Chapter One
The burning sting intensified against Cecilyâs side. She tried to keep her ribs from flexing as she drew a breath, squeezing her eyes shut and steeling herself against the pain.
âYou doing okay?â
She tucked her face into her arms, smiling despite the burn. âDoing good.â
The buzzing of the tattoo needles stopped. She heard Scott sit back, then felt a cool rag against her skin.
Lifting her head, she stole a glance at him before cradling her face in her arms again. âHowâs it look?â
A breathâs pause, then, âAmazing. Do you think you can take any more tonight or should we plan to do another session?â
âI can take it,â Cecily replied. She adjusted how she was laying, settling in and shoring herself up again. She could do this. âLetâs finish what we started.â
Scottâs chuckle might have been laced with admiration. She tried but failed to ignore the part of her that thrilled at that.
âOkay, but tell me if you want to stop,â he said. âAnother sitting doesnât have to be months away. Weâre moving to Seattle, remember?â
âOh, I know,â she replied. How could she forget?
Cecily winced when the needles first touched her skin, the burn akin to bee stings against her side.
âI saw that,â Scott remarked.
âYeah, it hurts,â she said, âbut that doesnât mean Iâm not fine.â Or that there wasnât some small part of her that kind of liked it.
But it wasnât like she was about to say that out loud.
Outside, rain pelted the roof and the windows. The blinds at the front of the shop were shut tight against prying eyes, but the sound made it clearâit was pouring outside. That seemed to just be the way summers worked in New Orleans, rising humidity all day until the clouds opened up and dumped a short torrential downpour and started the process all over again. It was nothing like the all-day Seattle-style drizzle Cecily was accustomed to.
Scott had a single goose-neck lamp on and angled to shine where he was working, but the rest of the shop was dark. It was well after closing time. Rhia was dozing peacefully under the table, but other than that, they were alone in the shop. The only sound besides the tattoo needles and Rhiaâs occasional snuffle was Scottâs breathing, slow and steady, and his voice, calm and comfortably low, when he chose to speak.
Cecily was topless, lying on her stomach on the padded table so Scott could access the tattoo heâd begun inking on her ribs months ago on her first trip to New Orleans. On that visit, heâd outlined the runes that had protected her over the last few months. Now he was adding detail and shading, taking it from a set of lines to a work of art.
His fingers moved against her skin, his touch warm and sure as he changed his angle.
In the year since sheâd met Scott over the phone the day she, Zander and Callum had destroyed the Shadow that had been stalking them (how about that for a bit of life experience she never expected to have?) Cecily had grown to think of Scott as one of her best friends.
She thought on that for a second.
Did Zander count as a best friend? She supposed yes, but also no. Zander was her oldest sisterâthat was a category all its own.
So, yeah. Scott was certainly her best friend still living.
He was smart, interesting and, unfortunately for her, incredibly good-looking.
Which was something she definitely hadnât known the extent of when sheâd talked to him that first time on the phone, but had gotten the full brunt of when he and Callum had visited Seattle with Zander for Christmas just a couple months later. The same visit when everything had been revealed about Cecily not finishing her degree. Yeah, that had been awkward.
âHow was your flight?â Scott asked over the sound of the needles, interrupting her thoughts like he knew she needed rescuing.
âIt was good.â She smiled and angled her face toward Scott slightly so her voice would carry over the harsh buzzing. âIf you call having the spirit of a woman talk at you for the entire flight good. I mean, she was nice enough, but itâs not like I could respond to her with all of those people sitting around.â Which meant she just sort of spoke the entire time. It had been exhausting.
Scottâs chuckle came from deep in his chest. âJesus, that sounds awful. Callum hates to fly. Thatâs probably why.â
âProbably. It definitely wasnât the most relaxing flight Iâve ever had.â Though getting this time to unwind with Scott was a nice way to end an otherwise hectic day. âHey, do you think Zander and Callum are staying out late tonight?â Callum had picked her up at the airport. Theyâd grabbed a fast food bite, but when they made it to the house, heâd all but turned around and left again, saying something about meeting Zander for a last-day-at-work happy hour. Heâd asked if Cecily wanted to join them, but sheâd already had this session set up with Scott. That had been around seven p.m. By the time sheâd showered off the airplane feeling and gotten to Scottâs tattoo shop, it had been nearly eight.
âI mean, itâs Zanderâs last day at work. Wouldnât you?â was Scottâs response.
