Possession: A Greywalker Novel - Possession: A Greywalker Novel Part 12
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Possession: A Greywalker Novel Part 12

"That's the place Dr. Hazzard sent her victims to be cremated, you know-right down there in the saloon," Phoebe said.

"She had them cremated in a saloon?"

Phoebe smacked the back of my hand lightly-a soft-pedaled version of her mother's corrective towel snapping. "It wasn't a saloon then! You know what I mean."

"All right, all right. Who was this Dr. Hazzard?" I asked. I knew she was dying to tell me.

"Linda Hazzard. She was a starvation doctor. You know how crazy rich Americans were about getting healthy back before the First World War? That's how Kellogg and Post got so famous-not because of the cereal but because of the health resorts they had where they made people eat the cereal to get healthy." She scoffed. "They thought all sorts of crazy things then. This Linda Hazzard, she thought people could be cured of diseases by fasting. But then she'd make 'em fast until they died and steal all their valuables. She had an office right there in the market-in a hotel-and when the patients died, she sent the bodies to Butterworth's to be cremated before the relatives could see what had happened to them. They say she might have killed forty people!"

"Well, that's a lovely thought," Quinton said, pushing his plate aside.

I made a face at him. "You never think it's gross when I talk about dead people."

"No, but I'm used to it from you. Phoebe's usually got much nicer things to talk about."

"You see," Phoebe interjected. "I am a much better conversationalist than you, Miss Skinny Butt."

"Not tonight," Poppy said. "I swear you two gone and spoiled my dinner. And I ate it hours ago. You two talk about something nicer, now. Or I'm gonna tell Momma on you and you won't get no dessert."

Not that I had room for dessert, but the idea of being banned from the Mason dinner table was daunting. I turned to look at Phoebe and she looked back at me like a naughty schoolgirl caught in the act with her co-conspirator. For a moment we stared at each other, smiles starting to tug our mouths upward until we spluttered into laughter.

"All right, Poppy. We'll talk about something nice. Like the weather," Phoebe said, grinning at me. "It's been mighty fine weather, lately, don't you think, Miss Harper Blaine?"

"I agree, Miss Mason. It's been wonderful. Except for that rainstorm yesterday."

"Wasn't that the strangest thing?" Phoebe said, continuing her teasing and giving her father a sly look from the corner of her eye.

Poppy gave us an agreeable nod. "There, now, you two get on just fine. That sure was the strangest thing. Raining in July."

"Like that's unusual," Quinton remarked.

Phoebe leaned over to me and grabbed my hand while the men were nodding to themselves. "I'll get those books for you-I got a whole bunch at the shop about the history of Seattle and if you're working down around the market, you'll want to know."

"Phoebe," Poppy scolded. "Now what I just told you?"

Phoebe sat up and gave her father an apologetic smile. "Yes, Poppy. I'll talk about something nice. Or I don't get to talk at all." Then she looked back to me. "Hugh's wife had twins!"

I flushed with embarrassment: It had been such a long time since I'd last seen the family that I'd lost track of Sonja's pregnancy. "Ack!" I sputtered, imagining the horror of chasing after two little terrors with her sister-in-law's brains and her brother's magic touch for mischief. "The world won't be safe."

"Ain't that the truth!" Phoebe agreed. "Barely crawling around and they already made the house a wreck. But they got the cutest little expressions! Just like those kitty pictures on the Internet-I swear they'll be saying 'I can has cheezburger' before they say 'momma.'"

"More likely 'I can has Auntie Phoebe wrapped around my little finger,'" said Poppy. "You such a soft touch, girl, and even the babies know it. We all going to be their slaves before long." He gave me a sideways look. "Even you, Harper. Even a old spinster like you."

"I am not a spinster, Poppy. I have Quinton."

Poppy looked at the man beside him. "When you going to make a honest woman of this girl, boy? Don't you know she's one of the special ones? You let her get away, you going to regret it."

