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The Skeleton Key

Page 20

by Tara Moss


  ‘I think so. He is really nice. But it’s complicated.’ I shrugged and gave a neutral smile, unsure how to explain. I sure didn’t like lying or being evasive. But I was doing it an awful lot. ‘Hey, would you like to see a movie on Friday?’ I asked.

  ‘Sure. The new Burton? It sounds cool.’

  ‘It’s a deal.’

  We walked into the crowd, headed for the subway. ‘I like your necklace, by the way,’ Morticia said. ‘I haven’t seen it before.’

  ‘Thanks.’ I pulled the chain up, so that the key showed above the neckline of my blouse. It felt strange to possess such a thing. The key to the entrance of the Underworld. ‘It’s from my great-aunt,’ I said, and then I froze, stopping abruptly in my tracks. ‘Um, I’ll have to leave you here,’ I told my friend.

  Morticia went on, still talking, then realised she’d lost me. She spun around and came back to where I was standing. My gaze was fixed on a figure in the crowd – a figure I doubted she could see. ‘What is it?’ she asked, studying my expression.

  ‘Nothing. Just . . . I forgot I’m meeting someone,’ I said clumsily.

  I could not believe what I was seeing. I almost could not speak.

  ‘Are you sure you’re okay?’

  ‘Totally.’ I’d felt the blood drain from my face, and now my cheeks grew as hot as if I were in front of an open fire. My heartbeat was behaving with equally erratic abandon. ‘Go on,’ I managed in a reasonably sane voice. ‘I’m fine. Friday night is a date, and I’ll see you in the morning.’

  Morticia left me reluctantly to wander off into the rush hour crowd of pedestrians. When she was out of view I walked up to the familiar figure who was leaning against the brick wall of one of the buildings not far from the office, clearly waiting for me.

  ‘Lieutenant Luke. How are you here?’

  Luke was on the street, in SoHo, without the full moon, and without my help. He had that peculiar opaque quality about him, the appearance of being something real and yet not real, as if you might blink and find him gone, a mere trick of the light. In the soft light of the fading sun, he was even fainter than usual. The pedestrians around him clearly could not see that he was there, resplendent in his Civil War uniform, his cap held respectfully in his spectral hands. Only I could see him. I could see him perfectly.

  ‘Miss Pandora, I am free,’ he declared.

  ‘Free?’ I felt tears spring to my eyes.

  ‘You and Celia have freed me from Barrett’s spell. I can leave the house and I don’t need to be flesh to do it.’

  Despite the public setting I threw my arms around Luke’s ghostly form, feeling the cool comfort that was not quite human. ‘I’m so happy for you,’ I whispered as he circled his arms around my waist. ‘You deserve to be free.’ I looked up and met his bright blue eyes – the eyes I’d so missed, eyes that no longer frightened me, I realised. ‘Will you . . . leave now?’ I dared to ask. My throat had closed up and the words came out strangled.

  If Luke was free and never returned to Spektor and the mansion that had been his prison, I should be happy for him. He’d suffered more than enough, and he deserved to be at peace. Any other response was just selfish. But still . . .

  Lieutenant Luke reached up and ran a ghostly hand over my hair, his blue eyes as intense and sincere as ever. ‘I am your spirit guide, Pandora English,’ he said. ‘I am yours. I will never leave you, as long as you want me.’

  I closed my eyes, awash with relief, and we held each other, the crowd passing us, indifferent. I must have looked like a crazy woman, weeping alone, but I may as well have been as invisible as Luke.

  Goodness, my life is complicated, I thought, and wiped a tear from my cheek.

  I straightened and pulled the satchel over my shoulder. ‘Lieutenant Luke, you aren’t going to go all green-eyed on me again, are you?’

  He looked at me questioningly, and I wondered for a moment if he realised all he had done while he was under the spell of Barrett’s necromancer. It seemed he did not.

  ‘Well, then. Shall we walk?’ I suggested, and took his hand. ‘You’re going to love this town . . .’

  This novel is dedicated to my husband, Dr Berndt Sellheim, for good reason. Writing two novels back to back without a break (and with a funny, swaggering, giggling toddler) is no easy thing, and without his unwavering support I simply could not have done it. Thank you for the love and coffee, Berndt. I can’t wait to hold your novel in my hands next year.

