Showing posts with label sidestories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sidestories. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Adventures in Ghost Hunting (Haskell Investigations outtake) Chapter 1/3

I have the rough draft of Vampires, Bears and Other Bitey Things 90% finished.  To help everyone get back in to the Az & Rick groove, here's a short story that takes place after the first book.





Adventures in Ghost Hunting Chapter 1 /3

Az trailed her fingertips along the wall as she quietly meandered down the hallway towards the staircase. It was dark, but she knew every inch of the hall.  She could walk it, and identify doors, with her eyes closed.  Or at three in the morning.  Same difference.
Halfway between her origin point – Jose’s bedroom - and her destination, she paused to press her palm against the cool wood of a closed door.  If she concentrated, she could hear a soft huffle-snore.  Two legs in Rick’s bed rather than four.  The invitation would still be open.  His goodnight kiss had made that clear.  It was tempting.
Too tempting.
With a wistful sigh, she dropped her hand back to her side and continued on her quest for a new book.  The Care and Feeding of Siberian Huskies had been interesting, but she doubted that many of the tips would translate well to the care and feeding of a house full of Shifters.  
At the murmur of voices from the room diagonally across from Rick’s, she stopped abruptly.  Her eyes narrowed as she tried to determine whether it was moonlight or artificial light seeping from underneath the door.  Uriah and Quinn had a strict midnight lights out rule.  Exceptions were only made for pack functions, school assignments, and illnesses.  
There were no pack functions.  All homework assignments had been checked and tucked away in backpacks.  The boys had been perfectly healthy during a surprisingly cutthroat post-homework game of Scrabble.
Az crossed the carpeted hallway and carefully turned the knob so that it didn’t squeak.  She couldn’t risk knocking first.  Knocking would undoubtedly rouse Rick, which would undoubtedly get the boys grounded.  And if the boys were grounded, she was grounded, too.
A flashlight clicked off as soon as she opened the door.  The edge of a sheet dangled off the top bunk.  Four pillows were piled in front of the window.  There two were two figures seated on the bottom bunk.  Though she didn’t have a Shifter’s senses, Az could practically taste the guilt in the air.
She stepped inside the room and pulled the door shut.  For ten seconds after the door closed with a snick, she held her breath.  When the growl of a sleep-deprived Alpha didn’t shake the floor under her feet, she relaxed and set her book on the corner of a nearby desk.
“What’s going on?” she whispered as she tiptoed toward the bed.  Navigating the teens’ bedroom in the dark wasn’t as easy as walking down the hallway.  There were dirty clothes landmines and sporting equipment roadblocks to avoid.
“Nothing,” Uriah said, voice equally quiet.
Az squirmed her way between the two teens.  She treated each to her harshest Rick-esque glare.  She’d practiced in the mirror for three days before trying it out on Rick.  He hadn’t even bothered to pretend to be impressed.  Jerk.  At least Jose had winced.  Ike had even handed over his pint of ice cream when she’d tested the glare on him.
“You’re risking missing out on an absolutely gorgeous weekend for nothing?”
The boys leaned in front of her to hold a silent brotherly conversation.  Az inspected the glow-in-the-dark galaxy adhered to the ceiling.  Orion’s Belt was in the wrong location, and she was pretty sure they were missing a planet.  Given their science grades, though, it was hardly a surprise.
Quinn straightened suddenly.  He raked a hand through his mop of hair.  “The house across the street is haunted.”
“Haunted?”  That wasn’t the answer she’d expected.  Az rose.  She picked her way to the window and pulled back the thick, thermal curtains.  The Gothic Revival house was dark.  According to Rick, it had been foreclosed months before her arrival in Houston.  With its lancet windows, steeply pitched roof, and decorative trim, it certainly appeared intimidating.
Uriah flopped back against the mattress.   “We’re not crazy.”
“I’m hardly one to toss stones,” Az murmured, squinting as a small speck of light appeared in one of the second-floor windows.  “It could be squatters.  That last cold front dropped the temperature.”
“We’ve seen faces in the windows.  And a woman on the balcony,” Quinn said.
“There was a man on the porch the other day.  I could see through him,” Uriah added. His enthusiasm paled in comparison to his brother’s, but there was a note of curiosity in his tone.   “Last week, I thought I heard a baby crying when I was out raking the yard.”
