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Echoes of the Past Copyright 2005 Audra Cole ISBN: 1-55410-991-4 Cover art and design by Martine Jardin All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher. Published by eXtasy Books, a division of Zumaya Publications, 2005 Look for us online at: www.zumayapublications.com www.extasybooks.com
Other books in this series: Spirit Lake
Audra Cole
Prologue er name meant Magic Power. But today, Orenda didn’t feel very magical. In fact, she was confused and a little frightened. In her seventeen years of life she’d never had such emotional conflict. She was promised to Yuma, the tribal chief’s son, yet she had betrayed him with the strong, muscular white settler named Daniel. She was Iroquois, betrothed to an Iroquois, but her attraction to Daniel was strong and she’d been unable to resist. A twig cracked, and Orenda leapt to her feet. She’d been waiting by the lake at the foot of the mound for quite a while, hoping he would come yet knowing it would be better if he did not. At a little over five feet, four inches tall, Orenda was well proportioned with narrow hips and large, firm breasts. Her raven hair hung straight down to the center of her back. Today, she had not braided it. Daniel liked it loose so he could run his fingers through it. He stepped out from behind a stand of trees and she was again struck by how handsome he was. Tall, blond, eyes as blue as an autumn sky, he had a smile that made her heart flutter dangerously.
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Echoes of the Past In the beginning, she’d spoken no English, he no Iroquois. But during the past two months they’d begun to teach one another their languages. They’d met one evening when she’d come to the lake to get away from the longhouse for a while. She’d spent that day weaving and her hands were bruised from twisting and turning the reedy vines. At first she thought she’d heard a deer or some other animal, and had been startled when he’d emerged from the nearby woods. He’d been carrying a rifle, but once he saw how terrified she was, he’d immediately put the weapon on the ground and held out his hands in an almost pleading gesture. Then, he’d reached inside his shirt pocket and brought out something shiny, offering it to her, coaxing her closer. The elders of the tribe had spoken of the settlers, and warned her and the other women to stay away from them. But she could tell the young man meant her no harm. The gift he had given her that day was something he called a brooch. The stone in the center was red as blood, the setting delicate and lacy-looking. When they were together, she wore it pinned to her deerskin dress; when she was back in the village, she hid it in a special pocket she’d sewn into the garment. This evening Daniel held a bouquet of wildflowers in his hand and presented them to her proudly, that boyish grin dimpling the corners of his mouth. “Back East, where I came from, gentlemen always court ladies by bringing them flowers, or candy,” he said. 2
Audra Cole She didn’t understand all the words, but she loved the sound of his deep, smooth voice, and the flowers smelled wonderful. A shy smile creased her mouth as he leaned in for a kiss. His lips were warm, hungry and she felt herself slipping into his arms, unable to resist the pull, unwilling to deny herself the feel of his body against hers. As evening shadows deepened around them, Orenda thought to herself that Daniel was really the one with the magic power. **** In the bushes, hidden from view, Yuma, son of Chief Tyee, watched as Orenda and the white boy embraced. Rage coursed through his veins as he saw the other’s hands caress his betrothed’s hips, moving to her breasts. Having never touched Orenda himself, he could only imagine the way her skin felt, the softness of her flesh, the curves of her naked body. Now to see this invader from the East defiling his promised one, Yuma could barely contain himself. But he would bide his time. Soon the settlers in the sprawling farmhouse on the other side of the woods would know the mighty power of an Iroquois’ revenge. **** 3
Echoes of the Past
Hattie Clark walked out on the front porch for the third time in the past hour and scanned the surrounding area for a sign of her son, Daniel’s, return. He’d gone hunting, hoping to bring home a deer. They were getting low on meat and her husband had been busy with the planting all day. “How’s this, Mama?” came a small, almost plaintive voice from beside her. Matthew Clark, who had just turned ten years old, was holding up a piece of wood he’d been whittling. He looked up at her through dark, luminous eyes, his father’s eyes. “What is it, Matthew?” Hattie asked, squatting down to take a better look. “A bear,” the boy said proudly. She took the object and turned it over in her hands. “Well, indeed it is. With this poor light out here, I couldn’t see it very well. It’s very good. We’ll put it on the mantle, so everyone can enjoy it.” She went inside and did just that. Then she returned to tending the bubbling pot of stew cooking in the hearth. “Daniel not back yet?” John Clark asked, coming down the stairs. A burly man, with dark hair and deep brown eyes, he had decided to move his family from New York, west to California. Hattie hadn’t wanted to come. She much preferred the comfort of their lifestyle in the east. But John, tired of the city life, had longed for some land and a place to really call their own. Their journey had ended here in Pennsylvania, as soon as 4
Audra Cole he saw the rolling hills and fertile land. “It’s safe. There’s a fort not far away and the Indians are under control,” he’d promised. She still wasn’t sure they’d made the right decision. But they were here now and she was determined to make the best of the situation. Katie, the sixteen-year-old, was fitting right in, however. A pretty girl with blond hair and large blue eyes just like Hattie’s, she’d turned the head of many of the young soldiers at the fort. But she seemed to have an eye for one in particular. “I’m starting to wonder what’s so interesting out in those woods, John. Seems to me Daniel spends a lot of time there,” Hattie commented. “He’s always offering to go hunting when we need meat, too,” put in Katie, who had been kneading bread dough at the kitchen table. “None of your concern, Katie. Just get that dough ready to rise or there won’t be any bread for breakfast in the morning,” Hattie reprimanded. “I’ll go look for him,” John said, walking to the front door. “Me, too,” offered Matthew, following his father. As the two left the house, Hattie couldn’t shake the feeling of doom that had been skittering around in her midsection all day. **** Orenda nestled into Daniel’s arms and sighed. Just then, a buck came out into the clearing on the other 5
Echoes of the Past side of the lake and dipped his huge, antlered head down to the surface of the water for a drink. “Lay real still, maybe a doe will join him,” Daniel whispered, reinforcing his words by tightening his hold on her. She knew what he meant, and obeyed. Then the doe came timidly out of the trees, hesitating, ears twitching, nose sniffing the air. Finally she joined the buck. “Neoge,” Daniel whispered, using the Iroquois word for deer. Orenda smiled and squeezed his arm. “Deer,” she said. Just then a fluttering of tree branches sent the deer back into the trees and they disappeared from view. “I have to go, Orenda. I love you,” Daniel said, kissing her forehead and smoothing back her hair. “Love, too,” she said, using the words he’d taught her. Daniel stood up and pulled her to her feet. Making a fist out of one hand, he pressed it to his chest and tapped lightly three times. “My heart beats for you. Only for you,” he said. She could see the intensity in his gaze. Making a fist herself, she mimicked his action. “On—only you heart too,” she managed, piecing the words he’d used together as best she could. His smile told her she’d done well. ****
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Audra Cole Yuma had no trouble finding braves to join him in his quest. He was not the only one in the tribe who hated the way the white settlers had come in and taken away what rightfully belonged to the Iroquois. Tyee, his father and the tribal chief, spoke of peace, of the five nations, the Iroquois Confederacy. But Yuma felt it was time to restore their heritage and reclaim what was theirs. He would start by taking back Orenda, then he and his warriors would take back the land that had been stolen from their people. Only then would he feel the full pride of being Iroquois once again racing through his veins. **** Orenda awoke from a deep sleep without being sure what really roused her. Then she heard it. The unmistakable sound of stealthy footsteps outside the longhouse where she and the members of her clan lived. She crept silently to the doorway and peered out into the clear, calm night. Shadows played across the grass as several figures disappeared from view. It wasn’t unusual for Yuma and some of the other braves to go hunting at night, but she had a bad feeling about this particular expedition. Slipping outside, she scanned the countryside for signs of the group but could not see them. Listening intently she hoped to hear their voices, but there were only the usual night sounds. Finally she went back into the longhouse and lay down again, falling into a 7
Echoes of the Past fitful sleep. **** Hattie Clark awoke with a start when her husband jumped up out of bed, grabbed his rifle and ran from the bedroom. Downstairs, she could hear the sounds of the invasion and fear gripped her heart like an icecold fist. Rushing from the room, she hurried down the stairs just in time to see an Indian warrior split her husband's skull with a tomahawk. Then her thoughts turned to her children and she quickly retraced her steps. The sound of thumping footfalls close behind sent a surge of panic through her body, propelling her into motion. She made it into the children’s room and slammed the door just as the war party reached the landing. “Daniel!” she screamed. By now the invaders were pounding on the door. Then she realized they weren’t using their hands, but their weapons, as wood began to splinter. “Run! Hide!” she cried, pulling her two other children from their beds. Daniel was the first to realize what was happening. Grabbing his sister’s arm, he propelled her toward the window, only to discover that several of the braves were outside and had begun climbing up onto the roof in order to prevent their escape. “We’re trapped!” Katie screamed fearfully. Matthew, rubbing the sleep from his eyes, clung to 8
Audra Cole his mother, crying. Rushing to the corner of the room, Daniel grabbed up his own rifle and aimed it at the door, squeezing the trigger. Hattie screamed, then pulled Katie and Matthew away from the window just as one of the braves came through. The cracking of wood as the door finally gave way caused a terrified scream to rip from Katie’s throat. Hattie watched in horror as Daniel reeled around and was felled by one slash across his throat. Matthew ran for the window, but his escape was blocked by another brave making his way inside. Katie cowered in the corner, shaking uncontrollably. Hattie watched as her two remaining children were slaughtered. When it was finally her turn, she welcomed the black void of death, knowing that it would forever wipe out the horrible things she had just witnessed. **** Sergeant Jeremy Taylor rode up to the Clark farm the next morning to check on the family. Of course, he had another reason for this devotion to duty: Katie Clark. He was smitten. He admitted it. As a result he now had to endure the kidding of his fellow officers, but he didn’t care. She was worth it. The minute he brought his horse to a stop, he knew something was wrong. The first thing he noticed was the eerie stillness. Then he saw that the front door 9
Echoes of the Past was destroyed. Rushing inside, he found John Clark dead on the kitchen floor, and the rest of the family slain in an upstairs bedroom. The entire house smelled of death and fear. Running to Katie, he scooped her into his arms. Her throat had been slit and her life’s blood pooled around her on the hardwood floor. “No!” he cried in anguish, holding her close. He wasn’t sure how long he sat there cradling Katie in his arms, but finally his military training came to the forefront and he realized he had certain duties to perform. Lowering her body gently to the floor, he got up and left the house. He then traveled several miles to the next farm, only to find that family well and untouched by the violence that had been vested on the Clarks. The third visit, to a small cabin housing a young couple expecting their first child, netted the same results: both expectant parents were alive and well. Riding back to the fort at top speed, he delivered the news of the massacre to his commanding officer, Lieutenant William Brigmann. Brigmann had often been taken to task by regional commanders for his attitude of intolerance. He didn’t trust the Indians and made no secret of it. Accused once of just looking for an excuse to declare war against the nearby tribes, he’d been placed under close scrutiny and threatened with disciplinary action. 10
Audra Cole “The fact that the Clarks were singled out may be significant. On the other hand, it could be the first in a series of attacks aimed at the settlers in the area. Either way we need to send a message, loud and clear. Be ready to move out just after midnight!” **** Orenda knew something was wrong the minute Yuma stepped out of the trees and joined her beside the lake. She was waiting on Daniel, but it was nearly dark now and she was about to give up. “He will not come,” Yuma said, speaking in a harsh tone. Standing up, she shot back, “You know nothing of it!” “He takes you as his. But you are promised to me. Now he is no more. Now you are mine again.” Orenda struggled to understand. Then she saw the ferocious glint in eyes that were now dark as night. “What do you mean? Tell me, Yuma, what have you done?” Suddenly Yuma grabbed her arm tightly and she winced in pain. “You will be mine tonight. Tomorrow I will go to the council and we will be man and wife!” “No!” Orenda shouted, wrenching away from his grasp. She ran toward the village, frantically wondering what this meant. Where was Daniel? What had happened? 11
Echoes of the Past “He is gone! All of his family is gone!” came Yuma’s words from behind her, as though they were chasing her through the trees. **** Tyee woke Yuma just after midnight, furious. “Come with me!” he commanded, motioning his son out of their longhouse. They walked to the edge of the clearing. “What have you done?” Tyee demanded, staring hard at his youngest son. “What should have been done long ago!” Yuma exclaimed, balling his large hands into fists. “For this you will be punished. We are at peace…” Tyee began. Yuma raised one fist in the air and stopped his father’s words. “We have no pride as a people because of your peace! We are disgraced! The white settlers have taken what is ours and spat on us. One of them defiled Orenda. She is promised to me, now she is mine again!” Tyee looked deeply into his son’s eyes and saw the fury there. But this was wrong. To kill served no purpose and jeopardized everything. But before Tyee could put this into words, hoofbeats sounded through the night like thunder. **** Orenda awoke and was immediately frightened. Her heart raced as she heard the shouts and screams from 12
Audra Cole outside. Rushing to the doorway, she joined the other women of her clan, peering out into the darkness. Nearby she heard the shouts of the warriors mingled with the sounds of gunfire. She couldn’t see very well, but she saw enough to realize a battle was in progress. “We must stay inside!” she shouted to the other women. “Go to the back of the house, quickly!” They herded the children ahead of them, seeking refuge. Going to the rear of the longhouse, she guided some of the women and children out the back and into the night, watching as they scampered toward the woods. Making a run for it herself, she felt the sting of a bullet as it grazed her shoulder. They are just firing at will, it is too dark for them to know if they are aiming at braves or women and children, Orenda thought as panic spurred her on. **** Yuma’s knife sank into the flesh of the soldier and he felt a surge of satisfaction. Tyee lay dead a few feet away. The rest of the tribal council had perished also. He would be the leader, if he lived through this battle. The braves who had stood with him yesterday as he’d taken revenge against those settlers were falling around him, their death screams echoing in the night. He had felled at least five soldiers, and still they kept coming. Now he faced another one, who took aim and fired before Yuma could throw his knife. 13
Echoes of the Past The bullet seared through muscle and bone, ripping apart his chest. His last thought as he fell to the ground was of Orenda, and the future they would never share. ****
Sergeant Jeremy Taylor helped his Lieutenant to his feet and quickly surveyed the jagged wound in the man’s shoulder. “That wound doesn’t look too bad, sir. We’ll get you back to the fort as soon as possible.” “None of them are left alive?” Brigmann asked. “Some of the women and children made it into the woods, sir, but the chief, the council and his warriors are all dead.” “Then our mission is accomplished. Let’s go home.” Jeremy looked at the carnage that was now becoming more visible in the pre-dawn hours. Fallen soldiers and Indian warriors lay side by side, spread out across the clearing in a macabre tapestry of death. “We need to bury our dead, and the Clark family,” Jeremy told him. “Choose a dozen men to assist you,” Brigmann directed, then asked, “How many did we lose?” “I count fifteen.” “Wounded?” Jeremy looked out over the assemblage, who was now awaiting further instructions. The swiftness of the attack had worked to their advantage, that and 14
Audra Cole their superior weapons. “Maybe ten, no more. We had the element of surprise and more firepower.” He felt again the deep satisfaction of knowing that Katie’s death had been avenged. **** Orenda crept out of the woods and stared down at the farm house below. She’d been walking for a long time, unsure of just where Daniel lived. But this had to be it. She’d heard Tyee speak of three families living on the other side of the trees. A little afraid, she approached slowly, expecting to see someone appear on the porch any minute to shoo her away. But even as she climbed the three steps and pushed open the door, she heard nothing. What she saw, however, caused her heart to begin galloping against her ribcage and her breath to come in sharp, shallow gasps. “Daniel!” she cried, looking frantically around. The man on the floor was older and very different looking than Daniel. Perhaps…. She ran up the stairs and into the first room she came to. Then she saw him, her love, lying on the floor, throat slit open, his shirt soaked with blood that had already formed a thick crimson puddle on the floor around him. The room spun and she sank to her knees, weeping loudly, rocking back and forth. Later, Orenda stumbled from the farmhouse. With the sun beating its warmth down on her, she made her way into the welcome coolness of the woods and ran blindly for her village. 15
Echoes of the Past What she found there was too much for her to take in at first glance. Newly dug graves ringed one side of the settlement, and scattered everywhere else were the remains of her people. The first one she came upon was Tyee, his eyes still wide with surprise, staring sightlessly at the morning sky. Yuma was lying not far away from her own father. She ran to the longhouse and cried out the names of her aunt and sisters. Moments later she found them lying outside in a thicket of juniper, dead. She couldn’t look anymore. Her life was gone, her loved ones massacred. Orenda walked slowly toward the only place she’d ever felt at peace. This morning the lake was clear and calm. She sat down in the grass, staring out at the glassy surface for a long time, remembering. Finally she slipped off her moccasins, and took the brooch Daniel had given her out of her pocket. Then, clutching it to her heart, she walked into the water.
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Audra Cole
Chapter One rica Parkhurst walked out of the courthouse into a cold, steady drizzle. It was mid-October, and the expected Indian summer had yet to show itself in New York City. Instead, they were experiencing the second day of gloomy, leaden skies that seeped instead of poured moisture down on millions of harried citizens. Fumbling with an umbrella that refused to cooperate, she rushed toward the curb and the line of waiting taxis. She was tall and slender with thick chestnut hair and indigo eyes. Her mother had once told her that her eyes were her best feature. In her father’s opinion, however, it was her skin—unblemished, smooth, creamy. Of course they were her parents, which made them a little prejudiced. “Free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, you’re free at last!” Reeling around at the sound of the familiar voice, Erica smiled as her best friend Paula Bascilla fell into step beside her. “What are you doing here?” Erica asked. Paula smiled back, exposing perfect white teeth.
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Echoes of the Past She was a little taller than Erica’s five feet seven inches with jet black hair and eyes that shone like fiery emeralds. Today, true to form, Paula was wearing an outfit that, on anyone else, would have looked mismatched and gaudy. But on her, the turquoise calf-length skirt, magenta blouse and green sweater seemed to be just right. As usual, her jewelry was every bit as flamboyant; silver bracelets dangled from dainty wrists, a large moonstone amulet hung on a thick chain around her neck and in her earlobes, sterling triangles bounced back and forth as she turned her head searching for just the right cab. “You’re rid of that cheating scumbag, Grant, once and for all. It’s time to celebrate!” Paula announced directing Erica toward a yellow vehicle. Celebrate. I suppose I should feel that way, Erica thought as she climbed into the back seat. Today her divorce from Park Avenue plastic surgeon, Grant Parkhurst, had been signed sealed and delivered, along with a large settlement. “Cheer up, Erica. You don’t ever have to lay eyes on that bum again. We’re going to go to lunch and drink a toast to your wonderful new life.” “And how is my new life going to differ from the life I’ve been living since I left Grant in July?” Paula sighed. “When was the last time you talked to Joe?” Erica squirmed a little in her seat. “I’m not sure. Maybe two weeks ago.” “And why is that?” 18
Audra Cole “Busy.” “Doing what?” “Look, Paula, when Joe and I had our…whatever that was in Spirit Lake…it was a very confusing time for me. A lot happened that threw my world out of kilter…” “Quit making excuses! Sometimes you can be so dense. You found a real man when you stumbled upon that quaint little town. Joe Lakota is exactly what you need!” Erica turned her head and stared at Paula. “And how do you know what I need, when I don’t even know that myself?” Paula smiled. “Because, my dear, I know you better than you know yourself sometimes. Okay, we’re at the restaurant. Pay the driver. I’ll get lunch.” Paula had chosen the Village Cafe, one of their favorite places. As Erica followed the hostess through the crowd to their table, she found her thoughts returning to Joe and Spirit Lake. She’d call him today as soon as she got back to her apartment. Her apartment. Not anything like the house she’d once shared with Grant, but it was cozy and comfortable. Once they were seated, Paula ordered a glass of Pinot Grigio. “I’ll have the Merlot,” Erica said, picking up the lunch menu. “I have news for you. Artie called me yesterday. They’re hiring people back.” Erica’s eyes widened in surprise. Part of the reason she’d fled the city in July was because she’d been laid 19
Echoes of the Past off from her job as an editor at the consumer magazine where she’d worked for five years. “Are you going back?” Their wine came, and Paula took a long sip before she answered. “Not sure. I mean I’ve built up some clients doing freelance over the past few months and I’m getting a good reputation. Do I need Artie’s bullshit? You know what a prick he is to work for.” Erica knew all to well. “I miss the challenge of my job. But you’re right. I don’t miss Artie one bit.” “You miss Joe.” Erica raised an eyebrow. “And you know this because…?” Paula shook a finger in Erica’s direction. “I’m never wrong. Admit it.” Paula claimed to have psychic abilities. Erica used to take this pronouncement with a grain of salt. But not now. Not after what had happened in July. “Yes, I miss him. But the time we’ve spent apart has given me a chance to put things in perspective, Paula. What we had was hot, but can it stand the test of time? When I met Joe, my husband had just left me and I’d lost my job. I was a wreck. I was running away and very vulnerable. Joe made me feel desirable again, but is that enough to build a life on?” “It’s enough to start. It’s more than some people ever have.” “He’s a loner. Look at the way he lives. All by himself in that log cabin in the woods with just Mingo for company.” “Ah, a man and his wolf. Sounds like he needs a 20
Audra Cole good woman,” Paula said, flagging the waitress for another glass of wine. “Then there’s the cultural gap. I mean, he’s part Iroquois. What do I know about Native Americans, anyway?” The wine arrived, and they started to order. Paula leaned across the table a little and asked, “Is he hung?” Erica was used to her friend’s bluntness by now, but the waitress who had just approached the table emitted a gasp. Erica pretended not to notice. “I’ll have the Cobb Salad.” Handing the menus back to the astounded girl, Paula said, “Me, too.” Once they were alone again, Erica replied, “You’re shameless. But to answer your question, he’s amazing. However, that’s beside the point. There’s more to a relationship than sex.” “Since when?” Paula shot back, then added, “You’re still pissed about him and that Indian girl, aren’t you?” “Not the relationship. That happened when they were teenagers. It’s the fact he kept it from me.” “Men always have secrets, Erica. Just like us women.” Changing the subject, Erica said, “Maybe I will call Artie. I need to feel useful again.” “Suit yourself, but I’m hanging tough. Artie can take his so-called offer and shove it!”
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Chapter Two hen the phone rang on Wednesday morning, Erica was having her second cup of coffee and putting off making the call to her former boss, Artie Baughman. The sound of Evelyn Black’s frantic voice on the other end of the line shot an arrow of alarm through her. “Oh, Erica, you have to do it. Say you’ll do it. Say you’ll come. I need you here…” the owner of the Spirit Lake Inn cried. “Slow down, Evelyn. I can barely understand what you’re saying. What’s wrong?” “I fell. Took a tumble down the stairs. I have to have surgery. My leg…Oh, please don’t say no. You’re not working again, are you?” “No. I mean, not yet. What is it you need me to do, Evelyn?” “I have guests coming in and no one to run the inn. You’re my only hope. Please say you’ll do it!” “This time of year?” “We’re often busy in October. People come to view the fall foliage, it’s spectacular.”
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Audra Cole Erica’s mind was reeling. How could she do this? She knew nothing about running an inn. She’d be lost, worse yet, she’d make a mess of things and poor Evelyn would suffer the consequences. But the words that came out of her mouth were, “How long will you be laid up?” I’m not really considering this, am I? “Three weeks at least. I can’t close the inn with guests coming. If I do, I might as well close it for good!” Erica could tell the woman was crying. During her stay in Spirit Lake, she and Evelyn had become close. How could she refuse her now? “All right, but I can’t do this alone. I’m bringing a friend.” “I’ll pay you both. Just come!”
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Chapter Three hey’re beautiful! Why did you ever come back to
“TNew York? Just look at all the colors!” Paula
gasped as she got her first sight of the Allegheny Mountains in all of their autumn splendor. She lowered the passenger-side window of Erica’s silver Dodge Stratus. “Just breathe that air! Fresh, clean.” As though proving her point, she inhaled deeply. “It is gorgeous here,” Erica said absently. Her thoughts were on the road, and on Joe. She felt that old familiar flutter in the pit of her stomach as she thought about seeing him again. She hadn’t called him to let him know she was returning. Truthfully, she’d felt awkward about contacting him, unsure of his reaction. “Hello, Earth to Erica,” Paula said. Erica glanced sideways to find her friend staring at her. “Sorry. What did you say?” “I said what do you know about this inn’s history?” “Not a lot. You know what happened there in July. Other than that, it was a private home once. The Black’s bought it many years ago. He’s dead. Evelyn has run it by herself since then.” “This entire area is steeped in folklore. Mysteries 24
Audra Cole abound. I can’t believe you didn’t ask questions, find things out!” Feeling like she was being scolded by a teacher for not paying attention in class, Erica replied with a weak, “I was sort of busy.” “Well, I’ll pick up the vibes the minute I walk in the door,” Paula declared. Erica smiled. Paula was certainly a free spirit. She ignored boundaries and never let rules stop her. We get along so well because she’s nothing like me. Then as she drove around a curve, she saw the old wooden sign that read, Spirit Lake, 5 Miles and all thoughts flew from her mind except for one: Joe. **** The large Victorian houses still gleamed brightly on either side of the tree-lined street. The stately oak and maple trees displayed their fall foliage creating a multi-colored tableau against a clear, blue autumn sky. Then the inn came into view, and Erica was again struck by the sheer beauty of the three-story Georgian-style structure sitting atop that gently sloping hill. The rambling rose bush that framed the inn’s sign was bereft of many of its red, velvety blooms now, and its branches clung to the trellis like thorny claws. The sign itself was different, too. Evelyn had had it redone. Where it had once listed Will and Evelyn Black as innkeepers, it now just had Evelyn’s name. 25
Echoes of the Past She’d finally let him go, along with their daughter, Chenoa. “Spirit Lake Inn, A Bed and Breakfast,” Paula said, reading the sign out loud. “You know, Erica, this area may be sacred ground. That hill looks like it could have been an Indian burial mound of some sort.” Erica pulled into the driveway and parked near the front porch. She’d move the car to the parking area at the side of the inn once they unloaded their luggage. The lake, partially visible from here, sparkled benignly on the other side of the hill. Erica scanned the dock for signs of movement. “Looking for someone?” Paula asked, throwing her a knowing smile. “Let’s get inside. Evelyn said the new chief of police would be here to hand over the key. And for your information, that’s who I was looking for.” “I don’t see a car,” Paula said, following Erica onto the wide, wrap-around front porch. Erica noted that the wicker tables, chairs and other outdoor furniture had been taken in, obviously in anticipation of the coming winter. She recalled how she had eaten an impromptu lunch out here on the day she’d first arrived. “People don’t drive from town; it’s only a couple of blocks away. He probably walked,” Erica replied, opening the door and stepping into the foyer. It looked the same, except now the flower arrangement in the center of the pedestal table was made up of dried fall foliage. The chandelier still twinkled overhead; the bench-style coat rack was still 26
Audra Cole along one wall. Beneath her feet, the oak floor gleamed with a luster that could only be achieved by decades of careful cleaning and polishing. “The parlor is there,” she pointed to her right, “and the kitchen is through there,” she added, pointing to her left. Then she realized Paula was not beside her. Spinning around she was shocked to see that her friend was still standing in the doorway, staring straight ahead at the staircase. “This place is alive with spirit activity. It’s everywhere! My God, they’re all around us. Cool!” Paula’s eyes were wide with enthusiasm. Then she came inside and headed for the parlor. By the time Erica decided to join her, she was exiting that room and hurrying toward the kitchen. The startled gasp that Paula emitted next sent Erica scurrying after her. “Didn’t mean to scare you ladies,” said the man standing near the back door. He was at least six feet tall and muscular, with dark brown hair and bluegreen eyes. At second glance, Erica saw that there was just a touch of gray at his temples. He was wearing a police uniform of tan and brown. “You must be Chief Novak. Evelyn said you’d be here,” Erica said, going to him and extending a hand. “Call me Greg. Glad you could come help Evelyn out. She’s had a rough time of it.” “I’m Erica Parkhurst, and this is Paula Bascilla,” Erica said making the introductions complete. At that point, Paula seemed to come out of her 27
Echoes of the Past stupor and became even more animated than usual, offering the chief coffee and searching the kitchen for something to go with it. In the end, they had coffee and pound cake around the kitchen table. “Evelyn left the arrival schedule for the guests on the desk in her office,” Greg told Erica. Evelyn’s office was really what had once been one of the pantries off the kitchen. It was small, with just a desk, file cabinet and chair. “Tell me, Greg,” Paula began, “where are you from?” Erica noticed she was watching him intently and wondered why. “Plainfield. It’s about eighty miles east of here.” “What made you decide to come to Spirit Lake?” Greg shifted in his chair. “Just needed a change of pace, I guess.” He stood up. “It’s been a pleasure meeting you both, but duty calls.” Before leaving by the back door, he added, “If you need anything, just let me know.” Paula was still staring after him when Erica began to clear away the dishes. “Okay, what was that third degree all about?” Paula seemed deep in thought as she stared at the back door where the police chief had just exited, “He’s a man with secrets.” Then before Erica could respond, she turned around. “Let’s get the car unpacked. I don’t know about you, but I could use a shower and I want to see that lake before dark.”
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Audra Cole **** The inn had two spacious corner guest suites facing the lake. One was on the Northwest end of the house and also overlooked the rose garden, the other on the Southwest corner which also had a view of the woods. Erica had occupied the Northwest suite when she’d been here in July. The other two rooms, one facing the garden, the other the woods, were smaller and less expensive per night but very comfortable. When they took their bags upstairs, Erica gave Paula a tour of the second floor. The minute she opened the door to the Northwest suite, memories came flooding back. The muted yellow walls, high ceilings and two wide windows were all too familiar, as was the canopied bed with its white eyelet spread and cover. The armoire still stood against the far wall. The brick fireplace with its marble mantle was now laid for a fire. “I love it! It’s alive with the past!” Paula exclaimed as she stepped over the threshold. Erica felt a sudden chill. “Well, our accommodations won’t be this luxurious, but the other two rooms are spacious enough, and beautifully decorated.” She fought the overwhelming feeling that she needed to get out of the yellow suite and stay out. Erica had selected the room next door for Paula. It was cheery and bright and overlooked the rose garden. Although the branches were now bare, there were fall flowers blooming, their bright yellows, oranges and reds affording a magnificent display. The 29
Echoes of the Past white Victorian gazebo gleamed brightly in the afternoon sun and a marble fountain spilled a steady stream of water into a large fluted basin. This room was wallpapered in a floral Victorian print. The ceiling sported a central light fixture that looked like one of those old-fashioned gas chandeliers. The fireplace was red brick with an ornately carved mantle of dark, gleaming wood. Paula hefted her bag onto the four-poster bed. “Cozy. I like it. No bad vibes, either,” she commented, winking Erica’s way. The bathroom was across the hall, facing the stairs. Evelyn’s living quarters were on the third floor, in what Erica supposed had once been the servant’s quarters. She’d never seen it, and wouldn’t invade the woman’s privacy now. The door to those stairs would remain locked. Leaving Paula to get settled, Erica walked down the hallway and entered the bedroom next to the Southwest suite. Stepping inside, she half expected the same feeling of unease she’d just experienced to re-emerge, but it didn’t. Looking around, she liked what she saw. The walls were painted light blue with white wainscoting. A small multi-globe light fixture hung from the center of the ceiling. The fireplace was white marble with brown and gold slag. There were two windows, sideby-side that gave her a view of the line of trees running along that edge of the property. The double bed had a white wrought iron headboard. There was also a dresser and an armoire. A floral-print rug of 30
Audra Cole blue and deep red covered the center of the floor. As she unpacked her things, Erica wondered if she should call Joe, or just throw caution to the wind and drop by the cabin? Memories of the way he looked, felt, smelled, and tasted overcame her in a rush and she experienced that familiar flutter in her stomach, as though a million butterflies had been let loose there. In the end, she decided to wait. She had to get the inn ready for guests. There would be time to contact him later. **** Paula stood in the doorway for a moment surveying the white marble floor, claw-footed porcelain tub, oval sink and gilt-framed mirror. When she finally stepped inside and discovered a nearly secreted Lshaped alcove that contained the shower enclosure, she muttered, “Clever design, for an afterthought.” Her voice, though barely above a whisper, seemed to echo off of the cold stone walls. The air felt chilly, and as she closed and locked the door, she felt a breeze brush past her from behind. Pivoting quickly, she half expected to see someone standing there but there was no one else in the room. “You’ll come to me sooner or later,” she said in a normal tone of voice. “It’s just a matter of time.” ****
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Echoes of the Past Erica finished putting her things away, then went out into the hallway. She could hear the shower running. While Paula freshened up, she’d go downstairs to Evelyn’s office. She was certain that, in addition to the list of arriving guests, there would be other things that would require her attention. Noting that the staircase needed a good dusting, she made a mental note to check all the rooms. Reaching the bottom of the stairs, she stepped onto the small landing and made the turn to go down the remaining step into the foyer. “What the…” she exclaimed, staring at the mess. The large vase of fall flowers that had, just moments ago, graced the center of the pedestal table under the chandelier, was now overturned, its contents strewn across the floor. Erica hurried across the foyer just as the vase rolled off the tabletop. Making a grab for it, she felt her hand close around the cool glass just in the nick of time. Alarm shot through her. I know I locked both the front and back doors. Did someone break in? Still holding the vase, she checked the front door then rushed into the kitchen and checked the back. Both were securely locked. Gathering up the dried flowers, she did the best she could to rearrange them attractively. Once she was satisfied, she went into the parlor. Erica felt the icy chill at once and her gaze immediately went to the large windows. Closed. Paula’s declaration that the inn was alive with spirit activity came back to her. 32
Audra Cole Stop it! You don’t have time to get caught up in someone else’s ghost-hunting obsession! Whatever spirits may have haunted this place are gone now, vanquished that night on the dock when a young girl’s death was avenged. “It was probably just a draft. These old houses are notorious for them,” Erica muttered. But even as the words filled the air in the otherwise silent room, she got the feeling she would live to retract them.
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Chapter Four y the time Erica and Paula got the suites inspected, dusted, vacuumed and otherwise ready for their guests, it was nearly five o’clock. Dusk was already beginning to settle over the landscape, as the sun balanced itself just above the horizon. “It’s beautiful. Like a big orange ball, just hanging there,” Paula said from the back porch. Erica, standing beside her, scanned the dock, memories skittering through her mind in random order. Paula’s voice interrupted her thoughts. “You should call him, you know.” “We’ve barely communicated during the past few weeks. Every time I’ve called him the phone just rings and rings. Who doesn’t have voicemail these days?” “He’s an old-fashioned guy. You said he lived in a log cabin, for chrissakes.” “He hasn’t called me, either,” Erica said softly. “Someone has to break the silence…” Erica saw the wry smile creasing her friend’s lips but failed to see the humor in the situation. “I’m going to start dinner. While I’m at it, I’ll make a
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Audra Cole shopping list. We’ll need to get more food in here if we’re going to feed people.” “I think I’ll take a look at the infamous dock now,” Paula told her, stepping out the door and starting down the hill. **** Erica was just about to call after Paula and tell her to wait, that she’d go with her, when the phone rang. Rushing into the office, she snatched up the receiver and said a breathless, “Hello.” “Been running a marathon?” came Evelyn Black’s cheerful voice over the line. “Oh, Evelyn, I’m so glad to hear from you. How are things going? Are you having much pain? I was going to call later this evening…” “Whoa, girl! Slow down. Don’t tell me you’re frazzled already?” Erica chuckled. “Sorry. It’s just been a strange afternoon…” Evelyn broke in with, “Strange how?” In a split second, Erica decided not to share the earlier episode with the foyer flowers, nor Paula’s pronouncement about spirit activity. “Nothing major. Except for some last-minute shopping, we’re as ready as we’ll ever be for our guests.” “That’s why I called. I just wanted to answer any questions you might have.” “Just one. How are you? What’s the word on the leg?” “The surgery went better than expected. But I do 35
Echoes of the Past have to stay here for a course of physical therapy. They’ll be moving me up to the rehab floor tomorrow. So that will be my home for a while.” Erica had expected as much. “I found the guest list. We have two couples coming tomorrow, one couple staying three nights, the other four.” “Right. Don’t be afraid to book more guests. Once I get home, my mobility will be somewhat limited, but I should be able to manage with a little help.” Hint, hint, Erica thought. “I’ll stay as long as you need me. I can’t speak for Paula, though.” “Fair enough. Now, tell me, have you seen Joe yet? Erica bristled but tried to keep the irritation from her voice as she replied, “Not yet. Paula and I have been pretty busy. We did meet your good looking chief of police, though. He seemed quite concerned about you.” After a slight hesitation, Evelyn responded with, “Greg has been a big help during these past few months. Look, here’s my number at the rehab unit, just call me if you have any questions.” Well, I guess that’s the end of that subject. Erica jotted down the phone number There was another brief silence before Evelyn asked, “Are you certain everything is normal?” Normal? What the hell does she mean by that? “I’m not sure what…” “Never mind,” Evelyn cut in, then added, “I’m on drugs, so don’t mind me. Just take care, Erica.” Just as Erica hung up the phone, she heard a loud crash overhead. Alarmed, she ran through the foyer 36
Audra Cole and up the stairs. First she looked in Paula’s room, then her own. Everything was as it should be. Next, she checked the other rooms. Nothing amiss there, either. Lastly, she went into the bathroom. An antique washstand sitting along one wall was overturned. The beautiful floral-print china bowl and pitcher lay in shards on the marble floor. “Oh, great! What next?” Erica exclaimed. She examined the damage, then looked around for a reason. She could see none. The washstand was heavy, made of oak. It would have taken some effort to tip it over. How had it happened? Was someone in the house? The same feeling a panic that had soared through her at the sight of the flowers strewn about in the foyer earlier found its mark again and she quickly got up and spun around toward the door. “Who’s there?” she called into the empty hallway. She left the bathroom and again searched the upstairs. Next she went downstairs and did the same there. When she was satisfied she was alone, she went to get a broom and dustpan so she could clean up the mess. **** Paula was intrigued by the dock with its oldfashioned light fixtures and quaint benches. The lake was another matter. The mist starting to rise off it was very unsettling, and she hugged her sweater tightly around her body as shivers rolled up and down her 37
Echoes of the Past spine. She knew the legend of the lake, and what had happened here a few months ago. She also knew about the secret this body of water had held for several decades. But now, standing on the weathered wooden planks and staring out across the glistening surface, she knew that Spirit Lake held many more secrets, yet to be revealed. A noise from the nearby tree line caught her attention and she turned around just as a large dog stepped out of the woods. Then, at second glance, she could see it was more like a wolf. He was tan, brown and black with a white muzzle. His eyes were amber. Standing very still, Paula watched as the animal moved slowly forward, sizing her up. Then their gazes locked and they stood there for several seconds staring at one another. “Hello, Mingo,” Paula finally said. Mingo’s tail wagged as he came to her. Paula sat on one of the benches and patted the dog’s head. Then, leaning down, she whispered in his ear, “She’s back, boy. Go tell Joe.” Mingo backed up, emitted a sharp yelp, then turned and ran into the woods. **** Joe Lakota laid the final log in the fireplace and struck a match. As the flames leapt up toward the flue, he savored the warmth. It had been a tough week. He’d had to travel to 38
Audra Cole several surrounding counties in his capacity as park ranger and everywhere he’d gone there were problems. Plus it was time for year-end reports to be compiled. Anyone who thought this job was all tramping around the woods checking on trees and wildlife and citing poachers was sadly mistaken. Bureaucracy had reared its ugly head even out here in the boonies. He remembered how it used to be, back when he’d built this log cabin with his own hands. Quiet, solitary, peaceful. No tight-assed and even tighterfisted bigwigs ranting on and on about the bottom line. Just a man and the land. One-on-one. Joe had grown up around the Allegheny Mountains. He was one-eighth Iroquois and his appearance bespoke the heritage: thick coal black hair, which he wore nearly shoulder length, dark brown eyes and rich coppery skin. As they did every evening when darkness was ready to settle over the small cabin in the woods, his thoughts turned to Erica. Where was she tonight? Was she thinking of him? Was she with someone else? Why hadn’t he heard from her? Should he call? In truth, he felt awkward calling her now. Why, he didn’t know. His cock stirred as memories of her soft, supple body pressed against his hard lean one came to mind. He longed to bury his face in that tender place just below her throat. He fantasized for a moment that his tongue was tracing a path down between those perfect, firm breasts to her flat stomach, then to the 39
Echoes of the Past triangle below. He could almost smell the musky aroma of her arousal. He pinched his forefingers against his thumbs, imagining her nipples there, hard and hot to the touch. He paced the floor, unable to settle his thoughts into a coherent pattern. His dick pressed urgently against the zipper of his blue jeans, begging for release. He could feel jism seeping through the material, warm and thick. The sound of Mingo whining and scratching at the front door jarred him out of his dream world and he cursed under his breath. Joe opened the door, glaring down at the part-dog, part-wolf. Instead of coming inside, Mingo backed up and ran toward the woods again. “What the hell?” Joe exclaimed, as the animal stopped, turned and barked. Then he ran a few more steps, turned again and barked once more. Something’s wrong. He wants me to follow him. Joe stopped long enough to grab his jacket and a thirty-eight revolver he kept in the desk next to the door.