  I’d also like to thank my own Great-Aunt Celia/fairy godmother, Selwa Anthony, my friend and literary agent. You and Brian are family. To Cate, Claire, Sam, Caitlin and the team at Pan Macmillan, thank you for letting me bring Spektor to life.

  I am blessed to have wonderful friends, including the Gothmother Alison, Aunty Hels, Miss J, Mindi, Joshua, Adam and Susie, Tracey and Charlie, Pene and Karim, Jody and Simon, Jack and Venetia, Alicia and Carlos, Charlotte, Misty, Sarah, Caroline, Kelly and Mick, Jacinta, Lizzy, Marieke, Helen, Mieke, Emily, Lauren and Josh, Amelia and Desi. Thank you for your patience, inspiration and general wickedness.

  Thank you also to the Wiccan goddess Fiona Horne for the circle of protection. And to the Blue Mountains for the magical mists of Spektor.

  To my precious family, Dad and Lou, Nik and Dorothy, Maureen, Jacquelyn and Annelies, I love you. Sapphira, you are a gem. Thank you for making my life richer. Mum, I never forget you.

  Tara Moss

  The Blood Countess

  Pandora English is no ordinary small town orphan. When she’s invited to live with her mysterious Great-Aunt Celia in New York City, she seizes the opportunity to escape her stifling hometown, break from her tragic past and make it as a writer.

  Things, however, are not what she is expecting. For starters, her great-aunt’s gothic mansion is in a mist-wreathed Manhattan suburb that doesn’t appear on maps. And then there’s Celia herself – a former designer to the stars of Hollywood’s Golden Age – who is elegant, unnaturally young and always wearing a veil.

  Pandora lands a job at a fashion magazine and her first assignment is covering the A-list launch of the latest miracle cream, BloodofYouth. But something is not right about the product, nor Athanasia, the drop-dead beautiful face of the brand. It seems there may be a secret ingredient in BloodofYouth, a secret worth killing for . . .

  In The Blood Countess – the first novel in the new Pandora English series – bestselling author Tara Moss brings her trademark macabre and lifelong love of the paranormal to the fashion world with a twist.

  Tara Moss

  The Spider Goddess

  It’s been two months since Pandora English left her small hometown to live with her mysterious great-aunt in a haunted mansion in Spektor – the fog-wreathed suburb of Manhattan that doesn’t appear on any map.

  With the help of Great-Aunt Celia and the handsome – but dead – Lieutenant Luke, Pandora is beginning to understand that she is heir to a great gift from the Lucasta family – a gift that comes with frightening responsibility.

  And New York needs Pandora’s special gifts.

  There is a new designer in town, and her ambitions extend far beyond taking over the fashion world one knit at a time.

  Tara Moss is the author of the bestselling and critically acclaimed novels Fetish, Split, Covet, Hit, Siren, Assassin and The Blood Countess and The Spider Goddess. Her novels have been published in eighteen countries in twelve languages, and have been nominated for both the Davitt and the Ned Kelly crime writing awards.

  Born in Victoria, British Columbia, Moss is a dual Australian/Canadian citizen. When not writing her next novel she enjoys reading voraciously, spending time with her pet python, Thing, collecting morbid memento mori and Victoriana, serving as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and ambassador for the Royal Institute for Deaf and Blind Children. She is married to Australian poet and philosopher Dr Berndt Sellheim with whom she has a daughter. Visit her on the web at www.taramoss.com and pandoraenglish.com.

  Also by Tara Moss

&
nbsp; The Blood Countess

  The Spider Goddess

  First published Macmillan in 2012 by Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd

  1 Market Street, Sydney 2000

  Copyright © Tara Moss 2012

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  All rights reserved. This publication (or any part of it) may not be reproduced or transmitted, copied, stored, distributed or otherwise made available by any person or entity (including Google, Amazon or similar organisations), in any form (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical) or by any means (photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise) without prior written permission from the publisher.

  This ebook may not include illustrations and/or photographs that may have been in the print edition.

  National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication data:

  Moss, Tara.

  The skeleton key / Tara Moss.

  9781742611631 (pbk.)

  A823.3

  EPUB format: 9781743348734

  Typeset by Midlands Typesetters Australia

  Cover design by XOU creative

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