Brodon could not restrain the hairs on his nape from rising. He felt the presence of a life ended, an ended life clinging to something, a life obsessed! Such a focused manifestation of purpose would be a terrible threat. Brodon had heard tales of possessions and furious whirlwind assaults of thrown objects. He'd also heard of some kind of craft that was developed to keep them in check. He knew nothing about it himself, though, and felt completely vulnerable.
But worse was the fear of losing himself, his identity, his knowledge of himself as Brodon Windriver, son of Warem Windriver. His knowledge of himself as the son on a mission to save his father from an affliction of unknown origin. He scrambled back from the girl, sweat breaking across his brow. His terror of having his persona buried in some psychoses borne of a demented mind driving his legs unbidden. A mind determined to reject rebirth to follow some doomed course of a tragic fate for eternity. A mind bent on dragging him down into some private, endless emotional torture.
His mind whirled. 'Do ghosts do this for company against the loneliness resulting in their rejection of fate? Their contempt for the course of events life has preordained for them? Their belief they can overrule the gods' designs? Do they do it to bolster their belief in the righteousness of their refusal by forcing a corroborator to their side? Will the gods hold it against me if I fail to resist?'
A wail of horror at the feared invasion and occupation of his soul rolled from his lips as the girl approached relentlessly, giggling as if he was playing some game with her. Her feigned innocence mocked him, as she held out her hands like an invitation to dance. Her extended hands swung before Brodon's face like the doorways to madness. He rolled away for room, and cocked the staff for a swing.
The wind wailed in alarm and a force tugged the staff from his grip and sent it flying into the sand. He turned to see an ethereal shimmer of pure anger. The edges of the apparition distorted and he felt contact, hard contact, slam his chest and send him with bone-jarring impact into the side of the building. His throat constricted with killing intensity and he could not draw breath. Spots swam before his eyes and an irresistible tugging slammed his head into the wall again and again.
Dizzy disorientation consumed his consciousness and he thought his skull must have split. His last conscious thought was that it was better this way than having his soul corrupted to spend eternity in a pit of shattering madness.