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Chapter Five rica went over Evelyn’s list of instructions, then made a note to herself about replacing the bowl and pitcher. There was a small antique shop in town, perhaps she could find something comparable. She just hoped it hadn’t been a family heirloom with lots of sentimental value. Glancing at her watch, she noted that it was past six. She walked into the kitchen and looked out the back door. There was no sign of Paula on the dock. Did she come inside while I was upstairs? Going into the foyer, she called, “Hey, Paula. Let’s get dinner started, or better yet, let’s go into town. There’s a great little…” By now she’d gone into the parlor and back out and was in the upstairs hallway. She checked the bedrooms and bathroom. No Paula. She must be outside, Erica thought, going downstairs, through the kitchen and out the back door. The dock looked desolate, and the mist was rising off of the water. Spirits of the dead tribal leaders, come to save us all. How could she mock the ages-old legend? That
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Echoes of the Past mist had saved her life a few months ago and brought a ruthless killer to the harshest justice of all. Feeling a little ashamed, she stepped onto the rough-hewn wooden planks. **** Paula was on the south side of the hill, on her way back to the inn, when she heard it. Weeping. It seemed to be coming from the other side of the house in the vicinity of the garden. Cautiously, Paula made her way through a maze of thorny twigs that scraped against her thighs like bony fingers. There was a flagstone path wending its way toward the other side of the garden, where a tall, wooden fence bordered the property. There! She heard it again. The unmistakable sound of a woman crying. Soft, muted sobs, full of misery and a sorrow so deep, it almost brought tears to Paula’s eyes. “Hello?” she called. “Are you all right?” No answer, but the weeping abruptly stopped. She felt a sudden bone-deep chill as she forged ahead. “Is anyone there?” Her reply was a light breeze that brushed against her cheek like a cool, moist finger. Tear drops of the dead, an inner voice whispered. **** Erica stepped onto the dock and called for Paula. 42
Audra Cole When she got no answer, a small prickle of fear shot through her body. Where was she? She scanned the woods, squinting into the gathering darkness. Suddenly she heard a rustling along the tree line. She felt the cold breath of the mist just seconds before it enveloped her. She’d forgotten how quickly the vapor cloud moved toward land once it completely rose off the water. “Damn it! Paula!” Something cold and wet touched her hand, making her squeal and step back so suddenly that she almost fell. Looking down she saw Mingo staring up at her, his amber eyes glistening brightly in the circle of light from the nearby lamp. He licked her fingers and she felt his warm breath on her arm. Then Joe stepped into view and turned off his flashlight. “Do you know why they call it Spirit Lake?” Do you know why they call it Spirit Lake? Those had been the first words he had said to her months ago, when she’d encountered him for the first time here on this very dock. He moved closer, taking it slow, his posture relaxed, his dark bottomless gaze riveted on her. Mingo, as though sensing that the mood had shifted, stepped aside. Erica’s skin felt hot and she could hear her pulse pounding in her ears. The need for him, held at bay for so many months, broke free, yet she stifled the urge to fly into his arms. She wanted those arms 43
Echoes of the Past around her, pulling her close, and heaven knows she needed to feel his desire pressing urgently into her own flesh, yet something held her back. I want him to be the one. I want him to sweep me off my feet. I need that from him. “Same pick-up line, I see,” she finally managed, when he stopped just inches from her. “It worked the first time,” he responded, his voice husky. She could see the muscles just above his jawline flexing ever so slightly. She could also smell the musky maleness of him, and all of a sudden it didn’t seem to matter to her who made the first move. She took the step at the same moment he did and then she was in his embrace, her breasts pressing against the solid wall of his chest, her abdomen flush with the hardness in his groin. His lips found hers urgently and he thrust his tongue inside of her mouth, exploring, probing, deeper and deeper. She savored the taste of him as she ran her hands down his back to his buttocks. She pulled his hips closer, wrapping one of her legs around his outer thigh. The desire for him was all-consuming, wiping every other thought from her mind. One of his hands found her breast and she moaned as his fingers squeezed at the nipple, drawing it out to a fine hard point. The wail ripped through the air, deep, full of rage and something else not quite discernible. Erica jumped. Joe pulled back. 44
Audra Cole “What the hell!” he exclaimed, rushing across the dock in the direction of the commotion. Erica followed with Mingo on her heels. Soon the dog pulled ahead as the trio rushed up the hill toward the inn. They found Paula in the garden, wide-eyed and pale. Erica hurried to her. “My God, what happened? Are you hurt?” When she didn’t answer, Joe asked, “Is she in shock?” “What happened, Paula? Why did you scream?” Erica insisted, shaking her a little. Then Paula seemed to snap out of it. She turned and looked at them. “I was exploring the grounds. This garden seemed…there was…something drew me here.” “I’ll check the area,” Joe told them, turning to go. But Paula’s voice stopped him in his tracks. “There was someone else here…something else. I heard crying, then…” “What?” Erica took hold of Paula’s arms, holding tight. Finally, Paula met Erica’s gaze. “That scream. It wasn’t mine.” **** They searched the garden, the hill, the nearby shoreline to no avail. Finally they went back to the inn. 45
Echoes of the Past Erica found the warm cheeriness of Evelyn’s country kitchen a welcome relief after the tension of the past hour. Paula brewed coffee while Erica put the finishing touches on dinner. “I’m checking this place out, top to bottom,” Joe had pronounced once they were inside. Then, with Mingo in tow, he left them there. When he returned twenty minutes later, Erica looked at him expectantly, but Paula simply continued with the task of tossing the salad. “Nothing?” Erica asked. “All clear,” he replied. They sat down at the kitchen table, Joe and Erica side-by-side, Paula across from them. Over dinner, which consisted of baked salmon, rice pilaf and salad, Paula told them exactly what she’d heard in the garden. When she was finished, Erica said, “I’ve heard the wind whipping through those trees, it can sound like cats in heat or a woman moaning or just about anything else that you can think of.” Paula’s raised eyebrow signaled Erica that she wasn’t buying that theory. “It wasn’t the wind. And it wasn’t my imagination. In fact there wasn’t a breeze until after…” Her voice trailed off. Joe, whose attention had been on Erica for most of the meal and whose hand had wandered to her thigh many times, now seemed interested in what Paula had to say. “After what?” His voice had a sharp edge. 46
Audra Cole Paula blinked several times before replying, “Something touched my cheek.” Erica sat up a little straighter in her chair. “What touched you? When?” Then Erica could see her friend shut down. She’d known Paula a long time. She didn’t take well to being interrogated, and she had no tolerance for ridicule. “Never mind. I’m just overtired. I need to go to my room and unwind.” With that she got up and began to clear the table. Erica rose too. “You look exhausted. Go on up. Joe and I will take care of these.” Joe didn’t seem too enthused, Erica noted, but he didn’t protest. After a quick clean up of the kitchen, they left Mingo snoozing peacefully on the braided rug near the back door and headed toward the parlor. As they crossed the foyer, Joe’s hand brushed against hers and she felt her pulse quicken a little. Just walking next to him, feeling his body heat against her arm reawakened the desire she’d felt for him earlier on the dock. But all of a sudden she felt awkward in his presence. Should I make a move? Will he? She debated telling him about the incident earlier in the day with the vase of flowers, but decided against it. He’d just think she was letting her imagination run wild. Besides, everything was in order now. Except the wild beating of her heart, that is. There was only one lamp on in the parlor and it 47
Echoes of the Past cast an amber glow over the walls and furniture. Mood lighting? He finally grabbed her hand, swung her around into his arms and kissed her with an intensity that took her breath away. Her body felt hot, flushed and tingly all at the same time as Joe’s tongue parted her lips and began exploring her mouth. The need for him she’d felt on the dock had only been lying dormant during dinner and now emerged full blown as it exploded inside of her. He ended the kiss, moving his lips down her neck and around to the soft spot at the base of her throat. Feeling the tug inside her cunt, muscles already beginning to clench, juices flowing, she grabbed his buttocks and pulled him against her. His cock was rock-hard, warming her flesh in spite of the clothing between them. She moved her hands up his sides to his chest, fumbling with the buttons on his shirt, hands shaking, breath coming in shallow gasps. Joe didn’t seem to be worried about formalities as he ripped open her blouse, sending buttons flying in all directions. Yanking her bra straps down off her shoulders, he let the undergarment fall to her waist as his fingers found her nipples, tugging hard on them until they became tight and rigid. And still he pulled, coaxing them out even more as she moaned in a mixture of ecstasy and pain. Frantic to touch him, she suddenly couldn’t seem to get her hands to do what she wanted them to do as 48
Audra Cole his belt resisted her efforts and his zipper refused to cooperate. Then he was helping her, his hands moving to the belt and undoing it with surprising ease. With shaking hands she slid the zipper down, freeing his penis. She grabbed it, relishing the feel of it in her hand as hot jism bubbled over the top and ran down between her fingers. Stepping out of his jeans, he kicked them aside. He had much less trouble divesting Erica of her pants as he effortlessly unsnapped them and slid them down over her hips. When she was clad only in her white bikini panties, Joe picked her up and carried her to the antique sofa on the other side of the room. As they passed the grand piano, her eyes fell on the picture of Chenoa, Evelyn’s daughter, Joe’s old flame, and she felt her heart sink for a second. Then Joe was lowering her to the couch, kneeling beside her and kissing the area just above her pubic hair, and she forgot everything but the feel of his lips as they found their way between her thighs. Sliding the silky undergarment down, he devoured her with his mouth, finding her clit and working it with his tongue, then lightly running the edges of his teeth over it. She arched her back and tangled her fingers in his hair, drawing his head closer. Her legs encircled him, locking him in as he cupped her ass in his hands and held her fast. “I need to feel you inside of me.” She clenched her teeth together as she felt the first wave of release hit 49
Echoes of the Past her. The orgasm sent sparks of light dancing behind her eyelids. She called his name, moving her hips in a wild motion that caused the sofa to scoot on the hardwood floor. He pulled back from her and lowered them both to the floor. She straddled him and his strong hands held her hips up just above his cock. She looked down, saw the honey dripping there and longed to close her mouth around him, to drink in all if it. As though reading her mind, he gently rested her behind on his upper thighs. His voice was low, husky as he said, “It’s all I’ve thought about for months.” Erica took him in her mouth, savoring the salty taste of his juices, nearly gulping them down her throat. She ran her tongue up the veined shaft, licking, sucking, treating it as though it was a delicious Popsicle. She raised her gaze to look at him, to see the pleasure in his face. She wanted to watch his expression as she brought him over the brink. The shadow that moved across the wall made her jump but it was the face that was in the window that made her scream and leap to her feet.
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Chapter Six oe jumped up and ran to the window. If Erica hadn’t been so startled by the sudden appearance of someone outside looking in at them, she would have found the sight of her lover buck naked, trotting across the room, quite amusing. But under the circumstances she was too busy grabbing up her clothes and trying to get dressed to laugh. “Where? Did you see who it was? Son of a bitch!” Joe growled, gazing out for a second then pulling the heavy brocade curtains together with a snap. Just then Mingo could be heard growling in the foyer. Joe turned and grabbed up his jeans from the floor and put them on, not bothering with his shorts. Next he snatched up his shirt and donned that. As he flung open the parlor door, Mingo began pawing at the front door, the fur on the back of his neck standing up, his lips curled back in a snarl. “Where did I put that damned flashlight?” Joe’s voice competed with Mingo’s barking. Erica, dressed now although looking somewhat tousled and mussed, followed him. “It’s in the
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Echoes of the Past kitchen,” she replied, hurrying to retrieve it. “Maybe it was just kids, you know, teenagers pulling a prank.” she suggested as he snatched the light from her hand. Joe was out on the wrap-around porch by now, rounding the corner of the house. Mingo had taken off like a shot in the same direction. “I’ll check the garden again and the dock. Go inside and lock the door,” he directed, disappearing into the blackness. Should I call the police? What exactly did I see? It happened so fast. A face, but indistinct. Good Lord, I can’t even say if it was a male or female. Then there was that shadow, like…What? Was it just a trick of the light? She went to the back door and peered at the dock. In the glow of the dull lamplight, she could see Mingo sniffing around the water’s edge, his tail low, shoulders hunched forward. Joe was approaching the water. “What the hell is going on?” came Paula’s voice from the kitchen doorway. Erica squealed and spun around, her hand on her chest, her heart beating wildly in her chest. “Good God, you nearly scared the life out of me!” She felt lightheaded all of a sudden, and grabbed the side of the doorframe for support. Paula was at her side at once, supporting her as she led her to one of the kitchen chairs. “Geez. I heard you yell…where’s Joe? What was going on down here, anyway? Never mind, I don’t want to know.” Erica eyed her friend severely. “Someone was outside, peeking in the parlor window.” She was 52
Audra Cole surprised at how shaky her voice still sounded. Paula stiffened. “Did you see who…” Erica shook her head, cutting Paula off in mid question. “There was a shadow along the parlor wall, then a face outside, blurry, I couldn’t make out details. Joe’s out there playing the hero with Mingo leading the way.” She got up and marched to the back door, feeling stronger now. She stepped out into the night, ready to call for him to come inside and let the police handle it, but Joe and the dog were already on their way up the hill. “Not a thing,” he announced as he stepped into the kitchen. Mingo, as though embarrassed that his mission had not been a success, lowered himself onto the braided rug and rested his chin on his front paws with a doleful sigh. “Did you call the police?” Joe asked Erica. Then, noticing Paula for the first time, he nodded a greeting her way, which she returned with a similar nod of her head. “No. I suppose I should, though,” Erica said, suddenly exhausted. “I’m not sure that will do any good, now. There’s no one out there. But, I’m staying the night.” His tone left no room for argument. Not that Erica would have, anyway. “Well, in that case, I’m going back to bed,” Paula said, leaving the room, but not before she gave Erica a look that told her she had noticed her friend’s disheveled appearance. 53
Echoes of the Past “You think I imagined it, don’t you?” Erica asked Joe, once they were alone. He came to her and pulled her close. She found comfort in that, and put her face against his muscular chest, listening to the strong, steady beating of his heart. “I’ll talk to Greg Novak tomorrow about getting some patrols up here at night. They should be doing that anyway,” he told her. **** Erica awoke drenched in sweat, her heart thundering in her ears. She sat up, straining to see in the darkness. The dream had been so vivid. She’d been running through the woods, danger at her heels, fear coursing through her veins, her breath forming vapor streams in the chilly night air. The shouts behind her were almost primeval, yet the footfalls were heavy, purposeful. They were gaining on her, drawing closer. She just couldn’t seem to run fast enough no matter how hard she tried. Then she felt it, the first stinging of the weapon, just above her right shoulder blade. She tried to cry out in pain, but no sound came from her parched throat. The second blow caught her at the base of the neck and she felt the numbness set in, sliding down her spine as it took all feeling with it. She was dying. This was what it felt like to just slip away. The dream had left her in peace as awareness slid from her grasp, but the awakening had brought about 54
Audra Cole a full-scale panic attack. Erica reached over, turned on the bedside lamp, threw back the covers and ran from the room. Down the stairs she flew and into the parlor, where she found Joe sitting in one of the antique chairs, newspaper settled into his lap, head down on his chest. Again panic seized her and she rushed to him, grabbing his arm. “No! Joe!” The term ‘came out swinging’ took on a whole new meaning as Joe grasped her wrists and wrestled her to the floor. Once she was pinned there, he placed a forearm forcefully against her throat. Then, as he seemed to realize who it was, he blinked several times, released her and rolled away. “Christ, Erica! What the hell are you doing?” “I…had a nightmare…I thought you were…I couldn’t tell if you were breathing…” she stammered, sobbing now. Joe pulled her into his embrace and smoothed her hair. “I must have fallen asleep. Some guard I am.” Mingo chose that moment to trot into the room, yawning widely and shaking himself. “Back to the kitchen!” Joe commanded, his voice almost harsh. The dog retreated at once and Erica pulled away from Joe. “It’s not his fault…” she began then stopped, suddenly too tired to argue. “I want him at the back door,” Joe told her. “Now, what happened?” “A nightmare. I was being chased through the woods. I felt the pain…the blow that killed me…” 55
Echoes of the Past Joe tilted her chin up and gazed into her eyes. “You’re very much alive. It was just a dream. You’re safe now.” She leaned against him, then slid her arms around his neck, nestling her face against his shoulder. “I don’t want to go back up there alone.” “Then don’t go. Stay here and finish what you started earlier today.” Erica pulled away and stood up. “Not here.” She held out her hand and he took it, getting to his feet. The bedroom was cold and Erica shivered, then went to the thermostat near the armoire. It was set at seventy degrees. How can that be? It doesn’t feel like it’s above fifty in here? Then Joe was behind her, slipping his bare arms around her waist, his lips nibbling at the nape of her neck and she forgot about the cold. She leaned back, feeling his hard cock against the small of her back. He was naked. “You trying to start without me?” She pushed back further and smiled with satisfaction as his penis twitched under the pressure. Then she felt the jism, hot and thick, as it seeped through her silk nightie. “I missed you,” he said, his voice husky, his hands slipping the straps of the gown down over her shoulders. He carried her to the bed, lay her down on the rumpled sheets, then kissed her with an intensity that left little doubt that he was telling the truth. His hands sought out her breasts, coaxing her nipples as she felt the pleasure wash over her, heating her cunt 56
Audra Cole with a fire that only one thing could extinguish. He was hard, hot to the touch, and she began pumping wildly as the passion he had aroused earlier surged through her once again “I need you. Don’t stop that, more, harder,” she panted, barely able to have a coherent thought. Then his lips were making their way down to her triangle and she felt his tongue exploring, lapping at the liquid flowing there. She couldn’t stand it anymore. She felt like she was going to explode inside, as he again brought her to the brink then withdrew. Joe sat up and looked down at her, his face somber, his eyes glassy with passion about to be released. Erica craved the taste of his pre-cum on her lips. As though reading her thoughts, Joe rolled onto his back and pulled her head to his groin. She took him into her mouth, filling herself up with him, letting her tongue dart up one side of his shaft, across the top and down the other. Joe thrust his hips forward, raising them off the bed, holding her head in place as though fearful she would pull away. She ached to have him inside of her, yet felt reluctant to give up the delicious taste of him, so she found her clit with her own fingers and manipulated it. Suddenly, strong hands were under her arms, lifting her into the air. With her breasts now just inches from his face, Joe directed, “Ride me.” And she did. Straddling him, she drove herself 57
Echoes of the Past down over the throbbing dick, letting out a cry as it slid up her thick, swollen passage. The first orgasm began like a tremor, then build to a crescendo as her muscles contracted in one strong spasm after the other. Her blood was on fire, her pulse thudding in her ears. Sparks of light exploded behind her closed eyelids as Joe pounded his cock into her over and over.
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Chapter Seven hen Erica awoke the next morning, Joe was gone. “What the hell? Did I dream that, too?” she muttered furiously, climbing out of bed. But the aching in her vagina and the tenderness of her breasts told her she had not dreamt their nocturnal romp. Throwing on a robe, she went downstairs. She found him in the kitchen standing at the back door. Paula was in Evelyn’s office, riffling through some papers on the desk. Joe turned when he heard her come into the room but said nothing. It was Paula who spoke. “Well, you’re finally up. Joe’s offered to take us into town for breakfast at the Eagle Hill Cafe.” “Coffee made?” Erica asked, her voice sounding blurry and thick even in her own ears. Joe nodded toward the counter, where a pot of the brew sat waiting. “What are you doing, Paula?” Erica asked, glancing in the small office on her way to pour a cup. “Looking for the sheet with the guest arrival times on it,” Paula said, joining them. She had a piece of paper in her hand. “Found it.”
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Echoes of the Past “Wouldn’t count on that to be gospel,” Joe advised, opening the back door to admit Mingo, who had obviously been out for his morning pee. Erica went to Joe and, after patting the dog’s head, looked up at him. “Hi. I wish you would have been there this morning.” “I thought it would be a good idea to be downstairs when…” He motioned toward Paula with his head. “Quit whispering about me over there. I know exactly where Joe spent most of the night. No mistaking those noises for ghostly happenings!” Paula said with a wide grin. “Now, when do we get that free breakfast?” **** It’s nice to know some things never change, Erica thought as the threesome walked into the Eagle Hill Cafe at a little after nine-thirty. It looked exactly the same, but then why wouldn’t it? She’d only been away from Spirit Lake for a few months, even though it seemed like years. There were only a few customers, since the morning rush was over. The sportsman-like atmosphere, the mounted game birds on the walls, the rough-hewn planks for walls and the unvarnished wooden floor filled her with a feeling of comfortable familiarity. The highly polished mahogany bar was straight ahead and Erica couldn’t help but turn around and glance at the painting over the front door, the one of an eagle in 60
Audra Cole flight. “This is awesome!” Paula gasped, her gaze sweeping the place, then turning toward the picture, “Breathtaking! They are such majestic birds. Who painted it?” Erica had never thought to ask that. Now she found her curiosity piqued, too. But Joe was already headed toward the back of the restaurant, pushing open the door to the kitchen. “Do you know?” Paula asked Erica. Erica shook her head. “Maybe Cal knows.” Paula smiled. “Oh, yes, Joe’s tall, mysterious partner. Can’t wait to meet that one,” she said, her voice tinged with a little sarcasm. Just as Erica was about to say don’t be so quick to judge, the kitchen door swung open and Joe came back, followed by a tall, lean man who also had the bronzed skin of a Native American. His hair was as black as Joe’s and, like Joe, he still wore it pulled back tightly at the nape of his neck. His deep brown gaze swept over her then landed on Paula. “Oh, my,” Paula said in a whisper just loud enough for Erica to hear. “Here’s your artist,” Joe commented, winking at Erica and motioning for the duo to join them. Cal Motega stepped behind the bar and placed both palms on its glossy surface as though waiting for them to place their orders. “Glad you’re back, Erica. Joe’s been like a mountain lion with a toothache since you left.” Paula was the first to settle on one of the bar stools. 61
Echoes of the Past “How about some coffee? I smell it brewing.” Erica took a stool, but Joe remained standing just behind her, his hand resting lightly on her back in a gesture of intimacy she welcomed. “So, you painted the picture of that eagle above the door?” Paula continued, leaning toward Cal as he served her the coffee and then poured a mug for himself. Cal nodded in answer to the question, then asked “You two?” He held the pot out toward Erica and Joe. Joe shook his head. “I need to show Erica something in the kitchen.” He quickly took her arm and propelled her out of her seat and onto her feet. Erica couldn’t be sure, since Joe was hustling her off so fast, but she could have sworn she heard Paula breathe a sigh of relief. **** Once they were in the kitchen, Erica waved toward the cook, who was frying something on the grill. Joe sat down at the little table where they’d shared their first lunch together months ago and motioned her into the seat opposite him. “Manny will fix us something. We can eat in here.” “Why are we hiding in the kitchen like two fugitives?” Erica asked, raising an eyebrow. Joe leered across the table at her. “Maybe I want to be alone with you.” Erica threw a glance Manny’s way. “But we’re not alone,” she said in a mock conspiratorial tone. 62
Audra Cole She could have sworn she saw his cheeks redden just a little, but she couldn’t be sure. “You know what I think? I think this has more to do with leaving Cal and Paula alone, than us being alone.” Joe accepted two steaming mugs of coffee from Manny and put one in front of Erica. He sipped at the other slowly. “Okay, you caught me.” “Joe Lakota, the matchmaker,” Erica said with a grin. “Who would have thought it?” “Cal is a good friend and deserves some happiness. God knows he’s had enough…” Erica saw Joe’s face cloud over as his words trailed off. “What, Joe? What’s he had enough of?” Then, just as suddenly, his expression changed and he smiled across the table at her. “Never mind. Let’s concentrate on us. I’d like to kiss you all over.” Erica, in the middle of taking another sip of her coffee, sputtered as it caught in her throat, going down the wrong way. Joe’s comment had caught her so by surprise that she found herself hacking into her napkin as she tried to get her breath. “Sorry,” he said, jumping to his feet and coming around the table. He patted her several times on her back, then let his hand slip down to her buttocks, where he briefly pinched at the flesh there. “Ouch!” she squealed, then covered her mouth with her hand as Manny threw them a questioning look. “Everything okay, boss?” the cook called across the stainless steel counter that separated them. Joe’s grin, as he continued to fondle her ass, or 63
Echoes of the Past what he could reach of it since she was still sitting, made Erica wish they were alone. His touch, as always, was magic, and she felt herself begin to respond in scandalous ways, as her thoughts turned basal and completely carnal. She imagined him naked, his cock hard and ready for her. She longed to feel him, and when he stood up, ready to resume his seat across the table, she purposely looked at his crotch, which was conveniently at eye level. In the meantime, he was looking down at her, his brows knitted almost together. She slid her gaze up his body until she looked him in the eye. Then very slowly, very deliberately she ran the tip of her tongue over her lips and smiled. She sensed rather than saw the spasm behind his zipper and when she dared to look, discovered the bulge was growing more by the second. “I consider this unfinished business.” Joe’s voice was husky, low. Her hands felt sweaty, her breasts were swelling and her nipples had become rigid points, pressing almost painfully against her bra. She wanted to shed the thing right then and there and feel his lips take those nubs into his mouth. Her panties were suddenly flooded with moisture as her juices began to flow. “I’m not hungry,” she croaked. “I am,” Joe responded, chucking a finger under her chin. When he leaned down and kissed her she felt warmth gush through her body, turning her insides to liquid. 64
Audra Cole “Order up!” Manny called and a waitress came barreling through the swinging door. And the spell was broken. For now. **** “How long have you and Joe owned this place?” Paula asked, as she sipped her coffee. “I bought it in 1995. But it has quite a history. It was a speakeasy during prohibition.” “No way!” Cal nodded, obviously warming to the subject. “Built in 1919. The original owners were a squirrelly pair named Phil and Drury Mapes. Brothers. Tales have been told about Al Capone visiting here.” “I knew this place had a colorful past the minute I walked in!” Paula exclaimed, then stopped, reluctant to bring up the subject of her intuitive powers. But Cal was smiling. “Ghosts of the past?” Paula shook her head. “More like echoes of the past. Go on, I want to hear more.” Cal continued, “The Mapes boys sold it in 1934 to a fringe mob guy named Vince Keller. He turned it into a gambling den with high stakes poker games. Now, there’s where the killing comes in. Seems there was an argument over a hand of poker that resulted in one of the players being shot dead.” “I’m not surprised to hear that.” “Right. Well, anyway, in 1950, it was sold to George Kling, a wannabe musician who ran it as a club featuring swing music and dancing until he died. 65
Echoes of the Past Then a real estate mogul named Mitch Wells bought it, and it was a restaurant again with live entertainment, whatever the flavor of the year was; rock and roll, blues, country, you name it, they had it. When Wells died, his son, a little twerp named Jeremy, decided disco was here to stay and put in some of those damned revolving mirror balls and a lighted dance floor. Hired a disc jockey, too.” “I remember disco. My parents were all over it,” Paula groaned. Personally she was a Nora Jones fan and loved smooth jazz. She’d have to remember to ask Cal what he liked, music-wise, that is. “Jeremy was a terrible businessman and failed to see the end of the disco fad coming. By 1988 he was bankrupt. Place sat empty from 1989 to 1991 while Jeremy held out for that land deal that would make him rich. In the meantime, he moved to Florida. I guess he finally realized he wasn’t going to make a killing and leased the place to a marketing firm until 1995, when they also went out of business.” “Is that when you bought it?” Cal nodded. “Got a government loan. Seems us Native Americans were entitled to something after all. Joe bought in four years later, 1999.” “You do a good business, I assume.” Paula looked toward the door as a group of men and women entered. They were laughing and waved Cal’s way. He waved back. “We get by. That’s all I need.” The kitchen door swung open and a young blond with a bouncy step came out carrying two plates of 66
Audra Cole food and went to one of the tables. “That’s Jenny,” Cal told her, then asked, “You like old movies?” The question caught her so off-guard that just stared at him. “You don’t like movies?” That broke the spell and Paula stammered, “I do…I mean yes…the older the better.” Oh, man! The older the better? Did that stupid comment actually come out of my mouth? “There’s a theater in Du Bois that plays classics. This week it’s High Noon. We could go, if you have time.” A western. Paula hated westerns. But what she said aloud was, “That would be great. I love westerns!”
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Chapter Eight rica and Paula ate a light lunch, then set about putting the final touches on the inn in preparation for the guests who were scheduled to arrive later that afternoon. Since the inn served only breakfast, Paula did a final inventory of the refrigerator and pantry. Once she was finished with that, Erica assigned her the task of checking the downstairs rooms one final time. In view of the strange happenings connected with the parlor, she asked Paula to pay particular attention to that room. “I called the town florist and asked them to deliver half a dozen fresh fall arrangements, but he hasn’t shown yet. Could you call and find out if they’re on their way?” Once all of that was settled, Erica got the cleaning supplies, including a dust cloth and bottle of lemon oil, and started up the stairs. On her way, she gave the staircase a final going over, rubbing the banister until the wood glowed richly. She also checked the new rubberized stair treads, which had been installed after Evelyn’s fall, to make sure they were firmly tacked down. They didn’t need
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Audra Cole any further mishaps. Even though the bathroom looked spotless, she still gave it a quick pass, paying particular attention to the corners and scanning for cobwebs along the ceiling. She went to the linen cupboard in the hallway and got out a new bottle of antibacterial soap and a handful of wrapped guest soaps. She also grabbed several more packets of bath salts, which she put in the wicker basket on the vanity. Fresh towels hung on all the racks, along with clean washcloths. Satisfied that the room was in tip-top condition, Erica flipped off the light and turned to go. It was then that she caught the movement in her peripheral vision. It was more like a shadow, really, floating across the far wall. She spun around and pawed around for the light switch, her fingers beginning to shake as she cursed aloud at suddenly not being able to find it. “Who’s there? Damn, where is that…” She felt the switch with her fingers and pushed it up, brightening the room once again. Gleaming fixtures, shiny mirrors and a pristine-looking marble floor are all she saw. Then her gaze went to one of the towel racks. Empty. She looked at the floor below it, where the white towel lay crumpled, along with the washcloth that had also been hanging there. Memories of her encounter a few months ago with something here in this bathroom came flooding back, as Erica went to retrieve the items. This can’t be happening again. I just didn’t hang them correctly, that’s all. But that didn’t explain the shadow and the 69
Echoes of the Past overwhelming feeling that she was not alone in the room. **** Paula double-checked the menu against the supplies and was finally satisfied that they had enough food to make breakfast for the next three or four days. She’d go shopping tomorrow if their guests made any special requests. Holding the reservation cards, she noted that the first couple due to arrive were the Carters, Edgar and Mimi. In her mind, Paula tried to imagine what they would look like. She pictured Edgar as a dead ringer for Mr. Roper on the old sitcom, Three’s Company for some reason, and Mimi as an egg-shaped woman with an overly made up face. It said on the card that Edgar Carter was retired but didn’t say from what. They lived in St. Petersburg, Florida according to the information she had. Idly, she wondered what was bringing them up here. The Ryans were due to arrive later that afternoon. Charles and Lisa. Charles was listed as an investment broker, whatever that meant and Lisa apparently had no profession. Charles would be stuffy, of course, and Lisa would be a country club wife with perfectly coiffed hair and well manicured nails. Snobs. Well, we’ll see how close I am, Paula thought with a smile as the entered the parlor for a final inspection. Again, her thoughts returned to Cal Motega. The first thing she’d noticed about him, aside from his 70
Audra Cole great physique, had been his hands. Nice hands, strong looking hands. Sitting there at the bar in that cafe, she’d wondered how they would feel on her body. I’m shameless. I just met the man and I’m lusting after him like a bitch in heat. I don’t know anything about him. Just because he’s Joe Lakota’s partner and friend, doesn’t mean he’s the kind of person I need to become involved with. Whoa! Who said anything about getting involved, anyway? Not me. Never. That’s not my style. Casual relationships suit me just fine. Don’t get too close and you don’t get hurt. So what if he looks like some bronzed warrior and his eyes are like deep, bottomless pools ready to pull me into their depths? I won’t let myself get carried away. Not ever again. Erica’s voice jarred Paula from her reverie, and she found herself standing by the grand piano her hand poised over the array of photographs there. She turned and faced Erica. “I’m…I was just…The menu is all set. I was just checking things out one last time.” “Are you okay? You look like you’re in a trance.” “Just thinking about our guests.” “And Cal?” Erica’s eyes twinkled with amusement. Oh, and you never stand around staring into space with a goofy look on your face when you’re thinking about Joe? Aloud, Paula said, “I think we’re as ready as we’re going to be. Now if the florist would just get here with…” As if on cue there was a sharp knock on the front door, followed by a male voice calling, “Kyle’s 71
Echoes of the Past Floral!” **** Joe watched the van marked Kyle’s Flora & Gifts pull out of the driveway and head toward town. He’d walked from the restaurant and now climbed up the incline toward the inn, a large bouquet of red roses clutched in his fist. Erica was on the porch, broom in hand, sweeping briskly back and forth to dislodge any dirt or dust that might be lingering on the painted wooden surface. He watched her for a moment, before she knew he was there. She was beautiful. Her chestnut hair was in disarray and the gentle breeze ruffled it slightly around her flawless face. Then her indigo gaze met his and she smiled. He felt his heart thump dangerously inside his chest and his cock stir threateningly inside his pants. “I come bearing a good luck gift,” he told her as he stepped up onto the porch and held out the flowers. “Got a vase?” She slipped him a quick kiss on the lips, turned and led him into the foyer. He could see that the dried arrangement on the table had been replaced by a fresh-cut one. It was low and wide and looked seasonal, with shades of orange, brown and even some small gourds and pumpkinlike objects interspersed amongst the flowers. “I’ll put these in the…” Erica began. 72
Audra Cole But Joe interrupted her with, “Put them up in your bedroom. They’re from me to you.” **** Paula stood in front of the dresser in her room, looking at herself in the beveled mirror. She’d changed into a pair of tan slacks and turquoise blouse for the arrival of the guest—something a little more sedate than her normal attire. First impressions. Hair up or down? Down, she finally decided, finger combing it until it fell in wavy ribbons around her face and onto her shoulders. Her mother used to call her ‘gypsy girl’ because of her coloring and her thick black tresses. “And you’ve also got the gift,” she’d told her over and over. The gift. What a strange way to describe something so illusive, so inexplicable. Paula remembered a lecture she’d once attended on the subject of psychics and other phenomenon. The lecturer, who of course was hawking his latest book on the subject, said that everyone had psychic abilities, but that only a few had the courage to recognize and develop them. The minute she’d walked into this house, she’d felt the centuries peel away like the skin of an onion, revealing in her mind those who had come before. Like a collage, they’d paraded before her in fastforward and she’d been rooted to the spot on the doorstep, unable to move or even think. Then, just as quickly, they were gone. This house was alive with them, even though they 73
Echoes of the Past were not. **** “Company gone?” Paula asked Erica when they met in the upstairs hallway. Erica smiled. “I made him leave. But he did come bearing gifts.” She held out the bouquet, which was now in a cut crystal vase. Paula eyed the arrangement. “Hmmm, red. A sign of passion and love.” “I didn’t know you were an expert on the meaning of roses,” Erica jibed, walking toward her bedroom. Paula followed. “Cal asked me out this morning.” Erica stopped and faced her friend. “You’re going, of course.” “I told him I would.” “But…” Paula shrugged. “I just don’t want to start something I might not be able to finish, that’s all.” Erica put the vase on her dresser, then faced Paula and took hold of her arms, staring her straight in the eye. “This isn’t like you. You’re not the kind of person who shrinks away from life. Nothing is certain, so if life’s going to kick you in the ass, at least have some fun along the way. Remember who said that to me a few months ago?” Paula chuckled and her face seemed to clear. “Your memory is too good.” Erica ignored the comment and went on, “Now, I know you’re not one of those do-as-I-say-not-as-I-do 74
Audra Cole people, are you?“ “He makes me nervous,” Paula admitted, her expression turning serious. “He turns you on,” Erica amended, smiling the allknowing smile of someone who’s been there, done that. “You’re right. I should go. It’s just a movie, not a lifetime commitment,” Paula finally said “I think I need a soda. You?” Erica shook her head. “I’m fine. And the place looks great. We’re as ready as we’re going to be.” As she watched Paula disappear down the stairs, she thought about what a good friend she’d been. When they’d first met at the magazine six years ago, she’d been very impressed with Paula’s talent, but not with her flamboyance. Always more of a conservative dresser, Erica had been a little wary of the tall, ravenhaired woman with the emerald eyes who sported wild outfits and lots of noisy jewelry. But her reservations about Paula had disappeared quickly once she got to know her. Erica went downstairs and wandered into the parlor, her thoughts once again returning to the prowler. Was it just a teenager from town, trying to spook them or doing it on a dare? Or, was it just someone headed for the lake who chose that path and that unfortunate moment to cross in front of the window? She just prayed there would be no further incidents once their guests arrived. Exiting the parlor, Erica gasped at the sight of the beautiful fall flower arrangement strewn all over the 75
Echoes of the Past floor. “But it was fine when I went into the parlor a few minutes ago!” she blurted, tears suddenly stinging her eyes. Paula swept into the foyer talking as she walked, “I think we’re ready to wow our arrivals with our wonderful innkeeping abilities… Whoa, what happened?” Water from the container now pooled on the tabletop. “That will ruin the wood,” Erica cried, rushing toward the kitchen for a towel. Paula passed her in the doorway and when Erica came back into the foyer, she found her friend picking up the remnants of the ruined piece. “Who did this?” Erica wondered aloud, her voice trembling. But Paula seemed transfixed, holding one of the gourds in her hand, and didn’t answer. Then she suddenly dropped it and got up. Her gaze, when it met Erica’s, was full of something she’d never seen there before—fear. “What is it? What’s wrong?” Erica asked, alarmed. “There’s death here,” Paula finally said, her voice sounding small and strained. **** Erica replaced the defunct flowers with the artificial arrangement that had originally been on the table. At least if it got spilled, there would be no wet mess to clean up. Then she called Joe. He sounded breathless and in 76
Audra Cole a hurry. “I was just going to call you,” he said, sounding rushed. “I’m trying to round up Mingo. He was closed up inside all morning and now he doesn’t want to come back in. I can’t find him anywhere. Look, I have to go over to Hartsburg. Seems something’s been vandalizing campsites. Hysterical campers claim it’s a bear.” “Well, I’m no camper and that’s one reason why.” Erica unconsciously looked out the back door toward the woods, as though expecting to see one of the big creatures emerge. What she did see was Mingo, running like the wind up the hill toward the back door. “I can’t solve the bear problem for you, but I can help you out with Mingo. He’s pawing at my back door as we speak,” “Great,” Joe grumbled. “He can stay here. He’s no trouble.” “I want him with me. I’ll swing by and pick him up.” “Oh, do wolves track bears?” Erica asked with a chuckle.
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Chapter Nine he first guests arrived at three o’clock that afternoon. Erica was putting the finishing touches on two coffee cakes she’d baked for tomorrow’s breakfast when she heard a cheery voice yell, “Yoo-hoo!” She entered the foyer to see a plump, henna-haired woman in a bright orange dress standing there, looking around. “Oh, Edgar, it’s beautiful! Just hurry and get the bags in, I’m exhausted. I need my tea and a long nap!” Erica smiled and closed the distance between them. “You must be Mrs. Carter. I’m Erica Parkhurst.” “Oh, please call me Mimi. This is wonderful! Where is Evelyn? I feel as though I already know her after talking to her so much on the phone.” Just then, a tall, balding man with a bit of a pot belly and a florid complexion came in toting a suitcase in one hand and dragging a bag on wheels behind him. After several tries, he was able to heave it over the threshold. “Mercy, Mother. How much do you have to bring for a two-week vacation? There are three more in the trunk.”
