Read The Secrets of Ghosts Online

Authors: Sarah Painter

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Women

The Secrets of Ghosts (31 page)

‘She’s here?’ The sudden need in his face was heartbreaking. ‘Tell her I love her.’

‘Henry’s here,’ Katie said to Violet. ‘He says he loves you.’

Violet clasped her hands to her chest and smiled, tears shining in her eyes. ‘Tell him I love him for ever.’

‘Right-oh,’ Katie said, but Max had hold of her arm, pulling her close. He put both hands on her cheeks and made her look at him. He was pale, his lips thin. ‘I just saw a ghost.’

‘Violet. Yes.’

‘Did you tell him, yet?’ Violet said, her voice close.

‘Just a sec,’ Katie said. Looking into Max’s eyes, she said, ‘Are you okay?’

‘I will be.’ He let his hands drop as if suddenly realising that he’d been touching Katie. ‘Sorry.’

‘It’s okay. It’s a shock.’ She couldn’t help adding. ‘I did tell you.’

‘I know. And I believed you. I thought I believed you. I just—’ He stopped. ‘It’s a shock.’

‘What’s more interesting is why did me touching Violet make her solid enough for you to see?’

‘I think we should go to the pub,’ Max said. ‘Right now.’

‘Okay,’ Katie said. ‘If that’s what you feel like doing...’ Honestly, show a man evidence of the afterlife and all he wanted to do was go and play pool and drink beer. She really didn’t know anything about the opposite sex.

Max practically carried her out of the hotel, he was so desperate to get out. Once they were in Katie’s car and almost at the centre of Pendleford, he said, ‘Shall I show you the museum?’

‘I thought you wanted to go to the pub?’

‘That was just the first thing that came into my head. There were ghosts around. I wasn’t thinking straight.’ He looked at her. ‘Why are you so calm?’

‘I’ve had time to get used to it.’ And I’m not that calm.

‘That’s not it,’ Max said, staring at her with eyebrows raised. ‘Back in the beginning, when that table was flying around the bar—’ He stopped. ‘Was that real, then? Christ.’

Katie concentrated on parking the car. It was strange to be described as calm. She always felt such an insecure mess inside.

‘How are you not freaking out?’

Katie applied the handbrake and turned to face Max. ‘You know I told you that my family has certain abilities? It’s more than that, really. It’s like having a totally different way of seeing the world. Once you know that magic exists, that people can be cursed or cured with words, it colours everything. You can’t help seeing magic in everything around you.’

‘That’s just like conning,’ Max said. He held up a hand to stop Katie interrupting. ‘Not that I’m saying your stuff is dishonest — it’s just that when you’ve been brought up to grift, you see it everywhere. It changes the way you see things. Situations. People. Everything.’

Katie nodded. ‘You can’t switch it off. If there’s a plane crash on the news, I wonder if the pilot was hexed—’

‘And if I see a total bastard waving wads of cash around, I get an itch to relieve him of it.’ He looked at her carefully. ‘Did you just say “magic”?’

‘What else do you call the ability to find lost things, to know what a person needs, to tell fortunes, to stop an argument with some herbs, to—?’

He reached out and cupped her cheek. ‘Magic and ghosts. Okay.’

‘Okay?’ Katie said. ‘Just like that?’

He leaned across and kissed her quickly. ‘Just like that.’

Katie grabbed the front of his T-shirt and hauled him back for a proper kiss. She was definitely getting better at it. She was able to shut her mind off for whole seconds at a time. She opened her eyes and watched his eyelids and eyelashes close up, the pores of his skin, felt the slight scrape of his stubble on her cheek.

Max pulled away. ‘I lost you again, didn’t I?’

‘No,’ Katie lied.

‘You think too much,’ he said and got out of the car.

‘That’s impossible,’ Katie said, following him.

The museum was just as tiny as Max described. It occupied the bottom floor of a small Tudor house, up a narrow cobbled street. The house was packed in by cottages on either side, which almost seemed to be holding up its sagging walls. The half-timbered façade was bowing outwards, and the roof looked as if it was going to come down at any moment. There was a small printed card in the bottom pane of one of the small windows. It had faded in the sun, but up close Katie could read the words ‘Pendleford Folk Museum. Open Daily. Ring Bell’.

The woman who answered the door wasn’t as old as Max had described. Maybe only in her eighties or nineties. She had white hair and was dressed in moss-green tweed. She led them to a surprisingly bright and modern-looking exhibition and then shuffled off in what appeared to be tweed slippers.

