Stacia Kane

Unholy Ghosts


Скачать книгу

first, a task she could tick off her list.

      Nothing appeared out of the ordinary up there, so she cast the light down. More difficult here, with all the debris. What she needed was a broom, but she somehow doubted Terrible would be carrying one with him. Instead she headed for the wall and shuffled along it, moving her feet in tiny increments. “Feel for anything solid,” she said. “Anything heavy.”

      If they made a silly picture—the tattooed witch in her tank top and jeans and the hulking guard in his bowling shirt and trousers, black pompadour slipping down into his eyes, sliding their feet along the walls like they were trying to ice-skate over garbage—she didn’t care. Nobody was there to see them, anyway.

      Except the thing creeping silently along outside. Chess caught a glimpse of it through a gap in the boards, hunched and dark.

      “What’s in the eyes?” Terrible’s voice rumbled across the empty space. “What you seeing?”

      She smacked her hand down through the empty air, signaling him to be quiet. Blessedly he seemed to understand, and stood stock-still while she waited. They both waited.

      She glimpsed it again, hovering just outside where Terrible stood, and pointed.

      She knew he was fast, but didn’t know how fast until his arm shot out through the gap and grabbed the apparition by the throat. It let out a distinctly unghostlike squawk as he pulled it through the boards. They crumbled like wet toast.

      “Don’t hurt me! Don’t hurt me! I’s just passing, I swear, I don’t know nothing!”

      Terrible didn’t speak, but he didn’t loosen his grip either. The flashlight’s beam passed up and down the figure he held, little more than a child in ragged trousers and a stained poncho. The hood had slipped off when Terrible sucked the boy into the building.

      “What business you got here?”

      “I’s just passing—”

      “Nobody just passing here. You speak, boy, you tell me. What business?”

      The boy glanced at Chess, his eyes wide and dark in his dirty face. “Lady, don’t—”

      The sound of Terrible’s hard palm striking the boy’s peaky face seemed impossibly loud. Chess stepped forward, her hand out, before she remembered. Lots of gangs used kids to do their dirty work. Just because the boy said he was innocent didn’t mean he was.

      “You tell me, or you get worse.”

      The boy rolled his eyes at Chess again, then looked down. “I heard there was ghosts. Wanted to see me one.”

      “Who told you?”

      “Nobody.”

      Another slap. Chess refused to watch.

      “Okay, okay. I tell you. It were Hunchback, you know him? From Eighty-third. Say he heard from somebody else, who was told by somebody else, that if you comes here some nights, you see them. The ghost planes, right? I came to see, that’s all.”

      Terrible considered this for a minute. “What Hunchback look like?”

      “Small guy, dig? With a limp. Crazy eyes and no hair. He call me Brain. Said I got one in my head.”

      “You don’t, you come playing here,” Terrible replied, but he let go of the boy. The marks made by his meaty palms were fading. “No place for kids here.”

      “I come here all—I sorry. I just wanted to see me some ghosts, is all.”

      “You here before? You see others here?”

      “No, I never did. Just me. My friend Pat. We come, but we ain’t seen planes yet. You gonna see them, you here for them?”

      “Here on business.” Terrible glanced up, saw Chess watching. She dug her notebook out of her bag and flipped to a fresh page. Hunchback. If he was spreading rumors about the ghost planes, he was as good a place as any to start asking questions.

      Terrible must have thought the same thing. He folded his arms across his chest. “Go now. No ghosts to night.”

      Brain had one leg over the edge of the hole Terrible had made in the wall when Chess’s skin blazed with heat, her tattoos practically tearing themselves from her flesh. At the same time the Spectrometer made a long, solid yowling beep, every light on it turning bright red, casting an eerie glow against the damaged walls for a split second before the room lit up like day and the roar of an airplane directly overhead made Chess dive down to the filthy floor.

       Chapter Four

      “You will not raise the dead, nor will you seek to commune with them outside the Church. To do so is to court thy own doom.”

      —The Book of Truth, Laws, Article 26

      It went on forever, the waiting to die, while her heart beat triple-time in her chest and Brain’s thin, high scream hit her ears, barely audible over the noise. It was coming, it was coming to smash into them all and destroy them in a quick flash of rocket fuel and smoke. She tried to scramble out of the way but there was no way to get out of. The lights didn’t dim or change direction, and she had somehow managed to fall against the only unbroken section of wall in the ramshackle place. She wrapped her arms around her head, knowing it wouldn’t make one damn bit of difference.

      Wood exploded next to her, splinters catching her cheek and bare arms. She tried to duck away from it but something grabbed her arm, something hard and hot, ripping her through the wall.

      Terrible. He dragged her through the hole he’d punched in the rotted wood and out of the building, to her feet, and as she stood she realized the noise had stopped. There were no lights. There was nothing but Brain’s panting sobs and the terrible rushing emptiness filling her ears.

      Her body felt like rubber as she tried to stand but fell again. Terrible’s arm wrapped around her chest, just below her breasts, and pressed her to his side.

      “Nothing here, Chess, nothing here.” She didn’t know how many times he said it before it finally sank in, before the queasy vibrating stopped in her legs and she could raise her head and look at him.

      “Thought you was good with the spook stuff,” he said. “You look like some dead.”

      “And you look like Elvis vomited you up,” she managed. “So?”

      Hinges creaked in her ears again as he laughed. “So we both looking bad, guesses. But I do always, and you do never. You right now?”

      “Yeah, yeah, I’m right. Come on. Show me around outside here.”

      “You little machine made the beeps, before the noise started.”

      “It’s a Spectrometer. It measures disturbances in the metaphysical plane—ghosts exude metaenergy and leave trails of it behind.”

      His jutting brow furrowed. “So—”

      “Woo-hoo!” Brain’s cry split the darkness and made Chess jump back against Terrible. The Nips were making her too jumpy, with all the extra adrenaline. She needed to finish this up and take something to come down.

      “I seen it! I seen a ghost! Wait’ll I say! They all listen now, they all lis—” The words turned into a queer gurgle when Terrible’s hand closed around his throat again.

      “You say nothing, young one. You say to nobody, dig?”

      Brain nodded.

      Terrible let go. “Ain’t no haunts here. We find who’s pulling tricks, we kill them. You don’t spread no stories, or I come get you and make sure you don’t. Or worse.” He turned and gestured toward Chess. “You know she, right?”

      “I never seen—”

      “You