Crimson Twilight

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Crimson Twilight Page 10

by Heather Graham


  “As if she’d have ever gotten away with it,” Logan muttered angrily. “The Krewe of Hunters doesn’t lose. We come on harder and harder until a case is solved.”

  “We’ll never really know what was on Green’s mind, will we?” Kelsey asked.

  Sloan lowered his head and shook it.

  When he’d tackled Green, he’d subdued him and tied his hands. He’d never suspected, though, that the bound man would pitch himself over the cliff. But that’s exactly what had happened once Green realized Phoebe was gone. He looked up. Logan was watching him, knowing what he was feeling.

  “We try to save the victims first and always,” he said.

  “You saved Scully for me,” Emil said.

  Sloan decided not to tell him that Jane had saved Scully. He’d saved his own love and his own life with a well-placed shot.

  “What will happen now?” Jane asked. “With this place?”

  “I think I’ll close it,” Emil said. “Funny, I always dreamed I’d be married here one day. I’m not huge on tradition, but my parents were married here.”

  “I think you should be married here,” Jane told him. “Prove to the world that the castle isn’t evil. Only people can be evil. Make the castle a place of joy.”

  “She’s right,” Scully said.

  “We get to be bridesmaids!” Lila said.

  “Oh, yes! Except, of course, we get to be in on picking the dresses,” Sonia added.

  “You’ll need a best man,” Chef told Emil.

  “And ushers,” Harry said.

  Detective Forester stood. “I’ll at least expect an invitation. And one for Flick, too, of course.”

  “You got it,” Emil promised. He looked at Jane. “But, you did plan to have your wedding here, you know?”

  “But we’re not the lord and lady of the castle,” Jane said.

  “I think we’ll be headed for an island in the Caribbean,” Sloan told him.

  “You’ll always be welcome here,” Emil told them. “And anywhere I have holdings. And, I know that with Scully at my side, I’ll make good. And we’ll do good things. I swear it!”

  “I believe you will,” Sloan assured him.

  “Flick and I will be leaving now,” Forester said.

  “I’ll walk you out,” Sloan offered.

  Jane stood as he did. He smiled at her. They were both still muddy and grass-stained. They might not be married at the castle, but he did intend to make good use of the elaborate shower in the bridal suite as soon as he could.

  They walked to the door and out onto the front lawn.

  Emil was going to need a new caretaker, too.

  But, as they waved good-bye to the detectives, Sloan was certain he’d never seen the place more beautiful.

  Elizabeth Roth had realized that she could leave the castle. She stood with her beloved John down at the gates, oblivious to all else. She and John didn’t notice the car that drove by them. They were engaged in a long kiss. And as the car passed, the sun rose high above them, crimson rays of extraordinary light raining down, more like twilight than dawn.

  Sloan lifted a hand to shield his eyes, blinking against the glare.

  When the light shifted, they were gone.

  “Do you think—?” Jane asked.

  “I don’t know. But I do know they’re together.”

  “Like we’ll always be,” she said.

  “Shower,” he said. “And then—”

  “We’ll fool around?”

  “Isn’t that how all of this started?”

  That it was, she thought.

  “Then, off to the Caribbean,” he said. “Some place warm, with lots of blue water and sunshine. And we’ll fool around for a lifetime.”

  She lifted her dirt-smudged face to his.

  And he kissed the most beautiful lips he’d ever seen.

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  1001 Dark Nights fabulous novellas...

