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Berkley Street Series Books 1 - 9: Haunted House and Ghost Stories Collection

Page 111

by Ron Ripley


  Marian had seen weapons and cash before, but it had never been offered to her.

  “Will you do it?” the man asked.

  “Hell yeah,” Ruby said, laughing. Marian nodded her agreement, unable to take her eyes off the money.

  “Now,” the man said, closing the briefcase and locking it. “The combination is three, two, one. Nice and simple. I will know when the men are killed because someone will be watching the Mill.”

  The calm way in which he stated the fact brought reality back into focus.

  He smiled and handed the briefcase to Ruby.

  “Now,” he continued, “if you get the bright idea to try and do anything other than that which you have agreed to, I will kill you.”

  Marian looked at him, heard Ruby inhale to say something and then stop.

  There was a mad glint in the man’s eyes. Part of him, Marian saw, hoped they would do something wrong. Anything.

  “I can assure you,” the man said, his voice pleasant, “that you will take an extremely long time to die. And you won’t beg for death.”

  “No?” Marian asked, her own voice sounding faint and strange.

  “No,” he whispered. “Because the first thing I do is cut out the person’s tongue.”

  He smiled at them again, winked, and got into his car. The engine purred into life, and the man put it into gear. Marian and Ruby watched him back the Mercedes up a few feet, then shift gears again.

  The stranger beeped the horn twice in a friendly goodbye and drove off.

  Marian looked at the briefcase in Ruby’s hands and wondered what it was they had actually agreed to.

  Chapter 33: Planning and Preparation

  “How’s the head?”

  Shane winced at the sound of Frank’s voice. He squinted and looked across the room to where Frank sat.

  “You’re pretty damned heavy,” Frank said, taking a sip of coffee. “I honestly thought I was going to have to drag you into the downstairs bathroom to get you cleaned up.”

  Shane closed his eyes and let out a groan. His head ached and something pulsed unpleasantly behind his eyes.

  “You’re not hungover,” Frank said.

  “No,” Shane agreed, his voice sounding like a tire driving over broken glass. “Hit my head.”

  Frank nodded. “You’ve got a bump the size of an egg on your forehead. I’m surprised you didn’t split your skull open.”

  “Too much scar tissue,” Shane said.

  “Too thick,” Frank retorted.

  “That, too,” Shane said, sighing.

  “What do you remember from last night?” Frank asked.

  “Nothing,” Shane replied. With tremendous effort, he sat up, head hanging down and blood pounding in his temples. “Not a damned thing. What happened?”

  “Evidently you drank more than usual,” Frank said. “Then you threw up. At least twice, and fell into it. You were a hell of a mess.”

  “I’m sorry,” Shane apologized.

  "That's not the worst of it, though," Frank continued.

  “What?” Shane asked, lifting his head up. “What else did I do?”

  “Nothing you did,” Frank answered. “Jack Whyte is back.”

  Shane blinked, his mind processing information far slower than normal. “Wait. What?”

  “Jack Whyte,” Frank repeated. “The Englishman.”

  “You have got to be kidding me,” Shane said. “How in the hell is that even possible? His bond with the button was destroyed. Oh no.”

  Frank raised an eyebrow.

  “His bones have to be nearby,” Shane said. “Where did you see him?”

  “He walked into the pond.”

  That simple statement sent a chill through Shane. His heart raced, and he forced himself to breathe through his nose, trying to calm down. He cleared his throat and said in a low voice, "The pond."

  Frank nodded. “Do you think his bones are in there?”

  "Maybe," Shane said. "I sure as hell hope not. He might have a pretty good radius for travel, though."

  “Is there a way we can find out?” Frank asked. “Historical society maybe?”

  “Yeah,” Shane said. He winced as he nodded his head. “Over on Abbott Street. Maybe the library too. They have a pretty good collection of histories about the city.”

  “Okay,” Frank said. He paused and then asked, “Shane, what’s up with the pond?”

  Shane hesitated, sighed and said, “You know the house is haunted.”

