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Heather Graham Krewe of Hunters Series, Volume 4 Page 9
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Page 9
“Why?”
His eyes were level and unfathomable as he stared at her across the table. “He wrote it,” he told her. “Jose wrote it on the ground—in his own blood.”
“Oh.” Hannah had been about to taste her fish, but now she set her fork down. “Oh,” she repeated.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I should have waited and not upset you while you were eating.”
She shook her head. “I’m just so sorry. He was—he sounds like he was a fine man.”
He nodded. “If it occurs to you later that it might mean something, let me know.”
“Of course. I’ll ask hi—” she began, then quickly cut herself off.
“Pardon?” He frowned fiercely.
“What?”
“You’ll ask who?”
“Oh, around. You know. See if the word means anything to any of the old-timers. Or anyone else, for that matter,” she said quickly. She looked down at her plate, picked up her fork again and began to eat. He was still watching her, and she knew it. “The fish is really delicious.” She made a point of looking at her watch. “We should hurry a little. People sometimes show up kind of early, and when they do, I let them sit out on the patio.”
“People,” he murmured.
“Well, yes, people. They are the ones who take ghost tours,” she said.
“And you just let them all into your house?”
“It’s a bed-and-breakfast. I have to let people into my house.”
“That’s one thing. I’m assuming you get their names, addresses, a form of ID? Those are guests—and at least you have something to identify them. Anyone can take a ghost tour, right? And you just let them all in?” He sounded incredulous, as if he couldn’t believe how foolish she was.
She set her fork down again. Dinner was over. She glanced at her plate. In fact, it was over. She’d been so hungry that she’d finished the fish without even realizing it.
“I’m in the tourist industry. Nothing is going to happen to me when sixteen people are following me through town. You’ve seen too much of the worst of humanity. I usually get to see the good,” she told him.
He leaned across the table. She was ready to hop up, then realized that he wasn’t trying to insult her. He was trying to convince her.
“You don’t know who might be on that tour. Who might have signed up to check you out, find a way to get to you. I can understand you wanting to see the best in people, and that’s a commendable quality. Except for now. And even after this is over, you might want to be a little more careful. You don’t know who might see something they like when they’re looking around the Siren of the Sea. Something they’d come back for.”
“Oh, great.” Distracted by that depressing thought, she stood. “This was actually a nice time. Thank you.” She suddenly realized how that sounded. “Oh, sorry. That was presumptuous. Are we splitting the check?”
His mouth twitched. “It’s my pleasure to get the bill.”
They left the restaurant. When they returned to the house, there were already four people waiting out front. Hannah quickly introduced herself and opened the door, inviting them in. She turned to introduce Dallas Samson and faltered, not sure how much to say.
He stepped forward and took care of that himself. “Dallas Samson, hello. I’m staying here at the Siren of the Sea.”
The foursome was the Taylor family, George and Ivy and their two grown sons, Trevor and Blaine. Ivy oohed and aahed over the house when they took seats in the parlor. Hannah excused herself to get them some bottled water as they waited for the rest of the tour to arrive.
In the kitchen, she paused. She didn’t know why; it just felt as if something wasn’t quite right. “Melody?” she said quietly. “Hagen?”
Neither of the ghosts replied. Looking around, she tried to find something that was different, but nothing stood out.
Had Jose Rodriguez been back in spirit form?
She was still, well, haunted by the sense that something just wasn’t right, but she still couldn’t place it, and now her house was filling up with people for her ghost tour. Reaching into the refrigerator, she grabbed three six-packs of water to take out to the parlor.
The Taylor family had been joined by Maddie, Belinda, Tobie and Josiah, the Rosewoods. The newcomers asked about the Siren’s history, and Hannah assured them that she would talk about the house when the others arrived. Agent Samson, she saw, seemed comfortable with everyone. He was capable of casual, friendly conversation—just not so much with her.
Two couples, a lone college student and a family of three arrived, completing the group of sixteen.
“It happened out back, right? Really close to the house?” George Taylor asked.