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Audra Cole “We go through this every time, Edgar. I don’t intend to do laundry on my vacation. Men,” she said, giving Erica one of those ‘you know what I mean’ looks and rolling her clear, blue eyes heavenward. “Here, let me help you with the luggage, sir,” Erica said, rushing forward. “Nonsense. I’m hale and hearty. Just like to give Mimi a bit of guff now and then, keeps her on her toes.” Edgar Carter said with a wink. “He’s impossible, sometimes,” Mimi said, adding, “Actually, he’s that way all the time.” Erica smiled and began to relax. They seemed nice. Average. Paula made an appearance and stood staring at Mimi for a moment, her face flushing a little. Erica quickly made the introduction. “These are the Carters, well Mrs. Carter. Mr. Carter just left to get more luggage from the car,” “Are you Evelyn?” Mimi asked hopefully advancing on Paula. “No,” Paula said, her tone sounding sharp, at least to Erica’s ears. Mimi stopped in mid-stride. “Oh.” “I’m sorry,” Paula finally said, smiling at the woman. “I’m Paula Bascilla.” Erica stepped forward. “We’re holding down the fort for Evelyn. She fell and broke her leg. She’s not going to be here, I’m afraid.” “Oh, no. I was so looking forward…” Edgar Carter came huffing and puffing into the foyer again, carrying three more bags. “That’s it, 79
Echoes of the Past Mother. I’ll move the car to the parking area.” He left again. While Paula took two of the smaller bags upstairs, Mimi insisted that Erica show her around the downstairs. She loved the parlor, taking her time looking around, running her hands over surfaces, glancing out the windows. Then, they went into the kitchen. “Could I bother you for a cup of hot tea?” she asked. “You know, Edgar and I have stayed in quite a few B & Bs. Is it true this one is haunted?” Erica stopped dead, the teakettle poised just above the burner. So, the Carters had read about the events that happened a few months ago. Ghosthunters? She hoped not. Keeping her voice as level as possible, Erica replied, “We had an unfortunate incident involving the town chief of police and an old missing person case. I don’t think that qualifies as a haunting. Do you take sugar or cream in your tea?” **** When Paula came downstairs from settling the Carters in their room, Erica was sitting at the kitchen table sipping at a can of diet soda. “Quite a couple, huh. She is exactly how I pictured her.” Erica glanced up at her friend. “Is that why you were looking at her so funny earlier?” she asked absently. 80
Audra Cole “Yeah. I guess my intuition was working overtime. Must be the atmosphere.” Paula went to the refrigerator, got out a diet soda of her own, and sat down across the table. “One down, one to go. Relax, we’re halfway there. Wonder what the next couple will be like?” The phone cut off Erica’s reply and she got up to answer. It was Evelyn. “I just wanted to make sure everything is all right. Did the Carters arrive?” Her voice sounded distant to Erica and she pressed the receiver closer to her ear, as if that would help. “You’re fading, Evelyn, I can barely hear you. Yes, they’re here. Mimi Carter was very disappointed she couldn’t meet you, though.” “She and I had a lot of phone conversations. They make a habit of staying at bed and breakfasts, never motels or hotels. Make sure they are comfortable. Did you tell her she’s welcome to make tea in the kitchen whenever she wants to? She particularly asked if that would be all right, and I assured her it would.” “I’ll tell her,” Erica said, deciding not to mention Mimi’s question about the inn being haunted. Instead, she asked, “Did she ask you anything about the inn’s past?” “Past? No, I don’t think so. Why?” Noting the suspicious tone of Evelyn’s voice, Erica quickly changed the subject. “How is your therapy coming along?” “Not so well. I had a setback. I fell. I’m okay, but I did bruise my leg and…” 81
Echoes of the Past The rest of the comment was lost to static. Then the line went dead. Erica waited for a few moments to see if Evelyn called back, but when the phone didn’t ring, she went back to the table to finish her soda. **** It was nearly four-thirty when the front door opened just as Erica was crossing the foyer to go into the parlor. A slender blond man of medium height wearing a tan trench coat stepped inside and looked around. He was carrying an attaché case in one hand and a cell phone in the other. The phone trilled to life and he quickly put it to his ear. “Talk to me. No. I told you I can’t…I’m tied up for at least…” The man listened for a minute, then barked, “Just handle it!” With that, he pushed a button on the phone and slipped the instrument into his coat pocket. He looked at Erica. She smiled. He did not return the smile. “Charles Ryan. My wife, who should be inside by now, and I have a reservation.” “Welcome, Mr. Ryan…” Erica began. She was interrupted by the entrance of a darkhaired woman who seemed more than tense. At second glance, Erica noticed the coppery skin tone and the chiseled features. Native American blood, definitely. The woman took off her trench coat, which was almost a duplicate of the man’s, and looped it over 82
Audra Cole her arm. She had large breasts and the rounded, voluptuous figure that had been so popular back in the fifties. A Marilyn Monroe figure. Charles Ryan glanced in the woman’s direction. “This is my wife, Lisa, who graciously decided to join us. I guess I’ll get the bags. I don’t see any bellboys around here.” He picked up the three suitcases and trudged up the stairs. “It was your idea to come here, Charles. I’d rather be at the Hyatt in Du Bois!” she called after him. Then she turned and glared at Erica. “I need a shower. Shouldn’t you be showing Charles where our room is? I suppose a private bath is too much to hope for.”
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Chapter Ten he dining room at the Spirit Lake Inn was cozily furnished with one oval mahogany table and eight matching chairs. A breakfront took up one wall and a buffet another. Striped wallpaper, in tones of peach and pale green, of the type popular during the Victorian era, graced the walls. A period chandelier hung in the center of a ceiling painted off-white. The carpet was muted green. Breakfast was served buffet style. Paula had opted for kitchen duty, leaving the socializing to Erica. This morning the Carters were the first to arrive. Looking at the array of muffins, fresh fruit and chafing dishes containing eggs, hash browns and bacon, Mimi smiled happily. “Oh, and you have Earl Grey!” she exclaimed, plucking the foil packet from the basket on the buffet. She poured hot water from a thermal pot into a cup, and dipped in the tea bag, inhaling the aroma for a moment before taking a sip. Edgar had already helped himself to coffee from a carafe on the buffet and was thoughtfully sipping it while perusing a copy of Forbes Magazine. “I constantly tell Edgar not to read at the table. It’s
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Audra Cole bad for the digestion,” Mimi lamented, throwing her husband a baleful look. “Did you both sleep well?” Erica asked, feeling the need to make some kind of conversation. Mimi brought her cup of tea to the table, put it down, then went back to the buffet and began filling a plate. “Well, to be honest, dear, our room is just so cold. I kept waking up all night long. Could you check the thermostat?” The Carters had the yellow room, the one Erica had occupied when she stayed here last summer. A jagged arrow of alarm spiraled up her spine. “I’ll check it after breakfast,” she promised, throwing the older woman what she hoped was a reassuring smile. Next to arrive at the table was Charles Ryan, looking as harried and irritable as he had upon his arrival yesterday afternoon. He let Erica pour his coffee, while he made a call on his cell phone. He gobbled down a muffin, then got up and left without speaking to anyone. “Seems that fellow is on a mission of some kind,” Edgar muttered. Mimi shook her head and clucked her tongue. “Younger people just don’t know how to relax and enjoy life.” Erica wondered where Lisa Ryan was, and if she intended to come down for breakfast. While the Carters ate, she decided to go check the thermostat in their room. That would also give her a chance to see if Lisa was up yet. The temperatures outside during the day had been 85
Echoes of the Past fairly moderate for this time of year, but the nights were getting pretty chilly. If there was a problem with the heating in this place, she’d better find it out now, so she could call a repairman before winter really set in. The minute she walked into the room, she knew she wasn’t going to find anything wrong with the thermostat. She checked the unit on the wall. The temperature read seventy degrees. The air felt warm and comfortable. She made a mental note to check it tonight right before the Carters retired for the evening. When she returned downstairs, she found the dining room empty. She cleared the table, carrying the dirty dishes to the kitchen, where Paula stood looking out the back door. “I don’t think Lisa Ryan is going to have breakfast,” Erica said idly, still thinking about the yellow room. “She didn’t strike me as a morning person.” Paula seemed distracted and Erica went to stand beside her. “What’s so interesting?” “Charles Ryan.” Erica saw him now. He was on the dock, sitting on one of the benches, writing something and talking on his cell phone. “I suppose a bench by a lake is as good a makeshift office as any. He’s obviously a workaholic,” Erica commented. Paula went back to the sink and began wiping it down. “Don’t forget, tonight is the night I go to the 86
Audra Cole movies with Cal.” Erica smiled. “Your first date.” Paula turned and faced Erica, her expression somber. “Tell me, honestly, what do you think of him?” Erica hesitated for a moment. “He’s quiet. Not at all like you, that’s for sure. Maybe that’s a good thing, though.” “Not a glowing endorsement—he’s quiet. I’m a little unsure about this whole thing, too. Guess I’ll just play it by ear.” **** Once the kitchen was cleaned up and Paula had gone upstairs to make up the Carter’s room, Erica went into the parlor, where she found Edgar sitting in one of the antique easy chairs, still reading his magazine. Erica sat in one of the nearby wingback chairs. “So, what brings you to Pennsylvania? Seems like living in Florida would be a year-round vacation.” Edgar lowered the magazine and looked at Erica. “Actually we’re going up to Erie, on the lake, when we leave here. Now that I’m retired we have the time to travel.” “Retired from what, Mr. Carter?” Erica pressed, frankly curious. “Call me Edgar, everyone does. Actually, I’m a retired civil servant. Mimi and I have been married for thirty-eight years. We have two sons, grown of course and with their own families now.” 87
Echoes of the Past They chatted for a few more minutes until the ringing of the phone called Erica away. It was Joe. He was still in Hartsburg. “I’m stuck until this evening. How’s it going there?” he asked. “Tense. The Carters are all right, but the Ryans…she’s a piece of work, and he’s anxious to show everyone how busy he is.” “Paula holding up?” “She’s doing maid and cook service this morning. I’m schmoozing. In a minute I’ll be cleaning the bathroom.” Joe chuckled. “Well, you can always come join me in the wild kingdom. We could stay over.” “Is your sleeping bag big enough for two?” “Nope. That’s why it would be so much fun.” “Did you find your bear?” Erica asked, chuckling. “No bear. But something is tearing things up. I’m betting on some sort of feline, maybe a mountain lion. While I’m out this way, I’m going to check on some other sites that are part of my territory.” “Well, I guess I’ll be alone for dinner, then. Paula has a date with Cal.” “High Noon.” “So she says.” “She like westerns?” “Hates them. But then, I doubt if the movie is what she’s interested in.” ****
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Audra Cole Erica was in the kitchen, getting a bottle of spring water from the refrigerator when Chief of Police Greg Novak knocked on the door. He was in his uniform, which she noticed, was neatly pressed. “Just stopping by to check on things.” Bull! You’re stopping by to ask if I’ve heard from Evelyn. As though confirming her suspicions, Greg asked if the guests were settle in, then asked about Evelyn. Erica told him the news and could see the lines of concern creasing his forehead. “She’s not going to have to have more surgery, is she?” “I’m not sure. We had a bad connection and then got cut off. I think she’ll probably call back, though. Do you want her number? I plan to call her tonight if I don’t hear from her today.“ Greg looked uncertain. “Do you think she’d want me calling her?” Erica went to the small office and copied Evelyn’s number at the rehab center on a piece of paper. “I think she’d love it. Give it a try. You never know what will happen,” Erica told him, handing the paper to him. He took it gratefully, a smile lighting up his face. “I understand there’s bottled water in the refrigerator…” Edgar said from the doorway. Erica turned to face her guest, only to find him staring intently at Greg. The look on his face was one of puzzlement mixed with something else Erica couldn’t quite identify. Turning back to Greg, she saw that he seemed a 89
Echoes of the Past little uncomfortable under Edgar’s hard gaze. Erica moved to the refrigerator and got the water, handing it to Edgar. She hoped he’d leave, but instead he stepped toward the chief. “I think I know you. You look familiar. Have we met?” Greg cleared his throat. “I don’t think so. I’m Greg Novak, chief of police around here.” Erica noticed that although Greg seemed cordial enough, he did not come across the room and extend a hand for Edgar to shake. Edgar studied Greg for another moment, then said, “I guess I was mistaken.” With that he turned and left the room. “How odd,” Erica said as she watched Edgar’s retreating form. A few seconds later, she heard the front door open and close. “I have one of those faces, I guess,” the chief said with a shrug. Turning to go, he added, “You need anything, just call.” **** At eleven-thirty, when Lisa Ryan finally put in an appearance, Mimi was in the kitchen talking to Paula and Erica about her life with Edgar and their upcoming sojourn into town for lunch at the Eagle Hill Cafe. “No coffee?” Lisa grumbled, her voice edged with disdain. “How about a nice cup of tea?” Mimi offered, jumping up to play hostess. 90
Audra Cole Paula went to the counter and brought a foilcovered plate of muffins to the table. “I usually eat yogurt for breakfast,” Lisa groused, as she took a cranberry nut muffin and began peeling away the paper cup surrounding it. “We have that, too,” Erica offered, opening the refrigerator and motioning toward the row of small plastic cups. “Strawberry,” Lisa directed. Erica brought it and a spoon to the table and put them in front of the woman, who was still in her bathrobe, her hair disheveled. “Where’s Charles?” she asked plaintively, her lips forming a slight pout. “He left right after breakfast,” Erica told her. “Figures,” Lisa muttered, sipping at the hot tea tentatively. It seemed to meet with her approval, and she sipped some more of it. “Well, girls, I’ve enjoyed this gab fest, but Edgar and I have to get into town,” Mimi told them cheerily, walking toward the door. “What’s your hurry? Touring this town shouldn’t take you more than five minutes,” Lisa snapped. Erica felt her hackles go up. She’d just about had enough of this one’s smart remarks. Lisa got up scraping her chair back on the linoleum. “I’m going to take a shower. Your muffins are too dry and you should buy a better brand of yogurt,” she said waspishly, adding, “And keep a pot of coffee going all day. Not everyone drinks it just at breakfast.” 91
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**** Twenty minutes later, when the blood-curdling scream resonated through the inn, Erica was on the porch, sweeping it again and Paula was in the parlor, watering the plants. “What the hell,” Paula exclaimed, as Erica ran inside and they nearly collided in the foyer. “It has to be Lisa Ryan, she’s the only one up there.” They found her in the bathroom doorway, clutching her robe around her dripping wet body and shivering. “Somebody grabbed at me…something touched me…in there!” She pointed a shaking finger toward the shower enclosure. Erica gasped, as she recalled her own encounter last July. Paula moved past Lisa and into the room, searching thoroughly, even though it was obvious there was no one else there. “Something is in there…I felt it…cold as death…it touched me…do something!” She’s hysterical. Should I slap her? As appealing as that thought was, Erica decided to try and comfort the woman instead. It was then she noticed the blood that was soaking through the right sleeve of the robe. “She’s hurt, Paula,” Erica called. Paula came running. They propelled Lisa to her room, and made her sit on the bed. Then they slid the left sleeve of her robe up and discovered a small 92
Audra Cole scrape just above her elbow. “Looks like she snagged herself on something. I’ll get the first aid kit.” Paula said, leaving the room. She returned shortly and they cleaned and bandaged the scratch. “Get out! I’m calling my husband right now! We’re out of here. I don’t know what kind of games you two are playing, but…just get out!” Lisa screamed, pulling the robe tighter around her body. Paula shook her head and went downstairs, but Erica lingered outside the bedroom doorway while Lisa placed her call. “I want to go home. I’m not staying here. Something grabbed me in the shower…it touched me…cold….I cut myself….” There was a short silence, then Lisa said, “I am not hysterical! Get back here, Charles. I want to leave. Now!” Another silence was followed by, “Then I’ll go by myself. You can stay, I’m not!” All at once the door was pulled open and Lisa stood glaring at Erica. “Spying, too? Do you always listen at doorways?” she demanded. Erica assessed her calmly. “Just why are you here?” She got a lot of inner satisfaction from the stunned look on Lisa’s face. “You’re obviously not on vacation, and you’ve made it clear from the beginning you don’t want to be here. So, I’ll ask again, why did you come?” “How dare you speak to me like that! I don’t have to answer your questions. But I’m sure the Better 93
Echoes of the Past Business Bureau and whatever entity governs these sorts of establishments will have plenty of questions for you once I file a formal complaint!” The door was slammed in Erica’s face so loud it echoed down the hallway and seemed to rattle the walls.
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Chapter Eleven aula assessed the Victorian house with a critical eye. From what she could see in the glow of a nearby streetlight, it was well preserved, painted either gray or blue, and had white shutters. Cal led the way up a set of brick steps onto a wood-planked porch. “They’ve turned a lot of these old places into doubles over the past decade or so. People are buying them up for investments. Investments. I wonder what ever happened to buying a big house and making it into a family home?” he asked, shaking his head. The movie had been better than she’d expected. Gary Cooper as the beleaguered groom, ex-lawman whose new life was put on hold while he faced down an old enemy, gave a staunch, stoic performance. He was typical Cooper, brave, stalwart, honest and in the end, the victor. Grace Kelly, as his new, much younger bride, was graceful and beautiful, classy even in the face of difficult times. She’d really enjoyed it. Dinner had been at a restaurant near the theater and now they were back at Cal’s for dessert and coffee. The perfect end to a nice evening.
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Echoes of the Past Idly, she wondered if he’d try to put the moves on her. He hadn’t even held her hand during the movie, although he’d leaned her way, so that their arms touched several times. Suddenly, halfway through the picture it had occurred to her that he was, basically, shy. That piqued her interest even more, and desire began to spiral through her. If Cal was going to be a tough nut to crack, all the better. Paula loved a challenge. Cal fished around for his keys, found them, and unlocked the scarred wooden door. Once he stepped inside, he flipped on an overhead light fixture and the room was illuminated by a soft amber glow. It was what Paula would call a straight-through apartment, that is to say, the living room led into a small dining room, which by the looks of things, led back to a bedroom. It was rustic, and her attention was immediately drawn to the many pictures adorning the walls. They were original oils from what she could tell, probably done by Cal, since they followed the theme of the beautiful picture in the restaurant. One was of a hawk, circling its prey on the ground. Before she could really look at the others, he moved to close the door behind her and his body brushed against hers. She felt a slight shiver course through her. “I’ll make us some coffee. The nights are getting chilly now. I could use a cup; you all right with that?” Cal asked. She’d been very well aware of his masculine presence all evening. He smelled of sandalwood and 96
Audra Cole something else she couldn’t quite distinguish. But she knew she liked it. It had been a long time since she’d been with a man, except in professional situations. She felt a little awkward, truthfully. He went to a small, Pullman-style kitchen situated beside the living room, which she now realized had once probably been part of a wrap-around porch. When she mentioned that, he nodded. “They put up a wall over there,” he pointed to their left. The staircase to the upstairs apartment is on the other side. My bedroom is at the back, in what was the original kitchen. He rejoined her in the living room, while the coffee brewed. She hadn’t gone into the narrow kitchen, but she glanced that way and noticed that the appliances were older, but looked well maintained. It was obvious that Cal was a decent housekeeper. She scanned her surroundings. The floors were hardwood, dark and highly polished, the walls painted a pale blue. The furniture was sturdy and dark, probably walnut. There was an easy chair that looked comfortable and well worn, obviously Cal’s favorite place to sit. But it was the other pictures that drew her attention, and she began walking around the room, studying each one in turn. The first was of a group of Native Americans gathered around a campfire. Their wizened faces seemed ready to come to life in the glow of the flames. “A tribal council. Those are the chiefs,” Cal explained. Next she went to a painting of a settlement that 97
Echoes of the Past showed a long structure totally unlike the teepees and tents usually associated with such communities. It depicted tribe members going about their daily chores: the men skinning a deer, the women cooking over an open fire, children playing in the dirt. “What is that?” she asked, pointing to the building. Cal stood behind her, his body almost touching hers as he explained. “It’s a longhouse. Farming tribes built them to house all the members of the family. It wasn’t unusual to find up to twenty or more families, which were all related, usually through the mother’s side, living there. They all belonged to the same clan, of course. I guess you’d call it an extended family by today’s standards. They worked together to make their living.” “Sounds like a commune to me,” Paula observed, looking over her shoulder at him. He smiled. “Yeah, I guess you could put it that way.” She moved on to the next painting, which was totally bereft of people. Then she recognized the landscape. It was the hill where the inn now sat and below it the lake, only the dock wasn’t there, just the woods surrounding it. “I see you recognize it,” Cal observed. “Is it true it was a burial mound?” Paula asked. Cal’s hands now rested lightly on her shoulders. When had he put them there? She wasn’t sure, but it felt good. No, it was more than that, it felt natural. Like they belonged there. “That story has circulated since I can remember, 98
Audra Cole but there’s no proof.” “Surely there are records somewhere.” “The Hartsburg historical society has volumes of records going back to the 1700s, but I’ve never bothered to go looking. Most of what I know about my own ancestors comes from stories handed down through the generations, and they don’t mention it.” “There’s no local historical society?” Cal shook his head. “Combined them years ago. Financial reasons, Hartsburg had more funds available and the one here was dying.” Paula smelled the aroma emanating from the kitchen. “Hazelnut coffee?” “Thought you might like it,” he told her. He withdrew his hands, and she suddenly missed his touch. “My favorite. How did you know?” “Psychic,” he quipped. They drank their coffee at the small drop-leaf table in the dining room and talked some more. She loved the sound of his voice—deep, resonant, masculine. She’d chosen her outfit carefully for this evening. The skirt was chamois of a rich deep tan, and hit her just below the knees. She had shapely calves, or at least she’d been told that, so she wanted to make sure he saw them. No hose. She had a good tan. Her shirt was emerald green, with three quarter length sleeves and a scoop neck that hugged her ample breasts, showing just enough cleavage to be enticing but not slutty. At least that’s what Erica had told her before Cal picked her up. Of course there was an abundance of jewelry, including a pair of gold double loop 99
Echoes of the Past earrings with the smaller loops hanging inside the larger ones. Cal offered her cookies; she declined. “Got to keep my girlish figure, you know. At least what’s left of it.” “Your figure looks just fine to me, at least what I can see of it,” he countered, eyeing her with a little more intensity than his tone indicated. Paula knew that at that moment, the tone for the rest of the evening would either be casual and friendly or very friendly, it was up to her. Cal had effectively put the ball in her court to make that decision. “I like you, Cal. A lot. It would be very easy right now to…” Cal got up, came around the table and pulled her to her feet and into his arms, kissing her soundly. The minute she felt his body against hers, his tongue probing her mouth, she forgot her little ‘let’s start out slowly and see what happens’ speech. His chest felt hard and taut against her breasts as her nipples sprang to attention. She wasn’t sure exactly when his knee went between her quivering thighs, but she welcomed it, enjoying the sensations as she moved her pelvis up and down. She held him tight, arms around his neck, abdomen pressed against his groin. She felt him grow there, felt the bulge of his erection as it blossomed. Praying that he wouldn’t break the embrace, she was elated when she felt his hands move down to her ass. Then he was kissing her neck, moving slowly, languidly, licking, nipping, tasting her as he went. She loved it. It felt so good. A shiver raced up her 100
Audra Cole spine when he hit the spot between her breasts. Her nipples ached for his touch, or better yet, his mouth on them. She moved one hand around his side to his cock, rubbing it hard. He groaned, a low guttural sound in his throat that made her pulse race even faster. “You’re so beautiful, so exciting. If you don’t want this to happen, you’d better stop me now, because it will be too late in a minute,” he told her, drawing back a little to look at her. “You talk too much,” she gasped. He swooped her up and carried her through the apartment to the back, where he deposited her on a king-size bed. The brown comforter was thick and plush and she sank into it. He was beside her now, holding her, caressing her, strong and ready. She unzipped his pants, her hands shaking just a little. She wasn’t sure if it was nervousness or passion that was causing her to tremble all over, but it seemed to arouse Cal even more so she didn’t care. His hands were warm and gentle as he stripped off her blouse, then her skirt. She moaned as the pleasure of his touch coursed through her, especially when he found her nipples and pinched them lightly, then with more force. His cock was hot in her hand, jism dripping down between her fingers. She longed to taste it, to run her tongue up and down its length, and across the smooth, slick tip. She scooted down to do just that and he lay back, letting her have her way with him. 101
Echoes of the Past Then he returned the favor, licking at her clit until the swelled nub pulsed and the orgasm began. One of many, she knew, as Cal pulled her on top of him and entered her with a force that took her breath away. **** Erica was in the kitchen at a little after nine o’clock that evening when Charles Ryan entered the room. She had to admit he was a good looking man, and he obviously took care of himself. He was wearing an oxford shirt with the sleeves rolled up to his elbows, exposing muscular arms. That, combined with a healthy tan, told Erica that he spent a good amount of time at a gym or spa. “I want to apologize to you for my wife’s behavior earlier today. She told me the whole story when I got back. You’ll have to excuse Lisa, she really has quite an imagination and I’m afraid the stories some of her country club friends pumped her full of about old haunted houses…well, need I say more,” he finished with a shrug. She told you her side of the story, I’m sure, Erica thought, as her initial dislike of Lisa Ryan rose up in her again. But, his wife’s behavior wasn’t Mr. Ryan’s fault, so she decided not to say what she was thinking. She’d just made a pot of decaf coffee and offered him a cup. He accepted, joining her at the kitchen table. “This is all new to me, Mr. Ryan…” Erica began. 102
Audra Cole “Call me Charles, please,” he interrupted. She nodded, “I’m just filling in for Evelyn, as you know. I’m not an innkeeper by profession…” “Yes, I understand you were a magazine editor.” Erica could not hide her surprise. “How did you know that?” A strange look passed over his face, and he artfully changed the subject. “How much do you know about the history of this place?” Taken off guard, Erica frowned. “Not a lot. There’s quite a bit of folklore surrounding it and the lake.” Charles smiled sardonically. “Oh, yes, the spirits that watch over us all. I’ve heard the hype.” He sipped at his coffee and watched her over the brim of his mug. “Sounds like a bunch of superstitious nonsense to me.” Erica felt suddenly uncomfortable. She wasn’t that well versed on all of the local legends, so she didn’t really want to expound a theory. “Actually, you need to talk to Joe Lakota. He knows more about it…he’s part Iroquois and…” As though summoned, Joe entered the kitchen and smiled at Erica. He eyed the two of them with a questioning look, which Erica found both touching and a little bothersome. “You’re back,” she said then thought how stupid that statement sounded. Of course he was back, he was standing right there, wasn’t he? “I smell coffee, got any extra?” Again his gaze stayed on Charles for a few more seconds, then slid to Erica. 103
Echoes of the Past “Plenty,” she said, getting up and pouring him a mug full. He planted himself in the chair next to Erica’s and stared across the table at Charles. “Joe Lakota. I’m the park ranger hereabouts.” “Well, your timing is great. Erica was just saying you might know a little more about the history of this land…” “Could be. Why are you interested?” Joe asked. Erica resumed her seat next to Joe. “I’m a history buff. Love these old places and the stories behind them,” Charles responded. Erica felt a strange energy at work in the room. Two males scoping each other out, circling, watching, evaluating. Tell me they’re not going to have a pissing contest! It was then that the spell was broken as Lisa Ryan flounced into the kitchen and stopped dead in her tracks, a look of shock and something Erica equated to horror on her face. Several things happened at once. Joe put his mug of coffee down on the table with a thud and stood up. Lisa gasped and muttered something Erica could have sworn sounded like, “I don’t believe it.” Charles, whose back was to the door turned around and stood up at the sight of his wife standing pale-faced and unsteady behind him. “I…I…Charles…” Lisa stammered, then turned and fled the room. Erica looked at Joe in disbelief as he followed Lisa. “I’m not sure what her problem is. Sorry again,” 104
Audra Cole Charles muttered as he got up and left, also. Erica sat for a moment, transfixed, wondering what had just happened. Then, very slowly, she stood, gathered up the coffee mugs, took them to the sink, rinsed them and left the kitchen. The foyer was empty, but the front door was ajar. Cautiously, she stepped out onto the porch. It was dark, but the strategically placed lanterns lining the drive gave enough light for her to see that the expanse of front yard was empty. She went back into the kitchen and looked out the back door. The lanterns on the dock illuminated two figures, Lisa and Joe, standing near one of the benches. Mingo, scratching at the back door, startled Erica and she jumped. “Oh, boy, I’m sorry,” she said, opening the door for him. He came inside eagerly, licking her hand and whining. “It’s okay, boy. Lay down,” she commanded and he plopped down on the nearby throw rug. She stood there in the darkness of the back porch watching the two figures on the dock for a long time. Lisa’s arms waved about, Joe remained immobile. Then they changed positions, still talking, obviously intense. They know each other. But from where and when? Lisa Ryan looked about to faint at the sight of him. And he just about dropped his coffee. Another secret? How many more does he have? Erica felt a lump of dread form in her throat, then settle uncomfortably in her midsection. It was then 105
Echoes of the Past she realized that she might not know the real Joe Lakota at all. She watched them for the next five minutes, then, when they finally parted company, Lisa trudged up the hill, but instead of coming into the inn, drove away in the Ryan’s sleek, black Lexus. Joe had disappeared along the service road, where he’d undoubtedly parked his Jeep. Were they going to meet somewhere else to continue their…what? Tryst? Affair? What? Mingo was still in the kitchen, sleeping like a contented baby and she decided to leave him there. If Joe wanted to know where he was, he’d have to wait until morning. The Carters had been in their room for a while. Mimi had pronounced, as they’d come in from dinner, that tonight was her favorite television night and she had no intention of being disturbed. Edgar, with several magazines under his arm, had obviously been ready to enjoy a night of reading. “Not much for television myself,” he’d muttered by way of explanation as he’d trudged up the stairs behind his wife. Charles Ryan was nowhere to be found. Had he simply gone to his room? Didn’t the man wonder where his wife went? Wasn’t he curious about her bizarre behavior? Probably used to it by now. I wonder how often he has to go around behind her apologizing for her bad manners and rude comments? It can’t be a pleasant life for him. No wonder he works all the time. 106
Audra Cole Lord knew when Paula would be back, if she came back at all tonight. I hope things are going well with Cal. At least one of us should have some good luck with men. The knock on the front door as she was walking through the foyer, startled Erica and made her jump. She spun around to see Joe peering in one of the door’s glass side panels. “I’ll get Mingo for you, he’s asleep in the kitchen,” she snapped as she opened the door and he stepped inside. He reached for her, but she was too quick and all she felt was his hand brush her upper arm as she turned and walked toward the kitchen. He followed. “We need to talk, Erica.” He kept his voice low, yet the words were clear. Mingo, his ears twitching at the sound of his master’s voice, stretched and stood up. Erica turned and faced him. “Not tonight. I’m tired. Let yourself out, the door will lock behind you. The guests have keys.” And you don’t. With that, she gave Mingo an affectionate pat on the head, brushed past Joe and left the room. She halfway expected him to follow her up the stairs and by the time she reached the top, her heart was hammering in her chest and she found it hard to breathe. But he didn’t, and when she heard the front door softly close and the lock click into place, tears of frustration were making their way down her cheeks.
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Chapter Twelve al had asked her to stay the night, but when she awoke again at one o’clock in the morning after another bout of lovemaking that had left her pleasantly exhausted, yet amazingly refreshed, she told him she’d better get back to the inn. “Erica will need help with breakfast, and I don’t want to come dragging in early in the morning looking like this in front of the guests,” she told him, as she began to gather up her clothing. “You can look like that any time for me. You’re beautiful.” She walked to the bed, where he still sat propped up against a pillow, his body in full view, his erection growing again. “You’re the best thing that has happened to me in a long time, Cal. Let’s not let it slip away.” Even to her own ears, the remark sounded wistful, almost sad, as though she knew it was entirely possible that was exactly what might happen. He pulled her down beside him and kissed her hard, his strong arms tightening around her almost desperately. She felt the power there, felt the passion
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Audra Cole and responded in kind, moving her hand to his abdomen, over the hard ridges, to the shaft that now pulsed with desire. Then, she pushed away and extricated herself from his embrace. “If we begin again, I’ll never leave,” she said somewhat breathlessly. She scooted off the bed. His reply had a little bit of a peevish edge to it. “So? Would that be so awful?” But he got up and began pulling on his clothes. “It would be wonderful. But I’m here to help Erica. We’ll have more times. Won’t we?” She eyed him keenly as he buttoned his shirt. “If I have my way, we’ll have a lot more,” he stated as he followed her into the living room. **** Erica was jarred from a fitful sleep by a loud, crashing noise that seemed to rattle the walls. Leaping out of bed she heard what sounded like a door slamming, then a cry that cut through the night like the wail of a siren. She could see well enough in the dark to find her robe and throw it on. Running for the bedroom door, she flung it open and emerged into the hallway simultaneously with Edgar Carter. He was trying to tie his plaid flannel robe and swore softly as his sausage-like fingers fumbled with the sash. “Damn it, what the hell was that? A bomb? I can’t find Mimi!” Just then, Charles Ryan came bolting out of his room. “Was that an explosion?” He fell into step 109
Echoes of the Past behind Edgar. Erica was already halfway down the stairs when she heard Paula squeal, “Oh my God, are you….Oh, shit, don’t be dead!” Mimi Carter lay in a heap at the bottom of the stairs. Paula was leaning over her, shaking her shoulder in an attempt to rouse her. Behind Erica, Edgar gave a expletive and pushed her aside, rushing to his wife. “Mimi! Good Lord, woman, what the hell were you doing?” Erica was beside Edgar in a flash. “Call an ambulance, Paula. Edgar, does she have a pulse?” Edgar was holding Mimi’s wrist with one hand, while he smoothed some errant strands of her hennaed hair out of her eyes with the other. “Yes,” he responded and the relief was evident in his tone. “We shouldn’t move her, she might have broken bones.” Paula came back into the foyer. “They’re on their way.” Erica stood up and looked at Paula as Mimi began to stir and moan. “What happened?” Paula met her gaze. “I don’t know. I came in and she was lying there. But I think it just happened because I heard a loud thud when I was opening the door.” “Wha…wher…Edgar?” Mimi, obviously dazed, tried to get up, but her husband held her firmly in place with one hand. “Lie still, Mother. The paramedics are on the way,” he ordered. “Oh, my arm hurts. Ouch, it hurts! My head!” 110
Audra Cole Mimi cried. Erica looked down at the woman’s right arm. The area around her wrist was already swollen to twice its normal size and resting at an odd angle. There was also an ugly bruise on her left cheek and a small gash on her forehead. Great. I hope Evelyn has insurance that will cover this. **** An hour later, Erica sat at the kitchen table sipping herbal tea. Paula was upstairs showering, but had promised she’d be right back. Mimi had been whisked away to the local hospital. The paramedics had confirmed that the wrist was broken. Edgar, looking worried and perplexed, had gone with her. Lisa Ryan had returned to the inn just as the ambulance pulled away. She’d come inside, snubbed both Erica and Paula and gone upstairs without even asking who was being taken off in the middle of the night. Obviously, she wasn’t concerned that it might be her own husband. “Penny for those thoughts,” Paula said as she entered the kitchen. Her hair was still wet and hung loosely around her face, already forming jet black ringlets. “I guess I don’t have to ask how it went tonight with Cal. You’re positively glowing,” Erica said as she watched her friend prepare a cup of mint tea. Before Paula could respond, the slamming of the 111
Echoes of the Past front door reverberated through the house and both women headed toward the foyer. Erica glanced around the empty space. Paula checked the parlor. Then they went out onto the porch. Nothing. Erica walked to the side of the house and checked the parking lot. No one lingered in the shadows. “Who was that?” Paula scanned the area with worried eyes. “Did one of the Ryans leave? I saw Charles slink back upstairs earlier when the paramedics arrived.” “Beats me. Maybe the front door was ajar and the wind made it slam. I can’t remember if I locked it after they took Mimi away. Everything happened so fast,” Erica replied, then added, “I’m checking the upstairs. I don’t mind telling you, I’m spooked. And what made Mimi fall? There’s a light at the top and bottom of those stairs.” Paula stared at her. “I asked her that when they were loading her into the ambulance. She said she was pushed.” Erica’s mouth fell open, and she felt her stomach do a flip-flop. “By whom?” “Or what,” Paula commented. “Oh, no, you don’t! I don’t want to hear this…”Erica began, then stopped. “You can be in denial if you want, Erica, but Mimi also told me she felt something rush past her. Something cold and clammy. Her words, not mine.” Paula’s jaw was set in a stubborn line, her emerald eyes flashing. 112
Audra Cole Erica sat down on the bottom step. “What next?” she asked to no one in particular.
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Chapter Thirteen oe’s touch was like magic as it slid down Erica’s neck to her breasts, then on to her abdomen and finally to that place between her thighs. She was wet and ready for him, her juices flowing like a fountain, her skin tingling with anticipation. He whispered her name, and she urged him on. She spread her legs wide, inviting him in, needing to feel the length of him filling her up. Erica awakened with a start, not quite sure what had jarred her out of the best dream she’d had in ages. “Damn it,” she muttered, withdrawing her hand from between her legs and throwing back the satinysmooth sheet that covered her body. She felt unfulfilled and cranky, wishing that the dream had gone on long enough for her to have the orgasm that still lurked in the inner reaches of her core. She sat up and looked at the bedside clock. It was after seven. “Shit!” she exclaimed, climbing out of bed and rushing into the bathroom. She peed, hopped in the shower, did a quick once over, then finished getting ready to meet the day.
