The house didn’t look like the kind of place one would imagine could be haunted. Sure, it wasn’t that malicious supernatural elements resided exclusively in decrepit manors, generational farmhouses in the middle of the fields, or abandoned psychiatric hospitals built at the turn of the last century, but the idea that they would manifest in a modern, two-story, cul-de-sac building with solar panels on the roof, a perfectly trimmed yard, and a newly laid driveway was simply difficult to accept. On the other hand, the mere existence of ghosts was, by definition, a largely unexplored territory, so closing your mind to eventualities, however improbable, was a pretty short-sighted strategy.
Robert pulled into the driveway behind a brand new Škoda Kodiaq that made him feel a little more self-conscious than he would have liked, and switched off the engine. Pulling down the sun visor, he checked his appearance in the little embedded mirror. Bloodshot sclera, dark circles under the eyes, hair that stuck out in all directions—he objectively looked like crap. For a fleeting moment, he caught himself wondering what the clients were going to make of his appearance, but then dismissed the thought as inconsequential. They were desperate—they probably wouldn’t care if he showed up buck naked as long as he helped them get rid of their problem.
And he was dead certain he could do that.
He pushed the sun visor back up and flinched. A man in a plain white t-shirt and black sweatpants stood right in front of his car, staring through the windshield at Robert. It took Robert a good couple of seconds to realize that the strange look in the man’s eyes was actually unabridged hopelessness.
“Mr. Kadlec?” Robert asked carefully as he got out of the car.
The man frowned as if he was trying to recall something important, then blinked and slowly nodded.
“Hi, I’m Robert. We spoke on the phone?”
Kadlec’s features brightened, and he started toward Robert with his right hand extended in front of him. “Oh, yes. You are the exorcist.”
“Not quite,” Robert said as he accepted his counterpart’s hand. Kadlec had a firm grip, though he clearly didn’t know when to let go. He would probably have kept shaking hands forever if Robert hadn’t indicated the house behind him with his chin and suggested, “Shall we?”
“Of course. Please, come in.”
Kadlec led Robert through the main door and into a spacious living room with the view of a small garden behind the house. The first thing Robert noticed—was assaulted by, really—was the smell. Rather than being localized in one specific spot, it permeated every cubic centimeter of air with the same unyielding intensity. Robert recognized it, naturally—it was the stench of the world beyond seeping into our dimension—though that didn’t make it any more bearable.
The second thing that came to his attention was the overall state of the room. It stood in stark contrast to the meticulous facade that could be seen outside. The walls and the ceiling were filled with scratches and stains that resembled mold, the furniture was cracked and splintered, with the upholstery on the couch slashed open. In a nutshell, Robert had been to drug dens that looked better than this.
Finally, his eyes rested on a woman who stood in front of a large painting suspended on one of the walls. She was facing away from both men as they entered the room, and since she was wearing a tank top, Robert easily made out scratches and bruises across her upper back and neck.
“Honey?” Kadlec said gently.
She recoiled as if he had just touched her with a hot iron, but didn’t turn around.
“It’s looking at me,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper.
The two men approached her from the side. Robert glanced at the painting—it depicted a rural house by the river, with lush green forests and snow-covered mountains in the background. A beautiful, evocative work of art by any standard, but the exquisite detail with which its author treated the canvas wasn’t the most notable thing about it at the moment.
No, that label belonged to something that had never been part of the painting in the first place: a terrifying, distorted face in one of the windows of the house. Robert leaned closer without obstructing the woman’s view, and several seconds later, the eyes, as red as blood, slowly blinked and looked straight at him.
The woman—future Mrs. Kadlec, if Robert remembered correctly from the frantic conversation with her fiancé—finally broke her intense gaze and registered Robert.
“Hi. My name is Robert Wain, but please call me Robert.”
“Hello,” she spoke, a bit louder than before, but still below what Robert considered normal conversational loudness. As she met his eyes, he was only slightly surprised by the empty, detached look in them. Trauma had a tendency of extinguishing life, hope, and everything positive, stripping people down to mere shells of their former selves, and by all indications, this poor woman had been through a great deal of it.
For a moment, it looked like she was going to say something else, but she remained quiet.
