* The second in what is now the series I named Adventures of Henrick and Theresa.
The idea for this one and their third adventure came right after I finished the draft of the first story, Henrick and the Ghost Maid.
*
01 - Prey and Hunters
Henrick rolled a rubbery ball made from a tropical plant's sap in his fingers, one of several substances he found mentioned in the rare occult texts talking about making ghosts visible to the naked eye. Since the day he was reunited with his beloved ghost maid Theresa he used all his knowledge as an occult researcher to find a way to make her less of a ghost and lead a more normal life as a couple with her.
Cool fingers running through his hair pulled him out of his deep thoughts and he looked up at Theresa standing next to him, or better said at her sexy black and white uniform. She moved a fresh cup of tea closer to him on his desk.
He knew she smiled at him and smiled gently at her. He didn't need to see her face to know her expressions, he just knew what they were. The one time he did see her real and cute face, it was engraved forever in his memory. He took her hands in his and caressed her black fingerless gloves with his thumbs. 'My love.' he whispered. She pulled at one hand and gestured with a sway of her black and white laced maid cap for him to turn his seat towards her. He turned his chair and she straddled him, leaned closer, and kissed him with her cool and invisible but soft and full lips.
He slipped his hands from hers and caressed her thighs while she pressed her body against his. Her short skirt crawled up on her hips and he moved his hands along the length of her thighs and her firm bare behind. She embraced him, slipped her tongue into his mouth, and kissed him with the same passion as in their first night together while grinding her mound against his hips and the growing part of his body inside his trousers. 'I love you so much, Theresa..' he whispered in her mouth and danced his tongue around hers.
Theresa shivered at the touch of his fingers stroking against her sensitive parts between her firm buttocks. Even if she no longer had a warm and real human body, it still reacted in all the same ways and Henrick's fingertips became slick quickly.
The urgent ringing from the doorbell startled the both of them.
'By Jove!' said Henrick and took a deep breath to calm his pounding heart. The doorbell rang again. 'Who on Earth dares to disturb this fortunate time right now?'
Theresa chuckled and stood up, pulled his handkerchief out of his breast pocket, and wiped his fingers. He sighed as he stood up and kissed her quickly. 'It had better be important to interrupt our precious moment together.' he said and she nodded. The bell rang impatiently again while he went down the stairs. 'Yes, yes! I'm coming!'
He opened the door briskly and gazed out into nothing before noticing the young boy standing in front of the door. The boy held up an envelope. 'What's this?'
'A letter from doctor Russell.' the boy said. 'He said it's urgent.'
Henrick read the name on the back of the envelope. 'Louis Russell? What could he want from me?' he said and looked at the boy again, but he'd already left and hurried down the street. 'What's all this about?' he muttered as he went back up the stairs to his study, ripping open the envelope and pulling out the letter.
Theresa waited patiently for him to finish reading and he laughed out loud once when he did. He gave her the letter. 'This is from the biggest non-believer of occult science I know, Louis Russell.' he said and sat down. 'He's a doctor, and I have to admit a very good one, and he's also busy with research in the medical field. I've met him several times at the university during presentations and he constantly dismissed my findings and that of my fellow researchers.' He leaned back in his chair. 'And now he seeks my help because whatever plagues his house has sent his housekeeper and a couple of pest exterminators running. They mentioned me by name as maybe the only one who can catch whatever is there.'
Theresa put the letter on his desk while he shook his head and chuckled, took his hand, and pulled gently on it. He looked up at her. 'You want me to go and take a look?' She nodded. 'Help the one who's been mocking my field of science all this time and now all of a sudden calls for me?' She nodded again and placed her fingers on the letter, then on her chest. He sighed. 'Yeah, I understand from his writing he's pretty desperate right now.' She squeezed his hand once. 'All right, I'll visit him and see if there really is something or not.' He stood up and she kissed and hugged him. He smiled at her and stroked her behind underneath her skirt. 'I'll return as soon as I can, we have something to finish.'
Her cap shook lightly as she giggled and she poked his nose.
***
'Doctor Russell.'
'Doctor van Schwaffle.' greeted the tall and tired looking man at the door in return. He stepped back and gestured inside. 'Please come in.'
Henrick hesitated for a moment as he realised he hadn't seen Louis looking this ragged and unshaven ever before, then stepped inside the front hall of the large house he knew had belonged to the Russell family for generations. The house had remained mostly the same since it was built and most of the land around it still belonged to Louis, although a lot of it had been used to build and rent out houses while the city grew. Louis guided him to a study at the back of the house and offered him tea.
'I can imagine you're wondering why you would be asked to come here by me of all people.' Louis said as he sat down.
Henrick sipped the hot tea while he observed how much older Louis looked since last time they exchanged words at a presentation of the rituals and medicine used by tribes in the far East. His once full black hair looked thin and flat with grey mixed in. His face had also lost its liveliness and was pale and thin. 'It must be something quite extraordinary.'
Louis nodded, lifted his own cup, and put it down again. Despite his looks his eyes still exhibited his defiant strength. 'I still don't believe any of that ghosts and curses mumbo-jumbo but my housekeeper refused to work for me unless I called in a pest exterminator, and now exterminators refuse to come unless I get you to have a look first.'
Henrick nodded. All the times he was called to investigate a possible haunting and found the cause of it had been critters or insects had given him a respectable reputation among those professionals. Not the reputation he aimed for though. He sighed on the inside. 'Well, tell me what happened from the beginning.'
The chair creaked lightly as Louis shifted in it. 'It began a while ago when Sarah, my housekeeper, noticed food went missing. Thinking it was mice she set up a few traps but strangely enough the bait was gone the next morning while no mice were trapped. Sometimes the trap hadn't even sprung. More food began to disappear and Sarah saw something scurry around not just the kitchen and pantry but all over the house on occasion. We set more and different traps but the result was the same.' Louis leaned forward. 'Or actually worse. Some traps had been sprung by an object placed in them like a smoking pipe or a spoon.' Henrick raised his eyebrows and Louis sat back. 'That's when I called in the first exterminator. He set traps again and searched around for the vermin and nests. He found a couple of nests behind loose wall panels and in a corner of the attic, but no mice or rats. Just the macabre remains of a cat's tail.' Louis made a disgusted face, then spread his arms in a gesture of bafflement. 'Yet still something took the bait!' He leaned forward again. 'Then during one of his searches in the attic he was supposedly attacked by something vicious. He claimed it came out of nowhere and punched him all over his body and he said it must have been a ghost. He didn't dare to continue his job and left, so I called in another exterminator. He said he wasn't scared of ghosts but when he was attacked and something slimy tried to strangle him he gave up. He told me no other man would come into my house if I didn't ask you to catch or chase whatever haunts this place first.' Louis sighed. 'I still wouldn't have asked you were it not for something appearing in my experiments chamber and destroying some of my important equipment.'