop cloth to wipe up the lemonade. Chase circled the room, on alert, but by now I could also tell he was trying to reach out, to use his burgeoning powers in order to help. Which maybe wasn’t such a good idea.
Camille and Morio dropped hands and came over to sit on either side of Fritz and Abby. Chase joined us after scouting out the kitchen. Roz finished sweeping up the glass and put the dustpan on the table near the window.
“I told Chase I didn’t know how to explain what’s been going on but…I guess you got a firsthand glimpse.” Tears rolled down Abby’s face. “This has been going on for a month now, since the middle of February. We bought this house and closed on the day after New Year’s. We’ve been coming over for a few hours at a time to work on it and…” Here, she paused.
“You said that you closed in January and that this has been going on for a month. That leaves a month in between. Did anything ever happen during that time? Maybe not so dramatic, but something odd or out of the ordinary?” Either something had stirred up their ghosts, or they had been slow to manifest.
Fritz shook his head, but Abby nodded.
“Yes, actually.” She looked up at her husband, tears in her eyes. “I didn’t tell you, because I thought you’d think I was tired and needed a vacation.” She shrugged at us, apologetically. “I’m a workaholic. It’s hard for me to be away from my desk, but renovating the house has been so interesting that I’ve been making time for it.”
“What happened?” Fritz took her hands in his. “And you know you can tell me anything.”
She leaned her head against his shoulder. “I came over here alone a couple of times, while you were at work. I was clearing out things and getting the house ready to start the renovation. The first time I was in here alone, I felt like somebody was watching me. I thought, no big deal—everybody feels that way at some point in their lives. Big empty house, unfamiliar neighborhood…you know. But the second time…I began to hear things.”
“What kind of things?” Camille asked.
“Children laughing, like they were taunting somebody. And someone…a man with a deep voice, whispering to me. But when I’d stop to listen, the sounds would vanish. I thought my imagination was working overtime.” She hung her head. “Then it got worse.”
“Worse? How?” Chase was taking notes and so was Delilah. Camille and Morio were listening. Rozurial had parked himself by the archway into the kitchen, and had put himself on guard duty, by the looks of his stance.
Abby raised her head. “Worse as in…I began to hear footsteps on the second floor. They echoed, like heavy boots. Another time I caught a glimpse of children playing in the yard but when I looked again, there was nobody there.”
She accepted a tissue from Camille and wiped her eyes, then turned back to Fritz. “That’s why I begged you to take the time off so we could get this place done together. It wasn’t just because I’m in a hurry to move in. The house began to scare me. I can’t stand the thought of living here now—especially with what’s gone on in the past month.”
“Why don’t you tell us what’s been going on since February?” Morio said. “And do you remember the day it started?”
Fritz, looking pale, nodded. “Yes, actually. I do remember because it was the day after Valentine’s Day. We came over and were stripping wallpaper in this room when…” He hesitated.
“Tell him. Or I will.” Abby pressed her lips together. I could read her energy clear as a book. She was fed up, and now that help was potentially at hand, she wasn’t going to let it go by untouched.
Fritz shrugged. “It’s simple, really. Whatever this ghost or spirit is, it tried to kill us.”
Morio straightened up. “That bad? What did it do, ex-actly? We need to figure out what spirits we’re facing.”
Abby let out a pained breath. “Shortly before Valentine’s Day, we started renovation. I’m not sure if that’s what stirred up the spirits or not. As I told you, until then, the hauntings were limited to footsteps, laughter, stuff like that. But after we started steaming off the wallpaper and taking down the lights, the activity increased and we began having major incidents.”
“What was the first? Wasn’t that when the hammer flew across the room? Or did I miss something?” Fritz shivered.
“No, I think that was the first.” Abby pointed to the ladder. “The hammer was over there, sitting on the top of the ladder, where Fritz had left it. He was taking a break—I’d made sandwiches—and as he walked toward me, the hammer flew across the room and missed him by just a few inches and hit the wall” She nodded to the opposite wall. There was an eight-inch hole in the drywall, exposing the boards beneath. “It almost put a hole through Fritz’s head.”
“At first, I couldn’t believe it.” Fritz crossed to the wall and fingered the hole. “By then, Abby told me about the noises—she heard most of them. I believed her, but part of me wanted to put it down to the creaking of an old house. Then, when the hammer came spinning by…the only reason it didn’t hit me was because I moved a couple of inches to the right, just before it sailed past. It could have killed me.” His dark eyes glimmered with fear. “After that, I couldn’t ignore it. I had to admit something was going on.”
“Poltergeist, maybe. What else happened?” I had learned far too much about ghosts over the past few months. It bothered me that I could name off as many types of spirits as I could.
“We took a break for a couple of days,” Abby said. “I think we were both afraid to come back. But this house is ours and we couldn’t just walk away. So a week later we returned. For two days it was quiet. On the third day, we decided to work on the attic. I hadn’t cleaned it out yet, so we hauled several old trunks out of there. One belonged to the monks and contained a few old robes, and some documents. I’ve made sure they were sent to the Order. But the other trunk…”
“The other trunk contained the possessions of a little girl,” Fritz broke in. “From babyhood to about age ten. When I opened the trunk, it felt like…almost like something slipped out of it—a shadow or something of the sort.”
Abby nodded. “I felt it, too. As we started to carry the trunk down the stairs, something shoved me from behind. I dropped my end—I was at the front—and fell down the stairs. If Fritz hadn’t held on to the trunk it would have come tumbling down on top of me.”
“Right before she went sprawling, something cold swept past and I heard a man laughing. He had a deep voice. And then, Abby screamed and the trunk almost yanked me down the stairs when she dropped it. I thought…when I saw her lying at the bottom of the stairs, I thought she’d snapped her neck.” He broke down, shaking his head as he rubbed his temples. “I thought she was dead,” he whispered.
“I strained an ankle and fractured my little finger. But it could have been far worse.” Abby picked up one of the cookies and bit into it. A crumb of chocolate stuck to the corner of her lip and she wiped it away. She had pale pink lips that curved in a lovely bow, and it struck me that she really was pretty. Her eyes were an arresting shade of blue that twinkled like marbles in the sun.