Robert waited until her stare passed the uncomfortable mark, then cleared his throat. “Anyway, I am here to—”
“He’s the exorcist!” Kadlec exclaimed, and Robert stifled the urge to roll his eyes. No matter how many times and in how many different ways he tried to explain that what he did had nothing to do with sending evil spirits back into their natural dimension, people just didn’t seem to understand.
“Sure,” he said, forcing a reassuring smile.
Kadlec shifted from one foot to the other and licked his lips.
“Thank you again for coming,” he said afterward. “We have tried everything we could think of—spilling salt everywhere, putting up crystals and tokens, offering sacrifice. We even had a priest from the local parish cleanse the house. Nothing worked. And it’s only getting worse.”
He paused, wrapping his arm protectively around his fiancée, careful to avoid the bruises.
“It attacked us last night,” he continued. “Pulled Milena straight from the bed and dragged her around. I tried to stop it, but…”
Robert nodded. As much as what his clients were experiencing fell into the category of unknown and unknowable, there was a pre-established pattern—or a timeline, if you will—that these supernatural occurrences largely followed. They began as something that could be easily dismissed or overlooked: sudden drafts, flickering lights, knocked over vases, or brief sounds that couldn’t quite be localized. After this introductory period, the duration of which was contingent on, among other things, the number of people living on the haunted property, the symptoms intensified to the point where the presence of an otherworldly entity became undeniable. It wouldn’t affect the inhabitants physically, at least not directly, but it would certainly test the limits of their mental health (plus, if someone had a weak heart, the consequences could indeed be tangible).
The third stage was when matters turned from bad to worse. Depending on the degree of malice toward the ordinarily living (there was no such thing as a good spirit), an entity would either “only” stick to a systematic destruction of the dwelling or also start harming its inhabitants.
The Kadlecs were clearly suffering from a particularly nasty case of stage three.
“Maybe we should sit down,” Robert said and indicated the dilapidated couch and armchair on the other side of the room.
Kadlec nodded and gently steered his fiancée away from the painting. Robert gave the horrifying face on the canvas one last look—it blinked again and grinned, showing shark-like teeth—and followed them.
The couple collapsed onto the couch, which squeaked in protest, only for Kadlec to get to his feet again.
“I’m sorry, where are my manners?” he told Robert, who sat down in the armchair. “Can I get you anything?”
Robert shot a glance at the liquor cabinet in the corner. Unlike the rest of the furniture, it appeared to have been spared the spirit’s rampage, and its content was clearly of the expensive variety. He could do with a glass of something neat and strong to numb the nerves for what lay ahead. Two fingers, or maybe only one, just enough to—
He shook his head, using every ounce of his willpower to stifle the growing urge.
“I’m good, thanks,” he said, smiling amiably.
Kadlec wordlessly acknowledged his reply and sat back down. He put his hands on his knees, rubbed them for a couple of seconds, then folded them across his chest. Nervousness competed with impatience in his features.
“So, how does this work?” Kadlec asked after shooting a glance at Milena. “Do you have specialized tools, like the board—what’s it called?”
“A spirit board?” Robert said and shook his head. “No. I am not here to negotiate with the spirit, or send it back to where it came from. I am here to destroy it, once and for all.”
Kadlec frowned.
“But how can you do that if you can’t—”
“Touch it?” Robert smiled. “You’re absolutely right. Nothing can hurt it in its current form, because it’s not playing by our rules. But if I make it play by those rules, make it obey the laws of our reality, then it will be just as vulnerable as you and I.”
The frown on Kadlec’s face eased somewhat, but the narrow line between his brow remained.
“The reason…” Robert wracked his brain for a better explanation. “…the entity can operate in the way it does is because it’s not fully in our world. It’s reaching in, but it’s still anchored in that other…place. I can pull it here entirely, make it tangible, and most importantly, killable.”
“How?” Kadlec asked dubiously.
“In short, I have a gift,” Robert said, hoping it hadn’t come out sounding too sarcastic.
The truth was that while it paid his bills and maybe even allowed him to save some money for a rainy day in an economy that saw unemployment reach unprecedented levels, his ability was far from a positive aspect of his continuous existence. Ever since it had first manifested in his early twenties, he couldn’t sleep—at least not without external help, which was problematic in and of itself—and he couldn’t hang on to a meaningful relationship for longer than a few days. The unorthodox nature of his exploits also tended to attract the attention of unsavory characters on both sides of the law, forcing him into situations he didn’t have a lick of interest in being in.