  1001 Dark Nights

  Click to purchase

  FOREVER WICKED

  A Wicked Lovers Novella

  by Shayla Black

  CRIMSON TWILIGHT

  A Krewe of Hunters Novella

  by Heather Graham

  CAPTURED IN SURRENDER

  A MacKenzie Family Novella

  by Liliana Hart

  SILENT BITE: A SCANGUARDS WEDDING

  A Scanguards Vampire Novella

  by Tina Folsom

  DUNGEON GAMES

  A Masters and Mercenaries Novella

  by Lexi Blake

  AZAGOTH

  A Demonica Novella

  by Larissa Ione

  NEED YOU NOW

  by Lisa Renee Jones

  SHOW ME, BABY

  A Masters of the Shadowlands Novella

  by Cherise Sinclair

  ROPED IN

  A Blacktop Cowboys ® Novella

  by Lorelei James

  TEMPTED BY MIDNIGHT

  A Midnight Breed Novella

  by Lara Adrian

  THE FLAME

  by Christopher Rice

  CARESS OF DARKNESS

  A Phoenix Brotherhood Novella

  by Julie Kenner

  About Heather Graham

  Click to purchase

  Heather Graham has been writing for many years and actually has published nearly 200 titles. So, for this page, we'll concentrate on the Krewe of Hunters.

  They include:

  Phantom Evil

  Heart of Evil

  Sacred Evil

  The Evil Inside

  The Unseen

  The Unholy

  The Unspoken

  The Uninvited

  The Night is Watching

  The Night is Alive

  The Night is Forever

  (All available through Amazon and other fine retailers, in print

  and digital—and through Brilliance Audio as well.)

  Actually, though, Adam Harrison—responsible for putting the Krewe together, first appeared in a book called Haunted. He also appeared in Nightwalker and has walk-ons in a few other books. For more ghostly novels, readers might enjoy the Flynn Brothers Trilogy—Deadly Night, Deadly Harvest, and Deadly Gift, or the Key West Trilogy—Ghost Moon, Ghost Shadow, and Ghost Night.

  Out next for Heather the second book in the Cafferty and Quinn series, Waking the Dead—which follows Let the Dead Sleep. Go figure! (I guess they've slept long enough!)

  The Vampire Series (now under Heather Graham/ previously Shannon Drake) Beneath a Blood Red Moon, When Darkness Falls, Deep Midnight, Realm of Shadows, The Awakening, Dead by Dusk, Blood Red, Kiss of Darkness, and From Dust to Dust.

  For more info, please visit her web page, theoriginalheathergraham.com or stop by on Facebook.

  The Night is Watching

  Krewe of Hunters

  By Heather Graham

  Now Available!

  Chapter 1

  Jane Everett was entranced.

  She’d been to a ghost town or two in her day, but never a functioning ghost town.

  But then, of course, Lily, Arizona, had never really been a ghost town because it had never been completely deserted. It had just fallen by the wayside. It had seen good times—when the mines yielded silver and there’d been a hint of gold, as well, and the saloons and merchants had flourished—and it had seen bad times when the mines ran dry. Still, it had the look of either a ghost town or the set of a Western movie. The main street had raised wooden sidewalks and an unpaved dirt street. Muddy when it rained, she was certain, but that was seldom in this area.

  The car her boss, Speci
al Agent Logan Raintree, had hired to bring her to town let her out in front of the Gilded Lily, where she’d be staying. The driver had set her bag on the wooden sidewalk, but she waited a minute before going in, enjoying a long view of the street.

  There were a number of tourists around. She heard laughter from across the street and saw that a group of children had come from a shop called Desert Diamonds and were happily licking away at ice cream cones. Farther down, a guide was leading several riders out of the stables; she could hear his voice as he began to tell them the history of the town.

  But the theater itself was where she was heading so she turned and studied it for a moment. Someone had taken pains to preserve rather than renovate, and the place appeared grand—if grand was the right word. Well, maybe grand in a rustic way. The carved wooden fence that wound around the roof was painted with an array of lilies and the name of the theater; hanging over the fence and held in place with old chain were signs advertising the current production, The Perils of Poor Little Paulina. Actors’ names were listed in smaller print beneath the title. She knew the show was a parody of the serialized Perils of Pauline that had been popular in the early part of the twentieth century.

  No neon here, she thought, smiling. They were far from Broadway.

