Leave it to Max (Lori's Classic Love Stories Volume 1)
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Leave it to Max
Lori’s Classic Love Stories, Volume 1
Lori Handeland
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Please Note
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
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Copyright 2001, 2015 by Lori Handeland.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
eBook design by A Thirsty Mind Book Design
cover design by CoversbyLily
Smashwords edition, 2015
Thank You
Table of Contents
Author’s Note
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Epilogue
Excerpt: Out of Her League
Book List
About the Author
Author’s Note
Dear Reader,
A few years ago I visited Savannah, Georgia, and fell in love. The city is both the most beautiful and the most haunted place I have ever known.
When it came time to work on an idea for my next novel, I knew I had to go back to Savannah, if only in my mind.
The moment I sat down at the computer, eight-year-old Max Frasier walked onto the page. The inspiration for him must have come from the little boy who once lived at my house; he also had an imagination that just wouldn’t quit. We called him “no fear boy” and hoped with every new year that the months to come would be E.R. free. Like Max, while physically fearless, he could imagine some pretty fearsome things.
For Max, anything is possible—especially in Savannah, where the trees whisper, the river mumbles and ghosts have been known to walk. Wherever Max goes, trouble follows. Luckily for Max, there are a lot of people who look out for him. His Gramma Rosie, a ghost-walk tour guide, his mother, Livy, a lawyer in a town that has little use for them, and his new friend Garrett, a horror writer who turns out to be a whole lot more than Max ever dreamed possible.
“Savannah is more than a city, it’s a state of mind.”
— Arthur Gordon
Chapter 1
Night descended upon Savannah like the wings of a great black bat. Cool air wafted along the ancient city streets. Dawn would not tint the river for hours upon hours.
Max Frasier should not be out at night He was only eight and his mom would have a hissy. But when his best and only friend, Sammy Sontag, pulled him aside after school and whispered, “There’s a vampire livin’ in the old Alexander place. Wanna go see?” he’d agreed before he’d remembered that vampires only appear at night.
By then he could not back out. A lot of kids thought him a wussy already, on account of he was little, skinny and scared of a lot. Max didn’t much like the dark. He’d always been spooked by closets and basements and such. He couldn’t even go in the bathroom without opening the shower curtain, as well as every door and drawer in the place. Drove his mom nuts, but he couldn’t stop. Who knew what lay in wait within those shadowy compartments? The one time he didn’t look would be the last time he needed to.
Those were the rules of his world. Under the bed lived awful things. In closets lurked monsters unimaginable.
And in the dark? Anything could happen.
“Come on!” Sammy urged. “It’s almost time.”
Max inched up next to his friend. “For what?”
They skulked behind some low bushes, just like the bad guys always did in his dreams. Max had a lot of dreams—sometimes even when he was asleep. He shivered as cool fingers drifted along his neck. But when he turned, no one was there. No one ever was.
His Gramma Rosie, though she refused to answer if he used the word Gramma, said Max was sensitive. Max figured that was a nice, adult way to say wussy. Still, Rosie always understood when he was afraid. His mom just looked concerned—as if she’d done something wrong. Moms were like that, Rosie said, especially moms like his.
“You’ll see for what,” Sammy answered. “As soon as the sun goes all the way down, a light will go on upstairs, and he’ll come outside.”
“Just ’cause he likes to come out in the dark don’t make him a vampire,” Max pointed out.
“Guess not. But no one’s ever seen him during the day. Ever. He has all sorts of stuff delivered. At night. No one knows his name. He hasn’t come over to meet the neighbors, like a gentleman should.”
“Still doesn’t make him undead.”
“What about the coffin?”
Max gulped. “Coffin?”
Sammy slid him a sly look. “The one the movers took in the house. I was watchin’ and I saw everything—furniture, boxes, coffin. No people but the movin’ guys. ’Cause it was daytime, see?”
Max saw. The other weird thing about Max was that even though he was scared of things that went bump in the night, they also fascinated him. He liked nothin’ better than a good scary story or a creepy old movie. Which made no sense—but what did in this world?
His grampa had died jumping out of an airplane. Max had no idea why you’d want to jump out of a perfectly good plane. It had been a bad idea for Grampa, anyway.
His gramma was a fruitcake, or so most of Savannah said because Rosie liked to stand up for people and animals that had no one else to stand up for them. It didn’t matter to her if snails were slimy or fish had cold blood or ghosts often disappeared before sayin’ thank-you. To Rosie what was right was right, what was wrong stunk, and she knew the difference better than anyone.
