The Ghost of Valentine Past
Page 1
The Ghost of Valentine Past
Bobbi Holmes
Robeth Publishing, LLC
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
The Ghost from the Sea
Haunting Danielle Series
Bobbi Holmes
Unlocked Hearts Series
The Coulson Series
Also by Bobbi Ann Johnson Holmes
The Ghost of Valentine Past
(Haunting Danielle, Book 7)
A Novel
By Bobbi Holmes
Cover Design: Elizabeth Mackey
Editor: Vivian Delchamps
* * *
Copyright © 2016 Bobbi Holmes
Robeth Publishing, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
* * *
This novel is a work of fiction.
Any resemblance to places or actual persons,
living or dead is entirely coincidental.
* * *
www.robeth.com
Dedicated to those who I’ve loved and lost to death.
As we grow older, death visits more frequently.
I prefer to believe it’s nothing more than a doorway into forever.
Chapter One
Meghan Carter doubted the building was haunted. There was normally a rational explanation for odd noises during the night, unexpected chilly drafts, flickering light bulbs, and rearranged furniture. That didn’t mean Meghan was a nonbeliever. In fact, she had been seeing ghosts for as long as she could remember. Of course, she didn’t share that with her acquaintances. To them, she was simply a researcher of paranormal activities, and when she received calls like this one, they typically turned out to be non-ghost related.
Meghan parked in front of the boarded up commercial building. From what she understood, this area of Sacramento, California, was considered prime commercial real estate. She thought it a shame the building was practically abandoned. Perhaps Tom was right, and the place was haunted. Why else would someone let the building sit idle for so long?
Just as she climbed out of her Jeep, Tom pulled up behind her. Meghan paused by the side of the Jeep and gave him a brief wave as he parked. A woman she didn’t recognize was with him. Meghan assumed it was the building’s owner.
“Hey it’s Ghost Busters!” Tom called out as he got out of his car and slammed its door shut.
“Funny, ha ha,” Meghan returned dryly. “You know, I can get back in my car and go home. I should be there putting my Christmas decorations away, anyway.”
“I’m sorry. I just couldn’t resist,” Tom said sheepishly. He gestured to his passenger, who had just gotten out of his car. The woman’s eyes nervously darted from Megan to the boarded up building.
“Meghan, this is Ann Reynolds, the owner. Ann, this is Meghan, who I’ve been telling you about,” Tom introduced.
Megan smiled at Ann. “Hello.”
“I’m not really sure how this is going to help,” the woman said, wringing her hands. “But, I’m at my wit’s end and willing to try anything. Even an exorcism.”
“I’m not sure what Tom’s told you, but I don’t do exorcisms.” Meghan smiled kindly.
Anne’s gaze darted from Meghan to Tom. “I don’t understand.”
“I told you, Meghan studies this sort of thing—paranormal activities. If your place is really being haunted, she’ll be able to tell, and then she can help you figure out what you need to do next."
“I want it to stop!” Ann cried out. “I thought you said she could take care of it!”
Megan reached out and patted Ann’s arm reassuringly. “Maybe I can. But first, why don’t we go inside, and you can show me what’s been happening.”
“No.” Meghan shook her head. “I’m not going in there. Not until it’s gone.”
“Okay then,” Meghan said patiently. “Why don’t you tell me what’s been happening, exactly.”
Tom spoke up, “Ann and her husband used to run their business out of this building. Then, over a year ago, strange things started happening. About six months ago, Ann’s husband passed away, and she found it impossible to keep running the business alone—not with all the strange occurrences going on.”
“It didn’t seem as frightening when my husband, Albert, was here. For one thing, Albert was getting forgetful, and I figured he was responsible for most of it. But he wasn’t,” Ann explained.
“What kind of strange things?” Meghan asked.
“Doors that were closed would suddenly be open. I’d clean up in the office and return to find drawers pulled out, the trashcan tipped over. And light bulbs—the light bulbs kept popping. I even called an electrician. He said there was nothing wrong.”
“That’s when I thought of you, Meghan. I remembered our conversation about lingering spirits screwing around with electricity.”
“Well, that’s one theory some have,” Meghan said.
“I couldn’t take it anymore. I closed the business. I started taking Social Security this last year anyway, and I had Albert’s life insurance. But I need to sell the building, and I just don’t feel right about selling it to some poor unsuspecting buyer, not if it’s cursed. That doesn’t seem right.”
“Well, let me have a look. Did you bring a key?”
Ann nodded and dug into her pocket, pulling out a keychain. “I hope you don’t mind if I stay here.”
“I’ll go in with you,” Tom offered.
“No. It might be quicker if I do it alone.” Meghan took the key from Ann. If she did encounter a spirit, she would feel awkward trying to communicate with it while Tom stood by and listened.
