Ghost Huntress: The Tidings
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About this ebook
Marley Gibson
MARLEY GIBSON is the author of all of the Ghost Huntress books, and co-wrote The Other Side with Patrick Burns and Dave Schrader. She lives in Savannah, GA, and can be found online at www.marleygibson.com or at her blog, www.booksboysbuzz.com.
Related to Ghost Huntress
Titles in the series (2)
Ghost Huntress Book 6: The Journey Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Ghost Huntress: The Tidings Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Ghost Huntress - Marley Gibson
Carol
Stanza 1: Kaitlin’s Apprentice
I can’t freakin’ believe how utterly stressed out and exasperated this ridiculous joke of a Christmas season is making me. In a nod to Mr. Dickens’s time-tested opus, my holiday spirit is akin to Old Jacob Marley: dead as a doornail. And poor, misunderstood Ebenezer Scrooge was definitely on to something with his ‘tude and outlook—even back in his day—on this taxing and hectic time of year.
Bah! Humbug!
It’ll take all my strength and intestinal fortitude just to model through these last few days of December to get to the other side of the calendar flip.
Nothing’s going right and everyone wants a piece of me. There aren’t enough hours in the day to get everyone else’s to do
lists accomplished. Not that I’m a selfish cow who doesn’t understand the true meaning of the holiday, but after all I’ve been through recently, is it too much to want some quality Kendall time for just…being? The frustration rolling through my veins is enough to rattle my chains. And I’m not a Dickens ghost at all – although I’ve encountered plenty.
I’m seriously about one inch close to the point of making a grand proclamation that Christmas is canceled.
A long, pent-up sigh escapes me as I try to concentrate on this tarot card reading I’ve got going for Suzanne Pilfer, the nice postal clerk who’s been working extra hours sorting and stacking Priority Mail packages, just so she can have some time off to go up to Stone Mountain to enjoy a lovely roasted goose dinner with her daughter, Chandra Pilfer, and her eight year old grandson, Max. The cards don’t have anything encouraging for me to tell to Suzanne, though. Instead, my psychic headache tap dances away at my temple as visions of Suzanne’s future materialize to me. Sadly, the premonition grips at my heart like it’s juicing a fresh orange. I see little Max, wigged out over his new video games Santa brought him, but it’s not a lasting kid high. Because I also see that Max will inevitably be fighting spinal meningitis in the near future. Geez, what part of Happy Holidays
does that fall under?
Suzanne taps a red glittery nail on the table bringing me back into the present. So what does that card mean, Kendall?
I wince inwardly, tamping down my desire to flip the table like a gansta’ and walk out, thereby erasing the message from the cards. How do I relay the news of her grandson to this sweet lady when all she really wants to know about is her own financial security, her daughter’s happiness, and if there will still be a United States space program in the future so Max can become an astronaut?
Lying isn’t really part of the whole enlightened and awakened game when doing a reading. It doesn’t lend to your integrity as a budding psychic, one who people come to for guidance and answers. However, I can’t just, like, ruin this woman’s Christmas or her holiday or her… everything. I swallow hard at the need to spread good tidings and great joy to Ms. Pilfer.
I move my hand to indicate the Ace of Wands lying on the velvet table cloth. This card usually signifies a new spark of energy. A new passion.
Her face lights up and she sits tall. Ooo, I like the sound of that.
Gulping down my own distress, I force away the image of Max crashing his bicycle into the side of his mother’s car that seems to be replaying non-stop in the DVR of my brain. I brush aside Max’s possible skull trauma that allows nasal cavity bacteria to creep in and spread the meningitis through his young body. I’m certainly no medical doctor—just a teenage psychic who picks up energies and sees visions—so who am I to rain on Suzanne’s family parade? I blink hard to ponder on this card’s meaning.
Keep it positive and light.
You might be out to discover some new concept or philosophy or a change in your career path. Or, it could mean a new man in your life.
A smile brightens her sun-wrinkled sixty year old face. Well, my Walter has been gone for eight years.
I nod. Pay attention to any surges in your personal energy. The Ace of Wands is telling you to pick up this opportunity and start walking.