  She’d read that the Gilded Lily had hosted many fine performers over the years. The theater had been established at a time when someone had longed to bring a little eastern “class” to the rugged West; naturally, the results had been somewhat mixed.

  As she stood on the street looking up at the edifice, a man came flying out the latticed doors. Tall and square as a wrestler, clean shaven and bald with dark eyes and white winged brows, he bustled with energy. “Jane? Jane Everett? From the FBI?”

  “Yes, I am. Hello.”

  “Welcome to Lily, Arizona,” he said enthusiastically. “I’m Henri Coque, artistic director of the theater for about a year now and, I might add, director of the current production, The Perils of Poor Little Paulina. We’re delighted to have you here.”

  “I’m delighted to be here,” she responded. “It’s a beautiful place. Who wouldn’t want to come to a charming, Western, almost ghost town?”

  He laughed at that. “I’m glad to hear that, especially since I’m the mayor here, as well as the artistic director. Lily itself is small. Let me get your bag, and I’ll show you around the theater and take you to your room. I hope you’re all right with staying here. Someone suggested one of the chain hotels up the highway, but everyone else thought you’d enjoy the Gilded Lily more.”

  “I’m happy to be here,” Jane assured him. “I can stay at a chain hotel anywhere.”

  She was happy. They’d been between cases when Logan had heard from an old friend of his—a Texas cop, now an Arizona sheriff—that a skull had appeared mysteriously in the storage cellar of a historic theater. It had sounded fascinating to her and she’d agreed to come out here. The local coroner’s office had deemed the skull to be over a hundred years old and had determined that handing it over to the FBI was justified, so that perhaps the deceased could be identified and given a proper burial. Like most law enforcement agencies, the police here were busy with current cases that demanded answers for the living.

  The skull, she knew, was no longer at the theater. She would work at the new sheriff’s office on the highway, but she was intrigued by the opportunity to spend time at the historic theater, learn the history of it and, of course, see where the skull was found.

  That was the confusion—and the mystery. No one remembered seeing the skull wearing the wig before. Granted, the theater had been holding shows forever; it had never closed down. And people had been using the various wigs down there forever, too. From her briefing notes, Jane knew that everyone working at the theater and involved with it had denied ever seeing the skull, with or without a wig. It seemed obvious that someone had been playing a prank, but Jane wasn’t sure how identifying the person behind the skull—given that he or she had been dead over a hundred years—would help discover who’d put it on the rack.

  The sheriff, Sloan Trent, had wanted to send the skull off to the Smithsonian or the FBI lab, but the mayor had insisted it should stay in Lily until an identification had been made. So, Sloan had requested help from his old friend, Logan Raintree, head of Jane’s Texas Krewe unit of the FBI teams of paranormal investigators known as the Krewe of Hunters. And that had led to Logan’s asking Jane, whose specialty was forensic art, to come here. The medical examiner who’d seen the skull believed it was the skull of a woman and he had estimated that she’d been dead for a hundred to a hundred and fifty years.

  “Come, Ms.—or, I guess it’s Agent—Everett!” Henri said, pushing open the slatted doors and escorting her into the Gilded Lily. “Jennie! Come meet our forensic artist!”

  Jane tried to take in the room while a slender woman wearing a flowered cotton dress came out from behind the long bar behind some tables to the left. The Gilded Lily, she quickly saw, was the real deal. She felt as if she’d stepped back in time. Of course, her first case with her Krewe—the second of three units—had been in her own hometown of San Antonio and had actually centered on an old saloon. But the Gilded Lily was a theater and a saloon or bar, and like nothing she’d ever seen before. The front tables were ready for poker players, with period furniture that was painstakingly rehabbed. To the right of the entry, an open pathway led to the theater. Rich red velvet drapes, separating the bar area from the stage and audience section, were drawn back with golden cords. The theater chairs weren’t what she would’ve expected. The original owners had aimed for an East Coast ambience, so they, too, were covered in red velvet. The stage, beyond the audience chairs, was broad and deep, allowing for large casts and complicated sets. She saw what appeared to be a real stagecoach on stage right and, over on stage left, reaching from the apron back stage rear, were railroad tracks.

