Johnny Blue

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Authors: Azure Boone

BOOK: Johnny Blue
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Azure Boone                                                                                                                                               Johnny Blue

 

© 2012 by
Azure Boone
.
All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of Azure Boone or her legal representative.

Chapter One

 

You need to live
again,
it’s been ten years, Jewel
.
It’s time.”

I clung to my therapist’s admonishment as I stealthily approached the back door to the dilapidated warehouse like a common crook
.
I made it to the rusted out green metal door and found no knob
.
Lord
, the
Doc’d
be horrified
that I’d chosen
breaking and entering as my choice
for
stepping out o
f my comfort zone and taking ri
sks.

Just
wanted to see for myself if the mysterious man
who
painted murals all over town for free
, actually
lived in such
a dilapidation
.
Not to mention
t
here was
the
decent reasons. Somebody needed to warn him
‘bout
the boys in town
.
T
alk
was circulating
about
them
pulling some kind of prank. I’d just look around and slip a nice
heads up
note where he could find it and be done
.
   
 

I pushed softly against the door and
froze
at
the loud creak tattle-tail
ing
my i
n
trusion
.
A hundred heart beats later, I took a deep breath and closed my eyes
.
You’re  fine
, nobody’s here, he’s down
town painting.
I gave the door a six inch
shove
,
and at my s
i
len
t
success,
I
quickly stepped inside
.

My nose wrinkled
from
sharp
moldy wheat
,
and I think
,
turpentine
.
It wasn’t a bad smell, just an odd mixture
.

Sliding my purse strap off my arm I rummaged for the small blue flashlight I’d purchased for my expedition while trying to calm my marathon breaths
.

I gripped the plastic flashlight tightly, shining the jittery beam before me.
First surprise
.
A vehicle under a cover
.
Definitely unexpected from the man who seemed to live out of
the
grocery buggy he pushed all
over
.
Course maybe it wasn’t his
.

I tip-toe ran then stooped down next to the far end of it, pausing for several thundering heart beats. Maybe he slept in it
.
I lowered my purse
to the floor next to me then lifted the heavy canvas up a little, flashing my light under
it
. My heart sped up at seeing
the old teal paint
.
Classic
truck,
looked like.
My CSI juices
kicked in as I wo
n
dered w
hy on earth this guy
would hide a vehicle.
You don’t even know if it’s
his,
don’t be careless in this investigation.
Investigation?
When did this become an investigation?
I needed to pipe my nosy ass down before I ended up in a heap of trouble
.
 

Metal clanged somewhere in the distance, stopping my heart a second
.
I dropped the cloth back down and flashed the light all around again
.
A stairway
?
What’d they have up there?
I flashed the light on the wall behind the
vehicle
and spied a large door big enough to drive through
.
I turned the beam up and was surprised to find
no
ceiling
.
What in the world did they ever use this space for? House a rocket? 

I quickly placed the flashlight between my teeth and aimed the light beam at my bag next to me
.
Time for some p
icture
s
.
A moment later, I had my phone out and on
, proceeding nonchalantly with my little CS
I
extravaganza. Pictures were
a must for the success of any investigation
.
A visual journal
.
Nothing left to
faulty
memory
.

I lifted the canvas at what seemed like the back end of the vehicle
.
No license plate
.
Dang it.

I clicked several
pics
then dropped the canvas and took
a few
of the
giant
door
on the wall
, the stairway, the non-existent ceiling, and every other angle I could think of
.

I contemplated those stairs only for a second before I headed to see where they led in this odd building
.

I put the flashlight in my pocket, able to see well enough by the light of my phone
.
Much stealthier
.

The stair way was enclosed and turned out to be multi-landed, enshrouded by thick, old spider-webs along the walls
.
Good God, if anything should appear alive in them, this
silly little
operation was so over
.
I took pic
tures
as I went, mostly at the sp
i
der webs, watching for movement in them
.

I focused on the building’s architectural purpose.
Sure didn’t look like much from the outside, just a plain metal, ten
-
story building out in the middle of a field next to a gravel road
,
left
leading to
town, right leading to
nowhere
land
.

I froze at hearing soft thudding in the stairway above me
.
A streak of black shot past my feet and I screeched right as the thing
meowed
.
I collapsed in relief then spun around and aimed the light at the spider
-
webbed wall
.
I pulled my waist long ponytail in front and stuffed it safely into my coveralls then gave a violent shudder
before hurr
y
ing my ass
through the ancient web maze,
past
ready to be done with my so called the
r
apy
.

A hundred steps later, I was convinced I’d followed stairs to a dead end. Then
came
the door.
My heart thundered in my ears as I snapped several pic
ture
s of the… I
paused, realizing the door was solid blue
.
And I’ll be darned, not that old looking
.
Was there a
house
behind it?  Wouldn’t that be the shock of the
century.
Daylight appeared at the crack beneath the door
.
Wonder if my phone could snap pic
ture
s from there?  I aimed the light of the phone at the handle first, and reached to slowly try it
.

Unlocked
!

Why should that surprise me? Not like
anybody
’d
think to rob
a place like this
.
Who knew this
even
ex
ist
ed
up here?

A flutter of fear raced along my spine
.
Well, if somebody
did
live up here…t
hat would be quite dangerous
.
A
s far as anybody knew, this place was abandoned
.
And as far as I knew, I was the only person that had the stupid idea to follow him here for the past week
to make sure this was where he was staying
.

That familiar nose burning euphoria hit me like it always did when the possibi
l
ity of death drew close in any fashion. A light-bulb moment slapped me
still as a mouse.
Maybe suicide wasn’t the only forcible way to the other side after all. I mean, death was all around, elusive to me as it was, that didn’t mean it couldn’t be enticed. I could probably orchestrate it up to the very act if I were creative
.

But
then there was one nagging problem. W
hat if I was wrong about fo
r
giveness?  What if I didn’t make it to where I needed to go?  Temporary separation from them was one thing
.
Eternal separation was unthinkable
.
I needed to be sure b
e
fore I made
such a
leap, no ifs ands or buts.

I turned the knob carefully and opened the door. Amazement replaced my u
n
ease as I peered into the naturally lit space
.
I’ll be damned
.
Not only a house beyond
the
door…
but a damn nice one
.
Not in a modern convenience kind of way, but
an
… ecle
c
tic, antique kind of way
.

I entered in and shut the door then selected rapid shot on my camera and began capturing the unexpected find
.
An odd excitement raced through my veins as I rotated the
phone,
the
camera
flutters sounding entirely too loud
.
Just… amazing
.
And the
smell
.
Turpentine permeated the air along with…I lifted my nose and gave a slow sniff
.
Something very sweet
.
And
orangey
.
Smelled

damned
delicious
.
Not the rat urine and human fecal matter I’d anticipated
.

I looked down and wowed at the floors
.
The old wood planks were
a
dark m
o
cha, warm and shiny
.
My tennis shoes squeaked as I slowly walked my way toward the giant space at the end of the little dining room, capturing the petite, almost feminine wood dining table for two as I went.
Okay, that
was just downright
adorable. I snapped pictures of the
bowl
filled with
vibrantly colored wooden fruits in the center
then
lift
ed
the camera to the white dining walls crowded with framed artwork. I
paused and
a
n
gled my head wondering if the
person decorating h
ad been drunk.
Chaotic
,
crooked mess
.

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