lizard?”
Kylie frowned, but her concern wasn’t about herself. “Do you remember your name?” Kylie held her breath.
The spirit met Kylie’s eyes and her brow tightened in puzzlement. Then she stood up and walked to Kylie’s window. Staring out in silence, she finally turned around. “Someone is looking for you.”
“Do you remember your name?” Kylie repeated her question.
Pulling her red hair over her shoulder, the spirit twirled it into a rope. The exact same way Kylie had watched Holiday do just a little bit ago. The ghost looked back. “They want you to come to them.”
Kylie’s chest tightened a bit. “Let’s talk about you right now,” Kylie said, making a mental decision to focus on one problem at a time.
“But you are so much more interesting. There’s all this mystery around you. A lot of questions to be answered. I can feel your emotions, you know. That’s what faes do. We feel what other people feel.”
“I know,” Kylie said, frustrated and scared about the spirit’s real identity, but she fought the angst back so she could learn more. Because if she was Holiday, then maybe Kylie could do something, change something to prevent …
“I used to be able to touch people and make them feel better, but that went away.”
“Why did it go away?” Kylie asked.
She frowned. “I’m not completely sure. I think I did something bad.” The ghost’s bright green eyes filled with tears. “I hurt people.”
Kylie sensed the spirit’s pain, her remorse, but she couldn’t deny feeling a bit of reprieve from the confession. Holiday wouldn’t do anything wrong. She was too good-hearted. Cared too much.
“Maybe you didn’t mean to hurt them,” Kylie said, wanting to help. She wrapped her arms around herself as protection against the chill that accompanied a spiritual being.
“I don’t know. I think I was angry.” The spirit stared at the wall as if lost in thought and then she reached up and touched her throat.
Kylie noticed the painful-looking bruises around the ghost’s neck.
“What happened to you?” Kylie asked, a knot forming in her throat at the thought of being choked to death.
The woman looked back at Kylie, her eyes still wet with emotion. “I’m dead.”
Kylie nodded. “I know.” She waited a second. “What happened?”
The spirit shook her head. “It’s like bits and pieces of a bad nightmare. But I think it has something to do with why I’m here. I mean, I should have left by now … We … supernaturals don’t hang around.” She looked down and her image started to fade. “I need to go figure this out. I think it’s important.”
“I’ll help you any way I can,” Kylie said, remembering Holiday saying the same thing about very few non-humans hanging around after they died. “If you can tell me your name, I might be able to find something on the computer that will help us.”
The spirit moved to the window and touched the pane of glass. A layer of ice appeared on the window, the frost blurring the view outside. “You’d better start figuring out your own problems, too.”
“I’m trying,” Kylie said, again seeing Holiday’s personality in the spirit and not liking it. “What’s your name?” Kylie insisted.
The spirit’s figure faded at the same rate as the ice on the window. Then she spoke. “I think it’s Hannah or Holly. Something like that.”
“No,” Kylie said, her own voice little more than a whisper.
She then grabbed a clip and put her hair up, determined to go see Holiday, not even sure what she would or wouldn’t tell the camp leader. Kylie just needed to see Holiday alive.
Kylie moved out of her room and found the main room in the cabin empty. She started for the door and stopped. Who was supposed to be shadowing her? Not that Kylie really cared. She was just going to the office, but she’d already gotten in trouble once with Burnett about the shadowing business, and she didn’t want to go for two.
“Della?”