On the other hand, he would have hesitated to call it a curse—at least for the time being.
“Like a sixth sense?”
Robert chuckled despite himself—four out of five of his clients referenced the famous film when he was explaining what he could do. Personally, he didn’t understand what the fuss was all about. Sure, there was a nice twist at the end that almost no one saw coming, but other than that, it was a rather mediocre horror flick.
“More or less,” he said. “Except apart from just seeing the ghosts, I can also punch them.”
He reached into the inner pocket of his jacket and pulled out his hunting knife, its blade hidden in a worn-out leather sheath. Alarm flashed in Kadlec’s eyes; Milena, conversely, didn’t so much as flinch.
“What are you going to do with that?” Kadlec asked.
“I did mention I was going to kill the spirit, didn’t I?” Robert pulled the blade out of the sheath, checked both sides, and put it back in. “I’d prefer to shoot it, but it’s difficult to get a gun these days. The new laws and everything.”
Kadlec nodded, but Robert could see the doubt gnawing at the man as clear as day.
“Look, I know what you’re thinking,” Robert said, setting the knife on the coffee table in front of him. “It’s not murder. Yes, the spirit will look and possibly sound like a human being, but trust me, it’s far from it. Hell, it doesn’t even bleed—at least not in the conventional sense.”
Kadlec looked at Milena, but the woman’s gaze was fixed on the painting again. He licked his lips, then sucked in a breath through his teeth. He was clearly one of those people who was afraid to take any action for fear of potential consequences, even if the said action was bound to make their life considerably better.
Robert frankly hated working with those—not because they balked at the slightest sign of difficulty, but because by the time their nature became apparent, it was too late for him to back out of the deal.
“Listen,” Robert said sharply. “This thing destroyed your home, attacked your future wife. And it’s only getting started. If we let it, it’ll do much, much worse.”
He wasn’t exaggerating, at least not by a lot—though less common, spirits were known to cause mortal injuries or drive people to suicide when no action was taken against them. Some experts in the field (as much as the paranormal and everything surrounding it could be considered as such) were also convinced that there was a stage four of the spectral incursion, during which the spirits actually possessed their victims, suppressing or completely annihilating their consciousness, but to date, none of them had been able to provide a shred of concrete evidence beyond poorly documented cases that could be easily explained as temporary mental episodes.
Robert himself wasn’t sure which side of the debate he was leaning toward more. Lack of legitimate evidence aside, possession didn’t make much sense from a practical perspective. Why would a spirit want to confine itself in a meatsuit that, by design, severely limited its options in terms of influencing the world around it when it could remain intangible and continue building its power and reach? Then again, wasn’t it a mistake to assume that the spirits’ motivations were anything like those of humans?
Robert’s stern tone finally snapped Kadlec out of his indecisiveness. He clasped his hands together and squeezed until his knuckles turned white, then said, “Okay, so I stab the thing when it appears?”
“If everything goes well, I’ll be doing the stabbing,” Robert said. “But the spirits struggle, and sometimes, it becomes very difficult for me to pull them in. It drains me both physically and mentally. If that happens, I will need you to step in. Either kill it yourself—I recommend going for the neck—or hold it down long enough for me to get my bearings. You are a big guy, so it shouldn’t be a problem for you.”
Kadlec slowly nodded, evidently trying to visualize the scenario in his head. He looked around the room, then at Robert, that crease between his brows making a comeback.
“Where will it appear?” he asked.
“Somewhere close,” Robert made a wide sweeping gesture with his hand. “I cannot materialize it in a precise location, down to a centimeter, but it will definitely be in the living room.”
“Okay,” Kadlec said, his voice considerably firmer than before. He exhaled loudly and stood up. “Should we get started then?”
Look at that, there might be some fight in you yet, flashed through Robert’s head, but the smile he gave Kadlec was nothing but sincere. Robert briefly considered Milena—she had been quiet throughout their entire exchange. Last night’s incident that Kadlec had mentioned earlier must have really done a number on her.
With Kadlec standing next to the couch akin to an attack dog ready to be let off his leash, Robert cracked his neck, relaxed his arms and legs, and leaned back in the armchair. He took a few deep breaths, in through the nose, out through the mouth, then closed his eyes, focusing on blocking out the stimuli of the physical world around him and opening his mind to everything and anything that wasn’t part of it.