Az watched as the speck of light bobbed in the window before unexpectedly winking out.  Something dark moved against the window, but she couldn’t tell if it was the wind moving branches or something spectral.  She scanned the house’s other windows for signs of occupancy.
“Ghosts exist,” she said, “of course they do.  You die and that supposed to be it, but sometimes things go haywire.  Wires crossed.  It could be a conscious decision or just a fluke.  Combination of both.  No one knows.  The energy transfer relating to death is too massive to be accurately quantified. The la Fay Constant is supposed to be the best estimate, but even that’s come under fire.  Energy and magic feel similar, can be used in many of the same applications, but they don’t dissipate in the same way.”
“In English, Az?”
“There’s a very good possibility you aren’t hallucinating.”
“We’ve been keeping a log.”  Quinn flicked on the flashlight.  He held up a battered spiral notebook.  “Do you want to see it?”
“Oh, absolutely.”
The three of them huddled on the bunk with the notebook and the flashlight.  Uriah hogged most of the mattress with his long legs while Quinn was content to cuddle up against her side.  Their notes were detailed.  They boys had carefully denoted the weather and traffic patterns at the time of each incident.  Rough sketches were included with the notes.  
“I wish you’d put this much effort into your schoolwork,” she muttered as she flipped to the notes on the latest occurrence.  “I will say that it does appear there is something odd going on across the street.”
“Ghost odd or drug smuggling ring odd?” Uriah asked.
“I love your imagination,” Az said, grinning at the teen.  “And the answer is: I don’t know.”
“But we’re going to find out, right?” Quinn asked.
Az playfully nudged his ribs with her elbow.  “Have you ever known anyone in this house to pass up a mystery?”
Before either teen could respond, the scritch of nails on wood cut through the silence.  Quinn and Uriah exchanged worried glances.  Az hurriedly turned off the flashlight and then motioned for them to lie down.  She slid off the bed and crept to the door.  
A thousand explanations – okay, lies – raced through her brain.  She hadn’t settled on one when she opened the door a crack.  She expected an irritated Alpha glare.  She got a sleepy ocelot stare.  Jose used his head to push her out of the way so she could enter.  She quickly scanned the hallway before shutting the door behind his tail.
“I was coming back,” Az said.  She glanced at the alarm clock beside the bed and winced.  It was nearly six in the morning.  In thirty minutes, Rick would knock on the door to wake the boys.  “Wow.  I didn’t realize I’d been gone that long.”
As if on cue, Quinn let out a jaw-cracking yawn.  Uriah followed seconds later.  Az eyed them speculatively.  If they went to school, they wouldn’t learn anything.  They’d only fall asleep in one class or another and wind up with detention.  Why put them through the hassle of detention and punishment from Rick for said detention?
“So sorry you boys came down with the stomach flu,” Az said, shaking her head.  “I know you were both looking forward to going to school today, but I’m afraid that you’re going to have to stay home.”
Jose padded toward the bed.  He sniffed both boys before cocking his head at Az.  His ears were perked up and his tail was curled around her left knee.  She stared at him imploringly.  If Jose didn’t back her story, Rick would know something was wrong.  After one, heart-stoppingly long minute Jose blinked.
“Thank you.”  Az ran her fingers across the tuft of fur between his ears.  “Why don’t you go back to bed?”
Jose shook off her hand and, with a liquid grace Az envied, leapt onto the top bunk.  The bed creaked as he turned Quinn’s blanket into an acceptable kitty nest.   The tips of his ears were the only parts of him visible from the floor.
Az scarcely had time to stash the ghost journal into a nightstand drawer and tuck the boys into bed.  She was dragging the wastebasket to the bed when the door flew open.  Rick, dressed only in a pair of faded jeans, stood in the doorway.  He scrubbed a hand across his face, and his attention was on the activity in the hallway.
“Up and at ‘em, boys.  If you’re lucky, we can sweet talk Jose into making breakfast.  I’m thinking chocolate chip pancakes, bacon and...Az!”
She bit back a grin.  He was downright adorable when startled.  “Afraid I’m not on the menu this morning, Ricky.”
The tips of his ears burned a bright red.  “What are you doing here?  I thought you were bunking with the furball.”
