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Incorporeal




  Incorporeal

  Copyright 2011 J.R. Barrett

  Cover Artist: “The Jackman”

  All Rights Reserved

  Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be used or reproduced electronically or in print without written permission from the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. All events, names, characters and places are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual events, names, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Incorporeal

  J. R. Barrett

  Copyright 2011

  Chapter One

  Sara turned from the window, and clicked off her cell phone. Her lips moved, forming a silent, “Holy shit.”

  “What?”

  Startled, her hand flew to her chest. “Christ! Would you stop doing that?”

  “Doing what?”

  “Sneaking up on me like that; it’s rude.”

  “I did not sneak up on you. I stood right here the entire time you spoke on the phone.”

  Sara turned in a slow circle. “Stood where?”

  “Over here, by the sink.”

  She faced slightly away from the sink and glanced out the corner of her eye. She could just see the faintly glimmering shape of a man. “You could announce your presence once in a while. I really dislike the thought that you might be, well, you know, spying on me.”

  “In the bathing room?”

  “Exactly,” Sara agreed. “In the bathroom. I like my privacy.”

  “So you’ve said.”

  Sara flipped open her computer and waited for it to boot up. She wanted to check her calendar.

  “What do you mean by the words, holy shit?”

  Sara jumped. “Stop doing that!”

  “I have no other way to do it. I’m incorporeal, remember?”

  “Yeah, as if I’m likely to forget. Go haunt someone else.” As she scrolled through her datebook, Sara heard a long-suffering sigh from over her left shoulder. “What?”

  “You’d be rid of me so soon?”

  “So soon?” Sara swiveled around on her chair. “It’s been two months. You showed up here two months ago and you refuse to leave.”

  Sara heard his laughter, that familiar warm, deep, throaty laugh, and her stomach clenched. Yes, he had shown up two months ago, first in her shower, incorporeal, as he’d just reminded her, sending her screaming in terror from the bathing room; and then in her dreams, where he was about as corporeal as any man could get. Sara shivered despite the warmth of the room.

  “It’s not a matter of refusing to leave; I’m not permitted to leave.”

  “Well, why the hell not?” she grumbled. “Every other ghost leaves. They say a word or two, ask me to pass on a message, which I still refuse to do by the way, and they move on. So move on.”

  “I can’t comply with your request. It’s not up to me; I’ve already said as much. Besides, do you really want me gone?”

  Sara glanced over her shoulder in the general direction of the voice. “Don’t press your luck.”

  “Why not? You like my luck, as you call it.” The low, suggestive whisper right beside her ear made Sara flinch, and not because he’d startled her again.

  “Fucking horny ghost,” she muttered.

  He laughed. As annoyed as she was with him, Sara couldn’t suppress a grin. Yes, he was a horny son of a bitch, but her dreams since he’d arrived, oh my god, they’d been scorching. Last night’s encounter still lingered in both her mind and body.

  “So what’s holy shit?”

  “Huh?” Sara gave herself a mental shake.

  “You heard me.”

  She could almost visualize him rolling his eyes and a corner of her mouth twitched. “You’re awfully nosy for an incorporeal being.” Sara sighed. “All right, I’ll tell you, but chances are you won’t understand what I’m talking about.”

  “I don’t understand half of what you talk about, Sara. I’m just curious, that’s all.”

  “Right.” Sara snorted. “You’re such a bossy ghost I keep forgetting how truly impotent you are.”

  “Impotent?”

  Oh, I hit the mark with that jab.

  He roared at her. “Impotent, you say? Wait until you fall asleep, woman, and I’ll show you impotent!”

  Choking back her laughter, Sara managed to ask, “Is that a threat or a promise?”

  “Both.” He purred, and that one word sent Sara spiraling back into her dream.

  “Enough. I have work to do. I’ve been asked to pick someone up at the airport on Friday.” Sara studied her calendar. “I’ve got a meeting scheduled that day, but I might be able to switch it.”