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Audra Cole Paula was in the kitchen, humming to herself as she put some freshly made muffins on a silver-plated tray. “Well, there you are. You could have slept in, you know. I have it under control,” Paula chirped with a cheerfulness that rankled Erica for some reason. “You should have knocked on my door,” she chastised grumpily. Going to the coffee pot, she poured herself a cup and sipped at it gratefully. “When did you get up?” “I didn’t. I mean, I never went to bed. It was after three o’clock in the morning when we finally put out the lights down here and I knew if I went to sleep, I’d never make it up this early. Besides, you looked like you needed the rest more than I did. I came back downstairs around four and read in the parlor.” Erica eyed her friend with something bordering on envy. Paula looked freshly scrubbed and wide-eyed. She’d changed into a turquoise blouse and a pair of tan chinos. Her face, not nearly as made up as usual, looked younger than it had in years. Erica thought of the hallow-eyed reflection that had stared back at her from the bathroom mirror just moments ago, and sighed. “Well, I feel like hell. This whole thing has turned out to be more than I bargained for.” Paula said, “I’m taking the muffins into the dining room. The rest of the food is already in there. Those chafing dishes are great. I think we should stick with the buffet-style breakfast. We just won’t make large quantities of anything, so there will be minimal waste. I’m getting pretty good at judging quantities. There’s 115
Echoes of the Past coffee, and hot water for tea. OJ also. That should hold our guests, such as they are. When I come back into this kitchen, we’ll talk.” Erica stifled the urge to say, yes ma’am. Instead she went to the back door and looked hopefully toward the dock. For what, she wasn’t sure. “It really is beautiful, but it has a troubled past,” Paula said from behind Erica. “You mean the murder all those years ago?” “That, yes, but there’s more,” Paula replied. Erica turned and followed Paula back into the kitchen. “Such as?” Paula shrugged. “I pick up vibes. You know me.” “I feel like things are spinning out of control,” Erica confided. “Just take a deep breath and calm down. Things have a way of working out. Now, first of all, I called the hospital. Mimi has a fractured wrist and a slight concussion.” Erica groaned, as Paula continued, “She’ll be released later this morning, but she’s forbidden to travel for at least a week, which pretty much knocks out the rest of their vacation for now.” “Okay. It could have been worse. I guess. I mean, she could have been hurt a lot worse. I just don’t understand how it happened.” Charles Ryan chose that moment to interrupt them. Erica appraised him carefully, noting the navy blue suit, white shirt and red tie. He looks like a politician getting ready to give a speech intended to inspire confidence in truth, justice and the American way. 116
Audra Cole “Lisa is still sleeping. I’m afraid I took a sleeping pill last night after all the excitement and didn’t even hear her come in. Did either of you happen to notice?” he asked. Erica exchanged glances with Paula before replying, “It was just as the ambulance took Mimi Carter away. I’m afraid I didn’t look at the clock.” He shrugged as though it really didn’t matter anyway, then said, “Anyway, I wouldn’t count on her for breakfast, which is a shame, because it looks great. I’m afraid I’ll have to grab a muffin and go. I’m heading for Du Bois. I left Lisa a note. I really can’t imagine where she was until so late….” he said, letting the sentence trail off as he departed. I can, Erica thought, recalling the heated exchange between Lisa and Joe yesterday on the dock. “Now, what kind of vacation is this, I wonder, with him running off all the time and her sleeping most of the day away?” Paula asked softly. Erica didn’t reply, but she’d been thinking the same thing. They decided to keep the food warm a while longer, just in case the Carters were hungry when they returned. While Paula started the daily cleaning chores, Erica decided it was time to call Evelyn Black and tell her what had happened. She’d expected Evelyn to be upset, which she was, but she assured Erica that the inn’s liability insurance was sufficient. Then she asked the question Erica had dreaded. 117
Echoes of the Past “What exactly did she say about the fall, about what caused it?” Erica hesitated for a moment trying to decide how much to tell the inn proprietor. “She said she was pushed,” she finally admitted. Evelyn’s voice was barely above a whisper. “Just like me.” But it was Evelyn’s next question that made Erica break out in a cold sweat. “Did she also mention the chill?” **** “That didn’t take long,” Paula said, coming into the kitchen and going to the utility closet to put away the cleaning supplies. Then she stopped. “What’s wrong?” “Evelyn says the inn’s insurance will cover what happened.” “That’s not what took the color out of your face.” “She asked about the fall, then asked if Mimi felt the…chill.” Paula’s eyes glowed with triumph. “See.” Erica’s reply was cut off by a knock at the back door. It was Greg Novak. “I heard about what happened here last night,” he began after waving away their offer of coffee. “Not exactly a criminal matter,” Paula quipped, eyeing the man keenly. Erica could see that something about him had again piqued Paula’s interest. 118
Audra Cole “No, but I get all the ambulance run reports and thought I’d better follow up.” Erica led him into the foyer. “Not much to tell. Mimi Carter, one of our guests, fell in the middle of the night on the stairs.” Paula was hanging back in the kitchen doorway, Erica noticed. “How?” Greg asked. “I don’t know. The stairwell is lit. Maybe she wasn’t paying attention, or…” “Have you talked to Evelyn about her fall?” Paula said suddenly, joining them. Greg spun around and faced her. Erica found herself holding her breath for some reason. “When it happened I talked to the paramedics. I haven’t seen Evelyn since she was taken to the hospital.” “Why not?” Paula countered. “I’m not sure what you mean?” “Well, you’re here now asking about Mimi’s fall, so I guess I wonder why you didn’t do the same when Evelyn fell.” “One fall is an accident. Two falls warrant a second look,” he told her. “Evelyn asked about you this morning when I spoke to her,” Erica said, deciding to diffuse the situation. This seemed to perk the lawman up considerably. “How is she?” Erica eyed him keenly. “Why don’t you call her and find out?” “Or better yet, pay her a visit,” Paula suggested. 119
Echoes of the Past Without responding, Greg left by the back door “Now what the hell was that all about? Is business that slow?” Paula asked, a frown furrowing the place between her eyebrows. “Who knows?” Erica snapped, suddenly feeling even more out of sorts. “He’s a man, that probably explains it.” “Okay, that does it. You’ve been tight as a bowstring all morning. And I doubt it if is because Mimi fell down the stairs. Let’s have it.” Paula said directing Erica into the parlor. She closed the door and sat down on the sofa, patting the cushion next to her. Erica took a seat and told her about the event involving Lisa Ryan and Joe. “And so you’re upset because he talked to one of our guests on the dock?” “There was more to it than that! You didn’t see the look on her face when she came into the kitchen and saw him or the way he reacted. And what would two total strangers have to argue about on the dock just minutes later?” “Did you ask him?” Erica felt her anger dissipate. “No.” “Why not?” Erica shrugged, not quite sure what the answer to that question was. Paula went on, “So call him now and clear the air. What you’re thinking is probably ten times worse than what is really going on.” “I hope so…” Erica began, only to be interrupted 120
Audra Cole by a shriek so loud and piercing that both women leapt to their feet. “God Almighty, what was that?” Paula cried, running out of the room and up the stairs. Erica was inches behind her. When they got the top, they saw Lisa Ryan in the hallway, holding a towel around her dripping wet body. “I’m suing you. That’s it. This is outrageous! That water turned ice cold on me. I damned near fell trying to jump out from under the spray!” the woman said, glaring furiously at them both. “Your ass is grass. My husband knows the best liability lawyer in the state. This place is a death trap and I’ll have it shut down!” With that, she stormed into her room and slammed the door soundly behind her. Erica swore under her breath and went into the bathroom. Lisa’s robe was on a bench near the shower enclosure. Her cosmetic case was on the vanity. The water was still running. She poked her head inside the shower area and noted that the hot and cold taps were both on equally, yet when she felt the water, it was frigid. She recalled that once she and some friends had visited Michigan in June. They’d gone to a lake to go swimming and the water was so cold that it actually made Erica’s joints ache to be in it for more than a couple of minutes. That was the kind of cold she was feeling right now. She withdrew her hand and shut off the faucets. “She’s right. I’ll have to go down into the basement and check the water heater,” Erica groused. “Just call a plumber,” Paula suggested. 121
Echoes of the Past Erica shook her head. “Maybe the pilot light went out. I’ll check that first.” “I’m going with you. I have a bad feeling.” **** The basement door was in the kitchen, next to the pantry. It was kept locked and Erica got the key from Evelyn’s desk. The minute she opened the door, the smell of mold, decay and something else utterly unpleasant wafted up her nostrils. “Ever been down there?” Paula asked from behind Erica. “No. And I’m not crazy about going down there now.” Erica replied, feeling around for a light switch, but when she flipped it on, nothing happened. “Great.” Paula retreated. “There’s a flashlight on the desk, I’ll get it.” Moments later, flashlight in hand, Erica led the way as the two women descended into the dark cavern below. Erica played the beam around the floor and walls. There were boxes stacked on her right. To her left sat the furnace and water heater, so she gingerly headed that way, pushing cobwebs out her face as she went. The gas water heater looked fairly new. She squatted beside it and looked underneath, where she saw the pilot light’s blue flame flickering steadily. “I don’t understand it.” Erica stood up, trying to make sense of it all. 122
Audra Cole Suddenly the aroma of flowers was so strong it almost made Erica gag. She couldn’t quite place it. Mimosa? Gardenia? No. More like a combination of several, along with something musky. “Do you smell that?” Paula whispered. Erica nodded as she felt the air grow heavy. She tried to move but could not. It was as though her feet were glued to the floor. “It’s right next to you,” Paula’s voice sounded hoarse and her gaze was riveted on a spot just over Erica’s right shoulder. “What?” Erica managed to croak through a throat that felt nearly closed shut. “Who are you?” Paula asked, her voice trembling slightly. Then a sound like the wind whistling through the trees surrounded them and the air became so cold their breath made vapor clouds under their noses. Erica felt something that reminded her of death brush past her. Then she heard a gasp and shone the flashlight that way. Paula was standing still, her body rigid, her eyes closed. Fear curled itself around Erica’s insides as she watched her friend begin to tremble. Suddenly it was gone and the room swam back into focus. The air was once again damp and clammy. The floral smell had dissipated, replaced by a mustiness that made Erica’s stomach recoil. “What was that?” Paula let out something like a moan and opened her eyes. “Let’s get out of here,” was her reply as she 123
Echoes of the Past hurried toward the stairs. Then she grabbed the banister and Erica was afraid she might collapse. “Did you smell it? Flowers. And that wind. There’s no way…”Erica babbled. Once they were safely in the kitchen with the basement door once again locked, Paula turned to Erica. “I felt it. Inside of me. Such sorrow and despair.” Erica led her to a chair. “What is happening here, Paula?” “I told you this place was alive with spirit activity. We just encountered one. And it’s asking for our help.” Paula replied. Not again! Erica’s mind took her back to her previous experience here. “Who is it?” “I don’t know.” “This is just too much!” she exclaimed, feeling shaky all of a sudden. She sat down in the chair next to Paula’s. “What do we do now?” Paula looked at her. “Go back upstairs and check the shower. My guess is that the water is fine now.” And it was. **** Lisa Ryan came downstairs just as Erica finished loading the dishwasher. She didn’t speak or look at her hostess, which gave Erica a chance to observe her closely. She was dressed provocatively in a short black leather skirt and a red scoop-necked knit top. She wore loops in her earlobes and a gold chain 124
Audra Cole around her neck. Her stiletto heels clacked sharply on the foyer floor as she strutted toward the front door. “Breakfast is still available…”Erica began. Lisa cut her off with, “Shove your fucking breakfast up where the sun doesn’t shine!” as she stormed out. Erica followed her onto the porch and watched as she marched down the drive and out onto the sidewalk. Charles Ryan had taken the car, so it looked like Lisa was going to have to walk into town. Those heels must be four inches. I hope she gets blisters on her feet! Aloud, she called, “You’re welcome to take my car, if you’d like!” Paula’s voice came from right behind Erica. “I’m sure, in that getup, she’ll be able to find plenty of rides if she wants them.” **** Paula left the inn several minutes later, after telling Erica she was gong into town to shop for shoes. Of course, Erica knew there was more to it than that. Paula had dozens of pairs of shoes, most of which she’d brought with her. Erica suspected that Cal was the reason for the trip. Feeling at loose ends, Erica decided to take a stroll down to the dock. The water looked glassy smooth and serene under a brilliant autumn sky. Just as she stepped out the back door of the inn, she saw Joe coming around the corner of the building. It felt like 125
Echoes of the Past her heart immediately leapt into her throat as she watched his easy stride. His body moved with a fluid grace that made her long to feel it against her own. “I heard what happened last night,” he said without preamble. “Small town. Word gets around, I guess.” She knew her tone was cold, but she didn’t care. He owed her an explanation and until she got it… He reached for her, his strong, muscular arms closing around her small waist and pulling her to him. She expected him to kiss her, but he didn’t. Instead he just stared into her eyes, as though searching for something. She wanted to feel his lips on hers, needed the reassurance they offered. But the memory of Lisa Ryan arguing with him on the dock took over and she pulled back. Maybe she should just tell him she saw them. Can’t he figure it out? I mean, when he left like that didn’t he think I’d go looking for him? He was right on my dock, for heaven’s sake. Does he think I’m blind? Or worse yet…stupid? “What’s wrong, Erica?” Joe snapped. “You’ve got something on your mind and I wish you’d just come out with it.” Erica could feel the heat rise in her cheeks, knew they were probably now blazing a bright pink. Anger flared inside of her. How dare he be irritated with her! “I think you’re the one who needs to explain some things, Joe. What is your connection with Lisa Ryan?” She watched as Joe’s eyes narrowed and his jaw 126
Audra Cole muscles twitched. “No answer? I’m not surprised. You know if you’re going to have an argument with someone who is supposed to be a stranger, maybe the dock isn’t such a good place to do it!” Joe continued to meet her challenging gaze. “I figured you saw us. I should have insisted we talk about it last night.” “Talk about what, Joe? More secrets? More lies. More deception….” He grabbed her arms and shook her slightly. “Stop it! I’ll explain. But not if you act like this!” Shocked, Erica just stared at him, her heart hammering in her chest, her breath coming in short gasps. She was angry, yes, but she was also afraid she would lose someone else who had come to mean so much to her. “Then explain,” she finally said, shaking in the wake of the adrenaline rush her anger had caused. “Let’s go inside,” he said, nudging her toward the door. Once they were in the kitchen, Erica stood and waited for him to begin. “I guess I should have told…” Joe began, then stopped as a booming voice from the foyer interrupted him. Edgar Carter appeared in the doorway. “Well, I was wondering where our welcoming committee was. We’re back, and Mimi claims she hasn’t had a decent thing to eat since she was carted away. Any chance of us bothering you for some of those wonderful muffins?” 127
Echoes of the Past The Carters were back, and Erica knew that her talk with Joe would have to wait.
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Chapter Fourteen aula entered the Eagle Hill Cafe and stopped short. It was just a little after eleven, but the place was already nearly filled to capacity. She wondered briefly if the late breakfast crowd was overlapping the early lunch bunch. But then all thoughts of the town’s dining dynamics left her mind as she looked across the room and saw Cal standing beside one of the tables. Seated at that table was Lisa Ryan. She was leaning forward across the tabletop, exposing her ample cleavage. While two waitresses scurried to serve the crowd, Cal stood as though transfixed beside Lisa’s table, as she talked, laughed, and stroked his muscular forearm. He’s enjoying every minute of it! What the hell has she got to say that is so damned funny, anyway? I never noticed her rapier wit when she was screeching like a banshee at Erica and me at the inn. Irritation grated inside of Paula as she watched the two talking. Cal smiled at something Lisa said and she leaned even further toward him, exposing more of her breasts. Enough of this, Paula thought as she started across
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Echoes of the Past the floor toward them. Cal saw her first and the silly smile faded quickly from his face. She glared at him then shifted her gaze to Lisa, who was still staring up at him with a sly grin on her face. Predatory, Paula thought as an unpleasant feeling washed over her. “Paula,” Cal said, his voice sort of trailing off as he realized her attention was not on him but on Lisa. “Mind if I join you, Lisa?” Paula asked, sitting down before the woman had a chance to object. “I hate to see one of our guests eating alone. Besides, I feel awful about what happened earlier with the water. Oh, by the way, your husband did leave you a note, right? He said he did. He’s in Du Bois for the day. Is that on business? This must not be much of a vacation for you, with him gone so much of the time.” Then, she looked up at Cal. “I’ll have iced tea…with lemon.” Paula was well aware of Lisa’s glare, but chose to ignore it, along with Cal’s pleading look. Finally he turned his attention back to Lisa and asked, “What would you like?” Lisa looked up at him and Paula followed her gaze. “Coffee, black,” Lisa snapped. When they were alone, Paula put her purse on an empty chair and sat back, staring across the table. It was Lisa who spoke first. “I don’t remember asking you to join me.” Her voice was a little louder than normal and Paula noticed that several heads turned in their direction as though sensing the tension in the air. Paula smiled congenially. “I know, but here I am, 130
Audra Cole all the same.” Lisa glanced sideways toward the bar, where Cal was pouring Paula’s iced tea into a tall glass. “He’s your man, isn’t he? I saw the way you looked at him and the daggers you threw at me.” He gaze slid back across the table to Paula. Ignoring the intended barb, Paula squared her shoulder a little and asked, “So, how is it you know Joe Lakota?” Paula was inwardly satisfied by the other woman’s look of surprise. “Who said I know him?” It was Paula’s turn to smile. “You must. You didn’t ask me who the hell he is.” But Paula’s sense of inner satisfaction was short lived because Lisa’s reaction wasn’t exactly what she’d expected. Instead of going on the defensive, Lisa smirked, then said, “Cal looks like a strong, virile man who needs a woman with some imagination, someone who can…” She leaned back in her chair, “…someone who can make his dick hard with just one touch and keep it that way. Can you do that for him, Paula? Because I know I can…and I think he knows it, too.” Paula felt herself flush with anger as her chest tightened and her stomach knotted. She clenched her hands together tightly on the tabletop, suppressing the urge to strike the other woman and wipe that smug look off her face. Lisa suddenly stood up. “Enjoy your tea, and tell Cal I’ll be seeing him later.” Then she walked slowly toward the door, her hips swaying seductively. 131
Echoes of the Past Paula followed her progress, noting that all the men were looking at her, some of them stopping midsentence to ogle that tight little ass and those slender, shapely legs. Cal returned to the table, carrying the iced tea and coffee on a tray. “Where’s she going?” he asked, glancing in Lisa’s direction. Paula looked up at him scornfully. “If you’re so worried about it, why don’t you go after her and find out!” she snapped, getting to her feet. Since several heads now turned their way, Paula realized she’d raised her voice quite a bit. Lowering it a decibel, she added, “I’m sure she’d like nothing better than…” Her rebuke was cut off as Lisa reached the door and nearly collided with Joe, who was coming in. In that instant, it seemed to Paula that time stood still. At the sight of Lisa, Joe’s expression turned dark and stormy. Lisa must have said something because his eyes narrowed and he grabbed hold of her arm and turned her around, marching her back across the floor, past the spot where she and Cal stood, and into the kitchen. “What the hell…” Cal began. Then they heard raised voices coming from the other side of the swinging door. Cal headed that way without another word. Paula followed. But when they entered the kitchen, only Manny and Jed, the two short order cooks, were there. Manny pointed toward the back door leading into the alley. “They went that-a-way.” “Yeah, and did Joe ever have a look in his eye,” Jed 132
Audra Cole added with relish. Cal and Paula exchanged glances. It was Paula who finally spoke. “Do you have any idea what is going on?” Cal shook his head. He was studying her with an intense look on his face. “But I’m not worried about that right now. I want to set some things straight with you.” Paula bit back her reply as Cal took her arm and steered her to a table in the corner of the kitchen. Once they were seated opposite each other, he began. “What was that little display all about out front?” Paula felt a brief surge of irritation but pushed it down as she launched into an explanation, which included telling him about Lisa Ryan’s antics over the past couple of days. She ended by telling Cal about the scene Erica had witnessed between Joe and Lisa on the dock. Cal stared at her thoughtfully. “So what’s your take on it?” he finally asked. Paula sighed, beginning to relax now that the conversation was centering on Lisa and Joe and not her own flare-up of jealousy. “She claims to have felt things, seen things. And the water was icy cold for no reason, then returned to normal just like that.” She snapped her fingers for emphasis. His eyebrow shot up skeptically. Paula wanted to tell him about the incident in the basement, but knew he’d probably scoff, putting it down to two emotional females with overactive 133
Echoes of the Past imaginations. “I’ve sensed a lot of…unexplained activity. And don’t look at me that way. You’re Native American, belief in spirits is a big part of your heritage. You should know better than to dismiss what I’m saying so quickly.” She felt her cheeks burn with anger. He really was the most insufferable man. And she didn’t like the way his gaze seemed to bore into her, and that stubborn jaw…then she realized that he was smiling. “What are you grinning at?” “You. What really bothers you about Lisa Ryan, anyway? It’s not that she’s a lousy guest, I’ll bet." “She’s rude and obnoxious. She’s been hell on wheels since they arrived. I don’t see how poor Charles puts up with her. And the way she flaunts herself around, like some hoochie-koochie mama…” Cal let out a chuckle, then got up, went to her and pulled her up into his arms. “You know, woman, if I didn’t know better I’d swear you were jealous.” Paula gasped. “What! Get serious! Jealous of what? That painted-up…?” He kissed her then, and she felt the warmth flow through her. Don’t let him do this. He can’t expect to win an argument by sweeping you into his arms and…. But, as the kiss deepened, she felt her mind lose all thoughts of Lisa, Erica, Joe and the world around her in general, as she gave herself over to Cal and the sweet taste of his lips on hers. ****
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Audra Cole Erica was in the parlor, looking out the window at the barren rose garden when Edgar came down the stairs and joined her. “You know,” he began, his booming voice jarring her out of her reverie, “my favorite season is autumn. Mimi prefers spring, says fall is like the prelude to a death of sorts. Summer dying, winter on the way. Mimi can be quite poetic when she puts her mind to it.” Erica turned and looked at the robust man. He exuded good health and always seemed to have an amused twinkle lurking in his eyes. But behind that, she sensed someone who had seen a lot of misery in his life, although not all of it his own. “I was going to fix Mimi some tea in a little bit. I’ve decided since she’s laid up, I’ll be serving lunch for the two of you and the Ryans, also. I’m afraid it will just be soup, sandwiches, salads, that kind of thing, but I don’t want you to have to run out for food every day under the circumstances.” Edgar beamed. “That’s the best news I’ve heard in ages. Not that I mind the trek into town, but Mimi is fussy about her food.” Erica sat down on the sofa and motioned for him to take a seat. “I know you’re disappointed because you can’t continue your vacation to Erie. I’m so sorry this happened. Do you have medical coverage? The inn will pick up any costs that aren’t….” Edgar held up a beefy hand to stop her flow of words. “Not to worry. My pension has more benefits attached to it than you can imagine. Everything is 135
Echoes of the Past taken care of. And you can tell Mrs. Black that we have no intention of suing. It’s not our style.” Erica sighed. She’d made a decision earlier and now put it into words. “That’s a relief, but I still feel terrible. Your stay here will be free, Mr. Carter. On the house.” When she saw that he was about to protest, it was her turn to hold up a hand. “No arguments. I would like to talk to Mimi though, about the fall.” “I hope you’re not taking what she said about being pushed by some ghost seriously,” he said with a dry chuckle. Erica eyed him thoughtfully for a moment. “There have been some unexplained things that have happened…” Edgar pooh-poohed the whole idea with, “Life is full of unexplained things, dear lady, that doesn’t mean every old house is haunted!” “But some are,” she replied softly. “Well, I heard about the unfortunate thing that happened here a few months ago. It made the wire services. Distressing. Tell me, how is that new chief of police doing?” Erica blinked at him, unsure what his interest in Greg Novak was. “Fine, I guess. I really don’t know much about him. We just met a couple of days ago. Evelyn seems to think highly of him.” “He’s from Plainfield, I understand,” Edgar said. Erica’s brows knitted together. She didn’t recall mentioning that. Maybe Greg had said something about it to Edgar. The phone interrupted them at that point and Erica 136
Audra Cole want to answer it. Paula’s voice was edged with a hint of breathlessness. “I’m staying in town to have lunch with Cal. Want to join us?” Erica smiled inwardly. How like Paula to ask, even if she did want to be alone with Cal. “Can’t. I’ve offered to serve lunch to the Carters for the duration of their stay. So, I’m glad you called. Pick up some more sandwich makings, cheese, cold cuts, you know. And some more potatoes and onions and a variety of gourmet teas.” “Are they suing?” Paula asked in a near whisper. “No. I just had a talk with Edgar.” “Thank God. This streak of bad luck has got to end sometime, and I vote for now!” Erica cleared her throat, trying to keep her voice steady. “Is Joe there, Paula?” There was a slight pause before Paula answered, “He just left. I don’t know where he was going, though.” Erica finished giving Paula the grocery list, then hung up. She checked her watch. It was almost noon. Time to get lunch started. She didn’t expect the Ryans back, so she’d just fix enough for herself and the Carters. Edgar decided to eat with Mimi in their room and helped Erica carry the two trays upstairs. “Oh, this looks wonderful,” Mimi exclaimed from her spot on the bed. She was wearing a lacy blue bed jacket over a matching gown. She’d applied very little makeup and her hair was fluffed out around her 137
Echoes of the Past cherubic face. Somehow, without all the trimmings she looked younger and very vulnerable lying there, propped up by three huge feather pillows. Edgar was, of course, waiting on her hand and foot, trying to anticipate her every whim. He fluffed her pillows, smoothed the comforter, then handed her a glass of iced tea, urging her to take a sip, holding the straw as she did. And when she smiled up at him and patted his arm affectionately, he beamed with pride. They are still as much in love as ever, even after many years of marriage. How do they do it? There was no doubt in Erica’s mind that Edgar would lay down his life for this woman and she’d do the same for him. “Let me help feed you, Mother. Damned awkward with that cast on your right arm…” Edgar began, reaching for the spoon. But Mimi swatted lightly at his hand. “Edgar, I can manage. You sit down and eat. You look a little wane to me. Doesn’t he look tired, Erica? Tell him to never mind me and start worrying about himself. I can eat left handed.” Mimi adjusted the tray on her lap just to prove her point. She sipped at the vegetable soup and signed contentedly. “My favorite. Always. Did Edgar tell you?” “I guessed,” Erica replied, studying Edgar as he bit into the ham and cheese sandwich, then sipped at his iced tea appreciatively. “Did you hear that?” Mimi suddenly said. She glanced toward one of the windows. Erica had heard it. The distinct sound of an animal in distress. It came again, only this time it ended in a 138
Audra Cole high-pitched yelp that made Erica turn and run from the room. She could hear Edgar pounding down the stairs after her. Mingo was at the back door, holding up one front paw and making soft whimpering noises. Erica saw the problem at once. He had a half-inch cut on the pad of his right front paw that was steadily dripping blood. “Is that a wolf?” “Half and half. He belongs to Joe Lakota.” She led Mingo into the kitchen and went to get the first aid kit. While Edgar patted Mingo’s head in an attempt to comfort him, Erica cleaned and bandaged the wound. “That bleeding isn’t stopping. It’s a deep cut. I think it might need stitches,” she finally said. “I’ll phone for the local vet,” Edgar pronounced, “where’s the phone book?” He got up and went toward the office. Erica stood up and motioned for Mingo to lie down. He obeyed at once, then looked up at her with soulful eyes. “I think it would be better if I took him home. Joe probably has someone he uses.” Edgar nodded. “Well, I’ll get back to Mimi, and lunch, then.” Once Edgar was gone, Erica went to get her keys and purse, intending to drive Mingo home, but when she returned to the kitchen, she found that he’d pushed open the back door and was limping toward the dock. Running after the dog, she caught up with him just 139
Echoes of the Past as he was entering the line of trees that bordered the woods. “Okay, so you want to walk home. Mind if I join you?” Erica panted. Mingo slowed his pace, definitely favoring the injured paw. “How did it happen, boy? If only you could talk. Then again, maybe some people wouldn’t like that very much.” The woods seemed less sinister now, with most of the leaves off the trees. There were some evergreens, spruce and firs, of course, but a lot of what had once been lush green foliage now lay on the damp earth like a carpet of crimson, russet and gold. The air was heavy with the smell of drying leaves, pine needles and rotting vegetation. Forest smells. Joe was home. And when she knocked on the door, he answered at once. “You’re just in time for lunch.” He opened the door for her. Then he saw the dog’s bandaged paw. “What happened?” She explained briefly. By now the bandage was soaked with blood. Joe went to get his first aid kit, which Erica noticed, was much better stocked than the one at the inn. In the end, he smeared some strange smelling green salve on the wound, applied two butterfly closures and wrapped the paw with gauze, extending it up several inches on the dog’s leg. “Old Indian remedy,” he said wryly when she wrinkled up her nose at the smelly salve. Erica smiled in spite of herself and began to feel the anger fade away. Then she took a good look at Joe for 140
Audra Cole the first time since her arrival. He’d obviously just gotten out of the shower. His hair was still wet and hung in damp strands over his forehead and down the nape of his neck. He was shirtless and his muscles flexed tightly as he gathered up the first aid supplies then rose from the floor beside Mingo. He was wearing a pair of blue jeans that fit just tightly enough to outline the bulge behind the zipper. He was barefoot. She felt her face grow warm and her body begin to respond to the nearness of him. He would explain about Lisa. It couldn’t be as bad as she was thinking. Their paths might have crossed in the course of his job. There had to be a simple explanation. Besides, the scene she’d seen between them was not a tender one. It was more like a confrontation. As he moved past, she took a step toward him, catching the aroma of soap, spicy and very sexy. She should demand that explanation right now, before things got too hot to handle, but all of a sudden she could only think of being in his arms and feeling his body pressed against hers. Putting down the first aid supplies, he took her into his arms and nuzzled her neck, moved his face up to her hair, kissed her ear, then moved his lips back down to her neck again. His hands caressed her back, then her buttocks, then pulled her so tightly against him she could feel his erection growing against the soft flesh of her belly. Her knees suddenly felt weak as she leaned into the embrace, holding him tightly as his lips sought 141
Echoes of the Past hers. The kiss was full of desire, his tongue probing, searching, and she responded in kind, hungry for the taste of him, wanting more. Erica felt desire well up inside her in a mighty wave. She rubbed against him, spreading her legs a little so he could push one of his thighs between them. She pressed herself down, feeling the thrill course up into her womb as her already swollen clit pushed against the hard muscles of his leg. His hands moved in what seemed like exasperating slowness as her need grew hotly inside her thickening channel. Her panties were already wet, and she silently begged him to hurry and find that spot where release waited. But still he just rubbed her back, kissed her deeply and moved his thigh against her with a measured, steady rhythm. She pulled back and fumbled with his zipper, only to have him remove her hand and hold it firmly in his. He broke off the kiss and stared at her evenly, his eyes dark as coal. “Don’t ever doubt how I feel about you, Erica. Not ever, no matter what,” His voice was low, intense. It flitted through her mind in that instant that he was a man of extreme passions, but also a man who could be dangerous. The thought both alarmed and excited her. She nodded, unable to speak. She just wanted him to take her, now, without another word. Her face felt hot as fire but it was nothing compared to the flames that burned inside her at that moment. He undressed her with a slowness that made her want to urge him on, tell him to hurry. Still, he denied 142
Audra Cole her the privilege of touching him, drawing her hands away every time she tried. When she stood naked before him, he looked at her for a moment, then drew her against “I just want to feel you, to look at you,” he said huskily in her ear. Her breasts pressed against his bare chest, her nipples hard and ready for his mouth. At last he suckled like a hungry infant, pulling, coaxing, licking until she felt her knees buckle. Needles of pleasure shot down to her core. Then one of his hands was between her legs, spreading those tender lips as he pushed his finger up into the silky passage. She felt herself go over the crest as the warmth washed through her and her muscles contracted over and over again. Flushed and out of breath, she collapsed against him. In one swift movement, Joe scooped her up into his arms and carried her down the hallway to his room, depositing her on the bed. The familiar comforter felt soft and smooth beneath her bare back and bottom. He undressed and lay down beside her, his erection still hard, the veins distended along the shaft. She flicked her tongue across her sandpaper-dry lips. “Go ahead,” he said, as though reading her mind. She’d always loved the taste of him. Now she used her jaw muscles, pulling him into her mouth, applying pressure then letting up. She licked the length of him, first one side then the other. Playing her tongue along the top, she savored the warm, thick liquid that now coated the surface. 143
Echoes of the Past Pulling her up on top of him, Joe lifted her over his dick then brought her down hard, thrusting himself into her as far as he would go. Erica gasped in pleasure as she felt herself letting go again. They came together this time, and that made it all the sweeter. **** Erica awoke with a start. Where was Joe? She looked around the empty room. What time was it? Feeling completely disoriented, she sat up and climbed out of bed. Remembering that her clothes were in the living room, she went to Joe’s closet, pulled out one of his flannel shirts and slipped it on. She found him in the kitchen, stirring something in a large cast iron skillet. The smell of onions permeated the air. He was wearing jeans and a longsleeved plaid shirt open down the front and rolled up at the sleeves. His hair was still mussed up. He looked very sexy. “How long was I asleep?” Erica asked, stifling a wide yawn, then smiling sheepishly at him. The table was set and Mingo still dozed by the fireplace. “It’s after three. You had a good nap. Something wear you out?” His lips curled up in a slight smile. “By the way, you look much better in that shirt than I ever will.” He ogled her openly. He went to the refrigerator and got out a large 144
Audra Cole salad bowl heaped with greens. “I never got lunch. Something distracted me.” “Wonder what that could have been?” she asked, feeling completely at ease again in his presence. She loved this cabin. He’d built it himself and the workmanship was amazing. “Well, some sex-starved wench came knocking at my door, obviously in need of…my services, so I felt obliged to….” Joe began. He got no further. She picked up a dishtowel from the counter and swatted at him with it, catching him across his bare midriff. “Ouch!” he exclaimed. “Baby,” she chastised, swatting again. This time he grabbed the other end of the towel and pulled her to him, locking her against him. She rested her head on his chest, listening to his strong, steady heartbeat. “I don’t want anything to ever come between us, Joe.” He pulled back and looked down into her face. “Such as?” “Life. Things. Other people,” It was time for him to explain his connection to Lisa Ryan. Grease spattered in the skillet and Joe kissed her quickly, then drew away. “I think the burgers are ready. We’ll talk while we eat.” But, as before, it was not to be. They were just starting the meal when the phone rang. As Joe took the call, Erica picked at her food, her appetite suddenly gone. When he came back into the kitchen, he looked exasperated. “I have to go up to Masonville on a 145
Echoes of the Past complaint. Sorry.” “Now?” Erica was astounded and a little irritated by this turn of events. “Afraid so. I’ll probably be gone until tonight.” He left the room, returning a few minutes later fully dressed. “Stay and finish lunch. I’m packing up mine to take with me.” Feeling a little like Cinderella when the clock struck midnight, Erica went to the bedroom to get dressed. “I’m not hungry, give mine to Mingo,” she snapped when she returned to the kitchen to find him putting his burger in a brown paper bag. It was close to four-thirty when Erica got back to the inn. The afterglow of her and Joe’s lovemaking had faded quickly during the ride. He’d acted totally preoccupied with the new emergency and she’d finally given up trying to make conversation. And it didn’t help her mood any when he pulled up into the driveway and his gaze slid to the parking area. Looking for that black Lexus, aren’t you, Joe? But it wasn’t there. When he reached for her, she was already halfway out of the Jeep. Then, without saying another word to him, she slammed the door and walked around the vehicle and up the front porch steps. Nor did she acknowledge his, “I’ll call you when I get back if it isn’t too late.” The inn was quiet when Erica stepped into the foyer. She went immediately upstairs to shower, but stopped for a moment outside the Ryan’s door. There didn’t seem to be any movement from inside the 146
Audra Cole room. When she walked by the Carter’s door, she heard loud snoring and the low drone of the television. Edgar sleeping; Mimi watching television. Just as she was about to go into her room to get a change of clothes to take into the bathroom with her, she heard the front door of the inn open and close, then Paula’s voice call out. Abandoning the idea of a nice hot shower for the moment, she went downstairs. “Where is everyone?” Paula asked at once, steering Erica into the parlor and closing the door without waiting for an answer. “The Ryans are still out, I guess, and the Carters are in their room.” Paula paced in front of her and Erica watched her curiously, then with growing concern. “What’s going on, Paula? What’s wrong?” “Sit down. No, don’t. Yes, sit down. We’ll both sit down. I need to tell you something.” Paula sat on the sofa and patted the cushion beside her. Once Erica was seated, Paula began to explain. Erica listened with mounting horror as her friend related the incident involving Lisa and Joe at the cafe. “They disappeared into that alley beside the restaurant before Cal and I could catch them,” she finished. “That woman’s a tramp. She was all over Cal and, well, there’s definitely something kinky going on between her and Joe. I’m sorry, Erica, but I…” Erica had stopped listening as she tried to absorb 147
Echoes of the Past what Paula had just told her. She’d made love with Joe just hours ago, and he never mentioned seeing Lisa earlier that day. Tears sprang to her eyes and her face felt hot. She couldn’t breathe as anger choked off her air, making her chest feel heavy and tight. “Erica? Are you all right? God, you’re pale as the dead,” Paula exclaimed, alarm edging her voice. “Why didn’t you tell me about this when you called?” Erica asked sharply. She threw Paula an accusing look. But she knew her anger was misplaced. It was Joe who had betrayed her. “I wanted to tell you in person. Why? What difference does it make? Have you seen Joe? Has he been here?” “No…I went to see…Mingo was hurt and I took him home. I just got back here a while ago myself,” Erica finally told her. She could feel Paula’s careful scrutiny. “Well, did he say anything? Did you ask…” “We made love. He told me nothing would ever come between us.” Erica said softly, more to herself than to Paula. “Son of a bitch,” Paula muttered, putting a hand on Erica’s arm. “I have to say, this place is quiet. That was the best nap I’ve had in ages!” came Edgar’s voice as he swung the parlor door open and smiled broadly at them. “But I could use a snort. A stiff one. Mimi will have a fit, she’s champing at the bit for supper, but a man needs a drink once in a while. Any suggestions?” Somewhat startled by the man’s abrupt entrance, 148
Audra Cole Erica jumped up and whirled toward the door. Paula went to Edgar. “Why don’t we hit the Eagle Hill Cafe?” Edgar nodded approval. “Sounds like an excellent idea. Just what the doctor ordered, as they say! And I can bring Mimi back some carryout for dinner. What about you, Erica, care to join us while we tip a few?” Erica snapped out of her stupor long enough to say something about needing a shower, which elicited a perplexed look from Edgar. “I guess it’s just you and me, then,” Paula pronounced, taking Edgar’s arm and steering him toward the front door. The large man beamed happily. “Mimi’s watching a movie. Doped up on those pain medications, you know. The only thing she might want before we get back with the food is some tea, so could you keep an ear out for her? She’s a little gun shy about tackling those stairs, now. Small wonder, hey?” Once they were gone, Erica went to the kitchen to lay out the things for Mimi’s tea, just in case. Tears threatened again, and this time she didn’t try to bite them back. He lied! Well, not technically, but isn’t a lie of omission just as bad? He had ample opportunities to tell me what is going on with her and he didn’t. How many more secrets is he hiding? He didn’t tell me about Chenoa back in July, and now he’s keeping things from me again. Next, she checked the front and back doors to make sure they were locked, then went upstairs deciding that a long, hot bath was what she really 149
Echoes of the Past needed. It would give her a chance to think about what she should do about Joe. **** Erica settled into the claw-footed tub. She’d used stress-relieving bath salts, and the smooth fragrance assailed her nostrils as she lay back against the cool porcelain. Her mind was still in a whirl and she could feel the beginnings of a headache throbbing in her temples. The hot water felt good, and she closed her eyes, trying to bring her random thoughts into some semblance of order. Joe had a lot of explaining to do. She’d confront him with it when he returned, and she wouldn’t let anything interrupt them this time. Not even sex. That decision made, she tried to clear her mind and think about pleasant things and soon she felt herself drifting off. Erica wasn’t sure if she’d actually fallen asleep or what roused her from her twilight state, but when she opened her eyes she was in total darkness. Then she heard the unmistakable sound of footsteps on the stairs. They weren’t normal, though, more like the slow, stealthy advance of someone trying to sneak in undetected. As Erica struggled to her feet, she heard a stair tread creak. The movement on the other side of the door stopped, then a few seconds later, continued. Panic grabbed at her. “Who’s there?” she called, 150
Audra Cole her voice echoing in the large, high-ceilinged room. The footsteps hesitated again, closer now. Then she heard another creaking board and knew whoever it was had reached the hallway. Eyes riveted on the door, Erica prayed she’d locked it, but wasn’t sure. As she watched, a bright yellow beam threw its light under the bathroom door. Involuntarily she leaned back as though afraid she’d be caught in the glare. Flailing around for something to cover herself with, she breathed a sigh of relief when her hand connected with soft, fluffy terry cloth. Wrapping the bath towel around her body, she carefully got out of the tub and felt her way to the door. Her eyes had begun to adjust to the darkness and she could make out the bench where her robe lay. Working her way toward it she grabbed the garment and quickly put it on, letting the damp towel drop to the floor. “Is anyone there? Answer me!” she called, louder this time and, she hoped, a lot more assertively. Silently, Erica cursed herself for not keeping a flashlight in the bathroom. Then she heard it, the unmistakable sound of retreating footfalls as the intruder made his way back down the stairs at the same, unhurried pace. Shivers ran up her spine as she stood with her ear against the door. When she finally heard the front door open and close, she turned the key and slowly pushed the door open, peering tentatively out into the darkened hallway. The fuse box was in the basement. No way she was going down there alone. Joe’s directive came back to 151
Echoes of the Past her. If anything like that happens again, call me. Well, where was he now? Walking gingerly toward the stairs, she suddenly stopped as her bare foot connected with the wet, sticky substance on the floor. “Why are the lights out? What are you doing?” Mimi’s voice, coming from just inches behind her, caused Erica to scream and whirl around. As she felt herself begin to fall backwards down the stairs, she grabbed the large, ornate balustrade just in time. A narrow shaft of light bounded around, glancing off the walls and floor. Finally it settled on Erica’s face and she blinked wildly. “Oh, my dear, I’m so sorry. I startled you. Did we blow a fuse?” Mimi asked, as she allowed Erica to grab onto her good arm for support. “See there, I’m not totally helpless, in spite of what Edgar would like to think.” She shone the light in Erica’s face. “Sorry, dear. Goodness you look pale as a ghost.” “You have a flashlight,” Erica croaked. “I always come prepared. Traveling would be much less stressful if people would just pack sensible, useful things.” Erica took the slender flashlight from the woman’s hand and shone it on the floor, where she now stood in a small pool of red liquid. Blood? “Oh, dear, you’ve cut yourself. Is there broken glass somewhere?” Mimi tried to wrest the flashlight back but Erica held tight, her gaze fixed on the gooey puddle. “It’s not my blood. We’ve had an intruder. I need 152
Audra Cole to call the police,” Erica finally said, stepping out of the mess. “Then whose blood is it?” Mimi asked. Before Erica could reply, the front door opened and Edgar’s voice called, “Where are the lights? It’s black as pitch in here.” “Erica, are you okay, what’s going on?” Paula yelled. Relief flooded through Erica. “The fuse box is in the basement, Edgar, please go see what’s wrong. Paula, call the police. We’ve had another prowler.”
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Chapter Fifteen rica and Paula were in the kitchen when a police officer Erica didn’t recognize arrived. He walked with a slow, purposeful gait as Edgar escorted him through the doorway where he stood for a moment, looking from one woman to the other. He was tall, with brown hair cropped short to de-emphasize a receding hairline. His blue eyes were alert, his gaze curious. “I’m Jed Wilson, Spirit Lake PD. Hear you had some trouble tonight, ladies. Mr. Carter sort of filled me in. Everyone all right?” His voice was a deep baritone. Erica met his piercing gaze. “I was here when it happened. My friend was not. I’m fine, but there’s blood up at the top of the stairs. I have no idea who it belongs to. The only other person in the inn at the time was Mrs. Carter, and she was in her room until she heard me in the hallway…” By now Wilson was on his way out of the room. Edgar followed. Erica looked at Paula, who simply shrugged. Ten minutes later, Jed Wilson and Edgar returned
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Audra Cole to the kitchen. “I’ve taken a sample of the blood and a few photos. Where’s your other guests? Mr. Carter tells me there’s another couple staying here.” While he talked he walked toward the basement door, opened it and peered down into the darkness. “I don’t know where they are. Mr. Ryan said he was going to Du Bois. He’s been gone since morning. I don’t know about his wife.” “She was in town earlier today. At the Eagle Hill Cafe. I saw her,” Paula interrupted. Wilson flipped on the basement light and when he saw that it did little to illuminate the stairwell, unhooked a flashlight from his belt and flipped it on. As the officer made his way down the steps, Edgar sat down opposite the women and sighed. “Quite an evening.” “Did Mimi like the carry-out we brought back for her?” Paula asked. Edgar nodded. “She’s happy as a clam, chewing down on the special of the day.” Then he got up. “I’m going to inspect the perimeter. Maybe our prowler left something outside.” Before Erica could mention that maybe the police wouldn’t want civilians tramping around on what could be evidence, he was out the back door and gone. When Wilson reemerged from the basement, he looked around questioningly, but didn’t ask where Edgar had gone. “I’ll get that blood to the lab. My report will be on the chief’s desk when he gets in tomorrow morning.” 155
Echoes of the Past Erica stood up. “This isn’t the first time we’ve had someone prowling around.” She told him about the face she’d seen outside the parlor window. “That could just have been kids. They used to give the Blacks fits, trying to spook the guests, you know running around making scary noises, stirring up rumors of ghosts.” “I think what happened up here a few months ago probably cured the local youths of wanting to visit this place at night, don’t you, officer,” Paula finally said, her voice taking on an edge. Wilson cleared his throat and studied the evidence bag he held in his hand as though it had suddenly become the most important thing in the room. “Call us back if you have any more problems. Someone will get back to you on the blood. You can clean up the mess now.” In the doorway, he stopped and turned around again. “I’ll be looking around outside, so don’t think you’ve got another prowler.” While Wilson was going out the front door, Edgar came in the back carrying a Maglight like the one Mimi had used earlier. “Nothing out there that I can see. I’ll look again in the morning, though. It’s dark as a tomb right now.” Edgar crossed to the basement door and started down the stairs. “You ladies should get some rest. I’m just going to check the fuses one last time to make sure everything is all ship-shape.” Although he tried to make his voice sound casual, Erica heard the undercurrent of concern hovering there. Suddenly she felt very, very cold and more 156
Audra Cole than a little frightened. Paula got some cleaning supplies and headed upstairs to mop up the blood. Charles Ryan came in the front door several minutes later just as Erica was crossing the foyer. “I saw a police car pull out of the driveway. What happened now?” he said, his voice tight and strained. “We had a prowler,” she told him, then added, “but don’t worry, nothing was taken.” “Is Lisa all right? Where is she?” He looked around as though expecting her to come popping out of some dark corner. “She’s not here, Mr. Ryan. I don’t know where she is,” Erica said wearily. He smiled slightly. “Well, that’s no surprise. Lisa’s a night owl. Always has been. You know, I’m surprised you don’t have an alarm system. Even small towns aren’t as safe as they used to be.” He moved past her to the stairs. Erica secured the front door and was walking toward the stairs herself, when the phone rang. For a split second she thought about ignoring it, but then the thought struck her that it could be Joe. The voice on the other end was loud and abrasive. “This the inn? Heard you had some trouble up there tonight. This is Mike from the Spirit Lake Sentinel…got ghosts again? Heard there was blood, too. Also heard people are getting hurt right and left. Want to comment?” Erica slammed the receiver down with a bang. Just what we need. 157
Echoes of the Past “Did I hear the phone?” Edgar stood in the kitchen doorway. He came to Erica and looked at her acutely. “Who was that?” “A reporter. How did he find out about this so quickly?” Edgar snorted in disgust. “Police scanner. They all have them. Vultures. Worse than ambulance chasers.” “Why didn’t he call last night when Mimi fell? I’m sure that was on the scanner. Most ambulance calls are.” “Someone falling down the stairs in the middle of the night isn’t news, but another incident at the same place makes it a matter of interest, I suppose.” Suddenly her legs felt like lead and her eyes seemed to be full of gravel. She needed sleep. Once she was in her room, Erica fished her cell phone out of her purse and called Joe’s number. No answer. Suddenly her imagination ran wild. Was Joe really in Masonville? Where was Lisa Ryan? Were they together? As she undressed and climbed into bed, images of Joe and Lisa ricocheted around inside of her head like a stray bullet looking for somewhere to embed itself.
