Walking Shadows

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by Phaedra Weldon


  Faith.

  Not sure I had any of that anymore.

  But in the end maybe that's okay. The uselessness of the whole thing.

  The not knowing…if the soul of Strauss was freed…or devoured.

  By me.

  ————

  Zoë's story continues in SOUL CAGE, available at all ebook retailers!

  Soul Cage

  A Tale of the Abysmal Plane

  A Zoë Martinique Investigation book #5.2

  Excerpt

  "…nine of the cages still exist in the world but in varying degrees…"

  The voice seemed to be coming from above—as if speakers were somehow hidden in the ceiling of the hallway he walked along. The wallpaper was cracked, aged and torn in large, harsh gashes. He knew this place—he'd walked along this hall a very long time ago.

  "…see the seriousness of events unfolding…it's my fault really. I never even considered the boy had magic. He's never used it…and now they say he'll be more powerful than me…"

  What boy was magic? Who will he be more powerful than?

  He should know those voices—but just couldn't remember. Joe continued walking, listening to the voice as he slowed his pace. And as he moved, what he used to call "the hallway nightmare" returned to him. A reoccurring dream of something that had, or hadn't, happened. In it, he was twelve…or was it eleven? It didn't matter…even as old as he was now, he was terrified.

  This hall belonged to his grandmother. He'd found it by accident back then, trying to find a place to hide from his cousin—the one twice his size with the I.Q. of a gnat. Marty didn't know a lot about learning, but he did know how to bash heads.

  And he hated Joe.

  And Joe had found a door in a closet at the top of the stairs. He'd walked down a hallway just like this one, with a door at the other end—only the door was in darkness, the hallway lights not quite reaching it.

  And as always, the end of the hallway slowly lit up to reveal details of that door. Wooden door, aged, with scuff marks around the bottom as if a dog had pawed at it often.

  The voice faded as he looked down at the old-fashioned knob with the generic keyhole beneath it. The metal was warm as if a fire burned on the other side. It'd been the same in his dream.

  Warm door. The call of his cousin's voice, taunting him, calling him Holler'n Halloran. Cause he was gonna make him yell.

  The warmth warned him against stepping through, but the call of his cousin behind him frightened him more. Facing the unknown ahead of him, or that of certain pain behind him, his instinct for self-preservation screamed at him to go forward, joined by his insatiable curiosity.

  He turned the knob…

  In his dream there had always been darkness. But in this dream there was…

  Nona's kitchen.

  Looking back, he held the door to the basement. A musty smell came from below. It was dark and he shut it quickly.

  Why am I in Nona's kitchen? The darkened windows told him it was night. A small light illuminated a spotless counter top. The emptiness of the house reminded him Nona was at the Society House.

  But why am I here?

  Joe moved out of the kitchen toward the tea shop. As he passed the counter, now empty of cakes and deserts, he noticed a light coming from the botanica. He knew Nathaniel, Nona's new helper, had bought a few night lights like the one in the kitchen so the house didn't appear completely dark.

  He stepped past the counter and looked right. A light flickered on the other side of the mosaic, beaded curtains. Flickering, moving…had someone left a candle burning?

  As he neared the curtain the hairs on his arms and neck rose as if he were walking into a magnetic field of some kind. He stopped with his nose touching a string of beads, the back of his mind telling him to run.

  But he couldn't.

  He had to know.

  "Sometimes knowing a thing is having it consume you."

  It was the same voice he'd heard in the hallway—but now it spoke from the other side of the curtain! He took in a deep breath, reached both hands up to part the beads as if parting a wave, and shoved them to either side.

  A fire burned in the fireplace of the empty room. Dammit…didn't Nathaniel know that was a bad idea?

  With a sigh he stepped through the curtain and the mantel above the fire lit up as if a spotlight in the ceiling had been turned on.

  There…on a pedestal in the center…sat that damn dragon statue. Nona called it a Soul Cage. He called it cheap ceramic.

  But…why was it here when he could also remember it in pieces on the floor of a basement of a house in north Georgia?

  Eyes narrowed, he moved slowly to it. The fire wasn't warm. It didn't make a sound, either. No crack or pop of the wood, not even a hiss. In fact, as he stood in front of it, looking up at the ceramic statue, the fire went out. The only thing shining in the room was the dragon….

  …it turned its head from the side and stared down at Joe.

  His eyes widened. "What the—"

  "Time to die," the thing said, just before it opened its maw and swallowed him whole—

  "Sonofafuckingjesusbitchgodallmighty!" Joe sat up in bed, his hands flat against the sheets. His heart pounded against his chest. He reached up and wiped at his face, his skin covered in a thin layer of sweat. After taking in a few gulps of air he turned and put his feet on the floor.

  What the fucking hell was that? He sat forward, elbows on this knees and ran his hands through his hair a few times. Three more deep slow breaths before he stood and went to the bathroom. There he splashed cold water onto his face and avoided looking at the mirror.

  He was pretty sure he'd see a haunted image staring back at him.

  The same nightmare. For most of his childhood he'd suffered that damn hallway, never really knowing if it was real, or his imagination. And now it was back? Three times now he'd woke up yelling something, unable to breathe, panicked and shaken. But this was the first time he'd been able to get to the botanica and see what the light was.

  And why…why that damned ugly statue?

  Why did it try and take his soul?

  Fuck. Fuckfuckfuck… He shut off the light and shuffled into the kitchen. There he turned on the one-cup coffee maker and grabbed a mug while the water heated up. Two packets of sweetener, milk from the fridge and the machine was ready. He chose a dark roast this time, popped the packet in and pushed the button.

  As it finished he reached above the fridge and pulled down a bottle of Bailey's Irish Creme. When the coffee was done and stirred he poured in a healthy amount and took the mug to the sliding glass door. Tim's rock sat on the desk next to the glass door, but the ghost didn't appear. Maybe he was sleeping. Either way, Joe wasn't much up for company.

  The cold December air chilled the dampness on his body as he stepped out. He was dressed in a pair of loungers and no shirt. The coffee was good and burned his throat. And even though he shivered, the cold cleared his head.

  He listened to the Atlanta night…the hiss of traffic nearby on Moreland Avenue. And beyond that was Ponce de Leon. But those weren't the sounds he was listening for.

  Joe wanted to hear Zoë moving in her apartment above him. She was up a lot at night, out on her own terrace just above his. Sometimes they talked. Sometimes he joined her, or she him.

  But not tonight. Not for a while.

  Zoë'd gone to Canada with Daniel.

  Always…with Daniel.

  Or Dags.

  But never with Joe. He knew something, like the voice said. He knew he loved her. And from the moment his lips touched hers, he'd never be able to love another. And that knowledge…well…

  He sipped his coffee and leaned his elbows on the railing. "I know a thing…" He said to the voice he remembered in his dreams. The voice of his grandmother. "And it consumes me."

  —————

  Read SOUL CAGE, available at all ebook retailers!

  About The Author

  Phaedra Weldon starting
writing as child re-imagining the endings and plots for some of her favorite television shows. The show she concentrated on the most was Scooby Doo yearned for the day when there wasn't a mask to be ripped off or a plot to be foiled by those nasty kids.

  She wanted the ghosts to be real.

  In 2007 her dream of being a published author came true when her first book WRAITH was released, kicking off the urban fantasy series, Zoë Martinique Investigations, set in her stomping ground of Atlanta, Georgia.

  WALKING SHADOWS takes place at the end of GEIST and before SOUL CAGE.

  Table of Contents

  Title

  Walking Shadows

  Soul Cage Excerpt

  Author

 

 

 


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