I froze and Tracy kept walking.
As the man came closer I could see that the blood was mostly down one side and he was cradling his right arm, but it was sitting at an odd angle. He didnât seem to see me. He must have been in shock. Blood covered his chest and the right side of his face and his right thigh looked wrong. Was it broken too?
My stomach churned â the gory details coming into focus as he approached â but I couldnât pull my eyes away. I was vaguely aware of Tracy talking to me and of Johnny heading over to get a closer look at the guy. I knew he was a spirit and I knew that he hadnât been dead for very long. Spirits always manifested with the injuries from whatever caused them to die. It faded after a while; sometimes days, sometimes after a week or more. And it meant that I had to deal with it till then.
I finally looked away as my mouth filled with saliva and I fought the urge to throw up.
âWhatâs wrong, Maddie? You look like youâve seen a⦠oh, have you?â
I flinched, then remembered that she knew about my so-called gift. I just nodded.
âReally? Where?â
I pointed discreetly. âOver there. Heâs in pretty bad shape. Car accident, maybe.â
She winced. âI imagine there would be a few fatal accidents on this road over the years.â
âYes, but this one isâ¦â I didnât want to use the word fresh. âHe looks like it just happened.â
âWhat do you mean? How can you tell?â
I explained how they carry their injuries and she cringed.
I gestured toward the people around us. âEveryone is walking toward the clock. It must have just happened. It must be down there.â
Tracy took a few steps in that direction, but there was no way I wanted to see this guyâs body for real. âIâm not going down there,â I told her. âI canât.â
She nodded. âI understand. I just want to see if there is anything I can do to help. I have some healing crystals in my pocket. Can you wait here till I get back?â
âYes.â
I sat on a bench on the footpath and listened as Johnny explained to the ghost that he was dead and about the kinds of things he could do in order to cross over. I didnât want to look and I was relieved that the ghost was too dazed to realize I was looking straight at him earlier.
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
Once we finally got home and trudged up to my room, I remembered the silly things Johnny had done when Iâd met Blake. All I wanted to do was kick off my shoes and relax, but I had to set this annoying spirit straight first.
He leaned back in the chair in the corner. âWhat a day.â
âYeah. It went from bad to hellish, but you could have made things easier. You just decided to make my life a living hell.â
âWhat do you mean? How did I do that?â
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âWhat you did with Blake. I canât believe you did that. What were you doing?â
âNothing.â
âDonât give me that crap. Were you trying to make me look crazy in front of the local priest and his son?â I glared at him. âIt was nearly impossible to keep a straight face and concentrate on what they were saying. How can I ever get out of this place if they think Iâm nuts?â
Johnny was silent. I sat on the edge of my bed and kicked off my boots. He looked like Iâd just kicked his puppy, but even if he was feeling bad about it, it didnât excuse what he did.
âIâm sorry, Maddie. I wasnât thinking.â
âCome on, Johnny. You know how much I need to get home.â
âI know.â
âPlease donât do this to me.â
He looked at me with those soulful brown eyes and I softened. âJust donât do it again.â
He gave me a scoutsâ salute and crossed his heart. âI promise.â
âThis isnât funny.â
âI know. Sorry.â
âââ ââ ââ â âââ
I looked at my phoneâs screen. 8:50 am. I was ten minutes early for my first day of work and my nerves were jangling. Having nothing to do on the bus trip didnât make me feel any better. It gave me plenty of time to think.
Iâd been disappointed that I didnât get a chance to tell Kellie about the job because sheâd slept over a friendâs house last night. I had no idea where the others were this morning and Justina was being weird again. Sheâd kind of said hello, then ignored me.
I was also disappointed in my lack of progress in my short magic lesson after dinner. I pushed those emotions down. I had to concentrate today.
Ruby smiled as she unlocked the door from the inside and switched the sign to âopen.â âCome in.â
She told me where I could put my bag and showed me where the break room and the toilets were. Then there was the usual basic intro stuff and she made sure I knew how to use the cash register. It was hard to concentrate when my mind kept wandering back to the bloodied ghost yesterday. I wanted to talk to Ruby about it, but I didnât even want to think about it. Weird, I know, but my emotions were all over the place.
My dreams had been filled with visions of the dead man and all that blood, but I was determined to do well in this job, so I pushed thoughts of him out of my head. Again.
At about 9:30, Justina walked in and her eyes went wide. She looked at Ruby with a question in her eyes.
Ruby smiled and said, âHey, Justina. Maddie is our new assistant â Saschaâs replacement.â
Oh, my god! Justina works here?
âI will also be teaching her some stuff so she can catch up to the other girls in her class.â
Justina looked like she wanted to scream and hit something and I think my mouth was hanging open. âOh. Thatâs good.â
Liar. She didnât think it was good. Neither did I.
Ruby turned to me. âJustina usually works in the office with our online sales. Sheâs the techy one, so itâs a huge relief now that I donât have to deal with all of that stuff anymore.â
I relaxed a tiny bit at hearing that. Maybe we could keep out of each otherâs way.
Justina smiled and slipped into the office and Ruby continued with my orientation. A few customers came in and browsed around and Ruby served them while I watched.
A woman with long, dark hair wandered in after lunch and seemed to totter around like an elderly woman, but couldnât have been much older than me.
Ruby saw the concern on my face. âThatâs Jade,â she whispered. âShe lost her first child â he was stillborn â and she had some kind of breakdown. Loses touch with reality. Poor thing.â
My heart felt heavy in my chest as I watched her. Iâd spent some time with people with different mental problems the last few months and some of them had terrible stories, and this story made me feel infinitely sad.
She eventually made her way up to the counter with some amethyst crystals in her hand and placed them gently on the glass surface.
Ruby smiled. âHi Jade, how are you? Iâd like you to meet our new girl, Maddie.â She turned to me. âMaddie, this is Jade.â
We both said hi and when Jade looked at me, our eyes locked and it was like she was looking into my very soul.
Her jaw dropped and she whispered, âAdelinaâ¦â