He reached out, carefully at first, like dipping his fingers in water of an unknown temperature. The spirit was there, just at the edge of his grasp. It was small—smaller and weaker than it had any right to be, considering both the damage it had caused and the aura, for the lack of a better word, that surrounded it—but that wasn’t the only thing that made Robert pause. The supernatural entity also didn’t react the way it was supposed to upon contact. It didn’t recoil, retreat, or push back, and there was no discernible feeling of surprise or curiosity from its side that usually accompanied the reaction. Whichever it was, it simply remained in place, like it didn’t care what Robert intended to do to it.
He shifted closer, ready to drive his mental hooks into a body that wasn’t really a body, but the spirit still didn’t move. What the hell was it doing? Playing possum? That didn’t make sense. Why would it feign death or incapacitation when it could easily fall back to its home realm?
Unless it’s bait.
The thought manifested somewhat lazily, a gentle suggestion somewhere at the back of his head that first struggled to get the full attention of his conscious mind, but ultimately hit him like an avalanche.
A chill ran down his spine, and his focus slipped. For a moment, the lines between physical reality and the world-in-between-the-worlds blurred. Kadlec was saying something, and even though Robert was unable to make out the words, the mixture of surprise and horror underlying his voice was enough to let him know that something was really wrong.
He opened his eyes.
The scene made no sense to him at that moment, but his lizard brain identified the impending danger a split second before the knife made contact with his body. He didn’t have time to evade it completely, but he managed to shift in the chair just enough so that instead of his heart, the silver blade ended up in his shoulder.
The pain was excruciating, nonetheless.
While he cried out in agony, Milena, her blank stare completely disconnected from the current situation, yanked the knife out of the wound. It hurt even more than when it went in a moment ago.
She was about to stab him again when Kadlec grabbed her knife-wielding arm by the wrist.
“Milena, honey, what are you doing?” he asked, and it dawned on Robert that this wasn’t the first time Kadlec posed that question.
She turned to look at her fiancé, and while Robert couldn’t see her face from where he was sitting, Kadlec’s was an open book. Shock mixed with disbelief and the first echoes of unadulterated fear, and when he addressed her again, his voice took on a whiny undertone.
“That’s. Not. Milena,” Robert said through gritted teeth. His shoulder was on fire, rendering his entire arm completely unusable.
“What?” Kadlec looked at him, his expression a textbook definition of dumbfounded.
If they had time, Robert would have gladly explained at length what he himself had realized the moment his knife had ended up lodged in his body. That there were two spirits, not one, hence why the aura had felt so off. That possession as a stage four was a real thing. That his ability clearly had limitations, because he hadn’t detected the spirit currently pulling Milena’s strings.
And most importantly, that for the first time since he could remember, he was, without a shadow of a doubt, way in over his head.
But there wasn’t time for any of that, because not-Milena was taking advantage of Kadlec’s confusion. Instead of wrestling her hand free of his grasp, she reached for the knife with her other hand, and in one fluid, horrifying motion, drove it just below his ribs.
Contrary to Robert’s expectations, Kadlec’s only audible reaction was a quiet gasp, though admittedly, that small sound perfectly encapsulated the slew of emotions he must have been experiencing at that nerve-wracking moment. Surprise turned to incredulity, turned to horror, as not-Milena withdrew the knife and he staggered back, looking down at the wound that was already bleeding profusely. He had enough presence of mind to put pressure on it with his hands before he collapsed on the floor in the middle of the living room.
Not-Milena looked back at Robert. There was something in her gaze that hadn’t been there before—a glint that he couldn’t quite decipher—but it disappeared with her next blink. She raised the knife, her intentions crystal clear.
“Shit!”
Out of options, he pushed off from the floor with his feet and leaned back, knocking the armchair over. The maneuver didn’t go exactly as he wanted it to—he slammed the back of his head against the hard ceramic and painfully twisted his injured arm when rolling out of the armchair—but at least he hadn’t ended up being stabbed again.
Still, by the time he scrambled to a somewhat upright position, not-Milena had crossed the distance separating them and was thrusting the weapon in the direction of his abdomen. Fortunately, the spirit didn’t seem to have a lot of experience with knife fighting, or driving the meatsuit wasn’t as easy as one would assume, because its attacks were rather straightforward so far. That, of course, didn’t mean they were any less lethal, just that he had a fighting chance to evade them.