“You realize that to me you are all furballs, right?”
“What did I say about attempting diversions before my first cup of coffee?”
“That they were only acceptable if they involved actions that I cannot discuss in a room with two ill teenagers.”  Az glanced over her shoulder to ensure that the boys were still feigning sleep before herding Rick into the hallway.  She closed the door but kept her hand on the knob.  It was the only way to keep her hands off the shirtless temptation in front of her.
“Ill?  They were fine last night.”
“No,” she corrected.  “They were fine until they started vomiting around three in the morning.  Stomach flu, I think.  Which is kind of a misnomer, actually.  It isn’t actually influenza.  It’s gastroenteritis.  If they had the actual flu, they’d be feverish, congested, and achy.  This is just stomach pain and puking.  Lots and lots of puking.”
Rick was silent for a few seconds.  He shook his head as if coming out of a daydream.  He’d likely zoned out while she was talking.  Az knew he did it often.  She didn’t mind.  Much.  It came in handy at times.
“I didn’t hear anything.”
“And why would you?  You were snoring loud enough to wake the dead.”  A slight exaggeration but not out of the realm of possibility.  He complained about Jose’s snoring, but he could be just as loud.  Especially if he was as tired as she suspected he’d be given the mess at the Astrodome.
Rick made a move for the doorknob.  Az slid to intercept him.  She curled an arm around his bicep.  Fought the urge to give it an experimental squeeze.
“Please, no.  They just fell asleep.  And the bathroom is finally clean.  Let them rest.”  She fluttered her eyelashes and tried to look as exhausted and guileless as possible.  It was more difficult than people assumed.  She was grateful she’d cleaned their bathroom the previous morning so that the smell of bleach was still fresh.
“They’ll need to stay home from school, then.  You’ll call the office?”
“Absolutely.  I’ll have them text Lenny Parker and ask to him bring by any assignments they missed.”  She relaxed against the door. He was buying it.  “You’ll have to settle for cold cereal.  Jose is snoozing on the top bunk. I woke him when I tried to sneak out.”
“What were you doing up so late?” Rick asked.  “Nightmares again?  Why didn’t you come to me?”
The kicked-puppy look on his face made the corners of her eyes sting.  She flung her arms around his neck, plastered herself against him, and pressed her lips to his scruffy cheek.  Silly Alpha.  For all his gruffness and cockiness, he was insecure about the oddest things.  She didn’t  hide how much she utterly adored him, but he still worried.
“No nightmares.  Haven’t needed to sleep.”
Rick’s fingertips dug into her hips.  He turned his head so they were nose-to-nose but made no attempt to extricate himself from the embrace.  “That’s three days with no sleep, Princess.   Are you sure you’ll be able to handle two sick teens?  I have meetings at the ‘dome I can’t cancel.”
“Jose’ll be here.  I’ll catch a quick nap while he’s on vomit bucket duty.”
Rick buried his nose in the soft skin behind Az’s left ear.  His teeth gently scraped across her neck.  A shiver zinged down her spine.  His smug chuckle rumbled through her chest all the way to her toes.  He nibbled his way down to her collarbone.
“You said you weren’t on the menu this morning, Princess.  Does that mean I get a rain check?”
Down the hall, a bedroom door opened.  Tommy stuck his head out into the hallway.  “Hey, boss,” he called, an odd note of uncertainty in his tone.
“Yeah?” Rick asked, lips still firmly attached to Az’s skin.
“You two going to be at it much longer?  Normally, I wouldn’t try to rush l’amore or anything, but it’s my day to open the shop, and I need to grab a shower.”
Heat rushed to Az’s cheeks.  She struggled to get free, but Rick’s arms were like iron bands.  “Put me down,” she muttered, slamming her toes into his shin.
“Keep wiggling like that, sweetheart, and I won’t settle for a rain check.”
“Put me down,” she repeated through clenched teeth.
Rick slowly, punishingly slowly, slid Az down until her feet touched the floor.  He rocked back on his heels and hooked his thumbs in his front pockets.  Dimples bracketed his satisfied smile.  “Try not to miss me too much today, Princess.”
“Every vomit bucket will remind me of you,” she promised with a beaming grin.  Before he could retaliate, she slipped into the bedroom and swiftly closed the door.  
Two pairs of brown eyes peered at her from the depths of the bottom bunk.  She waggled her eyebrows and rubbed her hands together.  “Who’s ready for a little ghost hunting?”