Katie scanned the printed boards, skimming over the history of Pendleford as a Roman settlement, through Saxon times, to its prosperous seventeenth-century years as part of the textile industry. She was caught by an image of a weaver’s cottage, realising that it was familiar to her as the crystal shop on Silver Street.

‘Over here.’ Max pointed to a board dedicated to the Beaufort family. It described the history of the Beaufort estate, rehashing the information Katie had already cribbed from the Internet. Next to it was a glass-fronted cabinet with the letters Max had photographed. The display read, ‘The mysterious disappearance of an heiress’.

Violet Beaufort was an enigma even before her mysterious disappearance in 1937. A socialite heiress with a penchant for archaeology, she is known to have taken a great personal interest in the Neolithic excavations at nearby Avebury and Windmill Hill
.

When she first went missing, it was widely assumed that she had eloped with Alexander James, a wealthy Yorkshire businessman who was conducting the archaeological digs, some of the first of their kind in Britain. Love letters (fig. 1-5) from Alexander seem to bear this out, although the couple must have left Britain as there are no recorded sightings of either one after July, 1937
.

Some locals still believe that something more sinister occurred and that a police investigation was hushed up and, perhaps, even cut short, by Lord Beaufort, who was mindful of the family’s reputation and wished to avoid further scandal
.

‘Have you asked yourself why there aren’t any letters from Violet?’

Katie looked at Max. ‘She didn’t love Alexander, she loved Henry. She told me—’

‘Okay,’ Max said, ‘but why aren’t there letters between her and Henry? Why isn’t Henry mentioned in any of the news stories?’

Katie shrugged. ‘Violet’s affair with Henry was secret. They just did a good job of keeping it that way.’

‘But she must’ve been murdered. Don’t you think it would’ve come out during the investigation?’

‘Don’t say that. Maybe she eloped with Henry. Maybe she can’t tell me how she died because she really can’t remember. Maybe she lived a long and happy life in America and died in her sleep aged eighty and the Violet I know is just an echo of her younger self or something. Why does it have to be murder?’

‘Hey, I’m not the bad guy. I’m just pointing out the most likely scenario.’

‘Well, don’t.’ Katie knew she was being ridiculous but she liked Violet. She knew she had to work out what happened to her, but at the same time she simply didn’t want to know.

‘I just don’t see why you’re so quick to trust them.’

Katie’s hand flew to her necklace. ‘I’m not.’

Max was clearly frustrated, but Katie couldn’t come up with an answer that would make him happy. Unless she lied.

‘I’m out of options,’ she said.

‘What makes you think you can trust Henry?’

‘We’ve been over this,’ Katie said. Her head was pounding again and she wanted to lie on the sofa in the quiet of the library, not argue with Max.

‘And you’re still not listening. These things are dead. They are echoes or spirits or whatever, but they’re not even people any more.’

‘They’re inside my head,’ Katie said. ‘It’s like the top layers of my skin have been peeled back and I’m feeling everything all the time. I can’t go on. I’m tired. I’m so bloody tired.’

‘I know.’ Max reached for her. ‘I know. I’m sorry. I wish I could do something. Can I do something?’ He looked so sweet and earnest and Katie leaned against him, feeling a rush of gratitude that he was there. She couldn’t believe she used to think he looked predatory. He was always watching, always calculating, but he had been trained that way. It wasn’t his fault.

‘Please, hold off,’ he said, speaking into the top of her head. ‘Just give us a bit more time to research this stuff. Talk to that woman, Hannah, again. Talk it through with Gwen.’

‘Okay,’ Katie said. ‘Another few days won’t do any harm. Violet’s waited this long But, then, I’m going to do it. I’m going to link Henry and Violet. I’m not doing it for him, I’m not even doing it so he’ll help me-

Max tightened his arms around her. ‘He’s promised you?’

‘He says he can help me control the sight or whatever we’re going to call it.’

‘Ghost whispering,’ Max said

Katie smiled into the soft fabric of his t-shirt. ‘If you like. But this is for Violet. She’s had such a crap deal and I can give her this. It’s not much, I mean she’ll still be dead, but it’s something.’

‘What if it doesn’t work, what if something goes wrong?’

‘I’ll give you a sign. I’ll give a big cheesy thumbs up,’ Katie stepped away and demonstrated, giving a wide fake smile to go with it. ‘If I do this you know I’m in trouble.’

‘Great,’ Max said, looking more unhappy than ever. ‘Then what do I do?’