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Chapter Sixteen rica slept poorly, awakening several times during a night that was plagued by nightmares of masked intruders and ghostly apparitions. Finally, at six o’clock in the morning, she dragged herself out of bed and took a hot, steamy shower. By seven o’clock she was in the kitchen brewing coffee, putting a selection of gourmet teas in a fancy basket and baking muffins. Paula joined her shortly, eyeing her critically. “You look like hell. Did you sleep at all?” Erica surveyed her friend as she went to the coffee pot and poured herself a mug of the steaming brew. “Some. I guess I was too keyed up to really relax.” “Bull. You were worried about Joe, wondering where he was. How often did you call him last night?” It was hard to get anything past Paula. “Twice.” “I didn’t sleep all that well, myself,” Paula admitted, sitting down at the table. “I haven’t since we came here, actually.” “Spirit activity?” Paula looked up at her. “This place has quite a
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Echoes of the Past history, some of it not so pleasant, I’d say. I need to know more about it.” “The past is dead, why rake it up?” Paula looked at her then cocked an eyebrow. “I shouldn’t have to tell you the answer to that one.” It was true. Erica sighed. “I’m sorry. I’m just edgy.” Paula got up and went to the oven, peeking in at the muffins. “We haven’t exactly bolstered poor Evelyn’s business, have we?” Erica managed a weak smile. “Well, our guests are still here.” Paula smiled back. “Maybe it’s our charisma that keeps them.” Edgar Carter came into the kitchen, said good morning, then added, “Just coffee for me right now. I think Mimi might try to come down for breakfast later. I’ll wait to eat with her.” He had the newspaper under his arm and as Erica poured him a cup of coffee he unfolded it and glanced at the front page. “Well, we didn’t make the headlines, thank God,” he boomed good-naturedly. “Mind if I just have my coffee in here with your ladies?” “We’d be honored,” Paula responded, taking the hot muffins out of the oven and placing them on the counter. Erica liked Edgar. She found his take-charge attitude a comfort and was very grateful for all of his help last night during the prowler episode. When she sat down across from him, she told him so. “My pleasure. You know, the police could step up 160
Audra Cole patrols around the inn. I’ll talk to that chief, Novak.” They drank their coffee in silence for a few minutes. Finally, Edgar pushed his chair back and got up. “It’s a beautiful morning, I think I’ll take my second cup and my newspaper down to the dock.” “It’s nippy out there,” Paula warned. “Good! I enjoy a brisk walk, and remember, fall is my favorite time of year,” he told her, as he went out the back door. As Erica began putting the warm muffins in a napkin-lined basket, she watched Edgar trudge casually down the hill toward the lake. He was right; it was a beautiful morning. Under a cloudless azure sky, pinpoints of dew glittered off the blades of browning grass like a thousand tiny diamonds. Then, she saw Edgar pick up his pace, as though something had gotten his attention. When he broke into a trot, Erica forgot the muffins and went to the back door. By then the large man was on the dock squatting down, looking at something in the water. He leaned forward a little, reached out, then quickly got up and backed away. He stood for a moment, looking first to his right, then to his left. “What’s so interesting?” Paula asked, then went on without waiting for an answer. “I’ve put out the muffins, coffee, tea, assorted cereals and some breakfast bars. I think I’ll fix omelets to order today…?” Then she followed Erica’s gaze and said, “What’s he in such a hurry for? I thought he liked chilly weather.” Edgar barreled in the back door and Erica moved 161
Echoes of the Past out of his way. Without glancing at either her or Paula, he went to the small office and snatched up the phone, punching in three numbers. “Police? This is Edgar Carter, a guest at the Spirit Lake Inn. You need to send someone. I’ve just discovered a body in the lake.” **** Erica stood in stunned silence as Edgar finished his phone call. When he finally came out of the office he rushed past her toward Paula, who was about to step outside. Edgar reached her and took hold of her arm. “No. You need to stay here. There’s nothing you can do for that poor woman and you might destroy evidence. My tramping around was bad enough.” Paula exchanged glances with Erica, then came reluctantly back inside. Still unable to comprehend what she’d just heard Edgar say to the police dispatcher, Erica suddenly found that her legs wouldn’t hold her. The next thing she knew, she was sitting on a kitchen chair with her head between her knees and Paula was pushing a glass of water into her hand. “Who is it,” Paula asked. “I believe it is Mrs. Ryan,” Edgar replied, “but the…she’s floating on her face and I can’t be sure.” “My God,” Erica managed, her mind reeling. Suddenly she felt sick all over. **** 162
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Edgar went back to the lake to, as he put it, “oversee things until the local authorities get here.” Paula paced back and forth between the dining room and kitchen, keeping a watchful eye out for Charles Ryan. Erica, her stomach in knots and her heart skittering around in her chest like a butterfly, stood on the back porch watching the tall, robust man on the dock. “We should go knock on their door. Maybe Lisa is in there, maybe it isn’t really her...” Erica began, then stopped. Deep down she had a feeling Edgar had definitely recognized the body floating in the water as Lisa’s. The arrival of Greg Novak was a welcome relief as his squad car came into view on the narrow gravel path that ran along one side of the inn at the bottom of the hill. Only then did Erica feel she could go out the back door for a closer look at the activities below. Greg and another man, also in uniform, got out of the car and walked toward Edgar, who was now standing in the grass with his back to the water, watching their approach. The other man was shorter than Greg, with light hair and a strut-like walk. While Erica wasn’t familiar with the entire Spirit Lake police force, she did know that it now had several new members, thanks to Greg Novak’s ability to convince the town council to increase the department’s budget. Charles Ryan’s voice from the back porch, along with Paula pleading with him to wait, caused Erica to spin around and move toward the man. “You 163
Echoes of the Past shouldn’t go down there, Mr. Ryan,” she began, but he marched past her and kept walking. Paula and Erica followed him, but when they got to the bottom of the hill, an officer stepped in front of them, blocking their path. “That’s far enough,” he said with authority. Now that Erica was closer, she saw that he was very young and that his eyes were a bright green with small yellow flecks dancing around in the irises. His mouth was set in a thin line and his jaw clenched in determination. “You’ll have to step back. Now.” Erica and Paula did as they were told, but Charles Ryan did not. “What the hell’s going on here?” he demanded. Erica detected a little edge of panic in his tone and felt Paula grab her arm. Her fingertips were icy. The officer held out a hand but didn’t touch Charles. “Step back with the ladies. Do it!” Reluctantly, Charles obeyed. Greg was now at the water’s edge, examining the object that was floating just out of their field of vision. When he got up and turned around, his face was a grim mask. He said something in a low tone to Edgar then motioned for the young officer to join them. Edgar broke away and joined the trio. Shortly, Greg approached them. “Bobby Ray is calling for the county coroner,” he said, and Erica turned to watch the other officer hurry toward the police cruiser. “Mr. Ryan, Mr. Carter has tentatively identified your wife as the person in the water. I’m very sorry, 164
Audra Cole sir, but I’ll need you to make a positive identification.” Erica noted that Greg’s voice had taken on the smooth, solicitous quality of a funeral director’s. “Dear God. It can’t be. Not Lisa. No, I don’t believe it!” He tried to rush to the water’s edge and nearly fell. “Steady, man. Take it easy.” Edgar took hold of Charles’ arm and escorted him onto the dock. Erica watched as Charles looked down into the water, then nodded his head. “I thought she was face down,” Erica said idly, to no one in particular. Bobby Ray, his call completed, was now standing next to behind Erica. “We flipped her over. Now, we’ll fish her out. No need to wait for the coroner to pronounce that one. I got some great photos, too.” Erica turned, threw the little officer a look of distaste, and moved away. During the awful episode in July, it had crossed Erica’s mind that perhaps the inn was somehow cursed. Then, when the truth had finally been revealed, her fears had been laid to rest. Now, those same thoughts were whirling around inside of her head. Evelyn’s fall, Mimi’s fall, the strange episodes involving Lisa Ryan here in this house and now this. Suddenly, Erica realized Paula was saying something to her. “Edgar has taken Charles into the parlor. I think we should join them.” But Erica seemed incapable of moving. “Oh, Lord, 165
Echoes of the Past Paula. What are we going to do?” Erica felt helpless to stop the steady stream of catastrophes that were befalling this quiet little inn. She’d been entrusted with running it; Evelyn had placed its welfare and the welfare of its guests in her hands. Now look. Then she felt Paula’s hand clutching her arm again, guiding her up the hill and into the house. Like a sleepwalker suddenly wakening, she felt her selfcontrol return. She was in charge here. Evelyn had entrusted the inn to her. It was time she took responsibility. As they crossed the foyer, Erica noticed two things: The tall flower arrangement was again on the floor and Mimi was making her way slowly down the stairs. “Take care of her, will you…and that,” Erica said to Paula, flailing her left hand first toward the portly woman then dropping it to the mess beneath the pedestal table. Without waiting for her friend to respond, she opened the parlor door and stepped inside. What greeted her was the sight of Charles slumped in one of the armchairs and Edgar standing by the fireplace, hands clasped behind his back, staring down at the man. Or, rather, towering over him. She went to Charles and bent down. “I’m so sorry, Mr. Ryan…” she began. “Charles was just trying to remember when he last saw his wife,” Edgar interrupted, his tone almost harsh, as though she’d walked in on a very important conversation. 166
Audra Cole Charles seemed to stir, then looked up at Erica with an expression of desolation. “I’ve been away a lot…I can’t…Where is that cop?” He got up quickly and made for the door. Edgar’s voice was cool, calm. “I wouldn’t do that, Mr. Ryan. Why don’t you come back and sit down. I’m sure Mr. Novak will be in soon to talk to you. In the meantime why don’t we get back to what we were discussing.” Thank God Edgar is here. He’s obviously no stranger to sudden death and its aftermath, Erica thought. She also noticed that he’d referred to Greg as Mr. Novak, not the chief or even Chief Novak. Charles seemed to hesitate, as though he couldn’t decide exactly what to do, then he returned to the chair and sat down. Mimi’s plaintive tones could be heard on the other side of the parlor door, arguing with Paula. Then, the door was flung open and the small, round woman came gusting into the room. “What has happened, Edgar? Paula said someone drowned in the lake…Mrs. Ryan….” Then at the sight of Charles sitting there she stopped, a look of mortification spreading across her face. Erica stepped forward and eased Mimi out of the room and into Paula’s care again. Then, without a word she came back inside the parlor and closed the door Edgar was speaking to Charles, “…the last time you saw your wife, Mr. Ryan?” Charles was now on his feet again, glaring at 167
Echoes of the Past Edgar. “What the hell are you driving at?” Color had returned to the man face and Erica almost breathed a sigh of relief. At least now he was showing some signs of life. “Just asking what the police will want to know, I’m sure,” Edgar said mildly. “I was in Du Bois all day yesterday. I left early…she was still asleep…I left her a note…” “Did she tell you what she intended to do yesterday? Did she have any friends here?” Edgar pressed. Erica almost stepped in, but decided against it. She wanted to hear the answer to that one herself. Charles looked at Edgar incredulously. “Friends? We’re on vacation. She didn’t know anyone here.” Erica found herself holding her breath and when she finally exhaled, the sound filled the silence and both men looked at her. Charles whirled around. “You have a question, too?” Erica braced herself for a blow without really knowing why. “Mr. Ryan, we’re only trying to…” Edgar began, but Greg Novak’s arrival stopped him. The police chief’s tone harbored a challenge as he opened the door. “What’s going on here?” “You tell me!” Charles demanded. Greg eyed Charles then shifted his gaze between Edgar and Erica. “I’d like to talk to Mr. Ryan alone.” Erica immediately started to leave, her hand connecting with the knob. 168
Audra Cole Edgar, however, hesitated. “I might be able to help, if you’ll let me, Mr. Novak.” Erica turned and stared at them. “And why would I need your help? Did you see what happened to Mrs. Ryan?” Greg’s voice was level but edged with irritation. Edgar cleared his throat. “You and I never met in our official capacities, Mr. Novak, but I know who you are.” “Really? How so?” “Maybe I should clarify matters. I was a homicide detective with the Plainfield Police Department for many years. I retired about eight years ago.” Plainfield? Erica felt something tug at her memory. Then she remembered that Greg had mentioned when they first met that he’d once been with the Plainfield Police Department. She looked at the chief, noting that his face had paled somewhat. But when he replied, his voice was strong. “I don’t remember hearing about you…” Edgar interrupted with, “Oh, but I remember hearing about you, Mr. Novak.” Greg seemed to draw himself up, squaring his shoulders as he faced the other man. “I’ll keep your offer in mind. And, it’s Chief Novak. Now leave so I can talk to Mr. Ryan.” Erica, who had watched the exchange with mounting dismay, finally spoke. “Mr. Carter, your wife is asking for you. Why don’t we join her and Paula.” Edgar nodded, passed Greg without looking at 169
Echoes of the Past him and followed Erica out of the room. **** In the foyer, Mimi was fretting and Paula was trying to placate her. “Breakfast, Mimi, let’s go,” Edgar said heading for the dining room. Paula’s eyes were bright with curiosity. “What happened in there?” “There’s something between Edgar and Greg. Something from the past. Edgar was a cop!” When she saw Paula’s eyes widen, she added, “Retired, evidently from the Plainfield PD.” “Why didn’t Greg say something before now, or Edgar for that matter?” “Greg says he doesn’t remember Edgar. Evidently Edgar has been retired for a while. But he remembered hearing about Greg. That’s how he put it, anyway.” Paula shook her head. “More secret pasts.” “What’s happening down at the lake?” Erica had half a mind to go see for herself. “The coroner took Lisa away, but that short cop is still down there, along with some woman officer.” Erica turned and hurried through the kitchen and out the back door. When she reached the bottom of the hill, she hesitated, watching the pair who were talking by the water’s edge. Yellow crime scene tape was strung from one lamppost to another, blocking off the area where Lisa 170
Audra Cole had been found. The sight of it caused chills to run up Erica’s spine. Suddenly the lake seemed like a desolate place with no warmth and no appeal. After a few seconds, the woman looked up. She was about two inches shorter than Erica with thick, curly shoulder-length black hair and luminous brown eyes framed by long, thick lashes. Her nose was so perfectly straight that it added an angular dimension to an otherwise pretty face. “Are you Erica?” Her voice was low for a woman but her enunciation was perfect. “Yes. How much longer will this tape be up?” Erica hated the sight of it. Before the woman officer could respond Bobby Ray, stepped up. “When did the Ryans check in?” “Three days ago. They were scheduled to leave tomorrow…” Erica’s voice trailed off as she realized that Lisa Ryan would never see tomorrow. “Well, she checked out a little early, didn’t she?” Bobby Ray said, his gaze boring into Erica. “I’m Lehna Redhawk,” the woman said, extending a hand. “Bobby Ray and I will be here for a while gathering evidence, so please don’t come onto the dock or near the water until we’re finished and tell the other guests the same.” Bobby Ray assessed Erica carefully. “You’re the one stirred things up last summer, aren’t you? I heard all about that one.” Lehna turned to her companion. “We’re here about this murder, Bobby Ray, so let’s get back to work.” Erica started. “I thought she drowned.” 171
Echoes of the Past Bobby Ray stepped closer and Erica fought the urge to shrink away from him. “She was murdered. Strangled. Maybe in the woods over there, then dumped in the water. Know anyone who would want to do that?” Erica felt dizzy and fought for control. Lisa murdered? Joe. No! He couldn’t. He wouldn’t. “I didn’t really know her very well.” she finally managed before turning the hurrying up the hill.
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Chapter Seventeen reg was waiting for Erica in the kitchen. “Let’s
Gtalk,” he said, taking a chair.
She sat down opposite him. “First of all, about the prowler last night. The lab results came back; it was pig’s blood.” Erica couldn’t hide her shock and didn’t try. Her jaw dropped and she could feel her eyes widen. “That was no ordinary prank. Someone is trying to terrorize us. And I wouldn’t be surprised if that other prowler we had was the same person. My only question is why? You don’t suppose there’s a connection between the prowler and Lisa Ryan’s death, do you?” “We’re looking carefully into that angle. I understand Mrs. Ryan wasn’t exactly thrilled about being here. You had problems with her?” Greg asked. Erica had been expecting the question. “I think she was the one who had problems with us. She didn’t like this place very much. In fact she made it clear she didn’t want to be here. She claimed something touched her in the bathroom a couple of days ago, then she was taking a shower yesterday and the water turned icy cold. She was furious. She threatened to 173
Echoes of the Past report us, sue, whatever else she could think of. She hurled insults around like confetti. All in all, I don’t think she was a very happy person.” “Was there anyone else here she might have confided in?” Joe? He knew her from somewhere. Where? When? How? “I doubt it. She spent most of her time away from the inn. Is it true she was strangled? One of your officers said…” “It looks like she was killed in the woods, then her body dumped in the lake. We couldn’t find any indication that the killer tried to weight her down, either.” Not like the last time, Erica’s inner voice reminded her. “Where is Charles now?” She should go and see if there was anything she could do for him. “In his room. He said he needed to make some calls, notify people. Where’s your partner? I need to talk to her.” Erica shrugged. Just then Edgar entered the room and answered the question. “Miss Bascilla is with my wife in our room. Mimi is devastated by this. She’s still not up to snuff since her accident and this has sent her over the edge, I’m afraid.” “Well, I’ll be able to talk to both of them, won’t I?” Greg snapped, passing the older man. Then he turned around and added, “I’ll be needing to talk to you, too. After all, you did find the body, didn’t you? Tell me, what made you go down to the lake so early this morning, anyway?” 174
Audra Cole Although Greg’s voice was casual, Erica noticed how sharp his gaze was as he stared at Edgar, waiting for an answer. Edgar studied Greg for a moment his expression a mixture of bemusement and chagrin. “Since we had a prowler last night, I decided to take a look around.” Greg nodded, but said nothing. However, Erica could tell that he was not satisfied with that explanation. Once Erica was alone with Edgar, she breathed an audible sigh of relief. “Are you going to tell me why there’s so much animosity between you and Greg Novak?” “If you can scare me up a good stiff drink somewhere around here,” Edgar bargained. “This early?” Edgar smiled. “Extraordinary circumstances, dear lady. A beer will do just fine.” He motioned for her to stay put while he fetched two tall bottles and two glasses, then returned to the table. Erica felt on pins and needles. “You could use this,” he said, pouring hers and pushing it across the table. He poured his own and took a long swallow. “Hits the spot.” “Greg Novak?” Erica reminded him, sipping at the foam atop the yellow liquid. Beer wasn’t her favorite drink, in fact, right now she would have preferred a double Scotch, but this would have to do. Edgar settled back and began, “I retired in 1997 from the Plainfield force. I was a homicide detective from 1986 until that time. Greg Novak was just a 175
Echoes of the Past patrolman then. He and I never met, but they still tell his story around the precinct and, of course, I read about in the newspaper and heard more particulars from friends who were still on the job when it happened. He was on patrol one evening in August of 2001 when he stopped a local man for a traffic violation. He suspected the fellow was drunk. When he got out to approach the car, the man drove away like a bat out of hell. Novak ran back to his squad car, jumped in, and followed him. “The chase, sans sirens, lasted about five minutes until the man, whose name was Bud Collins, pulled into a driveway. Come to find out, it was his own house, which was information Novak got from his onboard computer when he typed in the license plate number. “Anyway, Collins staggered inside and Novak pulled up to the curb in front of the house. Shortly, Collins came back out, brandishing a hammer and ran up to the squad car, where Novak was sitting, reached in through the open window, grabbed Novak’s shirt front and raised the hammer. Novak drew his revolver and shot the man in the abdomen.” Erica felt her palms grow moist and her face flush. “My God.” “You’re not a police officer, so you can’t begin to know the violations of protocol Greg Novak committed that day. Suffice it to say they were numerous. Collins was rushed to the hospital in critical condition. They operated on him for eight hours trying to repair the intestinal damage. They did 176
Audra Cole as good a job as they could, but he was going to be faced with complications that would probably require further surgeries.” “But, Greg was threatened…he was just defending himself…” Erica began, then stopped at the stormy look on Edgar’s face. “The internal affairs people didn’t exactly see it that way. They evaluated Novak’s behavior during that episode and concluded that, first of all, he should have called for backup the minute Collins pulled off like that, and second, he should have pulled the squad car up behind Collins’ vehicle to block any escape route, then exited the squad car so he could be in a position to apprehend the perpetrator.” Erica didn’t miss the insinuation. “They thought he was afraid to pursue the man, that he acted like a coward.” Edgar smiled mirthlessly. “In a word, yes. And they questioned why he didn’t call for backup when Collins went inside the house. He just sat in the squad car. He claimed he was making out his report and that he intended to go knock on the door when he was finished.” “And you? What did you think?” “I felt he acted unwisely and left the department open to numerous lawsuits, which is just what happened. Collins sued the Plainfield Police Department for over six-hundred-thousand and won. Greg Novak resigned two months later.” Erica thought a moment. That incident had been four years ago. He’d only been here a few months. “I 177
Echoes of the Past wonder where he was between then and now?” Edgar took another drink of his beer. “Good question. Who hired him?” “The town council, I assume. There are only five members, including the mayor. I don’t know any of them. I just know they were desperate to get someone in here. At least that’s what Joe told me….” She stopped, her words trailing off. “Ah yes, the park ranger. Where is he, anyway?” Edgar finished his beer, took the bottle to the trash then rinsed the glass in the sink. Again, she had the feeling the question, although asked casually enough, had purpose behind it. The ringing of the phone cause Erica to jump and part of her beer sloshed over the top of the glass and ran down her hand in cold, foamy rivulets. Please don’t let it be Evelyn. I just can’t tell her about this yet. “Should I get that?” Edgar queried, throwing her a questioning look. Erica shook her head and rushed to the phone, snatching it up and saying a breathless hello. The sound of Joe’s low, sexy voice cut through Erica like a knife, sending tears behind her eyes and flutters around her heart. “I had to stay in Masonville a lot later than I expected…” he began. Swiftly, she cradled the receiver and turned toward Edgar. “Wrong number, I guess.” With that, she fled the kitchen, afraid if she stayed any longer she would lose what little bit of self control she had left.
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Audra Cole **** Erica encountered Paula on the stairs. “Where you going in such a hurry? You all right? Come here,” Paula said in rapid fire succession, steering Erica toward the parlor. As they passed through the foyer Erica noticed that the flowers still lay in disarray on the floor. “Isn’t anyone going to pick these things up?” she snapped, grabbing them and jamming them into the vase, which she slammed down on the tabletop with a clang. Looking toward the ceiling, she yelled, “Quit it, whoever you are! If you have something you’re trying to tell us, this obviously isn’t working and we’re getting damned sick and tired of your cheap tricks! Get a new routine or leave us alone!” Erica felt her insides recoil. Great, now I’m talking to the dead. Lisa’s among them. Will she haunt this inn, too? “Well, that should get our resident spook’s ectoplasm stirred up,” Paula commented. Bracelets jangling up and down both arms and her multicolored skirt swishing noisily against her legs, she ushered Erica inside the room and slammed the door. “Have you called Evelyn?” Erica shook her head. “I’ve been putting it off.” “Well, should we draw straws?” Erica smiled in spite of herself. “I’ll do it. Just give me a while to work up my courage. What did Greg ask you?” “He wanted to know when I’d last seen Lisa Ryan. I had to tell him about what happened at the cafe 179
Echoes of the Past between her and Joe. That got his interest, believe me. I’m sorry, but it would have come out anyway, since Cal and about a dozen other people saw it.” Erica felt her stomach sink. Then the anger returned and she tried to push her feelings for Joe to the back of her mind. Too bad I can’t banish them from my heart. “Oh, and another thing, Charles Ryan says he has no intention of leaving Spirit Lake or the inn until this matter is cleared up.” Paula told her. “I doubt if the police want anyone leaving town right now anyway,” Erica responded. Before Paula could respond, the front door slammed and Joe could be heard yelling Erica’s name in the foyer. “God Almighty, here comes Daniel into the lion’s den,” Paula exclaimed opening the parlor door. Erica stayed where she was, watching as he looked over the threshold at her, his eyes dark as coal, his jaw muscles working furiously as though he were holding back a tidal wave of anger. What’s he got to be mad about? I’m the one who’s been lied to. Joe’s gaze flickered between the two women. “Why are the police here?” Now, Erica stepped forward and faced him, holding his gaze with one she hoped was just as determined. “Because your friend, Lisa Ryan, was murdered and her body was found floating in the lake this morning.” Her tone was bereft of emotion. Joe literally took a step back. “What? 180
Audra Cole “Shocked by her death, or surprised that I know about your relationship with her, Joe, which is it?” Erica demanded. “I don’t…didn’t have a relationship…” He stopped in mid sentence and rubbed a hand over his face. As she watched him, she thought of how those hands had felt on her naked body, tugging at her nipples, caressing her face and neck, moving down to that soft spot between her thighs. Images ran pellmell through her mind, as she replayed their lovemaking in a fast-forward collage. Erica blinked several times, trying to get her mind back on track. But it wasn’t easy, because just being in the same room with Joe conjured up desires she found very difficult to keep under control. “I can explain, Erica, just…” he began. Greg’s voice cut into the conversation. “Well, while you’re at it, Joe, maybe you could explain some things to me.” Joe whirled around and faced the chief. “Lisa’s really dead?” Erica stared at Joe. Lisa’s dead. Not Lisa Ryan. Not even Mrs. Ryan. Lisa. Familiarity that went beyond casual contact was evident in just those two words Joe had uttered. Greg nodded. “Not just dead, Joe, murdered. Strangled. The coroner just called me on my cell phone. He puts time of death at two o’clock this morning.” Erica thought of the call she’d made to Joe at one o’clock that had gone unanswered. 181
Echoes of the Past “But that’s not the only interesting piece of news,” Greg continued, stepping closer to the group. “It seems that during a background check on the victim, Officer Redhawk discovered that Lisa Ryan was once Mrs. Joe Lakota.” Erica heard a gasp, then realized it had been her own. The room suddenly seemed too bright, the voices too sharp. Things were moving in half-time, or slow time, or something equally bizarre. Then she was sitting on the sofa and Paula was sitting beside her, a protective arm over her shoulder. A glass of water was thrust into her hand and Paula helped her tip it to her lips. Joe was at her side, reaching for her. “No! Don’t!” she cried. Joe knelt in front of her. “I was going to tell you just before Greg came in. I know there’s a lot I need to explain…” “Well, you can start by explaining it to me. Down at the station. Let’s go,” Greg ordered. Erica saw Joe throw a pleading look Paula’s way. “You should have been honest with her long ago, Joe. Don’t look at me for help, now,” was Paula’s stony reply. The arrival of Cal Motega brought Paula to her feet as Greg was getting ready to escort Joe from the room. “I just heard about the murder. It’s all over town. The cafe is buzzing. Where’s he going?” Cal asked as Joe and Greg walked past him without a word. “To the police station for questioning,” Paula 182
Audra Cole replied. Erica got up and headed toward the door. Things were so out of control This was like some horrible B movie where no one could make sense out of the convoluted plot. With Paula’s voice calling after her, she kept walking, through the foyer, out the front door and down to the police cruiser, where Joe now sat in the back seat. Like a criminal. Like a murder suspect. His gaze begged her to give him a chance, and she could feel the desperation behind the expressionless mask that was his face. She leaned in the still-open car door and looked closely at him. “Was she your wife?” He returned the gaze, strong, steady. “It was a long time ago. I was just a stupid kid. Give me a chance to explain…” She was going to ask him if he killed Lisa Ryan, intended to pose that question next, but she couldn’t bring herself to do it. She didn’t need to. She already knew the answer. “I’m following you,” Cal yelled at Joe as Erica stepped back so Greg could shut the car door. Erica turned to Cal. “Did you know about Lisa Ryan and Joe?” Cal nodded. “Let Joe explain.” Let Joe explain. Erica walked up onto the wide front porch, sat down on the top step and wept bitterly, her shoulders shaking, her sobs echoing loudly in the late morning air. She wasn’t sure exactly when Edgar sat down on the step beside her, but there he was all of a sudden, 183
Echoes of the Past just waiting quietly for her to notice him. “I’m sorry, Edgar…” she began. But his hand on her forearm stopped her. “Get it all out, my dear. Sometimes tears are the best medicine.” “I should see if Mimi needs anything…” “Mimi is napping. This excitement has exhausted her.” A small smile turned up the corners of his mouth and Erica felt a rush of affection for this stalwart couple, who had managed to turn a disastrous vacation into something of an adventure. “I should see if Paula needs help…” Again Erica mouthed the words but seemed incapable of rising to carry out the task. “She’s on the phone with Mrs. Black, I believe.” Erica looked over at Edgar again and grimaced. “I should be making that call…” “Why don’t we just sit her a few more minutes and enjoy the warmth of the sun and the cool breeze? In fact, I wanted to talk to you about something.” Erica felt a surge of relief, akin to a death row inmate getting a last minute reprieve. Edgar continued, “I’m curious about the strange things that you and your friend have encountered since you came here. Mind telling me about them?” She was glad to talk about that. Anything but Lisa Ryan and her death. “Paula sensed something the minute she walked into the inn. She said the place was alive with spirit activity, which when you think about it is pretty funny. Anyway, we kept finding the flower arrangement in the foyer tipped over…flowers 184
Audra Cole scattered everywhere, pictures on the piano in the parlor turned facedown, even though no one had been in there, Your room is always cold, another signal of spirit activity, according to Paula. Lisa Ryan claimed something touched her in the shower, and later there was the incident where the water turned cold and we found no reason for it. When we went down into the basement to look at the water heater we had a strange experience. Something was there, but not there. Then there was the prowler, who left pig’s blood as a calling card. There was a face outside the parlor window one night when Joe and I were in there and we heard weeping coming from the rose garden, but no one else was there.” Edgar remained silent for a few moments after she finished, then said, “You also had experiences when you were here before, didn’t you?” She told him about what had happened, how she’d become a believer in the apparitions that had made themselves known to her during the summer. “Your friend, Paula, fashions herself more than just a believer,” Edgar commented. Paula emerged from inside the inn and settled on the other side of Erica. “Evelyn is devastated. She says this may finish the inn. She’s convinced that just the publicity alone will be enough to make people want to avoid it like the plague.” Edgar scoffed. “Tell Mrs. Black not to worry. People will flock here now, just to get a glimpse of the crime scene and to stay in the haunted inn.” “You think people are ghouls?” Paula asked, 185
Echoes of the Past looking across Erica at him. “I know they are. Thirty years on the force taught me that, along with a lot of other things about my fellow man.” Cal called an hour later to tell them that Joe had been released with a warning not to leave town, not even to carry out his duties as a park ranger. Shortly thereafter, Charles Ryan came downstairs and out onto the porch while Erica was sweeping the front walk. He stood on the top step for a few seconds, then said to no one in particular, “Seems I didn’t know my wife at all.” Then, he walked briskly to the parking area, got in his car and backed it out. As the Lexus pulled smoothly away, Erica went inside to change her clothes. She’d made up her mind; she was going to the cabin to see Joe.
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Chapter Eighteen ingo stretched languidly and got up as Erica approached the dock and it occurred to her that he’d probably come with Joe earlier and had been waiting for him to return. The crime scene tape was gone now and she wondered when it had been removed. Instead of walking onto the weathered planks, however, she stayed in the grass and skirted the area until she reached the edge of the woods. “Come on, Mingo, Joe’s at home. Let’s go see what he has to say for himself,” she called to the canine. He started toward her, stepping off the dock and into a section where the grass met the water with no barrier to separate the two. She was glad to see that he was barely limping now and that the paw was unbandaged. Joe’s salve must have worked its magic. Too bad there’s not some magic potent that could solve this mess. Expecting Mingo to be right behind her she was surprised when she looked back and saw him sitting at the water’s edge. Does he still smell death there? “Okay, you’re as stubborn as your owner, I see. I
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Echoes of the Past guess you’ll come home when you get hungry.” She found Joe on the narrow front porch putting in storm windows. Seeing him doing something so normal in the wake of recent events made her breath hitch in her throat. He had on a short-sleeved shirt, since the weather was still unseasonably warm, and his arm muscles rippled as he lifted the plate glass and fitted it into the waiting frame. The shirt was thin and she could also see the muscles of his back knot with the movements and manipulations required to secure the fixtures. A surge of desire rushed to her core, and she knew then that no matter what, she belonged to him. Even if he’s a murderer? She willed that small voice to stop, shrieked at it inside of her head. He’s not a murderer. He could never do something like that. Never. “You going to stand there all afternoon and watch me struggle with these damned things, or are you going to help?” he asked in that same deep, carefully paced voice he’d used that first night she’d met him on the dock by the lake. Memories of that encounter came rushing to the forefront and she again felt the pull that had been born that night. She’d wondered, after he had virtually disappeared into a bank of mist, if she’d imagined him. But he was very real and he was hers; she knew that to be the one truth in all of this madness. “Are you going to tell me about Lisa?” Erica said, closing the gap between them. He turned, staring down at her from the porch and 188
Audra Cole without a word, held out one hand. She took it, felt him coax her up the three steps with a tug and guide her easily into his arms. “Yes,” he whispered in her ear, his breath hot and moist against the side of her face. He smelled of pine and sweat and that tangy aroma that she’d come to associate with him. When he released her and turned to go inside, she held onto his hand as though it were her only lifeline to what really mattered in this world. Yet fear, deep and clumsily buried, was peeking around the corner of her thoughts as she followed him inside the cabin. He motioned her toward the sofa. She sat down. He got them both a cold beer from his refrigerator, uncapped the bottles and handed her one as he sat down next to her. Erica took a drink of the cold liquid. Joe took a long swig, then put his down on the thick pine coffee table and began to speak. “It was 1988. I’d just graduated from U of Pittsburgh. A couple of my buddies suggested we have a blow out…you know, go somewhere to celebrate. We picked Las Vegas. Lisa was working as a cocktail waitress in one of the casinos. We were just three guys out for a good time, trying to sew some wild oats before we had to get down to the business of earning a living. We’d all had part-time jobs during college, but we knew those days were over, and we’d now be challenged with putting four years of knowledge to practical use. “Anyhow, Lisa and I hit it off. The other guys said 189
Echoes of the Past she was just after bigger tips, but I could tell by the way she looked at me, her body language, that it was more than that. There was…we…God, Erica, how do I say it?” Erica interrupted with, “You wanted her and she felt the same.” Her matter-of-fact tone surprised even her. Joe nodded, his eyes again taking on that look of someone remembering the past. “Yeah, that was it. We flirted all evening, I pinched her bottom, she let me. Then, the guys wanted to go to another casino, you know, try their luck there. I stayed; told them I’d see them back at the room, later. Of course, I didn’t. Lisa whispered to me that she got off at two o’clock. I waited. We set about having some fun of our own. We drank, then drank some more, and when I woke up the next morning at her place, there was a marriage license on the night table. The Forever Chapel of Love. When I could finally remember bits and pieces of what had happened, I realized we’d had sex in some damned doorway behind one of the casinos, then ended up at that chapel being married by someone name Boscoe Fontaine who Lisa said looked enough like Elvis to be his twin.” Erica felt sick and took another drink of the beer, hoping it would at least dull the pain that had knotted itself around her heart. Joe looked at her for a moment as though trying to gauge her reaction and she made a real effort to keep her expression neutral. “So, there we were, hung over, two virtual 190
Audra Cole strangers, now married to one another. We batted it around half the morning as to whose fault it was. She said that I suggested it. I know better. But I had no way of knowing for sure. I told her we’d get it annulled before I left Las Vegas, which was supposed to be in two days. That’s when she dropped the bombshell. She wasn’t sure she wanted an annulment. “I went, as they say today, ballistic. I told her I didn’t give a damn what she wanted. Then I left. When I got back to the hotel room, there was already a message waiting there from ‘my wife’ telling me to call her at once.” The thought struck Erica like a physical blow and she put her beer bottle down on the table with a clang. “You were still married to her when she died?” Her stomach roiled, threatening to heave up the foamy liquid all over Joe’s nicely upholstered sofa. Serve him right if I did. In fact, I hope that’s what happens! Joe was shaking his head emphatically and Erica felt the world right itself again and her stomach settled down to a dull roar. “No. I got the annulment early the next morning and Lisa gladly signed the papers, after I forked over five thousand dollars.” “What! That’s extortion.” Erica felt a wellspring of fury rise up inside of her. Joe smiled humorlessly. “She called it proportionate alimony. She said it should also cover her emotional distress.” Erica stared at Joe, unable to speak. 191
Echoes of the Past He continued, “I had the money wired from by bank account.” “She conned you. She was no better than a…” Erica sputtered. “Yeah, I know,” Joe cut in, his mouth set in a grim line. “Anyway, I packed and left that day. I’d had enough of Las Vegas. I told the guys I’d received a call about a job offer and needed to get back right away so I didn’t miss the opportunity.” “And that’s the last you saw of her until she walked into the kitchen at the inn?” Erica asked, studying his face intently. “Yes. I couldn’t believe it when she walked into the kitchen at the inn. When I followed her out onto the dock, she’d regained her composure. I could see the old, cunning Lisa emerging. She asked me why I was at the inn. I told her none of her business. She laughed and said she’d seen the way I was looking at you.” “Blackmail?” “Not then. I asked her what she was doing there. She said she was with her husband. When I asked her if he knew about our short and not-so-sweet marriage, she laughed and said that Charles didn’t care what she did as long as it didn’t cost him money.” The next day, at the cafe, she demanded twentyfive thousand not to tell you about us. I told her I intended to tell you myself, so she could take an ad out in the paper for all I cared. Then I hustled her out the back door. The last time I saw her, she was stomping down the alley toward the street.” 192
Audra Cole Erica mulled over what she’d just heard. According to Joe, he had no motive to murder Lisa, but the police would, most likely, put a different spin on it. “You have to see how this could be made to look, Joe,” she finally said. She searched his face for some sign that he was lying, but didn’t find it. He reached across the small space that separated them and ran a finger down her cheek. “All I care about right now is what you think.” She pulled his hand away from her face and held it, intertwining her fingers in his. “I’m scared.” He seemed stricken. “Of me?” She shook her head. “For you.” When he pulled her toward him she went willingly, sliding across the small expanse of sofa. Turning slightly so she could hold him, she felt his hands caressing first her hair, then slipping down her back, with slow, gentle strokes that both soothed and excited her. His touch held a promise of better things to come and she began to feel herself relax for the first time that day. “You don’t ever have to be afraid with me. You’re safe here,” Joe whispered in her ear. She slid her hand to his chest, wedging it between their bodies and felt his heart beating strong and steady. When their lips finally met, she moaned and clung to him as the familiar warmth of arousal flooded through her. She was already moist, could feel the walls of her vagina begin to ache as they thickened. She moved onto his lap, straddling him, her knees digging into the couch cushions on either 193
Echoes of the Past side of his hips. He was already hard for her; she could feel the heat through his jeans, where his cock pressed tightly against the rough, thick material. The top she wore had buttons and Joe began to tug at them, one after the other until he was finally able to slide the silky material off her shoulders. It dropped behind her and when he quickly undid her bra, it also fell away, exposing her breasts to his urgent touch. He kissed her neck, moving to her nipples and she tugged at his hair, locking his head in place against her bosom. It felt so wonderful as his tongue rolled across those hard nubs, lips tugging gently at them, pulling them out to rigid points. “Your pants,” she gasped, tugging almost savagely at his belt buckle. When it wouldn’t budge, she pinched the tender skin of his abdomen, finding only a scant amount of skin to pull on, since his muscles were well developed there. He got the message—she needed help with the belt. A low chuckle emerged from his throat as he deftly undid the silver buckle, then moved his hand out of the way so she could finish the job. Then, so quickly that it nearly took her breath away, Joe swung her off of him, stood and picked her up in his arms, facing him. She clamped her legs around his waist as he carried her down the hallway to the bedroom. Once they were on the bed, all remaining clothing seemed to come off in a frenzy. She was hungry for him, longed to taste every inch of him. Joe usually had a slow hand when it came to their lovemaking, but today he, too, seemed almost frantic as he pulled 194
Audra Cole her skirt down then her panties. All of her nerve endings seemed to be electrically charged as his lips found the tender parts of her body, nibbling, licking, pulling. She moaned more than once as he worked his way down to her inner thighs, then parted her lips and found her clit. She felt the pressure build, the heat rise and begged for release. Joe lay back and pulled her on top of him, kneading at her breasts as they hovered close enough to his mouth for him to reach out with his tongue and lick them. And oh, how she wished he’d do just that. She got up on her knees and hovered there for a moment, smiling a little wickedly at him, then brought herself down, sheathing his cock with velvety walls that were dripping with her cream. He arched his back, tensed his neck and grasped her hips tightly as she rode him to an orgasm that rocked her senses. An ecstasy bordering on pain erupted inside of Erica as she felt Joe’s hot cum flood her vagina. “Oh, please, don’t let it stop, I need all of you…more…more…” Erica cried. But it did end and as the fire made its way from her cunt outward through her muscles and finally erupted as perspiration that coated her skin in a fine sheen, she collapsed in his arms and sighed with satisfaction. **** The banging on the door jarred Erica from sleep. She was curled against Joe, her head resting on his left 195
Echoes of the Past shoulder, her arm draped across his rigid abdomen. “What the hell?” he groused, sitting up. She fell away from him with reluctance, thinking at first that it must have been Mingo, pawing at the door. Then the second knock came and a gruff male voice shouted, “Police! Open the door.” Erica glanced at the bedside clock and was shocked to see that it was after four in the afternoon. Quickly, she gathered her clothing and headed toward the bathroom. A glance over her shoulder told her that Joe was hastily pulling on his jeans. “Damn it,” he muttered as he passed her in the hallway. Erica went into the small bathroom and locked the door. When she emerged a few moments later, hastily thrown together, she found Joe standing in the middle of the living room holding a document in his hand. Bobby Ray Dunn was in the kitchen, pulling open drawers and cabinets and Lehna Redhawk was pulling couch cushions onto the floor and running her hand around under the place where the seat met the back. “What’s going on here?” she asked, going up to Joe. “Search warrant,” he replied his voice tight with anger. “What?” She felt her heart skip a beat or two as the impact of what was happening finally registered. “Duly obtained and executed warrant to search these premises,” Bobby Ray said, swaggering into the room. I’ll get the…” He looked Erica up and down, 196
Audra Cole then smirked as he continued, “…bedroom. Don’t you two bother straightening it up….” Erica felt her cheeks flush and she saw Joe’s jaw muscles clench so hard that they spasmed with the effort to control his temper. Lehna straightened up from her task and eyed Erica. “He’s a dick,” she said matter-of-factly. “How long will this take?” Joe demanded. “As long as it takes, Mr. Lakota,” Lehna replied mildly, moving on to the bookcase against the far wall. She pulled open the enclosed bottom and squatted down, searching it thoroughly. “What are you looking for,” Erica ventured, trying to keep her voice steady. “Proof that Mr. Lakota’s wife was in this cabin, and it looks like I just found it,” came Bobby Ray’s voice from the hallway. He strutted into the room dangling a large gold loop earring between his thumb and forefinger. Erica turned around just as Bobby Ray came up behind her. “Doesn’t look like your style,” he said holding the shiny earring up to Erica’s earlobe. He looked pointedly at the pair of diamond studs she was wearing. “I’ve never seen that before,” Joe protested, meeting Erica’s piercing gaze. “Not even on your wife, Ranger Lakota?” Bobby Ray taunted. Erica felt the earth shift again, and her heart began beating wildly inside her ribcage. She felt hot, then 197
Echoes of the Past cold, then hot again. “Don’t believe them, Erica,” Joe said, touching her arm. She was ready to pull away from him, but when she saw the look of true bewilderment in those deep, dark eyes, she knew he wasn’t a good enough actor to fake it. “That earring proves nothing,” she said stonily. “You can’t even prove it’s her….” Bobby Ray’s sneer sent a chill racing down Erica’s spine. “Matter of fact, looks like a match to the one she was wearing when she was found floating in the lake. All we have to do is match the DNA that’s bound to be on the post and there will be no doubt it was hers,” he said. He dropped the earring into a plastic evidence bag, wrote something on the outside and put it in his jacket pocket. “Bagged and tagged,” he added, with a wink. “You’re going to have to come with us again, Mr. Lakota,” Lehna said, motioning toward the door. Then to Bobby Ray, “You want to finish up, search the bathroom and back porch. And bring Joe a shirt from his closet, he can’t go out like this.” She appraised Joe’s bare chest appreciatively. Beyond being embarrassed by these two, Erica got her purse and pulled out the cell phone. “He’ll get his phone call down at the station,” Bobby Ray said over his shoulder. “Well, unless I’m under arrest, too, I’m entitled to make as many phone calls as I want, whenever I want. Don’t you have a bathroom to search?” Erica 198
Audra Cole nearly shouted. Then, turning to Lehna, “Sure you got everything in the kitchen? Maybe we have M-16s hidden under the floorboards, planning to overthrow the US Government or something. Better check, wouldn’t want that to slip through the cracks, would we?” Her anger spent, Erica pushed the buttons on the phone’s keypad and waited. “Paula? Erica. Joe’s being taken in again. Is Cal there? Good, tell him to call that attorney he was talking about. I think he needs to step in.”