"I'm afraid I'm not capable of making Harper into an 'honest woman'-she's honestly all the woman I can take already." He winked at Poppy and the old man guffawed, elbowing him in the ribs as he rocked back and forth in his mirth.

I found myself blushing as the whole table full of Masons laughed. It was goodhearted laughter, not unkind. I had to turn my head to glance again at Phoebe, who was laughing just as hard as the rest. She grinned and winked at me. "We're going to be all right, girl. I knew we would."

I felt a prickling under my eyelids and had to bite my lip to keep from making a bigger spectacle of myself by crying over having my friend back-really back. I'd have to work harder to make sure I kept her this time.

Dinner was delicious and we enjoyed ourselves. Phoebe promised to call when she'd found all the books she'd mentioned, which I hoped would throw some light on what I might be dealing with and why the tunnel construction was causing such havoc. But things went a bit sour as Quinton and I said our good-byes and headed out the door.

Quinton paused on the stoop outside the restaurant to kiss my cheek and swing his backpack on. "I'll see you later, sweetheart."

I blinked at him. "Later? You're not coming home now?"

"No. I have to get out to Northlake and fix a few things-or more to the point, break them. It will probably take most of the night. I don't want to disturb you, so I'll catch some sleep on my own and see you tomorrow. OK?" he added, turning away to walk off into the settling summer night.

"No."

He turned back, looking genuinely puzzled. "What?"

"It's not OK. I haven't seen you in two days and I think we need to talk."

"When did my being independent become a problem?" Through the Grey side of my vision, I could see he was letting off annoyed red sparks.

"It's not. But your father is. You have put him at the top of your priority list to the degree that you aren't paying any attention to anything else. You're not acting independent-you're acting obsessed. And I haven't even had the chance to tell you he popped up on my trail yesterday."

"He what? Where? What did he want?"

"He didn't exactly say, but I got the impression he was taking my measure to see if he could use me against you. Or drive me off if he thought I was a threat. We had a little argument. With fists. Did you know he carries a combat baton and isn't shy about using it?"

Quinton was appalled, his energy corona jumping with bolts of red, orange, and green, and he grabbed my shoulders. "Jesus, Harper! Are you all right?"

I nodded, pulling back from him so I could keep an eye on his face. I felt fatigued by my vision and our argument and my voice was sharper than I'd intended. "I'm fine. It wasn't that much of a fight-he wasn't trying very hard and, like I said, he was mostly taking my measure."

"Did he say anything about the project . . . ? Did he know about you?"

"You mean the Greywalking stuff? He didn't seem to. I didn't give him any cause to find out, but if he's still following me around or has set someone on me, he may twig to it, especially if the friends-with-fangs get me involved. The current case is pretty deep into ghost country and you've said that all things paranormal are his current interest. If he's even half as savvy as you were when we met, he'll figure out my connection."

"You have to stay away from him." His anxiety was turning the air around him fiery orange.

"That is not up to me. If he wants to follow me, or if Cameron and his people call me in, all I can do is try to shake the tails off when they appear. I can't go into hiding. He has to back off on his own."

Quinton started to say something but was interrupted by a couple of restaurant patrons trying to get out of the door we were blocking. He took me by the arm and led me a few feet down the block, out of sight of the restaurant and into a shadow where we would be hard to observe. "Harper, my dad is dangerous. I know you can't take him out, but you need to be wary of him."

I had to close my eyes for a second, the injured one uncomfortable and itchy from my straining to see without the veil of Grey fog between me and the world. "I'm well aware of that," I said as I reopened my eyes. "But short of going straight at him and putting an end to this-which would signal an escalation on our part and make him more anxious to either control us or break us up-there is little I can do to stay out of his way. I'm not asking you to do anything about it. I'm only telling you what happened, since I haven't had the chance before now. If you're working on some way of getting out of his reach permanently, you need to have all the facts about what he's up to."

"I appreciate that, Harper. But I'm going to worry and freak out, anyway. You don't want to see some of the things that he's doing to the paranormals he's managed to get hold of."

