Ghouls Just Haunt to Have Fun (10 page)

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Authors: Victoria Laurie

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: Ghouls Just Haunt to Have Fun
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“I guess she appeared in full form,” I replied. “He had no clue.”
Heath nodded thoughtfully. “She’s a cutie-pie,” he said, and his chin lifted as he looked up toward the ceiling.
“You helped her over?” I said, thinking he’d done the right thing and assisted Sara in crossing over to the other side.
“I did,” he confirmed. “She’s a bit concerned about her father, though. I think he’s grounded somewhere around these parts too.”
“I have it on good authority that he is,” I said with another smile. “Maybe tomorrow we can team up and search him out together.”
Heath sighed tiredly but nodded. “Great idea. Let’s hope this production shoot doesn’t last all day and we’ll have time to work that murder case and do some more spiritual hotel housekeeping.”
Heath and I walked back to the elevators and he leaned in to push the up button, but before his finger could even touch it, the elevator bell dinged and we both looked at the double doors expectantly. “Huh,” I said when the doors didn’t seem to want to open. “That’s weird.”
Heath was looking up at the light above the doors, which clearly indicated that the car was on the ground floor. I watched as he leaned in again, and this time he pushed the button. “Hello,” he said to the elevator. “Open sesame, people!”
I smiled, but my humor was short-lived, because in the very next instant the doors rocketed open and clanged loudly as they bounced back against the doorframe, and something gray and smoky shot right out of the elevator and into Heath so hard that he flew backward through the air and landed with a loud
whump!
on the floor.
I’ll admit that I let out a yelp and ran to his side, but whatever had come out of the elevator car now seemed to turn on me. The gray smoke rose right next to Heath, who was trying to catch his breath after clearly having had it knocked out of him, and the violent presence reached a height of about seven feet, looming spookily above the young man.
I moved to my right, and the smoke wove eerily in that direction, resembling a cobra ready to strike if I got too close. “Heath!” I whispered. “Roll away from there!”
I kept my eyes on the smoke serpent and heard Heath gasp again for breath. A tiny moan came out of him, and I knew he was trying to do as I said. I moved to my left, and the head of the smoke serpent swiveled toward me. “Come on, ugly,” I coaxed, opening up all my intuitive senses, trying to get a feel for exactly what I was dealing with.
“M.J.,” I heard Heath groan.
“I’m right here,” I said to him, crouching low and edging close to him so that I could pull him away from the hovering smoke.
“No!” he whispered, and I looked at him and saw that his eyes were clearly frightened. “Run!”
And then, almost as if it were in slow motion, I saw the smoke serpent shrink down right before darting straight at me! I had no time to react, and in the very next instant I felt something like a lightning bolt hit my chest, and a searing pain so sharp that I cried out even as I tumbled backward to land like Heath on the cold, hard ground.
In my ears there was something like the sound of a hiss, but also words were forming that I couldn’t quite make out. I rolled around on the ground, trying to get away from the noise and the pain, and then I think I blacked out, because the next thing I knew I was blinking hard and looking up into Steven’s concerned face.
“M.J.,” he said softly. “Can you hear me?”
