Yverette walked across the room to her daughter Yvette's bedroom with the moonlight streaming through the open window, watching the gentle sway of the white lace curtains moving in the light night breeze. Well, Yverette didn't actually walk; ghosts dont have a corporal mass to press against the polished wood of the floor, nor even the beautiful Marian Dorn art deco rug that covered much of the floor of Yvette's bedroom. Sometimes Yverette missed the feel of the world on her hands and feet, the solid feeling of being part of something that she could not feel anymore.
She looked down at the brown, tan and white rug that she and Donald had picked out for the nursery when Yvette was still inside her. A smile claimed her face, for choosing that wonderful impressionist vision of water and earth had been one of Yverette and Donald's best married memories. They bought it during their one trip to Paris. Donald, now there was a pretty problem if ever there was one. How did one's ghost deal with the still present desire for the mate one was in love with?
Yverette stood over her daughter Yvette's crib and stared at the cherubic face of her daughter. The child's auburn hair, so like her mother's hair that it would have brought tears to Yverette's eyes, was she able to have tears. She reached down to cover Yvette's exposed shoulder and found herself being angry that her long thin fingers simply passed through the blanket, instead of moving the coverlet.
"
Think you silly ghost, concentrate now.
" Yverette concentrated on her grandmother's lessons for corporal manifestation, using her mental and emotional energy to create a simulation of the corporal hand she once had. Then, slowly she watched her fingers manifest themselves, then her hand and slowly from that hand upward her arm and finally her entire body became, real. All that effort, but the smile that moving Yvette's blanket to cover her shoulder and watching her daughter snuggle into the blanket and make that small sighing noise of hers was worth the effort. As soon as she stopped concentrating, she vanished again and her frown returned.
"