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Chapter Nineteen hen Erica returned to the inn, she found Paula and Edgar at the kitchen table sipping drinks and talking. “Did Cal call the lawyer?” was her first question. Paula nodded. Edgar got up and mixed Erica a drink. “Bourbon and water. You need this,” he told her, pushing the glass into her hand and guiding her to the chair next to Paula. “What happened?” She told them, and when she got to the part about Joe being taken in for questioning again, her eyes filled with tears. “An earring,” Edgar said thoughtfully. “Did they say exactly where they found it?” Erica thought for a minute. “I heard that little prick, Bobby Ray, tell Lehna that it was under the bed.” Edgar got up. “I think Mimi and I will go to the Eagle Hill for dinner. It’s nearly five-thirty, I’m sure she’s hungry.” “We can fix you something here, Edgar, if Mimi isn’t up to going out,” Paula offered without
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Audra Cole enthusiasm. “It will do us good to get out,” he pronounced as he left the room. “He’s running his own investigation,” Paula told Erica. “Why?” “Because he thinks Greg Novak is incompetent. He told me about what happened with Greg years ago.” Erica nodded. “I have my doubts now, too.” “But no doubts about Joe?” Erica stared at her friend, then replied, “He didn’t kill that woman. He couldn’t have. I can’t believe he’s capable of something like that. Plus, he had no real reason. He called her bluff on that blackmail attempt.” “You only have his version of what happened,” Paula reminded her. Erica’s cheeks flamed red. “And that’s all I need to hear.” Paula nodded, as though that was good enough for her, too. “Cal feels the same way.” **** It was after ten o’clock when Erica finally heard from Joe. He’d been questioned but had remained silent once his attorney arrived. “Then we came back to the cabin for what he called a strategy session. Never thought my life would be reduced to having strategy session with an overpriced lawyer over a bottle of Jack Daniels. You want to come over? I’ll pick you up.” 201
Echoes of the Past Erica could hear the weariness in his voice. More than anything she wanted to hold him, comfort him, tell him she believed in him and it would be all right. Instead, she heard herself saying, “I think we both need some rest.” The few seconds of silence on the other end of the phone line seemed like an eternity and when he spoke again she could hear the disappointment in his voice. “I guess you’re right.” Her heart was breaking, but Erica had no more to give Joe tonight. She was bone weary and emotionally wrung out. “I’ll see you in the morning, Erica.” “Yes, in the morning,” she parroted. As she was hanging up the phone, she heard his “I love you” drift past her ear and off into space.
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Chapter Twenty rica had slept heavily and awakened feeling groggy and lethargic. A cold shower revived her somewhat and she arrived downstairs at eight-thirty to find Paula in the dining room. The smell of coffee and something cinnamony made her mouth water. “I just put out cold cereal, cinnamon toast and bagels. I doubt if anyone will be very hungry this morning,” Paula told her. Erica poured the strong, black coffee into a mug and sipped at it without adding cream or sweetener. “The Carters not down yet?” she asked Paula. “I heard them moving around when I passed their door, but no sign of them yet.” A knock at the back door was followed by Joe’s voice, calling her name. “We’re in the dining room,” she called back. With him was a tall, lanky African American man in a dapper looking navy blue suit, white shirt and red tie. His close-cropped hair was sprinkled with gray and his chocolate-brown eyes had an amused twinkle lurking behind a sharp gaze that took in everything around him.
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Echoes of the Past “This is Clyde Proctor, my lawyer He wants to look around down at the dock and talk to both of you,” Joe said by way of introduction. Clyde held out a well-manicured hand for Erica to shake, then moved on to Paula. His bushy eyebrows shot up and down for emphasis as he said, “Pleasure to meet you two ladies. Joe tells me you can be a big help in this case.” Paula pulled her hand back. “I don’t see how.” Proctor exhibited a toothy grin, emphasizing the mustache and goatee he sported, and Erica was at once reminded of an evangelist preacher she’d once seen at a tent revival when she was about twelve years old. Her grandmother had insisted she go. The man glad-handed the crowd then worked them up into a frenzy with his Bible-thumping and shouted amens. The whole thing had frightened her a little, seeing how easily people can be led around by smooth words coming from slick orators. Erica was sure that Clyde Proctor was a master at that game. “I’ll be representing this gentleman. He’s a member of our State Park Services Department and a highly respected community businessman. I don’t know what the police think they’re doing,” Clyde said as though outraged. “Have you known Joe for a long time?” Paula put in, cocking one eyebrow. Clyde exhibited a wolfish grin and Erica shivered slightly. “Tell you what, I’m heading down to the lake. I understand she was actually killed in the woods, so 204
Audra Cole I’ll be looking there, too. Joe, you stay here. I need to take my time, reconstruct what might have happened. I’ll be back to talk to you lovely ladies, and anyone else here who might be able to help. Joe, you can let me know who that might be and maybe get them down here.” Once the attorney was out the door, Joe held up a hand. “Don’t say it. I know. But Cal swears he’s the man for the job and right now I need all the help I can get. I’m not allowed to leave town, which means I can’t do my job, which means I need to call the Park Service and put in for some leave time.” Just then Edgar and Mimi appeared in the doorway. “There’s someone down on the dock.” Mimi announced. “Joe’s attorney,” Paula told them. Edgar advanced into the room. “What did the police ask you?” Joe threw him a quizzical look, but answered. “Why I killed my ex-wife. Then they wanted to know how the earring got under the bed, but of course they smirked enough so I got the message that they thought they knew exactly how it got there. At that point Mr. Proctor showed up and that was it, no more questions. He hustled me out the door with his ‘charge my client right now or he walks’ speech, and we walked.” “So now Mr. Proctor is down at the lake looking for exactly what?” Edgar queried. Joe shrugged. 205
Echoes of the Past Erica took a good look at Joe. The dark half moons under his eyes were testimony to the fact that he’d had a sleepless night. He needed rest, but most of all, she suspected, he needed peace of mind. **** Clyde descended on Edgar and Mimi while they were eating breakfast. Erica marveled at how Edgar handled the man’s flamboyant gestures and colloquialisms with a calm, measured response. Mimi, on the other hand got caught up in Clyde’s theatrics and was nearly in tears when the couple left for a day in Plainfield. Paula, who had eyed Clyde with something bordering on disdain from the moment she’d met him, answered slowly, as though weighing each response carefully. She told him about the exchange at the cafe between Lisa and Joe, then fell silent. “Why were you there?” Clyde asked. “What?” “Why were you at the cafe that morning? Aren’t you supposed to be helping Miss Parkhurst run this inn in dear Evelyn’s absence?” “I went to see Cal.” “Cal Motega, the other owner? What’s your connection with him?” “We’re…friends.” “Lovers?” “What? I don’t see where…” 206
Audra Cole “Never mind. I have my answer. Now, what was Lisa Ryan doing when you walked in?” “She was at a table…talking to Cal…” “Flirting?” Paula shifted in her chair. “I don’t know if I’d call it that…” “Then what would you call it?” Erica bit at her lower lip as the exchange went on. “Did you have words with her?” Clyde pressed. Paula hesitated just long enough to give rise to speculation. “We talked,” she finally said. “About what? The weather, fashion, yogurt flavors, television heartthrobs, what?” Paula stood up. “I think we’re finished here.” “No, we’re not!” Clyde was on his feet, also. His vehemence caused Erica to gasp and Paula to plop back down in the chair. “I didn’t kill Lisa Ryan,” Paula mouth was set in a stubborn line. “I didn’t say you did. But if we can prove that other people had motive, it’s enough for reasonable doubt,” Clyde said with satisfaction. Next, he turned his gaze on Erica. “The long suffering girlfriend. When did you really find out about Joe’s marriage to Lisa Ryan?” “What?” Erica, completely caught off guard, shot a glance at Joe, hoping for a rescue from the attorney’s intense questioning, but got nothing. “When the police told us,” she finally replied. It sounded lame, but it was true. “Really? I wonder. A jury might, also. I hear you 207
Echoes of the Past had several incidences here at the inn involving Lisa Ryan and that she even threatened to sue.” Erica couldn’t deny any of it so she simply nodded. “Made you angry, didn’t it? Then you find out that she’d actually been Joe’s wife. His wife!” Clyde flailed both arms into the air and Erica was once again reminded of that tent revival preacher. At that point Paula got up and left the room. Erica, however, seemed rooted to the spot where she stood, unable of moving. “She was difficult.” “Difficult!” Clyde fairly shouted. “She was a bitch! She was mean, spiteful and…and…she’d gotten there first where your lover was concerned. Beat you to him, had him, been privy to that connubial bliss!” Joe stepped forward. “Stop it! That’s enough!” Clyde got up and faced his client. “No, it isn’t. Not if you want to be cleared of these charges.” “You’ve never even asked me if I did it,” Joe grumbled. “Doesn’t matter to me! My job is to defend you and get you off. Which I will, whether you did it or not. Truth is, I don’t even want to know.” With that he gathered up his things, shoved them back into his attaché case and headed toward the back door. “I have an appointment, but we need to meet later today. And I’ll need to talk to Charles Ryan at some point.” But that message didn’t need to be delivered. For, at that moment Charles came into the kitchen. To Erica he looked somewhat better, his eyes were clearer, his skin not as sallow. He was wearing a pair 208
Audra Cole of tan chinos and a red pullover sweater. “I’m back. I just wanted someone to know,” he said to the room in general and no one in particular. “Are you Mr. Ryan?” Clyde asked, extending a hand. Charles took it then replied, “Yes, who are you?” “I’m looking into your wife’s death.” Erica noticed how skillfully Clyde avoided mentioning his name or real profession. “God. I’ve been in Pittsburgh, making arrangements and seeing her parents. But, I will say one thing, the drive down there was therapeutic. Do you know when Lisa’s body will be released?” “Not yet. But, we do need to talk, Mr. Ryan.” Erica glanced out the back door as movement caught her eye, and saw Paula walking toward the dock. Then her attention was drawn back to the conversation as Clyde asked Charles some wellplaced questions about his relationship with his wife. “Did you know she’d been married to Joe?” Charles shook his head, then threw Joe a look that Erica found difficult to decipher. Joe sought out Erica with his eyes and met her gaze steadily. She drew comfort from that. “I may need to talk to you again,” Clyde told Charles as he told them goodbye. Halfway expecting a confrontation to erupt between Charles and Joe, Erica was relieved when Charles announced he was going to his room to make some business calls. “Let’s take a walk,” Joe suggested, holding out his 209
Echoes of the Past hand for her to take. She hesitated just a split second, but it was enough to bring that hurt look back into his eyes. She felt a fist clench her heart. The morning was cool and crisp, and they walked hand in hand without speaking until Paula met them on the hill. “You’re not going to believe what I found,” she began, then held out the object for them to examine. It was mud-caked and the stone in the center had lost its luster, but even with all the water damage and mossy film covering parts of it, Erica could see that it was an exquisite brooch. “Where did you find this?” she asked, taking the piece from her friend’s hand. “Over there in the mud, by the water, near the woods.” Where Mingo was sitting yesterday when I couldn’t get him to follow me, Erica thought as she tried to brush away some of the silt. The brooch was about two inches in diameter with delicate filigree surrounding a central stone. She couldn’t tell what the stone was. “This has been in the water a long, long time.” “Indeed it has. I’m going to take it inside and try to clean it up, so we can see what we’ve got here,” Paula told them, as she took the brooch from Erica and continuing her journey up the hill toward the inn. “Come back with me to the cabin,” Joe said as they reached the edge of the woods. She slipped into his embrace and nuzzled his neck. “I can’t.” “It’s not because you doubt me, is it?” 210
Audra Cole His expression was so intense, his gaze so piercing, she almost wanted to shrink back, but didn’t. “One thing your lawyer said was true, I’ve been given the responsibility of running the place in Evelyn’s absence. We’re in crisis and I need to be here.” “Can I check in?” A slight smile turned up the corners of his mouth. Just then, Mingo appeared and nuzzled Erica’s hand. “Where have you been?” she asked. Joe pulled Erica into his arms, kissing her soundly. Then he released her and signaled for the dog to follow him into the woods.
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Chapter Twenty-One rica was confused. All around her people were running, shouting, but she couldn’t seem to see the reason for the commotion. It was as though she was in a fog, unable to move, speak or even see. Then she realized she was trapped, someone or something was holding her down, making it impossible for her to…wake up! Dreaming. She was dreaming, and the more she tried to pull herself up from the recesses of the nightmare, the more difficult it was to do so. The explosion was deafening, followed by another, then another. “No! No!” she cried. As though catapulted out of bed, she jumped up and ran to her door. Edgar, fist raised to deliver another blow to the ancient wood, shouted, “There’s a fire! The garden….” Erica, clad in a pair of jersey sleep shorts and top, ran out into the hall, just in time to see Paula disappearing down the staircase, fire extinguisher in her hand. “Oh, Lord. Do something, Edgar. The whole inn could go up…this old wood…oh, Lord!” Mimi cried
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Audra Cole from their bedroom doorway. The smell of smoke permeated the air and when she reached the bottom of the stairs, she saw Paula flinging open the front door and flying out onto the porch. “I’ve called 911,” Edgar shouted, close behind her. They hurried down the porch steps, making their way past the parked cars, then stopped in their tracks. Even Paula, who was obviously intent on battling the blaze with one of the inn’s heavy duty extinguishers, seemed to realize that it was no match for the inferno they now saw. The gazebo was ablaze, bright orange flames licking at the night sky, lighting up the entire garden. In the eerie glow, the skeletal rose bushes seemed to Erica like bony arms beseeching the heavens to save them. Some of the bushes were on fire and the fountain seemed in imminent danger. “We have to do something!” Paula shouted, moving forward. But Edgar was quicker and grabbed her arm, restraining her. “The fire department is on its way, I hear the sirens,” he said, holding fast to her. Erica heard them also now, their sirens cutting through the night like the shrieks of the damned. As the heat intensified, they stepped back, then moved to the front porch as the fire department arrived and began to battle the blaze. Erica stood transfixed, watching the ghastly scene unfold before of her. The firemen worked as a team, unrolling hoses, hooking them to the tank truck, 213
Echoes of the Past carrying the heavy snakes across the lawn. The cars were in the way. Why didn’t she think to move the cars? But the men found a way to work around them with an efficiency that seemed perfectly choreographed. Their shouts competed with the crackling of the flames as wood split and fell away from the once-beautiful structure, hitting the ground and nearby bushes. When the roof collapsed it seemed to happen in slow motion, as it hovered in mid-air for a moment, then lowered itself almost gracefully onto its foundation. “Anyone hurt?” came a voice from somewhere behind Erica. She turned to see one of the paramedics who had helped take Mimi away the night of her fall standing at her elbow. “Anyone need medical attention?” he repeated. Erica just shook her head. Paula put the fire extinguisher down on the porch and leaned against the building. Next came the police. Jed Wilson, the officer who had taken their report on the prowler was accompanied by Greg Novak. Obviously Greg had been rousted out of bed by this one, and looked it. His hair was half-combed, his eyes puffy, his face unshaven. He was not in uniform, but wore a pair of jeans and a red sweatshirt. “Everyone accounted for?” he asked, his voice gravely and none too pleasant. The words ‘this time’ seemed to be hanging on the end of his question even though he didn’t say them. 214
Audra Cole “We’re fine, Novak,” Edgar replied, his tone almost matching Greg’s. Mimi, who had been hovering in the doorway, now came to Edgar and leaned against him. “Where’s Mr. Ryan, then?” Greg was looking at Erica for an answer. “Right here. What the hell is going on?” said Charles, coming out the front door. “Surprised you could sleep through all of this,” Greg commented. “My room’s on the other side of the building…and I took a sleeping pill.” Silence followed the statement. Finally Erica spoke, her voice quivering. “Some of those rose bushes were over a hundred years old.” Paula came to her, laying an hand on her arm. “Easy. Let’s go inside and let them finish out here. If Chief Novak wants to talk to us he can do it in there. I’m freezing and you’re shivering.” With that, Paula shepherded Erica into the kitchen. Greg wasn’t far behind them, with Charles on his heels. “I want to know what you’re doing about getting Joe Lakota charged with my wife’s murder. I thought you arrested him, but he was here yesterday morning.” “He was never actually arrested, Mr. Ryan,” Greg replied, taking up a position by the door as though he thought one or all of them might try to flee. Edgar joined them. “I’ve sent Mimi back upstairs. She’d like some tea. If one of you ladies will put on 215
Echoes of the Past the water, I’ll take it up to her.” “Already on to boil,” Paula told him nodding toward the stove where the large teakettle was beginning to make gurgling noises. “Answer me,” Charles went on, facing the chief. “Why isn’t he in jail?” “Mr. Lakota has representation now,” Edgar looked steadily at Charles’ Charles produced a scowl. “Figures.” Erica wondered what he meant by that, but remained quiet. She thought it best not to antagonize the man any further. Just then Jed Wilson came into the kitchen and looked at Erica. “Fire’s out. Afraid your gazebo and about half of the garden are gone. Sorry, ma’am.” Erica felt the knot that had been in her stomach expand up into her chest and throat. She fought back the tears, even though she knew they were shining behind her eyes and that everyone in the room could tell she was on the verge of crying. “I need to know where everyone was when the fire started,” Jed began. But it was obvious that Charles wasn’t about to be cooperative. “How the hell do you know when the damned thing started? I’ve been asleep for hours and that’s where I’m going right now…back upstairs for another sleeping pill!” Erica watched him stomp from the room and a heartsick feeling washed over her. Then, the abrupt, high-pitched whistle of the teakettle cut through the silence and Paula hurried to snatch it from the burner. 216
Audra Cole She poured water into a mug, dropped in an Earl Grey tea bag and handed it to Edgar. At that moment, one of the fireman, his face grimy and soot coated, came to the back door and asked to see Greg. Erica turned to Paula. “My God, what do we do now? I think I need to close the inn. Surely the guests won’t want to stay after this.” Paula squeezed Erica forearm. “It’s not up to you whether we close the inn or not. That’s Evelyn’s decision.” Erica groaned. “Oh, I can’t face telling her about this, on top of everything else.” Greg Novak’s voice as he spoke to Jed, carried across the kitchen loud and clear. “Go get crime scene tape from the cruiser. Rope off the garden.” He turned back to Erica and Paula. “This was an arson fire. They found a partially burned plastic gas can in the rubble.” Edgar had rejoined them just in time to hear the chief’s revelation and stopped in the doorway. Erica then saw him step aside, back to the wall, as though not wanting to invite Greg’s attention. “Looks like your prowler might of stuck again,” Jed told Erica, as he went to do what the chief instructed. Then Greg turned to Edgar with an I-knew-youwere-here look on his face. “I heard you were at the cafe today, asking questions about Lisa Ryan. Why?” Edgar struck a casual pose, almost too casual in Erica’s opinion. “Curious. Old habits die hard, I 217
Echoes of the Past suppose.” “See that this one dies a quick death,” Greg shot back with feeling. “Stay out of my murder investigation. You have no authority here. And don’t even think about sticking your nose into this arson case, either.” “You think they’re connected?” Edgar asked, his gaze boring into the chief. “You do not need to worry about what I think,” Greg responded, pacing the words evenly, emphasizing each one equally. “Are we clear?” Then, Edgar smiled. “Crystal.” Greg stared hard at the other man for a moment longer, then turned to Erica. “Give Jed your statements when he’s finished outside” Once Greg was gone, Edgar, Paula and Erica sat down at the kitchen table. “You’ll need to find out who carries the insurance on this place and turn in a claim at once.” Edgar told Erica. She nodded, still trying to make sense of it all. “If you and Mimi want to go somewhere else…you only have a few more days until the doctor releases her, anyway…” “We’re here for the duration. We discussed it already. I’ve got some definite ideas about this case and intend to pursue them,” Edgar vowed. Paula chuckled. “I guess you weren’t listening to that part where Greg said stay out of his investigations, huh?” Edgar returned her smile. “I’m old. Guess my 218
Audra Cole hearing isn’t as good as it once was.” **** Twenty minutes later, when she finally went upstairs to go to bed, Erica encountered Charles in the hallway outside the bathroom. “Mr. Ryan, I’ll understand if you want to leave the inn. This can’t be an easy place for you to be right now. Of course, you’ll get a full refund…” she began. But he cut off her words with an impatient wave of his hand. “If I don’t stay and see that they arrest Lakota, it won’t ever happen. I know he’s a friend of yours, but he needs to pay for what he did to my wife. That so-called chief of police of yours is lazy and rest of his force are yokels. I learned one thing in the business world and that’s why I’m successful…apply pressure in the right place at the right time and you get the desired results. And that’s what I intend to do here!” Erica bit back the response that lingered on her tongue. It would do her no good to defend Joe to this man. He was still reeling from the loss of his wife, and the secret she kept from him. Someone had to pay. Joe was the logical choice. Suddenly, Erica felt both mental and physical exhaustion overcome her and after a quick goodnight to Charles, hurried to her room, where she fell into bed, welcoming the oblivion of sleep with open arms.
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Chapter Twenty-Two rica awoke abruptly, her heart pounding, her body drenched in perspiration. She sat up and glanced at the clock on the night table. It read seven o’clock. Light filtered through the windows chasing away the previous night’s shadows. Dragging herself out of bed, she groaned as memories of the fire came back to her in a rush. The gazebo gone, the lovely old rose garden virtually destroyed. It was like a nightmare, only she was awake. The hot, pulsing shower did little to dispel the gloom that shrouded her as she thought about what had happened in the past forty-eight hours or what might lie ahead. She’d have to call Evelyn and break the news to her this morning before she heard about it on some newscast. As she pulled on a pair of jeans and a sweatshirt, she also thought about Joe and how she was going to deal with all that was happening in his life. Like it or not, what effected him, had an impact on her. She loved him. It was that simple. For better or for worse, she loved him.
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Audra Cole When she went downstairs, she found the front door ajar. Stepping outside, she was struck by the smell of burnt wood. The acrid stench permeated the early morning air. Charred remains, she thought and shivered. Rounding the corner of the wrap-around porch to take her first look at the damage in the daylight, she saw a man walking amongst the debris. Then she saw that Edgar was with him. She waved, hoping to get Edgar’s attention, but he seemed too engrossed in his conversation with the man to notice her. She turned around and walked toward the porch steps noticing for the first time the car marked ACART, Allegheny County Arson Response Team. The arson investigator had arrived. Paula came out the front door holding two steaming mugs. When Erica raised a questioning eyebrow, accompanied by a hopeful look that one of the hot drinks might be for her, Paula said, “For the guys. Sorry. There’s plenty in the dining room, though, along with muffins, eggs, sausage and fresh fruit.” What a blessing Paula had been, and still was through all of this. Erica sent up a silent prayer of thanks that she had such a good friend. Once inside, she was surprised to find Mimi in the dining room, partaking of the breakfast buffet with gusto. She was wearing a tan pantsuit with an offwhite blouse. Her hair was styled in the softer do, framing her plump face like a coppery halo. She smiled as she tried to spread butter on her muffin left221
Echoes of the Past handed. “My arm itches like crazy. Edgar says that means it’s starting to heal. I suppose that’s a good thing, but God is it driving me crazy!” “You look very nice today. It’s good to see you up and around.” Erica poured some coffee and sat down opposite the plump woman. “I have a doctor’s appointment today in Du Bois, with the specialist who set my arm.” She got up and piled more fresh fruit on her plate, then scooped some more eggs out of the chafing dish. “Edgar’s out there making a pest of himself with that man from the fire department.” “I saw them,” Erica said, idly stirring sweetener into her coffee. “Have you called Mrs. Black yet?” The phone rang just then and Erica started, dropping her spoon onto the white linen tablecloth, where it made an ugly brown stain. With a feeling of dread, she went to answer it, afraid it might be Evelyn. But it was Greg Novak wanting to know if the arson inspector had arrived. “He’s outside now. Do you want to talk to him?” Erica asked. “No. I’ll see him when he’s finished. Uh…I’m here with Evelyn, Erica. I’ve told her about the fire.” Erica was silent for a moment, then said, “I’d like to talk to her.” Evelyn’s voice was soft but steady. “None of this is your fault, Erica. We’ve obviously been targeted by vandals. I just don’t know why.” “I’m so sorry. Do you want us to close the inn?” 222
Audra Cole “I’ve given it some thought. There aren’t any more guests schedule for a week or so. Let’s see if we can get things cleaned up by then. Hopefully, that poor woman’s murder will be out of the headlines soon. I just don’t want whoever this is to win, Erica. I won’t be run out of business!” The resolve in Evelyn’s voice gave Erica hope and bolstered her courage. She had a feeling Greg was in part responsible. “I expect the Carters to leave soon anyway, and I can’t see why Charles Ryan would stick around once his wife’s body is released. Does Greg know when that will be?” Erica waited while Evelyn said something to Greg. Then, he came back on the line. “We’re not sure…probably tomorrow, or the next day. The coroner’s office is backed up, as usual.” When she hung up the phone and returned to the dining room, she saw that Mimi was gone. Then she heard a car start. She got to the front porch just in time to see the Carters driving away and the arson investigator getting into his own vehicle. Her first instinct was to rush off the porch and flag him down, but she thought better of it. Instead she stood and watched him slowly make his way down the incline to the street below. Erica found Paula in the Carter’s room, stripping the bed. Pitching in, she shoved the sheets into the laundry bag and took them to the chute in the hallway. These old houses have such quaint features. Erica could recall, in a house she’d lived in as a child, there had 223
Echoes of the Past been a narrow, wooden laundry chute that went from the bathroom down to the basement. More than once, she’d had to take the long metal pole her parents kept in the cellar and try to fish various pieces of clothing out of there because, it being wood, the chute had splinters and slivers that would snag something or other, usually her nylon panties. Thank goodness this chute was wide enough to accommodate even the bed sheets. Just as they finished the Carter’s room and were ready to move on to the bathroom, Charles Ryan emerged and headed that way, so they decided to each do their own rooms until he was finished. By eleven o’clock they had completely finished the upstairs, and cleaned up the remains of breakfast from the dining room. As Erica was making her way across the foyer toward the parlor, she passed Charles on his way out. He was dressed in a very expensive looking gray business suit, accented by a white shirt and navy tie. He was carrying the ever-present attaché case, and although he had to have seen her, he didn’t speak.
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Chapter Twenty-Three ater that morning, Erica got two calls from area reporters, which she referred to Greg Novak for a comment. Then she received a visit by a Du Bois TV news crew, and before she knew what was happening, they’d filmed a few seconds of her blinking slack-jawed on the inn’s threshold, then proceeded to bombard her with questions which she cut off by slamming and locking the front door. She’d then gone to the parlor and watched out the window in horror as they tramped around the garden area, seemingly unable to comprehend that crime scene tape meant stay out. When she came out of the parlor Paula was rummaging through the large burlap bag she called a purse. “I’m going into town, if you don’t mind.” “Lunch date?” Erica glanced at the clock. It was just noon. Paula nodded. “Plus I want to see what I can find out about that brooch. Look at this, I cleaned it up.” She unwrapped the piece of jewelry from a delicate lace handkerchief and handed it to Erica. “My God! It’s exquisite. It looks like a ruby.” The
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Echoes of the Past stone shone brilliantly and the delicate setting gleamed brightly with only a few tarnish marks to mar its otherwise perfect surface. “How did you…” “Toothpaste and baking soda,” Paula interrupted proudly. “Works every time.” “Well, be careful out there, you’ll probably have to run the gauntlet of reporters.” “Great. Just what we need.” Once Paula was gone, Erica tried calling Joe again. This time he answered. “I woke up this morning and wanted you. Bad,” were the first words out of his mouth. She knew he was trying to lighten the mood, to take her mind off the awful events of the past week, but she just couldn’t seem to play along. Not today. She told him about the fire, then waited for a response. Instead she got a long silence on the other end of the line. Finally in a tone as solemn as an undertaker’s, he said, “I know. The police were here, banging on my door at four o’clock this morning.” “God, Joe. Surely they don’t think…” “I’m still number one on their hit parade of suspects for just about every crime committed around these parts, evidently. You okay?” Her gut wrenched and her hand tightened on the receiver. She felt like crying. Needed to cry. Wanted to bawl like a kid with a skinned knee. But when that happened, she wanted Joe to be right there beside her so he could take her in his arms and make her feel that everything would be all right. 226
Audra Cole “I need to see you.” Even to her own ears, her voice sounded small and weak. “I’m meeting with Proctor this afternoon. The county has put me on paid leave until this mess is cleared up. Proctor wants to sue them, but I think that’s the least of my worries right now.” Erica felt bile rise up from her stomach and burn her throat. She pushed it back down with effort and said, “You don’t think…” “I think before too much longer I’ll be arrested. Charles Ryan is putting a lot of pressure on the police. He’s convinced I killed Lisa. Come to the cabin tonight for dinner, Erica.” The invitation had an undertone of urgency, and she felt her heart rate quicken. She needed to see him. No. She needed him. “Early. I don’t want to be out late.” “Five. I’ve got some salmon I can broil. And a very good bottle of wine.” **** Paula spent an hour at the local library researching the brooch. In the end, it was the librarian, a gangly woman with wire-rimmed glasses and thick red hair, who steered her in the right direction. “My mother deals in antique jewelry. I’ve seen pieces like this in her collection. I’d say it was made in the early 1800s. There’s a marking on the back, just a minute, let me get the magnifying glass.” The marking turned out to be two letters: N and Y. 227
Echoes of the Past “For New York, I’d say. That’s where it was made.” “How the hell did it end up here I wonder?” The woman put the magnifying glass down on her desk. “My guess is that a settler brought it with her. This was a trial west, you know. Easterners came through here on their way to California. Some of them ended up staying here, putting down roots. Many of them came from privileged lives in the east and brought their treasures with them. I’d say you’re holding one in your hand right now.” Paula felt a thrill of excitement. She’d known from the minute she’d touched the brooch that there was something special, no something significant, about it. She just needed to find out what. When she walked into the Eagle Hill, she was bombarded by questions from patrons about the fire. She talked for a few minutes with them, then let Cal steer her to a table in the back where he had two draft beers waiting. “I went ahead and put in our order,” he told her. Usually, this sort of thing, a man assuming he knew what she wanted to eat, would have annoyed her, but in this case she found herself looking forward to seeing what they brought out of the kitchen for her. She sipped at the brew, then took out the brooch and showed it to him. “Isn’t it exquisite? I’m so excited. But I need to know more about it.” He leaned forward, taking it from her hand an examining it. “Like I said before, pay a visit to the historical society. I’ll bet they could help you trace it, 228
Audra Cole and answer some of the other questions I see whirling around in that pretty brain of yours.” “Such as?” He smiled. “Such as, who your other resident spirits are and why they are still hanging around.” “You’re not going to make fun of me?” Cal’s expression sobered. “My great-great grandfather was a tribal healer. Part of our belief is that the body and spirit must work as one. And if that hasn’t been accomplished when death occurs, the spirit will not rest.” “I guess our beliefs aren’t that far apart, then, because I believe that the spirits of the dead wander the earth because they didn’t resolve something in life and they can’t move on until they do. Unfinished business keeps them here, bound to the earthly plane.” Cal studied her for a moment. “My great-great grandfather also believed in Dreamcatchers, even though they didn’t originate with the Iroquois tribe. They were first used by the Chippewa. But he had vision and wasn’t afraid of new ideas.” Paula had seen the round, beaded items with feathers hanging from them in gift shops but was really unclear about the history behind them. “Tell me about them.” Cal sipped his beer. Lunch arrived just then, two heaping platters, his with a charbroiled steak burger and fries, hers with a thick, juicy chicken breast filet and a mound of mixed vegetables. Looking at her food, Paula smiled. “Perfect. I 229
Echoes of the Past couldn’t have done better myself.” As they ate, Cal began to explain the legend of the Dreamcatcher. “You’ve seen them, I’m sure. They’re anywhere from three to six inches around, some are made of willow or even grapevine, some leather. There’s a web design in the middle, meant to represent a spider’s web and a hole in the center of the web. Beads are sewn into the web and feathers hang from the bottom. Everything has a purpose.” “I’ve seen them in stores, at souvenir shops, even flea markets,” she admitted. Cal grimaced and went on. “Nothing like the ones they originally made, believe me. Anyway, the purpose of the Dreamcatcher is to catch all dreams, both good and bad, and protect the dreamer from nightmares. The beads help guide the good dreams through the hole in the center to the feathers, so they can be repeated. The bad dreams get caught in the web and die when morning comes.” “Insurance against nightmares. I could use some of that,” Paula told him. To her surprise, Cal reached down onto the seat of the extra chair at their table and drew out a box. “Open it,” he said handing it across to her. The Dreamcatcher was obviously hand made, not at all like the commercially produced ones she’d seen previously. It was constructed of a gnarled looking vine with a silky delicate-looking web in the center. The beads were blue and purple, the feathers dark, almost black. “It’s beautiful,” she said, and to her surprise felt tears sting her eyes. 230
Audra Cole “Hang it over your bed.” His voice was steady but she could hear emotion in it. It was then it struck her that Cal Motega was a man who cherished the tradition of his ancestors and was proud of his heritage. A spiritual man. A good man. She also realized something else. He would never scoff at her beliefs and never ridicule her when she talked of spirit activity. In his own way, that was what he was trying to tell her today. “I’ll take it with me wherever I go,” she said around the lump in her throat. “Don’t go anywhere.” His hand covered hers. He’d said it so quietly she wasn’t sure she’d heard him correctly or that he’d said anything at all, except maybe in her imagination. “What?” He leveled those black orbs on her. “You heard me.” Oh, damn, now what? **** Around two o’clock, Erica was out surveying the fire damage up close when Mimi yelled her name. Turning she saw the woman trotting across the parking area, leaving Edgar to unload several packages from the trunk. “It’s dreadful. Just look at those bushes. To say nothing of the beautiful gazebo!” Erica watched Edgar trudge toward the front porch. “I just wish the police would tell us something. Evelyn said she’d call the insurance company but 231
Echoes of the Past we’ll need a police report to file the claim.” Mimi clucked her tongue. “I suppose they are just trying to be thorough.” “Tell me what the doctor said.” “Oh, they x-rayed the arm. It’s healing beautifully, everything’s in its place. Now it’s just a matter of enduring the next four weeks until this wretched cast comes off.” Edgar came into view again, this time empty handed. Erica expected him to join them but instead he got into his car, backed out and drove away. It really wasn’t Erica’s place to question the guests about where they went, but she couldn’t help it. “Is Edgar going out to get lunch for you? I really don’t mind fixing something here.” Mimi turned just as the car’s back end disappeared from view around the corner of the inn. “Oh, he’s off on another one of his hunches.” Then, lowering her voice to a confidential tone, she added, “He’s onto something about that poor girl’s murder.” Then, her eyes widened and her mouth made an ‘O’ as though she realized she’d said too much. Erica felt her heart lurch. “He’s conducting his own investigation?” Mimi backed away. “I’m just exhausted, dear. I think I need a nap. We had lunch in Du Bois so don’t worry about me. But I’m afraid I overindulged. That always makes me sleepy.” With that, she scurried inside.