  “Yeah,” Frank said, grinning. “Kind of figured that one out.”

  “Well,” Shane said. “There was another ghost. Someone bad, and she was in the pond.”

  “How bad?” Frank asked.

  Shane glanced at the clock, saw it was only eight, and remembered the historical society didn’t open until ten.

  “Bad,” Shane said. “We’ve got some time. This will take a little bit.”

  “Okay,” Frank said. “Let’s hear it.”

  Shane took a deep breath and began to tell Frank about Berkley Street.

  Chapter 34: Forced to Believe

  Kurt and Marie sat in the Main Street Diner next to City Hall. They had finished their breakfast and their coffee. The waitress had taken the dishes away, and the two of them sat in the booth, ignored by the other patrons. Marie knew the owner and had told Kurt they wouldn't be bothered.

  He tore his napkin into small strips. A nervous habit he thought he had broken himself of after his divorce.

  As he shredded another piece, Kurt realized he hadn't after all.

  In a low voice, he said, "Ghosts are real."

  Marie nodded.

  After the shock of Bill’s death, and going to Shane’s house, Kurt thought that Marie would reassure him that the whole thing wasn’t real. That it was all just madness.

  She hadn’t though.

  “How can they be real?” Kurt asked, picking up another piece of napkin.

  “I don’t know how,” Marie said. “I just know that they are.”

  "But it doesn't make sense," Kurt said, his disbelief and anger spiking. "None of it does. You die, and you go to heaven, or you go to hell. Damn, maybe even purgatory. But you don't hang around."

  Marie watched him, her face impassive.

  "It doesn't make sense," he grumbled and tore the piece in his hands apart.

  “It doesn’t have to make sense,” Marie said. “Nothing does. All we can do is accept what our senses tell us in this regard. You saw what happened to Bill. I’ve seen other things that I don’t want to talk about, let alone remember. The point is, Kurt, that we have to accept what we have seen, and what we’ve experienced.”

  He grunted but didn’t speak.

  After a few minutes of silence, he reached up, rubbed the bare skin of his scalp, and asked, "Do iron and salt really work?"

  “Yeah,” she said. “They work. And so does fire.”

  He blinked. “What?”

  She explained to him how they salted and burned the bones of ghosts. How it was the only way to destroy them.

  “What happens if you don’t?” Kurt asked.

  “Then you don’t get rid of them,” Marie said. She sat back in her seat and fixed her ponytail. Her face was harsh, her eyes hard. Kurt had worked with her on a handful of cases. Nothing more than grunt work, but he had always been respectful to her. Which she had reciprocated.

  “So you think this is something we can do?” Kurt asked. He dropped the last piece of napkin and stuffed his hands under his legs, making certain he didn’t pick up another one.

  “Of course, it is,” she answered. There wasn’t a trace of doubt in her voice.

  “Is it as dangerous as they said?” Kurt said.

  “Yes,” Marie replied. “They didn’t oversell it, and they didn’t understate the dangers. There is a chance we’ll be killed. Or worse.”

  “Worse?” Kurt scoffed, shaking his head. “What the hell could be worse?”

  “Your soul might not be allowed to leave,”
she said.

  The idea struck him like a fist, causing him to blink and shake his head. Then a horrible thought arose.

  “Marie,” he said, pulling his hands out from beneath his legs and putting them on the table. “Is Bill’s soul there?”

  “It might be,” she replied.

  “God in Heaven,” Kurt whispered, and he dropped his head into his hands.

  Chapter 35: Information Gathered

  Shane stood with Frank in the kitchen. The afternoon sun poured through the windows over the sink while the two men looked out the glass of the back door. Wind rippled the surface of the pond and bent the stiff reeds back. Branches, still bare of leaves, resisted the wind’s efforts, and dark clouds raced by in the sky above.

  Shane reached up and scratched the remnants of his left ear. The tattered flesh ached more often than not, and when he was concerned about something, anything, he had a tendency to scratch them. He dropped his hand down to his side and looked at the pond.

  It reminded him of his childhood and all the terrible things that had occurred. The water was never restful to his eyes, never peaceful. It held dark secrets and threatened violence.

