That Olde White Magick. Sharon Pape

That Olde White Magick - Sharon Pape


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curb in front of my house, those were the last things on my mind.

      Chapter 3

      Travis met me in the driveway as I emerged from my car. He was dressed in chinos and a blue button-down, a leather messenger bag slung across his chest. His hair looked like he’d been raking his fingers through it, a habit he had when he was frustrated. He looked good but tired. I must have looked worse after the ordeal at the gym. But tired or not, my heart did its little jig for him. I made a point of not letting it show. The way things were between us lately, Travis didn’t need any added pressure about our relationship.

      “Hey, Kailyn,” he said. “How are you doing?”

      The words were right, but the tone and delivery were perfunctory, as if he felt obligated to say them before he broached the real reason for being there.

      “Good, I’m good,” I said, aiming for carefree nonchalance and missing by a mile. Neither of us was on our A game tonight. I shut the car door and set the alarm. The proverbial ball was in his court, but he was studying his Docksiders, presumably working out what he wanted to say. It was unusual for a reporter who normally had his patter honed down to an art. I gave him another twenty seconds to say something, before I headed for the house.

      “Listen,” he said with five seconds to spare, “I’m sorry to drop by like this, but I’m here to run down the story about the woman...the one found dead behind the elementary school? When I got there, the cops had the school grounds roped off. I couldn’t get two words out of any of them.”

      “I know,” I said. “I was there.” I needed to get off my feet, so I started up the slate walk to the old Victorian my family had called home for almost a hundred fifty years. The land itself had been owned by the Wildes for closer to four hundred. Travis fell in beside me. We took the steps up to the wraparound porch in tandem. I stopped at the door to root around in my purse for the keys.

      “Was the victim a close friend?” he inquired, clearly trying not to make the same foot-in-mouth mistake he made shortly after we met.

      I gave up on the Braille method of finding the keys, and I peered into the depths of my purse. “An acquaintance,” I said, finally locating them inside the wrong compartment. I really had to get a smaller purse.

      “In that case, maybe you can help me out?”

      He kept his voice low as if he were in a funeral home to pay his respects to the deceased. I could tell by the twinkle in his eyes, though, that I was the answer to his prayers. Not long ago I could have elicited the same response by just being home if he happened to stop by. A sigh ambushed me, but I covered it by faking a yawn. “Give him time,” I heard my mother say. “Give him time.” I glanced around to make sure I’d only heard her in my head and she wasn’t actually there with us. The last thing I needed was for Travis to meet my dearly departed. Although he seemed to take the proof of my paranormal abilities in stride that night two months ago, things hadn’t been the same between us since then.

      I opened the front door. It shuddered inward, the wood swollen by the August humidity. I’d been meaning to find a spell to return it to its proper dimensions or hire a repairman. I turned to Travis. “Would you like to come in?” Talk about a ridiculous question. The man had been waiting for me to come home and followed me up to the front door like a lost puppy. Unless he was there to sell me Girl Scout cookies, he wanted to come in and talk.

      “If you’re not too tired?”

      I toyed with the idea of telling him I was too tired, but our current problems were not entirely his fault. He and I had both had a rough time that day in June. Tilly, Merlin and I, facing a killer who intended to add us to his list of victims and Travis racing back to us, afraid he would find all of us dead. In retrospect, it wasn’t the best time to have further complicated matters by proving I wasn’t the woman he thought I was. Since then, the easiness between us was gone, replaced by a wariness I could almost smell. It radiated from him like a pungent new cologne. But I didn’t blame him. If the situation were reversed, I would probably have run for the hills. Life was hard enough without a sorcerer in it—my own included.

      “It’s okay,” I said, holding the door open for him. “Just shake me if I fall asleep.” I left my purse on the table in the foyer and led the way into the living room where Sashkatu was stretched out along the top of the couch. He’d always been an “up” cat, preferring to survey his domain from above. His eyes blinked open when Travis dropped heavily onto the couch, but after determining there was no imminent danger, he promptly fell back to sleep. The five other cats were probably bedded down for the night.

      Travis set his messenger bag beside him on the couch, in the space where I would have been sitting in the pre-revelation days of our relationship. I tried not to take it personally and made do with sitting on the wing chair across from him. He pulled out his mini laptop and asked me to begin.

      I laid out the sequence of events as I remembered them, which is harder than it sounds after witnessing a traumatic event. I kept to the facts I knew for certain: Amanda’s name, where she was found, and the sharp, bloody line across her neck. Travis kept his head down, taking notes without a word. He didn’t look up until I stopped speaking.

      “Can you tell me more about this Waverly Hotel deal?” he asked.

      “The chain wants to build a hotel where the marsh is at the entrance to town.”

      He thought about that for a moment. “They’d have to dam the stream that feeds it and drain the land, a pricey proposition before you even calculate normal building costs. Is there any opposition to it?”

      “Plenty, but Waverly is also asking for a change in the zoning laws. They claim the hotel has to have at least ten stories, a hundred rooms, for it to turn a profit.”

      “Folks are divided on that?”

      “Well, it would change the look of the town, the quaint atmosphere that tourists find so appealing. As things are now, there’s no building over two stories.”

      “And once the zoning is changed, they’re worried it will snowball.”

      “Exactly, but that’s still not the whole story. If you ask ten people, you’ll get ten different reasons why they’re in favor of the hotel or against it. I’ve never seen anything raise people’s hackles like this before. That’s why the board called the special session.”

      “Do you know where Amanda stood on the project?”

      “No. I went to the meeting because I wanted to hear what everyone had to say.”

      “Any thoughts about who might have killed her?”

      “I’ve been asking myself that question ever since I saw her lying there. Maybe the killer wanted to eliminate a vote that conflicted with his or her agenda. It shouldn’t be too hard to find someone who knows which way Amanda was leaning.” Someone like Beverly, who was also a board member. I could feel the Nancy Drew juices stirring in me. Another investigation might be the perfect way to distract myself from the issues between Travis and me.

      “Kailyn?”

      Travis’s voice dragged me out of my thoughts.

      “You’re not thinking of going after another killer, are you? Because this time it’s different. It’s not a matter of trying to keep your best friend out of prison. There’s no good reason for you to take the risk.”

      I couldn’t decide if I was pleased with his apparent concern or irritated that he still felt entitled to have a say in my life now that we were barely a couple anymore. Travis seemed to be waiting for me to say something. “You don’t have to worry about me,” I told him, satisfied that my reply was vague enough to give me some leeway.

      He wasn’t buying it. “Have you forgotten how close you came to being killed the last time? And not just you. Your aunt Tilly and that peculiar cousin of yours might have been victims too, even poor old Sashkatu.”

      He was really pushing all my buttons. “I appreciate your input,” I said.


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