"Like what? And how did he 'get hold' of anything?"

"I don't know how he got most of them. Some he brought back from some other project in Europe-don't ask about it because I don't know. Here he's directing experiments. It's like something out of a horror movie. And he's not alone-he has a support unit. He's a monster and I don't want him near you."

I was taken aback for a moment, but that didn't change the situation. "Then find a way to stop him. He's not going to give up keeping tabs on me as long as I'm of any potential use to him-which will be as long as he still wants to force you to work with him. I'm trying to give him no reason to tag me, but it's unlikely, given his interests, that I can dodge him completely. And I certainly can't lower my profile as a person of interest while I'm hanging out with ghosts and people who are manifesting mediumistic behavior. He wants to know more about ghosts and monsters and, sorry to say, I'm one of the resident experts. When he figures that out, he'll press you even harder."

"He might not figure it out." His aura had gone an uncomfortable shade of green.

I gave him a disbelieving stare. "Right. He's going to be stupid and blind where I'm concerned. Because he's been such a big blind idiot up until now. Gods, I'm tired," I added, not really meaning to say so aloud as I put one cold hand over my injured eye. "So tired of this . . ."

Quinton put his hands on my shoulders and tried to pull me to him, but I resisted. "Harper . . . what's wrong?"

"Aside from this whole situation with your dad . . . ? I can't see normally out of my left eye at the moment. It's all Grey all the time, which is making my life and my work a lot more complicated than usual."

"You didn't say-"

"You haven't been around enough."

He threw up his hands and glared up at the sky in exasperation. "I'm never around! You're acting like an abandoned spouse! That's not how we operate, is it?"

"It wasn't. But for the past six or eight months, you've been at my place more often than on the street like you used to be. Didn't you notice that's where your dad found you? And I am your damned spouse. May not have the paper, but we have the relationship and the magical tie to prove it."

He seemed to ignore the deeper implications of my statement. "Are you saying you're a liability . . . ?"

My turn to thrash my head in exasperation. "No! I'm just trying to get you to recognize the pattern we both established. I don't want it to change-I'm annoyed at how little I've seen of you while acting as if it's my due when I know it isn't-but we have to factor that into any plans for stalemating your father."

Quinton took a deep, angry breath, the energy around him turning dark red before it bled away on the exhale. "I'll take care of him."

"Don't do anything foolish," I warned, a chilly sense of doom settling over me.

He pressed his lips tightly together, stubborn and not willing to discuss it further with me.

"Quinton, I'm with you, no matter what. Just . . . respond to messages more often, will you?" It wasn't what I wanted to say, but anything else was either stupid or a waste of breath. For all that he seemed an easygoing guy, Quinton was as devious and stubborn as his dad and wouldn't take kindly to any demands of mine where that sneaky bastard was concerned.

He relented a little and gave me a hug, whispering into my ear, "I'll take care of this. I love you. And I'll stay in better touch. I promise. Just be careful, sweetheart."

I kissed his cheek, unenthusiastic about the situation. "I'll be as careful as you are. And I'll come after your ass if you get yourself in dutch with Daddy."

"Don't you dare," he whispered.

"You won't have any say in the matter." I backed away from him, my face feeling stiff with a lack of warmth. "I'll see you later."

He just looked at me a moment, then shrugged-not a truly insouciant shrug, just a faked one-and turned away.

I wanted to cry or scream, but I wasn't going to. Sometimes you have to let your other half be a stubborn fool. He'd let me do it often enough.

I shook my head with disgust all the way back to the Land Rover-weaving a little as the Grey flitted in and out of my vision-and decided I was too keyed up to go home yet. Work was about all I had to distract myself and since it was night, now might be the time to visit a haunted bar. . . .

THIRTEEN.