  “Hello, welcome!”

  The woman who’d been behind the bar came around to the entry, smiling as she greeted Jane. She thrust out her a hand and there was steel in her grip. “I’m Jennie Layton, stage mother.”

  “Stage mother?” Jane asked, smiling.

  Jennie laughed. “Stage manager. But they call me stage mother—with affection, I hope. I take care of our actors…and just about everything else!” she said.

  “Oh, come now! I do my share of the work,” Henri protested.

  Jennie smiled. “At night, we have three bartenders, four servers and a barback. And we have housekeepers who come in, too, but as far as fulltime employees go, well, it’s Henri and me. And we’re delighted you agreed to stay here.”

  “I thought the theater history might help you in identifying the woman,” Henri said.

  “Thank you. That makes sense. And it’s beautiful and unique.”

  “Lily is unique! And the Gilded Lily is the jewel in her crown,” Henri said proudly.

  “Well, come on up. We have you in the Sage McCormick suite,” Jennie told her, beaming.

  The name was familiar to Jane from her reading. “Sage McCormick was an actress in the late 1800s, right?”

  “All our rooms are now named for famous actors or actresses who came out West to play at the Gilded Lily,” Henri said. “Sage, yes—she was one of the finest. She was in Antigone and Macbeth and starred in a few other plays out here. She was involved in a wonderful and lascivious scandal, too—absolutely a divine woman.” He seemed delighted with the shocking behavior of the Gilded Lily’s old star. “I’ll get your bag.”

  “Oh, I’m fine,” Jane said, but Henri had grabbed it already.

  “Tut, tut,” he said. “You may be a very capable agent, Ms. Everett, but here in Lily…agent is agent!”

  “Well, thank you, then,” Jane said.

  Jennie showed the way up the curving staircase. The landing led to a balcony in a horseshoe shape. Jane looked down at the bar over a carved wooden railing, then followed Jennie to the room at the far end of the horseshoe. This room probab
ly afforded the most privacy, as there was only one neighbor.

  “The Sage McCormick suite,” Jennie said, opening the door with a flourish.

  It was a charming room. The bed was covered with a quilt—flowers on white—and the drapes were a filmy white with a crimson underlay.

  “Those doors are for your outdoor balcony. It overlooks the side street but also gives you a view of the main street, although obstructed, I admit,” Jennie said.

  “And the dressing room through here…” Henri entered with her bag, throwing open a door at the rear of the spacious room. “It’s still a dressing room, with a lovely new bath. Nothing was really undone. The first bathrooms were put in during the 1910s. We’ve just updated. And, you’ll note, this one retains a dressing table and these old wooden armoires. Aren’t they gorgeous?”

  They were. The matching armoires were oak, with the symbols of comedy and tragedy carved on each side and on the doors. “They were a gift to Sage when she was here,” Henri said reverently. “A patron of the arts was so delighted that he had these made for her!”

  Jane peeked beyond. The bathroom was recently updated and had a tiled shower and whirlpool bath. The color scheme throughout was crimson and white with black edging.

  “This is really lovely. Thank you,” Jane said again.

  “It’s our best suite!” Henri gestured expansively around him.

  “How come neither of you are in here?” Jane asked, smiling. “And what about your stars? I don’t want to put anyone out.”

  “Oh,” Jennie said. “Our ‘stars’ tend to be superstitious. They’re in the other rooms on this level.” With a quick grin she added, “And Henri and I are quite happy in our own rooms…”

  Jane waited for her to say more.

  Henri spoke instead. “Sage McCormick…” His voice trailed off. “Well, theater folk are a superstitious bunch. I mean, you know about her, don’t you?”

 

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