Sullivan.â
Their relative sizes made it ridiculous that he should cower before her temper, but he did anyway.
The ghost was wearing a Cult and Jackyl T-shirt, a local band that recorded in North Vancouver. Henry was a little surprised it wasnât a Grateful Dead T-shirt. Heâd often suspected the universe had a really macabre, and pretty basic, sense of humor. Its arms still ended just above the wrist. Again, it seemed to be waiting.
Tony believed it wanted vengeance.
I suppose thatâs as good a theory as any
, Henry reflected. He sighed. â
Do
you want revenge on the person who took your hands?â
Impatience adding a first hint of personality to translucent features, the ghost slowly faded away.
Henry sighed again. âI take it thatâs a qualified yes.â
The apartment was empty when he emerged from his room. After a moment, he remembered it was Saturday and Tony would be working late.
âWhich is probably a good thing,â he announced to the lights of the city. He wondered if the ghost expected him to begin by finding the hands, and if he should be looking for the remains of flesh and bone or an ethereal pair quite possibly haunting someone else.
When Tony returned home after midnight, he was in his office with the door closed, deep in the complicated court politics of 1813 and more than a little concerned with his heroineâs refusal to follow the plot as outlined. Dawn nearly caught him still trying to decide whether Wellington would promote her betrothed to full colonel and he raced for the sanctuary of his bed having forgotten his spectral visitor in the nightâs work.
âThis is becoming irritating; do you at least know who has your hands?â
The ghost threw back its head and screamed. No sound emerged from the gaping black hole of a mouth, but Henry felt the hair lift off the back of his neck and a cold dread wrap around his heart. While the scream endured, he thought he sensed a multitude of spirits within the scream; all shrieking in unison, all lamenting the injustice of their deaths. His lips drew off his teeth in an involuntary snarl.
âHenry? Henry! Are you okay?â
The ghostâs face, distended by the continuing scream, faded last.
âHenry!â
It took him a moment to realize that the pounding wasnât his heartâit was Tony, banging frantically on the bedroom door. He shook himself free of the lingering uneasiness and padded across the room, the carpet cold and damp against his bare feet. Releasing the bolts, he called, âIâm all right.â
When he opened the door, Tony nearly fell into his arms.
Eyes wide, panting as though heâd just run a race, Tony pulled back far enough to see for himself that Henry was unharmed. âI heard . . . no, I felt . . . it was . . .â His fingers tightened around Henryâs bare shoulders. âWhat happened? Was it the ghost?â
âIâm only guessing, but I think I asked it a question with a negative answer.â
âNegative?â Tonyâs voice rose to an incredulous squeak and he let his arms drop to his side. âIâll say it was
negative.
It was bottom of the pit, soul-sucking, annihilation!â
âIt wasnât that bad . . .â
âMaybe not for you!â
Concerned, Henry studied Tonyâs face. âAre
you
all right?â
âI guess.â He drew in a deep breath, released it slowly, and nodded. âYeah. Iâm okay. But Iâm gonna stay right here and watch you dress.â Propped up on one shoulder, he sagged against the doorframe, too frightened to be tough, or independent, or even interested in Henryâs nakedness. âI donât want to be alone.â
âDo you want to know what happened?â From Tonyâs expression, it was clear that he hadnât needed to ask. While he pulled on his clothes, Henry described what had occurred when