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Authors: Brian Mercer

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BOOK: Aftersight
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"Why did you pick me? Out of everyone, why me?"

The silence lasted so long I didn't expect she was going to answer me. Then she said,
"I think that's how it works, isn't it? I'm supposed to help you and you're supposed to help me. You wouldn't have found these people without me, would you?"

"I guess not."

There was a triple knock at the door. Sir Alex's uniformed manservant opened it and stepped inside. "They've arrived, Miss. May I show them in?"

"Sure. Thanks."

A stocky couple in their mid-thirties walked in looking lost and bewildered. I stood as they crossed the room. I had to restrain myself from hugging them both. "Mrs. Clarke. Mr. Clarke. I'm Becky." We shook hands. "Thanks for meeting with me."

The couple nodded, mumbled greetings, gazed about the well-appointed parlor.

"Okay, maybe we should start." I waved them toward the sofa across from my chair. "Please have a seat." I sat and closed my eyes, trying to pretend I wasn't as self-conscious as I felt. There were so many things I wanted to say, I didn't know where to start. I had to remind myself that my connecting with these people wasn't the point of the meeting.

"Jenny wants you to know how sorry she is for all the pain she's caused you. She wants you to know that it was an accident, that she didn't mean to hurt herself."

My eyes were closed. I didn't see Mrs. Clarke choke up, Mr. Clarke squeeze her hand, but I felt it easily enough. "Jenny's showing me a shelf with, like, shoes on it. Something from a closet, maybe. She's saying that it broke when she was standing on it and that she couldn't get back up. She couldn't free herself."

I felt Mrs. Clarke's face flush. I peeked enough to see her fumble a handkerchief to her nose and lay her head against Mr. Clarke's shoulder.

"She's showing me a jump rope with pink handles and little silver sparkles," I went on.

"That was—" Mrs. Clarke began. Her words cut off in a little sob.

"That was the cord that was found around Jenny's neck," Mr. Clarke explained. "That wasn't printed in the press. How did you know about it?"

"Jenny's saying that it's important for you to believe that it's really her. This is her way of showing you that it's her."

In my mind's eye, I saw a black cloth with diamonds scattered over it. The diamonds quickly disappeared but the black cloth remained.

"Diamonds?" I whispered to myself. "Black cloth? Black velvet? Velvet?" Then louder, to the Clarkes. "Velvet. Does that have any meaning for you?"

"Oh, dear," Mrs. Clarke exclaimed.

I shook my head, waiting for an explanation.

"Velvet was the name of her rabbit," Mr. Clarke said. "Velvet died just before... just before the accident and Jenny had been very sad about it. We thought that was the reason why..."

"Wait, a rabbit?" I shook my head, swallowing a humorless chuckle. "Tell me, Mr. Clarke, was this a little grey bunny?"

"Yes. How did you know? Nothing about that was printed in the press."

"I'm pretty sure," I replied, thinking of Sara's grey rabbit sightings, "that bunny is still very close to your daughter. Jenny's telling me that she was just trying to visit Velvet in heaven the day she passed. She didn't mean to be gone long. Just for the afternoon. She only wanted to say goodbye."

The reading continued with me supplying information about Jenny's brief life in Surrey, offering up information that none but Jenny could have known about. It lasted almost forty-five minutes, when I said, "Jenny wants you to know — this is very important — she wants you to know that she never meant to leave you. That was never her intention. It was an accident. You have to understand that."

The Clarkes, their eyes swollen with tears, only nodded, smiling vaguely. I could feel their relief, their comfort. It made me think of Catalina giving that reading at Mrs. Hawkley's house in Bridgeport. I remembered thinking that if I could bring comfort to people the way Catalina did, that all the suffering I'd gone through might be worth the price.

"Jenny wants you to know that she's coming back," I revealed, shaking my head in disbelief at what I'd just said. "What?" I whispered to myself. "Coming back?"

"Coming back?" the Clarkes echoed.

"What do you mean you're coming back?" I asked the unseen Jenny. "Mrs. Clarke, I don't mean to ask personal questions that aren't any of my business, but are you... are you pregnant?"

"Oh dear," Mrs. Clarke blanched. "How can you know? How can you know that?" She hiked her thumb at her husband. "He doesn't even know that. Nobody knows."

"It's Jenny," I whispered to myself, tears falling down my face. "It's Jenny. She's coming back. Jenny's coming back."