  And now the ghost of Jack Whyte had slipped into its depths.

  Shane was certain it meant that Jack could enter the house.

  Shane sighed and turned away from the window. He went to the table and sat down in one of the chairs. Frank joined him a moment later. The former monk looked anxious, which was an expression Shane hadn’t seen on the man’s face before.

  “It’s supposed to be nearby?” Shane asked.

  He had already asked the question twice before, and Frank had answered it the same number of times.

  Frank answered it again.

  "Yeah," the man said without any hint of aggravation. "No one's sure exactly where the tree was. It came down in some storm, and they harvested the wood. There had always been a rumor that a murderer had been lynched from it, but that was all. Just a rumor.”

  “Well, we know it’s not,” Shane said. He rapped his knuckles on the table. “Damn.”

  “We need to take care of this,” Frank said. “Before we even think about going into the Slater Mill. We can’t leave him here to wait for us.”

  Shane wanted to. He wanted to unleash Courtney on Jack, but such a plan could backfire. Given Courtney's tenuous state of mind, she could attempt to destroy Jack, destroy Shane, or sit and watch them tear each other apart.

  And for once, unfortunately, Carl was no help. Jack Whyte was stronger than the ghosts in the house. Even combined they wouldn't be able to face him. This, Carl had told him, was confirmed by the fact that he had been able to return to his bones. Not all of the dead, it would appear, could remain after an item they were bound to was destroyed.

  “What are you thinking about?” Frank asked.

  “How strong he is,” Shane answered.

  Frank nodded. “The question is, do we try to take him alone, or do we try and do it with Kurt and your friend, Marie?”

  Shane’s shoulders slumped. “Good question.”

  Frank was quiet for a moment, and then he said, "We could use it as a dry run."

  Shane waited.

  “Listen,” Frank continued. “You told me Marie can handle herself.”

  Shane nodded.

  “And Kurt’s no slouch. I mean he recognized an issue at the Mill. He’s got some basic skills as a cop,” Frank said, “which means he should have a good baseline for disciplined responses. I think we might be able to work with this.”

  “I don’t know,” Shane said, scratching at the stumps of his missing fingers. “Being able to handle a police situation is a far cry from dealing with an enraged spirit.”

  “I know,” Frank said. “And I’m not saying we shouldn’t be careful. But seeing how powerful Jack evidently is, we’re going to need more than the two of us. And, since we’re bringing Kurt and Marie into the Mill with us anyway, we should do a test run.”

  “This is going from training wheels to a Harley Davidson Panhead,” Shane said, unable to keep the doubt out of his voice.

  “Well,” Frank said. “I was thinking of asking for a little more help as well.”

  “From who?” Shane asked.

  “Carl,” Frank replied.

  Shane sat back in his chair. “Carl?”

  Frank nodded. “If Jack can make it as far as the pond, then it means Carl can make it as far as Jack’s bones. What’s good for the goose is good for the gander, right?”

  “Yeah,” Shane said. “Yeah, I think you’ve got something.”

  “Now we don’t need Carl to do anything other than help run some interference with Jack,” Frank continued. “He doesn’t have to go toe to toe with him. Carl won’t have to do anything other than serve as an early warning system. Just an alarm. He can keep his eyes open, and when, or if Jack shows up, then we can retreat if we haven't gotten close enough to the bones."

  Shane thought about it and then grinned. “Damn. I think that might work out.”

  “We’ll just have to ask Carl,” Frank said. “And if he says yes, we’ll get in touch with Kurt and Marie.”

  “Okay,” Shane said, standing up. “Let’s go talk to Carl.”

  Frank got to his feet, and the men left the kitchen together.

  Chapter 36: Impatient for Results

  Kurt had met with the psychologist that the Police Department had assigned him. The woman, Dr. Lee, had been compassionate without treating him like a child and Kurt had appreciated that.

  She hadn’t signed off on a ‘Return to work’, and Kurt was fine with her decision.

  It would give him time to do what needed to be done.