As he staggered back, the blade having narrowly missed his torso, he risked a quick glance around. The door to the small hallway and the main entrance at the end of it was diagonally to his right, too far away to reach safely, but the door to the adjacent kitchen combined with a dining room was basically within an arm’s reach to his left.
Kitchen it is.
The room, which was, just like the rest of the house, equipped with ridiculously expensive furniture and appliances in varying degrees of damage and decay, featured, among other things, a rectangular table with chairs surrounding it in the middle. Robert learned of its existence by first bumping into it with his back, and once he pivoted to the side and recognized what it was, its tactical value became instantly apparent. He knocked over one of the chairs to slow not-Milena down and rushed around, putting the table between himself and his assailant.
Twice she lunged to the side to get to him, but in both cases, he mirrored her movement, maintaining the stalemate. As far as he could tell, the spirit was indeed limited by the physical characteristics of the body it was inhabiting, which was also probably why it had waited for the right moment to attack Robert, rather than doing so on sight. Not that it would do him much good now—he basically had only one usable arm—but at least not-Milena wasn’t going to jump over the table in one leap, or throw it aside.
So, if she can’t do anything…
He realized he had completely forgotten about the other spirit a second before a porcelain mug with the words Finish Me Off written on it took off from the table and bumped into his head. The impact wasn’t strong enough to shatter it, nor cause Robert real injury, but it distracted him long enough for not-Milena to get halfway to him.
He swore again and attempted to gain the lost distance, only to trip on a wooden cutting board that most definitely hadn’t been there before.
He landed harder than from the armchair earlier, but he knew he couldn’t let the agony shooting through his upper body paralyze him. Breathing hard, he rolled onto his back. Not-Milena was already advancing toward him, the knife—his goddamn knife—raised in an icepick grip above her head.
He waited until she was almost on top of him, then kicked as hard as he could, connecting with her midsection. The spirit inside Milena might have been immune to kinetic energy and laws of physics in general, but her body certainly was not, and she was knocked back, crashing into the chairs by the table and onto the floor.
Robert allowed himself a long second to feel wrong about his counter-offense—after all, he had never hit a woman in his life—then scrambled to his feet. He wanted to run, but his lungs were on fire, his legs full of lead, so the best he managed was an unsteady wobble.
Heading back into the living room, then the hallway with the main door beyond, he was intent on getting to the relative safety of his car. He had no idea what he would do after that—call the police, or an exorcist, since this actually was right up their alley—and he didn’t care, as long as he got out of the house alive.
He made it five steps before the second spirit tripped him again, this time with a small wooden statue of Buddha he remembered seeing on a shelf next to the painting when he had entered the living room. To add insult to injury, as soon as he fell on the floor, beside himself with pain, the little Buddha clocked him from the side right below the eye. Stars erupted in his vision; he blindly reached out to seize the statue and break it to pieces, only to find something soft and pliable instead.
He withdrew his uninjured arm and used it to prop himself up. Blinking rapidly got rid of the stars enough that he could see more clearly, and he discovered he was lying next to Kadlec’s body.
The big guy lay on his back, his face frozen in a permanent expression of disbelief and panic. His hands were still on the wound—the poor bastard had probably fought to the last moment to stop the bleeding, even though he must have known that absent external help, he had no chance in hell succeeding.
Get up and go, get out of here, a voice inside Robert’s head yelled at him, but despite the adrenaline coursing through his veins, he reacted somewhat reluctantly. He was halfway through the motion when not-Milena appeared right in front of him and knocked him back down. Before he could do anything, anything at all, she was on top of him, pinning him to the floor, the blade on an unmistakable descending trajectory.
Time seemed to have slowed down, and Robert’s perception of the situation shifted—he was suddenly an uninvolved observer, watching himself from an unspecified angle. An arm was raised to meet the knife above the body, but it wasn’t his arm or body, not entirely. There might or might not have been a sharp sound originating in his throat. A cry, a curse, or something else? He wasn’t sure. It felt as if the body on the ground wasn’t his, yet at the same time, a thread stronger than the universe itself bound him to it. Was this what dying was like? Where was the highlight reel of the defining moments of his life? The light at the end of the tunnel? Were those going to manifest only once the knife found its way to the vital organs beneath the laughably delicate tissue?
