Tugging the earbuds out of my ears, I shoved them into my pocket and then I sat, back stiff. “I had no idea until we got here that Sam was bringing me to Stacey. He conveniently left that out.”
Sam had the decency to look sheepish.
“And as Zayne can confirm,” I said to Stacey, “I didn’t know who Sam was. No one told me about him. If anyone had, I might’ve realized right off who he was.”
She stared at me. “This is real?” Her wide eyes darted to Zayne. “She can see him?”
“She can see ghosts and spirits.” Zayne dropped his arm on the table, next to the pack of the Twizzlers. “If she says Sam is here, he’s here.”
“I can’t...” She looked at where Sam was sitting, shaking her head. “Tell me what he looks like.”
I did just that, and Stacey pressed her palm to her mouth. “But you could’ve seen a picture of him online,” she reasoned. “That doesn’t mean anything.”
“She’s telling the truth,” Zayne insisted quietly, saving me from having to ask why in the Hell I would even be looking up a picture of Sam.
Stacey said something, but it was too muffled for me to understand. She lowered her hand, fingers curling into a tight ball over her heart. “Sam?”
“I’m here,” the spirit said, reaching for her but stopping short. “I’ve been here. Always.”
I repeated what he said, and Stacey’s face crumpled. “I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I just—I’m sorry. Tell him I’m—”
“He can hear you,” I said.
“He can hear me? Okay. I guess that makes sense.” Tears tracked down her cheeks as she looked at me and then Sam. “I miss you,” she whispered, lifting her hand from her chest to her chin.
“I miss you, too,” Sam said, and I repeated it.
“Oh God.” Her slim shoulders shook. “I’m just so sorry. I...”
Zayne made a sound of distress, reaching across the table. He placed his much larger hand over hers. “It’s okay,” he told her. “It’s okay.”
But it really wasn’t.
Normally I’d be more considerate of the emotions these types of situations caused, but I had zero craps to give at the moment and we didn’t have a lot of time.
“He has something he needs to tell you—”
“Tell both of them,” Sam corrected, and my eyes narrowed on the spirit. “I knew they were meeting today.”
A spirit had known and I hadn’t.
“They used to come here once a week after...well, after everything,” he added.
Nice.
That was just freaking great.
Hands opening and closing, I kept my eyes on Sam. “He has a message for both of you. Something to do with a school?”
Sam nodded and then twisted toward Stacey. “She can’t go back to that school. Something is happening there. It’s not safe.”
“You’re going to need to give me more detail, Sam. I need to know why it’s not safe.”
“He’s saying the school isn’t safe?” Zayne questioned.
“There’s a lot of...souls there. Too many. It’s like they’re gathering for something,” Sam explained, his form flickering more rapidly now. “I’ve been checking on her since...well, since I could, and it hasn’t always been like that.”
“What do you mean souls are gathering there?” I asked, and Zayne shifted forward.
“Souls. Dead people who haven’t crossed over—”
“Ghosts?” I suggested, and when he nodded, I glanced at Stacey, who was staring at Sam but not seeing him. “There are a lot of ghosts there? How many?”
Stacey’s eyes widened even further. “At school?”
The spirit nodded. “Over a hundred. I tried counting one day, but they disappear and they’re confused. Sort of running around all hectic-like. It’s like they’re stuck.”
“The ghosts are stuck at the school,” I repeated. “Over a hundred.”
“How can that happen?” Zayne asked.
“Spirits and ghosts can be summoned to a place,” I explained.
“Like through a Ouija board?” Stacey let out a nervous, wet-sounding laugh.
“Yeah, actually those things can work under the right circumstances,” I said. “But you almost never get who you think you’re communicating with. Not unless you know how to...channel a certain spirit, and even I can’t do that.”
Stacey stared at me. “They sell them in toy stores.”
Beside her, Sam laughed. “God, I missed that look on her face.” A smile appeared. “Did you know the Ouija board marketer fell to his death while supervising the build of a Ouija board factory?”
I frowned at him.
He shrugged. “Kind of freaky if you think about it.”
“How can ghosts be stuck?” Zayne asked.
