Part 1 (1/2)

The Haunted Air.

A Repairman Jack Novel.

by F. Paul Wilson.

for two MIAs Poul Anderson Richard Laymon

Acknowledgements

I owe a debt to works by James Randi (An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural, The Psychic Healers (An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural, The Psychic Healers, and Flim-Flam!) Flim-Flam!) and M. Lamar Keene and M. Lamar Keene (The Psychic Mafia) (The Psychic Mafia). These acted as invaluable guidebooks on what to look for on my visits to Spiritualist churches and psychic mediums.

Thanks to the usual crew for their editorial help on the ma.n.u.script: my wife Mary; my editor David Hartwell; his a.s.sistant Moshe Feder; Elizabeth Monteleone; Steven Spruill; and my agent Albert Zuckerman. And thanks to Blake Dollens, typo master, for his help with this edition.

FRIDAY.

1.

The bride wore white.

Only she wasn't a bride and the dress-two sizes too small at least-had faded to beige.

”Can I ask again,” Jack said, leaning toward Gia, ”why our hostess is wearing her wedding dress?”

Gia, seated next to him on the tattered, thirdhand-store sofa, sipped from her plastic cup of white wine. ”You may.”

A casual little get-together, Gia had told him. Some of her artist friends were going to gather at a loft in a converted warehouse on the fringe of the old Brooklyn Army Terminal, throw a little party for one of their clan who'd started to make it big. Come on, she'd said. It'll be fun.

Jack wasn't in a fun mood. Hadn't been for some time now. But he'd agreed to go. For Gia.

Maybe twenty people wandering about the s.p.a.ce while Pavement's last alb.u.m pounded from a boom box, echoing off the high ceilings, huge windows, and stripped-to-the-brick walls. The occupants sported hair colors that spanned the visible spectrum, skin that was either pierced or tattooed or both, and clothes that redlined the garishometer.

And Halloween was better than two months away.

Jack took a pull from his bottle of beer. He'd brought his own, opting to forego his usual Rolling Rock long necks for a six-pack of Harp. Good thing, too. The bridal-bedecked hostess had stocked Bud Light. He'd never tasted watered-down cow pee, but he imagined it tasted better than Bud Light.

”All right. Why is our hostess wearing her wedding dress?”

”Gilda's never been married. She's an artist, Jack. She's making a statement.”

”What statement? I mean, besides Look at me Look at me?”

”I'm sure she'd tell you that it's up to the individual to decide.”

”Okay. I've decided she just wants attention.”

”Is that so bad? Just because you're frightened to death of attention doesn't make it wrong for other people to court it.”

”Not frightened to death of it,” Jack grumbled, not wanting to concede the point.

A tall, slim woman pa.s.sed by then, a dead-white streak running along the side of her frizzy black swept-back hair.

He c.o.c.ked his head toward her. ”I know her statement: her husband's a monster.”

”Karyn's not married.”

A guy with gelled neon yellow hair slid by, each eyebrow pierced by at least a dozen gold rings.

”Hi, Gia,” he said with a wave and kept moving.

”Hi, Nick.”

”Let me guess,” Jack muttered. ”As a child Nick was frightened by a curtain rod.”

”My, aren't we the cranky one tonight,” Gia said, giving him a look.

Cranky barely touched it. He'd been alternating between bouts of rage and the way-down dumps for a couple of months now. Ever since Kate's death. Couldn't seem to pull himself out. He'd been finding it hard to get out of bed in the morning, and once he was up, there didn't seem to be anything he wanted to do. So he'd drag himself to Abe's or Julio's or Gia's and pretend he was fine. Same old Jack, just not working on anything at the moment.

The angry voice mail messages from his father, ragging on him for not showing up at Kate's wake or funeral, hadn't helped. ”Don't tell me you had something more important to do. She was your sister, sister, d.a.m.n it d.a.m.n it!”

Jack knew that. After fifteen years of separation, Kate had come back into his life for one week during which he'd gotten to know her again, love her again, and now she was gone. Forever.

The facts said it wasn't Jack's fault, but the facts didn't keep Jack from blaming himself. And one other person...

He'd searched for the man he'd suspected of being in some way responsible, a man whose real name he didn't know but who'd called himself Sal Roma once, and maybe Ms. Aralo too. He'd put the word out but no one knew anything. Never heard of him. Jack wound up with a taste of his own medicine-Sal Roma didn't seem to exist.

Kate... she might still be alive if only he'd done things his way instead of listening to...

Stop. No point in traveling that well-worn trail again. He hadn't returned his father's calls. After a while they stopped.

He forced a smile for Gia. ”Sorry. Pseudo-weirdos crank me off.”

”Can't be much weirder than the people you spend most of your day with.”

”Those are different. They're real. Their weirdness comes from inside. They wake up weird. They dress weird because they reach out a hand and whatever it touches first is what they wear that day. These people here spend hours in front of a mirror making themselves look weird. My weirdos have hair that spikes out in twenty directions because that's the way it was when they rolled out of bed this morning; these folks use herbal shampoo, half a gallon of gel, and a special comb to achieve their unwashed bed-head look. My weirdos don't belong; these people seem to want desperately to belong, but don't want anyone to know, so they try to outdo each other to look like outsiders.”

Gia's lips twisted. ”And the biggest outsider of them all is sitting right here in a short-sleeve plaid s.h.i.+rt, jeans, and work boots.”

”And spending the evening watching pretensions collide with affectations. Present company excluded, of course.”

One of the many things he loved about Gia was her lack of affectation. Her hair was blond by nature and short for convenience. Tonight she was wearing beige slacks and a sleeveless turquoise top that heightened the blue of her eyes. Her makeup consisted of a touch of lipstick. She didn't need anything more. She looked clean and healthy, a very untrendy look in this subculture.

But the subculture had percolated into the overculture, the fringe had become mainstreamed. Years ago construction workers threw bricks at longhairs and called them f.a.ggots, now the building trades were packed with ponytails and earrings.