Tash and Joe are back! Mystery, humor and romance combine when they investigate the ghostly goings-on at spooky Wildfinch Hall.
Dead Lady Vanishing is Book 2 in the Bolde and Baulsey paranormal mystery series. Here’s a
sneak peak:
***
My flashlight
illuminated the name Wildfinch Hall.
Really? Somebody had been reading too many Brontë novels. And we
weren’t even in Yorkshire. I wondered whether Heathcliff was at home.
“Stop messing around,”
yelled Clover. She was already on the other side of the gates. Unlike me, she
could walk right through them. “Come on.”
“The gates are locked,”
I said, directing my beam onto the padlock and chain.
“Then climb over.”
It wasn’t the first time
I’d trespassed at Clover’s insistence and I guessed it wouldn’t be the last.
Sticking the flashlight in my pocket, I surveyed the curls and scrolls of
wrought iron, which appeared to provide plenty of hand- and footholds. It
wasn’t until I grabbed hold that I realized the metal was dangerously slick
with rain. I slipped and banged my knee. Sucking in a breath, I tried again,
more carefully this time. As I made my way up, the gates wobbled. The wind
whipped around, threatening to toss me on my ass, but I clung on. When I reached
the top, I swung one leg over and then the other. For a second I balanced on
top then I jumped down, landing with a crunch on the gravel driveway.
Jagged lightning split
the sky. For a moment it was bright as day. A large building—we’re talking Pemberley
or Downton Abbey—stood on the crest of the hill at the end of the driveway. The
scream must’ve come from there.
As I started toward it,
Clover called, “No, this way,” and set off across a wide lawn dotted with
swaying trees.
Forgetting about the pelting
rain, my wet shoes, and the chill that turned my breath misty white, I went
after her, flicking on my flashlight again as I ran.
“Is the woman still
screaming?” I panted.
“No.” She sounded
worried.
“Maybe you’ve gone the
wrong way. The scream must’ve come from the place on the hill.”
“It didn’t.” She
continued to move away from the house.
“You do realize I’m
soaking wet,” I grumbled. Honestly I wished I’d stayed in the cramped car. At
least that had been warm and dry. But Clover wasn’t sympathetic. Probably
because, no matter how hard it rained, she was bone-dry. One of the advantages
of being a ghost.
I
stepped in a puddle halfway up my shin and swore loudly. Mud squelched as I
pulled myself free. Clover had gone on ahead. I trudged after her.
Suddenly she yelled and
pointed, “Over there. Near the wood. It’s some sort of building.” She moved
fast, gliding over the grass. I hurried after her.
The building had been
constructed in the style of a mini Roman temple with stone walls on three
sides. On the fourth side a short flight of steps led to a porch with a roof
supported by columns. By the time I reached the steps, Clover was moving across
the porch toward a wooden door. She could easily have passed right through it,
but she suddenly stopped and took a step back. Had she met some kind of
resistance? I moved closer so I could hear what she was saying.
“What the—?” She squared
her shoulders. Then, raising her voice above the storm as though she was
speaking to someone, she said, “Who are you? Why did you scream?”
As she listened to the
answer, she tapped her foot like she did when she was pissed. “I’ll mind my own
business when hell freezes over! Who the hell do you think you are anyway?”
Frustrated that I could
only witness one side of their exchange, I yelled, “Clover, what’s going on?”
But all her attention
was on the other ghost. She looked it over from head to toe. “You’ve been here
a while, haven’t you? When did you die? Nineteenth century?...No, I won’t go
away. I heard a scream. Was it you?” Her hands rested on her plump hips, feet
apart, in the determined stance I knew so well. She clenched her fists and
demanded, “Get out of my way.” A second later, she doubled over. Had she’d been
gut-punched?
“Clover!” I rushed up
the steps.
“Stay back,” she warned,
but I kept going. Her assailant was a ghost. It couldn’t hurt me. Not
physically anyway.
I'd almost reached her
when her head snapped back. Had she been punched in the jaw? She lashed out,
one-two, with her fists. Then suddenly her hands were pinned behind her and she
was being pushed toward the door.
“Let her go!” I launched
myself at whoever was holding her and swung a punch. I’d never fought a ghost
before. I was shocked when my fist sank into something thick, viscous, and bitterly
cold. I yelped as the icy sensation crept up my arms and entered my chest. It
was hard to breathe. For one terrifying moment, I heard the faraway sound of a
woman screaming in torment.
Clover struggled to
escape whoever had pinned her arms behind her. She yelled, “You have no right
to—” Her voice was abruptly cut off as though someone had her around the
throat. I wanted to help, but the icy cold that had settled in my chest moved
up through my neck and into my skull. I’d had brain freeze before but this was
much worse. I fell to my knees, cradling my head in my hands, moaning. What was
happening to me? I couldn’t think straight, could hardly move. I huddled in a
pathetic mound, willing the pain to go away.
“Tash!”
Clover was in trouble…I
had to help her…somehow. With a huge effort I managed to raise my head. I saw
her throw a punch then suddenly she was down on her knees, her back arched,
head bent way back. Her bright blue eyes locked on mine. I heard her panted
breaths, saw her struggling to defeat her opponent, but she couldn’t do it
alone.
“Tash! Help me!”
I was on my knees,
ice-cold, shivering. My head ached like a thousand knives were stabbing my
skull. I could barely move, but somehow I had to help her. Slowly, terribly
slowly, I forced myself to move, straightening my back, moving one leg into a
half-kneeling position. Then, with a supreme effort, I pushed myself upward.
Ignoring my pounding, throbbing head, I launched myself at Clover, twisting a
little at the last moment, hoping I’d knock down her assailant. It was like
hitting a wall of ice. I staggered backward, lost my footing on the edge of the
porch, and tumbled down the steps onto the wet grass. Rain poured onto my face,
making me cough and splutter. Groggy and disoriented, I rolled onto my hands
and knees.
Clover called out to me
again, but her voice sounded faint and very far away. I struggled to make out
the words, but all I heard was a name. “Rosalind… ” Then suddenly my head
cleared, just like that, and I was no longer in pain. I leaped to my feet.
Scooping up the flashlight I’d dropped, I raked the beam over the place where
I’d last seen her. All I saw was the little Roman temple looking dismal and
forlorn in the sheeting rain. Clover was gone.
***
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