Deception (12 page)

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Authors: Lee Nichols

BOOK: Deception
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“A compeller? What’s that?”

“Bennett, business at the dinner table?” Martha said repressively.

“Sorry,” he said, flashing me a look.

I grinned as I put my napkin in my lap, then watched Celeste and the ghost boy, Nicholas, arrive with chafing dishes. Celeste served us roasted birds, like miniature turkeys, with boiled potatoes and gravy.

“The cook,” I said. “Is he French?”

“Anatole, yes, he and Celeste both,” Martha said. “He’s not exactly, well …
au courant
with his recipes. I lost twenty pounds when I left this job.”

“That’s okay,” I said, not wanting to hurt his feelings, because he could be hovering anywhere. “Everything’s so delicious.”

As Nicholas set the peas on the table, I cut into my bird, and inadvertently nudged him with my elbow. I gasped at the contact.

“What is it?” Bennett asked, his eyes bright with concern.

“I

I felt him!” It seemed rude to jab him again, so I offered my hand to Nicholas. He grinned, took my hand, and made a little bow. His skin felt cold, and my hand looked bright pink next to his pallor. You wouldn’t notice in daylight, but in the candlelight he glowed very faintly. He and Celeste both. I wondered if they could dial it up a notch, like the man in the brown suit had when I’d needed light in the dark corridor.

My hand holding Nicholas’s began to tingle and ache. When he dropped it, my fingertips were pale.

“That happens,” Bennett said, watching me. “We can’t touch them for very long. Ghostkeepers can’t.”

“And the more powerful the ghostkeeper,” Martha said, “the more pronounced the effect. I’ve seen hands that never came back. Like frostbite.”

“Nicholas,” Bennett said, and reached out to the boy. The urchin scampered over and wrapped his hands around Bennett’s. When he withdrew his hand from Nicholas’s grasp, he wiggled his fingers in the candlelight. They were barely pale, and he’d held Nicholas’s hand much longer than I had.

“But that means
—,
” I said.

“Ghostkeeping runs strong in my family,” Bennett told me. “I’ve dispelled ghosts who’ve lingered too long, who’ve mixed with less wholesome things. I’m not
un
powerful.”

I looked at my own hand again, an unsettled feeling in my stomach. It meant that I was more powerful than Bennett. How could that be? I knew next to nothing about ghostkeeping.

Martha must’ve noticed my discomfort. “I called the school and explained you were sick,” she told me. “It was awfully nice of that boy, Coby, to drop by with your homework. He’s quite fond of you, Emma.”

Thank you, Martha. Now Bennett’s going to think I’m involved with Coby. “We’re not

I mean, we just met.”

“Sometimes one simply knows,” Martha said.

“Yeah.” I refused to look at Bennett. “Sometimes you just know.”

Utterly uninterested, Bennett said, “Pass the peas? I’m starving.”

We kept the ghost talk on hold until dessert. It helped that Celeste and Nicholas had silently dematerialized after serving. Their abrupt disappearance didn’t seem to faze Martha or Bennett, but I wasn’t sure how I’d get used to it.

Anatole brought in dessert himself, tall fluted glasses filled with a pale frothiness.

“Is this a vanilla milk shake?” I asked. “I love milk shakes!”

Anatole frowned and his ruddy cheeks grew redder.

“Um, yogurt?”

Anatole twirled his mustache fiercely. Oh dear.

“It’s syllabub, dear,” Martha said.

“Syllabub! Of course. I love syllabub.” Which, despite the fact that I’d never heard of it before, turned out to be true. Apparently it consists of cream, lemon juice, sugar, and … brandy. Lots of brandy. When I finished, I licked my spoon clean and giggled.

Maybe because of the poof, I’d never experimented much with drugs or alcohol. I was afraid to lose control of myself. So learning that Bennett, Martha, and I were a secret sect of ghostkeepers, combined with an entire brandy-soaked syllabub, knocked my socks off.

“I’m going to name my first child Syllabub,” I announced. I almost said “Syllabub Stern,” but managed to restrain myself. “Or Rex, if it’s a boy.”

“Oh, dear,” Martha said. “I’d forgotten the brandy.”

I giggled again.

Bennett frowned at his glass. “In the dessert?” he said, in disbelief.

“Well, pardon me, college boy!” I said. “I’m not downing kegs at toga parties every weekend.”

“Right. That’s exactly how I spend my weekends.”

“You’re too grumpy for Greek parties,” I informed him. “Catapultam habeo. Caput tuum saxum immane mittam!”
*

“Sentio aliquos togatos contra me conspirare
,”
**
Bennett said.

I sighed at his perfect pronunciation. All this, and Latin, too? Syllabub Stern actually had a nice ring.

“Bennett, have a little sympathy.” Martha sighed. “Take her for a walk.”

He stood and pulled me from my chair.

I clung to him happily, the brandy having stripped away my inhibitions. I
looooved
him. Maybe I’d tell him on our walk.

*
I have a catapult. I will fling an enormous rock at your head.

**
I think people in togas are plotting against me.

15

We strolled quietly past the front gates and

thank God

the cool air dissipated my buzz. At least a little. We walked through the narrow streets of the village. A sporty BMW prowled past, and somewhere in the distance two dogs barked at each other. A fresh breeze came from the harbor, and I remembered something that was eating at me. Back in the rose garden, Bennett had talked about missing pieces and I had some of my own.