But Savannah was used to odd characters. Like Viola and Violet, the elderly twin sisters who kept a trained goose in their backyard—something that drove Rosie bonkers and had started a running feud between her and the sisters. Or the man who continued to walk a dog years after it had died, and the lady who wore clothes dating from the War of Northern Aggression so the ghosts in her parlor wouldn’t know that they were dead. With all those characters, and then some, wandering Savannah, the folks who called Rosie a “fruitcake” did so with a fond smile.
They never said “lawyer” that way, though his mom insisted she was the kind of lawyer who helped people. Savannah had never taken much to lawyers. In the oldest, olden days lawyers hadn’t even been allowed in the Colony of Georgia.
The thing that made the least sense of all to Max was how his dad had died
before Max was born, and Mom still seemed awful mad about it—so mad she never mentioned his name but once. Heck, Max wouldn’t even know his dad was named James unless he’d asked a hundred thousand times.
Maybe she was mad because Dad had died before they could get married, which explained why Max, his mom and his gramma all had the same last name. Though, no one else seemed to care, so why should she?
“There,” Sammy said, and Max jumped.
A light came on upstairs. The Alexander place was a monstrous house built on one of the outer squares of old Savannah. The place had been empty for a long time—no one had been able to afford the high price. Until now.
“You know vampires live forever, so they have lots of time to make money,” Sammy whispered. “He probably has houses like this all over the world.”
“What for?”
“So he can run to another safe place when the mob comes to stake him.”
Max couldn’t imagine the laid-back folk of Savannah getting riled about much of anything—least of all a vampire. They were kind of a live-and-let-live—or maybe die—sort of crowd. But then, you never knew. Look what had happened to Count Dracula in every single movie.
The front door of the mansion creaked open. Max shivered at the sound, straight from one of those movies he’d been thinking on. Someone appeared on the porch.
At first all Max could see was a tall outline. Then the street lamps flared to life, and the man flinched, putting his hand up to shade his eyes. When he dropped his arm, the silver glare slanted across the porch.
His dark hair brushed the shoulders of his black shirt, and his skin glowed pale beneath the wash of shimmering light. The man breathed deeply, as if he couldn’t get enough of the fresh river air, then stretched his arms upward, leaned his head back and gave a hissing groan.
Max gasped.
The sound wasn’t loud, but the man stilled, then slowly dropped his arms, turned his head and looked right at their bush. Right at them.
Max and Sammy ran.
*
Garrett Stark watched the kids disappear into the night. Before now, only the brown-haired one had been hanging around. Tonight he’d brought along a towhead for company.
Garrett smothered a smile as the boy stumbled, fell, then righted himself and ran on. The towhead appeared to have mighty big feet. Garrett remembered having a whole lot of scraped knees for a whole lot of years. At least until he’d grown into his own feet.
Would the two be back tomorrow with friends? What was so darn fascinating about him? These days he didn’t even interest himself.
They couldn’t know who he was. He’d had his agent rent this place for him. He never connected a phone, preferring a cell phone because he moved around so much. Even if the kids had heard his name, weren’t they a bit young to know the work of Garrett Stark, bestselling horror novelist?
Or at least he had been a bestselling novelist up to his last book—which just might be his last book the way things looked.
Today had begun well enough. He’d rolled out of bed with the sun, watched the wake-up news while he ran on the treadmill, a necessary but horrific evil in his opinion—both the news and the treadmill—then taken his coffee into the office, answered his e-mail and begun to write.
Like every other day for the past nine months, things had gone downhill from there. By lunch he had one page. As punishment, he skipped lunch. He wasn’t hungry anyway. He ought to recommend panic sauce to Jenny Craig International.
By early evening, he had two pages. However, when he read them over he decided the two could be combined into one, and he was back to where he’d started at lunch. What could be a suitable punishment for that?
At the insistent buzz of his cell phone, he glanced at the caller ID, which revealed cruel and unusual punishment. A call from his agent, Andrew—never Andy, never Drew—Lawton. As if anyone would address someone of Lawton’s demeanor as Andy.
Lawton might resemble a proper English earl, but his negotiation skills were pure New York City, where he’d lived all his life. Andrew worked fast, talked fast; hell, he even walked fast.
“I expected a rough draft by now.” Andrew never bothered with such trivialities as “Hello.”
“Me, too,” Garrett mumbled.
“Come back?”
“You’ll be the first to know when I’ve got one.”
“You’re right, because I’m coming down there to get it.”
Garrett blinked, then gaped at the phone, but Andrew was already rattling off his arrival time—tomorrow. Agents didn’t do things like that in the usual course of publishing. Or at least, most agents of most writers.