Cecily thought for a moment. Zander had coined the term âhell-jobâ to refer to the role and the company she was leaving behind. âPoint taken.â
âWhy do you ask?â
The funny thing was, she wasnât sure. But she did know it definitely wasnât to get a sense of if she and Scott would be hanging out at the house by themselves after they finished her tattoo. Or to know if anyone would be waiting up for them back home.
It wasnât anything like that.
âJust trying to get a sense of if I should stay up to hang out with Zander tonight or save it for tomorrow.â She was here for over a weekâthereâd be plenty of time to see Zander. Plus Scott wasnât one to go out to barsânot that he was the reason she wasnât going out. Besides, there would be lots of opportunities to spend time with Zander and Callum, along with Scott, when they moved up to Seattle at the end of this vacation-to-help-them-move Cecily was currently on.
She smiled as a thrill of excitement ran through her: Zander back home in Seattle! Living just a short drive from the apartment Cecily was about to sign a lease for!
Sheâd taken time to get her head right after Trevor died. He was still around thanks to her medium mojo, but he wasnât alive so every plan theyâd made together had been destroyed. Sheâd spent the last year-and-a-half since then standing still, unsure what to do next.
But, at some point during the summer, sheâd started to feel better. More solid.
Scott was part of why. He was this constant, sure-footed presence in her lifeâeven if he lived halfway across the country. Callumâs friendshipâmore big brother than Scottâs best friend vibesâwas another. Zanderâs acceptance, her no-nonsense care and her ambition kept Cecily grounded and reminded her that sheâd had goals at some point, too.
Time, she knew, was the other part that had begun to heal her wounds.
It still sucked sometimes, knowing she and Trevor werenât facing the future theyâd planned. But not as much as it had at first.
Which was why she had registered for winter quarter classes at the university, and why she was getting ready to sign a lease and move out on her own once and for all.
And why she was so excited to have her three favorite living people (well, besides her mother, of course) a quick drive instead of a five-hour plane ride away.
âHow are things with Alyssa?â Scott asked, his voice coming from somewhere along Cecilyâs side, which, sheâd learned, usually meant he was inking some seriously tiny detail.
Of course heâd ask about the one part of Cecilyâs life that wasnât progressing according to her designs. âSheâs fine.â
âStill distant?â
âMore or less.â Although by that, she meant only more.
Cecily suppressed a sigh. She and Alyssaâs relationship hadnât been the same since that drama with the Shadow. Alyssa had been more than happy to leave the apartment while Cecily, Zander, and Callum destroyed the thing but when she came back after it was all over, it was like a wedge had been planted between them. Nothing uncivil or direct. Sometimes Cecily wondered if she was imagining it, but then something would happen that normally would have been prime sister bonding fodderâand nothing. Alyssa would laugh, or comment, but she remained distant. The conversations were more akin to that of a trusted co-worker, not the sister-closeness theyâd once shared.
âI thought she was considering coming down with you this time,â Scott said, his breath brushing against Cecilyâs ribs.
Which she totally didnât notice.
âShe was,â Cecily replied, âbut she couldnât get the days off work.â If she even tried.
The truth was, she had no idea what was going on with Alyssa. On the one hand, she wished Alyssa would get over whatever was keeping her distant already. On the other hand, she understood why she hadnât.
âI really figured sheâd come around,â Scott remarked, almost like he knew all the things Cecily wasnât saying.
She started to shrug but stopped herself.
âHey, did you end up taking classes for fall quarter?â Scott asked. The buzzing stopped for a moment, like it did intermittently, leaving only the weight of his fingers against her ribs.
âNah, Iâm working a ton to save up so I can move out,â she replied, forcing her brain to stay on track. âBut I registered for Winter quarter.â It had taken her some time to be able to stomach the thought of going backâthen more months to save up the money to actually do itâwhich was why it had taken her so long to follow through on the thing she knew she should have done a year ago.
She braced herself for the sting of the needles as she felt him lower the machine back onto her skin a second before the buzzing kicked back on.
âGood for you. Did you end up landing that apartment you wanted?â
âWe did!â she exclaimed in response. Damn, had it been that long since sheâd texted with him? âWe sign the lease when I get back. Itâs near campus so getting to work will be a breezeââ
âNot to mention your classes,â Scott interjected. Heâd been a good friend and a huge support with the whole school thingâfrom the moment her no-degree status had been unceremoniously revealed.
Cecily smiled. âAnd my classes. But the apartment is far enough away from campus not to be too noisy Friday and Saturday nights. Iâm not looking to dive into the party scene or anything.â
Scott laughed under his breath. âYou sure you want to move out of your momâs place? It seems kind of cushy where youâre at now.â
âYes, Iâm sure,â Cecily replied with certainty. âIâm twenty-three. I need to not live with my mom anymore.â Ouch! She drew a sharp breath through her teeth before she could stop herself.
