Read Witch of Christmas Past Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
Witch of Christmas Past
An Izzy Cooper Mystery
Kendra Ashe
Copyrigh
t
2015 Kendra Ashe
All Rights Reserved
Lavine Press 2015
This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the author’s imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely coincidence.
The lights flickered. A few seconds later, the Lighthouse Market was plunged into darkness.
This so wasn’t cool!
Reading labels in the dark was only part of the problem. Now the cashier wouldn’t be able to accept credit cards, and I had no cash on me.
Just as I was trying to decide if the cashier would accept an IOU, the lights flickered again, and then came on.
It was time to get out of Dodge before the power went out again.
A bell ringing Santa was common during the holiday season. That was all part of Christmas.
What wasn’t so common was that this Santa was really a demon. The white hair and beard couldn’t hide the mischievous gleam in his eyes.
Stopping in front of the red collection pot, I gave Julius the evil eye. “We need to talk … right away!”
“Ho ho ho! I’d love to talk with you child, but I’m a bit busy at the moment. Maybe if you send a letter to the North Pole …”
Julius rolled his eyes. “Fine!”
By the time I loaded my groceries in the trunk, Julius was standing behind me.
“You are no fun anymore. I think the FBI is getting to you,” he grumbled.
Before getting into the car, Julius pulled off the Santa hat and fake beard. “My dear Izzy. I think you forget whom it is you are talking to. I am a demon … remember? You know … a fouler of men, the scourge of the universe.”
Julius rolled his eyes. “Coming from Miss Fallen Angel. You’re still in between and haven’t beaten it.”
“Just drop me at the Mermaid Inn. I’ll use what little money I managed to collect for a lobster dinner.”
Julius was in a foul mood for sure. It didn’t matter. He wasn’t keeping the money.
“Sorry.” I shook my head. “You collected that money under false pretenses. We are going some place where you can donate the money to people who really need it.”
His normally handsome features twisted as he scowled at me. “Like hell! I just spent the last hour collecting this money. I figure I’ve earned it.”
“Julius … if you can’t do it for the sake of just trying to be good, then do it because if you don’t, I will never talk to you again. If I’m not talking to you, then how are you going to drag me to Hell?”
“Really?” I asked, not trusting him at all.
He shrugged. “Sure. What do you want to do with the money?”
“Let’s go then.”
That was easy. In fact, it was too easy.
I pulled up to the collection box outside the tan brick building. “Just dump the money in there.”
Shaking his head in annoyance, Julius got out of the car. I watched closely as he dumped the contents of his collection can into the Fisherman’s Hope donation slot.
When he was done, he opened the car door and leaned inside. “I’m going to walk to the Mermaid from here. You’re going to be busy tonight.”
I had just opened my mouth to ask him what he meant when my phone rang.
Julius waved and shut the door. I could see him in my rearview mirror. It was only a block to the Mermaid Inn, where he rented a small apartment. I figured he’d be okay.
“Hello,” I answered the call.
“I’m not extremely busy. Why?”
“I need you to stop by the Hope Grove Cemetery. It looks like we may have a slight problem.” The grim tone of his voice sent chills down my spine.
What kind of person would cause trouble this close to the holidays?
I knew it was a stupid and naive thought, but I really wished the depraved criminals would give it a rest every so often.
With the number of officers around the cemetery, I was sure we had another homicide on our hands.
Deputy Greg Hammond waved me through the ancient wrought iron gate.
About a hundred yards inside the cemetery there was an area sectioned off with yellow crime scene tape. That’s where I found my boss and Tim, the only other agents on the island, aside from myself.
“What happened?” I asked as I was stepping over the crime scene tape.
“Okay, so I’m lost. Why are we here?”
I kneeled down to get a better look. “What is it?”
“It is a camera … probably from the late nineteenth century,” Tim explained.
“Okay, maybe it belongs to a collector who dropped it while visiting the cemetery.” I shrugged.
That wouldn’t explain why someone would be visiting the cemetery with an old camera that probably took crappy pictures to begin with, but it was the only thing I could come up with.
Ayden shook his head. “Take a closer look. It appears to be in nearly new condition.”
The boss was right. Although it was obviously an antique camera, it was in very good condition.