Hannah felt a cold chill seep over her. It was natural, she supposed. The murder had taken place practically in her yard. Tourists whose interests ran to a ghost tour were bound to ask about it.
Once again, she didn’t have to say anything, because Dallas stepped in. “In the alley that runs behind the house,” he said. “But the police are still working the scene, plus it’s cordoned off, so it will help if we just steer clear of the area for now.”
“You a cop?” someone asked him.
“No,” he said, and smiled at Hannah. “But we’re all here for the history and legends that Miss O’Brien is about to disclose, so why don’t we give her our attention and let the authorities handle the information about the murder?”
“Of course,” George said, clearly sorry and slightly ashamed he had spoken.
“I’ll start out with the house we’re in,” Hannah said quickly. “Please, take a bottle of water from the table over there and grab a seat.” Her guests obeyed; those who didn’t find room on the sofa or nab one of the armchairs—mostly the younger members of the party—simply found comfortable spots on the floor. “The Siren of the Sea is named in tribute to the original owner—a merchant who followed the siren call of the sea, at least until the tragedy that befell his ship, which went down in the early 1850s. I’m sure you’ve already heard some Key West history, but this house figures in that history—as will a lot more of the places we visit tonight—so I’ll briefly recap. The Spanish were the first to arrive on this island, which they called Cayo Hueso, or Island of Bones. That’s because the bones of the indigenous people lay everywhere. When the English arrived, they bastardized the name to Key West. In 1763 Key West passed into the hands of the British for a mere twenty years before it was returned to Spanish control.
“By the early 1820s, when Key West became an American territory, piracy was raging on the high seas. Commodore David Porter planted the American flag here on the island, complained about the pirates and was ordered to subdue them. He immediately instituted martial law, something that didn’t go over well with the citizens, mainly fishermen and divers who either called the island home or made use of its resources. The pirates were pretty quickly expunged by the Mosquito Squadron, a fleet of small ships that Porter commanded. After that, salvage became the order of the day.
“There are many stories about so-called wreckers setting up lights to lure ships onto the reefs, but most of those stories are fiction. The wreckers of Key West didn’t need to create any maritime disasters. The shoals and reefs off the shore were deadly all on their own.
“When Ian Chandler arrived in the early 1840s he built this house, and in its day it was considered an appropriate residence for a prosperous businessman. Mr. Chandler wasn’t a wrecker, of course. He was, as I said, a merchant, one in possession of a number of ships. His Wind and the Sea was a three-masted schooner, a beautiful ship—as you can see by the painting above the fireplace. In September of 1857 the Wind and the Sea sailed from her berth in Key West carrying all kinds of goods, cigars from Cuba, sponges from the local waters and jewelry from workshops in Colombia. She’d barely left home when a vic
ious storm came tearing across the Florida Straits. The ship was tossed back on the reef, where it struck a coral shelf and began to sink. Ian Chandler was on the ship himself, but his beautiful young daughter was still at home.
“When word came that the ship had foundered and was sinking, the cry went up. Now, here’s the thing about wreckers. The first man or company to get out to the wreck lays claim. Others who help with the salvage are entitled to a share of the goods and/or what they brought in. But the first wrecker on the site is the one to call the shots and divvy up the haul.
“As it happened, Ian’s daughter, Melody, was in love with a young wrecker, Hagen Dundee. Ian—a widower by then—frowned on their relationship, despite the fact that Hagen was well liked and respected in the community. The two were planning on marrying but were still hoping for Ian’s blessing. Diaries and letters left by those who lived in the area at the time suggest that Ian Chandler would have disliked anyone who won his daughter’s love, because Melody was the light of his life.
“At any rate, when the ship went down, Hagen was quick to assemble his men and get out to the wreck. His plan was to return everything to Ian Chandler and thereby win Ian’s approval to wed his daughter. And so, in the midst of horrendous weather, Hagen and his crew set out. But Hagen was a decent man. Lives had to be saved before material goods. And he knew Ian Chandler was sailing on the Wind and the Sea that night.