The buzzing of the tattoo needles stopped immediately. âAnd thatâs my cue to quit.â
Cecily sighed, annoyed at herself. She wanted to keep goingâbut even she had to admit that the pain was starting to get to her.
She also wasnât sure if it was the tattoo, or the company that made her so gung-ho about keeping on.
âThat was a full body wince,â Scott said, like he knew she was silently kicking herself. âEndorphins bottom out eventuallyâno matter how badass you are.â
Cecily pushed herself up onto her elbows and turned her head to look at him, careful to maintain some semblance of modesty by keeping her breasts hidden behind her arms.
Ever the gentleman, Scott wasnât even looking. He was sitting back in his chair, eyes closed, stretching his neck, left, then right, and left again. His black, horn-rimmed glasses were pushed up into his short, dark hair. His sharp jaw was shadowed in stubble at least two shades lighter. And below that, the tattoos that ran up his neck, peeking above the collar of his plaid, short-sleeved button-up looked like pencil sketches on his skin.
He sat up and opened his bright, brown eyes. Cecily cast her gaze to the space beyond him, to the art on the walls, but it was too late.
Heâd caught her staring.
âIâm not worried about being a wimp,â she said with a laugh, shaking her head and redirecting her gaze completely so she stared at the table beneath her. She clasped her hands and picked her feet up from the table, crossing them at the ankle in the air behind her, going for casual and nonplussed.
Anything but shit-I-just-got-caught-staring-at-my-sisterâs-boyfriendâs-brother.
âI just canât wait until its finished,â she added.
She couldnât take it anymore. She threw Scott a glanceâonly to catch him staring.
Unfortunately, he was focused on the tattoo heâd just been working on.
Not on her.
He looked up at her with a quick breath, like heâd been lost in thought about his work. âItâll be worth the wait,â he said. âNot to be too self-congratulatory or anything.â
Cecily laughed. âIf youâll hand me my shirt, we can get out of here.â
âNot yet,â Scott replied.
But before her imagination could get too far ahead of her, he turned, reached, and swiveled back again with a tub of ointment in his hands.
âGotta wrap you up.â
Callum wrapped a half sheet of newspaper around a mug and made a mental note to tell Zander to kick him if he ever suggested or agreed to moving ever again. This sucked.
He was ridiculously thankful Cecily had flown down to help. With Zander working crazy hours up until last night and Scott pulling different though similarly long shifts, Callum was pretty sure that the three of them alone had no hope of packing this entire house without Cecilyâs help.
It was a two-bedroom, one-bathroom houseâ1000 square feet, tops. Heâd thought theyâd lived sort of minimalist. He and Scott werenât into superfluous purchases, and even Zander was more of a quality-over-quantity kind of person. So how did they own this much stuff?
âScott and I figured you and Zander were going to go out last night, it being Zanderâs last day at work and all,â Cecily remarked as she wrapped another mug in newspaper.
Callum laughed under his breath. âNah, weâre hanging out with some friends tonightâdecided to return to our cocoon after the happy hour and a late dinner.â Like, really late. The happy hour hadnât broken up until nearly nine. Zander hadnât really seemed up for anything but a just-the-two-of-them dinner at that point. She used to be game for staying out all damn night if the company, drinks, and music were goodâhe used to be tooâbut her job over the last six months or so had taken its toll. She burned a lot of energy dealing with a toxic corporate culture, shitty co-workers, and a boss who didnât seem to give a damn about any of it.
âYour place is sort of cocoon-like.â Cecily laughed quietly as Callum handed her the mugs heâd just wrapped and she set them both in the box at their feet.
Speaking of comfort⊠Callum saw his opportunity. âSeems like I heard you and Scott up late,â he remarked casually as he reached for the next mug and a fresh sheet of newsprint. He and Zander had gotten home around ten oâclock. Theyâd stayed up for a bit, drinking a couple beers and hanging out with Scott and Cecily. But Zander had turned in around eleven and Callum had followed, something in him unwilling to let her go to bed alone. Maybe when they got up to Seattle, some of her out-all-night energy would return, but until then, he was happy to hole up with her in their room when she needed it. There was more to do in bed than just sleep, after allâŠ
But later, with the sound of Zander sleeping beside him, heâd lain there, awake, because even midnight was way before his bedtime most nights.
âWell, you and Zander crashed out at elevenâwho the hell else was I supposed to hang out with?â Cecily laughed.