Chapter 27

Katie had been hoping to sit somewhere quiet with Max for five minutes before her shift started and do some serious kissing. She felt in need of a boost and kissing Max was like being plugged into a car battery. In a good way. The scent of pipe smoke told her that wasn’t going to happen.
Shouldn’t have arranged to meet in the library
.
Stupid
.

‘You are making me stronger,’ Henry said. ‘I can feel it. I’m more connected. I can see more.’

‘That’s nice,’ Katie said, still thinking about how much she wanted to kiss Max. She wanted Henry to go. She wanted to be alone with Max and have just a couple of minutes to herself, then his words sank in. ‘Wait a minute. What do you mean “connected”? To this world or the spirit world?’

‘Both,’ Henry said, looking smug. ‘I’m hearing all kinds of things. For example, has your young man told you why he wanted to connect to the other side?’

‘Max? A medium told him there was a message for him. He didn’t really believe it, but these things can get stuck in your mind, you know—’

‘Was the message from a young lady of his acquaintance?’

‘I don’t know,’ Katie said, her stomach suddenly cold. ‘What do you know?’

Henry waved a hand. ‘I would say lover.’ He rolled the word around his mouth, as if he was enjoying himself. ‘These days, I believe the term is “girlfriend”.’

‘Max wanted a message from his girlfriend?’ Katie said.

‘What girlfriend?’ Max walked in, wearing his black work shirt and a name badge.

‘Henry’s here.’ Katie moved closer to the ghost. She felt the coldness of Henry, but pictured light filling her, warming her up, and she felt a little less chilled. Maybe Hannah was right. If she held onto the light, she could get close to the ghosts, help them, without passing out. That would be nice.

Max stared to the left of Katie, then shook his head. ‘Can’t see him. Maybe if I—’ He screwed up his eyes into a squint and tilted his head to one side.

‘He killed her.’ Henry’s voice was flat with none of his usual teasing tone.

Katie felt the energy rush out of her. Henry seemed taller suddenly. ‘What?’

‘Ask him,’ Henry said.

‘No.’ Katie shook her head. ‘No.’

‘What’s wrong?’ Max stopped squinting.

‘You’re lying,’ Katie said.

‘Are you talking to me or him?’ Max took a step towards her and Katie took a step back. ‘He says you killed your girlfriend.’

The colour went out of Max’s face. After a long, horrible moment, he said, ‘Did Laura tell him that? Is she—?’

‘You’re not denying it.’ Katie took another step, edging towards the doorway. Fear was thumping through her now. She was such an idiot. No intuition. No clue on who to trust. He’d told her he was dodgy but she hadn’t believed him. Hadn’t wanted to believe him. Had been seduced by his nice voice and lopsided smile and warm eyes. She’d listened to Lily Thomas, trusted her, and now she’d made the same mistake all over again. Another step.

‘It was an accident,’ Max said, very quietly. So quietly that Katie almost didn’t hear him. There was a roaring in her ears but her mind felt frozen solid. As if it had shut down.

‘I have to go.’ Katie stumbled out of the room. She ran through the hallway and out of the front door. Outside, the air was like soup. The mugginess of the last day had intensified. Katie dragged in warm breaths, trying to calm her heart, trying to think clearly. She wasn’t a kid, any more. She wasn’t helpless. Max wasn’t going to hurt her. Apart from anything else, they were in a hotel. A very public place. She would get Anna or Jo or even Patrick to tell him to leave and she wouldn’t even have to see him again. Not ever.

The light had gone strange. Filmic. Katie half expected to see floodlights and cameras. The colours of the garden were saturated, the edges of everything clearly defined, making it look hyper real or like a painted backdrop. There was a roll of thunder somewhere far off and fat rain drops began to fall. The weather was finally breaking. And then the rain got heavier and she realised she was getting drenched.

‘Katie. Can I talk to you?’ Max was there. Of course he was.

‘No,’ Katie said. She walked past him and ducked into the large porch. Through the glass panels of the front door, she could see Anna step behind Reception. She could open the door and ask her to phone the police. Max was a thief and a liar and, maybe, a killer.

‘Please.’ He reached out as she walked past and she turned, feeling fury thump through her body.

‘This is not a rom com. This is not the bit when we stand in the rain and you make a speech and make everything all right.’

‘Laura.’ Max swallowed. ‘It was an accident. I was driving. It was dark and the road was really wet and we were arguing. It was three years ago and I’ve felt terrible ever since. When Barton said he had a message for me, from Laura, it hit me hard. I didn’t believe him but I wanted to believe him — you know that feeling when—’

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