****

When the reading finished, the Clarkes were on their way out of the room when I stopped them. "Mr. and Mrs. Clarke, before you go, I want you to have this." I passed them an envelope. "It was a sketch I made, before I knew... before I understood what was happening to me."

Mr. Clarke opened it. It was a colorful pastel drawing of Jenny sitting near a bright, sunlit window, which I realized now wasn't so much a window but a doorway. A doorway of light.

"I thought that was going to be hard," I told Sir Alex a few minutes later, once the Clarkes had left and I'd had a chance to collect myself, "but it was a lot harder than I thought."

"You were feeling their emotions," Sir Alex explained, "experiencing their grief." He sat behind an opulent mahogany desk with inlaid cherry and chestnut, as behind him the spring rain continued to fall past the window.

"I was using all the protection and separation techniques I learned at Waltham," I said, "but I still felt their pain. Jenny's coming back, but it'll never be the same. I'm going to miss her."

"This sort of thing takes practice. The more readings you do, the easier it will become. But it may never be
easy
."

"It was Mr. and Mrs. Clarke you were meeting on Saturday night, the night we were at Lord Humphreys' house, wasn't it?"

"Yes. Very good. I'd been trying to arrange a meeting with them for months, but they wouldn't return my calls. When I got word that the Clarkes were in London visiting Mrs. Clarke's sister, I made a few phone calls and the rest just sort of fell into place. I expect it happened at the right time. If the meeting had taken place any sooner, I suspect the Clarkes wouldn't have heard the messages they needed to hear."

"I also think you knew about our past lives," I accused him, narrowing my eyes suspiciously, "and about Gotfrid and Cali and the witch trial and all of that."

"I knew and so did you. And Cali. And Nicole and Sara. All of us keep that information in a higher aspect of our consciousness. We're given access to that information, but it's only downloaded into our conscious mind — to use today's parlance — when we're ready to hear and accept it. I suspect, like Mr. and Mrs. Clarke, had you girls been given access to that information sooner, you would not have taken it in as you should."

I wrinkled my forehead. That was as good an excuse as any why Sir Alex had kept everything to himself. But that only begged another question,
If he knew about all that, what else isn't he telling us?

"And how is Emily?" I asked. "Will she be all right?"

"Emily is going to be fine. As soon as you told her the background behind the boys who were haunting her, when she understood that they were once human, too, with all the human frailties that we ourselves possess, you sent her down the road of love and compassion instead of fear and resentment. It's that love and compassion that will keep the house's negative energy at bay. Either those spirit boys will find a new host or, perhaps, with a little guidance, they'll find their way home."

"And what about Gotfrid? Is he truly gone?"

"Gone?" Sir Alex puckered his lips contemplatively. "Gone? I don't know what you mean by that. Cali managed to banish him from the Humphreys' house. I'm most certain of that. But he has no corporal shell from which he might be permanently parted. He is still energy and while energy has the ability to transform, it most certainly exists in one form or other. No, Father Gotfrid is still very much out there. With any luck, he's learned his lesson and moved on, but at this juncture I very much doubt it."

Sir Alex's manservant knocked three times and opened the door. "Sir, your guest has arrived."

"Thank you. Please offer the usual reception."

"Guest?" I asked. "Not another reading?"

"No, not today," he replied, standing and guiding me to the double doors leading to a sitting room. "This is something different. We have a new student at Waltham, a student that should have started with your class in February but, for reasons I won't name at the moment, was unable to attend."

Sir Alex opened the double doors to reveal a small parlor with a bay window, a sofa, and more bookcases. Nicole, Sara, and Cali sat on the sofa drinking coffee and tea and eating little cookies. The scratch near Sara's eye was healing nicely. And Nicole's seven stitches, running along her eyebrow near her temple — exactly, I realized now, where my sister in the past life had been struck by a stone — were hardly noticeable.

"So if Gotfrid was the old man whose ghost we were seeing," Sara was saying, "and Cali was his brother, the magistrate, in that past life, and we were the girls who were killed for witchcraft... but we are only
three
and there were
four
witches. Who, then, is the fourth witch?"

"Hey, everybody. Guess who's joinin' the party? What? What's everybody lookin' at?"

"Ladies," Sir Alex announced, "may I introduce you to Tyson Allard, the latest addition to your class at Waltham."

"Ty. Will everyone please start callin' me Ty?"

"Really?" I said. "You, Tyson, a psychic?"

He grinned, holding his cowboy hat to his chest. "I guess I have some kind of after-whats-it that lets me see and communicate with spirits. Who'da thunk, eh, Jailbait? So, it looks like I'll be stickin' around here in England a while longer."