“What happened?” I said, staring first at him, then around at my surroundings. “Where am I?”
“You’re in the lobby,” he said, leaning in to put his arms underneath me and lift me up.
“Where’s Heath?” I asked, putting a hand to my head, which felt as if it had been slammed against a wall.
“I’m right here,” Heath said, and I squinted over Steven’s shoulder to see him walking behind us, rubbing his chest.
“You okay?” I asked as Steven bent down to place me on an overstuffed chair.
“Yeah,” he said, but by his pale cheeks and pinched eyes I knew he was feeling as bad as I was.
“What the freak
was
that?” I asked him.
He shrugged his shoulders and shook his head. “Hell if I know.”
“Here’s some water,” said someone to my right. I looked over to see the manager, Murray Knollenberg, handing me a bottle of water. “I’m so sorry about this,” he added. “My bellhop told me he saw the whole thing. He’s having some sort of a melt-down in my office right now, and he wants to quit his job and walk off his shift immediately.”
I gripped the side of the chair as I took a sip of water. I felt really queasy and out of sorts and was struggling just to keep up with the flow of the surrounding conversation. “Murray,” I said after I’d had a few sips more and felt as if I could let go of the chair without falling out of it. “You’ve got a
big
problem on your hands.”
Chapter 5
Heath and I explained to Knollenberg what we’d encountered, and the general manager kept insisting that to his knowledge, no incident like the one that had occurred by the elevators had ever happened before at the Duke. “We have our share of strange occurrences,” he explained, “but no ghost has
ever
attacked our guests. Frightened them, maybe, but nothing close to the violent nature you’re both describing.”
I glanced over at all the scaffolding and orange cones marking areas off-limits due to the construction. Ghosties hate construction. They really take offense when you start tearing into walls and making a lot of racket.
“You think some of that might have awakened something and made it angry?” Heath asked, and I noticed he was glancing in that direction too.
“It’s possible,” I said. “But if the construction did provoke it . . .
what
did it provoke?”
“This is most distressing,” muttered Knollenberg. “I should let the owner know about this.” The GM looked over his shoulder at a man behind the front desk and called, “Oh, thank goodness you’re back from your lunch, Anton. We’ll need to close off the main elevator and direct our guests to the freight elevator for now. Will you help me set up some cones?”
Knollenberg left us to make his call and divert the traffic. Heath eyed the front desk and said, “Think I’m going to request a room on the ground floor so I don’t have to use the elevator for a while.” And he hurried off to make the arrangements.
Steven then looked at me and said, “Ready to go upstairs?”
“Am I ever,” I said.
We walked over to the stairs—I wanted nothing to do with elevators for a little while either—when I heard Gilley’s unmistakable, “Yoo-hoo!” Steven and I both stopped and looked back to see our partner trotting along in his leather pants, feather boa, and fur-trimmed vest. And wild though his outfit was, his face was deadly serious.
“I’ve checked the entire lobby,” he said as he hurried to catch up to us. “There are no unusual readings coming off the electrostatic meter, M.J.”
I closed my eyes and tried not to panic. “That means that whatever that thing was, it’s on the move.” I glanced at both Gilley and Steven, their expressions mirroring my own worry. “Gil, we need to start checking this place from top to bottom.”

