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Haints and Hobwebs: An Elemental Assassin Story
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Haints and Hobwebs
by
Jennifer Estep
An Elemental Assassin Story
Haints and Hobwebs
Copyright © 2012 and 2018 by Jennifer Estep
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual or fictional characters or actual or fictional events, locales, business establishments, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. The fictional characters, events, locales, business establishments, or persons in this story have no relation to any other fictional characters, events, locales, business establishments, or persons, except those in works by this author.
All rights reserved by the author.
ISBN: 978-0-9861885-9-6
Cover Art © 2018 by Tony Mauro
Interior Formatting by Author E.M.S.
Published in the United States of America
The Elemental Assassin series
featuring Gin Blanco
Books
Spider’s Bite
Web of Lies
Venom
Tangled Threads
Spider’s Revenge
By a Thread
Widow’s Web
Deadly Sting
Heart of Venom
The Spider
Poison Promise
Black Widow
Spider’s Trap
Bitter Bite
Unraveled
Snared
Venom in the Veins
E-novellas and stories
Haints and Hobwebs
Thread of Death
Parlor Tricks
Kiss of Venom
Unwanted
Nice Guys Bite
Winter’s Web
Haints and Hobwebs
by
Jennifer Estep
An Elemental Assassin Story
To all the fans of the Elemental Assassin series who wanted more stories—this one is for you.
To my mom, my grandma, and Andre—for everything.
Note: Haints and Hobwebs is an 11,000-word story that takes place after the events of Tangled Threads, book 4 in the Elemental Assassin urban fantasy series. Haints and Hobwebs first appeared in The Mammoth Book of Ghost Romance in 2012.
The first time I saw the haint was in the cemetery.
Shocking, I know, a ghost hanging out in a graveyard, but the pale, wispy figure still caught my eye, if only because it was the first one I’d ever seen.
You’d think I would have been visited by more haints in my time, given the fact that I was a semiretired assassin and that I’d helped a lot of people move on from this life to the next with a slice or two of my silverstone knives.
I had come to Blue Ridge Cemetery to place some forget-me-nots on the grave of Fletcher Lane, my murdered mentor. The old man had taken me in off the streets when I was a teenager, trained me to be an assassin like him, dubbed me the Spider, and then set me loose on the greedy, corrupt citizens of the Southern metropolis of Ashland.
Good times.
I had been crouched over Fletcher’s grave for about ten minutes, brushing the dry, withered remains of the autumn leaves off his granite gravestone and arranging the blue forget-me-nots in an empty soda bottle I’d brought along for the purpose. The slick green glass was the same color as Fletcher’s eyes.
It was a bitterly cold January day. The sun looked like it was submerged under dingy dishwater clouds rather than hanging in the sky, and its weak rays didn’t even come close to melting the thin patches of crusty snow that littered the ground like shreds of tissue paper.
But I didn’t pay much attention to the cold—I was too busy talking to Fletcher. I’d been catching the old man up on everything that was happening in my life, from the reappearance of my baby sister, Bria, back in Ashland to my ongoing war against Mab Monroe, the Fire elemental who’d murdered my mother and my older sister when I was thirteen.
Fletcher’s grave was my own private confessional, a place where all my whispered secrets and worrisome weaknesses would be whipped away by the biting winds that whizzed across this particular ridge of the Appalachian Mountains.
Weaknesses that I had to hide as Gin Blanco—and most especially as my alter ego, the Spider.
I had just finished telling Fletcher about my deepening feelings for my lover, Owen Grayson, when a flash of movement caught my eye. I immediately palmed one of the silverstone knives hidden up my sleeves. I might be mostly retired from being the Spider these days, but I still had plenty of enemies who wanted me dead, namely Mab, now that I was openly gunning for her.
My fingers curled around the knife’s hilt, and a small symbol stamped into the metal pressed into a larger matching scar embedded in my palm. Both of them spider runes, a small circle surrounded by eight thin rays. The symbol for patience. The same rune, the same scar, was branded into my other palm. It was my assassin name and so much a part of who and what I was.
Knife in hand, I turned my head, ready to face whatever danger might be lurking in the cemetery—and to put it down, if necessary, in the bloody, permanent fashion I was fond of and so very good at.
And that’s when I first saw the haint.
She hovered over a gravestone about twenty feet away from where Fletcher was buried. I’d never given much thought to ghosts before. They were dead, after all. It was the living you had to watch out for—the people who could still screw you over six ways from Sunday the second they got the chance.
Still, it surprised me how translucent she was, like a shadow cast by the moon. Everything about her was pale silver, from her sweet, old-fashioned gingham dress to the wild, wavy hair that cascaded down her back like a waterfall. Her features were sharp, though, painfully so. Big eyes, full lips, a crook of a nose. She wasn’t what I would consider pretty—her features were too angular for that—but something in her face made you take a second look at her.
All put together, she looked like an old-timey mountain girl, someone who had once lived in one of the hundreds of forested hollers that clutched around the city of Ashland like thin, green, grasping fingers.