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Chapter Twenty-Four ince Paula had the car and was still in town, Joe was coming for Erica in his Jeep. He’d told her in no uncertain terms that she was not to walk through the woods any longer. It was too dangerous. While she waited for him, she went over the past few days in her mind. All of it was somehow connected, she was sure of that. The prowlers, the murder, the fire. Criminal intent. The only pieces that didn’t fit into that scenario were the incident in the basement, the spilled flowers, and the cold spots. Then there were the falls, Evelyn’s and Mimi’s. How did those figure into all of this? Erica knew what Paula thought, that another spirit was trying to get their attention. But who? And, more important, why? Sighing, Erica wandered from the parlor into the kitchen, then back out into the foyer. She felt restless, edgy. The air seemed stagnant in here, too. She checked the thermostat and found that it was set at exactly seventy degrees. Tonight would be chilly, with a low of forty degrees, according to the news. Speaking of the news, the media had lost interest in
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Echoes of the Past the inn and its problems, thank God. A double homicide out in the county had taken over the front page, along with some sports scandal. Charles Ryan was still out and she had to wonder where he went when he was gone for half a day at a time. The Carters had decided to take in a movie. What was Edgar up to, anyway? She’d been unable to get anything more out of Mimi, who now acted nervous as a scalded cat around her. The sound of Joe’s Jeep in the driveway brought her attention back to the present and she gathered up her purse, locked the front door and walked quickly around to the passenger side of the vehicle and got in. “You look good enough to eat. I don’t think I need dinner, after all,” Joe smiled somewhat lasciviously at her. She felt a pang of satisfaction. She’d picked her outfit with care. The deep coral blouse was low cut, showing lots of cleavage and the tan skirt flowed silkily against her slender hips and thighs. He hair fell loosely, in soft waves. She’d applied minimal makeup, accentuating her indigo eyes with just a touch of mascara and eyeliner. He lips were lightly colored with a soft coral shade. “Well, I happen to be starved, so I hope you’ve prepared a feast,” she told him, determined to put the ugly mess of the last few days out of her mind and enjoy what might be their last night together for a while. **** 234
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Joe couldn’t take his eyes off her. She moved with such grace and the way that skirt caressed her lower body was driving him crazy. When they arrived at the cabin, Mingo was champing at the bit for Erica’s attention, and she lavished it on him, bending down to stroke him while making cooing noises. Joe couldn’t stop watching her and he could tell she knew the effect she was having on him and enjoying every minute of it. “Wine?” He offered her a glass of the pale liquid. He’d used the good crystal glasses and was pleased when she noticed. “Good,” she commented as she sipped it. A drop ran over the brim and down the side of the glass and when she ran her tongue over the surface to collect it, he thought he’d go nuts. His need for her felt overwhelming. He suddenly didn’t care about dinner, conversation or anything else. Passion consumed his mind and body. Erica, on the other hand seemed all too willing to make small talk as she casually lowered herself onto the sofa and patted the cushion next to her. He obeyed like a puppy, eager to please. Even the baleful look Mingo threw him didn’t matter. And when the dog gave a half-snort and lay down near the hearth in obvious disdain of his master’s wimpy attitude, Joe ignored him. “Did you meet with your attorney?” She put her wine glass on the nearby end table. Joe tried to clear his mind. “For two billable 235
Echoes of the Past hours.” Erica chuckled. Then she told him about her short conversation with Mimi. Joe shook his head. “Greg Novak isn’t going to like some civilian sticking his nose into this case. Not that I care. In fact, maybe I’ll have a talk with Edgar myself.” Reaching across the small space between them, he stroked her forearm with one finger. She smiled, ran a hand down his cheek, then tickled the spot at the base of his throat where his shirt was unbuttoned. Joe put his wine glass on the coffee table. “Come here.” He closed the gap between them and drew her into his arms. He buried his face in her hair, breathing in the fresh, clean smell of her. He needed to know if she trusted him or if the suspicion he’d seen in her eyes two days ago was still there, lurking beneath the surface, ready to rear its ugly head again at a moment’s notice. He felt the warmth of her body pressing against his, felt her relax in his embrace and inwardly breathed a sigh of relief. Drawing away, he looked into her eyes, those beautiful eyes, and searched there for any doubts that might still be lingering inside her head. “I need to know you believe in me.” **** Erica stared at Joe, rehearsing her response briefly in her mind before she spoke. “Have you told me 236
Audra Cole everything? And is it all the truth?” “Yes.” And in that moment she knew that it really was the truth. She could see it in that dark-pool gaze, hear it in the simple answer. Yes. He stroked her back, softly, tenderly and she nestled into his embrace, feeling comfortable there. Any doubts she may have harbored about his innocence were gone now, wiped away like a mist in a strong breeze. She kissed him then, closing off any further conversation for the moment, and he responded by pulling her into his lap. The thrill his kiss sent through her body was warm and wonderful. His hands caressed her back, then fondled her breasts, then found their way underneath the skirt. “I love you, Joe,” she managed as he moved his lips to the delicate hollow of her throat. “I’ve waited my whole life to find you…I’d never do anything to hurt you.” The touch of his hands on her body sent electric charges coursing into her core. He was gentle, slow, using his tongue on the sensitive place between her breasts, then tweaking her nipples with his fingers. She felt the pressure building, unreleased, demanding, yet she wanted to prolong the exquisite agony as long as possible, wanted him to keep teasing her, pulling her slowly, oh-so-slowly toward that moment when her passion would be satisfied. “I want to hold you for a while, just hold you,” he told her, pulling back. Her panties were saturated with the juices of her 237
Echoes of the Past desire and her body ached to have him become one with her, but more than that she wanted have him stroke her, caress her, reassure her that the rift caused by the events of the past few days was mended, and that things were right between them once again. Sex alone would not do that. And so that was what they did, there on the living room couch, with Mingo snoozing peacefully nearby and supper simmering on the stove. They held one another, stroked one another, reassured one another without speaking, without undressing, without the wild abandon that had usually accompanied their lovemaking. Erica closed her eyes, taking in his scent, the feel of his lean, hard body, the strength in those muscular arms as they encircled her. When she finally felt the thickening behind the zipper of his jeans, she began to stroke his chest, playing at the hair peeking out above the shirt opening near his throat. She tugged on a few strands. “Ouch!” He tightened his grip on her a little then relaxed it again. “Baby.” She looked up at him, feeling playful for the first time in days. Again, she tugged on the wayward hairs. But this time, he didn’t protest, didn’t squeeze her. Instead, he began to tickle her along her sides. “Hey, no fair!” She squirmed around trying to escape, but he held fast, still poking his fingers playfully into her ribcage. “Oh, you want fair? Sorry…no can do.” 238
Audra Cole Enjoying the antics, she chuckled. “You’re in big trouble now, mister.” “I hope so.” His gaze held hers and Erica felt her heart begin to beat faster. I hope I will always feel this excitement when Joe touches me, or looks at me, or smiles at me. I never want to lose this. “Are we okay?” His expression was so serious it made her breath catch in her throat. “We’re okay, Joe.” She reached up and stroked his cheek with one finger, then raised her face, inviting his kiss. His hands were like a magic balm, soothing away all of her doubts, all of anxiety, all of her tension. He stroked the tops of her breasts, and she felt goose bumps erupt in the wake of his touch. He undressed her slowly, and she begged silently for him to hurry, to satisfy her every wish, her every desire. Now. Right now. But he took his time, slipping the skirt down over her hips with excruciating slowness. The fabric slid along skin that seemed electrically charged, so that the very touch of the fabric evoked a response deep inside of her. One hand played at her nipples, tugging and pulling until they felt hot as fire. The other hand made its way almost cautiously up her inner thigh until, at last, his fingers found her clit. The sensations raked up her thick, moist walls, carrying her to the brink and over. She stiffened, her muscles contracting against those magic fingers and 239
Echoes of the Past she held him tight as the orgasm sent warm pulses throughout her body. She felt his need pressing against her and ripped at his pants, then his zipper until she at last held his cock in her hand. Pumping wildly, all she could think about was having him inside of her, re-establishing that intimate connection. Joe got out of his jeans then his shorts. Erica felt her own heat rise again, as he entered her, thrusting deeply, his penis demanding satisfaction. “I love you, too,” Joe whispered as his seed spilled into her and she came again.
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Chapter Twenty-Five hen Paula returned to the inn, at a little after nine o’clock, the first thing she did was take the Dreamcatcher Cal had given her up to her room and hang it over the bed, replacing a small still life that had been centered on the wall. Looking around, she saw no place to put the print, so she stuck it in the armoire. Next, she decided to take a hot bath. She’d locked the front door and checked the back, so she felt fairly confident that she would be safe inside these old walls. She was getting used to the creaks and groans the house made as well-seasoned wood popped and cracked in response to changes in temperature and humidity. She liked this place so much. It had such character, such history. Sometimes she could almost see the past unfold before her in the narrow upstairs hallway, or the richly decorated parlor, even in the kitchen, where a more modern appliance had replaced the old, ornate gas stove and the modern stainless steel double sink had taken the place of the deep granite one which had, no doubt, been complete with a hand pump attached to it for drawing water
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Echoes of the Past up from a well. How she knew what the rooms had looked like back then, when the house was new and shiny and yet to hold any secrets, joys or sorrows, she didn’t understand. But there it was, that inner knowledge that flashed visions before her eyes in freeze frame clarity. Her body still ached from her lovemaking with Cal. A sweet pain that was more pleasure than anything else, really. After lunch they had spent over an hour walking around town hand-in-hand, talking about the good and the bad things that had happened in their lives. Of course, they’d ended up back at his apartment, which was beginning to feel very comfortable to her. Too comfortable? Their lovemaking had been strong, urgent and totally satisfying. They’d slept in each other’s arms until she’d been jarred awake by that intuition that tells you it is time to get up. At first she’d been disoriented, thinking it might be the middle of the night then totally relieved when she saw that it was only eight o’clock. She’d slipped out of bed and walked to the narrow kitchen for a drink of water. There she’d stood at the sink looking out the window at the expanse of lawn and wondered what Spirit Lake would look like blanketed with snow. Beautiful, she supposed. Then she had wondered if she would be here to see that first snowfall of the season. Probably not. And how am I going to handle leaving? Bringing her thoughts back to the present, she closed and locked the bathroom door, just in case any 242
Audra Cole of their guests returned while she was bathing. Edgar Carter had said something about going somewhere to listen to some live music after the movie. He’d added that Mimi used to cut a pretty good rug in her day and still could give it a good try. As for Charles Ryan, she’d given up trying to guess his comings and goings. He had a lot on his plate right now, what with trying to get his wife’s body back home and plan a funeral. Paula put the stopper in the tub drain and turned on the water. From the packets of bath salts that were in a wicker basket on the vanity, she selected one called Serenity. She could use that right now, something to relax her, get her in the mood for sleep again. Stripping off her clothes, she pulled her hair up on top of her head and secured it with a large clip. Settling into the hot, fragrant water she sighed with contentment. She’d always loved bubble baths as a kid and often had to be coaxed out of the tub by her mother, who told her repeatedly that she’d shrivel up like an old prune if she wasn’t careful. She leaned back and closed her eyes, letting her mind wander without tethering it to any particular train of thought, as the liquid heat began to ease the tension from her muscles. The campfire cast an orange glow over the wizened faces of the tribal council as they encircled its licking flames. The discussion was heavy, fraught with disagreements, rife with conflict. The women huddled near the longhouse, straining to hear, yet fearful that if they got too close, appeared too curious, they would be banished back inside. 243
Echoes of the Past The council elder looked ancient, his skin like leather, deeply grooved by many years of exposure to the sun and harsh elements. Tonight his eyes were dark with anger, his mouth twisted in disfavor. They felt the vibration of the earth beneath their bodies long before they realized what was causing it. It began like a distant roar, then grew louder until the sound of hoofbeats could be distinguished. Faceless men on horseback suddenly appeared out of the darkness and the women scattered, some going inside the longhouse, others running toward the deep woods that surrounded the village. The wind picked up, howling through the trees like the wail of something loosed from the bowels of hell. The smell of death and fear filled the air as the battle raged and blood soaked the ground. Then all was silent and Cal Motega stepped out of the middle of the chaos, holding a Dreamcatcher high into the air and shaking it toward the sky. Wake up…WAKE UP. Then he stomped his foot and the loud thud sounded as sharp as the crack of a whip. Paula jerked awake just as her nose slid under the water. Sputtering, she sat up and gasped. “God!” She coughed and spit out the briny-tasting liquid. “Jesus!” She looked around the bathroom in a panic. What was that noise? Or was it a noise at all, or just part of that crazy dream? It had seemed so real, all except Cal stepping out and…what? Tribal council? Wise old men? A surprise attack? Another sharp sound made her jump and she stood up, grabbed a towel and wrapped it around her shivering body. The water had grown cold and she could feel the goose bumps popping up along her 244
Audra Cole arms, legs and torso. Again, the thud sounded. Heart racing, Paula stepped out of the tub and pushed her feet into a pair of terry cloth slippers. She knew that Evelyn occupied the half of the third floor over the south end of the house. The other half, used for storage, was separated from those living quarters by a wall. Each side had its own set of stairs. And while the door leading to the stairs that accessed Evelyn’s apartment was locked, the one leading to the other side was not. The noise was coming from the unoccupied side right overhead. Paula cautiously opened the bathroom door and peeked out into the hallway. The strategically placed sconces on the wall held flame-shaped bulbs that were supposed to imitate the candlelit corridors of long ago. She’d been initially enthralled by their charm, but right now would have gladly traded them for lighting that left no shadowy corners unexposed. She tiptoed along the hallway, as if that would conceal her presence from any intruder. Perhaps if she hadn’t been walking on wooden floors that were over a hundred years old, she might have had a fighting chance, but as it was each step brought with it a noise that, to her, sounded loud enough to wake the dead. Is that what I’m doing, waking the dead. I feel them all around me, their unspent energy, their lost hopes and dreams. She pulled open the third-floor door on creaky hinges. Damn! Her heart pounded in her chest, 245
Echoes of the Past ramming against her ribcage, yet something drove her on. She felt for a light switch and having found it flipped it up. The bulb was dull, its yellow glow barely lighting the stairwell. Turning around, Paula hurried to her room and returned with a flashlight. Playing the beam ahead of her she slowly mounted the steps. The air felt heavy with dust. It had been a long, long time since anyone had been up here. A cobweb draped itself over her face and she gasped, drawing back, then brushing frantically at her head as though expecting to find something multi-legged and furry entangled in her hair. At the top she hesitated in order to get her bearings. There was only one room, which surprised her. Then she noticed joists and beams that indicated this had not always been the case. At some point, the separate rooms had been eliminated, walls removed, and new support beams put in place resulting in a large open area. The floor was narrow-planked hardwood, very light, perhaps oak. Shining the flashlight around the wall to her right, she found another light switch and flipped it on and an ornate chandelier sprang to life. Even with only a fraction of the bulbs working, the fixture emitted enough light for her to be able to turn off the flashlight. She stood for a moment taking in her surroundings. The two long walls were mirrored, floor to ceiling. A brass bar ran waist high along both. It was then she realized she was standing in what had 246
Audra Cole once been a dance studio. Someone who once lived here studied dance, probably ballet. The place smelled of old paper and rotted fabric with an underlying mustiness that made her want to throw open one of the windows and let some fresh air inside. Moving forward she scanned the treasures around her. Furniture from various eras took up much of the floor space. A Victorian dressing table, its mirror cracked and nearly opaque stood to her left. To her right was an old trunk, its hasp broken and hanging from the brass fixtures. She spotted a dressmaker’s mannequin, several chests of drawers and some giltframed mirrors. Suddenly a chill raked up her spine as she felt the temperature drop significantly. Stopping dead, she waited and watched. Closing her eyes she cleared her mind, inviting whoever was there inside. When she opened them she was standing at the back of the room, near the chimney. Confused, she darted the flashlight around but saw nothing of interest. Turning to go, she was stopped by the sudden shout. No! It is here! Paula looked around, expecting to see someone standing nearby. Then she realized that the words had not been spoken aloud, but inside of her head. “Where? I don’t see anything. You’re going to have to help me if you want me to…” she began. She got no further. She caught movement out of the corner of her eye, then watched as the dressmaker’s dummy teetered, then toppled to the 247
Echoes of the Past floor. As she got closer, she noticed it had fallen onto a valise, the kind that used to be associated with carpetbaggers. It was dull with age, but the floral pattern was still discernible. Next to it was a box, worn and ragged. As she knelt down, she saw that the box was actually made of some kind of leather. The lid, also leather, was padded. In the center was a diamond-shaped knob made of something that resembled marble or perhaps onyx. “So is this what you wanted me to find?” She waited for a response, but got none. She sat the dummy upright, then picked up the valise and box and headed for the stairs, half expecting to encounter some kind of resistance, but there was none. When she reached the second floor once again, she heard movement downstairs. Her pulse quickening, she went to the head of the stairs and was relieved to see Erica coming her way. “Where have you been, on a scavenger hunt?” Paula chuckled, partly from relief, partly because it was true. “Up on the third floor. The natives were restless tonight.” Erica’s eyebrow shot up in a mixture of curiosity and skepticism. “Let’s go into my room. I was led to these items and I’m anxious to see why,” Paula told her.
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Chapter Twenty-Six fter the evening of gentle lovemaking and much
Aneeded air-clearing she’d spent with Joe, all Erica
wanted to do was crawl into bed and sleep until the morning light chased away whatever shadowy, nether-world beings also inhabited this house. But now her curiosity was aroused and she felt wide awake. The minute she entered Paula’s room, her gaze was drawn to the object hanging over the bed. She’d seen them at Joe’s. Dreamcatchers. She knew the powers they were deemed to have and the legends behind them. “Cal gave it to me. He made it,” Paula explained before Erica could utter the question. “It’s very distinctive. Not like the ones you see in gift shops.” “Well, Cal is a very distinctive guy.” Paula smiled a little wickedly. Then her expression was serious again, with only the color in her cheeks hinting at the excitement she must be feeling about her find. “Okay, let’s see what our unseen residents were so eager for you to discover,” Erica told her. 249
Echoes of the Past They sat on the bed with the two items between them. Paula opened the bag first, extracting some old photographs. They were somewhat faded and a couple of them were mounted on stiff backings. There was nothing else inside. Erica saw disappointment flicker across her friend’s face until she looked at the first one, then her eyes lit up. “My God, these are from…” Paula turned the photo over. “The writing is so faded…but I swear it says eighteen-seventy-seven.” She handed the photo to Erica, carefully, almost reverently. It was, without a doubt, the hill on which the inn now stood. And at the top, like a skeleton against the landscape was what would, eventually, become the house. The framework was visible, the line of the roof intact, but nothing else. It gave Erica a funny, shiver-up-your-spine feeling, and she turned it over to check out that date. Paula was right. The next photo was of the house again, only this time there were people in the picture. By the look of the mature trees and shrubs around the front porch, Erica guessed that at least two decades had elapsed since the first photo. The two women, one plump and dressed in a shapeless, light colored dress, the other younger, shapelier wearing her Sunday best, complete with a wide ornately adorned hat, were accompanied by two men, both in dress suits. The younger couple had two children standing in front of them, the man’s hands on the shoulders of a boy who looked to be about ten 250
Audra Cole or eleven. The other child, a girl, was dressed richly also, and Erica assumed the woman behind her was her mother. “Addie, Charles, Jeremy, Pauline, George and Anna Mae.” Paula read the names on the back of the photo as Erica held it up to study the image on the front. “No last names.” Paula shook her head. There were several other photos, and Paula noticed that the trees were in full foliage, and in one the rose garden was visible. It wasn’t as lush nor as large as it was now, or rather as it had been before the fire, but it was beautifully maintained. A gazebo sat in the middle of it. Not the same gazebo as the one that had just been destroyed, but one similar in size and design. One picture was of the lake before the dock had been built. Near the water a blanket had been spread out on the ground and two children sat having a picnic lunch. Paula gathered up the photos and put them back into the bag. “You know, Cal said I should go to the historical society if I wanted to find out more about the history of this house and the land and even that brooch I found. I think he’s right. Maybe that’s why I was led upstairs tonight. To get my ass in gear and make that trip.” “Where is it?” “It’s just up in Hartsburg.” “I’ll go with you. How about tomorrow?” 251
Echoes of the Past Paula nodded her agreement, then turned her attention to the box. Erica was fascinated by the design tooled into the soft leather top. “This is unique. I’ve never seen anything like it.” She ran her fingers along the grooves that formed an intricate floral pattern. “I think it must have been part of a desk set, probably a woman’s by the look of it.” Inside was an envelope, now yellowed with age. Underneath the envelope was a book of some sort, hard-bound with the picture of a woman’s silhouette on the front. Paula put the envelope aside and lifted out the book. Flipping open the cover, she exclaimed, “It’s a diary!” Erica could see that not much of it was filled in, however. “Is it dated?” Paula went back to the front of the book. “June eighteenth, nineteen hundred. Looks like only about ten or twelve pages were written.” “Is there a name? Whose diary is it?” Paula looked inside the front cover, then the back. Shaking her head, she leafed to the final written page. “No name.” Erica watched as Paula scanned the first page, then the second. “We need to read this,” she finally said and then began do so aloud. “I am so afraid of this house. It is cursed. I just know it. It is the only thing that explains what I have seen and experienced inside these walls. Cecil says I’m having hysterics, and he won’t hear of moving. To be the master of 252
Audra Cole the grandest, most richly furnished house in town is too much of a status symbol for him to even think about giving it up. He has an important position in the community, I understand that, but should he put that above the safety, and yes, the sanity of his wife? I dread the night. That damnable mist, like a shroud, hovering there, waiting to choke the life out of me and everyone dear to me. The children haven’t been themselves since we moved here. Barry is cranky and cannot sleep through the entire night. He says his room is too cold, even on nights when it is so hot and close that not a breath of air stirs the curtains at his open windows. Alise, even though she is only a few months old, seems to sense the tension and my fears. She fusses incessantly and Cecil often is sharp with me when I cannot calm her. I must close now, diary. My husband is calling.” Erica exhaled slowly. “She was scared to death. What the hell happened to her here?” Paula shook her head. “That’s just the first entry, too. I guess we need to read them all.” She handed the book to Erica. “You take the next installment.” Erica scanned the page. “This one’s dated June twenty sixth, nineteen hundred.” “Yesterday, I decided to take a few moments for myself and go to the gazebo. My sister, Rene, had sent me a book and I was anxious to read it. The afternoon was quiet, the sun warm, the air filled with the fragrance of the beautiful rose bushes that were planted so many years ago. The moment I sat down I got the feeling I was not alone. I looked around, expecting to see the gardener or one of the townspeople milling about. We don’t get many 253
Echoes of the Past unannounced visitors here, Cecil discourages that, but once in a while a passerby will see one of us outside and come up the hill to pay respects. But there was no one. I began to read and got so engrossed, that it took me a moment to realize that someone was weeping nearby, perhaps on the other side of the fence, or in the tangle of willows that border that part of the property. I jumped up, my heart leaping into my throat, and called out but got no answer. Yet the weeping continued. When I walked toward the fence that runs along the back side of the garden, the sound seemed to be coming from my right. When I turned that way, it seemed to be coming from my left. Then it suddenly stopped. Again, the fear overwhelmed me as I searched every foot of the garden, only to discover that I was completely alone. If I tell Cecil of this, he will surely insist I see a doctor for my nerves. So I will not reveal the episode to another living soul, only to you, diary, for I know my secret will be safe within your pages.” “Oh, Lord,” Paula whispered. “The weeping in the garden,” Erica added. She looked at Paula, whose face had now lost some of its color. “She heard it, too. Do you know what that means?” Paula’s eyes were bright with a mixture of triumph and excitement. Erica nodded. “We have a very old ghost on our hands.” She handed the diary back to Paula. “The next entry is July the fifth, nineteen hundred. Paula took the book and began to read. “Cecil is on what I can only call a rampage. He became furious with me at the annual Fourth of July picnic in town 254
Audra Cole when I asked several people if they had ever heard of strange things happening at the house we now occupy. Notice, diary, that I cannot refer to this as my home. It will never seem like a home to me. It is a mausoleum harboring some sort of secret that has caused it to be a place of sadness or tragedy or both. When we talked about my behavior, I broke down, begging my husband to consider selling this place and moving us into one of the houses in town. But, I’m afraid he’s become rather used to being Lord of the Manor and will never give it up. He’s also asked me why I now spend so much time at my desk in the evenings. I don’t dare tell him I’m keeping a diary or he would pitch it into the rubbish heap, or burn it. So, I lie and tell him I’m writing to my sisters, who are eager for news of our lives here in Spirit Lake. I’m so homesick for Philadelphia, diary. And I’m so tired of fighting the influences that I sense all around me. Last night I awoke for no reason and was immediately overcome by such a sadness that I wept for an hour. I moved Barry to another bedroom this week, the small one at the south end of the house. It is cozy and he is at last able to sleep at night. Cecil allowed the move only because he was tired of being awakened by our son’s nightmares and complaints of being cold. Because Cecil is suspicious of my writings, I am going to hide this diary in a secret place on the third floor, along with something else precious to me.” Paula closed the book and let it rest in her lap. “That’s it. She never wrote in it again.” Erica reached for the envelope. “This must be the something precious.” She opened the envelope and 255
Echoes of the Past two photographs spilled out onto the bedspread between them. The first one was of a narrow, two-story structure with shutters at the windows and climbing roses on a trellis near the brick front porch. A man and woman were posing on the porch steps. The woman was holding a baby. The man had his right hand on the shoulder of a small boy. Scribbled on the back of the photo were the words, Cecil, Jenny, Barry and Alise, May 30, 1900. Today, we venture forth. The second picture was of the same couple standing hand-in-hand on a pier. Behind them was what looked like a large lake, with boats sailing on its smooth, glassy surface. The date on the back was June 12, 1896. “They’re so much younger in this picture,” Paula observed. “Maybe they were on their honeymoon?” Erica studied it for another moment then handed it back. “All of this proves what I’ve been saying. This house is alive with spirit activity!” Paula smiled and shook the envelope briefly for emphasis. “I think that trip to Hartsburg is long overdue,” Erica finally said.
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Chapter Twenty-Seven rica awoke the next morning feeling refreshed and renewed. She’d called Joe before bed, telling him about Paula’s discoveries and their intention to visit the historical society in Hartsburg. He’d given her instructions on how to find it. “I’d like to go with you, but I’m meeting with Clyde Proctor. He thinks he can bully the county into reinstating me,” he told her, but she couldn’t help but notice that his tone didn’t convey much confidence. Now, she got out of bed, glancing at the alarm clock as she grabbed her robe from the foot of the bed and slipped it on. It was just after seven-thirty. She’d shower quickly, then go downstairs and fix breakfast. She went to the window and parted the curtains. It was going to be another beautiful day. The sky was clear and there was a light covering of dew sparkling on the hillside. Raising the window a little, she let the chilly morning air drift into the room, bringing with it the aroma of the damp earth below. She met Paula, who was dressed already in a calf length prairie skirt of deep umber and a cotton blouse of lime green, in the hallway. A dishtowel was tied
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Echoes of the Past around her waist as a makeshift apron, which told Erica that her friend had already started preparing the morning meal. “I slept like a log! Not one nightmare, and absolutely no visitations. That Dreamcatcher did the trick.” Paula smiled widely then winked. Today she had her hair tied back in a chignon at the nape of her neck. The silver necklace at her throat was wide and ornate, as were the matching earrings dangling from her lobes. As usual a set of mix-andmatch bracelets jangled from one wrist. “I’ll be down in a bit. Why didn’t you get me up sooner? I should be helping with breakfast,” Erica said, continuing her trek to the bathroom. Paula lowered her voice to an almost confidential tone. “Breakfast for who? Or whom? Which is it, I never can remember? Anyway, no one’s here but you, me and Mimi. Greg Novak came to the door about twenty minutes ago asking for Charles Ryan, who is, by the way, still MIA. Then, shortly after that, Edgar came down and took off without a word. Mimi has yet to put in an appearance, but I know she’s in her room because I heard her moving around. Anyway, I’m fixing for you and me, so shake a leg. Oh, and why don’t you see if Mimi intends to join us before you come down?” With that she was gone. Once Erica was dressed in a pair of tan chino pants and a dark blue knit top, she tapped lightly on the Carter’s door. “Come in, dear,” Mimi called. 258
Audra Cole Erica opened the door and stepped into the room. She noted that it was neat as a pin and the bed made. Mimi was putting items into a large suitcase that lay open atop the down comforter. She moved slowly and clumsily with only one usable arm, but she was taking her time and managing quite well, Erica thought. “You’re leaving?” “Well, in a day or so, dear. I have my final appointment with the surgeon tomorrow, so once he releases me and gives me his blessing to follow up with my doctor at home, we’ll be off, I suppose.” She didn’t sound all that sure but Erica didn’t question her further about it. “What about breakfast this morning?” “I’ll be down shortly. I hope Paula has made some of those delicious blueberry muffins. I’ve got a real taste for them this morning.” **** Before Mimi joined them, Paula and Erica decided not to tell her about the photographs and diary. They did, however, mention that they were going to Hartsburg to try and find out more about the history of the inn and the land it occupied. “How interesting. You know, I once belonged to our local historical society, but the meetings got so tedious, so much infighting. Groups are like that, aren’t they?” Mimi excused herself then, taking a couple of 259
Echoes of the Past muffins with her. “I need to finish sorting things and packing what we won’t be needing between now and when we leave.” Erica stared after the woman for a moment, then turned her attention back to Paula. “Do you detect a little tension in the air where Mimi’s concerned? She was nervous as a cat and skillfully avoided your question about where Edgar was off to so early this morning.” Paula nodded “Something’s going on. And why was that police chief here at the crack of dawn? Do you suppose they have a lead?” “Besides Joe, you mean?” Erica snapped. “Look, I don’t believe for a minute Joe killed that woman. But somebody did.” Erica stared sullenly into her cup of coffee. “Joe thinks he’ll be arrested either today or tomorrow.” She felt the old knot return in her stomach. “Then Greg Novak is a fool.” Paula got up and glanced at the clock. “The historical society opens at ten. I’m assuming there will be someone there to talk to, and they’ll let us do some research.” Paula’s eyes were bright with enthusiasm and Erica couldn’t help but smile. “What?” Paula demanded. “Nothing. I’m just amazed at how you take everything in stride, that’s all.” “Maybe I just don’t have any better sense, ever think of that? Come on, lets get moving. I want to be there when they open.” The ringing of the phone summoned Erica to the 260
Audra Cole office while Paula began clearing the table. It was Evelyn. “How are things going?” Quickly, Erica brought her up to date. “I haven’t been in that part of the third floor in years. Most of those things were here when Will and I bought the place.” “We’re going to the historical society in Hartsburg today to try and find out more about the history of the land.” “Well, it may be a moot point, Erica. I got a call yesterday from an attorney who is representing someone who might be interested in buying the inn.” Erica was stunned into silence. Selling the inn? How could she do that? “Are you there?” Evelyn’s voice jarred Erica out of her stupor. “I don’t know what to say. Who made the offer?” “A group of investors. That’s all I know so far. The man didn’t go into specifics but will be contacting me again, he said.” A cold, desolate feeling sniggled up Erica’s spine. “What plans do they have for the inn, Evelyn?” “He didn’t say. But he wants to meet with me today or tomorrow.” Unease, edged with panic surged through Erica. “Promise me something, Evelyn. Don’t make any decision yet. You’ve put too much into this inn to let it go so easily.” Erica held her breath until she heard Evelyn say, “That sounds like Greg’s advice. I guess it makes sense. You’ve got a deal.” 261
Echoes of the Past Erica said goodbye and hung up the phone, breathing a sigh of relief. **** Edgar sat in the hallway outside Greg Novak’s office and leafed through the local paper. He’d been waiting almost half an hour for the chief’s return. At her workstation, the dispatcher, a young woman by the name of Cleo Burchard, sat filing her nails. Her headset allowed her ‘hands-free’ operation except when she had to flick the button to talk to the officers on patrol. Edgar having worked for a larger force, was amazed at the ‘Andy of Mayberry’ technology in use here. “He’s in the building,” Cleo informed Edgar almost at the same moment Greg rounded the corner and came into view. “Mr. Carter, what can I do for you?” “Edgar. And, I’d like to talk with you. I think I might have discovered some things that will help your investigation into Lisa Ryan’s death.” Greg, ignoring Cleo’s curious stares, motioned Edgar into his office and closed the door. “So what makes you think I need your help solving this crime?” Greg asked as he sat down behind his desk. Edgar looked around the small, but comfortable looking workspace. There was a leather love seat along one wall, file cabinets along the other, an oak table that held a coffee pot and several mugs along 262
Audra Cole the back wall, and in front of the chief’s desk an uncomfortable looking straight-backed chair. Edgar chose the love seat, forcing Greg to swivel his chair sideways. “It is not my intention to undermine your authority here, Chief Novak. And just because I know about your past, doesn’t mean I’m a threat.” Edgar had hoped to reach a truce with the man, for the good of the investigation. And while he knew his input was not welcome, he did have information that might help solve the crime. Greg leaned forward and linked his fingers together on the desktop. “I’m not threatened by you. I am just curious about your interest in this case, that’s all. So why don’t you tell me what you think you have that will help and I’ll decide if it’s relevant?” Edgar wanted to bristle, but knew deep down that if the roles were reversed he’d be saying the same thing. “I’ve come across certain information that I think you should know. I’m not trying to hinder your investigation, but if you listen to me, I think you will be glad you did.” Greg seemed to relax a little, his interest obviously peaked. “Go ahead.” Taking a deep breath, Edgar began, leading Greg through the information he’d acquired over the past few days. When he was finished, he was gratified to see a glint of something close to admiration in the other man’s eyes. “Well, I guess we’re not that far apart in our thinking, after all. Actually, I’m surprised we didn’t 263
Echoes of the Past run into each other during the course of our visits.” Edgar leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees, clasping his hands together in front of him. “Are you still determined to arrest Joe Lakota?” Greg grimaced. “Bobby Ray’s idea, not mine. He’s a little enthusiastic.” Edgar would have said trigger-happy, figuratively speaking, but let that pass. “Has anything I’ve said changed your mind?” Greg nodded. “I was going to look into that angle, but you’ve already done it. I take it you have proof.” Edgar extracted a business envelope from his jacket pocket, got up and handed it to the chief. Greg examined the contents. “Now my suspicions are confirmed.” Edgar rose to go. “If you need me to do anything…” “I’ll be sure and let you know,” Greg cut in. As Edgar opened the door and stepped into the hallway, he thought he heard Greg Novak say a low, almost whispered, thanks, but couldn’t be sure.
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Chapter Twenty-Eight he Hartsburg historical society was located on a short side street off the main drag. The two-story house, made of large irregular stones, was very plain in its design with a red tile roof. The front porch consisted of a series of wooden planks that were painted gray and just uneven enough to testify to their age. Four slender white pillars supported the porch roof, which was also red tile. “Quaint,” Paula whispered, as she opened the door and walked inside the cool interior. “Typical austere architecture, common for this area during the nineteenth century,” Erica commented. She’d read up on Western Pennsylvania when she returned to New York last summer. “I’m impressed.” Paula smiled Erica’s way. The room was wallpapered in shades of dark blue and gray with splashes of deep crimson. Straight ahead was an arch-shaped counter, much like the ones seen in libraries. Behind the counter stood a matronly looking, bespectacled woman who looked to be in her mid-forties. She had a pleasant face and dark hair pulled back in the same sort of chignon
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Echoes of the Past Paula was wearing. “No way,” Paula muttered, reaching behind her own head to yank the hair accessory out, freeing her raven tresses. “Ladies, what can I do for you?” the plump woman said as they approached the counter. Erica glanced to her right, where a furniture grouping sat cozily in one corner. To their left were the stairs leading to the second floor. “We’d like to see anything you have on Spirit Lake going back as far as possible.” Paula told the woman. “Oh, yes. The old fort. Or, to be exact, Fort Pitt. It was established in 1768.” She stepped out from behind the counter and led them up the stairs. “We keep all of our historical documents up here. The downstairs is used for meetings, ours and other local groups’.” There were three rooms upstairs besides the bathroom. The one at the farthest end of the hallway was filled with file cabinets and several glass cases containing various items of historical interest. “By the way, I’m Melanie Bradford, curator and duly-elected president of the society.” Of course you are, Erica thought recalling Mimi’s comment about the infighting amongst group members. The way Miss Melanie had introduced herself indicated that she’d been duly elected after a hard-fought battle. It was obvious that the woman enjoyed the power her position wielded. “We’re interested in the land where the Spirit Lake Inn sits and anything having to do with that area, say 266
Audra Cole from the eighteenth and nineteenth century.” Paula was right next to Ms. Bradford now, straining to see inside of the file drawer. “We have some very interesting things from Fort Pitt when it was under the command of Lieutenant William Brigmann. There are also some artifacts from the settlers that were found at the fort when it was decommissioned in 1888. It had a turbulent history, though. Especially during one year. A massacre actually took place. Well, here are the things, I’ll let you read about it for yourselves. The reading room is next door. Just be sure you leave all documents in their protective coverings.” She left them alone to pour over the voluminous records. **** Erica, being the organized one, began separating the files by time frame, but soon found that most of them were from the same five-year period and matched the dates when Lieutenant Brigmann commanded the fort. “Well, at least he wasn’t a sloppy record-keeper,” Paula quipped as she opened the first journal and began to read. “May 1, 1841. I’ve assigned my second in command Sergeant Jeremy Taylor to take half a dozen men and do a census of the settlers under the protection of this fort. He is a good soldier, dedicated and reliable. The records kept by my predecessor were scant and poorly maintained, but I do glean from what I have read 267
Echoes of the Past that Fort Pitt was ruled with a lax hand and the men given to drinking too much. I can only hope that my firmness, yet fairness will turn things around.” “A man with dedication and high hopes,” Paula said, leafing ahead a few pages. He says here that there were three families homesteading in the area and that a roster has been made of their names and origins. See anything like that? They aren’t listed here.” Erica thumbed through the papers she’d been separating. “Not yet. Keep reading, let me know what’s interesting.” “Oh, here he talks about the Iroquois in the area. He’s met with their chief, let me read it to you.” “June 3, 1841. Today I visited the Iroquois village and was somewhat surprised at the organization with which they existed. Their longhouses are built at the base of a hill that provides perfect cover and protection and are highly sophisticated in design. The clear fresh-water lake is perfect for their needs and the woods provide them with ample hunting. Their chief, Tyee, seems determined to abide by the treaty signed with our government as well as the peaceful coexistence outlined by the Iroquois Confederacy. I feel confident that he is a man of his word and a man of honor. I also met his son, Yuma, who seemed to me hostile, yet he held his tongue.” Paula continued to go through the pages quickly, then suddenly Erica heard her exclaim, “My God. Our
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Audra Cole friend downstairs was right. There was a massacre.” Her voice shaking a little, Paula began to read again. “August 16, 1841. Today when Sergeant Taylor went to check on the Clark family, he found that they had been slain in what was, obviously, an Indian attack…” But Erica had stopped listening and was staring transfixed at a document encased in a plastic sheath. “What’s wrong?” Paula’s voice, raised now and accompanied by a hand laid firmly on Erica’s arm, snapped her back to the present. “It’s a census of the settlers under the jurisdiction of Fort Pitt in 1840. One of the names. I know…they were…” Erica stopped because she knew she was babbling. Taking a deep breath, she continued, “John and Hattie Clark and their three children, Daniel, Katie and Matthew, are listed here.” “So, what does that…wait a minute…your maiden name was Clark. Now there’s a coincidence…” Erica felt numb with shock. “It’s no coincidence. John and Hattie Clark are my ancestors. My great, great, grandfather, Rufus, had a brother named John. Family stories abounded when I was growing up about his rebellious brother, John, who took his entire family west. They were supposedly headed for California. There was a falling out between the brothers about the family business and John’s lack of interest in it. All he wanted to do was farm the land.” Paula took the sheath from Erica’s hand and scanned it. “Well, looks like they made it to the Allegheny Mountains,” Paula commented. Picking up the journal, Erica began to read… 269
Echoes of the Past “I had long suspected that Sergeant Taylor gave the Clarks special attention because he was sweet on their daughter, Katie. When he returned to the fort to sound the alarm, he was in a state such as I’d never seen him before. He was ranting and raving, talking of taking retribution on the Iroquois. The carnage he had happened upon was such that I could not refuse. This breach of the treaty was clearly an attempt to start a war. I was relieved, however, to discover that the other two families under our care were unharmed. Although, it does make me wonder if the attack was of a personal nature, although I can not understand why that would be so. We will attack after midnight, as I feel that will take them by surprise.” “My God, they slaughtered them, even the children.” Erica felt sick inside, but still she read on. “August 20, 1841. I write this as I am recovering from my wounds. Our attack on the Iroquois village was a success, if you can ever call the massacre of dozens a success. Some of the more fortunate women and children did escape into the woods, although very few. I sustained a serious cut along my left shoulder blade, but nothing life threatening, thanks to our excellent doctor. Some of the others under my command were not so fortunate. We lost fifteen good men on the battlefield and three more from their injuries once they were returned to the fort. I would have spared all the villagers except the men, but once my soldiers smelled the blood and were fully engaged in battle, they were crazed with a lust for killing and I could not have stopped them if I had tried. I am saddened by the losses on both sides, but we are 270
Audra Cole charged with the protection of the settlers under our care and the murder of the Clark family had to be avenged. I have submitted my report to my superiors and await their response, and perhaps their punishment.” Erica closed the journal and sighed. “That’s it. There are no more entries. What do you supposed happened to Lieutenant Brigmann?” Paula shook her head. “I don’t know, but I think you’d better read this. It’s an unmailed letter. The sidebar says it was found among the things at the fort. It’s dated August fourteenth, eighteen forty-one.” Erica took the plastic-encased letter with a shaking hand and read it in a voice that trembled with emotion… “My Dearest Rachel: I am writing this letter to you in the secrecy of my room while John is in the fields with Daniel, and Katie and Matthew are studying their lessons at the kitchen table downstairs. It has been over a year and a half since we left New York and I know you, at least, must be worried sick about our fate. John has forbidden me to contact anyone in the family, but I could not bear the thought of you fretting about us any longer. I have cried myself to sleep many a night, so homesick I cannot stand it. I hate this place, Rachel, and long for the life we left behind. The falling out between Rufus and John over something so trivial seems to me a poor reason to cut oneself off from those who matter the most. Your husband is a wonderful businessman, but John must feel the earth between his fingers to be truly happy. I miss our talks, our trips into the city and most of all seeing you and your lovely daughter, Adeline, and 271
Echoes of the Past handsome son, Eric. I pray all is well with you. We made it as far as the Allegheny Mountains, that is all. Once John saw the fertile farmland and discovered it was there for the taking, he would travel no further. For that I am grateful, for I do not think I nor the children would have lived to see the Pacific Ocean. The stories we have heard of the hardships endured by those who ventured on are horrifying. So, I will try to be glad for our good fortune and make the best of our lives here. There is a fort nearby and we feel somewhat secure, although the Iroquois have a village on the other side of the woods. We’ve been assured there is a peace treaty in effect, yet I am always uneasy in my heart and expect to hear the sound of attacking savages at any moment. John has called me a foolish female for this notion on more than one occasion. The children are doing well, considering. Daniel helps John with the farming and I give Katie and Matthew their lessons each day. There is a young soldier from the fort who comes to call a little more often than necessary. He is a sergeant and I think his interest is more in Katie than it is in our general welfare. I have not mentioned this to John, of course, and he is usually in the fields when young Jeremy Taylor comes by. So it is up to me to keep a protective eye on Katie and see that she doesn’t lose her head, or her heart too easily. A funny thing did happen. Do you recall that beautiful brooch my mother gave me on my wedding day? Well, it has disappeared. At first I thought perhaps Katie had purloined it to wear for her beau, the sergeant, but she has denied laying a hand on it except in my presence when I have taken it out to show it off. I have turned this humble 272
Audra Cole log cabin upside down to no avail. But, as most things thought forever lost, I’m sure it will show up someday in the most unlikely place. I will secret this letter in my dress pocket and the next time John goes to the general store at the fort I will ask to accompany him. I will tell him I need to pick out some new material for the children’s clothing. Forgive me my little deceit, Rachel, but it is the only way I can get this letter mailed, since the only post office is also at the fort. “I will have to ask that you not reply to this, for it would surely be picked up by John. In the meantime, I will work on him to soften his anger against Rufus, then perhaps we can communicate in the open someday. Your devoted sister-in-law, Hattie.” Erica made no attempt to wipe away the tears that now streamed down her cheeks. When she handed the letter to Paula, she saw that her friend’s eyes were also bright with moisture. “Well, I guess we know what drew you here, don’t we? This is destiny, Erica. You’ve just discovered the missing branch of your family tree.” Erica stared at Paula. “And you have discovered the history behind the brooch.” Paula reached into her skirt pocket and withdrew the lace handkerchief and unwrapped the brooch. “Now, it’s home.” Erica lay the piece in the palm of her hand. “But how did it end up in the lake?” “We may never know that. But we have a lot of other answers.” “You think our resident spirit is one of my dead 273
Echoes of the Past ancestors? They never lived on that land.” “No, but the Iroquois village was there. Look at the description of the landscape again in Brigmann’s journal. It’s the land around that hill, which is what Joe pretty much told you anyway when you first met him. Now you know the whole story. Downstairs, Ms. Bradford made copies of the documents. When Erica told her she was a descendent of John and Hattie Clark, the woman beamed widely. “This is so exciting. Can you prove it? I mean, do you have family records?” Erica nodded. “Letters from my grandmother that mention them.” “Wonderful! May we have copies? To tie the mysterious letters to an actual family and add to that you’ve ended up back here…it’s…I’m goosebumpy all over!” Erica believed her. Actually, she was in shock herself. “I’ll get copies made and bring them to you. You might also be interested to know that the brooch mentioned in Hattie Clark’s letter was recently found by Paula in the lake.” At this revelation, Ms. Bradford nearly jumped for joy. “Oh, I can’t believe it!” Then her expression sobered. “I suppose, if you do prove that this letter came from your ancestor, it belongs to you…” Erica stopped her with a raised hand. “It stays here. This is where it belongs. But I would like copies. One for me and one for my parents.” 274
Audra Cole Once the copies were made and put into sheet protectors, Ms. Bradford turned to Erica and said, “I’m going to make a special display down here of all this memorabilia. And I’m going to tell everyone the story of how the brooch was found after all these centuries. It’s really sort of spooky, isn’t it? I mean especially in view of all the rumors floating around town after that awful thing that happened…” Then realizing who she was talking to, Ms. Bradford blushed. Erica quickly changed the subject. “Do you have a camera?” Still flustered, the woman just nodded. “Why don’t we take some color shots of the brooch, close-ups, and you can put them with the letter for the display?” Relief flooded Ms. Bradford’s finely etched features and she rushed to get the camera, then spent the next twenty minutes concentrating on getting just the right angle and just the right exposure with her durablelooking Nikon.