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

WOTD: Variorum (short fic)



Word of the Day Prompt
Date: March 11, 2015
Universe: Haskell Investigations
Word of the Day: variorum (adj;1.  Containing different versions of the text by various editors; 2. Containing many notes and commentaries by a number of scholars or critics)
Timeline: post-book one, no major spoilers

A small bubble of panic welled in Rick’s throat.  He’d let go of Az’s hand for one second – just long enough to shield his eyes from the fireball – and lost her.  He stood still in a swarm of firemen, police officers, paramedics, and screaming witches.  Sharp eyes scanned the crowd for a bobbing blonde ponytail.  With the smoke from the fire and the acrid odor of burning herbs, he couldn’t use his enhanced senses to locate her magnolia scent.

Had she gone into the burning building?  Had she been knocked down by the explosion and trampled?  Had one of the witches attacked her?  Az got along with the Sisters of Munificence, but it had been five weeks since their last witch fight.  They were due.

There was no sign of Az in the crowd.  He should have carried her away from the house when the first spark lit up the night.  He should have handcuffed her to his wrist.   He should have locked her in the truck.  He should have left her at home with the rest of the pack.

Rick retrieved a roll of antacids from his pocket and popped two cherry-flavored tablets in his mouth.  The grit stuck to his molars as he chomped on the pills.  The mild cooling sensation did little for his churning gut.  Doc Taylor was on his ass about his blood pressure.  Rick was going to send Az to Doc Taylor for a week to prove that medication was unnecessary.  His blood pressure would return to normal just as soon as he had a void who didn’t run off whenever a thought popped into her pretty, reckless head.

He dug into his other pocket for his phone.  After dialing Az’s number, he jammed one finger into his ear and held the phone up to the other.  One ring.  Two.

His ass vibrated.

Twice.

Anger swiftly replaced the panic. He reached into his back pocket.  The neon pink smartphone was still vibrating.  His face, slack with sleep, filled the screen.  When had she taken the picture?  Why was he listed under “Growly”?  Did she really enjoy running with Greta and him in the mornings?  He’d practically tattooed the rule about phones on her forehead.  Why had she slipped her phone into his pocket?  Why hadn’t he noticed?

Rick popped another antacid before pocketing both phones.  He grabbed the shoulder of a passing uniformed police officer.  “Have you seen Az Stanton?”

The cop’s forehead scrunched up.  After a moment, it smoothed out and a grin slowly spread across his face.  “Cute little blonde thing, right?  Great smile, decent rack, downright sweet ass?  Consults with the supe squad?”

Rick ground the antacid into fine powder.  He balled his fists to keep from wrapping his hands around the cop’s scrawny neck.  The cop didn’t know it yet, but his career was over.  Rick was going to use every iota of influence he held to ensure the cop never guarded anything more than a crosswalk.

A crosswalk in front of a retirement home.

Oblivious to how close he was to certain death, the cop chuckled.  “I haven’t seen her tonight.  Wish I had.  I hear she’s close with witches.  Big explosion like this is bound to be upsetting.  I wouldn’t mind offering up my shoulder for her to cry on.  I could take her mind off this tragedy, if you know what I mean.”

Rick bared sharp, gleaming fangs.  Fur sprouted along the back of his hands.

The cop went ashen.  He finally focused on Rick’s face.  Went even whiter.  He tugged at the collar of his shirt.  “You’re the Alpha of the Pack.”

“Yeah, I am.”

“Ms. Stanton is a member of your pack.”

“Yeah, she is.”

