“No one. I don’t even know what you’re talking about.”
Crowley’s smile bloomed, a dark and venomous expression. “Listen to me very carefully. You want to tell me the truth, because I can help you. I can make them go away, but I need to know what I’m dealing with and why they’re hovering around you.”
The room grew colder as he spoke, and Crowley, who was used to dealing with dead things and not the least bit surprised by the change, watched Turner flinch as surely as if he’d been slapped across the face.
“You should leave. Take Laura with you.” Turner’s voice was trying for calm and failing miserably. His eyes looked around with a quiet desperation, but saw nothing. The air temperature dropped substantially for the second time and the man stepped away from the threshold he’d been standing in and retreated back into the room he’d come from.
Crowley followed and chuckled. “Seriously, you’ve got a bad case of the holiday spooks. Tell me who it is before things get worse.”
They’d entered the dining room, which was set up with a small feast. The meal was laid out, a spread worthy of a dozen people, complete with settings, opened bottles of wine, eggnog, a ham and a turkey with all of the fixings.
“You have to leave. They want to eat now.” The man’s voice was hollow, weak. He swallowed, his face paler than before, his skin sweating profusely despite the frigid temperature in the room. Every breath, every word he uttered sent small plumes of condensation past his lips.
They tried to hide themselves from him but Crowley forced the issue. His hand reached into the thick winter coat he sported and sorted past several stones and two small bags of salt until he found the cellophane strip twisted around a pinch of grave mold mixed with sulfur and ash. A quick utterance, no more than a dozen mumbled words and then the fine black grit in the palm of his hand lifted into the air and dispersed evenly through the room. The cloud of dust settled itself, seemed to stick to the air around Turner. It layered itself in a thin mist and revealed the shapes that did their best to avoid being seen.
Two women stood in the room and near them, like satellites around twin moons, a half dozen children circled. Turner stared, his eyes bugging wider than Crowley would have thought possible.
“What? You haven’t seen them before?” He let the humor creep into his tones. He didn’t know exactly what the man in front of him had done, but he suspected Turner was responsible for the spirits that surrounded him.
“I-I-How did you do that? Why are there so many of them? I only wanted Michelle…” He tried to look everywhere at once, at all of the shapes and the faces hinted at by the black powder draped across their translucent forms. Apparently it was simply too much for him. Turner sat down abruptly at the head of the table, his face a study in misery.
“Did you kill them, Turner? Or did you just miss them too much? They look mighty pissed off, whatever the case.” He quickly scanned the room and frowned; it was getting colder and more than that, there seemed to be more of the shapes than he remembered.
“You wouldn’t understand.” Turner hid his face in his hands, mumbling the words past his clasping fingers.
“What’s there to understand? You missed them, so you called them back. You think you’re the first person to ever summon a dead loved one or two from the other side of death?” Crowley stepped closer, pushing his way through a dead boy who simply dispersed, leaving a thin black powder across the floor in his wake. “You think you’re the only one who’s ever wanted another chance at happiness?” The rage snuck in as he spoke, stoking the fury that always waited just under the surface of the Hunter’s calm demeanor.
“I just wanted them back to say good bye. I didn’t expect them to keep coming back.” He kept his hands over his face, and Crowley, who had been moving closer, felt the fine hairs on his neck rise and stepped back. You fight enough things in darkness and on unfamiliar territory you learn to trust your instincts.
“How long have they been after you?” He could hear the women coming back, their steps tentative, uncertain if they should enter the room. The shadowy forms all around them—enough now to crowd a bus station: there were more shapes coming from somewhere, and not all of them could be his family—looked toward the doors with unsettling hunger on their hollow faces.
“It’s been five years. Just at Christmas at first, but then they started coming for longer stays. I couldn’t hide them anymore; Holly was starting to ask questions and the kids…sometimes they could see them.” He looked at Crowley with a trembling lower lip. “Do you understand? They could see the dead people.”
“What? You thought they were your special entertainment?” Crowley’s mouth curled into a scowl of disapproval. “They’re dead, you damned fool. They’re supposed to stay that way.”
He saw the movement, the slight push at the door, and heard Laura’s voice. “Is it okay to come in now?”
“No! No, Laura Keep away from here!” For the first time Turner seemed genuinely scared. He rose from his seat, his arms reaching as if to block her actions from across the room.