Besides, haints or not, only mountain girls went around barefoot in the winter. Like Jo-Jo Deveraux, the Air elemental who healed me whenever I needed patching up. I eyed the ghost’s toes, which rested on a patch of snow. I wondered if she could even feel the cold in whatever half-life she was clinging to.
I had told Fletcher everything that was troubling me, at least for today, so I slid my knife back up my sleeve and focused on the ghost. It took me a minute to realize that she was trying to clean off the gravestone, just like I’d done with Fletcher’s. I didn’t know if she could really brush aside the glittering cobwebs that swooped from one side of the gravestone to the other with her silvery fingers, but the tight set of her mouth told me that she was sure determined to try.
I got to my feet and walked over to the grave. The haint didn’t stop her phantom brushing, much less look at me. I supposed that she was used to being ignored. So was I. As the Spider, I had spent a good portion of my life creeping through the shadows and being as invisible as possible—until the moment I chose to strike.
I watched the haint work for a while. Maybe it was just my imagination, but the thick, sticky cobwebs seemed to quiver, shiver, and slowly break apart one tangled thread at a time under her relentless touch. Maybe she really could brush them away if she focused hard and long enough. And what was time to a haint?
My gray gaze traced over the faint markings on the smooth stone.
Thomas P. Kirkwood, beloved son, 1908�
�1929.
Maybe it was because I had been thinking about Owen so much lately and trying to come to terms with my feelings for him, but I didn’t think the long-dead Thomas was the haint’s son. No, I thought, only a lover could inspire that kind of devotion, even among ghosts and, most tellingly, all these years later.
Curiosity was one trait that Fletcher had instilled in me above all others, so I crouched down in front of the gravestone, then reached forward and ran my fingers across the weather-worn words.
The stone radiated sorrow.
People’s actions and feelings sink into their surroundings over time, especially into stone. As a Stone elemental, I could sense those psychic vibrations in whatever form the element took around me, from the proud whispers of a beautiful jewel to the harsh cries of a concrete floor spattered with blood.
The gravestone’s sad murmurs filled my mind, along with soft, whistling notes that told of the crumbling passage of time and how the sun, wind, rain, and snow had slowly worn away the hard, pointed edges of the marker. Not unusual emotions in a cemetery. The same feelings would eventually sink into Fletcher’s gravestone as the years rolled on by.
What surprised me was the rage.
It pulsed through the stone like a cold, black, beating heart—slow, steady, and unending.
Thump-thump-thump-thump.
Somehow I knew it was the haint’s rage. After all, if she’d died around the same time as Thomas, then she’d probably been haunting the cemetery since the 1920s, which meant that she’d had decades for her feelings to sink into the gravestone.
But who was the haint so angry at? Thomas? Had their love affair somehow gone wrong?
I concentrated on the rage, listening to the harsh mutters buried deep, deep down in the stone. I got the sense that the ghost’s anger was directed at someone else, someone who’d taken Thomas away from her. Sharp, anguished shrieks of helplessness also trilled through the stone, punctuating the rage and mixing with faint whispers of guilt.
Whatever had happened to Thomas, there was nothing the haint could do about it now, and it was eating her up inside. If she even had an inside anymore. Maybe that was why she hadn’t faded away into the afterlife yet. Maybe she couldn’t until things were set right. At least, that was what always seemed to happen in the stories I read for the various literature classes I took in my spare time at Ashland Community College.
Guilt, rage, helplessness – they were all emotions that I could relate to, that I’d felt every single day since Mab Monroe had murdered my mother and older sister. Really, they were the driving forces of my life – and would probably be the death of me when I finally went up against the Fire elemental.
So I took pity on the ghostly mountain girl. I leaned forward and spent the next few minutes brushing off all the hobwebs that decorated the gravestone, as well as dusting off the dried leaves and snapped twigs that the wind had carried that way as well.
When I was finally done, I turned to look at the haint. “There,” I said. “Better now?”
I must have surprised her because, for a moment, she zipped around me like moonlit lightning. I blinked, and there she was, shimmering a few feet away. The mountain girl’s eyes met mine. When she realized that I was actually looking at her, that I could actually see her, her mouth rounded into a perfect O. After a moment, she crept forward and waved her hand in front of my face.
“What?” I asked, brushing away her cool, ghostly fingers. “If you’re trying to make me cold, I don’t think it will work. I’m an Ice elemental, you see. Ice and Stone, actually. I can create Ice cubes with my bare hands that are colder than you are. And if you’re trying to scare me, well, you should know that I’ve spent a good part of my life being an assassin and killing people – bad, bad people. So I don’t scare easy.”
The mountain girl dropped her hand. She backed up a few steps, crossed her arms over her chest, and considered me, her silvery gaze taking in every little thing about me from my heavy fleece jacket to my chocolate-brown hair to my grey eyes that were almost as cold and pale as hers were. I stood there and let her stare. As an assassin, I was used to being patient, used to waiting for my targets to become vulnerable, no matter how long it took – minutes, hours, days, weeks. Or in Mab’s case, years.
