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Ghost Moon
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Page 1
Prologue
The sun was setting, casting a bloodred hue upon the land and the Merlin house.
The house was quite odd, sitting on a spit of peninsula that stretched in a small curlicue from the Old Town mainland of Key West. One of a kind, it was Victorian and elegant—and in a state of neglect and decay that made it appear as if it were haunted, almost a living, breathing entity. Shadowed windows might have been eyes, watching all activity that surrounded the place. The fading gray paint created a trick of light in the coming darkness, making it seem as if there was a pulse in the façade of the place. It sat, quiet, dormant, and yet alive…waiting.
Liam Beckett parked his car in the overgrown gravel drive of the old house, dreading what he would find within, and thinking back many years.
This had been Kelsey’s home for so long. Until her mother had died, and her father had taken her away. Cutter Merlin had stayed behind, either mourning his only daughter or left behind by his son-in-law. Liam didn’t know. He remembered Kelsey, though. She’d been his enemy—the little girl who tortured him with spitballs while he’d slipped behind her to tie knots in her hair—and then, somewhere along the way, they’d become friends. And then she had become the first real crush of his life, a dark-haired tomboy who had become a lithe and elegant young woman. He hadn’t been able to say goodbye.
And now…
He walked to the front door and knocked. The house was nearly seven thousand square feet, and Cutter lived in it alone, so—with or without his sense of dread—there was no reason to fear because his initial knock wasn’t answered. He pressed the buzzer for the doorbell, but he was certain that it hadn’t worked in years.
He heard nothing within the house.
He banged on the door again, but there was still no response.
He stepped back on the porch. As Jason Fried had reported, the mail was piling up.
Maybe Cutter Merlin had gone somewhere. Out to see his granddaughter in California, perhaps.
But that wasn’t the case, and Liam knew it.
Cutter Merlin hadn’t left the island in a decade.
He walked around back. The house itself sat on a solid coral-and-limestone shelf that gave way to sand, sea grapes and mangroves. Bony pines and low scruff foliage surrounded the house, most of it appearing to be dead and unkempt, adding to the barren, forgotten and forlorn appearance of the property. Liam knew how to break in: when Kelsey had forgotten her keys, they had crept through the brush—once tended—to the rear of the house and the laundry room. There was a loose screen over the washer and dryer, and it was a piece of cake to move it.
Liam did so.
He slipped the screen out and crawled in, then leapt down from the dryer to the floor.
The odor assailed him immediately, and he knew.
He just had to find the body.
He flicked the switch, but the lights in the laundry room were out. He doubted it had been used in a long time. The connecting door between the kitchen and the laundry room was unlocked, though, giving to his touch. In the kitchen, he flicked another light switch.
A dim bulb came to life.
Cutter Merlin had been fixing himself something to eat. Flies buzzed around a bowl of tomato soup and the sandwich on the plate beside it. Liam touched the bread; it was hard as a rock. An odor different from the intense smell of death but nearly as bad rose from the sandwich.
He walked through to the massive dining room. A bay window seat to the north usually gave a beautiful view of the Gulf, a magnificent site to watch the sunset. But he couldn’t see the dying sun except for a sliver of light; the drapes had been drawn.
There was a patina of dust over the house. Cobwebs covered the chandelier over the dining table.
“Cutter?” Liam called the man’s name, and then felt like an ass, talking to himself. He knew that Cutter was dead. No living man could have remained in that house with the odor, a miasma that was palpable.
One tile step led to the grand living room. The light from the kitchen wasn’t enough to filter in, but, trying another switch, Liam discovered that it, too, was dead.
The room was cast in the eerie bloodred that was darkened by the shadows of the coming night.
It had once been beautiful, with Italian marble floors, elegant throw rugs and crimson Duncan Fife furnishings. Over the years, it had become cluttered, and not with the usual accumulation of silly souvenirs, magazines or papers. There were boxes everywhere. A suit of armor—real—stood in a corner, near a Victorian coffin with a window at the head and a painting beneath the window to display how the dead might have been shown. A mummy case lay to one side of the fireplace, and an authentic voodoo altar lay to the right. A glass dome covered a shrunken head he knew to be from New Guinea, and a stuffed raven took precedence on the mantel. Everywhere you looked, there was an artifact from somewhere, some in pristine condition, others worn and falling apart. Animal heads adorned the walls along with African masks and feathered spears.
There was so much in the room to attract the eye in the strange mixture of shadow and light that Liam didn’t even see the dead man at first.
And then he did.
Like one of his relics, Cutter Merlin was covered in a thin patina of dust. A spider had spun her web from the edge of Cutter’s reading glasses to the armrest of the rocking chair on which he sat.
