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The Ghosts Of Cragera Bay

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2019
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She nodded slowly. “It might.”

Chapter Five

Swirling gray mist wrapped around Declan, icy and damp against his skin. The fog blotted out his surroundings except for the still, black waters stretched out before him. A shudder rippled through him. The urge to run tightened his calf muscles, yet he remained frozen, rooted to the ground at the water’s edge.

They’ll devour you.

His mother’s words spoken to him on her deathbed, the last thing she would ever say to him, whispered inside his mind, but not in his mother’s voice. He didn’t recognize the woman’s voice.

A faint odor of charred wood smoke teased at his nose and everything inside him squeezed tight.

Not her, he thought, heart slamming against his chest. Not again.

The water before him rippled and frothed. Something was moving beneath the surface, coming for him. His hands felt wet and sticky, and when he looked down they were streaked with blood.

His breath came fast and hard; he wanted to back away from the churning waters. Instead, his feet slid toward the edge of the bank. A man’s pale, slack face emerged from the roiling waters. His gaze locked on dead, staring eyes. His eyes. His face.

They’ll devour you.

Declan woke with a jolt. His eyes flew open and fixed on the unfamiliar ceiling. Where was he? A confused vertigo gripped his mind before memory swept over him like a wave. Stonecliff.

He closed his eyes and let out the breath he’d been holding, sagging against the mattress. A stupid dream. Was it any wonder, after his bizarre conversation with Carly?

A part of him still couldn’t believe he’d agreed to let her come back or to take part in her craziness, but maybe she’d offer him some explanation for the things he’d seen.

He reached for his phone on the night table to check the time. Nearly five-thirty. He doubted he’d be falling back to sleep.

Throwing back the covers, he sat up and rubbed his tired eyes. Cool air chilled his bare legs and chest. He grabbed up his jeans from yesterday and dragged them over his boxers, then pulled on a sweater. Damp, drafty air still wrapped around him. He crossed the room to the fireplace and tossed a log on the smoldering coals—all that was left of last night’s fire.

He’d left the light on in the en suite, its soft glow spilling into the shadowy room, and the lamp between the two chairs facing the hearth—all in an attempt to chase away the shadow man. He shook his head in mild disgust. He hadn’t slept with a light on since he was kid too young to have started school.

He dropped into the chair at the small writing table next to the window. He had a few hours before the rest of the house woke—before Carly Evans showed up banging at his door—he might as well get a little work done, make some effort at running his business.

Once again, he considered how much easier and more comfortable he would be set up in the study, and once again a thick smothering gripped him.

Declan opened his laptop and waited for the system to boot up. His thoughts drifted to Carly once more. They’d been doing that a lot since yesterday. She was attractive—he would have had to be dead not to notice—with all that golden brown hair falling past her shoulders, serious gray eyes and a single dimple grooving one cheek when she smiled. She was different than he’d expected, more grounded despite the strangeness of her work.

Her turning up at The Devil’s Eye like that still pissed him off when he thought about it for too long, but he was intrigued by her. He wished he’d met her under different circumstances.

What if she was right about The Devil’s Eye and its high magnetic field? Would that explain the shadow man, the burned woman? Maybe even what had sent his mother running?

He thought about what Hugh Warlow had said when he asked about his parents’ marriage. The man claimed he didn’t know the specifics of why his parents separated, but he said, “Women don’t do well at Stonecliff. Your father had three wives and none of them were happy here. Perhaps it’s the isolation, but the weaker sex tends to unravel the longer they stay.”

At the time, Declan thought the man had merely been glossing over the real reason his mother left, but now…

His mother had been the most rational person he’d ever known—she would have gouged Warlow’s eyes out for that “weaker sex” remark. Did he really believe some mystical energy from The Devil’s Eye had driven her away?

Fifteen bodies had been pulled from that bog. Maybe she’d run from something flesh and blood.

What did it matter now, anyway? Both his parents were dead, and their secrets with them.

He scrolled through his email, the connection to his real life in Seattle, the normalcy, comforting. He read his personal email first. There was only one from his sister Katie. She asked him about his trip, told him about being back at school—she was in her second year of university—and at the end asked him to call her father. She was worried about him and Josh. A faint sinking feeling settled over him. What had Josh done now? As if he didn’t have enough to worry about.

He typed a quick reply, keeping things light and amusing, promising to call Allen and reminding her that he would be back in a few days.

After, he went through his work emails. He did a couple of background checks for one of their corporate companies. He left the skip traces for Jayne. It would be easier for her to manage them locally.

He tapped his finger on the polished desktop. He’d rather be doing the skip traces. Tracking people down was what he was good at. All that time living in hiding had given him a certain insight when it came to finding people who wanted to stay lost.

The sky outside his window began to lighten as much as the heavy gray clouds would allow. A steady drizzle soaked the ground, tiny raindrops zigzagging down the glass. The forest stretched out before him, all bony branches and patches of dying leaves.

He wished Warlow had put him in a room that overlooked the sea instead of the forest. Whenever he was near the window, he couldn’t shake the feeling that he was being watched from the trees.

A shiver crept up his spine, and he forced his attention back to his computer screen. He was being stupid. Even if there was someone out there in the woods, they wouldn’t be able to see him. He was just letting this place spook him.

A loud bang from somewhere deep in the house made him jump, his heart lodging in his throat.

“Stupid,” he muttered, willing his pulse to resume a normal rate. Someone had probably slammed a door. Maybe Mrs. Voyle had arrived. He stood and craned his neck to get a look at the driveway. Her car wasn’t in the courtyard. It had to be Warlow.

Even as he listed rationalizations in his head, Declan stood and crossed to the bedroom door. He pulled it open a few inches and peered out through the gap. The narrow hall stretched out on either side of him dim and shadowy, the wall sconces dark. Silence wrapped around him, eerie and strangely unnatural as if the house were holding its breath.

A shrill laugh from a child pierced the quiet and the hair at the back of his neck stood on end.

* * *

“I bet he’s changed his mind,” Andy said, a smirk curling his mouth.

Knots tangled Carly’s insides. She would have loved to tell Andy that he was wrong, that he didn’t have a clue what he was talking about, but she was afraid he was right.

“It’s a large house. No one can hear me, probably.” She knocked again—louder this time.

Beside her, Andy sighed and turned absently, taking in the scenery behind them. “Place sure as hell looks haunted.”

He had a point. Dark clouds hung heavy in the sky, a relentless drizzle pelting the tin roof over the overhang. Most of the remaining leaves had been swept from the trees, leaving the woods a tangle of dark, bony branches. The sea, the color of slate and dotted with foamy whitecaps, rushed against the shore. A mix of sea brine and wet earth filled the chilly air.

While she didn’t look forward to sitting out in the rain next to The Devil’s Eye, she didn’t want to give Declan a chance to change his mind about participating—provided Andy was wrong and Declan hadn’t changed his mind already. She sighed. At least her ankle was better today.

The door opened and a tall man in a tidy gray pinstripe suit filled the opening. His hair was white and cut short. Sky-blue eyes bore into her.

“Can I help you?” he asked, deep voice cool.

“I’m Dr. Carly Evans, this is Andy Quinn. Mr. Meyers is expecting us.”

The man chuckled. “The ghost woman.”

“I suppose,” she said, irritation prickling her skin.

“I believe Mr. Meyers expressed that he was not interested in you. I’ll tell him you were here.” The man began closing the door. Carly stepped forward and pressed her hand to the wood, stopping him.
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