“I don’t know. I’m sure there are spells that could do it, but I don’t know why you’d want to. A trapped ghost or even a spirt could become a wraith. Could take months or years, but being stuck would corrupt them,” I said, horrified by the possibility of something like that occurring. “How could this happen at a school?”
“It’s a Hellmouth,” Stacey murmured. “Layla and I weren’t joking when we said that.”
I ignored her. “Are the ghosts putting people in danger?”
“Someone fell down the steps a week ago. They were pushed by one of the ghosts,” Sam said.
When I repeated that, Stacey sat back against the booth. “A guy did fall down the steps. Last Tuesday. I don’t know the details, but I heard that it happened.”
“I’ve heard whispers,” Sam continued, and then he blinked out and returned in a more transparent form. “And yes, I’m being literal. I hear whispers when I’m here—about it not being much longer and that something is coming. I’ve tried to find the source but when I saw them, I knew I couldn’t get any closer. I can’t keep going back there. I want to, I want to keep her safe, but I’m... I’m afraid if I keep going back, they’ll see me and they’ll know I’m not like the others.”
A chill swept down my spine.
“What is he saying?” Zayne asked, pulling his hand away from Stacey’s. “Trin?”
“Who are they?” I swallowed. “Do you know who is whispering?”
Sam’s hazy form twisted toward me. “Shadow People.”
27
Shadow People.
Two words in the English language I’d never hoped to hear spoken out loud. Goose bumps spread across my arms.
“Oh, man,” I whispered.
“What?” Zayne touched my arm, and this time I didn’t pull away. “What’s going on?”
Pulse pounding, I gave a short shake of my head and focused on Sam. I needed to get as much information as possible out of him before he poofed into oblivion. “Have you heard them say what’s coming?”
“No.”
Even though he couldn’t confirm it, I had a feeling I knew. And there was something else I needed to know. I tipped forward. “How did you know what I was?”
“Because there’s someone there, at the school, who can do what you can,” Sam said, and another chill powered down my spine. “I’ve seen him talking to—Oh, man. It’s happening.”
I blinked, knowing what he meant. He was being pulled back. “Can you tell me what he looks like, Sam? I need—”
“I’ll try to come back as soon as I can.” He turned to Stacey, and for what I could see of his face, my heart cracked a little. “I wish I’d had the guts to tell you how I felt about you. I wish... I wish we had more time. Tell her that. Please? Tell her I did love her.” He lifted an arm that was more see-through than solid and touched her cheek. Stacey sucked in a sharp breath. “She felt that. Tell her it was me. And tell her I want her to be happy. That she needs to be happy.”
Without warning, the space beside Stacey was empty. He was gone, and I had a feeling he wasn’t coming right back.
“Dammit,” I muttered.
“What?” Stacey placed her fingers over the spot on her cheek. “What just happened?”
“You felt him when he touched your cheek,” I said, and then I told her what he’d said without looking at her as I spoke. I didn’t want to see the emotions her face would expose. “He’s gone now, but he said he’ll try to come back. He doesn’t know when.”
Or if he could again.
I left that part unspoken, because the message he’d imparted made it sound like he wasn’t entirely sure. He’d been coming back too much.
“Excuse me.” Zayne tapped my arm. “Can you let me out?”
I slid out of the booth and stepped aside as Zayne moved to where Sam had been sitting. He folded an arm around Stacey’s shoulders, tugging her against him as he spoke to her.
I cast my gaze to the pack of Twizzlers, pressing my lips together. I was a third wheel on a painfully intimate moment of two.
“When?” Her voice sounded rough when she spoke again. “When can he come back?”
“I don’t know. I have a feeling he’ll try, but...” I stared at the candy I’d actually never tried before, because it always looked gross to me. “But spirits are not meant to repeatedly visit the living.”
“Why not?” she demanded.
“Because moving on isn’t just the process of crossing over. It’s a continuous journey for the, um, the deceased, and if visits are continuous, it’s hard for those left behind to move on,” I explained, dropping my hands to my lap. “It’s hard for those who have died to find peace when they’re still wrapped up in the lives of the living. Spirits can come and go as they please, but there are rules. Their travels are monitored. Based on what he said, he’s been here a lot already. He’s been trying to get your attention for a while.”