Walking. How ironic. Sadly, Max will have difficulty with the simplest trip across a room if the meningitis visualization is true.
You’re so good at this, Kendall,
Ms. Pilfer tells me. I do so enjoy your readings.
She opens her black leather Betsey Johnson wallet—that my intuition tells me she sniped with three minutes to go in a recent eBay auction—and passes over a twenty dollar bill. Reluctantly, I take it from her and try to offer the best smile that I can.
You have a h-h-happy holiday, Miss Suzanne.
Same to you, dear.
As she heads out the door into the chilly December day, a clog of emotion lodges itself in my throat and I sense tears beginning to well up. Good thing it didn’t happen in front of a client.
My heartbeat hammers away inside my chest and I feel the proverbial weight of the world rest on my shoulders. As much as I’m trying to work with my still-developing gift, the empathy aspect of it sometimes makes me want to crawl under the kitchen table, curl up into the fetal position, and suck my thumb.
I blink away the nonsense swimming around in my own head. Overhead, the Muzak in the store pipes up with Burl Ives’s Have a Holly Jolly Christmas,
and I want to hurl the pack of tarot cards at the corner speaker. Anger and defeat and sheer exhaustion roil through my body and I want to scream out at someone.
School has been a stress-bomb with a multitude of calculus exams eating at my very brain cells, coupled with miles and miles of reading and essay assignments in AP English class. Then, I’ve been working extended hours here at Loreen’s store, Divining Women, assuaging the townsfolk of Radisson, Georgia, about their futures. Who am I to tell these people about their possible paths when my own is so bumpy and uncertain at the moment?
My besties and fellow ghost huntresses, Celia Nichols, Taylor Tillson, Becca Asiaf, and I have been overrun with paranormal investigation requests of late, as well. You’d think every freaking ghost, spook, specter, apparition, presence, wraith, phantom, demon, whatever in Radisson and surrounding counties had nothing better to do other than annoy the crap out of their host families. After all the cases we’ve handled since the school year started, I’m about EMF’d, EVP’d, and KII’d to death. Pun intended.
On top of everything else, Loreen and Father Mass are getting married Christmas Eve night and I’m the maid of honor. That’s wicked cool and—as the title says—a total honor. Thing is, I’ve taken the task to the extreme, trying to shoulder the burden of the event’s deadlines, seating charts, and floral arrangements for Loreen while she tends to all of her last minute items like the bad dress fitting in Buckhead, the caterer who refuses to take the walnuts out of the red velvet wedding cake, and the fact that her own father wants nothing to do with the ceremony. Most depressing of all, though, is that it finally hits me that Patrick’s blowing off being together for Christmas so he can go diving in Belize with his dad at something called The Blue Hole. After everything we’ve been through, I just wanted to be with my sweetie, and spend time making out under the mistletoe and dancing in his arms at the wedding reception.
And don’t even get me started on the queen diva herself, my little sister, Kaitlin. Casa Moorehead has become The Kaitlin Show. She won the part of the major soloist/angel in the church pageant, beating out her best friend, Penny Carmichael. Kaitlin gets to stand high atop the living Christmas tree in a fancy, sparkly gown, and sing O, Holy Night
during the Eucharist service. Not that I wanted the role—God knows I couldn’t hit the high C in that song—but it’s propelled our household into a frenzied high of all-Kaitlin, all-day. I feel like an unwelcomed stranger as Mom tends to my sister’s costume, planning out her hair design, and calling every living soul in Radisson on her cell to brag about Kaitlin’s starring part.
I suppose I should be proud of my sister and all of that, but I can’t bring myself to rah-rah, thereby putting a spotlight on Kaitlin and making her the center of attention, like she so desires twenty-four/seven.
School, Patrick’s vacay, the wedding, and Kaitlin’s drama aside… there’s the ultimate in final straw department. One of those last drops of trouble that cause the emotional liquids to spill over. The type of thing that breaks the camel’s back and depresses an already tense and terse teenager: I had longed to have some holiday bonding time with my newly-discovered grandparents, Anna and John Faulkner. They’re the parents of my deceased birth mother, Emily, and I only just found them last summer when