You
need to go to bed,” ordered Steven, and the tone of his voice said he wasn’t kidding. “The ghosties can wait until the morning,” he added when I opened my mouth to protest.
“You don’t understand,” I insisted. “That thing . . . that . . . whatever it was, is no joke! I mean, if it could knock two trained mediums on our butts, imagine what it could do to the average layperson!”
“And what are you going to do if you find it?” Steven argued. “Right now you’re in no shape to fight with it, M.J.”
I rubbed my forehead again, and Gilley made a suggestion: “How about I go back to my room and get my sweatshirt? Then Steven and I can do a thorough check of all the floors, and if we find anything weird or any readings that are off the charts, we’ll come get you and let you handle it, okay?”
I had to hand it to my partner—for how frightened he was of spooky things, this was really big of him to offer. After a moment’s consideration, I sighed and nodded reluctantly. “Fine,” I agreed. “But come get me if anything—and I do mean
anything
—weird buzzes the meter.”
“I promise,” said Gil.
I left Steven and Gilley at Gil’s room to switch out of his party outfit and into his ghost-hunting uniform and then continued on to my room. The last thing I remember before my head hit the pillow was how grateful I was to have someone look after me for a change.
 
It was dark when I woke up, but my internal clock insisted that I’d slept long enough. I crept out of bed, trying not to wake Steven, (whom I had a very faint memory of coming back to the room earlier), and went to the curtain in front of the large sliding glass door to our balcony. Peeling back the curtain to see how dark it still was, I shrieked at the top of my lungs when I came face-to-face with a woman staring right back at me on the other side of the glass.
I heard Steven’s voice behind me shout, “What is it? What’s happened?” while I wheeled away from the curtain.
I backed myself against the wall as Steven hurried out of bed to my side. I tried to calm myself and told him, “There’s a woman out on our balcony!”
Steven moved to the curtain and yanked it open, but no one was there. The balcony was empty.
“Son of a bitch!” I swore as I stared at the place where the woman had been.
Steven looked from me to the window, then back again. He then reached for the latch on the sliding door and opened it. Carefully he took a step out and looked around. With a shrug he said, “There is no one here.”
I sat down on the bed and ran a hand through my hair, feeling my heart still thundering in my chest. “You know,” I said to him as he came back into the room and shut the door, “it takes a lot to creep me out, but this place . . . well, this hotel may just do me in!”
“Maybe you were dreaming?” Steven suggested.
“I wasn’t dreaming.”
“Another ghost?”
“Yes,” I said with a sigh as I got up and went back to the glass door and slid it open myself. I moved to the railing and peered down. Then something occurred to me, and I turned back to Steven. “I know who the woman was,” I said after a bit.
“Who?”
“Carol Mustgrove. She committed suicide in the room right below us. I think she’s taking a tour of the hotel and was attracted to my energy.”
“Do you think that was who attacked you last night?”
I shook my head and shuddered, leaving the cool air of the balcony to go back inside. “No,” I said as I latched the door again. “What came after Heath and me last night was more powerful than anything I’ve ever seen. And, Steven,” I said, looking up at him nervously, “I’m not even sure it was ever human.”
His mouth fell open slightly. “What else could it have been?” he asked.
I wrapped my arms around myself, feeling very cold all of a sudden. “I’ve heard stories from other ghost hunters about evil energies coming out of portals that aren’t from this world.”
“I am not understanding this,” Steven said, scratching his head.
I headed over to my suitcase and rooted around for a sweater. Throwing it over my head I explained, “You know that portals connect the lower realms to our world and are easy pathways for some of the nastier ghosts to cross back and forth through, right?”
“Yes, you are talking about ghosts like Hatchet Jack,” he said with a small shudder, referring to the particularly awful fellow we’d dealt with a few months back.
“Exactly,” I said, going back to the suitcase for a pair of jeans. “Sometimes when a nasty ghost builds a portal, another entity can come with him.”
“You mean,” said Steven, searching for the right word, “like a
demon
?”
I nodded gravely. “Yes. I’ve never actually seen one—they’re extremely rare—but I have a strong suspicion that something got through a portal somewhere here in the hotel and is now loose among the bricks and mortar.”
“So which of these ghosts built the portal in the first place?” Steven asked, saying aloud the thing that I was actually wondering myself.
“I have no idea,” I confessed. “Did you and Gilley get anything off the meters last night?”
“No,” Steven said. “It was very quiet, but there were several sections of the hotel that were closed off.”
“Closed off? Oh, you mean because of the construction?”
Steven nodded. “But we checked everywhere we could.”
“Well, the construction could definitely be kicking up this extra poltergeist activity. But from everything I’ve read in the hotel literature, none of the recorded ghosts at the hotel fit the profile for a spirit vile enough to create a portal to the lower realms. It certainly wasn’t Sara, and I doubt her father is an evil guy. He seems to be solely concerned with finding his daughter. That leaves the bellhop who worked here for all those years—and again, I don’t think he’s our dark entity—and Carol Mustgrove, the woman who committed suicide in the eighties, unless there are a couple of other ghosties afoot that weren’t in the literature.”
Steven was silent for a bit before he asked, “What are you going to do?”
I sat down on the bed next to him and laid my head on his shoulder. “I have no idea,” I admitted. “I mean, we’re shooting this stupid show in a few hours, and then I guess I’ll team up with Heath to see if we can’t root around and locate a portal while we’re also working on finding any clues about Sophie’s murder, but I really feel like we’re going to be searching for a needle in a haystack.”
“Why would a needle be in a haystack?” Steven asked curiously.
“It wouldn’t,” I said. “Which is the point.”
“Then why wouldn’t you say you are looking for hay in a haystack?” he insisted. “I mean, that you would find. Looking for this needle, well, that would be a waste of time. But you could say that you are looking for the needle in the tailor shop. Now, that would make more sense, no?”

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