Liam felt his heart sink. He’d known, of course. He found himself suddenly wishing that he—or someone—had kept up with the old recluse. Cutter Merlin had always been kind to children. He’d been filled with wonderful tales about distant lands: Asia, Far East, Middle East, the jungles of South America and the sands of the Sahara desert. But his daughter had died, his son-in-law and granddaughter had moved away and he had closed himself in with his treasures. Then there had been the strange rumors about the old hermit and his collections. He practiced black magic. He made deals with the devil.
He sat now, just sat, a book in his hands, dust motes dancing in the crimson air around him. Old and frail, his hair long and white, his cheeks covered in a stubble of white beard, he looked as if he might speak. But, of course, he would never speak again.
“Ah, Mr. Merlin!” Liam said softly, walking toward the old man. He noted then that the corpse’s mouth was slightly open, while its eyes were wide-open as well behind steel-framed reading glasses. It was as if Cutter Merlin had died staring toward the foyer and the grand front entry, terrified of whatever he saw there. The expression on his face was so filled with horror that Liam found himself turning to look.
But there was nothing there. He turned and came down on one knee by the corpse. He realized that he would be saturated with the smell of death when he left, but it didn’t matter; he had known the man. He was a sad old fellow who had given a great deal, and he had died alone, in fear.
He sighed softly, shaking his head sadly. He took out his cell and called in the death; the medical examiner would arrive soon.
There wasn’t a terrible rush; Cutter Merlin was dead. The spider that had spun the web about him emerged from the old man’s mouth, causing Liam to start and shudder—and be glad that no one had been there to see his horrified reaction.
Liam frowned, noting the book on the old man’s lap. It was large, with gold trim on the pages, and Liam judged it to be a hundred or more years old. He carefully lifted the cover, but the bloodred twilight was turning to darker and darker shadow, so he took his flashlight from his pocket, carefully lifting the book with the tip of the light.
In Defense from Dark Magick.
There was something in the old man’s hand, as well. Liam knew not to touch him until the M. E. came, but he was curious, and it hardly appeared that this could be a case
of murder. An old man had scared himself, and died from a heart attack.
His gloves were in the car, so he used the tip of the small laser light to shift the hand and see what was clutched in the fingers. The old man had long since gone in and out of rigor, so he wasn’t stiff, and Liam was easily able to see what he clutched.
It was a casket, a little gold casket, like a jewelry box with its lid open for a special piece. Liam hadn’t been an altar boy, but he had been brought to church every Sunday when he’d been growing up. It seemed to him that the box was some kind of reliquary. It appeared to contain a small gold ball, filigreed, with the ball designed to fit into the casket, and the casket designed just to fit the ball.
Beneath the book on his lap, Cutter held an old sawed-off shotgun.
“What were you doing, old man?” Liam asked softly aloud. He shook his head and stood, looking around the room again. Boxes and crates and pieces—some priceless, some surely pure junk—seemed piled en masse. Now, the shadows stretched out like bone-fingered tentacles. Liam walked across the room to the main entrance, and, once again with his flashlight, studied the door. Odd. Cutter Merlin had prepared his dinner, simple soup and a sandwich. But he had never eaten it. He had taken a book and an old relic and gone to sit in his rocking chair by the fire, staring at the front door.
Staring as if he were waiting for someone, but with a book and gold casket as his weapons, along with a sawed-off shotgun. He hadn’t pulled out the shotgun to aim at anyone; it remained on his lap, beneath the book.
Cutter Merlin had been called eccentric as long as Liam could remember.
In the last years, he had been referred to as a crazy hermit. To keep their children from playing near the shoreline where the boats came and the water could suddenly become deep, local parents had warned that the man was loony, that he might have been the devil.
The front door was locked. In fact, there were three bolts on the door now, and they were all secured.
It was as if Cutter Merlin had become quite frightened of some visitor in his dotage. Who?
He’d probably begun to suffer dementia. Alzheimer’s. And none of them had really known. Or cared. Liam felt horrible again; how had they all forgotten this man?
He walked back to the corpse. Cutter still stared at the door in fear—and determination. He had been clutching the little casket as if his life had depended upon it.
