Haunted

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Haunted Page 6

by Heather Graham


  “And damn, but she is good-looking,” Clint supplied.

  Matt nodded slowly. They were all right—and he had been one hell of an ass to the woman. She had just hit a raw nerve with him, he supposed, looking as if she had just stepped off a fashion page, heels clicking on the floor, manicured nails expressive in the air as she spoke, her face that of a sophisticated angel—or siren, one or the other.

  Redheads were always trouble.

  “I’m just irritated, I guess. Maybe I do owe her an apology.”

  The phone rang stridently from the bar. He felt a surge of anger. She was already calling. Mae picked up the phone.

  “Hello…yes, Penny, he’s here. He’s got his cell phone turned off again, huh? Well, he’s sitting here, sure as can be. Shouldn’t have that cell phone turned off, Matt, you know that,” she said, her hand over the receiver.

  “Shirley at the station knows where I am, and that’s all that matters,” Matt said.

  “Penny knows you’re here now, come on over and talk to her! Please!” Mae insisted, seeing the stubborn set to his jaw.

  Matt cast Mae an evil eye, then rose to accept the receiver from behind the bar. Penny came on the line.

  “Yes?”

  “Matt, I heard you gave that girl from New York an absolutely wretched time!”

  “Penny, I really did no such thing. And how did you hear so fast?”

  Matt looked around. Sure enough, Marty Sawyer—Penny’s nephew—who had been watching Carter’s pool game was now nowhere to be seen. He’d slunk out already.

  “Matt Stone! There is so much good to be done here! Principal Joe from the grade school was telling me how much the schoolchildren just loved the living history productions we did last summer, and you know as well as I do that you can’t keep that kind of program going if we don’t make sure that the house is entirely safe. And you’ve already agreed that we can let the seance go on.”

  “Because even though I don’t believe in such a thing as a ‘medium,’ I like Elizabeth!” he said irritably.

  “You’re going to make a tiny percentage off Elizabeth—compared to what Adam Harrison is paying to investigate your property. He usually charges people for his services. Now you know that I personally think that the ghosts are wonderful, but even I’m getting nervous here. Think about poor Clara’s face—and don’t go telling me she bumped into a wall. We need our ghost stories, some of them are so great. Passion, spurned lovers, murders, suicides! But…there’s something not at all right going on as well. Oh, Matt, please! If you really love the house and our history and want to keep the place open, not to mention in the family!—please let this girl come and get started on her investigations, no matter what it is, exactly, that she does.”

  He gazed back at the bar. Everyone was staring at them. Penny was speaking loudly. They could all hear. “Penny—you’re right. Murders and suicides. The woman in white who’s been seen floating around the staircase. You know what? It isn’t going to matter what I do—the stories are going to circulate forever.”

  “I’ve seen the woman in white,” Penny said stubbornly.

  “Penny, you drank half the wine cellar that night,” he reminded her.

  “Nevertheless, this is important. Yes, we’ll have stories, no matter what. But you said yourself that you were suspicious that someone was causing some of the ‘haunting.’ How will you ever know, or prove anything?”

  “Penny, I am the sheriff. I know a few things about investigating occurrences on my own.”

  “Matt, where’s your patriotism?”

  “What?” he said incredulously.

  “The house is so important. What if someone really gets hurt?”

  He almost smiled. It was a new line of attack.

  From the table, he heard the sound of David Jenner clearing his throat. “You know, Matt, things haven’t been that great. I could really use the work.”

  “Right. You know, we’re not all rich, kind of famous, and born with absolutely legitimate names,” Clint said, grinning with a shrug.

  “Matt, maybe you could do us all some good,” Carter told him.

  “You won’t have to do a thing,” Penny’s voice said from over the phone wire. “Give Ms. Tremayne my number. And I’ll handle everything. You don’t have to come anywhere near the house if you don’t want to while she’s in it. But first, you go over right now and get her out of that ramshackle hotel where’s she staying.”

  “Hey!”

  Carter could obviously hear Penny. He owned the ramshackle hotel.

  Again, Matt couldn’t help but grin. “Hell, all right.”

