Read The Black Parade Page 16

The fight with the demon left me drained, so Michael dropped me off at the apartment to rest before getting ready to track down the fence.

  Unfortunately, Michael’s theory proved true. He couldn’t heal the cut with his energy, meaning it would remain until his body naturally repaired itself. Definitely a bad sign. We’d have to find those weapons and quickly if we wanted to keep the other angels safe.

  I hopped in bed with a novel and read for a while. I didn’t remember falling asleep, but apparently Frankenstein had enough dark charm to send me off for a short nap. Judging by the dim streetlight peeking in through my window, I guessed it was sometime after seven o’clock. An eerie sort of twilight had fallen across my room and the young white boy standing at the foot of my bed.

  “Whoa!” I shouted. “Who the hell are you?”

  The boy blinked his large brown eyes at me. “Jacob.”

  I tried to breathe normally and tilted my head so I could see next to my bed. The boy had no feet. Ghost. A huge sigh escaped me. I let go of the gun and slid my hand from beneath the pillow.

  “Well, congratulations for scaring the crap out of me, Jacob,” I told him, pressing a hand to my chest as if it would help my heart stop racing.

  Jacob gave me an apologetic look. “Oh, um, I’m sorry. I dunno why I came in here. I just sort of…did.”

  “You’re a ghost, kiddo. You didn’t find me on purpose. It’s sort of like an instinct.”

  His eyes widened. “I’m…dead?”

  “Yes,” I said. “I’m sorry.”

  He stared at the floor for a handful of seconds before lifting his head to look at me. “Why am I still here, then?”

  I opened my mouth to answer, but the front door opened and Michael stepped inside. It took him about three seconds to spot the boy by my bed. He rushed over, his brow furrowed in a frown.

  “Who’s the kid?”

  “This is Jacob. He’s a ghost.”

  He sighed, which was odd. Did he honestly think a child would hurt me?

  “Have ghosts ever followed you home before?”

  I shook my head. “No. They always see me on the street.”

  “Right.” Michael knelt so he could be eye-level with Jacob.

  “My name is Michael. I’m an archangel.”

  Jacob’s face brightened with surprise. “Really?”

  Michael chuckled. “I know. I don’t look like one, but I am. You need my help if you want to pass over to the next world.”

  “Hey, he was my ghost kid first.”

  He looked at me then, genuinely shocked. “Jordan, you don’t have to do this any more.”

  “I know that. I actually want to help him. This ability isn’t going to go away, so I might as well use it.”

  Michael studied my face. Then he smiled. “Alright.”

  If I didn’t know any better, I’d have thought he was proud of me. Good thing I knew better. I tossed back the covers and stood up, ignoring all the parts of my body that complained, and set about searching for my notepad. “Okay, Jacob. Why don’t you tell me the last thing you can remember?”

  “Well, I was outside some sort of building. It wasn’t an office or a skyscraper. It looked sort of like a hospital.”

  I nodded, having found a pencil and my worn notepad, and started scribbling what I knew so far.

  Jacob

  Appears eight or nine years old

  Caucasian

  Brown eyes

  Brown hair

  Remembers hospital or building that looked like one

  “Do you remember how far you walked to get here?”

  The boy shook his head. “I lost track of time. Something just told me to walk away and when I finally stopped, I was here. I’m sorry.”

  “It’s okay. Your memories will start to come back after a while.”

  “What happens then?”

  “We’ll find out what your final wish is and you’ll cross over to the other side.” Michael jumped in this time.

  Jacob still appeared anxious, not that I blamed him. “What if I’m not ready to go yet?”

  I glanced at Michael and he understood the look. “It’s natural for you to be worried about crossing over, but I promise it’s a better place to be. You won’t have to worry about anything ever again, and you’ll be loved for all eternity.”

  Jacob’s shoulders relaxed. “Okay.”

  “Follow me.” I headed towards the kitchen. My laptop lay on the table. Its blue light occasionally glowed in the dark, beckoning me to find my answers. Michael flipped the light switch on and automatically began clearing away dishes and leftover food. Strange behavior, since his own home had been a pigsty.

  After everything on the computer had been set up, I went about my normal researching route. My initial information gathering always started with a document I had compiled of local hospital morgues. I could weed out some of them, considering the fact that Jacob had gotten here on foot. The kid didn’t remember how far he had walked, but I couldn’t imagine it had been more than half an hour. Even without his core memories, he would have noticed if it took an hour or more to “find” me.