But even I couldn’t compete with a haint. She had all the time in the world, and I had things to do, specifically a restaurant to run.
“Well,” I said. “I hope you find what you’re looking for. Peace, revenge, whatever. Maybe I’ll see you the next time I come here to visit Fletcher.”
The haint didn’t speak, of course, and I didn’t really expect her to. Still, the mountain girl stood next to Thomas’s forgotten grave and watched me disappear into the darkening twilight.
“I think I’m being haunted,” I said the next day.
Finnegan Lane, my foster brother and partner in murder, mayhem and mischief, arched an eyebrow. Amusement filled his bright-green eyes, which were the same color that Fletcher’s, his father’s, had been. “Really? Has one of your previous dark and dirty misdeeds came back to bite you in the ass?”
“Nothing as dramatic as that. I seem to have brought home a haint from the cemetery.”
I jerked my head to the right. Finn stared at the spot, but he didn’t see the mountain girl spinning around and around on the stool next to him, a small, silly smile on her face. I wasn’t quite sure how she could spin like that and the stool not move, but then again, haints weren’t my specialty. Killing people was. So I just sighed and leaned my elbows down onto the counter.
It was almost closing time at the Pork Pit, the barbecue restaurant I ran in downtown Ashland, and my gin joint was largely deserted. I’d already sent the wait staff home for the day, and the only people still inside were me, Finn and Sophia Deveraux, the dwarf who was the head cook.
Well, us plus the haint.
I’d first noticed the mountain girl when I’d opened up the restaurant this morning. I don’t know how she’d tracked me from the cemetery to the Pork Pit, but she had. I’d found her wandering around inside, looking at the well-worn, but clean, vinyl booths, the peeling blue and pink pig tracks on the floor that led to the men’s and women’s restrooms, respectively, the long counter in the back of the restaurant, even the bloody, framed copy of Where the Red Fern Grows that decorated one of the walls.
She’d perked up when I’d come into the Pit, her ghostly figure pulsing a brighter silver. I’d tried to talk to her, to ask her what she was doing here and what she wanted, but all she did was stare at me with her big eyes that almost glowed with hope.
I had no idea why. I wasn’t one to inspire hope in people – more like fear, followed quickly by terror, panic and death.
The mountain girl had hung out in the restaurant the rest of the day, always keeping me in sight. When I went over to a booth to take someone’s order, she tagged along. When I went into the alley in the back of the restaurant to dump the day’s trash, she stayed two steps behind me. She’d even followed me into the bathroom, until I shooed her away and told her that I liked to do my lady business in private.
But none of the folks who’d come into the Pork Pit had noticed her hovering over their shoulders, wistfully eyeing their thick, juicy barbecue beef and pork sandwiches, steak-cut fries and baked beans coated with Fletcher Lane’s secret barbecue sauce. Apparently, I was the only one who could see her.
Well, me and Sophia.
I supposed it made sense. Sophia was an Air elemental, which meant that she could create, control and manipulate all the natural gases in the air the same way that I could in the stone around me. No doubt she sensed the psychic vibrations the ghost was giving off. Not that Sophia would say anything about it, since she didn’t talk much. Still, every once in a while, the dwarf would stare at the mountain girl out of the corner of her eye.
And the mountain girl stared right back at her. That’s because Sophia wasn’t just a dwarf – she also happened to be a goth. Sophia wore black from the
bottoms of her heavy boots to her thick jeans to her T-shirt, which featured a grinning pirate skull and crossbones. A matching silverstone skull dangled off the black leather collar that ringed her neck. Her hair and eyes were black too, although her lips were a bright, glossy pink in her pale face.
Sophia’s clothes stood out in stark contrast to Finn’s slick, designer, Fiona Fine suit and the simple long-sleeved T-shirt and jeans that I wore.
“And why do you suppose this particular haint has decided to haunt you?” Finn asked, taking a sip of the chicory coffee he favored. “You didn’t kill her, did you? Or someone she cared about?”
“No,” I said. “According to the gravestone she was floating around, she probably died long before I was even born.”
Finn perked up. “Gravestone, eh? What was the name on it?”
In addition to being an investment banker, Finn also had a network of spies throughout Ashland and beyond. To him, digging up dirt on other people was an amusing hobby, as was seducing whatever woman happened to be strolling by at the time. I’d never been able to decide what Finn liked best – money, secrets or women. But his unashamed pursuit of all three was one of the many things I loved about him.
This time, I raised my eyebrow. “You really want to research this for me? It’s just a ghost.”
“A ghost who’s haunting you,” Finn pointed out. “She’s got to have a reason, right? Otherwise, why not just stay in the cemetery and hang out for another hundred years?”
He had a point. Truth be told, I was kind of curious myself why she’d latched on to me. Oh, I could tell the haint wanted something – I just didn’t know what it was or why she thought that I could give it to her. As a semi-retired assassin, I wasn’t known for my kind and generous nature. Quite the opposite, in fact.