webnovel

THE GIRL AND THE GHOST

THE GHOST KNEW his master was about to die, and he wasn’t exactly unhappy about it. He knew that sounded bad. You’d think, after all those years together, that even he might have felt a twinge of sadness about the whole situation. But it’s hard to feel sorry for someone when: a) you’re a ghost, and everyone knows ghosts don’t have hearts, and b) that someone made her living out of forcing you to make other people miserable. He stared at her now as she lay on the narrow bed, gray and gaunt in the light of the full moon, her breath rasping and shallow. Watching her teeter slowly toward the end was a bit like watching a grape slowly become a raisin: the years had sucked the life and vitality out of her until she was nothing but a wrinkled shell of her former self. “Well,” she wheezed, squinting at him. Well, he said. “One more for the road, eh?” she said, nodding to the full moon out the window. And she grimaced as she offered him the ring finger of her right hand, as she had done so many times before. The ghost nodded. It seemed frivolous, but after all, he still needed to eat, whether or not his master lay dying. As he bent his head over the wrinkled hand, his sharp little teeth pricking the skin worn and calloused from time and use, the witch let out a sharp breath. Her blood used to be rich and strong and so thick with her magic that the ghost could get himself drunk on it, if he wasn’t careful. Now all he tasted was the stale tang of age, the sour notesthat came with impending death, and a bitter aftertaste he couldn’t quite place. Regret, perhaps. It was the regret that was hardest to swallow. The ghost drank nothing more than he had to, finishing quickly and sealing the tiny pinpricks of his teeth on her skin with spit. It is done, he told her, the words familiar as a favorite song, the ritual as comforting as a warm blanket. And I am bound to you, until the end. The witch patted his horned head gently. Her touch surprised him —she had never been particularly affectionate. “Well,” she said, her voice nothing more than a sigh. “The end is now.” And she turned her head to the window, where the sun was just rising over the cusp of the world, and died.

Ayomide_kusimo · Urban
Not enough ratings
35 Chs

chapter 23

Girl

THEPAWANGHADcome into town driving a trimlittle camper that he'd

parked on the very edge of the village, where the neat, orderly paddy

fields butted up against an unapologetically wild, unruly tangle of

forest, "so as to keep out ofeveryone's way," he'd said. Such was

the demand for his services as a handler of unruly spirits that he saw

no use in settling down in one place. "I bring my home with me

wherever I go," he'd told Suraya's mother earnestly as he left. "And I

help whoever I can, insha Allah."

So, even in the inky darkness of midnight under a cloud-clogged

sky, it was easy enough for Suraya and Pink to sneak past Mama

snoring gently in her usual seat in front of the flickering TV screen

and out of the house, through the paths and shortcuts as familiar as

the lines on her own palm, to where the battered camper stood, a

faint light glowing from one window.

From his perch on Suraya's shoulder, Pink sniffed. Explain to me

why we are doing this again?

"I told you," Suraya whispered back. "There's something about

this guy that just doesn't feel right. I want to know what he's up to."

Be careful,he toldher. But she didn't answer; she was too busy

sidling up against the walls of the camper, stretching on her tiptoes

to peek into its streaky windows.

They are too high for you,he pointed out helpfully.And anyway,

the curtains are closed. You would not be able to see.

She glared at him. "All right, then, Mr. Helpful, you go in there and

tell me what you see."

He sniffed again and hopped off her shoulder and toward the

door of the camper. In the darkness, she could just make out his little

body as it wriggled through the keyhole and disappeared.

He was gone a long time. Suraya shifted her weight from one foot

to the other as she waited, wiping the sweat that dripped from her

brow with the back of her hand, trying to ignore the shadows that

seemed to waver and shift as she watched, the rustling and

whispering that wafted from the undergrowth. It's just the trees,she

told herself. Just the wind blowing through the branches. Nothing to

worry about.

Then she heard a sound that had nothing to do with the trees at

all, or the screeches of the insects that sang loudly in the still night.

The click of a door handle.

She turned just in time to see the door of the camper swing

slowly, silently open.

There was nobody there. There was nothing but the empty

doorway, faintly illuminated by the light inside the camper.

Suraya felt her body begin to tremble all over, and she turned

away from the yawning emptiness, ready to run.

Suraya.

She looked back. "Pink?"

She feltthe familiar, reassuring tap of his little feet as helanded

on her shoulder. It's all right. There's nobody here. He's out.