“I’m afraid the electricity is turned off, but the skylights let in plenty of sunshine,” Ann told her.
A few moments later, Meghan unlocked the building’s front door and gently pushed it open. She found it was fairly bright inside, due to the sun streaming in through overhead skylights. Stepping into the building, she closed the door behind her and looked around. Dust coated the furniture and empty shelves.
Just as she reached the center of the room, the overhead light flickered on and off. Looking up to the light fixture, Meghan swallowed nervously and said under her breath, “Either Ann is wrong about the electricity being off or…”
Before she could finish her sentence, a ghostly apparition appeared, just a few feet from her. A strikingly handsome, well-dressed young man, he seemed more confused and frightened than poor Ann outside. By his clothes, he was obviously of Tom’s generation and not some ghost who had been lingering for decades.
“Hello,” Meghan said.
Her greeting startled him. “You’re willing to talk to me?�
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“Willing?” Meghan asked.
“Everyone is so rude. All I wanted was directions. Why won’t anyone help me?”
“I’ll help you. Where do you want to go?”
He frowned thoughtfully for a moment and then said, “I’m not really sure. That’s why I need someone to help me.”
“Do you remember how you got here?”
He considered the question a moment before answering and then pointed to the doorway Meghan had just entered. “I came through that door, of course.”
Meghan looked around the room. “Until I came in, there was no one here to help you. Why didn’t you just leave?”
He frowned again. “There was. I’m sure there was. And then…then there wasn’t.”
“So why didn’t you leave once you were alone?”
“Where would I go?”
“Can you tell me your name?”
“Lucas. Lucas Saunders.”
“Hello Lucas Sanders, my name is Meghan. Do you know where you were before you came in here?”
Lucas shook his head. “Things are a little confused for me.”
“What was the last thing you remember before coming in here?” Meghan asked.
Lucas closed his eyes and tried to remember. “Everything is so jumbled up…but…” He opened his eyes again and stared at Meghan. “Danielle, Danielle is going to be worried about me.”
“Danielle?”
“My wife, Danielle. She’s expecting me. I just remembered. We have to go Christmas shopping. I promised I’d go with her. Christmas is in five days.”
“No, Lucas. Christmas was almost two weeks ago.”
“No. That’s impossible. I couldn’t have missed Christmas.”
“Lucas, I have a feeling the Christmas you’re talking about was more than two weeks ago.”
“What do you mean?”
“What year is it?” she asked.
“You don’t know?”
“Yes, I know. But do you? Remember, you’ve been wandering around this building for some time. You said there used to be people here. But I happen to know this building has been empty for almost six months now.”
“That’s impossible. I haven’t been here for six months!”
“Then tell me what year it is.”
“It’s 2013, of course.”
Meghan pulled her iPhone out of her purse and opened her calendar. She showed it to Lucas.
“That’s impossible,” he said dully, sitting down in a chair, staring ahead blankly. “I don’t understand.”
“I really hate to be the one to have to tell you this Lucas. But I think you already know, you just haven’t come to terms with it yet, which is why you keep rambling around this building. You know…deep down…you know, don’t you?”
He shook his head in denial. “No. I can’t be dead. No.”
“I’m sorry, Lucas. Do you know how it happened?”
He looked up at Meghan and shook his head again. “No. I don’t remember. Everything is confused…but something strange…”
“What?”
“It doesn’t seem quite as jumbled as it was before you came in here.”
“Sometimes a spirit just needs someone to help them acknowledge their death, which enables them to see things more clearly, and then they can move on,” she explained.
“Move on? What do you mean move on?”
“When we die, we aren’t supposed to hang around here. You have somewhere to go. Haunting this building is no way for you to spend your eternity.”
“I’ve been haunting this building?”
“Yes. From what I understand, that’s exactly what you’ve been doing.”
“I can’t go anywhere; I need to find Danielle first.”
“Danielle? Your wife?”
“Yes. I remember now; I need to find her before I move on. It’s important. But I don’t know how to find her.”
“Do you remember how you died?”
“No. That’s still blurry.”
“Well, maybe knowing how you died will help you remember the rest of it.” Meghan opened a search window on her iPhone’s browser and typed in Lucas’ full name and Sacramento, California. Within less than a minute, she had the answer.
“Oh my,” she said sadly.
“What did you find out?”
“I now understand why you’re here. Apparently, you were killed in a car accident—across the street from this very building. You died on December 20, 2013.” She pulled up a few more webpages connected to his name.
“Does it say where I can find Danielle?”
“Umm…” Meghan looked up from the phone. “I’ve a feeling your wife really does not want to see you—even if that was possible, which it isn’t. I think you need to move on, follow the light as they say.”
He adamantly shook his head. “No, I need to find my wife.”