Oh, Jesus.”  Sweat dotted the cop’s forehead.  Oh, sweet Jesus.”

“Play nice, Ricky!”

At the laughingly-issued command, both men turned away from the house.  A slender, pale figure emerged from the shadow of an ambulance.  Az, hem of her prissy skirt coated with ashes, waggled her finger as she approached.

Rick quickly scanned her for injuries.  There was a small scrape along her left cheek and red handprints on each of her forearms.  He checked her eyes for signs of a magical overload.  The blue gaze locked on to his was sad but clear.

As soon as she was within reach, he looped an arm around her waist and dragged her to his side.  Aware that the frightened cop was watching, Rick let his lips linger on the warm curve of her cheek before resting his chin on top of her head.

Oh, Jesus,” the cop muttered, backpedaling.  He stumbled over his own feet.  “I’m sorry.”

He melted into the crowd.  Rick let him go.  He’d memorized the cop’s badge number.  Retribution could wait.  His attention turned to the woman snuggled up against him.  He dragged her away from the swarm of first responders.  The heat from the fire was only fueling his simmering rage.

“There are no words for how much trouble you’re in, Astraea.”

Az sighed.  Her fingers dipped into his back pocket, but she didn’t immediately grab her phone.  “Somehow, I doubt that.  You always find the words.”

His growl made the ground beneath their feet rumble.  “There isn’t enough cute in the world to get you out of this one, either.”

“I’d be willing to test that theory.”  She flashed a small, seductive smile.  “I’ve been reading this book on -.”

“You disappeared.  Before we got out of the damn truck, I told you to stay with me.  It was an order.  Not a suggestion.  But what did you do as soon as I let go?  You disappeared.  Not a word.  Not a warning.  Nothing.  Just poof.”

“Rick, I -.”

“And then,” he snarled, “you left your phone with me!  What have I told you a thousand times about that damn phone?”

“Rick’s electronic leash law,” she said, smile slipping away.  “I don’t have pockets and you made me leave my purse in the car.”

“Then maybe you should think of that before you pull another ridiculously impractical outfit from your closet.”  Rick’s angry glare pinned her in place.  “If you’re serious about this shit, Az, then you have to start obeying me.  All the time.  Not just when it’s convenient for you.  Probation period is over, sweetheart.  Time to prove you’re ready to be pack.”

“I am ready!”

“Prove it.”  Rick shook his head disgustedly.  “Sometimes I swear you’re more trouble than you’re worth.”

Az stiffened against him.  Stilled.  Her chin dropped to her chest.  Rick felt the tremble of her shoulders.  His anger cooled instantly.  Ah, hell.  He’d let his fear-driven fury get the better of him. At times his tongue could be sharper than his claws, and Az pushed his buttons like no one else.

“You don’t mean that,” Az said softly, hesitantly.  It was more question than statement.

“No, I don’t.”  Rick wrapped both arms around her to cradle her against his chest.  He buried his face in her soft hair.  “Of course I don’t mean it, sweetheart.  You know how I feel.  But you have to stop doing this to me.  You make me crazy.”

“I’m sorry.  I needed to get away from the house.  I was trying to avoid the Sisters of Munificence.  I warned them that this would happen.  I warned them every chance I got.  I had to get away, clear my head.  I thought I was good, but then I ran into Matron Laurie.”  She sighed again, melted against him.  “It was ugly.”

Rick remembered the marks on her arms.  Marks he was more than willing to repay on Matron Laurie.  “She hurt you.  She’s an empath, and she felt your guilt.  Two of her girls died; she took it out on you.”

Az swallowed.  Her hands settled on the small of Rick’s back.  Her nose pressed against his sternum.  Rick gently stroked his hands up and down her spine.  There were no tears soaking into his shirt, yet.  His poor, compassionate void took her responsibilities far too seriously.  She considered every misstep by a witch as a personal failure on her part.  The deaths of two witches would haunt her for weeks.  He’d have to watch her closely – make sure she didn’t fall into a funk.  He was going to be on nightmare duty, too.