  “So this is your holy shit, a trip to the airport?”

  “Yup.” Sara couldn’t help it. She smiled and her smile felt a little smug, even to her. “I’m picking up a publisher.”

  For a few seconds, there was complete silence in the kitchen. The lack of conversation surprised her. Sara had grown accustomed to his constant presence, even though he annoyed the hell out of her during her waking hours. She looked around the kitchen, scanning for his outline.

  “So someone is finally interested in your ghost stories, eh?”

  “Where’d you go?”

  “I’m over here, on the couch.”

  “You know, I really hate it when you move around like this. I like to know where you are. Can’t you wear bells or something?”

  He snorted. “It’s just as tiresome for me to stand in one place as it is for you. At least you can get out. I’m trapped in this damn house, haunting you until, well, until I’m not haunting you.”

  Sara rose from her chair and stretched. “I don’t know if she’s interested in my ghost stories, as you call them. I’ll see.” She filled the tea kettle with cold water and set it onto one of the gas burners. “I know it bothers you, but I’m going to make some coffee.”

  “Would you mind having tea instead?”

  “But I’m craving coffee and I’ve barely been able to use my new French press since you showed up.”

  “You can buy coffee anytime you want at that Starbucks place. I hate it when you make coffee. It’s downright cruel. I may not be able to drink it, but it smells so good. We didn’t have coffee when I was…”

  Sara interrupted. “But it’s my house and I want coffee. I didn’t sleep well last night.”

  “Is that so?”

  The voice was right at her neck again and Sara shivered. She swore she could feel the warmth of his breath against her skin, but she knew damn well ghosts didn’t breathe.

  “It seems to me you slept very well.”

  Sara turned around to face the ghost, despite the fact that she couldn’t see him. “Stop with the innuendos. You’re not being fair. I can’t help what I dream.”

  “Yes you can. You choose to dream of me.”

  “I do not. You enter my dreams uninvited.” Yeah right. He spoke the truth and she knew it.

  “But not unwelcome, I should say.”

  Sara turned the gas burner on. “At least I don’t have to worry about birth control in a dream,” she muttered.

  “What was that?”

  “I’m getting out the coffee grinder so you might want to make yourself scarce.” Ignoring his question, Sara pulled a bag of extra-bold Ethiopian coffee out of her freezer. She waved it in the air. “See? Pretend this is garlic. Be gone. I have work to do, I want a couple cups of coffee, and then I’m going for a hike. You skedaddle, you ghost.”

  He snorted. She heard him say, “Garlic is for vampires,” and then the voice was gone.

  Sara tilted her head and listened, but she heard nothing. B
lessed silence. Of course that didn’t mean he’d stay away for long. She wondered where he went when he vanished from her hearing. She’d asked a number of times, but he’d never given her an answer. Well, perhaps he didn’t know much more about his state of being than she did. In her experience, a lot of ghosts were pretty clueless about the reasons for their predicament.

  In truth, Sara didn’t mind his presence as much as she should. He was like a big, scary guard dog. Since he’d appeared, every other ghost had disappeared, and for that, Sara was grateful. This ghost business had become a real pain in the ass. They’d taken to dropping in all hours of the day or night. She could be in the midst of changing her clothes, or in the tub; it didn’t seem to matter to them. It was me, my, mine all the time. Fix this, fix that, talk to this person, talk to that person, find my wife and tell her blah-blah-blah.

  Enough already.

  Sara had dealt with ghosts her entire life and she’d wearied of their incessant demands. Spirits could request her help until hell froze over. She planned to continue to ignore them. Over the years she’d tried her best to do their bidding, to finish their unfinished work, and because of that she’d spent nights in police drunk tanks, hours in psychiatrists’ offices. One family had even threatened to kill her if she ever contacted them again.

  That’s what you get for trying to help. A big fat label stuck on your forehead that says – Certifiable. Yeah, well, that’s what my mom thinks of me, I’m one hundred percent certifiable.