The eerie experience lasted until it became clear that he was wrong, and he wasn’t going to die, at least not just yet.
“Jakub?”
Her voice, filled with terror and a half dozen related, wholly negative emotions, snapped Robert’s senses back to the status quo. He hesitantly lowered his hand, while keeping his eyes on the knife that was now suspended in midair, like a physical manifestation of the sword of Damocles. Milena—and Robert was sure that it was really her in the driver’s seat at the moment—followed his gaze, her expression growing even more petrified as she scanned the weapon.
“Oh, God!” she whimpered, looking back at Robert and then at Kadlec’s body next to him. “Oh, my God. What have I done?”
“It wasn’t you,” Robert said gently and wiggled around slightly. She took the hint and moved off him, sitting on the floor.
“I killed him,” she said quietly, and the rise in intonation at the sentence made it sound like a question.
“It wasn’t you,” Robert repeated, a bit more firmly this time. “Listen to me, Milena. It. Wasn’t. You! You were under control of a malicious…entity. A spirit. It killed Jakub. Not you.”
She looked at him, her eyes narrowing in focus, and it was as if he was seeing her for the first time. The dim lighting of the room—it was getting dark outside—cast shadows under her eyes, yet she somehow appeared more alive, more genuine than before. Fragile. Robert felt a sudden urge to embrace her, but she was still holding the knife, and he didn’t want to do anything that might prompt her to use it, even if unintentionally.
“They are angry with you,” she said in a low voice, and a sick feeling settled in the pit of his stomach. “So angry. They…” She looked away from Robert for a moment, then back at him. “They want you dead.”
“Why?”
It wasn’t exactly what he wanted to say, but the syllable got out of his throat completely on its own account. An instinctive reaction, like hands going up to meet a punch.
You know why, a part of him—the part that he didn’t at all want to listen to—said, and he gritted his teeth to prevent nausea from overtaking him. Over the years, he had spent more than enough time thinking about his ability and exactly what he was doing with it; he had considered both from every angle and in every context imaginable. One thing he had always glossed over, however, had to do with the consequences—not for him or the people he helped, but for the other side. After all, the world, his world, had stayed exactly the same whenever he was done. Nothing had been added, nothing had been subtracted, so why worry?
Except the other side had clearly had enough.
Milena snapped her head to the side, as if she had just heard a particularly intriguing noise.
“Milena?”
She ignored him at first, and only as he addressed her again, his voice tinged with urgency, did she turn back to him. Her eyes were wide with fear and something much more sinister.
“It’s still in me, isn’t it?” she said slowly.
“I…” Robert hesitated. The truth was, he didn’t know. It made sense that the spirit was indeed still in the meatsuit, having been momentarily stripped of control by Milena for one reason or another (the sight of Kadlec’s corpse providing a spike in willpower seemed most likely), though he had no way to confirm that. Okay, maybe that wasn’t entirely true—if the entity was actually out of her body, he would be able to sense it with his ability if he focused hard enough, but he was extremely hesitant to do it, with the knife still very much in play.
“Yes, it is,” he said and quickly added, “But don’t worry. We’ll figure something—”
“It killed him,” she said, and Robert was taken aback by how firm she sounded all of a sudden. “But it won’t kill anyone again.”
She looked at the knife, and he felt his pulse quicken, adrenaline once again kicking in. It was only when she transferred it to her other hand, switching to the point-up grip with the sharp edge facing her, that he understood she wasn’t planning on attacking him. Just as he yelled out, “No!” she raised her arm and in one fluid motion ran the blade across her neck.
Robert had stabbed and slashed dozens, if not hundreds, of spirits in the past two decades. He had felt them struggle and writhe and thrash in his grasp as he delivered the killing blows. He had gotten pieces of the weird approximation of flesh and guts his ability manifested on him countless times. None of that compared to the horrifying, visceral reality of watching Milena bleed to death right in front of him. This whole thing had gone wrong, so terribly fucking wrong, and he couldn’t deal with it.
Bile rose in his throat, and he vomited around the same time Milena collapsed next to her fiancé. When there was nothing more he could expel, he dragged himself to the nearest wall and leaned with his back against it, his throat raw and his mind empty.
He had no idea how long he stayed like that, a living statue in the company of the dead. Space and time had lost all meaning, and the only thing that remained was the steady sound of his breathing.