  “Matt, honestly, you don’t even have to be involved, I’ll do everything, I swear! Dammit, Matt, you’re the one who called Adam Harrison, why are you balking now?”

  “Because I expected Adam Harrison,” he said, feeling like a broken record, his temper rising. Impatiently, he said, “I’ll talk to her, Penny.” Then he hung up.

  Mae grinned like a kid with a candy bar. “This is so cool—Melody House is getting real live ghost busters.”

  “They’re not ghost busters, Mae,” Matt said.

  “I’ve got to go to that seance!” Mae said firmly.

  “You all really did hear every single word of that conversation,” Matt said ruefully.

  A circle of nods answered him. He shook his head. “Hell—I guess I will start answering my cell phone,” he muttered.

  “Well…?” Clint drawled. “When are you going to bite the bullet, give that girl a call and convince her that she is welcome here?”

  “Soon. But not from here,” he said. He slid his sunglasses back down over his eyes, and strode to the door, taking his hat from a peg on the wall. He twisted his jaw; he didn’t believe in ghosts, spirits, haunts, or the goddamned Easter bunny, and he sure as hell didn’t believe in premonitions.

  Still, he didn’t like this.

  He shook his head, speaking with his back to the others.

  “There’s an awful lot that’s bad in that place’s past,” he said.

  He walked back into the sunshine of the day, letting the door slam behind him.

  There was silence in his wake for several seconds.

  “He’s going to let it happen, Mae, don’t worry, you’ll get to go to a real live seance,” Clint assured the woman still standing behind the bar, and still staring after Matt Stone.

  “Yeah, well, it’s not the whole thing with the house that makes him so hostile,” Mae said quietly.

  “He just never should have married that bitch from New York,” Carter agreed.

  “Redhead, too,” David Jenner murmured.

  “Well, living or dead, it’s always people that haunt the living!” Mae said sagely, offering a sad shake of her head. Then she brightened, sounding like a girl about to head for her first dance. “And you bet your butts, gentlemen! I’m going to get to see a real live ghost!”

  “Mae, if you see a ghost, the point is, it’s not ‘live,’” Clint said dryly. “But what the hell? Things could get darned interesting around here.”

  Thirty minutes later, Darcy was back in her hotel room, listening to the voice on her cell phone.

  “You want me to do what?” she said incredulously to Adam. “Not apologize, right?”

  Darcy actually pulled the cell phone away from her ear to stare at it, despite the fact that on an intellectual level, she knew she couldn’t see her employer’s face.

  “Don’t apologize, just rethink things.” Adam, far away in London, was quiet for a minute. “Darcy, I have a vested interest in the house. I’ll explain when I get back into the country.” He sighed softly. “Darcy, there’s no one like you. I need you. Please don’t sound as if I’ve asked you to make peace with hostile aliens or some such thing.”

  Darcy winced. She knew that there was something about Melody House that Adam hadn’t shared with her yet. Had to be. She was often certain herself that Adam, despite his own apparent wealth, was funded as well by another source—possi
bly governmental. They’d quietly gone in and out of a number of Federal buildings in previous cases. This was different. He really wanted in. For personal reasons, so it seemed. Reasons he wasn’t willing to share, as yet.

  “Adam, if this was so important, you should have been here.”

  “I know. But I had to be in London.”

  She didn’t ask for an explanation, because he was a man who always kept business confidential, and even with her, information was shared on a need to know basis.

  “Darcy, are you okay?”

  “I’ve met a lot of skeptics,” she said, “I’ve just never had to actually work with anyone so openly hostile.”

  “You can do it. I know you can,” Adam said.

  “But,” she said quietly, “you don’t really want me to call this guy and apologize, do you?”

  “I’d never ask you to do that.”

  “So…?”

  “Let’s let it lie for now. I’m willing to bet that you’ll hear from him.”

  Darcy breathed out on a deep sigh. She hated the fact that she hadn’t handled the situation well at all. Her affection for Adam was very deep and real.

  “All right. So what exactly do I do now?”

  “Just sit tight. Is the hotel okay?”

