memory?â
âNaturally,â he said. His expression filled with a gentle, distant sorrow. âA strong one. Iâll make it into another bullet at some point.â
âThank you,â I said. âFor helping me.â
âI must admit, I did not put the poor brute down exclusively for your sake, wizard. You represent a feast for any wraith. Fresh from the world of the living, still with a touch of vitality upon you, and full to bursting with fresh, unfaded memories. The wraith that ate you would become powerfulâa dire, fell creature indeed. One that could threaten the world of the living as easily as it could the world of spirit. I wonât have that.â
âOh,â I said. âThanks anyway.â
Stu nodded and offered me his hand. I took it, rose, and said, âI need to talk to Mort.â
Even as I spoke, I saw two more wraiths appear from the darkness. I checked behind me and saw more coming, drifting with effortless motions and deceptive speed.
âIf you get me inside Mortâs threshold, Iâll be safe from them,â I said, nodding to the wraiths. âI donât know how to defend myself against them. Theyâll kill me. And if that happens, youâll have that monster wraith on your hands.â
âNot if I kill you first,â Stu said calmly, tapping a finger on the handle of his pistol.
I turned my head slightly to one side, eyeing him, studying his face. âNah,â I said. âWonât happen.â
âHow would you know, spook?â he asked in a flat voice. But he couldnât keep the smile out of his eyes.
âIâm a wizard,â I said, infusing my voice with portentous undertones. âWe have our ways.â
He remained silent, expression stern, but his eyes danced.
I sobered. âAnd those wraiths are getting closer, man.â
Stu snorted and said, âThe wraiths are always getting closer.â Then he drew his pistol and pointed it at my chest. âI hereby take you prisoner, late wizard. Keep your hands in plain sight, follow all my verbal instructions, and weâll do splendidly.â
I showed him my hands. âOh. Uh. Okay.â
Stu nodded sharply. âAbout face, then. Letâs go talk to the little bald man.â
Chapter Four
I followed Stu through the front door (dammit, tingle, ouch), and paused on the other side to consider that fact for a moment. Only a member of the householdâs family could issue an invitation that would let an immaterial entity past the homeâs threshold.
So. Sir Stuart was practically family around Mortâs place. Unless he was literal family. Hauntings, after all, have historically been known to remain with a specific family lineage. Could Stu be one of Mortâs ancestors, here to watch out for his familial posterity? Or had the little ectomancer always possessed an odd sort of family, one I had never known about?
Interesting. It would be wise to keep my eyes open.
The house looked much different. What had been a cheesily staged séance room had become a living room with a sofa, love seat, and comfortable chairs. Iâd seen only part of the rest of the house, but as I walked with Sir Stuart, I could see that the dismal little den of a house had been renovated, redecorated, and otherwise made more beautiful. Stu guided me to a room that was part library, part office, with a fire crackling in the fireplace.
Mortimer Lindquist seemed to have finally given in to the inevitable. Iâd seen him with a bad toupee, and with an even worse comb-over, but this was the first time Iâd seen him sporting a full-on Charles Xavier. The unbroken shine of his pate looked a lot better than the partial coverage. Heâd lost weight, too, since last Iâd seen him. I mean, he wasnât going to be modeling for Abercrombie & Fitch or anything, but heâd definitely dropped from self-destructively obese down to merely stout. He was in