"
He's
our fourteenth classmate!" Sara cried. "See, I knew it wasn't right! Thirteen wasn't right."

Tyson really was the one we'd been waiting for,
I thought. Things finally felt… complete.

"All this feels really familiar," Tyson said. "Like it's all happened before."

"I know exactly what you mean," Cali agreed.

"Charlie's tellin' me that you aren't too far off," Nicole added.

Tyson wrinkled his brow. "Charlie?"

Cali winkled at him. "I'll explain later."

At that moment I sensed an unseen presence slip into the room with us. It was nothing I saw or heard. Nothing foreboding, exactly. The atmosphere seemed to grow just a little bit heavier. It was as if something was standing not far away, watching.

"Wait, wait," Tyson said. "I feel a prediction comin' on."

"Tyson," I said, "if you're just going to joke about this…"

"No," he insisted, "this is serious. I was just gonna say that I finally feel like I'm home, you know, like with family. I mean really home, if you get me. It just seems like, whatever this is, it's bigger than all of us put together. It seems like it's just the beginnin', you know?"

I don't think any of us understood exactly what he meant at the time, but I believe all of us sensed he was right.

Acknowledgements

I want to thank my wife, Sara, for her undying support and inexhaustible patience reading, rereading and proofing my work; and my agent, Kathleen Rushall, for her diligent efforts and expert advice. I am indebted to Cathy Valenti and Erin Brown, editors extraordinaire, and all those whose guidance made this story better, especially Kate Lee, Jennifer Scott, and Greg Hyman. Special thanks to the staff at Hyde Park Stables, who schooled me on horse riding in the park, Dr. Nipali Bharani for talking through the symptoms of schizophrenia, and Elisabeth Buchman for sharing her observations on the nature of head injuries. Finally, I'd like to extend my undying gratitude to Pam Binder, president of the Pacific Northwest Writers Association; Jeff Ayers, book reviewing master; Bill Kenower, Editor-in-Chief of
Author Magazine
, and Terry Persun, for their kind support and never-ending well of optimism.

About the Author

Brian Mercer
is the author of
Mastering Astral Projection: 90-day Guide to Out-of-body Exper
i
ence
and the
Mastering Astral Projection CD-Companion
. When he is not writing, reading, or out of his body, he can be found working at his job as a programmer/analyst or volunteering for the Pacific Northwest Writers Association. He lives in Seattle with is wife, Sara, and their beloved cats.

Also from Astraea Press

Prologue

Donovan kneeled by Satan's side. He'd been kneeling there for over five hours but he didn't care. Something bad had happened. Normally, this would cause him to grin, but not when it came to his master. When ill fate befell his master, it happened to
everyone
. He frowned at the wall of Satan's palace. The wall had been made from white stone which looked like seashells.
How despicably romantic.
He growled as he thought about it.

The wall reminded him of his dead wife, Clarice, and their honeymoon in North Carolina where the beach path had been made of crushed seashells. Their night together had been a blissful one. He had stood over her body, basking in yet another evil deed, another soul for his master. Unfortunately, the morning had been less grand. He had gotten caught.

"Do you know what the wall is made from?" Satan asked, yanking him from his thoughts. Satan must have followed his eyes, or maybe he had even read his mind.

"No, Lord," Donovan said quickly, knowing how his master hated to wait for anything, including answers. He glanced at Satan and wanted to breathe in deep as the scent of death overcame his nostrils. His lord smelled like his life during his most blissful moments. There was a coppery scent as well as the heady scent of death. Sometimes, when he knelt in front of Satan, he got the same high he had received during murder. And this was just the scent.

Satan had five glorious heads. There was the rotting corpse, the snake, the hand, the demon, and the beautiful woman. His two clawed feet were like the massive paws of a bear, but without the fur. His skin was dry and scaly. Donovan loved each of the heads, or rather, he loved to drink in the expressions on peoples' faces when they stared into Satan's eyes and were overcome by the most intense fear they'd ever experienced in their entire life. There was no knife, no gun, which could create as much fear as seeing Satan.

He also had no doubt whatever the wall was made of was frightening, just like Satan was.

"The wall, Lord," Donovan said.

"What?" Satan snapped.

"You never told me what the wall was made from."

"Don't you think I know that, you human twit," Satan said. "It's made from human bones. Now—" Satan brought back his arm, grabbed Donovan by his shirt, and hurled him all the way across the human bone tile floor until he hit the wall on the other side of the room with a thud, "—get down like the dog you are. Don't you dare ask me questions."

