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Authors: Heather Graham

BOOK: Deadly Harvest
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The mist swirled around her in a fury, and she heard laughter again.

Damien's laughter…

His face rose before her.

He was there. He had her hand, and they were standing on a hill, with the wind sweeping around them.

His laughter was…evil.

He couldn't be real; the hill couldn't be real. But she could feel the wind against her legs, the earth beneath her feet and the chill of descending night.

“And now you're mine. Playtime, my love,” Damien said.

His laughter came again, blending with the wind.

1

R
owenna saw scarecrows.

They stood above the cornfields, propped on their wooden crosses, and from a distance their faces were blank and terrifying.

The cornstalks grew high, marching toward the horizon in their neat rows seeming to stretch on forever.

And then, like sentinels, rising in a line and towering over the tall stalks that bent and waved in the cool breeze, stood the scarecrows.

She felt as if she were drifting through the corn, borne on the breeze, as the mist settled down over the cornfield, a dark blanket against the burst of beauty and light. She was looking down from above, almost as if she were a camera, coming into focus.

She dreamed, but she fought it and came so near to waking, struggling against the nightmare, against the threatening whisper in her mind.

Light…She needed light. Needed the spectacular beauty of the autumn colors to drive away the creeping darkness.

She was going home, so maybe it was natural to dream of the place where she had grown up, where the colors of fall were so beautiful that they belonged not in the real world of the unreal, but in a land of dreams.

Golds, oranges, crimsons, deeper reds, softer yellows, all dazzled from the trees stretching from the great granite rises to the windswept seas and calmer harbors, where the whitecaps of the waves warned that winter was on its way.

But before the ice and cold of a New England winter arrived, there was the fall. The glorious fall with its brilliant display. The gentle sweep of the breeze came first, a touch of sweet cool breath on the cheeks. And before that touch became the chilling grip of icicle fingers, there was the reaping, the bonfires of fall, the harvest brought home.

And so, in her dream, they stretched before her, rows and rows of cornfields, the stalks undulating mesmerizingly in the sweeping breeze. She had always loved the cornfields; she could remember racing through them as a child, her grandfather chasing her, her laughter filling the sky.

The crows were always there, too, their black wings shimmering, their wicked cawing carrying high in the air, but the farmers, with a wisdom carried down from generation to generation, knew how to manage the voracious thieves.

They fashioned scarecrows and set them above the fields, and those scarecrows had personalities of their own. Mrs. Abel's scarecrow wore a wild garden hat sporting stick pins to stab the feet of any unwary crow that tried to land. Ethan Morrison's wore a billowing cape and a hideous, toothed grin. Her grandfather's scarecrow was dressed in denim overalls and a plaid shirt, and carried a shotgun; its hat was straw, and it had a mop of white hair.

Eric Rolfe's creation was the most frightening—and the most remarkable. The most likely to come to life and speak, for he had created his scarecrow's face from a plastic skull and Halloween makeup. Huge eyes stared out from the bony face, eyes that moved on battery power, and it wore a black frock coat, arms outstretched, barbed wire protruding from its head like a razor-sharp fright wig.

Some of the older residents had a problem with Eric's creation—Puritanism was long gone from the area but never really dead. Regardless, Eric loved it, and so did the kids.

Sometimes, though, when she was running in the cornfields, her grandfather close behind, her laughter would die when she came to that scarecrow. The eyes would be looking at her from their sockets, and the wind would seem to rise, not howling, but breathing out a high-pitched whisper of mingled fear and seduction. She would stop and stare, the cornstalks rustling around her, and uneasiness would steal into her heart, a fear that if she opened her mind, she would see something ancient and terrible that had occurred here, would share the evil impulse of its creator and the horror of those it had touched.

She had grown up with the stories of the local witch trials, when men, in the service of their God, tortured and condemned their fellow men, when children wept and accused, and evil was done in the name of righteousness.

In such a blood-drenched land, how could an impressionable child not feel something of the anguish of those times?

Despite that, the cornfields had always entranced her, along with the spectacular color palette of fall.