“Hagen was the first to reach the site—the salvage claim was his. But there was something far more important, and that was saving the life of the man he hoped was his future father-in-law. So imagine Hagen fighting the wicked battering of the wind and the tempest of white-capped seas, trying first to pluck survivors from the waves. Many had made it into the lifeboats, but those were being tossed about like volleyballs on the high seas. Bold, dashing and daring, eyewitnesses attest to the fact that Hagen dove into the churning waters himself to save his prospective father-in-law. Success was within his reach when one of his rivals, Valmont LaBruge—a man who wanted to ruin Hagen Dundee, because he also had his heart set on winning the hand of Melody Chandler and taking over her father’s empire—reached the wreck. He maneuvered his ship Mademoiselle into position close to Hagen’s Saint Elizabeth.
“Just as Hagen saved Ian Chandler, Valmont dove into the water himself, throwing both Ian and Hagen from the lifeboat Hagen’s men had maneuvered into place. To the astonishment of those watching, in the midst of the raging storm Valmont swore he’d see Hagen dead before allowing him to claim the salvage from the Wind and the Sea—or the hand of Melody Chandler. In the fighting that followed, both Ian and Hagen disappeared below the surface.
“But before he was swallowed by the black depths, Hagen shouted out a curse. He cursed Valmont LaBruge, the seed of his loins and whatever treasure he might claim. The curse may have had some effect, because Valmont didn’t make it back to shore. Despite the storm, despite the wisdom that the salvaging of goods was best left until the storm abated, Valmont was determined to find something he believed was aboard the Wind and the Sea. He forced his men to create a safety line so he could board the quickly sinking ship. The line broke, and Valmont LaBruge died that night, victim of a curse spoken by a good man, so they say. Many lives were lost that night, but many others were saved due to the courage and determination of Hagen Dundee.”
“But poor Melody!” Belinda said. “She lost her father and her lover the same night.”
Hannah nodded. “The body of Ian Chandler washed ashore on what’s now Stock Island about three days later. Crushed and disconsolate, Melody buried her father. You can find his grave in the Key West Cemetery. But Hagen was not to be found. So, night after night, Melody went to the beach to stare out at the sea. Some think she walked out into the water. I believe she saw a light out at sea and simply tried to get a closer look. At any rate, she didn’t believe Hagen had drowned. She was certain he was out there somewhere. And, in searching for him, she was drowned herself. Neither her body nor Hagen’s was ever discovered. And because they weren’t given a good Christian burial, they are said to have remained behind in spirit form, together at last for all eternity.”
“What a sad story,” Maddie said.
“Hagen’s and Melody’s spirits can sometimes be seen right here in this house. Melody often walks the widow’s walk on the roof, searching the sea for her missing lover. Hagen comes to the door seeking Melody, or he stands looking up at her window, singing to her. Local records show he often came to serenade her. Hagen and Melody were tragic lovers and, some say, are now doomed to haunt Key West until they come to peace with themselves—or the world. Anyway, everyone have their water? We’ll head on down the street, and I’ll tell you the story of the poor woman I consider Key West’s most tragic haunt, Elena de Hoyos.”
“We’ve already heard something about Elena,” Tobie said excitedly.
“And Robert the Doll,” someone else said.
Hannah said, “We’ll go by Artist House, too.” She looked across the room and caught Agent Samson watching her with a gleam of amusement in his eyes.
Fine, be a skeptic, she thought.
But, of course, he probably knew all the Key West legends, seeing as he was from here. Still, she thought, it did seem as if he’d enjoyed her rendition of this one and its connection to her house.
Hannah led her crowd down toward Simonton Street and stopped across from the Dean Lopez Funeral Home.
“This,” she began, “is another story of love gone awry—and the strangest thing about this story is that it’s fairly recent history, and everything I have to tell you is true and documented. It all began over eighty years ago.
