The Curse Keepers Collection (85 page)

Read The Curse Keepers Collection Online

Authors: Denise Grover Swank

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Romance, #New Adult & College, #Paranormal, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Romantic, #Ghosts

BOOK: The Curse Keepers Collection
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Tom’s body stiffened and his voice deepened. “Did he?”

I studied the crack in the floor. “It didn’t get that far.”

“What happened?”

“When he dragged me over to the boats, I hit him in the head with a wrench I found on the boat and it dazed him. I was getting away when a giant snake appeared out of the water. Then it ate him. His friend took off and so did I.”

Tom’s shoulders sagged. “Why in God’s name didn’t you tell me all of this in the beginning?”

“It was a giant snake, Tom. Seriously, who was going to believe that?”

“Ellie, I already told you that the other guy said it was a snake.”

I shrugged. “I don’t know. It just seemed better to try and forget it.”

“And the destruction at the lighthouse?”

“Why do you think I know about the lighthouse?” Tom had never questioned me about the incident that night, and I’d incorrectly assumed he hadn’t made the connection.

Tom studied the opposite wall. “Don’t you play stupid with
me
, Ellie. I know you’re wrapped up in it somehow.”

I pressed my lips together.

“I don’t think a snake is killing these dogs and people. Their abdomens were all ripped open with large claws.”

“And you think I know what it is? You think I know who it’s going after next?”

A cocky smirk lifted his cheeks. “I’m more worried about you. If I weren’t so sure this was an animal, I’d say it’s after you. Have you pissed off anyone other than Marino lately? Is Collin upset that you broke up with him?”

I cracked a grin. “And how do you know
I
broke up with
him
?”

He laughed. “Because any guy who broke up with you would be an idiot. And that guy doesn’t look like an idiot.”

Carly rounded the corner and frowned when she saw me talking to Tom. “Ellie, you have orders ready and customers waiting for their checks.”

I cringed.
Damn it
. “Coming.”

I stepped away from the wall. “I
did
break up with Collin, and although he wasn’t happy about it, he wouldn’t resort to terrorizing me. We’ve reached an amicable truce.”

“But he still cares about you? Enough to stalk you and try to intimidate you?”

My eyes flew open and my heart slammed against my chest. “No! Collin would never do anything like that.”

“Is he capable of violence?”

I shook my head, getting frustrated. “Listen to me, Tom. I know you really want to find out who is doing this, but it’s not Collin. You’re looking in the wrong place.”

“Then where should I be looking?”

I sighed. “I wish I knew. And that’s the truth.”

I took the orders and checks out to the tables and kept an eye on Tom, desperate for the chance to call Collin. About fifteen minutes later there was a slight lull, so I headed into the women’s restroom and hid in a stall.

Collin answered on the second ring and sounded worried. “Ellie? Are you okay?”

“I’m fine, but you need to hide.”

“What are you talking about?”

“That police officer who was questioning me last week behind Darrell’s? He tricked me into admitting I know you. He told me if I didn’t answer his questions he would lock me up for twenty-four hours just to prove his point.” My voice broke. “I’m sorry, Collin.”

“What did you tell him?”

I filled Collin in on everything I remembered.

“He’s grasping at straws if he’s making those leaps,” Collin finally said.

“He’s desperate.”

“Obviously.”

“I’m sorry.”

“No, Ellie. You did the right thing. We can’t risk you getting locked up.” He paused. “How much of your mark is left?”

“None.”

I expected him to blow up, but instead he asked, “You haven’t found Ahone’s symbol yet?”

“No.”

“I’m giving you three days, Ellie.” He sounded like the Collin I’d first met. Dictatorial and condescending.

“We have bigger issues, Collin. Tom thinks Ukinim is baiting me.”

“Then that’s exactly why the disappearance of your mark is our biggest issue.”

“They’ll still kill me, Collin. Ukinim doesn’t care about my Manitou. He just wants to get me before Okeus does.”


Fuck
, Ellie. Stop being so stubborn. You have to let me protect you.”

“Let you protect me?” I spit into the phone. “You’re the reason I’m in this situation. The marks on my door are still working.”

“Ellie, be reasonable.”

“Tell me what you know about the Ricardo deal.”

“No.”

“You owe me something for dragging me into that mess, along with everything else.”

