Ascension Bailey Bradford (best 7 inch ereader .TXT) đ
- Author: Bailey Bradford
Book online «Ascension Bailey Bradford (best 7 inch ereader .TXT) đ». Author Bailey Bradford
âRich is fine, and he wonât go home,â Sev said as he walked into the office. He closed the door. âHe doesnât, however, want to hear a spirit speaking after his previous encounters with them, so he is manning the front desk for a while.â
âI didnât mean to scare him. I thought he was you or Laine,â Ro explained. âI was startled when it wasnât.â
Sev looked around the office, and Ro saw it then, the age that had crept up on Sev over the years. He guessed itâd been so subtle that he hadnât realized how the years had affected Sev. On Laine, it was even less noticeable because he tended to be stern-looking, with weathered features by the time Ro had met him. But Laineâs hair had once been dark, and was now almost entirely a steel-gray color, and the lines he had were etched deeper into his skin. It saddened Ro and he shared Connerâs fears for his uncles.
He realized heâd been wool-gathering while everyone else had been talking. He tuned back in, listening as Sev explained how Ro seemed to have the reverse psychic abilities of his.
âThatâs messed up,â Ro mumbled. âYours you could at least use while you were alive.â
Sev canted his head and narrowed his eyes. âWell, but I have to wonder. How different is it being a spirit, really? Yâall get your feelings hurt, experience the same emotions and shit that we do. You feel lustâand please, donât even try to tell me you and Conner arenât going at it like bunnies. Conner broadcasts accidentally sometimes, and do you have any idea what itâs like to be talking to a funeral director and have someone slam their orgasm into your head?â
âOops,â Conner whispered.
Sev glared daggers at him. âOops, my ass. I walked out of there with a freakinâ erection, and that was beyond disturbing.â
âIâd be offended but I get what he means, even if I didnât hear exactly what he said just now,â Laine said as he hooked an arm around Sevâs hips. âSev felt what Conner felt, and that wasnât something he could control.â
âI didnât know.â Conner didnât look overly sorry, though. âI wouldnât have invaded your privacy like that, and I wasnât trying to brag or anything. Ro just blew my mind.â
âDonât say it,â Sev warned.
Conner grinned. âAnd the rest of me, yeah, I wonât name the part butââ
âConner!â
âFine, fine, Sev, chill.â Conner dropped the subject easily and was all seriousness again. âThe thing about what you can do, Ro, is that itâs probably more important than what Sev can do. If other spirits find out, theyâll be buzzing you to pass on messages and what have you. You wonât have a momentâs peace.â
Ro noticed Sev gaping at Conner before he turned to explain to Laine what Conner had said. Ro frowned at them in return. Didnât they realize that Conner was pretty damned smart? Had they forgotten how heâd helped them catch killers and solve cases? Probably, he thought. Who liked to remember the bad things that happened? It was easier to focus on things like pranks and jokes.
Sev finally spoke, his voice not hiding his surprise. âConnerâs right. Iâve had spirits hunt me down to reach the living for them, but itâs really hard for most of them to clarify what they want me to do or say. With Ro, they wouldnât have a problem, not if he can be heard as clearly as we hear him.â
âWhat do you mean?â Ro asked.
Sev twirled a finger around, pointing at them. âWeâve all had some kind of brush with death, andâorâspirits. Rich, too. Maybe that has something to do with why we can hear you. I donât know, though. Itâs just a theory, and I kind of donât believe it even if I did share it.â
Connerâs gleeful expression returned. âThatâd be easy enough to check out. All you have to do is pop out and say âbooâ to the first stranger you see. I wish I could do that. Man, Iâd have a ball!â
âSo itâs a good thing you canât do it,â Sev told him. âRo, why donât we go to the city park, and you can try it? Iâll be close by, so that if whoever you choose to speak to hears you and freaks, weâll just say it was me.â
Laine settled his Stetson lower on his brow and took Sevâs hand in his. âWhy not just go for a stroll and have Ro say âhiâ to people, and if they respond, Sev, you just nod like it was you who said it. Might spare someone a heart attack.â
âYou take all the fun out of everything,â Conner muttered. âNot that I want anyone to keel over, but a yelp or two would be funny.â
âConnerâs bitching, ainât he?â Laine asked.
Conner slapped a hand over his heart. âHe knows me too well.â
âHeâs hamming it up,â Sev told Laine. âOkay, letâs do this, if youâre game, Ro?â
âWhy not?â Ro couldnât help but notice that Rich seemed to look right at him as they passed him by. It was unnerving, and he was sorry for freaking the guy out.
Outside, the sun was bright and hotâwell, heâd bet it was hot. He didnât feel it any more than he felt the wind blowing through him. He did, however, feel Connerâs hand in his as they moved along.
As soon as they reached the small park with the walking trail, Ro looked for people he didnât know. It was hard because McKinton was a small town, and heâd lived there for years. Most of the people had eaten at Virginiaâs CafĂ© at one time or another. That didnât mean heâd served them, but he had certainly waited on a lot of them. Still, he saw a few people he didnât think heâd ever talked to, and when he spoke to the first one, the old man answered right back. Sevâs eyes went wide but he talked to
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