  Darcy looked around the room. “Sure,” she lied. As she did so, the hotel line began to ring. She stared at the phone distastefully. It was dirtier than a pay phone outside a heavily frequented gas station.

  “I’ve got another call,” she told Adam.

  “Any premonitions?” Adam said lightly. “I’m willing to bet that it’s Stone.”

  “We’ll see. I’ll give you a call back.”

  “Actually, you don’t need to,” he said, and hung up. Again, Darcy stared at her cell phone, shook her head, and forced herself to pick up the hotel line.

  “Yes?”

  “Ms. Tremayne, it’s Matt Stone.”

  She was silent, waiting. Adam had been right.

  Of course.

  Apparently, Matt Stone could be stubborn, too. The silence stretched on.

  “Yes?” she said again. She could almost see his teeth grate in the steel cage of his face.

  “As you’re aware, I own Melody House. I don’t actually live in the main house all the time, though I stay now and then. However, I have a woman who manages the upkeep and the tours we allow through, and the events which are held there upon occasion. Her name is Penny Sawyer, and I’ll put you in contact with her. She’s incredibly anxious to have you and your company in.”

  “But you’re not.”

  “I did talk to Adam Harrison,” he said, not agreeing or disagreeing. “The house holds incredible historical importance,” he said flatly.

  “Of course.”

  “Look, Penny is supposed to handle everything. And she’s great with the place, knows all about it, and can help you with whatever you need. When you’ve got your plans down all pat, I’ll be back in on it, though. It’s still my place. And I want final approval on what you do.”

  “Naturally,” Darcy said. She knew that it sounded as if her words were a flat fuck you, guess I’ve got no choice.

  “Penny has suggested that you move on over to the house now.”

  “Oh, that’s not necessary—”

  “You need to be in the house to investigate it, right?”

  “I just meant that there was probably no need for that kind of hurry.”

  “Penny wants you there as soon as possible. She’s very eager to have you. Also, her office is in the house. We have all kinds of documents there, so…you could get started.”

  Darcy looked around her hotel room. It was stretching it to even call the place a hotel. She didn’t flinch at the sight of bugs, but she had gagged over the film of them she’d had to clean out of the bathtub before managing a quick shower.

  Maybe Matt Stone was something of a psychic himself. His next words suggested that he had read her mind.

  “Ms. Tremayne, I’m familiar with the hotel.”

  “Fine. I might as well get started. You’re right.”

  “I’ll be there for you in thirty minutes.”

  She opened her mouth to protest. She could have used a little more time just to survey the area before entering the house.

  Too late. He’d hung up.

  Swearing, she did the same. She looked around the small room. Not much to pick up—she’d been too afraid of getting creepy-crawly things in her lingerie to unpack much. She fished her few personal articles from the bathroom and folded the few pieces of clothing she’d had out in less than ten minutes.

  Which turned out to be good. Matt Stone’s concept of time was not at all precise. She had barely made a quick run-through to assure herself she hadn’t forgotten anything when there was a knock at her door.

  She opened it. He stood there, sunglasses in place, a lock of his dark hair windblown and sprawling over his forehead. In her business heels, she was just a shade under six feet. He still seemed to tower. She didn’t like the disadvantage, even if height didn’t really mean a damned thing.

  “Ready, Ms. Tremayne?”

  She took a breath, forcing something of a grimace rather than a smile. “Mr. Stone, somehow you manage to drawl out a simple Ms. as if it were a word composed of one long z, and a filthy one at that. My name is Darcy, and I’m accustomed to going by it.”

  He cocked his head slightly. She couldn’t read his eyes because of the shades. “All right—Darcy. I’m glad you’re capable of moving. I have to get back into the office so let’s get going, you know, quickly. Where’s your bag?”

  “I can take it myself, thank you.”

  “Would you just show me the damned bag?”

  She set her hands on her hips. “Someone ought to call the local cops on you. You may be some kind of a big landholder in these here parts, bucko, but you’re the rudest individual I’ve ever met.”