âFair enough,â Callum chose not to bring up the fact that once he finally fell asleep, heâd heard them talking in the moments he woke up to roll over. He wasnât mad. On the contrary, he hoped they would get out of their own way.
âWhere is Zander, by the way?â Cecily asked as she took another wrapped mug from him.
Callum grabbed the last mug from the cabinet and a sheet of newspaper. âSleeping again.â
Cecily paused, her brows furrowed. âZander doesnât nap. Is she okay?â
âSheâs fine,â Callum replied over the sound of crinkling newspaper as he snugged the folds around the mug in his hand before handing it off. âThe last couple of weeks have been pretty roughâsheâs stress crashing.â
âAh, gotcha. Stress crashing does sound more like Zander.â
âOh?â Callum asked with a smile. âIs this a pattern for her?â He closed the box and ticked a nod at the packing tape on the counter behind Cecily.
âSort of,â she replied, handing him the tape. âI think itâs how she recalibrates after pushing through something hard.â
Callum chuckled. âWell, that seems reasonable,â he replied. âMaybe we should all take a lesson on stress crashing from Zander.â
âOr,â Cecilyâs brows rose, âshe could learn not to put so much damned pressure on herself so she doesnât have to crash?â
Callum laughed. âHey, her high expectations have served her pretty well, so far. Who are we to judge?â He peeled up the edge of the tape, stuck it to the side of the box, and stretched it long across the top, bracing himself through that horrible noise it made every time he did it.
Jeez, maybe he should wait to do the tape until Zander was awake. Heâd remember that for the next one.
He pushed the box to Cecily who was ready and waiting with the marker to inscribe the top of the box with the same ornate font sheâd used on all the others. It took less than a minute, but when she was done with it, the word âkitchenâ looked like it belonged on a wedding invitation.
Cecily capped the pen. âItâs all yours, ready for the moving truck pile. Can you believe thereâs only five days left until youâre out of here?â
Callumâs chest gave a pang of ridiculous sadness as he hoisted the box and carried it to the living room where theyâd been stacking all the packed boxes. The landlord was scheduled to do the final move-out walk-thru on Tuesdayâwhich was less than three days away at this point.
âIâm not sure Iâve fully accepted it yet,â he joked.
Heâd miss New Orleansâand heâd miss this house. It was hard to believe he and Scott were about to move out. They couldnât stay here forever and the fact was, Zander deserved this new role sheâd landed. It was closer to her family, and far away from the boss and co-workers sheâd grown to hate so much over the last year. It just also meant it was really far away from New Orleans, and everything he and Scott had known as adults. But Zander and Cecily, even Zanderâs mom, Nicole, were almost as much a part of Callumâs life now as Scott wasâhe and Scott both felt that wayâso while the scenery would change, Callum found comfort knowing his connection to this new-found family wouldnât. In fact, he hoped it just got better.
âItâll be great,â Cecily said. âI, for one, am super stoked to have you all so close.â
Callum laughed. âYou read my mind.â Now he needed to change the subject before things got too mushy. âScottâs at the shop, yeah?â
Cecily nodded and backed up a step to let Callum by as he crossed back to the kitchen. âTodayâs his last day taking clients, so heâs booked solid. He said heâd be home around nine.â
âShould we take bets now on how much past nine oâclock heâll actually walk through the front door?â Callum joked.
âOver-under…two hours?â Cecilyâs brows rose.
âIâll take the over bet,â Callum replied, turning toward the cabinets once again.
âPerfect. Tomorrowâs coffee on over/under two hours past nine p.m.â
âYouâre on,â Callum agreed. He took a box from the empty-pile and sat it where the last box had been. âNow on to plates!â
Cecily laughed again and joined him at the counter, bringing with her a refreshed stack of newspaper. âOh, hey, I had an idea for my next post on the blog!â
âOh, do tell.â Callumâs tone was joking, but his interest was real.
âSo, I had a friend ask me to try to reach her father,â she said, then tacked on, âwhoâs dead.â
Callum chuckled. âI gathered as much.â
âJust going for clarity. Anyway, it was a pretty cool experience. So I started thinkingââ
âWait, wait, wait,â Callum cut in. âYou did it?â
âYeah.â Cecily shrugged. âIt took a little practice, but it wasnât that hard.â
Callum had stopped with a plate in his hand when she started talking about directed contactâreaching out to an individual spirit. He stared at her for a moment.
Cecily never failed to amaze him with her ease and willingness. Even when heâd first met her, and when he first told her she was a mediumâand explained that he was one, tooâsheâd barely blinked. Callum had never felt as easy about it as she seemed to, even as a kid. Heâd never tried to learn more or tried to expand his ability. Heâd never pushed the spiritual envelope, so to speak. But Cecily just took it all in stride with an air of curiosity and a bias toward action heâd never possessed.