And now she was going home to see those fields in truth, so it was only natural, in that strange twilight stage between sleep and wakefulness, to see them in her mind's eye, to dream of running through them like the child she had once been. She heard her own laughter as she ran and knew she would soon come upon Eric's gothic monster of a scarecrow, but she didn't hesitate, for she was no longer a child but a woman grown, and the fears of the past could not haunt her now.

But she was wrong. The fear
was
there.

She saw it now, in the distance, and fingers of dread reached for her heart as she waited for it to see her, because she knew it would.

She didn't want to go closer.

But she had to.

Then the scarecrow raised its head, and a scream froze in her throat. The eye sockets were empty, the head a skull covered in rotting, blackened flesh, and somehow she knew it could see her, though nothing remained of what had once been its eyes.

What was left of the mouth was open, as if in a final scream. A ragged coat hung from the rotting body, the white gleam of bone showing through, dried blood staining fabric and bone alike. And as she stood there, her scream still trapped inside, the skull began to turn toward her, as if whatever evil consciousness still lived within it was drawn to her.

A crow landed on the gruesome figure's shoulder and plucked at the putrid flesh hanging from one cheek.

The skull began to laugh, as the wind rose and the sky was suddenly filled with the fluttering of brilliant fall leaves. And all the while, those eye sockets stared at her, and then red tears suddenly spilled from them, down the ravaged cheeks, as if the rotting corpse was locked in the field for all time, weeping blood.

Then the fingers of bone and rot began to twitch, reaching out for her, as a chant from her childhood echoed on the air.

“Don't fear the Reaper,

Just the Harvest Man.

When he steals a soul

It's a keeper, so

Don't fear the Reaper,

Fear the Harvest Man,

For when he steals a woman's soul

She'll go to hell or deeper….”

Rowenna Cavanaugh jerked up to a sitting position in bed, gasping, startled…and scared.

She took a deep breath and reached for calm. What a nightmare. She was surprisingly shaken by it, and she couldn't allow herself to be. She told herself that she had simply drifted off to sleep while thinking about home, even though she wasn't going back for a few days and Halloween would come and go with her here in New Orleans.

She missed home. Massachusetts was always so beautiful this time of year. And Salem…Salem was still just a small town in so many ways. She'd been elected harvest queen in her absence. At least that gave her something enjoyable to look forward to after the upcoming debate with Jeremy Flynn, scheduled to raise funds for Children's House, the charity he ran here. Besides, her appearance would help her to sell books. And she had been adrift since Jonathan, the man she'd planned to marry, had died—had it really been three years ago?—so she'd welcomed the chance to get away. Not that she really needed an excuse for coming to New Orleans, because she loved the city. But she was ready to go back home now, nightmare or not.

When she'd been a kid, they'd played games like harvest man. The Puritans had believed that the devil lived in the dark forests surrounding their settlements, just waiting to steal unwary souls. Superstition and fear had reigned supreme then, but she knew better, no matter what nonsense her subconscious had decided to dredge up.

Still, she had to wake up, had to get out of bed before she fell into another dream that was as bad or even worse.

She was living in the real world, the world of today. She had to pull herself together—and somehow manage another day in the company of Mr. Jeremy Flynn.

Ah, yes, Jeremy Flynn. Ex–police diver, now a partner in a private investigations firm with his two brothers, intelligent, articulate, charming, gorgeous…and not in any way shape or form attracted to her. In fact, he seemed to actively dislike her, but maybe it was just her opinions he didn't like. To be fair, he was never rude or actively hostile. Of course, he probably didn't dare, since his sister-in-law, Kendall Flynn, was one of her best friends and had been for years. Tonight there was going to be a Halloween party at the Flynn mansion, which Kendall and her husband had moved into a year ago, and where they now managed a community theater and hosted various charity events. It would be a great party, and Jeremy would politely greet her, then find a way to be on the other side of the room all night.

She got along just fine with Aidan, Kendall's husband, and the youngest brother, Zach, was unfailingly friendly.