Crowley was faster. He pushed the door shut violently enough to shake the wall. Laura let out a squawk on the other side of the barrier, shocked by the sudden action. “Is everything okay in there?” Her voice had risen at least an octave and her stress was apparent.
Crowley smiled, though there was nothing kind about the expression. “You really screwed the pooch, didn’t you? They’re here for more than a holiday meal, aren’t they?”
“They always come for Christmas dinner; I can’t get rid of them.” He looked at the shapes that moved, surging into the room from somewhere beyond the physical plane. Crowley looked carefully and finally saw the rift, understood what was happening.
“Oh, you damned fool. There’s always a cost, isn’t there?” He’d have to check. He’d ask Laura on the way back to her house, before he wiped the memories of the night from her head.
“They wanted… They wanted my family. Again.” Turner’s voice broke at last and he shook his head. “I couldn’t give them Holly or the kids. I already lost one family!”
There had been two women present among the first spirits, and several children besides.
“How many times have you been married, you son of a bitch?” The words were cold, distant. Any sympathy he might have had for the man he was supposed to save was gone.
“Three times, okay? I wanted my family back, is that so wrong?” He was pleading, as if there was a chance that Crowley would somehow find it in himself to grant absolution.
“Last year your family left and you called for someone to cook for you. That’s how this works, isn’t it? You have to offer up someone, somebody to pay the price for letting them back in or sending them away.” He stared at the man, stunned. “You’ve done this before.”
“I had no choice!” Oh he was crying now, showing his misery for Crowley, showing how he’d suffered for the last few years.
“Was it this bad last year?” His was almost yelling to be heard over the hissed murmurs of the dead.
“It was never this bad before.” Turner’s voice was barely audible over the sound of the dead.
“Here’s a secret for you, Turner, old son. The Dead don’t like being where they are. It’s cold and lonely. Here, this place? It’s a lot happier for them.”
“I can’t make them go away. I’ve tried!”
“What rituals did you use?” There were always methods for reversing a spell, but he had to know which incantation had been used in the first place if he was going to make this painless.
Turner did the one thing guaranteed to anger Crowley. He lied. “I don’t remember. I don’t have the book anymore.”
There were times when Jonathan Crowley was too nice for his own good and times when he was far too lenient as far as he was concerned. He looked at the man in front of him, surrounded by the dead who demanded sacrifices, and knew that there was never going to be an easy fix for the situation. Given the opportunity, Turner
Harrison would do it again. He did not want to learn from his mistakes. He simply wanted to have everything turn out his way, regardless of the cost.
“Fair enough. Handle your own problems, Mr. Harrison.”
“What?” Oh, that got him thinking, didn’t it? Suddenly there was more to consider.
“I said handle it yourself!” Crowley left the room, pushing the door open in a hurry and almost knocking Laura on her ass in the process. The atmosphere was quieter on this side of the door, the air warmer, less turbulent.
“Mr. Crowley, where’s Turner?”
“He’s staying here. We’re not.” He didn’t give her a chance to argue, but instead grabbed Laura by her bicep and led her toward the front door. The maid hesitated for a second and then started following. He looked over his shoulder at her and nodded. “This is the part where we want to run.”
Laura tried to resist but he was far too strong for her. He lifted the woman in his arms and ignored her frantic attempts to hit him, to make him let go. She started to say something but the sudden screams from the dining room dwarfed whatever words she tried to speak.
Crowley didn’t stop to listen, much as part of him wanted to. Instead he forced the front door open and when she got feisty a second time he physically hurled Laura out into the snow beyond the front porch. The maid was right behind him and didn’t waste a second leaving the premises.
A moment later the scream came again, louder, distorted by pain and something else. It did not cease, but instead trailed off, fading in the distance though none of them were moving.
Crowley looked back at the house, a frown on his features, and studied the structure carefully.
Silence greeted him, complete and eternal. The dead that had been in the house were gone and so too the man who had summoned them to visit and paid them in blood to stay away every year.
Laura charged past him, screaming her uncle’s name. He let her go, knowing full well what she would find inside.
The house was as empty as his own; devoid of family or loved ones. Once upon a time he’d lost his family too; the difference was he knew better than to try to call them back.
The wind called out, blasting past the empty house, drowning the sounds of a woman in mourning. Her losses were bad, but could have been worse. In the end, she still had her husband and her children waiting for her.
That would have to be enough.
THE END
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Home for the Holidays
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Home for the Holidays
Home for the Holidays: A Short Story Page 2