What eventually roused him out of this state of timeless non-existence was the pain in his injured shoulder. He ignored it at first, but it throbbed and burned, pressing uncomfortably against his awareness. He relaxed his arm completely, hoping to mitigate the agony, but the effect was minimal.
Coming to the inevitable conclusion that the injury wouldn’t get better on its own, he got to his unsteady feet. He had never felt so awful, not only physically, but especially mentally. Two people were dead, and as much as he tried to reason otherwise, he had played a significant role in their demise. If he had decided to sit this gig out, or if he had paid more attention to Milena’s unusual behavior after his arrival, then maybe…
“I’m sorry,” he told the corpses. He barely even recognized his own voice—it sounded hoarse and dry, like it belonged to someone much older.
“I am so sorry,” he repeated, and it dawned on him that he had no idea what he was going to do next. He was tempted to simply leave; get into his car and drive as far away from here as possible, but his fingerprints, blood, his damn puke were all over the place. Hell, it was his knife that had killed two people. On the other hand, how was he going to explain any of what had happened to the police? It’s not like he could tell them the whole truth—that would earn him a one-way ticket to the nuthouse at best.
At worst? He didn’t even want to imagine.
Desperation welled up within him as his mind frantically scrambled for a way out, even though intellectually, he knew full well there was none.
Then his eyes landed on the little Buddha on the floor a handful of steps away, and that desperation mutated into rage. The big spirit might have been out of play, dead along with Milena, trapped in her corpse, or otherwise incapacitated—Robert was convinced it was one of the three simply because if the otherworldly community was indeed as angry with him as the future Mrs. Kadlec had said, he should have had loose objects from the entire house falling down on his head the second she had taken her last breath—but maybe the little bastard that had baited him and tripped him was still around. If that was the case—and he really hoped it was—he was going to pull it out and beat it into oblivion, if that was the last thing he would ever do.
He picked the statue up, feeling its weight in his hand. It wasn’t as heavy as he had originally thought, but he didn’t mind—it meant it wouldn’t be over too quickly.
He walked over to the sofa, ignoring the knocked-over armchair, and sat down. Giving the Buddha one last squeeze, he took a deep breath and closed his eyes. Using his ability wasn’t quite the same as flipping a switch, but there was a reassuring familiarity to it that made the process smooth and almost soothing, regardless of the circumstances.
Come out, come out, wherever you are!
The pessimist in him had braced for disappointment, but the small spirit was still there. A rush of excitement swept through him as he reached for it—this time, however, it scuttled away at the last moment. Robert didn’t mind. On the contrary, it appealed to the blood-thirsty hunter in him.
He repeatedly attempted to seize the spirit and yank it into the real world, yet every time, it evaded his efforts. What had begun as an exciting game became an exercise in futility until he had to begrudgingly admit that it wasn’t scared or trying to escape. It was toying with him.
And that made him even angrier.
After the spirit had slipped from his grasp once again, he furiously followed it, pushing his ability to the absolute limit. He reached out further than ever before, way past what he thought himself capable of, until what was connecting him to his body and the world, his world, was nothing but a footnote at the edge of his consciousness. Even though he couldn’t use his senses, he knew he was getting closer to the boundary between the dimensions. Perhaps the spirit wanted to flee back to its native realm after all?
Not today, flashed through his head as he finally seized it, a feeling of triumph briefly overshadowing everything else. Just one more moment and he could express the volatile concoction of emotions impatiently bubbling under the surface.
Just one more moment and—
Robert was about to materialize his catch when something impossibly strong breached the boundary, enveloped his mind, and in one swift motion, pulled him into the world beyond.
***
If he still had lungs, vocal cords, and a mouth, he would have yelled himself hoarse. If he had his arms and legs, he would have kicked and punched and scratched, until his fingers and knuckles bled. In the non-space where he currently found himself, which was defined by the absolute absence of everything he could conceptualize, he couldn’t do anything but simply be. He was a soul without a body, an abbreviated version of himself that was as undefinable and uncountable as his surroundings.
The worst part—orders of magnitude worse than the form his entire being had been reduced to—was that he wasn’t alone. They had appeared almost immediately after the transition, a rather swift, if not painless, process was over. Swarming him like ants swarm an unfortunate beetle, they pushed and poked at his very essence.
And they were indeed very, very angry.