Unfortunately, she was attracted to Jeremy and had been since they first met. She had been stunned, because she hadn't dated at all since Jonathan's death. Not that she believed in some archaic mourning period, she simply hadn't met anyone who attracted her enough to want to go out with him, or even to wonder what it would be like to have sex again, to touch another person intimately. But with Jeremy, she all too often found herself watching his mouth when he spoke, or his strong hands, with long fingers, the tips calloused because he played guitar. And he was a phenomenal musician. She knew, because she had seen him play.

But he clearly wasn't interested, so she kept her dreams of wild, rampant, in-the-dark-at-first sex with Jeremy Flynn a complete secret. She wondered if her hidden fantasy meant she was being disloyal to Jonathan's memory or merely human.

She wondered how he could ignore all the heat and electricity whenever they met. It was as if sparks filled the space between them, as if all they needed to do was touch and the very air would burst into a beautiful sizzle of mutual desire.

Or did that feeling exist only in her own mind?

She knew she needed to get up and take a shower, but she couldn't stop thinking about him. It wasn't just the vision of sex, either. It was like a yearning in her heart.

I admire you. I love listening to the tone of your voice. I love the passion in your eyes when you talk about a cause. I would love to spend just an hour in real conversation with you, without being on a show, when your attention was all for me, when I could honestly know what was going on in your mind, what makes you tick….

But it wasn't to be. It was ironic that she'd finally met someone she was interested in and he wasn't interested in her, but that was that. He'd made his opinion of her clear, and she wasn't about to make a complete fool of herself by throwing herself at him. She would keep on being polite, and she would never give up her friendship with his sister-in-law—or his brothers, for that matter.

She stretched, sighed and took hold of the sheets, ready to throw them back and get up to face the day.

She touched something in her bed and frowned then gasped, incredulous at what she found.

A corn husk. A single brown corn husk caught in her sheets.

2

“J
eremy?”

He looked up, and was quick to feel a surge of annoyance. Rowenna Cavanaugh. Author, speaker and historian—and advocate of the powers of the mind. Her books were popular, he knew. She wrote about places to go where strange events had been documented, abandoned prisons and mental hospitals, historic battlefield sites and the like. She never came right out and said that ghosts or anything else otherworldly existed, only that no one had proved they didn't. She had come to town to debate paranormal possibilities with him as a way to publicize last night's Halloween benefit for Children's House. Their regular radio debates had been popular, and ticket sales and donations had soared.

This would be their last on-air appearance, though.

He was proud of everything he'd done to establish the local branch of Children's House, a special home for displaced children, something he had given himself to wholeheartedly when he had left the Jacksonville police and his position as a forensic diver to work as a private investigator in partnership with his brothers. Their inheritance of the Flynn plantation, outside the city, had kept him around, along with his charity, but now the trust fund had reached a substantial amount and was being run by local agencies, and the plantation was thriving, with his older brother, Aidan, and his sister-in-law, Kendall, in residence. Zach, their youngest brother, had already headed home to man their Florida office, and as for himself…he was ready to take some time off. Head to the islands for diving that had nothing to do with work or death. Drink sweet concoctions filled with fruit while he sat on a beach.

He wanted to reply curtly to Rowenna, but he refrained. He didn't know why she'd instantly gotten his back up.

She was a stunning woman. Her hair was nearly pitch-black, her eyes strikingly amber. Not hazel. Not brown. Amber, like gold, and shaded by ridiculously thick lashes. She was both tall and slim, but curved in every place where a woman should have curves. Her voice had a husky quality that reeked of sensuality, perfect for public speaking.

Too bad they weren't on television. No, thank God they weren't on TV. No one would even notice
he
was there, nor would they give a damn what
she
was saying. They would nod at anything, drooling on the floor all the while.

So what's
your
problem?
he mocked himself.

Their debates had been sponsored by various businesses; the sponsorship money went straight to the charity. They'd been going on for two weeks, and he felt that he knew her fairly well from a distance, if that made any sense. The distance was something he had imposed.

Maybe it all had to do with everything that had gone on out at the plantation a year ago.

Rumor said the property was haunted. At first, it had been part of the charm of the place. Now he was sick of it. He adored his sister-in-law, and no way was he going to get into a fight with her over her belief in ghosts or what she had been through out in the family burial ground. But as far as he was concerned, the bad things in this world were brought to light not because of voodoo, mysticism, ESP or any other hocus-pocus.