  All those nights spent in terror, her head buried under the covers, crying her eyes out because the ghosts were all around and her mother wasn’t.

  Water under the bridge, girl, remember that. It’s nothing more than water under the bridge. You have a new life now, a new career, and what your mother thinks hasn’t mattered for years.

  “Your water’s boiling.”

  “Shit! You did it again! I nearly jumped out of my skin.”

  “I thought you’d have the coffee made by now and I was tempted. I remember, Sara.”

  Sara turned off the burner and poured a few tablespoons of whole coffee beans into the grinder. She ground them coarsely, dumped the fragrant coffee into the glass carafe, and poured in the hot water with a slow, steady hand. “Remember the fragrance of coffee, you mean?”

  “No, I remember your mother.”

  At his words, Sara dropped the tea kettle. Before she knew what was happening, she’d been shoved clear across the room onto her backside, out of splatter range of the scalding water.

  “What the hell is wrong with you?” he growled. “You have to be more careful.”

  Sara picked herself up and flipped open a cabinet. After grabbing a handful of dishtowels, she tossed them onto the spreading puddle and began to mop up the steaming water. “How did you do that?” It took every ounce of strength she had to keep the fear out of her voice.

  “Do what?”

  “Shove me out of the way like that.”

  “I don’t know that I did. Perhaps you jumped.”

  “No,” Sara rose to her feet and set the tea kettle back on the stove. “I didn’t jump. You pushed me. No ghost has ever been able to touch me before, I mean, not in real life. And how the hell do you know my mother?”

  There was no answer.

  “Hey, I asked you a question, ghost.”

  Still no answer.

  “Goddamn you. Get your ass back here and answer my question.”

  Nothing.

  Sara spun in a circle to make certain he’d gone. Ass is right. Yeah? Well he’s an ass who just saved yours. You could have thanked him.

  Thanked him? He’s the one who made me drop the tea kettle in the first place, by saying that… How did he know what I was thinking? And how does he know my mother?

  The coffee forgotten, Sara reached for the phone. She needed to talk to a real live human being. She’d been spending far too much time alone with a dead man.

  ***

  “So aren’t you excited?” Dalton jostled her shoulder as the two stood in line to buy their coffee. “Leah Rosen wants to meet you. You get to pick her up at the airport. What a coup!”

  Sara paid for two coffees and handed a cup to her friend. “I don’t know. I’m pretty nervous. I’m still not clear on how she learned about me.”

  “I am.” Dalton winked at her. “It was Geri. She knows somebody who knows somebody, and after she read your manuscripts, well, she called him. Mark Katov. He read all three of your books. Can you believe it?” Dalton pounded her on the back. “He said you’d be perfect for Leah Rosen. She’ll be in town for one day before she heads to San Jose for a week-long conference and she needs someone to chauffer her around the city. He gave her your name and described your stories. Geri figures it will be a great opportunity for you to meet her in person and talk to her about your books, especially this new one. Geri loves it. I love it, Sara. It’s great. They’re all great. I have no idea how you dream up these ideas.”

  Sara couldn’t help it, she laughed. “Overactive imagination, I guess.” She looked for an empty table, but they were all taken. “Want to go outside, sit in the sun?”

  “Sure.”

  The two women found a small table along the wrought iron rail overlooking the river. The morning was still brisk; Sara pulled on her jacket. “Are you warm enough?” she asked Dalton.

  “Oh yeah, I’m wearing this thick sweater. I’m fine. The sun feels good. So tell me,” Dalton slid her chair up to the table and sat down, “what exactly did Geri say?”

  “Well, she was a little vague on the details, but she asked me to pick Leah Rosen up at the airport on Friday. I think her plane gets in around one, so that means I need to ask my boss for the day off.”

  “And get your car washed?” Dalton asked.

  “Yeah.” Sara grinned. “No shit, get my car washed and vacuumed. It’s disgusting right now, a mud pit.”

  “Where will you take her? What do you think you’ll do?”