  “Sorry, but my time is limited. Please, Ms. Tremayne—sorry, Darcy, may I take your bag?” he said sarcastically.

  “Fine. Right there. It rolls—unless you’ll feel that your macho image will be marred and lessened by taking an easy route.”

  He offered her a dry grimace, grabbed the bag, and started out.

  She followed him, exiting the spiderweb filled hallways of the place, out to the parking lot.

  She didn’t see any regular cars—there were a few trucks, a code-enforcement vehicle, and a county cop car in the lot.

  He had a really long stride, but had paused just outside the building and removed his sunglasses, waiting for her to catch up. He saw that she was staring expectantly out at the parking lot.

  “Oh, sorry,” he told her flatly. “It’s that one. I guess everyone forgot to tell you. I’m the local sheriff. Guess Adam didn’t tell you, either. But then, since you’re supposed to be a psychic, you should have known.” He stared at her, a light of mockery in his eyes.

  She smiled sweetly in return. “Mr. Stone, I’m not exactly a psychic. There are certain areas in which I can deduce things. There are certain things about people I don’t know. But then again, there are things that people really don’t want known that I can deduce very easily. I’m known for finding skeletons in closets, and I’m sure that there are dozens of them at Melody House.”

  Staring back at her, he was dead still then. His eyes were dark, not brown, but a deep gray. Disturbing. They seemed to pierce right through her, and yet wear a protective veil that kept her from reading anything within them. Still, it seemed that she had given him pause.

  “Shall we go?” she said.

  “Oh, yes. I’m just dying to see what bones you can dig up, Ms. Tremayne. Just dying.”

  “Great. Just…”

  “Just what?”

  “Be prepared. Sometimes, people don’t like the skeletons we find.”

  3

  “To me, it’s simply one of the most incredible houses—and historical sites—on the face of the earth!” Penny said enthusiastically.


  Darcy smiled, thinking that she agreed—despite the difficulty involved with the place, and that difficulty being Matt Stone.

  He had maintained something of a pleasant conversation on the drive over, pointing out Civil War skirmish sites, and telling her that at one point, on his way to battle, the great Southern general Robert E. Lee had stayed at Melody House. Then they had reached the house, and though she couldn’t say he had practically thrown her out of the car, he had delivered her to the front door and Penny Sawyer as quickly as possible, explaining simply that he was on duty.

  Hm. She wondered if he’d been on duty while sprawling around at the Wayside Tavern as well.

  But Penny Sawyer was wonderful. Darcy couldn’t quite determine her age. The woman was certainly somewhere between forty and sixty, which was quite a span. She was slender, about five-five, with an attractive shag type of short haircut in a natural salt and pepper, and had beautiful, bright blue eyes. She was also nicely dressed in a stylish pantsuit, and as friendly as her employer was rude.

  “The house is quite incredible,” Darcy said. “A number of historical homes—usually those owned by preservation societies—have been restored with painstaking authenticity, but it’s amazing to see the integrity of this house, especially when it’s been a family home all along.”

  “Ah, well, the old gentleman, Matt’s grandfather, really loved the place. Treated the house like a baby. He wanted it to be a home while maintaining all that it had been. He was a remarkable old fellow.”

  “Apparently.”

  Penny gave her a funny little rueful smile. “Oddly enough, believe me, Matt is just as dedicated to the preservation of the house. He wants to maintain it himself, though—you know, he doesn’t want it going to any societies, no matter how good they might be, because he would lose control. He knows that house has to hold its own if he’s going to hang on to it. Upkeep on these places is staggering. And sheriffs just don’t make that kind of money. Oh! That didn’t really sound the way it should—he’s a man of incredible integrity. What I mean is, no matter how he loves the place, he’d never do anything illegal. Of course, you didn’t suggest such a thing!” Penny broke off with a laugh. “There would never be such a thing as graft involved in Matt’s life. He’s a great sheriff. The people love him. He can defuse the most ungodly situations, speak to the youngsters around here and all…but what it means is that he has to have tours going through here, and he has to make the house pay. That’s all. So! What kind of a feel do you get from the place? Is it haunted?”

 

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