He believed in hard work, science, logic and intelligent investigative techniques. The work of forensic scientists combined with detectives going door to door, wretched hours in stakeouts and a mind trained to slip into the psyches of others. Those things solved crimes. A crime scene was simple. A killer always took something away with him and always left something behind. Not every case was solved, but the ones that
were
all got solved in the same way. The lost were found by retracing footsteps, by detecting liars, peeling away layers of subterfuge until the truth was at last laid bare.

Any psychic was simply damned lucky—and probably smart enough to detect and follow clues—to solve a murder or pick up the trail of a kidnapper.

If only logical arguments could drive away the dreams that plagued him. The scenes that came to him when he was sleeping, of the bodies he had found floating. Of the children.

He'd been a police diver, and that meant you found bad things in the water. And he had found plenty. But nothing like the children. The van had been seen going into the water, and the dive team had been assembled fast. But the St. Mary's River was brown, mucky and deep, and the van had plunged into the deepest part. He'd been the first to reach the van and had gotten the cargo door open, only to find the cargo was children, foster children in the care of a couple whose only interest was in the payments they received each month, and each child was strapped into the car. Not seat-belted,
strapped
. Six of them, ranging from two years to ten, five of them staring sightlessly into the void that had stolen their lives. And then there had been Billy.

Billy had been alive. Jeremy had used his knife to cut the cord that bound the boy to his seat, and Billy had seen him, had tried to smile. Had reached for him. When he'd gotten Billy to dry land, he'd performed CPR until the paramedics arrived. He'd driven with Billy to the hospital. And then, despite the desperate efforts put in by truly caring medical personnel, Billy had died.

Jeremy could still see Billy's eyes. In his sleep, he could feel the boy's hand, grasping for his, as he drew him from the van.

That was the worst of the nightmares that plagued him. It was the nightmare that had made him decide to leave the force and join his brothers in an investigation agency. He was sane; he'd seen the police shrink. He knew that nightmares were nightmares. They were repeats of what was unbearable by day, of what the mind couldn't endure, not the visitations of restless spirits.

He lived with them.

He didn't attempt to put them into any cosmic perspective.

He dreamed of Billy alive, looking at him with his huge brown eyes, and sometimes he dreamed of standing on a hilltop with Billy holding his hand. Maybe Billy represented the child he'd never had—and perhaps never would. Maybe he represented what infuriated Jeremy about of the failure of the overburdened social welfare system. He didn't know and he didn't care. He only cared about making things better for the children who were left.

Anyway, even the shrink said he was doing the right thing, using his time to create facilities to help other needy children. It seemed to be working. And maybe, someday, the nightmares would stop, not just for days at a time, but for weeks. Months. Years. Maybe even forever.

But that future was unknown and would remain so until he got there. He didn't look for signs in tea leaves. He didn't believe that a line on his hand indicated the direction his life would take.

He reminded himself that it wasn't as if Rowenna ever said flat-out that there were ghosts in the world, much less claimed that she sat down to chat with them. She simply pointed out strange things that happened, phenomena for which there was no clear explanation.

He and Rowenna were professional combatants, nothing more. They could have been friends, if he'd been willing, because it was clear that she was open to the idea. They had been the guests of honor at several fund-raising lunches, even headlined a few cocktail parties and dinners. She had been a big draw at all those events. She was charming, articulate and approachable. They had a shared indignation at injustice, and a passion for the rights of others. But something in him wouldn't let her get close.

“Jeremy?” She repeated his name, a frown forming between her delicate, perfectly arched brows. “Sorry. Are we on?”

She nodded, as the producer spoke to them from the booth and started his countdown.

They introduced themselves, falling easily into the give-and-take they were there to provide, given how many shows they'd already done. She had an easy manner on the air, making her point but never breaking in or turning rude or abrasive. He had a feeling it was her calm approach that made her so believable. She didn't have to be fanatical. She spoke just as she wrote—she didn't tell ghost stories, she reported on events and let the listener decide. She presented things well, too. He found himself nearly hypnotized, almost believing her at times.

