Read Witch of Christmas Past Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
I had to go into work for a couple hours, but it wouldn’t take long to stop by and see Aaron.
Sure enough, there was a man sitting on Granny’s swing. He was sporting a long gray beard and looked to be dressed like someone from the eighteenth century.
Whoever he was, he wasn’t alive.
The man glared at me, drawing his bushy brows together. “I daresay … you took your time.”
“Excuse me, but who are you … and what are you doing haunting my Granny’s porch swing?”
That’s when it dawned on me that my great great great grandfather’s name was Zechariah Osborne.
What was he doing hanging around the old homestead?
I knew the Osborne mansion was haunted. Growing up in the house, I’d seen my share of ghosts, but I’d never seen Zechariah.
“Um … what can I do for you?” I asked.
“I’m having a very difficult time getting through to that boy in the house, and his insane chatter is pushing me right to the brink of madness. I understand it is my duty to be the guardian of the Osborne witches, but if I have to listen to much more of than boy’s incomprehensible mumbling, I’ll have to take the plunge and jump into the light.”
“Wait a minute! Did you say you were our guardian?”
Zechariah nodded. “That be the truth of it.”
“What do you mean by his insane mumbling? Is Uncle Aaron casting spells?”
Zechariah shook his head. “Tis no spell I know of. To my ears his words are akin to infant gibberish. The boy does not even put his strange music box on at night.”
“You mean his stereo?”
“I’ll see what I can find out,” I told him.
“Thou efforts would be a fine deed, but there be another matter needing attention.”
“And what might that be?” I asked, folding my arms in front of me, fully prepared to defend myself against whatever slander this ancestor might toss my way.
“Have you forgotten about the lost?”
I squinted, as if the act would help me understand what the hell it was he was talking about.
“The dead and Mistress Stella.”
“Of course I haven’t forgotten,” I came back, making sure to give him a roll of my eyes. “I just solved several deaths during Halloween, and I am still looking for my Granny.”
The truth was, it had taken me a couple of weeks to help the ghosts that suddenly appeared at my bedside on Halloween, but I’d managed.
He wanted his body found and his murderer brought to justice.
Ayden hadn’t been too keen on the idea of doing a search based on the directions of a ghost child, but I’d finally convinced him. The boy’s body had been discovered in a cave on the north side of the island. He’d been murdered decades before.
It was a small comfort to know that Brink had drowned at sea in the 90s, and thanks to the biggest gossip of the underworld, AKA Julius, I also knew the man was burning in Hell.
Zechariah shook his head. “Hopefully Mistress Stella has been blessed with more intelligence than thou.”
Well, that was uncalled for.
He gave me a curt nod and disappeared.
Damn! I’d had so much more to ask him.
“Who are you talking to?” A voice startled me from behind.
I swung around to face Malcolm Skeet, Uncle Aaron’s best friend since grade school.
Today Skeet actually didn’t look too bad. Although he still had his sandy hair in dreadlocks, his black denim jeans looked clean, and he was a wearing a black, Alice Cooper t-shirt.
“Yeah, he’s in there playing Holly Homemaker. You Osbornes must be getting some strange gas leaks in your houses or something. You’re talking to yourself, and he’d prefer to skip out on the Crow’s concert so he can stay home and bake cookies.”
What was with all the insults this morning?
I decided it was time to give Skeet one of my death stares. “Okay now. That was uncalled for.”
“Sorry.” He shrugged. “But your uncle is going nuts or something. We’ve had these tickets for two months, and all the sudden he decides he doesn’t want to go. Annabelle even said she’d cover for him at the station tonight.”
“I’ll see what’s up with Uncle Aaron. If I can change his mind, I’ll have him give you a call.”
Instead of going right in, I waved as Skeet walked away. It seemed a little strange that he was on foot, instead of driving his car.
“Where’s your car?” I called.
“Broke down this morning. I was hoping to use Aaron’s car, but …” His words trailed off and he shrugged.
“Good luck. Hope you get your car fixed.” I waved again.
“Uncle Aaron! Where are you?” I yelled.
“Back here in the kitchen … whipping up some breakfast!”
Now that I was inside, I could totally see what Skeet was talking about. The house was spotless.
I hadn’t seen it this clean in months.
Not only that, but all the Christmas decorations were up too.
Even before I made it to the kitchen I caught the scent of bacon and blueberry pancakes.
“Pull up a chair and I’ll fix you a plate,” he told me, as he was flipping a pancake.
What was wrong with Uncle Aaron?
“Skeet tells me that you don’t want to go to the concert tonight. I thought you really liked the Crows?”
I couldn’t really find an argument for that. Granny’s house was in desperate need of some upkeep, but still.
“Not a big deal. Maybe next time.” Aaron was still smiling, but suddenly it seemed strained.
Hmm … what part of
final tour
didn’t he understand?
“One or two pancakes?” he asked.
“None for me. Thanks anyway.”
“No problem. I’ll just freeze these up for later.” He got into Granny’s old oak cupboard and started rummaging for freezer bags.
I opened my mouth to ask him why he’d bought the concert tickets in the first place, but was interrupted by my phone.
“Hello,” I answered.
“Hey, Izzy. How are you doing this beautiful morning?”
But it was things like this that totally made me believe that bit about Tim really being an undercover angel. No matter how dreary things got, he could find a way to be optimistic, if not downright sunny.
I figured there was no sense in ruining his morning, so I kept my opinion to myself. “I’m doing okay. How are things at work? I should be in soon.”
Crap! The last thing I needed at the moment was for my wayward sister to be stirring up trouble.
“I’ll see if I can find out what’s going on.”
“Good. I was hoping you could stop by and have a talk with her on your way in,” Tim informed me.