“Will do,” I told him. “I’ll try to come in for a few hours tomorrow and do some research.”
I looked around to see if Sheriff Bourne was nearby. He was in front of the graveyard entrance, talking to a group of three deputies. It was difficult to miss Sheriff Jeb Bourne. He was wearing a big white cowboy hat.
Dodging headstones, I trotted over to where they were gathered. “Hello, Jeb.”
Sheriff Bourne turned his attention to me, but there was no recognition in his eyes. His smile was one of those automatic smiles that law enforcement pasted on the face when interacting with the public.
“Hello,” he said with a tilt of his head.
I could usually pick up on emotions fairly easy, but all I was getting from Jeb was a blank slate. It was almost like he didn’t know me.
Could he be coming down with Alzheimer’s?
“SA Fontaine believes this could have something to do with witchcraft, and possibly a
necromancer
. Have you heard of anyone on the island who might be involved with this kind of thing?”
It was no use asking him if he knew of any witches. Half the island’s population would fit that description.
Jeb appeared thoughtful, but then shook his head. “I can’t say as I do.”
I wasn’t sure if that was good news or not. At least if he’d had someone in mind, we would have had a suspect.
“Thanks. If anyone notices any suspicious activity around the cemeteries, be sure to let us know.”
“Will do.” He nodded.
There was something else off with Jeb’s behavior. He wasn’t hopping around and blaming the Roseland werewolves. They were always his first choice when something went wrong.
Of course, it was possible that he was just being gracious due to the upcoming Christmas holiday.
Suddenly an icy wind swept over the cemetery, seeming to bring with it a sense of foreboding. A shiver crawled over my entire body.
Something was very wrong. This wasn’t just the usual, Mystique Island strange. There was something really weird in the air. I could feel it in my bones.
* * *
I hadn’t been expecting to get in so late; otherwise I might have left the porch light on.
That was when I made the decision to get one of those motion sensor lights that would turn on as soon as I drove up.
In spite of being a little spooked, I ran up to the front door and unlocked it, switching on not only the porch light, but nearly every light in the house.
Where was Julius when I needed him?
After making one more trip out to get the mail, I shut and locked the door. Not that a locked door would keep out most supernatural beings, but I figured it couldn’t hurt.
My curiosity was peaked by a large red envelope.
According to the return address, it was from the Misty Haven Resort. I had a pretty good idea who it was from, and what it was for.
It was probably a holiday ball, which sounded like it would be a lot of fun, except that if I went, I’d have to see Zane Dupree.
I couldn’t take the chance of getting mixed up with someone as magnetic as he was, and lose focus on everything else. Besides, I didn’t have a great track record when it came to men.
Next on my agenda was a long hot shower, after which I could fall into my bed and let the world slip away until morning.
As soon as I stripped down and pulled the shower curtain open, my heart nearly burst out of my chest.
I would have screamed, but I couldn’t utter a sound.
But I wasn’t looking at Muriel’s corpse. It was her ghost that was hiding in my shower.
“What are you doing in my shower?” I asked, once I managed to find my voice. “And why are you appearing to me like this?”
“Like what?” Muriel asked.
“Like a dead person.”
“Yeah, but why are you popping up in my shower looking like a corpse?” I scowled.
I’d grown accustomed to seeing the deceased, and it usually wasn’t a problem as long as I was prepared for it.
“The lighthouse is getting boring.”
Sighing, I asked, “Why is it getting boring at the lighthouse?”
“Aaron isn’t fun to scare anymore. He is totally ignoring me,” Muriel complained.
“Well, maybe he has found a way to stop you from bugging him while he is trying to work,” I suggested.
“No, he isn’t just ignoring me.” She shook her head. “He is also ignoring the phone when it rings.”
Well, that was weird. Uncle Aaron was normally pretty good about not ignoring the business side of his radio station.
“I couldn’t even get a sigh out of him when I turned off the broadcast system,” she added.
Now I knew something was wrong. My phone would have been ringing endlessly if the broadcast system went down and Aaron suspected Muriel was behind it.
Maybe Uncle Aaron was going into a depression?
It was getting close to Christmas and Granny still wasn’t home. I would definitely have to pay my uncle a visit and see how he was doing.