He was making a pitch for the real, the definable, the touchable, the things that could be seen. She stared at him, those gold eyes of hers sparkling teasingly. “Explain a remote control.”

“Like a radio, there are frequencies.”

“I can't see a frequency, but I believe it exists,” Rowenna said.

“So you're telling me ghosts absolutely exist, even if we can't see them?”

“I'm not saying anything is absolute, but take the case of the MacDonald twins….” She went on to describe a brother, injured in the Middle East, who somehow not only told his identical twin he'd been injured but also raised a welt on his brother's stomach in the same place where he'd been hit by shrapnel.

“It's documented,” she said, looking at Jeremy.

He decided not to respond directly. “What's frightening is when people believe in magic and in spells. Even when what look like miracles occur—an unexpected recovery from disease, for example—there are underlying principles at work, even if, like frequencies, we can't see them.”

“Now, wait a minute. Even doctors acknowledge that a positive attitude can help in a person's recovery. The will to live can be very strong,” she argued.

They went on in that vein until it was time for a commercial, and when they went back on air, the phones began to ring off the wall.

Most of the callers were for Rowenna.

Many of them admitted looking at her picture on the Internet; most of them were keen on the idea of the supernatural, as well.

That was okay. There were calls for him, too, applauding the work the police did in solving crimes and bringing killers to justice. Frustratingly, Rowenna was just as happy when those calls came in, and she agreed with every caller.

What the hell was his problem with her?

Fear?

Fear of
what?

He was single, self-supporting and over the age of twenty-one. He liked women. He'd never felt women were “easy come, easy go,” but at the same time, he'd just never found anyone with whom he wanted to share his life.

Someone with whom he would really want to share his soul and his mind. So much of what he had seen, as a cop and even now, as a private investigator, was horrific. How the hell did you share that with someone?

He almost laughed aloud at himself for the way he was thinking. He and Rowenna hadn't even been on anything close to a date. He hadn't been rude, though he'd certainly been cold and distant on every possible occasion. Something about her was too compelling. It was almost as if there were something, well,
magical
about her. As if—as crazy as it sounded—she owned his soul.

She had never tried to seduce him. She had been friendly, nothing more. She never seemed to feel the sparks that always hit him like an electric current.

Their segment at last came to an end, and they both laughed about their disagreements. Jeremy even quoted Voltaire. “I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”

The producer waved an all-clear and the newscaster came on. Together, they headed out to the anteroom, where Jeremy stopped dead still, his attention caught by a newspaper lying open on a coffee table.

“What is it?” Rowenna asked, sounding genuinely concerned.

He glanced up at her. “Nothing,” he lied. “Something just caught my eye, that's all.”

“Oh, okay.” She sounded doubtful, but clearly she wasn't going to push it. “Well, this was it, last show. Let me buy you a drink?” Her smile deepened. “You never have to see me again after today, you know.”

He never flushed, but he did then.
He would like to have that drink. He would like to have a hell of a lot more.
It was her last day, and it would be churlish to refuse.

Except today he really did have other—and much more pressing—concerns.

He inclined his head slightly. “I would love to take you up on that, actually. But the truth is…a friend of mine is missing, and I'm kind of anxious to find out more about it.” He indicated the paper.

“I have a laptop in the car,” she offered. “And there's bound to be a wireless signal we can pick up.”

He hesitated. He had an odd feeling he was standing at a crossroads, and that if he accepted her offer, he would be making a life-altering decision.

Bull.

To prove the ridiculousness of the thought, he decided to take her up on the offer. He told himself it was just because it would be faster than heading back to his hotel, where his own computer was. “All right. Thanks.”

They said goodbye to the people at the station, then headed out to her car.

He was able to bring up the Internet easily and quickly found what he was looking for. His old partner, Brad Johnstone, and his wife, Mary, had been on vacation in Salem, Massachusetts, when Mary had disappeared at dusk from a local historic cemetery. The police had found Brad alone behind the locked gates, screaming for his wife. A search had begun quickly, but nothing had turned up other than her cell phone and purse, which were found lying on top of an old grave. The article mentioned that the couple had been estranged and were trying to repair their marriage.

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