“Yeah, I’ll do that. See you soon,” I told him before ending the call.
Getting up from the kitchen chair, I turned my attention to Uncle Aaron. “Well, it seems there is a crisis with Annabelle. I’ll have to stop by and see you later.”
Aaron nodded. “Give Annabelle my love.”
Now that really wasn’t Aaron. He and Annabelle got along about as good as cats and dogs.
It would be more like him to shake his head and say something along the lines of,
I told you she was an uncontrollable, wicked witch
.
Thinking of cats brought to mind Dutch and Dilly. I hadn’t seen the cats around lately. “Where have Dutch and Dilly disappeared to?” I asked.
“I’ll look around today,” he promised.
There was a good chance the Uncle Aaron I knew, would have kept to his word to look for the cats. I wasn’t so sure about this new and improved Aaron.
This morning she was watching carefully as a delivery driver unloaded several cases of Jamaican rum.
“Hey, sis! What brings you to this part of the island?” she asked, her green eyes sparkling with mischief.
My sister was well aware of what had brought me to the Sandbar on a Saturday morning.
“Chuck made a complaint against you. He says you put a spell on his hands and turned them orange.”
“Well turning them neon orange should do the trick.” I nodded, more or less agreeing with Annabelle’s handling of the situation.
Sighing, I sat down on an empty wooden crate. “Could be he might have already learned his lesson.”
“Are you suggesting that I reverse the spell?”
“Well, it might save you from being put on the ACMU watch list. Besides, you don’t really want to make him live with orange hands the rest of his life, do you?”
I decided it was best not to let Annabelle know that she was already on the ACMU watch list, but it was only due to her involvement with those Black Moon witches.
“I’ll think about it,” she said, her tone flippant and noncommittal.
There was no doubt in my mind that my sister would eventually reverse the spell, but the question was,
when
?
It wouldn’t do a lot of good to push her, so I steered the conversation to Uncle Aaron.
“Have you noticed how weird Aaron has been acting lately?”
“You mean weirder than usual?”
“I haven’t seen him in awhile, but Skeet called this morning to tell me never mind about covering for Aaron at the station. He was in a tizzy because Aaron decided to stay home and bake cookies.”
Again I nodded. “That’s true. I stopped by today. The house looks like something out of a homemaker’s magazine.”
Annabelle stood and put her hands on her hips. “And that’s a bad thing … why?”
“Because that isn’t Uncle Aaron.”
Annabelle’s eyes took on that faraway look they got whenever she was deep in thought.
Finally, she shrugged. “Maybe someone put a spell on him.”
“Maybe,” I agreed, though reluctantly.
Kneeling next to the crate I was sitting on, she draped an arm across my shoulders. “Tell you what. I’ll ask around and see if anyone knows about a spell being put on Uncle Aaron.”
Annabelle shook her head. “That’s terrible. I hope you find whoever did it. No doubt they are going to stir up the ghosts. Maybe even Captain Marsh.”
* * *
The fact that I’d found an actual manufacturer didn’t rule out the possibility that it was a fake.
Once the camera reached DC, they’d bring in an expert who would be able to verify if it was authentic or not.
* * *
I was startled only because the knock was so unexpected. No one came to visit, let alone on a Saturday night.
After placing the loaves on a cooling rack, I answered the door.
“So love … I knew you’d be so busy that you’d forget to eat. Feel like some Chinese?” he asked, holding up two white bags with Chinese writing.
In return for not making me ornery, I gave him a bright smile. “Thank you, Julius. That was very thoughtful of you.”
“Don’t get too accustomed to it,” Julius tossed the words over his shoulder as he was headed to the kitchen.
I couldn’t help but wonder what it would be like if Julius was always nice like this, but I figured it was probably a good thing he wasn’t. It would be too easy to like him, and then he could really seduce me to the dark side.
But still, he’d been human once.
When we were settled at the kitchen table with our dinner, I asked, “So what was Julius the rock star like? Did he have a wife … kids? What was his favorite Christmas song?”
“I would say his favorite Christmas song was Jingle Bell Rock. As for family … the only family he had was his brother.”
For an instant I thought I saw sadness in his eyes.
Could a demon really be sad?
In the living room, I switched on the stereo. It was already set to WRCK. Instead of the music that I’d been expecting to hear, it was Aaron’s voice. He seemed to be in the middle of reading a Christmas story.
We caught only the last of,
The Night Before Christmas
.
Although the voice coming over the speakers was familiar, the person just didn’t seem like my uncle.
“Julius! Check this out!”
Julius appeared in the arched doorway between the living room and the kitchen.
“Uncle Aaron prerecorded his show. He’s getting ready to tell another story.”
“So.” Julius shrugged. “Maybe he wanted to do something different this year.”
“Once upon a time, there was a jolly old elf they called St. Nicolas …”
There was no emotion or color in his voice. That is what was so different. If Uncle Aaron was anything, he was colorful.
And then he was running toward the stereo.
The next thing I knew, I was lying on the sofa with Julius standing over me.
“What happened?” I asked.
“You were becoming hypnotized by the story,” he explained.
“That’s impossible. My uncle couldn’t hypnotize a mouse.”
“I hate to break it to you, but that’s exactly what he was doing. If I hadn’t turned the stereo off, you’d probably be a walking puppet by now.”
“If I had to guess, I’d say he was possessed.”
My eyes widened. “Is he?”
“Not by anyone down below. I’d have recognized it in his voice.”
“Well not really.”
“What do you mean?” I asked, drawing my brows together.
“Not only did I not sense an oppressive soul. I couldn’t sense any soul at all.”
The question was, if his body didn’t have a soul, what had happened to it?