“Poor old fellow,” Liam said. “You were always good to me. I’m sorry that I forgot you. ”

Deadly Night
The Uninvited
Dust to Dust
Heart of Evil
A Perfect Obsession
The Keepers
Pale as Death
Phantom Evil
Hallow Be the Haunt
Night of the Wolves
The Night Is Forever
Golden Surrender
Kiss of Darkness
Beneath a Blood Red Moon
A Dangerous Game
Ghost Shadow
Long, Lean, and Lethal
Fade to Black
The Rising
And One Wore Gray
Rebel
The Unseen
The Night Is Watching
The Evil Inside
The Unspoken
The Night Is Alive
The Unholy
Nightwalker
Deadly Harvest
An Angel for Christmas
A Pirate's Pleasure
American Drifter
Realm of Shadows
Blood on the Bayou
Sacred Evil
Dying to Have Her
The Cursed
Captive
Hurricane Bay
Drop Dead Gorgeous
Ghost Memories
All Hallows Eve
Dying Breath
Deadly Fate
The Dead Room
Lord of the Wolves
Ghost Night
Ghost Walk
The Forgotten
Unhallowed Ground
One Wore Blue
Dead By Dusk
Night of the Blackbird
The Dead Play On
Bride of the Night
Wicked Deeds
The Forbidden
Triumph
Out of the Darkness
Love Not a Rebel
The Last Noel
Tall, Dark, and Deadly
The Death Dealer
Dead on the Dance Floor
Law and Disorder
Dark Rites
New Year's Eve
Hostage At Crystal Manor
And One Rode West
Home in Time for Christmas
Killing Kelly
Blood Night
Tangled Threat (Mills & Boon Heroes)
Darkest Journey
Glory
Deadly Touch
An Unexpected Guest
Night of the Vampires
Seize the Wind
Ghost Moon
The Vision
Dreaming Death
Conspiracy to Murder
Horror-Ween (Krewe of Hunters)
The Summoning
Waking the Dead
Danger in Numbers
The Hidden
Sweet Savage Eden
Tangled Threat ; Suspicious
Mother's Day, the Krewe, and a Really Big Dog
Picture Me Dead
The Killing Edge
St. Patrick's Day
Seeing Darkness
The Dead Heat of Summer: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
Crimson Twilight
Haunted Destiny
Devil's Mistress
Banshee
The Unforgiven
The Final Deception
A Horribly Haunted Halloween
Haunted Be the Holidays
Deadly Gift
Easter, the Krewe and Another Large White Rabbit
Haunted
The Silenced
Let the Dead Sleep
Christmas, the Krewe, and Kenneth
Big Easy Evil
Sinister Intentions & Confiscated Conception
Haunted Be the Holidays: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
Blood Red
A Perilous Eden
Slow Burn
Strangers In Paradise
Bitter Reckoning
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 1: Phantom Evil ; Heart of Evil ; Sacred Evil ; The Evil Inside
Do You Fear What I Fear?
The Face in the Window
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 3: The Night Is WatchingThe Night Is AliveThe Night Is Forever
Eyes of Fire
Apache Summer sb-3
Sensuous Angel
In the Dark
Knight Triumphant
Hours to Cherish
Tender Deception
Keeper of the Dawn tkl-4
Apache Summer
Between Roc and a Hard Place
Echoes of Evil
The Game of Love
Sacred Evil (Krewe of Hunters)
Bougainvillea
Tender Taming
Keeper of the Night (The Keepers: L.A.)
Lonesome Rider and Wilde Imaginings
Lucia in Love
The Gatekeeper
Liar's Moon
Dark Rites--A Paranormal Romance Novel
A Season for Love
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 6: Haunted Destiny ; Deadly Fate ; Darkest Journey
Keeper of the Dawn (The Keepers: L.A.)
Blood on the Bayou: A Cafferty & Quinn Novella
Double Entendre
A Perfect Obsession--A Novel of Romantic Suspense
The Night Is Forever koh-11
The Di Medici Bride
When Irish Eyes Are Haunting: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
The Keepers: Christmas in Salem: Do You Fear What I Fear?The Fright Before ChristmasUnholy NightStalking in a Winter Wonderland (Harlequin Nocturne)
Never Fear
Dying Breath--A Heart-Stopping Novel of Paranormal Romantic Suspense
If Looks Could Kill
This Rough Magic
Heather Graham's Christmas Treasures
Hatfield and McCoy
The Trouble with Andrew
Never Fear - The Tarot: Do You Really Want To Know?
Blue Heaven, Black Night
Forbidden Fire
Come the Morning
Dark Stranger sb-4
Lie Down in Roses
Red Midnight
Krewe of Hunters Series, Volume 5
Night, Sea, And Stars
Snowfire
Quiet Walks the Tiger
Mistress of Magic
For All of Her Life
Runaway
The Night Is Alive koh-10
The Evil Inside (Krewe of Hunters)
All Hallows Eve: A Krewe of Hunters Novella (1001 Dark Nights)
Tomorrow the Glory
Ondine
Angel of Mercy & Standoff at Mustang Ridge
Bride of the Tiger
When Next We Love
Heather Graham Krewe of Hunters Series, Volume 4
A Season of Miracles
Realm of Shadows (Vampire Alliance)
When We Touch
Serena's Magic
Rides a Hero sb-2
All in the Family
Handful of Dreams
A Stranger in the Hamptons
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 2: The Unseen ; The Unholy ; The Unspoken ; The Uninvited
Never Sleep With Strangers
Eden's Spell
A Magical Christmas
Forever My Love
King of the Castle
Night Moves (60th Anniversary)
The Island
Borrowed Angel
Hallow Be the Haunt: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
Why I Love New Orleans
The Last Cavalier
A Matter of Circumstance
Heather Graham's Haunted Treasures
Tempestuous Eden
Krewe 11 - The Night Is Forever