He needs somebody to punish, and I shall be the one to accept his violence, if only to remain close to the scent.
Donovan shut his eyes and inhaled, imagining a body upon the floor as he heard the sound of footsteps. His dark lord was coming for him again. Donovan felt a sharp pain as his master held him up by his neck and shook him, forcing him to open his eyes. He stared straight into the shriveled face head, the main head. With a groan, he willed himself to stay still. It did not matter what he did now, after all. Satan would be dead set on punishing him, regardless.

"Do you know how many people built my palace?" Satan asked. "Do you know how many corpses?"

"No, Lord."

"I swept the Earth as the Black Death and killed almost one hundred million people, but it wasn't enough to even make the floor of this room. I caused a famine which killed forty-five million people in China. I—" Satan threw Donovan to the floor and his back seared. The pain gave him an odd sort of pleasure and he almost smiled. "—planted the idea of exterminating Jews in a man's mind and managed to convince him to kill fifteen million people."

Instead of attacking Donovan, Satan paced back and forth, his greasy wings twitching on his back. His hand head, which was a large, disgusting growth in the shape of a hand with eyes on two of the fingers, jerked in rage. Once again, his footsteps made loud thudding noises upon the bone floor.

"I did all of these things." Satan's beautiful blonde woman's head twisted all the way around. His bones made a loud cracking noise as the spine twisted. Her blue eyes stared forward, staring blindly. "I did all of these things, and do you know the one thing it appears I cannot do?"

Donovan stared, unsure of whether he was supposed to reply.

"Answer me!" Satan boomed, his voice deep and loud.

"Nothing, Lord," Donovan said.

Throwing back his head, Satan let out a loud, piercing shriek of rage which echoed throughout the throne room. The throne of un-crushed human bones with skulls as the headrest shook in the process. Donovan covered his head in pain, though it would do little good in blocking the sound; souls did not hear through their ears — they just
heard
.

Finally, Satan stopped howling and continued to thunder about the throne room. "It appears even though I can wipe out a fourth of the Earth's population, I cannot catch a single human soul. A young female soul." Satan slammed his fist against the wall and the bone pieces crumbled into dust. "Argh!"

In horror, Donovan struggled to his feet.
A human girl? Is he talking about the one who was in the chapel with us and tried to stop the ceremony?
After his master had come up with a plan to shut the gates of heaven, they had to have a ceremony called the Blood Stone ceremony in order to seal the deal. Right as they had begun the ritual, a blonde-haired girl had attempted to stop it and failed. He shut his eyes and imagined her body lying on the floor. But it was no longer possible. He could not slice her open as a soul.

"Lord, maybe I can try to find her," Donovan said. "I can teach her a lesson. I can do things to her, Lord. Awful things."

"
You
,"
Satan said, turning around to face him. He threw back his head and laughed. "What could you do? She transformed the demon of sickness, the one who started the plague, small pox and famine, and convinced him to gouge out his own eyes. She took one of my strongest, deadliest allies and made him into a blind, gibbering fool
.
"

Donovan pictured the small, mousy girl. At the time of the Blood Stone ceremony, when his goal had been to close the gates of heaven, she had appeared so simple, so ordinary. In comparison to the large, eight-armed demon, the extremely thin blonde girl was insignificant in comparison. How could she have been victorious? Did she have some secret, God-given ability?

Silence fell as Satan continued to pace. He threw back his heads and screamed, "Come to me.
Now
."

Though Satan did not specify names, by the time he marched over to the double-doors in front of him and opened them, a group of his most fearsome demons awaited him on the other side. They entered the throne room. It seemed to Donovan they had been waiting for him, and all of their jaws dropped open.

Abyzou, a fish-faced demon, puckered her fat blue lips. Lady Midday, the bearer of heatstroke, gripped the staff in her hand tightly enough the skin paled over her bones. Lamashtu, the menace of a woman with a face of the lion, growled and shook her head.

Lamashtu said, "I do not want to face this human woman. Make Pazuzu do it."

The only one who did not appeared worried was goat
-
headed Aka Manah, the disturber of moral duties. Donovan always felt that Aka Manah, with his long face, appeared permanently sneering.

"I
do not
like to be mocked, and this girl, Eden, mocks me," Satan said. "At first, she was merely an annoying fly. I thought I'd toy with her. But now… It appears she has powers I have not foreseen, and because of this, my sense of humor is running thin."