“Maria Elena Milagro de Hoyos, a lovely Cuban-American, was born in 1910. In 1930, she came down with tuberculosis. At the time, it was still an incurable disease. She received her diagnosis when she came to the United States Marine Hospital in Key West. Elena was dark haired, vivacious, filled with life—loved by her family, but perhaps not so much by her husband, who left her almost immediately after the diagnosis. There was a German-born radiologist at the hospital named Carl Tanzler, who went by the name Count Von Cosel. He was thirty-three years older than Elena, but he saw her and he was in love.”
“Yuck!” someone said.
Everyone turned to look. It was one of the young girls in the group—Belinda, Hannah thought.
Belinda cleared her throat awkwardly. “He was...what? Fifty-three? And she was twenty? That’s gross.”
Hannah laughed. “I never said that Elena fell in love with Carl Tanzler, just that Carl Tanzler fell in love with Elena. But that was how things stood. Elena had a husband, but he wasn’t about to stick around as his lovely young wife sickened and died. And in fact Tanzler had a wife, but she lived up in Zephyr Hills. So he convinced the family that he could treat Elena with all his radiology equipment and save her. He visited her house and ingratiated himself with the family. But poor Elena died despite his best efforts. Her wake was held right here at the Dean Lopez Funeral Home, which, as you can see, remains in business today. Tanzler offered to buy Elena a beautiful mausoleum at the Key West Cemetery, and she was laid to rest. But here’s where it starts to get really creepy. Tanzler visited her nearly every day, playing music for her, reading to her, speaking to her constantly of his undying love. This went on for two years, and then Tanzler suddenly stopped visiting.”
“I know!” Tobie Rosewood said. “He stole her body!”
“Yes. He stole her body from the grave in the dead of night,” Hannah agreed. “Now, Key West is known for having residents who are a bit eccentric. So when Carl Tanzler began buying piano wire, mortician’s wax, women’s lingerie and perfumes, no one really seemed to notice.
“And then one day, in 1940, Elena’s sister, Florida, heard rumors about Tanzler, so she confronted him. He was living in a broken-down plane on the beach, because he wanted to fix it and fly away to the h
eavens. She saw that he had her sister’s body, and that was the end of Tanzler’s ‘romance.’ The authorities came, and he was arrested. He claimed that although Elena never so much as agreed to date him in life, she had married him in death. He was given a psychological examination and deemed mentally competent to stand trial.
“And here’s where it got tricky. He hadn’t murdered Elena, and the statute of limitations on grave robbing meant that it was too late to charge him with stealing her body.
“Newspapers around the country hailed Tanzler as a great romantic. But back in those days, the press didn’t reveal every salacious detail the way it does now.” She paused, looking from person to person before revealing the next detail. “In his efforts to preserve Elena’s body he used wire and plastic and whatever else he could find. And he maintained a relationship with her as if she were alive, as if they were truly man and wife.
“After her body was found, poor Elena was given another viewing here at the Dean Lopez Funeral Home. This time thousands of people came, some to pay their last respects but most, I’m sure, to stare at what remained of her corpse. She was buried once again at the Key West Cemetery, but only the sheriff and a few other people knew where. Rumor says she was actually buried in several pieces in several places. Carl Tanzler’s last words to the judge were a question. He wanted to know when he could get his Elena back. He never would, of course.
“Soon after his release, the mausoleum he’d had built for her exploded and Carl Tanzler left town. But the story gets even stranger. He moved up to Zephyr Hills, where his estranged wife helped him find a place to live and get on his feet. He died on July 3, 1952, and some say he was found in a coffin with what must have been an effigy of his Elena. Or was it? I personally believe our medical examiners would have known the difference between an effigy and a corpse. All I can say is that if anyone deserves to haunt Key West as a ghost seeking something better, that person is Elena de Hoyos.”
Next she led the group to Artist House to tell the story of Robert the Doll, encouraging them to check out the East Martello Museum to see the doll and many other artifacts of Key West history. She followed that with the story of the children who’d died at the old theater and several other local legends, then led them to the haunted Hard Rock Cafe, where she told them the story of the Curry family and the tragic suicide by hanging of one member of the family in the building that now housed the restaurant.