Sometimes he wondered how much more knowledgeable heâd be about it allâhis skills, the other side, the veil, all of itâif heâd had free reign to learn and grow with his abilities instead of hiding it and ignoring the spirits who talked at him.
It wasnât exactly something he could indulge when he was a kid living in foster care. Back then, the name of the game had been blending in or being labeled and shipped out to a home that was âmore equippedâ to handle your âspecific needs.â
It was cool to watch Cecily own it all, though. Not to mention pretty freaking cool to have a friend to talk to about it who could actually relate. A friend who was being talked at by the same spirits he was when they went out to grab a biteâor drove home from the airport, as it were.
âYou seem mad,â she said, her tone wary.
He shook his head. âNot mad at all. Just surprised.â
She seemed relieved. âOkay. Thatâs good because, well, she told a mutual friend, and now that friend wants me to try to connect with her aunt. So I got to thinking, what if I record the session, and we post it on the blog? With her permission, of course. I think itâd get views.â
Callum laughed under his breath. âItâll get views alright.â Likely crazy amounts of views. âBut going viral isnât a good enough reason to do itânot unless itâs something youâd want to do anyway. And even then…â
He finally started wrapping the plate he had in his hand as he continued over the sound of the crinkling paper. âWeâre getting thousands of visitors per week at this point. Shit, if it really went viral, weâre talking millions of people seeing this video. And lots of those people will want you to connect with their loved ones.â
âSo, weâll make it a recurring topic!â she exclaimed.
âDo you want that?â he challenged, setting the wrapped plate into the box and reaching for another. âWhen you finish school and youâre looking for a new job, do you want prospective employers to know you talk to dead people? Or worse, have them not believe you talk to dead people?â His brain started really churning on the idea. They had an FAQ on the blog, and a couple of videos with voiceovers, but an honest-to-god video of her speaking to the dead felt a hundred times more exposed than all of that. âWe use different names on the blog, just in case, but we canât hide your face in a video. Not if weâre going to create any sort of credibility with the whole thing…â He stopped when he noticed Cecily staring right back, one brow raised, eyes cynical.
She shook her head and took a plate from the cabinet, breaking their eye contact. âScott said youâd say that.â
She was stung. Callum hadnât meant to be so negative. âWell, Scott knows me pretty well,â he said. âLook Iâm not saying we shouldnât do it. I just want to make sure we consider all the consequences. This could have a lot more impact on your life than writing some posts.â
Cecily tilted her head from side to side, her eyes toward the ceiling for a second like she was making a show of considering it. âBirdCall83 would be pretty pissed,â she said.
Callum tried to hide his smile. BirdCall83 was their loudest, most critical reader. They commented on almost everything he and Cecily posted. Sometimes their comments were neutral, once or twice theyâd even been supportive, but most of the time, their comments were salty like the bottom of a bag of potato chips. That said, they were never impolite, never used foul language nor attacked he or Cecily personally. Honestly, it sounded like this person had some seriously deep understanding and was none-too-pleased that the two of them were sharing some trade secrets.
So Callum could only imagine how salty theyâd get if Cecily posted a recording of her contacting a friendâs deceased loved one.
God, it was almost enough to make him want to do it!
Which probably meant it was a bad idea.
âThey say donât feed the trolls,â he admonished with no seriousness.
âTheyâre hardly a troll,â Cecily countered. âBesides, you know you want to.â
âItâs true,â he replied with a dramatic sigh. âWatching them go nuclear would be pretty sweet. But that doesnât mean we should do it.â
âThis sounds like way too serious a conversation for this early.â
Callum looked up in time to see Zander step around the door frame into the kitchen. Her dark hair was bedhead stylish, her tee faded and her denim shorts ripped, but what really registered was her smileâtired but more true than heâd seen from her in weeks. He put the plate heâd just wrapped into the box, then reached for her as she stepped toward him. He kissed her soft, pink lips.
âItâs after lunch,â Cecily remarked.
Zander gave a short laugh as she drew her lips away from Callumâs. âAh. Only early to me then.â
âWell, this is your second morning of the day,â Callum reminded her. âCoffee?â
âHell yes. But I want to go hit our coffee shopâlimited chances left, ya know? You guys want a break?â A break sounded perfect, Callum thought. He needed to think about Cecilyâs recurring topic ideaâand really flesh out his position on the whole thing. Because the last thing he wanted was to hurt his relationship with Zanderâs sister.

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