“It’s not your fault, Princess.  The Sisters of Munificence are notorious for resisting change. You could have talked until you were blue in the face and it wouldn’t have done a lick of good.  Laurie’s a third-gen Matron.  She should have known better.  It’s not your fault.”

“Damn straight it’s not.”  Az pushed back just far enough to scowl up at Rick.   “I told that obstinate hag that she was playing with fire.  Literal fire.  She didn’t listen.  This is on her.”

Rick floundered for a moment.  She didn’t feel guilty?  She was angry?  At the witches?  “Huh?”

“I told them to stop being so damn tight-fisted and buy unadulterated copies of their spellbooks.  Variorums are cheaper, but something gets lost with all those commentaries and unnecessary edits.  This was a disaster waiting to happen.”

Rick shook his head and tried not to laugh.  Az took her books seriously.  She couldn’t understand that not everyone shared her passion.  Especially not cost-cutting witches.

“So what happened to your arms?”

“Matron Laurie started screaming about sabotage or an attack.  It pissed me off.  We just got tensions down to a reasonable level.  The last thing we need is someone from another coven to hear her running her mouth and firing things up again.”

“A fair point.  That doesn’t explain what happened to your arms.”

Az lifted her chin.  “Matron Laurie wouldn’t shut up.  I asked politely.”

Rick reached for another antacid.  Evasiveness meant that he wasn’t going to like what she had to say.  “What.  Did. You.  Do?”

“Punched that old biddy in the collagen-enhanced mouth.  It took three of her witches to keep me from breaking her hook of a nose.”

Rick knew he should discourage her occasional bursts of violence.  She was usually the even-tempered, diplomatic half of their team, but every now and then she gave into the anger.  He needed to teach her his breathing and meditation techniques.  The witches she had to deal with on a weekly basis were enough to try the patience of a saint.

He should discourage violence, but he was a Shifter.  Violence was as much as part of him as breathing or eating.  Az wasn’t a Shifter, but she was pack.  And her violence made him proud.

He dropped a kiss on the top of her head.  “That’s my girl.”

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Viola, at the beginning of The Chaos Child

Viola’s trip to Connecticut at the beginning of The Chaos Child


At first Viola thought it was a jet-lag induced hallucination. Inclement weather at BWI had delayed the last leg of her flight from Houston to Hartford. She’d used the time stuck on the plane to e-mail a memo back to the office regarding the importance of nonstop flights. Ten minutes after sending the e-mail, she’d begged Duke to deliver lunch to the office as an apology for the profanity-laden message.

As the taxi pulled into the hotel parking lot, though, it became clear that it wasn’t a hallucination. There really were three gold and red Ghost Grabbers vans parked in front of the Luz Hotel. As soon as the car rolled to a stop, she flung open the door and hopped out of the car. While he retrieved her suitcase from the trunk, she dialed Becky’s number.

“I am scheduled to be at the Luz tonight, aren’t I?” she asked, cutting off her employees greeting.

“Yes, you are. I spoke with the manager, a Mr. Scott Farleigh, this morning to confirm your reservation in a non-smoking room.” Becky’s voice was cool. It was clear she hadn’t completely forgiven Viola for the e-mail. “I have also rebooked your return flight. I will e-mail the details to you shortly.”

“Thank you, Becky.” Viola made a mental note to send Becky flowers. “I am sorry about the e-mail. You know airline food makes me cranky, and I was stuck next to the most talkative person on the planet.”

Becky harrumphed. “Is there a problem with the hotel?”

Viola handed the driver a wad of bills in exchange for her suitcase. Gravel crunched under her sneakers as she marched towards the glass double doors. “There are Ghost Grabbers vans in the parking lot,” she hissed.

She normally didn’t bother wasting energy thinking about the multitude of paranormal investigators across the country. Most treated it as a hobby, and those who hunted demons in their spare time couldn’t throw stones. The Ghost Grabbers, however, had landed a syndicated television show and national attention. Their condescending attitude towards spirits, laughable techniques, and propensity to claim everything as paranormal had earned them Viola’s disdain.

Becky muttered an apology and hung up on Viola. Viola shook her head, slipped her phone in the front pocket of her green trousers. The foyer of the mid-sized independent hotel was dark and imposing. The glass in the skylights was frosted and electric wall sconces provided the only other light. She gave them points for creepiness.

