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Let Sleeping Dogs Lie (Hewey Spader Mystery Series Book 3)

Page 8

by Tanya R. Taylor

Deciding they had enough of them, Wade came down from the tree and snatched one of the dillies out of the bag. As he ate, he looked around at the large property and an idea struck him. "How about we explore this land? We've never gotten further than just a few feet in everytime we come here."

  "This is private property, Wade. We can't just go exploring," Mira replied, thinking how slow her brother really was. After all, the large, lop-sided NO TRESPASSING sign sprayed in red was clearly visible on the fence.

  "You're gonna let an old NO TRESPASSING sign stop you from walking through here? Have you ever seen the owners out here? Have you ever seen anyone out here?"

  Mira was quiet.

  "Right! That's because no one ever comes here. The place is abandoned. What's wrong with a couple of kids just walking through a vacant property with a bunch of tall trees and bushes on it? What can we possibly do to hurt the land?" Wade said sarcastically. "Come on, Sis. It'll be fun. We can pretend that we're real explorers or something."

  Mira was hesitant whenever Wade presented ideas that could possibly get them into trouble. Then again… those types of ideas were the only ones he ever seemed to come up with. "What about the fish?"

  "What about it?" Wade was puzzled.

  "We have to fry it before Dad and Mom get back home."

  Wade looked at Mira in disbelief. "Why are you so darn scary, girl? How long do you think they've been gone? It's only been a few hours. Last I knew, they got off work in the evening and then there's traffic. It's barely noon yet."

  "How do you know what time it is?" Mira asked. "You don't have a watch."

  "I can estimate the time, Mira. Can't you, smarty pants?"

  Mira shoved the bag of fruit at him. "Here then! You carry this." And she slowly headed out into the wooded area.

  As they walked along a narrow trail, the children were fascinated by the size of the property. Trees of every kind imaginable seemed to inhabit it—pine, mangoes, bananas, avocadoes, plum, ginep. Wade and Mira stopped and picked what they wanted, adding them to the bag, and the apprehension Mira had initially felt about their so-called exploration had soon disappeared.

  "This is great," she said, sucking on a plum.

  "Awesome!" Wade agreed. "I feel like we're in the jungle or something. How long do you think it'll take us to walk the whole perimeter?"

  Mira looked at him incredulously. "Are you out of your mind?" Do you think I'm gonna walk this entire property? I hear the Fergusons' land is more than a few miles long."

  "I didn't mean we should walk the whole thing today. I was asking how long you think it would take us if we decided to," Wade explained.

  "I don't know… maybe an hour or two." Then her eyes were suddenly affixed to a large house that they never knew was there. "Hey, look there!" Mira pointed straight ahead.

  "Wow! That's huge!" Wade exclaimed, almost in slow motion. With heightened curiosity, he started running toward it.

  "Wait up!" Mira shouted, careful to do so in a lowered voice as she had no idea who or what might be inside. "Don't go in there without me!"

  However, old and dilapidated with broken windows showcased along the whole front view, the house was breathtaking.

  Wade climbed the colonial-style porch, stopping just about a foot away from the front door. The only thing is… there was no door—just a ten foot opening where there, most likely, used to be double doors.

  Wade looked inside. Grimy white tiles covered the entire front area as far as he could see.

  Mira climbed the porch moments later. "Do you see anything?" She asked softly, feeling a bit of apprehension gradually returning.

  "No," Wade whispered. "Is anyone in here?" He called out hoping not to receive an answer.

  They stood quietly, both decidedly ready to take off in an instant if they heard even a crack. They waited for a few seconds… nothing. Then Wade said, in not so much of a whisper anymore, "Let's go in."

  Mira grasped his arm. He was just eleven months older than she was, but in a case like that where they were entering the unknown, he could have very well been ten years older and fifty pounds heavier as she knew 'come hell or high water', he would protect her.

  Before stepping inside, Wade looked at her, "You mind letting up a bit? You're squeezing my arm."

  "Oh sorry," Mira replied nervously.

  They walked inside together—eyes darting in all directions of the spacious interior. The white paint on the wall was chipped in several places and the dusty floor had been speckled with creature droppings and smudges of dirt and mud. There was no furniture in sight—just a large, empty space. Wade and Mira walked slowly ahead and entered a room that looked like an extension of the living room, only separated by an arched wall.

  "Hello…" Wade called out again.

  "Is anyone here?" Mira said behind him, voice breaking at the end.

