I’m thankful that Jasper died with unfinished business. It’s
hard on me, and harder on him, but it was smart. He let lovers get away from
him, and made promises knowing they’d go unfulfilled, and just about asked the Syndicate’s
assassins to pin him down. We knew we wouldn’t get out of Georgia alive. The
hopelessness was an investment.
Before we were two teenaged fuck-ups trying to take on the
world. The next morning, we were one teenaged fuck-up and one pissed off ghost.
We got a lot more work done. All that fancy throwing knife shit the Syndicate
teaches didn’t do salt against Jasper. And when they turned and tried to
escape, he’d possess their engine blocks and drive them into the ocean.
It once took us eighteen months to find the safe house where
the man who strangled our father hid – an ugly labor, even if it’s how I met
Hilde. And I’m thankful we don’t have to tail anyone anymore. Jasper sucked
salt at tailing people, and I had to bail his ass more times than I’ve got
fingers left. After he let himself die, after he died in my place in a sweltering
warehouse and under a hail of knives, things got plain easier. He found Syndicate
lawyers and magi faster than a GPS.
I almost began collecting a scrapbook of his greatest hits.
The suspected heroin kingpin whose elevator malfunctioned. The three demonists
posing as patent lawyers who went missing with their yacht.
I almost did it, but I worry that if I praise him too much,
that’ll acknowledge his work, and then he’ll be done. If his business is
settled, Jasper will cease to be. And maybe Jasper deserves the rest of ceasing
to be. I can’t ask him because he doesn’t reckon things that way anymore. He’s
still the pissed off ghost of a teenager, where I’m an expecting father of
twins. I’m a little scared to tell him about them. I’m a little scared to tell
him I’d like to slow down.
But I’m thankful. I’ll never pretend I’m not. Hilde wants to
name one of the twins after him, and I owe him. I just don’t know how much further
a man can owe.
Serendipity. I am reading a very very nasty story involving ghosts, mental illness, twins, love and loss at the moment (Her Fearful Symmetry: Audrey Niffenegger) and this short is a pleasant interlude. The skilled plotting and writing is stronger (just) than the nastiness which keeps me reading.
ReplyDeleteNow THAT is serious commitment to one's chosen career path.
ReplyDeleteGreat story John, the reference to his "Greatest hits" particularly made me smile.
ReplyDeleteI love the scrapbook idea. :) Fun story John!
ReplyDeleteThere's no ghost like a pissed off ghost. Nice one.
ReplyDeleteHmm sounds like he needs to keep that ghost happy!
ReplyDeleteThis is a dark and disturbing piece that I enjoyed. I wonder what all the owing leads up to.
ReplyDeleteI love this! Would make a great TV show, too. :-)
ReplyDeleteThis was really something to read after my first exposure to Supernatural last week -- I keep going over the episodes I saw and thinking it would make a lot more sense if Dean was already dead when he showed up at Sam's university apartment. Or if one of the writers for Supernatural was Nick Cave.
ReplyDeleteWhat I loved the most was that the narrator seems at least as scary and messed-up as his ghost brother!
Really clever concept, John. One of my favourites of yours!
ReplyDeleteNice one, John. I second the idea that this would be a great TV miniseries or movie.
ReplyDelete