Crimson Twilight

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Authors: Heather Graham

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Crimson Twilight

A Krewe of Hunters Novella

By Heather Graham

 

 

1001 Dark Nights

 

 

Copyright 2014 Heather Graham Pozzessere

ISBN: 978-1-940887-10-4

 

 

Forward: Copyright 2014 M. J. Rose

 

Published by Evil Eye Concepts, Incorporated

 

The Night is Watching
excerpt used with permission from Harlequin Books S.A. Text Copyright © 2013 by Slush Pile Productions, LLC.

 

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination and are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or establishments is solely coincidental.

 

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Table of Contents

Author Forward: On the Krewe of Hunters

Dedication

Forward

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Also From 1001 Dark Nights

About Heather Graham

An excerpt from The Night is Watching by Heather Graham

Special Thanks

 

On the Krewe of Hunters

By Heather Graham

I’ve always been fascinated by both history and stories that had elements that were eerie and made us wonder what truly goes on, what is the human soul—and is there life after death? When I was young, I devoured gothic novels and became a fan of Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker’s
Dracula
and Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein
.

And with years passing—for some of us earlier in life and others later—we lose people. When we lose people, we have to believe that we’ll see them again, that there is a Heaven or an afterlife. Sometimes, it’s the only true comfort we have. I think it’s a beautiful part of us—the love we can have for others. But it also allows for pain so deep it can’t be endured unless we have that belief that we can and will meet again.

Having grown up with a Scottish father and an Irish mother, I naturally spent some time in church learning the Nicene Creed—in which we vow that we believe in the Holy Ghost.

I suppose people with very mathematical and scientific minds can easily explain away such things as “death” experiences shared by many who technically died on operating tables before being brought back. “Neurons snapping in the brain,” is one explanation I’ve heard.

But I sadly lack a scientific brain and my math is pathetic, so I choose to believe that all things may be possible.

Have I ever sat down with a ghost myself? No.

But I have been many places where it’s easy to imagine that the dead might linger. I’ve heard of many strange tales. And I love the chance that when a loved one needs to be soothed, when a right must be avenged, a ghost—or perhaps the  strength and energy of the human soul—might remain.

Thus the Krewe.

Who better than an offshoot of a crime-fighting agency to help these wronged individuals—far too, well,
dead
, themselves—who wish to set the record straight?

I’ve had incredible chances myself to do wonderful things and while I haven’t met a ghost, I have certainly been places where the very air around you feels different. Walking through the Tower of London, stepping into Westminster Cathedral—or standing at dusk on one of the hallowed fields of Gettysburg, you can easily feel seeped with history and the lives that went before us.

I’ve enjoyed working on the Krewe novels, setting them various places I’ve loved myself. Each year, a group of writers takes the Lizzie Borden house for a night. For promo, I’ve done a documented séance at the House of the Seven Gables. I’ve been on expeditions with ghost “hunters” on the Queen Mary, the Spanish Military Hospital, the Myrtles Plantation, and many more wonderful locations where history, time, and place took their toll on men and women.

 

 

Wonderfully fun things happen. The incredible owner of the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast and Museum, has restored the house to as close to the way it looked the fateful day that Lizzie herself either did—or didn’t—take an ax (or hatchet!) and give her mother forty whacks. (It was really somewhere between 18 and 20, but that doesn’t work well in a rhyme!) One year, the Biography Channel was filming there and my newly graduated Cal-Arts actress daughter, Chynna Skye, played Lizzie Borden for the Biography Channel—and hacked me to pieces as Abby Borden. (What a charming mother/daughter shot, right?) I’ve stayed at the 17hundred90 Inn in Savannah in the room from which their resident ghost, Anne, pitched to her death. The management there has a wonderful sense of humor—they have a mannequin of Anne in one of the windows, waving to those on the tours that go by. We also happened to follow a then young recording and television star’s stay in the room. She left the inn a letter, telling them that Anne had been in her luggage, messing up all her packing. Having spent time with ghost trackers who did seek the logical explanation first, all I could think was, “But did you look for the note from the TSA?”

A favorite occasion was at the Spanish Military Hospital in St. Augustine where, watching the cameras set up by my friends, the Peace River Ghost Trackers, I was certain I saw a ghost. But good ghost trackers are out to find the solid solution to a “haunting” first—it was pointed out to me that I was seeing Scott’s shadow as he moved across the room.

While Adam Harrison first makes his appearance in
Haunted
, the Krewe of Hunters series actually begins with
Phantom Evil
, taking place in one of my favorite cities in the world, New Orleans, Louisiana. I have put on a writers’ conference there every year since the awful summer of storms and flooding decimated the city. There are few places in the world with an aura of “faded elegance,” of the past being an integral part of the present. There are tales of courage there, of tragedy, and of adventure. The cemeteries stir the imaginations of the most solid thinkers. There are many ghosts with the right to be truly furious at their earthly fates—not to mention some of the most delicious food in the world!

Jane Everett and Sloan Trent first meet during a wicked season of murder at an old theater in Arizona reminiscent of the Bird Cage. The Wild, Wild, West certainly had its share of violence and intrigue as well. Cultures came together and clashed, miners sought treasure, and the ever-present human panorama of life went on—including love gone wrong, hatred, jealousy, and greed.

And where ghosts might well linger. If they exist, of course.

For this story—while thankfully, nothing went wrong and it was an incredibly beautiful day!—I have chosen a castle in New England and the seed of its imagining came from a real wedding—my son’s.

Yes, in America, we have castles. That’s because we’ve had men who lived with massive fortunes and could indulge their whims and have them brought over—brick by brick or stone by stone—from a European country. And there’s just something about a castle...

So many things can go wrong at a wedding. What with dresses, a wedding party, nervous brides, nervous grooms, bad caterers, and so on.

But what could be worse than the minister—dead on the morning of the nuptials?

 

Dedication

For Franci Naulin and D.J. Davant

 

Yevgeniya Yeretskaya and Derek Pozzessere

 

and

 

Alicia Ibarra and Robert Rosello

 

And to all kinds of different, beautiful—wonderful weddings!

 

One Thousand and One Dark Nights

Once upon a time, in the future…

 

I was a student fascinated with stories and learning.

I studied philosophy, poetry, history, the occult, and

the art and science of love and magic. I had a vast

library at my father’s home and collected thousands

of volumes of fantastic tales.

 

I learned all about ancient races and bygone

times. About myths and legends and dreams of all

people through the millennium. And the more I read

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