Pike Place Market is creepier at night. Even if you can't see the shades of the dead among the wiry lines of energy that rush off the bluff like a waterfall, the buildings and arcades take on a menacing air when empty. Sounds echo across the road and along the alleys. Awnings flap in a breeze that is always cold, raising monstrous crow shadows lit by the neon clock over the main entrance. Clouds had begun to roll in again, covering the stars and drowning the moon. The bars and restaurants attract just enough people to emphasize the emptiness rather than fill it and I found the sound of my rubber-heeled boots too loud as I walked along the tilted streets toward Post Alley. It didn't take long to realize someone was following me.

For a moment, I thought it might be Quinton, keeping an eye on me in case his patriotic psychotic father was stalking me, but a quick check of the Grey revealed nothing like either man's energy signature. Instead, something tangled in red and black with trailing tentacles of cold white light lurked just beyond any easy view, as if it knew exactly how to stay out of my normal sight. Not quite vampire-like, but not something I knew. It plainly wasn't normal, whatever it was, and I hoped it wasn't part of the conspiracy of ghosts that were plaguing my client's sister and the other patients I'd seen. If it were somehow connected to Purlis, well . . . that was a different problem altogether. It couldn't keep tabs on me without showing itself once I went into Post Alley, however, since there were no cross alleys in the stretch where Kells Irish Pub was. And it couldn't assume my destination, since two other bars or restaurants had doors onto the alley, too. It would have to close up a bit. . . .

I got all the way to the tavern's door before I caught a fleeting glimpse of something human-shaped beneath the distinctive aura. I paused and considered trying to catch the tail, but a small band of pub crawlers came noisily around the corner and sent my observer back into deeper shadow. I hoped I'd have another chance to "chat" with it when I came out. For the time being, I was going inside to see what ghostly things might be lurking about in the former mortuary.

The first room was the classic low-ceilinged pub with dark wood and tiled floors. The tiles might well have been original, since my Grey-adjusted vision saw the room as it must once have been-filled with cold slabs on which the bodies of Seattle's dead were embalmed. I shuddered and passed through a short doorway to the other half of the bar, where the ceilings were higher and the decor more modern. The paranormal setting, however, was much worse: I'd found the former crematory.

To me the room was uncomfortably warm and a storm of spirits rushed through it, swirling like ash toward the back of the space, where a storage room or refrigerator now occupied what had been the oven. I cringed and turned aside, stumbling into the edge of the bar that was hidden by my Grey vision on that side.

The bartender looked up at me with a touch of alarm. "You all right?" he asked.

"Just dizzy," I croaked back, fighting to put the sight into literal perspective and shut down the double image of the past and the present.

"It takes some people that way," he said.

I got myself onto a barstool. "What does?"

"This room. Some people find it uncomfortable. Even frightening."

"Former funeral home. Yeah, I suppose they might."

"You know the story, then?"

"No, but I have heard the general outline."

"Do you like ghost stories, then?"

My desire was to say "not particularly" but I would never get any information if I did that, so I said, "Maybe. Are they true stories or just hogwash and hokum?"

The bartender laughed. "It's hard to say sometimes, but this being a former funeral home, some of 'em are probably true. They say the original owner used to have hearse races so he could beat the other mortuaries to dead people. Might even be true."

"I heard this place was connected to a certain doctor. . . ."

"Dr. Hazzard? Oh yes. She used to have her patients cremated here and the owner would give her somebody else's diseased organs to show to the distraught relatives to prove the patient had died of something other than starvation. Quite a racket, eh?"

Judging from the phantoms of the emaciated dead rushing through the room, it wasn't just a racket, it was an industry. I nodded, still a bit queasy.

"And there's the little girl some people claim to see here. She stays near the back and she likes the dancing. The theory is that she died of influenza and was cremated here. It's quite likely true. When they were renovating, they found shelves full of tiny urns with no names on 'em, just numbers. Child-sized urns."

"Down here?"

"No. Upstairs. The bar's owners are turning it into a space for catering parties. Used to be the sales room and the chapel."

"What is the attraction of bars in former funerary chapels?" I asked.

"Not sure. Spitting in the face of death, maybe?"