Название: A Summoning of Souls
Автор: Leanna Renee Hieber
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Историческая фантастика
Серия: A Spectral City Novel
isbn: 9781635730609
isbn:
Copyright
Rebel Base Books are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp. 119 West 40th Street New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2020 by Leanna Renee Hieber
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First Electronic Edition: July 2020
eISBN-13: 978-1-63573-060-9
eISBN-10: 1-63573-060-0
First Print Edition: July 2020
ISBN-13: 978-1-63573-063-0
ISBN-10: 1-63573-063-5
Printed in the United States of America
Dedication
To the spirit world, may we always be a force for good…
Prologue
Manhattan 1899
Margaret Hathorn wafted along Fifth Avenue in her favorite ballgown, forever sporting the opulent fashion of the eighties; her skirts doubled with a fine bustle decked in bows and gathers, her dark hair pinned up with a few cascading ringlets.
To the living eye, the young woman was transparent and all in greyscale, but Maggie’s favorite dress had been a bright rose as pretty as she’d once been praised to be. Glancing down at her rustling skirts, an undulating pattern hovering over the cobblestones, to her eye, the rose was faded but it still held a whisper of blushing color, a little slip of life.
At present, the wraith was on an important mission.
Looking in the front windows of opulent mansions, Maggie startled the occasional child who was looking out of them. The act, if she were honest with herself, gave her a distinct delight. It wasn’t that Maggie wanted to be a terror, but she had to take her pleasures where she could. And Maggie had always liked to be seen; whether in an admittedly shallow life, or now as a more mature ghost.
For some, becoming a ghost wasn’t a choice. But for Maggie, she retained every bit of agency she wanted. No, she couldn’t pick things up or feel touch and embraces like she used to, but one adapted. At any point she wished, she could say goodbye to her loved ones, corporeal and non, and leave for that Sweet Summerland the Spiritualists spoke of; eternal rest in some wonderful Elysian Field. Someday. But not yet. There was so very much to do.
Death had rearranged Margaret Hathorn’s priorities. Having been caught up in all manner of terrible things she’d unwittingly unleashed, she was murdered nearly two decades prior. Having sacrificed herself to save others, the act absolved her of torments caused by her ignorance. Her spirit lived on to make sure that Eve Whitby, the daughter of those she gave her life for, had a ghostly auntie always watching over her. It was Maggie and Eve’s mutual mission to help make New York that much safer and brighter, instilling a spectral purpose she’d never had as a snobbish socialite.
The spirit paused before the target address. Every time Maggie tried to return to this terrible house, her spectral form quailed, as if the wisp of her that remained could not bear to confront this place of trauma again.
The Prenze mansion. Patriarchs of tonics and dubious cure-alls, the Prenze twins had made a fortune off chronic pain and symptoms of disease the medical profession had yet to cure. One twin, Albert Prenze, had died in an industrial accident at one of their London warehouses. Or so it had been said.
Albert was, in fact, alive, operating under a false name and acting from the shadows. Even his twin brother Alfred didn’t know he was alive.
None of these details would be important to Maggie had Albert Prenze not made two things very clear: He was intent on destroying any ghost he could, no matter if they wished to haunt on and help mortals or not. And he was sure Eve Whitby and her Ghost Precinct of the New York Police Department was an obstacle in his aim.
Well, the man wasn’t wrong; they were obstacles. And living and dead, they were about to fight back. Maggie just didn’t know how. Thus, her research expedition.
Floating into the Prenze hedgerows, she waited. The thick, manicured branches around her made her feel safer, as if she were in the brambles surrounding an evil fairy-tale castle.
Again, Maggie tried to remember what exactly happened the night she’d disappeared. When Albert Prenze had tried to break what remained of her soul in two, never to haunt again. She’d been drawn to the mansion by the spirit of children that wanted her help. For whatever reason, she’d been able to get in that night, but never since. She remembered the electric lights had been odd, and perhaps a malfunction in what she now knew was an electrical blockade, snapping at spirits like a switch to keep them from coming in or out.
When she had gone inside, she did as the two siblings had asked and she managed to muster a small burst of physical force to send a collection of postmortem photography flying. In doing so, she’d roused the attention of their present nemesis. He had sent his houseguests out of the room, turned to her with a cruel sneer, and flipped a switch that tore her out of existence.
As if swatting Maggie from this memory, a ghostly, wrinkled hand slapped against the glass of the thin basement window. Maggie started, almost tumbling out of the hedge.
“Help us,” came a desperate, elderly voice trying to travel the distance to her spectral ear. “He wants to kill us all. End us forever.”
“We’ll do everything we can,” Maggie murmured back, unsure if she could be heard.
The sharp whinny of a horse as a driver cracked a whip was like an extension of the faint scream she heard coming from that cellar room. Looking behind her, she wanted to get the attention of the living, “Do you hear that? Can anyone help them?” But she couldn’t.
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