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9 Vol 2 Num 3: October 2007
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Fantasy Stories
Soul Searching
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Illustrated by Mike Rooth

Dugan Growser was the last guy I wanted to see in my office, since I'd been haunting him at home for the last month. Sure, it was a crummy office in a crummy section of town, but even it had its standards.
"You gotta find somethin' for me, McCaffrey!" the greasy-haired, skinny little runt squealed, shoving the door right through me and dropping into a chair, as uninvited as demonic possession. He dug a hairy little hand into the box of cigars I keep on my battered desk, scarfed a mittful, knowing full well I had no use for them anymore.
I cursed him like I'd been cursing him every night for the last thirty. And the effect was the usual—
"My soul!" he bleated, not altogether correcting me. He shoved his three-fingered hand through his black hair and shuddered, his pointy face swimming in sweat. "You gotta find my soul, McCaffrey!"
"Have you tried jazz?" I said, floating over my desk.
He didn't look amused. "No, no! I don't mean I lost it or nuthin'. I mean someone stole it!"
"How would a guy like you even know it was missing?" I asked, watching him rattle like teeth in a hockey player, enjoying myself.
Growser grinned a crooked grin, regaining some of his scummy composure. "Okay, okay, we've had our differences, sure, McCaffrey. But—"
"Differences!?" I shrieked (something I'd been doing a lot of lately; seemed to come with the ghostly territory). "You killed me, remember? Turned me into the only dick in this town with a clear conscience—
Growser planted one of my cigars in his kisser. "That was an accident, McCaffrey. No hard feelin's. How was I s'posed to know the slugs I pumped in Fish Manson were gonna chew through him an' eat into you?"
"You blast away with a .44, in the middle of a crowded street, and you don't think maybe there's going to be some collateral damage! Even you're not that dumb, Growser."
He shrugged his bony shoulders, wiped his pointed nose with a yellowed digit. "What can I say? The opportunity just sorta came up. I couldn't let it pass. Anyway, that's yesterday's news. You gonna help me or not?"
"Not!" I shrieked.
Growser set fire to the stogie, puffed on it, as calm and deadly now as an oil slick. "How'd you like it if I ratted you out to the Feds—
I clenched my fists, my fingers doubling back on themselves. The reason I was still around, in spirit at least, still working cases, was because I had a tax bill outstanding at the time of my untimely demise. The IRS wanted what was coming, no excuses accepted. They had worked a deal with both sides, so that back taxes, interest, and penalties were considered unfinished business. Just as surely as you can't take it with you, you also can't take off owing Uncle Sam. The reason I was haunting Growser? Well, that's what ghosts do. Haunting your murderer is an obligation of being a ghost.
"Okay, Growser," I gritted, "when did you first notice that your soul was missing?"
He spat on the floor. "Yesterday mornin'. I woke up same time as usual, but I had this real, kinda, empty feelin' inside. I just wasn't myself, you know—
I floated down to look him in the eye. "You sure your soul didn't just pack up and leave on its own, like your ex-wives? Like maybe it went looking for better accommodations? Or maybe . . . it got while the getting was good?"
"Like I'm gonna keel over any minute—
"That is an awfully long time for a soul to be missing, even in this town," I mused.
"Yeah. Anyway, I come here 'cause I figure a guy like you's got connections—
He had me there. I wanted that IRS bill squared. There had to be more to death than hanging around here. "Okay," I said. "I'll scout around, see what I can dig up."
"Good." Growser jumped to his feet, threw down the cigar with a look of disgust, and crushed it out with his heel. "You find whoever stole my soul, McCaffrey, 'cause no one steals nuthin' from Dugan Growser!" he barked, punching the air with a bony finger, like he was issuing a warning to the underworld, both above and below ground.