“According to the second online article—you were killed with another woman. Someone named Kelsey Woods. Kelsey’s spirit isn’t around here, is she?”
“Kelsey…Kelsey is dead too…I remember now,” he said dully.
“Do you also remember Kelsey was your lover? According to the article, you were killed with your lover, Kelsey Wood.”
“Oh my god,” Lucas started to pace the room. “That explains it. That’s why I need to find Danielle.”
“I’m sorry, Lucas, that’s really impossible. You need to move on. There’s nothing you can do about it now.”
“I need to remember where I lived with Danielle…why can’t I remember that? I need to get home.”
“I’ll see what I can find on her—but you have to promise me you’ll leave here and not come back.”
“I promise.”
“You also have to promise not to haunt your poor wife.”
“What do you mean?”
“I’d feel horrible if I helped you find your wife only to have you hang around her house, slam her doors, and make her light bulbs explode.”
“I need to find her. Please help me.”
“Do you promise not to haunt her? Check on her, make sure she’s okay, and then move on. Do you agree?”
He didn’t answer immediately; finally, he nodded his agreement.
Meghan looked at her cellphone again and began searching for any information on Danielle Saunders. After a few minutes, she looked up and asked, “Was your wife’s maiden name Boatman?”
“Yes! Yes it is!”
“She’s going by her maiden name now.”
“Why would she do that?”
Meghan arched her brows. “Why do you think?”
“Oh…I wonder if she’s still living in our house.”
“No. She moved to Oregon.”
“Oregon? Why would Danielle move to Oregon?”
“She’s living in Frederickport, Oregon—on the coast. According to this article, she runs a bed and breakfast called Marlow House.”
When Meghan looked up from her cellphone, Lucas was gone.
Chapter Two
It was no longer raining. Normally, that would make Will Wayne smile, but now it was snowing—if one could call the slush covering his windshield snow. The wipers struggled to keep up, and he was grateful he was almost at his destination. Days like this made him long for Arizona and its reliable sunshine. He enjoyed summers in Portland, Oregon—winter, not so much.
Pulling into the parking lot, he turned off the engine and grabbed the umbrella off the passenger seat. He wasn’t too proud to use an umbrella, especially on days like this. He had already traded his cowboy boots in for a pair of reliable rubber soled water-resistant boots. It had only taken one tumble to realize slick bottom cowboy boots and wet asphalt didn’t mix. He was too old to be breaking a hip. His cowboy hat remained, but he had no intention of getting it soaked in the rain and snow; hence the umbrella.
Five minutes later, he was being led into the office of Logan Mitcham, private detective. Wayne hadn’t expected a thirty-something, ruggedly stocky man of six-feet, wi
th a ruddy complexion and short buzzed strawberry colored hair. Wayne thought marine when he saw Mitcham, not PI. To Wayne, a private detective should look like James Garner or Humphry Bogart.
The two men shook hands, exchanged introductions, and Wayne took a seat facing Mitcham, who sat down behind his desk.
Mitcham opened a manila folder, glanced over its contents and then looked up at Will and asked, “You want me to investigate your daughter’s death?”
Wayne nodded. “Yes. A friend recommended you. She said you’re familiar with Earthbound Spirits.”
The private detective did not respond. Instead, he stared at Will.
“You are familiar with them, aren’t you? She said you’ve investigated them before.”
Mitcham closed the folder. “Earthbound Spirits? The cult? Yes, I’m familiar with them.”
“And you know who Peter Morris is?” Wayne asked.
“Of course. He founded the group.”
“I believe Peter Morris may have been responsible for my daughter’s death.”
Mitcham leaned back in his desk chair and studied Wayne for a moment. “I’m sorry about the loss of your daughter. But how exactly do you believe Morris was involved? How did your daughter die?”
“My daughter was Isabella Strickland. They say she died of a brain aneurism.”
Mitcham leaned forward, resting his elbows on the desk. “Isabella Strickland, yes, I remember reading about that in the paper. She was your daughter?”
“Yes.” Wayne nodded solemnly.
“I don’t remember the paper mentioning she was married.”
Will shook his head. “Married? No, Isabella wasn’t married.”
“I just assumed—since she didn’t go by Wayne.”
“Her mother and I divorced years ago. Unfortunately, I was never in Isabella’s life.”
“Why do you believe Morris had something to do with your daughter’s death?”
“The oldest motive in the world, money, of course. She had made a will leaving everything to Earthbound Spirits.”
Mitcham leaned back again. As he did, he picked up an ink pen from the desk and began absently tapping its end against the desktop. “I remember reading about her death—it was quite sensational, considering the uncle hid her body and tried to pass off another woman as her. From what I’ve read, your daughter left everything to that uncle.”