Viola ignored the rail-thin blonde standing near a grouping of chairs in the lobby. She recognized the young woman as a member of the Ghost Grabbers. The thirty-ish black woman behind the front desk smiled politely at Viola, but her posture indicated she was uncomfortable.

“Hi, Viola Duke.” Viola forced herself to remain in control. It wasn’t the poor woman’s fault the manager was a PR-hungry ass. “I’d like to speak with Scott Farleigh. Now.”

As if she’d expected such a request, the woman, Adelle according to her name tag, escorted Viola to a small office on the other side of a black column. Adelle rapped once on the door before opening it. Three men, two wearing gold Ghost Grabbers polos, were already in the room.

“Mr. Farleigh, Mrs. Duke has arrived,” Adelle said before brushing past Viola and returning to the desk.

Viola left her suitcase outside the door. She slipped her balled fists into her pockets, leaned against the doorjamb, and fixed Scott Farleigh, a graying, middle-aged stout man, with an expectant stare. “If there was a miscommunication between your office and mine, I have no problem moving on to one of my other locations and rescheduling this evaluation.”

She didn’t care if it cost a potential business associate. Something about Farleigh rubbed her the wrong way, and in the end he would be the one to lose out on profits. There were five hotels in the Hartford area looking to work with Spirited Stays.

“No, no, Mrs. Duke. There is no misunderstanding.” Farleigh’s booming voice rattled the framed photos on the walls. “I was hoping we could kill two birds in one night, so to speak. You and these gentlemen are in the same line of work. Surely your… er… skills would be a perfect complement to their technical expertise.”

Anger swirled in her belly. Power flooded her veins, turned her eyes a dangerous, glittering black. “I am not a medium for hire,” she bit out, lips curled back in a snarl. “I do not appreciate you making arrangements like this without consulting me first.”

“What’s the matters, Mrs. Duke?” One of the Ghost Grabbers leaned forward with his elbows on his knees. “Afraid of the cameras?”

“Nope. I don’t want to waste my time working with a bunch of AV Club geeks who don’t know the difference between the hum of an air conditioner and an EVP.” Anger cooled steel resolve. She kicked off the doorjamb. “My expertise isn’t the one you should question, Mr. Farleigh. I’ve got mad skills.”

The spirit in the corner of the room hesitantly waved at Viola. She winked back at the shy, young man dressed in mid-nineteenth century clothing. It was clear he was less than impressed by the Ghost Grabbers, too.

“Now, it’s late and I’m tired, so I’m going to go back up to the desk and check in. I’m going to order something from room service for dinner, and in the morning I’ll pay for my stay and leave. You won’t contact my company, and I won’t tell everyone I know what a jerk you are.” She arched an eyebrow at the flabbergasted Farleigh. “Okay?”

“B-but, Mrs. Duke…”

“Oh, and by the way, your hotel isn’t haunted.”

The spirit followed Viola to the front desk. He loitered by her suitcase while she checked in and got a room service recommendation from Adelle. It wasn’t until she was in the elevator that she spoke to the ghost.

“I’m sorry about denying your presence earlier. Feel free to make a liar out of me, if you’d like.”

The ghost shook his head. “I have seen their work on the television. I do not care for their methods or their manner of speaking.” He extended his hand, thought twice about it, and settled for tipping an invisible hat. “I am Archibald Thorton, Mrs. Duke. It is a pleasure to meet someone with whom I can converse.”

“Viola, please.” She curtsied awkwardly. “Archibald? Can I call you Archie?”

“You may. It is a diminutive my dear sister often used.”

Archie walked with Viola to her room. She was pleased to have a corner room, until she opened the curtains across the wall-length picture window. She had a lovely view of… the hotel across the street. She let go of her suitcase and sank onto the edge of the bed.

“I hate Connecticut.”

After changing into sweatpants and a long-sleeved t-shirt she’d stolen from Duke’s side of the closet, she read the one-sided room service menu aloud to Archie. There were four sharp knocks on her door. She grabbed the tranq gun out of her open suitcase and peered through the peephole before opening the door.