Silence filled the room. Abyzou made a squelching sound out of the back of her throat, like a bathtub with a clogged drain.

"What?" Satan asked.

"Is it true she convinced Asag to blind himself?" Abyzou said.

Turning, Satan shouted over his shoulder, "Asag,
come out
."

Out of the second set of doors behind him, there was a loud thud against the wall. The demon Agares, an old man with red eyes, in charge of the 31 legions of hell, came out gripping the arm of the most hideous demon of them all. He had a dry tongue which hung out past his waist, and eight sets of arms with claws extended outward. Donovan could not forget the way Asag's eyes had bulged from their sockets, but now all that remained were two holes. Asag's gray, slimy skin appeared melted, as if somebody had poured acid upon him. His left foot was bloody and he limped as he walked.

Everyone gasped, and Donovan froze.
What kind of soul could do this damage to a demon? She must have powers.
He licked his lips at the thought of having such powers himself. But he could not query her. Satan wanted her, and his lord's needs had to be met before any of his own.

"Do you see this?" Satan hissed, each of his heads focusing on a different minion. "Do you see what the girl has done? Asag was supposed to collect her and bring her to me, but he failed me and she destroyed him. Feasting on human ichor will heal some of his injuries, but not all of them. I do not like this. I do not like it at all. And do you know what I do with things I do not like?"

The room stilled again. Everyone knew what happened when Satan was displeased, but even demons feared their lord. He threw back his head and howled again, and even the strong walls of his palace began to crumble around them. Donovan half feared the ceiling would cave in and he would be trapped for all eternity beneath the bones, unable to move. That was a lot worse than reincarnating or being able to move around freely. Finally, Satan stopped and focused on Lamashtu. She gasped in response and took a step back.

With a howl of anger, he seized her by the neck and hurled her across the throne room. She let out an inhuman screech as she hit the wall and bone dust fell on top of her from the shaking ceiling. Blood trickled down her fish face; she groaned and did not get up. Satan spun toward his other minions and they all gasped and stilled.

"I said I do not like this," Satan said. "What are you going to do about it?"

Agares released Asag. Wobbling, Asag stepped away from Satan. Ignoring his ally's retreat, Agares stepped toward his master. Satan whipped around and looked Agares up and down with all ten eyes, as if he contemplated throwing him against the wall too. Donovan subconsciously backed away because he was close to Agares.

"What?" Satan snapped.

"I will find the girl," Agares, the old man and the leader of legions, said. "I am stronger than even Asag. I also have the most control over First Beast and Second Beast."

"I need them now," Satan said. "Second Beast is good with the humans."

"Then you shall have me face the girl alone?" Agares asked. "A girl who did this?"

Waving at Asag's now demented face, Agares frowned.

"You will not be alone," Satan said.

"Then what do you expect me to do, Lord?" Agares asked. "Would you have me summon the thirty-one legions?"

With a growl, Satan stepped toward Agares and held him up by his shirt collar. Donovan winced. Something similar had happened to him many times, and it was painful. Unlike Lamashtu, Agares did not flinch at his lord's anger.

"I want you—" All five heads let out hissing breaths at once, "—to find the girl and bring her to me. When I have her, I will use my powers to keep her in hell. I will torture her until she forgets love and anything else. And I will find whoever is close to her and I will ruin them and make her watch every second of it
.
"

Nobody spoke until Agares stepped forward.

"I know where she is. Her cross may have saved her, but it gives her away too. I can sense its power. She is on the continent of Horace, on her way to the city of Gabriel," Agares said.

Satan threw Agares to the ground, but Agares raised his hand and his own powers slowed his decent. He landed gracefully on his feet.

"You wish for me to go there?" Agares asked.

"No. I wish for
all of you
to go there," Satan said. "I will take care of destroying the Earth. I want you — every one of you — to go to Gabriel and look for her."

All demons in the room, except for Agares, nodded. Even Lamashtu, who lay on the floor like a limp fish, nodded. Satan let out a grunt, whirled around, and sat down on his throne. He stared at his minions but did not appear pleased.

"Find the girl at all costs," Satan said. "I always thought I wanted the Earth more than anything else, but now, I long for the girl more. She has irked me to the point all I can think about is exacting my revenge. When you find her, don't be gentle. Terrify her until she can't remember who she is."

Agares was the first to speak and bowed at the hip. "Lord, it will be my pleasure."

A slow grin crossed Donovan's face.
I wish I could be there to witness her destruction. The girl does not stand a chance.
He once again took up his kneeling position.

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