  Since his discussion with Marie, Kurt had been wracked with worry. All he could picture was Bill, as a ghost, trapped somewhere in Slater Mill. Imprisoned and kept from Heaven. Shane and Frank hadn’t set a time for going into the building, Frank informing him that preparations weren’t done yet.

  But Bill was Kurt's partner, and there was no way Kurt was going to let the man’s spirit continue to be held in the Mill.

  Kurt stood in the shadow of the old powerhouse, the smokestack rising up from it to stab at the night sky. From his hiding place, Kurt could watch the Mill. Fewer people than usual walked near the building. Or even within a hundred yards of it. The only sight slightly off was a teenage girl who sat in the playground.

  She was by herself, which wasn't unusual for the neighborhood, but she wasn't doing the usual things. On any other day, Kurt would have seen her as a look out. Not a particularly good one, but still, a look out.

  She wasn't playing with a phone or talking on one. She wasn't listening to music or even watching any of the cars that drove by. Instead, the girl sat on a bench and watched the Mill.

  Nothing else.

  A part of Kurt wanted to walk over to her and ask her what she was up to. Even without his uniform on, she would identify him as a cop. Either from having seen him before or from the way he walked and the way he talked.

  The kids who grew up in the Tree Streets always knew.

  She was watching the Mill for someone, but Kurt couldn’t be bothered with it.

  He turned his attention away from her and focused again on the building.

  A soft glow ebbed and flowed from the dirty windows. Occasionally he could hear the sound of machinery, and he knew that wasn't right.

  The building had been empty for years. Until he and Bill had found the dying teen in it a few weeks earlier, Kurt had never even heard of people squatting on the property.

  Steeling himself, Kurt walked towards the Mill.

  If Shane and Frank had been right, then the old iron spike he had salvaged as a kid would do the trick against a ghost. He pulled it out of his pocket, the metal heavy in his hand. The weight of it was comforting, something real he could focus on. He felt the grind of rust and dirt into his palm, and he squeezed it. Kurt took long, deep breaths as he crossed the street, angling his steps so he would
reach the corner of the building without any waste of time.

  The fence leaned outward, creaking on unsteady posts with a growing wind.

  I need to know he’s not in there, Kurt told himself. He can’t be in there. Not Bill.

  Kurt reached the edge of the fence, followed it around to the back of the building and glanced once at the girl in the park.

  The phone was at her ear.

  Kurt turned his gaze back to the Mill and pushed the thoughts of the child out of his mind.

  Chapter 37: Earning their Pay

  “Ha!” Ruby said, slamming her phone down.

  Marian looked at her. “What’s up?”

  “Gabriella says some bald dude just went around the back of the Mill,” Ruby answered, getting to her feet.

  “Is it our guy?” Marian asked, sliding the magazine into the pistol and chambering a round.

  “Got to be,” Ruby said, tucking her own pistol into the waistband of her pants and pulling her sweatshirt down over it. “Can’t think there’d be another bald guy who’d want to go in there.”

  “Yeah,” Marian agreed. She stood up, put her own weapon away, and then frowned. “She say anything about the other guy?”

  “The one with the bad eye?” Ruby asked.

  Marian nodded.

  “No,” Ruby answered. “Nothing. Got to figure he's on his way, though."

  Marian shrugged. “Guess so. Don’t want to have to do it twice.”

  “Nah, we’re good,” Ruby said, chuckling. “Come on, girl. Let’s do this.”

  They left Ruby's apartment, worked their way around to the front, and walked down Central Street towards the park where Gabriella waited. In a few minutes, they reached the little girl, Ruby's niece, and came to a stop.

  “Anybody else show up yet?” Ruby asked the girl in Spanish.

  Gabriella shook her head. “No. Just the one.”

  “And he’s bald?” Ruby asked.

  Gabriella looked disgusted. “You think I’d call if he wasn’t?”

  “Don’t get mouthy,” Ruby snapped, and then she grinned. “You’re good, girl. Get out of here. I’ll be around tomorrow to catch up with your mom.”

 

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