Suraya took a deep, shaky breath, trying to steady her thundering

heart. "Excellent. Now let's go see what's going on."

She climbed up the steps of the camper slowly, partly to make

sure she didn't make a sound, partly because her knees still felt

decidedly wobbly.

Inside, the camper was tidy, organized, and achingly,

disappointingly normal. The pawang had left a small lamp on, its

fluorescent glow straining to light its surroundings. A cursory glance

through the contents of the cupboards revealed a small space

dedicated to basic cookery ingredients—a little carafe of canola oil, glass jars with salt and sugar beached along the sides, bottles of

sauces in every shade and spice variant, from the caramel darkness

of sweet soy sauce to the flaming red of a sauce made with tiny,

dangerously hot bird's-eye chilis. The rest held row upon row of

leather- and clothbound books, some new, some with flakes of

material peeling off the spines like sunburned skin. There were no

photographs or ornaments to provide some insight into his solitary

life, and no little messes; no papers strewn carelessly over tabletops,

no crumpled piles of dirty clothes left to fester on the floor.

"A place for everything, and everything in its place," she

whispered to herself. It was something Mama often said when

Suraya's room started getting out of control; she didn't think the

pawang had ever been out of control in his life.

Pink had peeled himself from her shoulder and gone exploring on

his own, and she'd almost forgotten where he was until she heard a

small gasp from the bedroom.

Suraya. Come here.

"Hmm?" She ran her hand over the multicolored spines of the

books, trying to make out their titles in the dim light. "In a minute,

Pink."

Now.Something in his voice made her look up. You need to see

this.

She walked down the narrow little corridor toward him.

The first thing she noticed was the little bed, perfectly made, the

blue bedspread folded so neatly and so tightly over the corners that

each one was as sharp as a knife's edge.

The second thing she noticed was Pink, sitting squarely in the

center of that smooth blue bedspread, his mouth set in a grim line,

staring at something right behind her.

The third thing she noticed, as she slowly turned around, was a

wall filled with row upon row of shelves, from floor to ceiling, fitting

neatly around the narrow sliver of doorway she'd just come through.

The fourth thing she noticed was the jars.

There were so many of them, lined up along each shelf like

sentinels, tall jars, thin jars, fat jars, each made of clear glass with a

silver top screwed on tight.

And inside each one, a dark shape.

Suraya frowned and took a step closer. One jar held what she

recognized as a musang, thetype of civet that often scrabbled lightly

across their roof in the light of the moon, curled up with itseyes shut

tight. One heldan owl with downy gray feathers and long talons that

ended in wicked points; its eyes too were closed. One—and it was at

this point that Suraya began to tremble so hard that she felt her teeth

tap-tap-tapping against each other in her mouth—held a baby,

completely naked, its skin tinged a sickly green, its ears tapering at

the tips, the sharp points of tiny fangs resting against its bottom lip

as it slept. And more, so many more things she couldn't even

recognize, the stuff of spite and nightmares.

Taking a deep breath, Suraya bent forward to peer more closely

into one of the jars in which there rested something she couldn't

quite make out.

Two tiny eyes peered back.

They sat in a tiny face, and the face belonged to a tiny figure, no

bigger than the tip of her little finger. It was black all over, and its little

limbs ended in wickedly clawed fingers and toes, and it looked at her

without blinking.

She hadoften read about little girls who found imps and fairies in

the woods andmade friends with them. This little imp did not look

like it wanted to make friends.

As she watched, it narrowed its eyes, bared a mouth full of sharp,

pointed fangs at her, and hissed with such venom that its glass

prison shook.

She backed away quickly, her hands shaking.

Row upon rowof jars, row upon row of dark shapes that had

begun to move restlessly against their glass confines. And they were

all staring right at her.

Suraya felt her heart pounding in her ears. Each stare pierced

her skin like a thousand tiny pinpricks, and yet somehow she

couldn't move.

Run,she heard a voice whisper, like the rustling of old leaves,

then another, then another, then another, louder and louder until the

rustle built itself up into a roar. RUN RUN RUNRUN RUN RUN RUN

RUN RUN.

Suraya. Pink's voice, urgent and scared, brought her abruptly

back to herself. I suggest you do as they tell you.

And with her ghost clinging to her left shoulder, Suraya raced out

of the camper and back home, the words still echoing in her ear with

every step.

In the shadows of the restless banana trees, the pawang

watched her go. Behind the smudged lenses of his glasses, his eyes

gleamed.