A world void of sound and color. A terrible smell that’s inescapable. And a young woman who has no idea where she is, who she is, or how she got there.
As she wanders, the world slowly takes shape around her. People and buildings appear, but no one acknowledges her presence, and her memory remains impaired. A man finally speaks to her. Simon Peterson is a seer, one who recognizes and can communicate with the dead. Simon tells her she is a lingerer, someone who died but remained on earth rather than moving on to the next plane of existence . Simon’s research uncovers who she was and how she died. Simon does not understand why she remained on earth. By rights, she had died a hero’s death and should have transitioned immediately. Simon believes she lingered because there was something left unfinished in her life. She has no idea what that could be – until she meets another Jude is handsome, personable, and working to better the world – except someone has set Jude up so it appears he is an embezzler. If she uses abilities she gained at her death, she could extricate him from the unfair accusation. Was this the reason she lingered – even though she didn’t know Jude while she was alive? In order to help Jude, she would have to commit a crime herself. Can she risk never transitioning for someone else’s sake? Or would that be an act of true heroism and hasten her transition? If transition is what she still wants…
The Ghost Girl Trilogy consists of Lingering , Book 1 Ghostly Skills , Book 2 Transformation , Book 3