  They proceeded through the large front area then entered what looked like the kitchen. There was one row of cabinets still attached to the upper northern section of the wall with a few missing doors. Some doors were slanted due to rusty, broken hinges. There were three other sections of the wall where only the imprint of cabinets remained presenting a theory to the observer that they might have been cleanly extracted at some point by thieves.

  "This place is a mess," Mira uttered, still holding her brother's arm.

  "Yeah. You notice that just about every door around here is missing?"

  "Yeah."

  "Let's go upstairs," Wade released Mira's grip. "Follow me."

  "No way! You know I'm afraid of heights!" Mira whispered loudly.

  "Just hold on to the rail. You'll be fine," Wade replied before heading up the long winding staircase.

  Feeling that she would rather be with him than downstairs alone in the old, creepy house that resembled something from a horror flick, she took a deep breath in and decided to follow him. The ceiling of the house was extremely tall and as Mira carefully followed Wade up the stairs, she couldn't help but wonder how the owners ever managed to change a light bulb up there whenever necessary. As they climbed the staircase, the wood beneath their feet creaked and Mira had no idea how she would ever get back down.

  They made it to the second landing and refusing at that point to look down over the rail, Mira trailed closely behind Wade who had entered one of the bedrooms.

  "Wow! This room is huge!" Wade remarked, hurrying over to a large window on the western side of the room. "Hee, hee!" He laughed looking down at the yard. "The second floor of this house must be at least a hundred feet from the ground!"

  Mira quietly advanced toward the entrance of what looked like the walk-in closet. As she looked in, something immediately caught her eye. The floating image of a black woman was at the far end of the room. The apparition appeared relatively young with frazzled, black hair that hung tiredly just above her shoulders. Her face, rough and haggard, exuded a sadness that Mira could feel deep within her bones, and the thin, white dress the woman wore was drenched in what appeared to be blood around the mid-section where long trails of it had slid down to the end. Momentarily frozen by the sight of this woman, Mira's mouth hung open, yet no voice escaped. The woman's veiny eyes seemed to be begging, pleading… for something. Then her hand reached up toward Mira, re-enforcing what the little girl already felt was a cry for help. At that point, a blood-curdling scream escaped Mira's lungs and she darted outside of the room—Wade running behind her.

  With a fear of heights that paled in comparison to what she saw in that room, before Mira knew it, she was at the bottom of the staircase and out of the house.

  "What's wrong?" Wade called out to her in the yard. "Wait for me, Mira!"

  She had run a good distance away from the house before even thinking of stopping.

  "Tell me what's wrong!" Wade insisted after catching up to her. "I never saw you run that fast in my life."

  "I know I shouldn't have listened to you, Wade. You're a jerk! We never should have come here," Mira blasted, walking hurriedly.
>
  "What did I do?" Wade was confused.

  "I don't wanna talk about it right now. I just wanna go home."

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  FICTION TITLES BY TANYA R. TAYLOR

  Visit Tanya’s website here.

  * LUCILLE PFIFFER MYSTERY SERIES

  Blind Sight

  Blind Escape

  Blind Justice

  Blind Fury

  INFESTATION: A Small Town Nightmare (The Complete Series)

  * THE REAL ILLUSIONS SERIES

  Real Illusions: The Awakening

  Real Illusions II: REBIRTH

  Real Illusions III: BONE OF MY BONE

  Real Illusions IV: WAR ZONE

  * CORNELIUS SAGA SERIES

  Cornelius (Book 1 in the Cornelius saga. Each book in this series can stand-alone.)

  Cornelius’ Revenge (Book 2 in the Cornelius saga)

  CARA: Some Children Keep Terrible Secrets (Book 3 in the Cornelius saga)

  We See No Evil (Book 4 in the Cornelius saga)

  The Contract: Murder in The Bahamas (Book 5 in the Cornelius saga)

  The Lost Children of Atlantis (Book 6 in the Cornelius saga)

  Death of an Angel (Book 7 in the Cornelius saga)

  The Groundskeeper (Book 8 in the Cornelius saga)

  Cara: The Beginning - Matilda’s Story (Book 9 in the Cornelius saga)

  The Disappearing House (Book 10 in the Cornelius saga)

  Wicked Little Saints (Book 11 in the Cornelius saga)

  A Faint Whisper (Book 12 in the Cornelius saga)

  ‘Til Death Do Us Part (Book 13 in the Cornelius saga)

  * THE NICK MYERS SERIES

  Hidden Sins Revealed (A Crime Thriller - Nick Myers Series Book 1)

  One Dead Politician (Nick Myers Series Book 2)

  Haunted Cruise: The Shakedown

  The Haunting of MERCI HOSPITAL

  10 Minutes before Sleeping

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