“So it’s always been real? Even as a kid, when I saw all those people no one else could?”

“They’re not alive, but yeah, they’re real. And there’s nothing wrong with you, Emma. You’re not crazy, you’re not broken

you’re exceptional.”

I only wished my parents agreed. “When did you first start seeing them?”

“I was four

at least the first time I remember. Olivia summoned him. She was only eight, and playing around, but she summoned this huge guy

this tough old sailor. He’d probably been lost at sea, but to me he looked like a pirate. I closed my eyes and willed him to disappear. My parents came running just as I dispelled him. I felt a sort of …
shove
, from inside, and he vanished.”

I frowned. That’s just what I’d felt among the encroaching shadows in the village, before they dissolved. But I was a summoner, not a dispeller …

“That’s when they knew I had the gift,” he continued. “It runs in families. They explained everything to me that day

as much as a four-year-old could understand.”

“I guess my parents didn’t know. That’s why they sent me to the hospital.”

Instead of responding, Bennett led me silently down a crooked little wooden staircase, then turned left toward the marina. We passed the boats in the harbor and walked to the end of the breakwater and stared at the sea.

The Atlantic felt so different from the Pacific. It was darker, rougher and less forgiving. The sea swallowed the few rocks Bennett tossed into the waves.

“Do you know why they named you Emma?” he asked.

I cocked my head, surprised by the question. “After some relative I never met.”

“You never met her because she died over two hundred years ago. Emma Vaile. She was a legend. The greatest ghostkeeper in the New World.”

“I saw her

in a painting at Thatcher.”

“She lived there.”

“That was her
house
? Not bad.” And it explained a lot. “But why am I reliving her memories?”

“I don’t know. Some ghostkeepers can recall the memories of the dead by holding things they owned, but you’re definitely a summoner. You proved that this afternoon.” A wave crashed against the breakwater. “But nothing’s ever simple.”

“Yeah, I’m getting that.” More softly, I said, “I look just like her.”

“Like the first Emma?” He glanced at me.

“Yeah, it was weird.”

“Well, you’re her great-great-great-granddaughter, or something.” He watched me in the moonlight. “They say she was beautiful.”

I let out a breath. “Maybe not
exactly
like her.”

Bennett smiled and hurled another rock into the water. We stood there silently, as I mustered the courage to ask the questions I was afraid I didn’t want answered.

Finally, I said, “So I’m descended from one of the earliest ghostkeepers, and all this runs in families.”

Bennett nodded, looking relieved that it was out in the open.

“So, my family is like yours and my parents are … Oh God.
Both
of them?”

“Just your dad, now. He’s a reader

he senses psychic impressions, reads memories in the belongings of the dead. There’s a lot of information to be mined there

and a lot of wealth. He knows exactly how old something is and whether it’s a fake or not.” A wave rippled down the shore, and Bennett fell silent for a moment. “Your mom wasn’t very strong; she needed what we call a ‘focus’ to magnify her power. Like repeating a mantra or

I don’t know

a lucky charm or incantation. She lost her talent years ago. That happens, when


“Wait. What about
Max
?”

A sad smile crossed his face. “He’s a badass compeller.”

The chill ocean wind seeped into my bones. “How could they be

it’s like I don’t know them at all.”

“Emma, that’s not true. They’re still your family.”

“No. They’re strangers to me. How could they keep me in the dark all this time? I thought I was losing my mind.” I swallowed the bitter taste in my mouth. “They threw me in a mental ward. I was
seven
. They drugged me and


Bennett put his arm around me and it wasn’t romantic, but I was comforted.

“Why?” I asked him. “Why would they do that?”

“I don’t know. They had your ability wiped, or at least suppressed, until now. They must’ve had a reason. That’s the piece of your past that we’re missing.”

I watched the ceaseless flow of waves, the old wounds fresh in my mind. Was there a reason they’d closed doors on me, so I wouldn’t overhear what they’d taught Max? At least this explained their favoritism toward him

why they’d traveled with him and shared their obsession with death: the antiquities and funeral urns and books on necromancy.

“You call us ghostkeepers,” I said, “but are we really necromancers?”

“No. No one can raise the dead to life.”

“So there are rules?”

“There are limits,” he said. “And there’s always a price.”

“What does that mean?”

He shrugged. “Most ghosts are like Celeste and Anatole, but some ghosts get twisted. They seek to hurt and destroy. We call them ghasts. They’re dangerous, so we handle them, keep them where they belong. That’s what we do, that’s why we’re called ghostkeepers.”

I nodded, but I wasn’t really listening

I was obsessing over my parents. They lived this secret life, never showing me who they really were. They hadn’t just ignored me, they’d taken steps to
exclude
me.

“Let’s go back,” I said, needing to move, to burn off some of the emotion. Bennett walked beside me, giving me the silence I needed.

I didn’t speak again until we’d passed through the museum gates, and were at the front door. “Why? Why would they name me after a famous ghostkeeper and not tell me who we were?”

“I’m named for a relative, too,” he said.

“Bennett Stern?”

“Yeah.” Bennett opened the front door. “Emma Vaile was a widow. He was her lover.”

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