****
There'd been plenty of cases of gung ho angels, fallen and otherwise, snatching souls before their rightful owners had truly given up the ghost, I was well aware. Not to mention flesh-and-blood Christ crusaders, devil worshippers, and Board-decertified voodoo/witch doctors trying to save or subvert souls while the flesh was still willing but the spirit weak. So, the logical starting point in my investigation was Hyram Kruk, biggest middleman in the entire East Coast soul chain. If anyone had their ear to the ground in the soul racket, it was him.
He was a squat, surly sonuvagun who had run a string of discount pawnshops during his days of living and breathing. He'd been killed when the stolen gun he'd pointed at an unarmed burglar had accidentally blown up in his hand, killing him and the burglar. And it'd turned out that the first-time burglar had only been trying to get his hocked plumbing tools back so he could take a job, get his family off welfare. It was quite the moral conundrum for the boys upstairs and down. And the convoluted terminus, coupled with his equally checkered past, had left Kruk in limbo longer than a calypso band conductor, two years and counting.
But while the higher and lower powers that be were debating Kruk's fate for all eternity, they'd at least agreed to put the guy's skills to good use, making him head receiver/shipper for the largest soul storage facility on the northeastern seaboard. Kruk bagged 'em, tagged 'em, and stacked 'em, before eventually shipping them on their way. And he wasn't above doing a little fencing on the side, both to stay sharp and to score brownie points with the boys in the great beyond, on either side of the divide.
I vacated my office straight through the roof of the three-story greystone. I would've liked to keep up the trajectory
"How's business, soul man?" I greeted Kruk, as I slipped into his warehouse beneath the most populated cemetery on the Jersey shore.
"Eh, it's got its ups and downs," he responded, ziplocking a baggie, flinging it onto a shelf. "What'd you want now?"
"Just passing through," I cracked, casually browsing around for anyone I knew.
"Yeah, and me, I'm the Ghost of Christmas Past," he responded, in Hebrew. He always could see right through me.
"Well . . . I was kind of wondering if you'd seen Dugan Growser's soul around—
"That bum finally get plugged?"
"No such luck," I replied, liking his analogy nonetheless. "He's still in the upright and cocky position, but he claims his soul's been stolen. Thought you might know something about it?"
Kruk gave me a ghastly grin and waited.
"You set up any deals lately? Maybe some brimstone-breather couldn't wait to get his mitts on a fresh one?"
Kruk waited some more.
I stared at his shadowy form, then smiled. "I'm not bribing you, Kruk. I've got no money to call my own, and you've got about as much use for money as a rich man has for the eye of a needle."
Kruk's shoulders drooped. "Oh, yeah. Old habits die hard, eh?" He pulled an imaginary pipe out of the corner of his mouth. "Nah, just like everyone else, I ain't seen Growser's soul. I woulda remembered that one—
We both waited some more.
"Damn!" Kruk grunted eventually. "Okay, so I hear on the ghostvine that some phony souls been turnin' up at some of the West Coast warehouses."
"Huh?"
"Yeah. Nuthin' here yet, but a guy in California tells me they've had a coupla cases of soul doping already."
"Soul doping?"
"Yeah. Someone switching the dirt on their dirty, rotten soul onto a nice, clean one—
"How's that possible? I mean, where's the dirt going? And how are they making the switch? You're not selling salvation on the side again, are you, Kruk?"
He gave me a dirty look. "C'mon, I wouldn't pull that kinda stuff! I don't know from nuthin' about transplanting souls. Besides, my case is in arbitration right now—
Then it hit me. "You mean someone's dealing in souls topside, without a spiritual connection? A flesh-and-blood for-real person?"
"That's the way I peg it, yeah. Someone's figured out how to catch souls without a license. And he's cutting deals with the damned, to try 'n make their final journey a whole lot more uplifting, if you know what I mean." Kruk's thick, bloodless lips framed a melancholy smile. "I wish I'd've lived long enough to see a scam like that."
****
I went back to my office, did some thinking on the case. If soul doping was the angle, then why would anyone in their right mind pinch Dugan Growser's charred essence? That thing was a ticket to Hell just waiting to be punched.
I couldn't figure it— That ends the preview. Probably in the middle of a sentence. Sorry.
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