But Garrett’s agent had once been his editor. Andrew had yanked Garrett’s tome from the proverbial slush pile and taken them both from eating canned tuna to smoked salmon, if not imported caviar.
Andrew had always loved a good deal just a bit more than he loved a good book, so a few years back he’d left editing and become an agent. His caviar dreams were still just that but he had high hopes, which explained why he felt he had to come to Savannah.
Garrett cursed.
“It doesn’t matter what you say, I’m coming.”
“I know. It’s one of your charms.”
“That’s me. Charming Andrew.’’
Garrett snorted. One thing Andrew was not was charming. That was why Garrett liked him so much. Despite that, despite how well they worked together on the business end, regardless of the fact that Andrew was the only true friend he had, the quickest way to smother any breath of creativity would be for Andrew to arrive in town. The man had an imagination deficit.
“If you start hanging around, I’ll never finish.” Garrett wasn’t required to admit that he hadn’t even started. While he should be in the middle of the book, the only thing he seemed to be in the middle of was a panic attack.
Silence from the other end of the line made Garrett frown. Another thing Andrew was not was quiet. Had he hurt the man’s feelings? Impossible. Andrew had few feelings to hurt. Another reason Garrett liked him.
“You’d tell me if anything was seriously wrong, wouldn’t you?” his agent asked in an uncharacteristically sympathetic tone.
“Seriously wrong?”
“Like if you were dying of brain cancer or congestive heart failure.”
“My, aren’t we cheery?”
“You’ve got me worried, Garrett. You’re just not yourself.”
Garrett wasn’t sure who he was anymore. That was why he’d come back here.
“This book is important,” Andrew continued. “It’s your chance to be more than a paperback writer.”
“I like being a paperback writer.”
“But don’t you want to move up? Be bigger, better, more?”
God, Andrew was such an agent.
“I always thought I did.”
As usual, Andrew took Garrett’s indecision and made it a decision he wanted to hear. “Glad to hear it. This is the opportunity we’ve been waiting for. Your first hardcover.” He said the three words the way a patriarch might say, Your firstborn son. “But with the size of the advance…the book has to be special, Garrett.”
He resisted the urge to snarl. He hated that word. It didn’t mean dink—especially when applied to a book. One man’s special was another man’s crap.
“Special. Right.”
“What’s the idea?”
Special crap.
Garrett’s laugh ended up sounding just a bit crazed. He snapped his lips shut but not before Andrew heard. The man might be oblivious about some things, but he worked with authors every day. Andrew knew trouble when he heard it.
“I might be able to catch a red-eye.”
“I’m fine.”
Or as fine as I can be as I watch the chance of a lifetime go up in flames.
Garrett cleared his throat and put some steel into his voice. “I’m not kidding, Andrew. If you come down here, you’re fired.”
Andrew laughed. Technically, Law
ton worked for Garrett. But Garrett had never had the guts to point that out.
“Okay.” Andrew managed to stop laughing for a minute. “I’ll stay put. For now.”
After Andrew hung up, Garrett went inside, made himself a drink and returned to the porch. Since coming back to Savannah, an after work libation had become a habit. At this rate he’d be doing an Edgar Allan Poe imitation before long. Why was it that so many brilliant, famous writers were also drunken psychotics? Made a man consider a change of vocation.
What person in his right mind would sit in an office as the sun shone bright and stare at a computer screen, never showing his face in the light of day because he was too occupied with the people who lived within that little gray box? Like one of those creatures of the night he wrote about, Garrett only turned off his computer and ventured outside after dark.
You went where the Muse took you, or where she said you must go. If you didn’t, she might go silent. She might just run away and never come back.
Garrett had never thought his Muse, voice, gift—whatever— would get testy on him.
“Another day, another piece of crap.” He toasted the rising moon. “Very special crap.”
Garrett drank, but the burn of alcohol in the depth of his empty stomach did not jump-start his Muse. How had Poe managed?
What had brought on this uncharacteristic detour to the bottle? The fact that Garrett could no longer write? Or the fear that he’d never been able to in the first place?
The last time, Savannah had been magic for him, and when he’d left he’d written his first book in a whirlwind of creativity that had earned him money, accolades and stellar reviews.
He had already been here a week, and his Muse was as quiet as the house he’d rented, far from the madding crowd on River Street, from the gaily painted trolleys that chugged around and around the historic district, from the red-brick museums and the nighttime ghost walks and the white marble monuments—from everything that made Savannah, Savannah.