  Sara pulled the lid off her coffee cup, to let the brew cool down. “I don’t know how you drink it right out of the pot. It’s way too hot for me.”

  “Who cares about the coffee? Where will you take her?”

  “I don’t know. Geri said not to make any plans, that Leah would tell her what she wants to do. I hope it doesn’t involve a lot of driving in the city because you know me, I never drive there. I take mass transit and I walk. I only know how to find my way to a couple places and I hate parking.” Sara sipped her coffee. It was still too hot for her.

  “What books are you gonna bring? You absolutely have to bring some of your manuscripts.”

  Sara toyed with the plastic lid. “I haven’t thought about it. Maybe that’s kind of rude, you know, to hand her full-length manuscripts. I don’t even know the woman, other than by reputation. It seems kind of like objectifying her, as if she doesn’t matter as a person. I don’t want to be crass, act like she’s just a means to an end.”

  “Don’t be silly. That’s exactly what she is.” Dalton shook her head. “This is her job. It’s what Leah Rosen does. No, you have to take your manuscripts. What’s the worst she can say?”

  “Fuck off?” Sara laughed. “She can tell me to stick ‘em where the sun don’t shine?”

  “No.” Her friend was insistent. “This is what aspiring authors do. You have an opportunity here. Take the manuscripts. She’ll be interested, I know it. You’ll be spending most of the day with her. The least she can do is check you out.” Dalton fanned herself. “Christ, your work makes me feel like I need to buy my own personal ice machine.”

  Sara burst out laughing. “I wish I had your confidence.” She took a sip of her coffee.

  “Hey, I’m telling you, this is what a publisher does, she reads submissions. Geri told me she gave Leah Rosen all the details, and Leah said she wants to meet with you. What are you worried about?” Dalton reached for Sara’s hand and squeezed it. “What have you got to lose?”

  Sara gave a little cough. “Nothin
g but my pride,” she said. “I’m not a kiss-up.”

  “Would you like some lessons? ‘Cuz I can give you a few. I’m an expert in the art of butt-kissing.”

  Both women laughed. Sara pressed the plastic lid back onto her coffee cup. “You want to walk downtown, share a sandwich or something?”

  Dalton stood up and slung her purse over her shoulder. “Sure. Why not? I’ve got nowhere to be right now and we can talk about your delicious work in progress, or should I say, WIP?”

  “Work in progress is fine. LOL. Let’s go.”

  Dalton threaded her arm through Sara’s. “So tell me, I want to hear all about your latest chapter. Your ghost hero sounds wickedly seductive.”

  ***

  Sara pulled up to the curb in front of Dalton’s cottage.

  “You want to come in for a glass of wine?”

  Sara considered following her friend inside. She wasn’t quite sure she was ready to go home and face her ghostly guest. “Nah, that’s sweet, but no thanks. I have to come up with some excuse to skip work on Friday, and if I’m going to put a professional package together for Leah Rosen, well, I’d better get to work on it.”

  “Okay.” Dalton leaned over and gave her a peck on the cheek. “You let me know if you need any help, even if all you need is moral support. You call me any time. Bye”

  “I will. Bye, Dalton.” Sara waited to pull away until her friend had unlocked her front door and disappeared inside, a holdover from her childhood. Whenever her father had brought her home after one of their weekends together, he’d wait until she’d unlocked the front door and waved goodbye. Sara knew he wouldn’t leave until she’d closed the door behind her. Her father had loved her. Sara had never once doubted her father.

  Maybe dad sent my ghost. Yeah, right. And I’m the president of the United States. No, he’s nothing more than a sticky ghost and for some reason, which he either refuses to explain or can’t explain; he’s stuck to me.

  Forget the ghost, what about Leah Rosen? Geez, that’s a scary thought, me meeting with Leah Rosen. That frightens me far more than being haunted. Sara shook her head. I have to show her my best, nothing less will do. This might be my only chance to meet with a New York publisher face to face. And if she’d actually read my stuff? Wow.