  The hardest part of my cases was locating pictures. Jacob was a child so he wouldn’t have any ID even if we found his body. The best course of action to take would be to call the hospitals and ask if anyone with Jacob’s description was in their morgues. Hopefully, something would turn up.

  “What happens now?” Jacob asked.

  I brandished my cell phone. “The fun part of my job—phone calls.”

  Michael sat a mug of fresh instant coffee in front of me with a sympathetic smile. “Happy hunting.”

  “Thanks.” I took a deep sip of the delicious beverage and dove in.

  An hour later, I set the phone down and stretched my back with a miserable sigh. All those numbers and I still hit a dead end. At the very least I knew one thing—Jacob had not ‘woken up’ outside of a hospital. The morgues were still open, and none of them had a kid with his name or description. Most of them told me to call back the next day to double check. I’d most likely end up doing that just to be thorough, but the chances of finding anything were slim.

  “Alright, so if you didn’t ‘wake up’ outside of a hospital, where the heck were you?” I muttered to myself, peering at my laptop as if an idea would spring from the screen. Jacob stood to my right, chewing his bottom lip.

  “I wish I could tell you something more helpful,” the boy offered. “I’m sorry.”

  “It’s alright. You have to walk up some blind alleys before you find where you’re going. I’ve got an idea—why don’t you go in my room and watch some TV? Maybe something on the local channels will jog your memory. Michael, would you turn it on for him?”

  “Sure.” He followed the boy back to my bedroom. I drummed my fingertips on the tabletop, trying to figure out another angle to look at this case. The newspaper stands were closed by now, but I could still check the obituaries online. They wouldn’t be up to date just yet, but most of the names present would be recent. I connected to the local website and searched again. I found a couple of Jacobs, but they weren’t children. Well, no one ever said this job was easy.

  “Hey.” I tilted my head back to find Michael smiling down at me. “Any luck?”

  “Nope. Shame, though. Cute kid.”

  “Yeah,” he said with a regretful smile.

  I straightened up and closed the laptop, sliding in my seat so I could look at him. “Why did you seem so agitated when you came in? Is there something you’re not telling me?”

  The smile disappeared, replaced with a neutral expression, and he didn’t answer. Not a good sign.

  I pressed on. “Is there something you’re not supposed to tell me?”

  Michael ran a hand through his hair, brows furrowing. “Not exactly. I’m just…worried. Jacob isn’t dangerous, but I don’t like that he came into your apartment instead of finding you on the street like the other ghosts. It bothers me.”

  ??
?Why? You know Gabriel blessed this apartment. If he were a threat, he wouldn’t be able to get in, remember?”

  He plopped down in the chair next to mine. “I know. I guess this whole thing with Belial made me paranoid. And it doesn’t help that there’s a rumor of another major player in town.”

  “Agreed,” I admitted. “But as long as I’m in here, we can relax a little.”

  He smiled. I cocked my head to the side. “What?”

  “I think that’s the first time you’ve said ‘we’.”

  My eyes widened a bit. How the hell did he notice stuff like that? He just kept catching me off-guard.

  “Lighten up, Jordan. You don’t have to be dark and tormented all the time.”

  I squirmed in my seat, avoiding eye contact. “I’m not very good at being anything other than grumpy.”

  He rose from his seat. “That’s what I’m here for. Maybe some of my traits will rub off on you.”

  “…I’m going to ignore the sexual connotations of that sentence just so my brain won’t explode.”

  “How deep in the gutter does your mind have to be to think that sounded perverted?”

  “…I refuse to answer that question.”

  “Just help me clean up the kitchen, will you?”

  “I don’t know. Will anything ‘rub off on me’? …don’t you dare throw that dishrag at me.”

  Afterwards, we went to my room to check on Jacob. To my surprise, he was floating cross-legged over the bed, turning those large eyes on us as we entered. Most young ghosts couldn’t figure out how to do that.

  “Did anything come back to you?” I asked. He shook his head.

  “Well, Michael and I need to go somewhere so why don’t you stick around until we come back?”

  “Okay.”

  I swiped my leather jacket from the closet and shut the bedroom door behind us. “Alright. Let’s go hunt us some demons.”