Farleigh and two of the Ghost Grabbers stood in the hallway. The blonde from the lobby had a black case in her hands. She shuffled her feet and shot Viola a hesitant, apologetic smile.

“Mrs. Duke, I am going to have to ask you to remain in your room for the duration of our investigation,” the male Ghost Grabber said. “Rainbow’s going to install a camera outside your door to ensure nothing contaminates our evidence. We’re going to need you to keep your television off, as well.”

Viola slammed the door in their faces. She briefly entertained thoughts of burning the building down or at least slashing the tires on the Ghost Grabber vans. The bacon cheeseburger she ordered from room service was bland and her fries were soggy. She made a mental note to forgo the complimentary breakfast.

She dragged the black upholstered chair to the window and stared out the window as she ate her chocolate lava cake. Fortunately, it had a rich flavor and the cake was moist. She regretted not ordering two and calling that dinner.

The hotel across the street had a charming, Victorian façade. It was smaller than the Luz, but looked brighter and cleaner. “What do you know about the Cantor Hotel?” she asked Archie.

“I am afraid I have not left this establishment since my death.”

As soon as she finished her dessert, Viola booted up her laptop. The Cantor’s website was simple but elegant. It only had 124 guest suites and one meeting room, but it also boasted a bar, dining room, lobby, and library. The décor managed to maintain an old world feel without compromising modern amenities.

She and Archie watched the virtual tour and clicked through the photos. Archie instantly fell in love with the Cantor. He sighed wistfully when they reached the pictures of the library.

“How attached to this hotel are you, Archie?”

“I do not know. I have not attempted to leave.” Archie faded from view. “Please pardon me.”

Viola responded to two of Becky’s e-mails. Halfway through her second game of solitaire, Archie returned. A wide smile split his boyish face.

“It is possible! I crossed the street and entered the Cantor. The library is divine!”

“How do you feel about moving?” She didn’t feel guilty in the least about stealing the Luz’s ghost. It was true that most of the hotels listed with Spirited Stays profited from being haunted, but none of them outright exploited the resident ghosts.

After hearing Viola’s proposal, Archie heartily agreed to moving to the Cantor if the proprietor agreed with the plan. They played four games of computer chess before Viola got tired of losing and shut down her laptop. The Ghost Grabbers weren’t bothering to be quiet. They could hear them stomping up and down the stairs and talking in the hallways. Viola bit back a laugh every time she heard a high-pitched exclamation. As the hotel’s only spirit was dozing in her room’s spare chair, it was doubtful they’d caught anything truly ghost-related.

She flicked off the bedside lamp and stretched out on the bed. Duke laughed when she used their link to tell him all about the Ghost Grabbers and Archie. He laughed even harder at her petulant exclamation of boredom.

“We could always…” he started.

“No,” she sighed. He made the same suggestion any time they were apart. “We are not using the link for that.”

“But I miss you.” His voice dipped lower, liquid heat her mind. “I could make it good, sugar.”

“I’m sure you could, but there’s a camera with audio right outside my door.”

His chuckle was two-parts pure filth and one-part amusement. “You could try being quiet.”

“There’s also a ghost in my room. A ghost who blushed when he saw my ankles. I’m not going to traumatize the poor thing by engaging in… in that.”

 “Ha,” Duke laughed. “Never mind, then. If you can’t say it, you can’t do it, sugar.”

Face flame red, she sent a wave of irritation through the link. “I hate you.”

“No you don’t sweetness.” Duke’s affection-warmed tone lulled her to sleep. “Just relax and think about all the things I’m going to do to you when you get home. I advise stretching first.”

She fell asleep with a smile on her face.

The next morning, Archie was right beside her as she paid for her room and rolled her suitcase across the busy street. The inside of the Cantor was as inviting as it appeared on the website. Viola went directly to the front desk, introduced herself, asked for the manager.

Phillip Dickens, the general manager, greeted her with a smile and a breakfast invitation. Behind his back, Archie gave her an enthusiastic nod. She grinned back.

“Mr. Dickens, how would you like to be the manager of a haunted hotel?”