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Chapter Twenty-Nine n hour and a half later, when Erica and Paula returned to the inn, they ran into Charles Ryan, who was just getting out of his car. Erica felt awkward and wasn’t really sure what to say to the man. What exactly am I supposed to say to someone who thinks my boyfriend killed his wife, anyway? Paula, however, didn’t seem to have a problem. “So, Mr. Ryan, has the coroner released your wife’s body yet?” Erica restrained the impulse to give her friend a sideways kick in the shins, knowing it would do no good anyway. “Actually, he has. I’ve also met with the police.” He threw a significant glance Erica’s way. Then, changing the subject, he added, “You two look pretty pleased with yourselves.” He waved them ahead of him onto the porch then quickly followed. “Well, we’ve made some pretty amazing discoveries today,” Erica told the man. She then gave him a rundown on their visit to the historical society and what they had uncovered there. “Really? So, you have a connection here.”
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Audra Cole “It would seem so.” Paula stepped into the foyer. “Any idea when you’ll be checking out?” She turned and faced the man. Erica noted that Charles’ gaze turned stony. “Yes. I’m leaving tomorrow. In a hurry to get rid of me?” Erica felt the conversation was headed down a strange path, but wasn’t sure why. “You’re welcome to stay as long as you like, Mr. Ryan. We just worry that it is very stressful for you.” She shot Paula a ‘be quiet, now’ look, which to her relief, her friend heeded. Charles went upstairs, while Erica headed for the kitchen and a bottle of beer. When Paula joined her, she was carrying a piece of paper. “I found this note from the Carters on the table in the foyer. They’re in Plainfield again. A night out on the town with Edgar’s old cronies, it says. Mimi signed it. And, speaking of a night on the town, I promised Cal I’d come to the cafe when we got back and let him know what we found out.” “Go ahead. I need to call Joe and do the same. Hopefully, he’ll be able to come over for a quickly thrown together dinner.
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Chapter Thirty rica took another swallow of beer, then dialed Joe’s number. No answer. Where the hell is he? She was fairly bursting with the news of the day’s adventure and wanted to share it with him right away. She’d just put the receiver back in the cradle when she heard that familiar canine whine at the back door. Rushing out of the office she called, “Great minds must run in the same channel, I was just calling you…” The rest of the sentence died on her lips as she saw only Mingo standing on the stoop. “Where’s Joe?” she asked the dog, as though she expected an answer. Tail wagging, tongue lolling around a mouth open with excitement at the sight of her, Mingo bounded into the kitchen and licked Erica’s hand lavishly. “Good boy,” she said, patting his large furry head. “Where’s Joe?” she repeated, searching the darkening hillside for him. Finally, she closed and locked the door. “Okay, why are you out roaming around by yourself?” Again, she got a quizzical look and a tilted head for
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Audra Cole a response. Erica got the dog some water, putting the bowl on the back porch. Then, she went to the phone and again called Joe. Again, no answer. Swearing under her breath, she nearly jumped out of her skin when the phone shrilled to life. Snatching up the receiver, she said, “Joe?” “Sorry, hon. It’s Evelyn.” Pushing down her disappointment, she told Evelyn about the trip to Hartsville. When she was finished, Evelyn sighed. “I’m so happy for you. Now you have a missing piece of your family history. I know what it is like to have gaps in your life that nothing but knowing the truth can fill.” Yes, you would, Erica thought, her mind going back a few months. “Erica, I called to tell you two things. First, the insurance agent called me today. He was at the inn this afternoon, but no one was there. Not that it matters, he was just there to survey the damage and make his report.” “Are they going to pay without a fuss?” “Yes. But…well, I won’t be making any repairs.” Erica felt a stirring of discomfort. “Why?” “I’ve received a firm, and extremely generous, offer on the inn today from that group I told you about. They call themselves a consortium. They want to develop the land, put in condos. I hate the thought of the inn being torn down, but I just don’t feel I can turn them down, and after all that has happened…” Erica was too stunned to speak for a few seconds, 279
Echoes of the Past but when she did, her voice came out in a strangled, “No! You can’t! No!” “I’m sorry, dear. I know you’ve become fond of the place, and now with it being part of your family’s history you feel connected, but I need to think of….” “I’ll buy it! Half of it. I’ll be your partner. I’ll help you run it. We can do it together, Evelyn. Don’t do this, don’t take the inn from me, please!” Erica knew she sounded hysterical, but she couldn’t help it. She felt sick inside, as panic at the thought of losing the inn, of seeing it destroyed, raced through her like a runaway train. The silence on the other end of the phone seemed to go on forever as she stood by the desk in the minuscule office and clutched the receiver so tightly her hand throbbed with pain. Her knees were shaking and she could hear her breath coming in short, anxious gasps. “You’re serious?” Erica felt relief flood her senses and she sat down heavily in the desk chair. “Yes! Please, Evelyn, don’t sign anything…you didn’t, did you?” “No. I told the attorney I’d think about it for a couple of days. He’s supposed to come back on Monday.” “I’m serious, Evelyn. I have the money. My divorce settlement was very generous and I’ll be getting alimony for the next seven years. Please, let’s work something out.” Erica held her breath, waiting for a response. Finally, Evelyn said, “I think we can do that. Let’s 280
Audra Cole talk tomorrow.” When Erica hung up the phone, she folded her arms on the desk and rested her head on them. She felt drained, near tears. I need to talk to Joe. Where is he? As if her thoughts were suddenly turned into action, the phone rang again. This time it was him. **** The high-pitched tone of Erica’s voice put Joe immediately on alert. “What’s wrong?” “Nothing…everything…” Was she crying? “Erica, tell me what’s going on. Now.” When she responded, her words came out with the rapid-fire cadence of a machine gun. “So much has happened today…we went to the historical society…you won’t believe…then Evelyn said she’s selling the inn. I can’t let her. I told her…then Mingo came to the door…I can’t handle…” “Whoa! Slow down. Take a deep breath.” He waited silently until he heard her exhale. “I just got back from a marathon session with my supervisors and Proctor. I’m going to grab a quick shower and come over. As for my wayward pup, he and I will have a long talk about dropping in unannounced. Who’s there with you?” “Just Charles Ryan. Wait a minute.” He heard a male voice in the background, then Erica came back on the line. “Scratch that. He’s on his 281
Echoes of the Past way into town, says he needs to unwind. He’s not the only one.” Joe smiled. “I think I can handle the unwinding part.” “I’ll fix dinner. Just get here. I’m sorry I was so scattered a few moments ago. I have some amazing news.” Joe chuckled. “This news isn’t going to result in me passing out cigars a few months from now in some hospital waiting room, is it? Not that I’d mind that, though, come to think of it.” He heard her sharp intake of breath and his smile broadened. “See you in a little while,” he added before breaking the connection. **** Erica knew she was blushing. Profusely. And she was very glad no one was there to see it. Then it occurred to her that this was the first time in their relationship that Joe had expressed serious intentions toward her, the first time he had alluded to them being a family someday. She found she like the idea. The inn was silent around her, save for Mingo’s soft snoring and the hum of the refrigerator. It had been such an eventful day, she’d had to absorb so much, that she felt like her brain was on overload. Dinner. What to fix? She went to the freezer and got out a package of salmon filets. The makings for a salad were in the refrigerator. A good white wine would compliment the meal. And for dessert, she’d 282
Audra Cole thaw out two ready-made cream pie slices. Key lime, perhaps. A good accent to seafood. Confident that she at least had dinner under control, if not her life, she decided to go upstairs and take a hot, soothing bath. As she went to check the back door to make sure it was securely locked, she saw the mist rising off the lake. A deep purple band of clouds hovered just above the horizon cutting the setting sun in half. It truly was a breathtaking sight. I’m glad Joe and I will be alone for a while here tonight.
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Chapter Thirty-One rica reveled in having the house to herself as she locked the bathroom door and walked across the cool marble floor. After laying her terry cloth robe on the nearby bench, she stripped off her clothes, then went to the tub and turned on the tap. This bath needed to be steaming hot to soothe her tired muscles. After shaking her head and running her fingers through her coppery hair to loosen it, she selected a packet of lilac bubble bath from the basket on the vanity and sprinkled the contents into the water. The fragrance filled the air and she breathed it in, already beginning to feel more relaxed. Lowering herself into the aromatic water, she tried to clear her mind of everything but Joe and the night that lay ahead for them. She especially tried to push the memories of recent events out of her head. Mingo was downstairs and she felt safe with the big galoot snoozing in the kitchen. He’d alert her to any intruders. Once again, she went over her conversation with Evelyn and prayed that she would not change her mind about selling the inn to outsiders. If that happened…she didn’t even want to think about it.
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Audra Cole Settle down, girl. Get yourself in shape for the wonderful dinner you’re going to share with the man you love. Love. God, is it possible? Am I really in love with him? Of course I am. He had me that first night on the dock back in July when he asked me if I knew why they called the place Spirit Lake. That voice—deep, steady, in control. And that body. Strong. Muscular. Hard. Thoughts of Joe’s hands on her body caused Erica’s skin to tingle. He made love with urgency yet tenderness. As a result, she found that she could have multiple orgasms. Grant, her former husband, had never made her feel that wanted or desired and had certainly never elicited such an intense response. Erica felt herself drifting off as the warmth overcame her. The crash from somewhere below, cut through the silence like a bomb, causing her to bolt upright and cry out. Water sloshed over the rim of the tub, splashing onto the floor in waves. Then, the lights went out. Not again! Good God! Trying to pull herself to her feet, she lost her grip on the slippery porcelain and fell back into the water, sending more of it over the sides. Finally she stood, then strained to hear footsteps on the stairs, but all was silent. Mingo! Where is he? Why didn’t he…Oh, I’m such a dunce. It must be either Paula, Charles or the Carters. He wouldn’t bark at any of them. But if that’s the case, why are the lights out? Erica carefully got out of the tub and felt around for her robe. Once she found it and slipped it on, she 285
Echoes of the Past slid open the vanity drawer and drew out the flashlight she’d replaced after Paula’s attic encounter with the unknown. Still trying to remain quiet, she tiptoed through the standing water to the door and put her ear against the rough, ancient wood. Silence. Slowly twisting the key in the lock, she winced when the tumblers sounded loud as whip-cracks in her ears. Then her hand was on the knob and she slowly turned it. Does this door squeak? I can’t remember. Dear Lord. Some primal instinct told her it was not a good idea to call out, so she just cracked the door a little so she could shine the narrow beam toward the stairs. Nothing. She opened the door a little wider and bounced the light in a wide arc. The hallway appeared to be empty. No one lurked in the shadowy corners. Making her way toward the stairs, she illuminated the risers one by one as she crept down to the first floor. After she scanned the darkened foyer with the yellow ray and determined it to be empty, she headed toward the kitchen. Like it or not, she’d have to check the fuse box in the basement. She felt her palms grow sweaty at the idea, but kept going, her resolve temporarily blocking the panic attack hovering around the fringes of her brain. When she’d gone upstairs, Mingo had been lying on the throw rug by the back door. She swung the flashlight that way. There he was. But something was wrong. He was too still and the light hadn’t roused him. Alarm pulsed through her as she started toward the dog. Then out of the corner of her eye she noticed 286
Audra Cole something else: the basement door was ajar. No, wait, that wasn’t quite right, either. As the gap widened, she realized that it wasn’t just ajar, it was being opened from the other side. Turning to run back toward the foyer, Erica felt the panic she’d been so successful at squelching hit her full force, like an unexpected physical blow. The large, cold hand that grabbed her upper arm caused her to lose her footing and stumble, but she didn’t fall, since the vise-like grip prevented it. She held tight to the flashlight, though, determined to see her attacker. “You really are a fucking pain in the ass,” growled the male voice. Then, she swung the flashlight around and was staring up into the malevolent gaze of Charles Ryan. The beam hitting him at an upward angle made him look completely sinister, like something from an oldtime horror movie. “Let go of me…what are you doing?” Erica cried. “Shut up! You’ve caused me all the trouble you’re going to. Why couldn’t you just keep your nose out of it!” “What?” Erica yelled, trying to wrench herself free. “I had the deal almost sealed. All that work, all that planning. Bitch!” He flung her away and she found herself hitting the floor with a resounding thud. Trying to break her fall she flung one arm back, then screamed as her elbow connected with the hard surface. Pain shot up to her shoulder, then down her leg as she landed on her side. The flashlight clattered against the 287
Echoes of the Past floorboards and rolled out of reach. But not before she caught sight of the gun in Charles’ hand. Not again. Dear God, I can’t go through this again. Squinting into the shadows, she saw his position change and knew he was taking aim. Using that moment to her advantage she rolled away as one bullet whizzed past her head and landed somewhere nearby. The sound of wood splintering practically next to her signaled the second shot, causing her to scramble away at a crawl toward what she hoped was the front door. The third shot hit the wall several inches from her. There was no loud report, just the sound of the bullets as they found their target. He had a silencer on the gun. She could hear his heavy breathing as he ran toward her. Bracing herself for the fourth shot, she realized she would have to stand up to open the door and in doing so she’d be an easier target. All at once she heard wood splinter, felt a rush of air and saw the outline of two figures filling the open doorway. Looking up, she also saw the most welcome sight in the world: a full moon illuminating the front porch and spilling its blessed light into the foyer. The next voice she heard was Greg Novak’s. “Drop it, Ryan. It’s all over!” Another shot pinged above her and she put her head down on the floor and covered it with her arms. The next shot was loud, and a scream like that of a wounded animal filled the air. Erica felt faint as she heard people rush past her. Then she was being lifted up and carried away. 288
Audra Cole “Someone turn on the damned lights!” one gruff voice commanded. “Is he dead?” asked another. “The fuse box is in the basement, I’ll take care of it,” came Edgar Carter’s unmistakable accent. “The paramedics are here,” shouted a female voice that sounded to Erica like that of Lehna Redhawk. “Is she shot?” Greg demanded. Erica wanted to answer, but she just couldn’t make the words come out. She nestled her head against the broad, muscular chest of her rescuer and decided she’d just stay there forever. “We’ve got lights again,” called another voice. The foyer was now bathed in the soft yellow glow of the overhead chandelier. Hands quickly moved over her body. Joe’s hands. He was the one who had scooped her up off the floor and was now carrying her toward the parlor. “You shot, baby? Please say something. Are you…I need a medic here!” he shouted and she took comfort in the sound of his voice. Nuzzling closer to him, she let the darkness that had been closing in take her into its welcome embrace.
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Chapter Thirty-Two rica was sitting on the dock. The autumn sun was warm against her skin and she turned her face up toward the sky. Mingo was at her feet, snoozing peacefully, his soft snore a reassuring sound. Joe was standing nearby, looking out at the water, his strong, broad back muscles straining against the tan uniform shirt. She loved afternoons like this, when it was just the three of them. She felt at peace, serene. A clattering noise broke into her dream and Erica’s eyes flew open. A bright light, not the sun, was shining in her eyes. Then the glare was gone and she was staring up into a large overhead lamp. Beneath her back and buttocks, the surface she rested on was hard and a little uncomfortable. He throat ached, her arm hurt and her muscles felt sore. She shifted her gaze to the right and saw the source of the noise. A woman in a pair of green scrubs was removing some instruments from a metal tray. She slid her gaze to the left and Joe’s worried face swam into focus. “She’s awake,” he said, his voice sounding far
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Audra Cole away. “She’ll drift in and out. It’s the anesthetic,” the woman on the right assured him. “Joe…Joe…” Erica croaked, then squeezed her eyes shut as tears welled up. “You’re okay, hon, they just had to put a cast on your arm, that’s all. They gave you something to relax you while they did it.” “Well, not a very medical explanation, but sufficient, I suppose,” came a strange, male voice. Erica saw a man in a white coat hovering over her now. “I’m Doctor Bazentine. You sustained a fracture of the Radius. We’ve put a cast on it, which should stay on for the next six weeks. We’ll X-ray it again in three days to see if it is setting correctly, then again in two weeks. I don’t foresee any complications. You’re very lucky. You just missed having to have a pin surgically implanted.” With that he smiled and left the cubicle. Erica didn’t feel particularly lucky. She felt groggy, nauseated and her arm was starting to hurt like hell. “Hurts,” she muttered. The nurse scurried to her side. “I’ll get you something for the pain, dear, then you’ll get a prescription for some medication to take with you.” The nurse left and she was, at last, alone with Joe. He leaned over, putting his face very close to hers. “I love you.” “Me, too.” She felt her spirits lift and reached up to touch his face, only to find that her arm felt like it was 291
Echoes of the Past weighted down with lead. “Use your good arm if you’re going to fondle me, please,” he said with a grin. She raised her head and took stock of her physical condition. Her right arm was in a powder blue cast from wrist to elbow. Her left one was tethered to an IV line. “I picked the cast color,” Joe said proudly. “Like it? I think it brings out your eyes.” Erica chuckled. “You have excellent taste. When can I go home?” “As soon as you can walk out of here,” Joe told her. “Give yourself some time to get your land legs back, okay?” “What happened? Why did Charles Ryan try to kill me, Joe? And how did the police get there just in time?” The anesthetic fog was beginning to lift, and questions rampaged through her mind faster than she could ask them aloud. Before Joe could respond, the curtain was pulled aside and Greg Novak entered the cubicle, followed by Edgar Carter. “My God, you gave us a scare,” Edgar pronounced, his voice booming. Erica tried to sit up and Joe adjusted the bed so that she was in sitting position. “I want to know what happened, why this happened. And did you shoot Charles Ryan?” Erica eyed them each in turn, resting her gaze on Greg for that last question. “I did. But I’m glad to say he’ll survive to serve a 292
Audra Cole nice long prison term,” Greg replied. “He killed Lisa,” Joe told her. Erica frowned. “Why?” Greg explained. “She was a threat, pure and simple. In the course of our investigation we found out that Lisa had consulted an attorney in Pittsburgh about a divorce. She wanted out of the marriage, but Charles held the purse strings and she wasn’t about to give up her lifestyle. “We figure she found out about Charles’ real purpose in coming here and threatened to spill the beans. In fact, the arsonist, a local thug by the name of Carl Jenkins, told us that during one of his conversations with Ryan he said his wife was trying to ruin the deal. “Tonight, Joe told me that Lisa tried to shake him down for money. Now we know it was because she was desperate to get away from her husband. I think when she knew she couldn’t get anything out of Joe, she confronted Charles and he killed her. Probably by luring her down to the dock then dragging her into the woods, where he strangled her. Next, he took the earring so he could frame Joe, and then dumped her body into the water.” Edgar said, “You see, Mr. Ryan, being the wheeler and dealer that he is, had a master plan. He was part of the consortium that wanted to buy the inn and the surrounding land. But first he had to convince Evelyn to sell. She had been approached months ago and refused. So Charles was given the task of making her change her mind, no holes barred. Your prowler 293
Echoes of the Past outside the parlor window, your second prowler who left the blood upstairs and turned off the lights, and the gazebo fire were all Carl Jenkins’ doing.” Erica felt her head swim. “But what led you to this Jenkins person?” Greg smiled. “Remember the remnants of the gas can that were found after the gazebo fire?” Erica nodded, still stunned by it all. “The regional crime lab was able to lift a partial print off it and that’s how we found Jenkins. Once we had him in custody earlier today, he spilled his guts in exchange for a deal.” “It was when he told us that he’d also been hired by Charles to plant that earring that we knew we had that bugger, Ryan, for his wife’s murder,” Edgar said, a grin spreading across his craggy face. “Of course Ryan has lawyered up, but there’s enough to get an indictment, especially after what happened tonight.” Greg said with satisfaction. “In fact, we were on our way to arrest him when we stumbled into his attempt on your life.” He patted her good arm. “I’m just glad we got there in time and that our arrival coincided with Joe’s.” “Me, too,” Joe echoed, smoothing an errant strand of hair from her forehead. “Even though I didn’t get that dinner. Guess I’ll have to take a raincheck.” Erica was about to tell him that if she had her way, there would be a lifetime of dinners together, when there was a great commotion in the hallway. “Oh, God, you’re not dead. I heard you were dead! It’s all over town that someone got shot…My God!” 294
Audra Cole Paula swept into the cubicle and pushed Greg out of the way. She hugged Erica and planted a kiss on the side of her head. “Your arm. What did that bastard do to you? I hope you shot him in the balls!” She glowered at Greg. Joe winced and Edgar cleared his throat. Erica looked from one of them to the other and smiled. Then she turned her attention to Paula. “He’s going to get what is coming to him, don’t worry.” “Well, it won’t be nearly enough!” Paula stormed. Erica adjusted her position to get more comfortable. “Charles must have heard me on the phone with Evelyn tonight, discussing my becoming her partner so she wouldn’t have to sell the inn. He came into the kitchen when I was talking to Joe, right after I hung up with Evelyn, and told me he was gong out. I guess he decided to get rid of me, too.” Edgar agreed. “You were now a threat to his plans.” “How did you connect Charles to this consortium?” Erica asked. Greg motioned toward Edgar. “I’ll let Detective Sergeant Carter tell you, since he was the one who figured it out.” “Not true. We both arrived at the same conclusion at the same time. In fact, we showed up in Du Bois within hours of each other to try and find out what took our friend, Charles Ryan, there so often during his so-called vacation here. Actually, we have Lehna Redhawk to thank. She got on the Internet and did some good, old-fashioned detective work. Tracked 295
Echoes of the Past Ryan’s business dealings backwards and came across this affiliation. In other words, she followed the money. The partners in this consortium are not the most savory characters. Ryan may have been in way over his head.” Erica couldn’t help but notice that Greg Novak and Edgar Carter had become, if not friends, at least comrades-in-arms. “Mingo!” she suddenly said, as the memory of that dog lying listless by the back door leapt into her mind. Joe put a reassuring hand on her shoulder. “Charles drugged him with sleeping pills. They had to pump his stomach, but he’ll be fine.” Erica felt anger roil up inside her belly. “Now, I agree with Paula, Greg. You should have shot Charles Ryan in the balls.”
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Chapter Thirty-Three he next day dawned bright and clear with frost on the ground and a hint of winter in the air. Edgar and Mimi were downstairs by seven o’clock, loading their car for the trip back to Florida. Erica, under orders from Paula, had not been allowed to lift a finger to help with the breakfast preparations. Not that she could have, with her casted arm resting in a sling. “What do you think?” Paula asked, standing in the doorway of the dining room and surveying the spread. “You’ve outdone yourself,” Erica admitted, as she gazed at the food her friend had prepared. The fragrance of warm apple cinnamon muffins made Erica’s mouth water in anticipation. She’d had very little to eat yesterday and was famished. “Goodness’ sakes, you didn’t have to do all this,” Mimi crowed, sweeping into the room with a grand gesture toward the table, which was set with a white linen cloth and good china. “There’s juice, fresh fruit, muffins, bagels and cream cheese and I’ll make your omelet to order, just
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Echoes of the Past let me know what you want in it.” Paula beamed at them. Erica went for the coffee pot and clumsily poured a cup with her left hand, sloshing most of it into the saucer. Mimi fluttered around. “You’ll get used to it, dear. I did. Let Edgar pour for us, why don’t you.” Edgar obliged as Erica and Mimi took their seats at the table. Once they were seated, Mimi leaned toward Erica and, indicating her own cast, said in confidential tones, “It itches like a flea bite, I swear. Don’t tell Edgar, but sometimes I poke a ball-point pen under the cast. It feels sooooo good. You might want to remember that.” Erica smiled and felt like saying that she’d take itching any day to the pain that she’d felt when the medication wore off. Instead, she sipped her coffee, then smiled. While Paula prepared the omelets, Edgar sat down across from Erica. “How are you, really?” “Still shaky. I was terrified last night. I thought for sure he was going to kill me.” The admission made her tremble inside. “It must have brought back some terrible memories, also,” he pressed. Erica nodded her head. Then, she asked, “Tell me, Edgar, when did you first suspect Charles Ryan had killed his wife?” Edgar smiled. “From the beginning, actually.” “You didn’t tell me that, Edgar,” Mimi blurted, 298
Audra Cole sounding offended. He patted her plump hand benevolently. “Sorry, my dear, but I needed to keep my own counsel on that suspicion until I had proof.” She nodded in an understanding, yet longsuffering way. Edgar continued, “You see, while he put on a good show as the grief-stricken husband, he never asked what happened to her.” Paula brought the omelets to the table and they concentrated on the meal. Erica finished every scrap of hers and even helped herself to a second muffin, slathering at it with lots of butter, even though most of it went on the plate or the tablecloth below. The Carters left an hour later amid promises to write and keep in touch. Erica suspected she’d never hear from them again, but called one final “Don’t forget to write,” as they pulled out of the parking area and drove away. **** Paula spent some time in the Ryan’s room after she got finished cleaning the one the Carters had just vacated. The police had asked for all of their belongings and she packed them up, including his laptop, and took them downstairs and deposited the box on the back porch. The morning paper had sported the headline: HUSBAND ARRESTED, CASE CLOSED. Reporters 299
Echoes of the Past had called several times but she’d given them the standard, “No comment” and hung up. Let them get their story from the police or the lawyers. It still made Paula’s blood run cold to think of how close she’d come to losing her best friend. She would have never gotten over that. Never. Not again. Cal. His face leapt into her mind, as it often did lately. Was she falling in love? Or was it lust? Who cared at this point? They still had a long way to go. Last night, the waitress at the cafe had given notice and Cal had asked Paula if she’d fill in. Fill in. Is that what I am to him, his fill-in woman? He was still an enigma to her. Strong, solid, sure of himself in many ways, but there was something bubbling just below the surface that seemed to keep him from really embracing life. There was a lack of joy, as though he wanted to be completely happy when good fortune came his way but was afraid to accept it because something might happen to take it all away. She sensed the reticence; felt him drawing back when she got too close. Why? Paula made a vow to unravel the mystery surrounding Cal Motega because it was the only way she’d be able to continue the relationship. **** Mingo’s scratch at the back door caught Erica’s attention as she was getting a can of soda from the refrigerator. She rushed onto the back porch and threw open 300
Audra Cole the door, kneeling down to hug the canine. “Oh, my good boy. I’m so sorry. Yes, I am.” She roughed up the fur on his chest, then scratched one of his ears. He licked her face in appreciation then padded into the kitchen and sat by the refrigerator. “What’s that all about?” Erica asked Joe as he stepped inside. “The vet keeps her dog treats in the refrigerator,” Joe replied, throwing Mingo a threatening glare. Mingo remained immovable, staring steadily at Erica, and pointedly ignoring his master. Erica laughed and it felt good. After so many days of unrelenting tension she enjoyed the release. “Well, the only thing in that refrigerator is people food, and your big, bad ogre of an owner won’t let you have any of that.” Joe pinched her behind and she squealed. “I see you two are back to normal,” Paula said, entering the room. “Why is that dog sitting there?” Joe and Erica exchanged glances, then laughed. Paula, obviously not seeing what was so funny, just shrugged. “Did you tell Joe about what we discovered yesterday before all hell broke loose?” Erica motioned Joe to the table, got him a soda then joined him. Carefully, she took him through their visit to the historical society and the things they’d found out. When she finished, he sat back and exhaled. “You belong here.” “That’s what I told her. See, I’m not the only one who realizes that,” Paula exclaimed, glancing at them. Erica’s expression was somber. “You know, we still 301
Echoes of the Past have some unexplained events around here For instance, the way Paula found those photographs and letters in the attic. And, the weeping in the garden….” Paula cut in with, “And don’t forget what happened in the basement and the Carter’s room being cold all the time. Then Lisa claimed she was touched in the shower.”. Joe held up a hand. “Old houses have tricky plumbing and heating.” Paula shook her head. “I’m sure the cold water can be attributed to old plumbing, but what happened down in that basement when we were investigating it was like nothing I’ve ever encountered. We both felt a presence.” “Then there’s the flowers in the foyer,” Erica put in. Joe got up just as the phone rang. While Paula answered it, he went to the refrigerator, shooed Mingo out of the way, and came back to the table with a beer. “I need something a little more substantial, if I’m going on a ghost hunt.” “I have to go,” Paula announced as she came out of the office. “I’ll be back later.” With that, she hurried from the kitchen. A few moments later Erica heard the front door open and close. “What was that all about?” Erica wondered. Joe got up and drew Erica up from her seat and into his arms. “Who cares. We’re alone and I intend to take advantage of it.” “Of me, don’t you mean, sir?” Erica chuckled. “Of 302
Audra Cole course, I only have the use of one arm, so I guess I’m at your mercy.” “I think I like the sound of that,” Joe said, seeking his lips with his. The kiss was warm and strong and grew in urgency until she couldn’t help but press her body tightly against his. Her breasts met the immovable muscles of his chest and she could feel her nipples harden in anticipation. Honey began to flow into her panties, and her clit twitched with need. The cast seemed impossibly clumsy as she tried to hold it out of the way so Joe could unbutton her blouse. She’d had a terrible time getting the arm through the blouse sleeve and knew he’d have trouble getting the garment off. But, oh how she needed for him to do just that, and quickly. Instead of continuing, however, Joe released her and stepped back. “Come with me,” he said, holding out his hand. “Now? Where?” “Just come on, I’m parked out front,” he urged, leading her through the foyer, and out to his Jeep. Mingo leapt into the back just as Joe started the engine. During the drive to his cabin, Erica bombarded him with questions, but he refused to reveal his plan. Once he parked the jeep and led her inside, he went to the kitchen and returned with a small gold box. A red bow adorned the top. He handed it to her and stood there, capturing her questioning gaze with his steady, dark one. 303
Echoes of the Past “The top just pulls off,” he told her, steadying the bottom so she could open it with one hand. Erica gasped at the sight of the beautiful, ornate ring that lay on a bed of soft, fluffy cotton. It was a diamond, secured in an antique gold filigree setting with two side stones of deep blue. It was breathtakingly lovely, and she knew right away it was not just an ordinary ring. “It was my grandmother’s. Her engagement ring. Now, I’d like for it to be yours. She was the only woman who ever wore it. She made me promise to only give it to the woman I intended to spend the rest of my life with.” His voice, though deep and clear, trembled a little. Tears brimmed in Erica’s eyes then spilled down her cheeks as she took the ring from its nesting place and held it up in front of her. “It’s so beautiful…” “No, you’re beautiful.” His hand touched her face, his finger drawing lightly down her cheek, wiping away the tears. Deftly, Joe took the ring and slipped it onto the third finger of her left hand. “Like it was made for you,” he said. “I loved you the minute you stepped out of the mist, that first night on the dock,” she admitted, her gaze never leaving his. “Then say yes,” he groaned, “I’m in agony here.” Erica thought back to yesterday, when the most important question she would ever ask Joe had been answered by that one simple word. Now it was her turn. 304
Audra Cole “Yes.” All the anguish of the past two weeks, all the terror she’d felt last night as bullets whizzed past her head, all the pain of the broken arm was forgotten as Joe swept her up and carried her to his bedroom. Once she was lying on the soft comforter he slowly undressed her, being careful of the arm, pampering her with soft caresses, lingering, gentle kisses and smooth, light strokes. He kissed her bare breasts, played at her nipples lavishly with his tongue, then kissed his way to that place between her legs where her juices now flowed freely. As his tongue licked at her vagina, then her clit, she moaned and laced the fingers of her good hand through his hair, drawing him closer. She longed to hold him, to feel his hardness against her body, to taste the essence that bubbled from the top of his cock. Joe sat up and pulled her into a sitting position, then got on his knees so that his dick was near her mouth. She licked the length of him, up one side and down the other, feeling the distended veins against her tongue. She squirmed on the bed as he slid two fingers inside of her, using them scissors fashion. And when she took his length into her mouth, Joe pulled her head close and groaned as she relaxed then clenched her jaw muscles, creating suction then releasing it. Just when she thought she would burst with her need, he drew away and rolled over, lying on his back. “Ride me,” he said. She did. She rode him hard and fast and with all of 305
Echoes of the Past her strength. Sweat poured down her face and dripped between her bouncing breasts as she came with such force that she screamed out his name over and over and over. **** When Joe drove Erica back to the inn two hours later, Paula and Cal were having coffee in the kitchen. A plate of chocolate chip cookies sat between them on the table. “About time. Where have you two…” Paula began, then jumped up and squealed with delight as Erica held out her hand to show off the ring. Erica felt the tears begin anew as Paula oohed and aahed over the beautiful diamond. Cal slapped Joe on the back. “Guess I’ll be renting a tux, huh?” “Let’s hope soon,” Joe replied, throwing Erica a meaningful glance. She felt her heart leap, then settle back into a somewhat normal rhythm. “Tell them,” Cal said to Paula. “What?” Erica looked from one to the other. “Cal needs help at the cafe. Joe doesn’t know yet, but one of the waitresses gave notice today. I’m going to be filling in for her.” “But that leaves me alone here at the inn…” Erica began. “Did I miss something?” came a familiar voice from the kitchen doorway. Erica swung around and gasped at the sight of 306
Audra Cole Evelyn Black, on crutches, standing there with a wide smile on her face. “Let me see it, sweetie. I heard the commotion all the way in the parlor.” She hugged the other woman, “I’m so glad you’re back.” “Well, partner, we have an inn to run. Where else would I be?” Paula drew Erica toward a kitchen chair. “Wait until you both hear the really fabulous news! Tell them, Cal.” “Me? You tell them, it was your idea,” he replied, winking Erica’s way. “Okay. We all know how old this house is, right? And now, thanks to our spectral friend in the attic, we know the history. Well, we have a little thing in this country known as the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. It’s administered under the National Park Service, which is part of the Department of the Interior. Joe was kind enough to help us get the ball rolling yesterday to have this inn and the property it sits on nominated for a listing in the National Register of Historic Places. Once it is accepted, it will be protected by law, and you, owner number one,” she pointed to Evelyn, “and you, owner number two,” she turned to Erica, “will be able to tap into federal funds if needed for preservation. And, best of all, it can never be torn down as long as it is on the register.” All of a sudden, Erica felt relief wash over her. The inn was protected, Evelyn and she would soon be 307
Echoes of the Past partners, and Paula was staying in Spirit Lake. And I will soon be Joe’s wife, Erica thought, looking again at the gorgeous ring on her finger. Life is very, very good.
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Epilogue reg Novak sat alone in his office and stared at the wall. The past week had been a nightmare. Not only had there been a murder here in Spirit Lake, but he’d encountered, quite by chance, someone who remembered him from his days as a Plainfield cop. Although Edgar Carter had turned out to be an ally in the solving of Lisa Ryan’s murder, it had been touch and go for a while. It could very easily have gone the other way and then where would he be? Perspiration formed a slimy film on Greg’s upper lip and forehead as he thought about what could happen if anyone ever found out just where he’d been between the time he left Plainfield and the time he resurfaced in Spirit Lake.
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**** It was nearly one a.m. by the time Cal and Paula stopped making love. It had been a marathon session; she’d seemed insatiable and he’d relished every minute of it. She was adventurous, willing to try anything to please him. In turn, he made it a habit to 309
Echoes of the Past bring something new and exciting into their lovemaking each time. Cal sat up and looked at Paula, now asleep on the other side of the bed. She was so lovely, so passionate. She reached out and grabbed life by the scruff of the neck and never let the bad things get her down for very long. He needed her. Maybe he even loved her. Who knew? Getting up, he went into the living room and poured a straight whiskey, downing it in one long gulp. The nightmares had gotten better since she’d come into his life. He didn’t even want to think about what would happen if he lost her. That’s why he had to make sure she never found out about that part of his past that he kept hidden in the deepest corner of his mind. As he stood there, naked, staring out at the silent street, his CO’s words came back to him in a rush. “We’ve all done things we’d just as soon forget, son, especially over here. Just give it time.” But time hadn’t done the trick; in fact, it only seemed to make the hellish memories sharper in his mind. **** On the moonlit hill, in the burned-out ruins of the once-spectacular rose garden, a woman wept, her soft anguished cries blending with the wind that blew across the landscape and down over the lake where the mist still hovered. 310
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To be continued…
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