Last of the Ravens. Linda Winstead Jones
don’t need a vacation,” Miranda insisted stubbornly.
“You do,” three voices responded in concert.
She pursed her lips, but arguing with this bunch was a waste of time. Autumn and her husband of two years, Jared Sidwell, stood side by side and glared at her over sweet iced tea. Cheryl Talbot smiled and nodded.
FBI Agent Roger Talbot flipped a burger on the grill and belatedly he agreed with the other three. “This last job was a doozy. It drained me, and I didn’t have to do what you do. You’re pale and you’ve lost weight and there are dark circles under your eyes. Let’s be honest here. You look like crap.”
“Roger!” Cheryl chastised. “There’s no need to be so…so…”
“Honest?” he said, lifting his head to look at his wife with undeniable love.
Miranda had met Roger Talbot three years ago in the line of work she’d taken up a year after the accident that had killed her sister and in return given her what some called a “gift.” Some gift. No one wanted an interior decorator who saw ghosts in the rooms they wished to adorn. No one wanted to walk into a room and find the woman they had hired to bring together paintings and curtains and upholstery fabrics talking to Grandma—who’d been dead seven years. Miranda knew that to be true. She’d been there. She’d tried so hard to live a normal life—but the spirits she’d begun to see after the accident continued to haunt her. The only way she could find any peace was to help them.
When she’d first heard from a murder victim, she’d tried to ignore the bothersome specter. The man—the ghost of a man—had been annoyingly persistent and would not leave Miranda alone. After a few days she’d given up and gone to the police. Naturally they’d dismissed her as a nut and sent her on her way, but the ghost did not take the hint and get lost. Instead, the spirit of the murder victim had stuck to her like glue, an unrelenting stalker no one could see, a dead man insisting on a justice only Miranda could deliver.
The only way she could get rid of him was to hand him off to someone else. The man wanted his murderer caught and punished—naturally. It had taken a while, but eventually Miranda had found someone who would listen to her. That someone had been FBI Agent Roger Talbot. They’d been working together—more or less under the table, when it came to official business—for years. For the first couple of years she’d been able to keep her ability secret, but eventually word had gotten out. There were plenty of people who thought she was a nut, or worse, a con artist, but there were also more than enough people out there who wanted her services.
Jessica had been right. Less than five years after that fateful night Miranda had clients lined up out the door. She was very much in demand. In some circles she might even be called famous. Miranda Lynch, who’d discovered an uncanny ability to talk to ghosts after the horrific car accident that had taken the life of her sister, was a hot commodity.
These days when she felt like someone was watching her, she was probably right.
Roger and Cheryl were several years older than Miranda, but they had become like family to her. Roger was a big brother, protective and sometimes teasing, and Cheryl had become almost a surrogate mother, even though she was only ten years older than Miranda. Cheryl cooked healthy meals; she introduced her young friend to shoes that were comfortable and cute, insisting both qualities were essential; she made sure Miranda went to the doctor when she was sick. Their three kids felt like family, as well, especially fifteen-year-old Jackson, who looked so much like Roger he might as well be a younger, thinner clone. They were the center of Miranda’s personal life, pretty much the only personal life she had. The Lynch love curse seemed to be fully in effect, since every unattached man Miranda met was either repulsed by her ability or else wanted to make a profit from it.
Autumn and Jared had met the Talbots through Miranda, and in the past year or so there had been occasional cookouts and birthday parties like this one. Jared and Roger weren’t exactly close friends—they didn’t have much in common, since Roger was in law enforcement and Jared was in computers, and Roger liked to hunt and fish and Jared’s idea of fun involved computer games or paint-ball fights—but Autumn adored Cheryl as much as Miranda did. These four people had become the only family Miranda had left and at this rate they were the only family she would ever have. The last attempt at having a significant other in her life had ended so badly she’d sworn off men. She was twenty-six years old and a determined old maid who devoted more of her life to the dead than she did to the living.
Not exactly the life she’d planned for herself.
She really should listen to these people when they told her she needed time off, but she had clients waiting, meetings to make and obligations to fill. Sure, beyond law-enforcement consultations most of her clients just wanted to know that their loved ones still lived on, somehow and somewhere, or else they wanted to know where the will or the family jewelry had been hidden.
“I have a cabin in Tennessee,” Roger said.
“I know.” He’d been trying to get her to take advantage of the place for the past two years, but she was usually too busy to take an entire weekend off, much less go on a real vacation. There was always so much to do! People died every day. Most of them traveled directly to their place in the afterlife, but some of them reached out for her after they should’ve passed on.
“I don’t get to use it nearly often enough,” he continued, studying the burgers, instead of her. “Cheryl doesn’t like the cabin much.”
“I like the outlet malls, which are only forty-five minutes or so away,” Cheryl responded with a wide smile. “I don’t like the single bathroom that’s the size of the hall closet, and I hate that my cell phone doesn’t get a signal there. It’s medieval to be so out of touch. It doesn’t help that the man who owns the only other house on the mountain glares daggers at us every time we cross paths. I swear that psycho wants the damn mountain all to himself. I don’t know what he’s doing up there that he can’t stand the idea of neighbors, but there must be some kind of nefarious dealings going on. The man has to be hiding something.”
Miranda looked at Cheryl, hoping for support from that quarter. “There’s a psycho on the mountain and your husband wants to send me there for a vacation?”
“A psycho and outlet malls,” Cheryl said with a wide grin. “Sounds like a fair enough deal to me.”
“You don’t like it,” Miranda argued.
Cheryl shrugged. “Not all that much, but it is nice and quiet there, and Roger’s right. You look like you could use a little nice and quiet. A couple of weeks—”
“A couple of weeks?” Miranda interrupted shrilly. “I was thinking of maybe a long weekend.”
“So you were thinking of taking a few days off?” Autumn asked, a hint of hope in her gentle voice.
“I said maybe.” Did she look that bad? Could everyone around her see that the work of talking to ghosts was draining her, robbing her of sleep, making her feel much too old for her twenty-six years?
That was certainly possible. It was as though she didn’t only understand the emotions of the spirits she talked to, she experienced them. She didn’t only hear and see how they died, she felt their pain. She was tired all the time, and lately if she got four hours of sleep it was a good night. It wasn’t all that unusual that those closest to her might see the effects of the strain.
“Maybe is a start,” Roger said. He took the burgers off the grill and put them on a platter. “We should’ve done steaks,” he said beneath his breath.
Thank goodness, a change of topic. “It’s my birthday and I wanted your burgers,” Miranda said.
“And chocolate cake!” Jackson called, walking out of the kitchen door and into the backyard bearing a huge birthday cake complete with fudge icing and decorative yellow roses.
“What more could a girl ask for?” Miranda said, her eyes flitting from Autumn and Jared to Roger and Cheryl. Two couples, each so different, each so