“Forget Marino and focus on the bigger issue. This thing is getting stronger, Ellie. The daylight is protecting you for now, but I suspect it will soon be able to make short excursions into the sunlight.”

The blood rushed from my head. While I knew that day was coming, I’d hoped it would be further off. I’d become a prisoner in my apartment. “Then help me get rid of it.”

He hesitated. “I can’t.”

“Why not? You’d seriously let this thing kill me rather than help?” Hurt and resentment filled my chest. “If you really wanted to protect me, you’d help me send this thing and his mate back to Popogusso. To hell with your principles.”


His mate?
What are you talking about?”

“You really don’t know anything about Ukinim or his wife?”

He paused. “No.” A low grumble filled my ear.

“And you were so certain that David would be pointless and get me killed. Well, he’s the one who’s actually giving me information instead of trying to keep me in the dark. Unlike you.”

“Ellie,” he pleaded.

The bathroom door opened, and I flushed the toilet. “I have to go. But watch out for Tom.” I hung up before he could respond and washed my hands, ignoring the strange look from a young mother trying to corral her two small children into the other stall.

As soon as I got off work, I started ripping the house apart. Whatever I needed to protect myself had to be in Daddy’s notes.

Because I couldn’t consider the alternative.

C
HAPTER
T
WENTY
-O
NE

David found me in the living room, on my hands and knees under a small writing desk in the corner.

“If you’d told me we were playing hide-and-seek, I would have counted first.” He looked around the trashed room and whistled. “I see you started without me.”

I looked up. “I have to find those notes.”

“I know, love.” He reached his hand out to me. “But come up here and let’s figure out a plan, because you’ve searched this house countless times and come up with nothing.”

I took his hand, my heart stuttering at his term of endearment. Had he meant anything by it, or was it just one of those things people said? I stood and he pushed me back toward the chair, guiding me into a sitting position on the arm. Then he took a step back and surveyed the room.

“I’ve spent the better part of the day trying to get into your father’s head.” He shot me a frustrated look. “Not an easy task since I didn’t know him.” He ran his fingertips across a pile of guidebooks on the desk. “But Myra told you that he was anxious and paranoid when he started compiling his notes, right? And he would have hidden them somewhere he thought you’d be able to find them.”

“Yes, but I’ve already looked in those places.”

“So let’s consider this logically.” David sat on the arm of the chair next to me, our legs pressed together. I was hyperaware of his presence. “Have the Keepers before you ever written the information down?”

“I’m not sure, but I suspect not. It’s an oral tradition, and it was a secret. To tell someone who wasn’t family about the curse would bring dire consequences.”

His brow furrowed. “Do you believe that? Is there evidence this actually happened?”

“I remember my father impressing the importance of keeping it a secret with horrible tales of death and injury, but I never really believed it.” I looked up at him, guilt eating my insides. “Until I told Claire.”

His eyes widened. “You told Claire?”

“When I was eight. She knew I had a secret, and she couldn’t stand it. So I told her about the curse. Just the part about Manteo and Ananias and the gate.” I sucked in my bottom lip and wrapped my fingers around the edge of the chair’s arm.

His body stilled. “What happened?”

“My mother was murdered a few days later.”

“Oh, Ellie. I’m sorry.” His hand covered mine.

“I forgot every single thing I learned about the curse that night. When Daddy tried to reteach me, I refused to listen. I didn’t want any part of it.”

“I’m sure it was a coincidence . . . ” His voice trailed off at the end, and the tone of his voice told me he wasn’t sure he believed it.

I offered David a tired smile. “I used to tell myself that too. But now I’m not so sure. I’m not so sure about anything.” I sighed and looked up at a tiny stain on the ceiling. “You knew that Steven knew my parents.”

“Yes. He told me that he highly respected your father’s work.” David shifted on the seat, but he kept his hand on mine.

Tingles shot from my hand through my body. “He said Daddy was known worldwide for his expertise about the Lost Colony. But he stopped giving lectures after Momma’s death. Daddy told Steven she died because of the colony, and he’d never lecture about it again. He blamed himself for her murder.”

David slid his hand up my arm, resting it on the back of my neck, leaving goose bumps in its wake. His hand slipped under my hair and rubbed my tense muscles. “It sounds to me as if there was a lot of unnecessary guilt associated with her death. The person who killed her is the only one to blame.” He gave me a gentle smile.

“You’re right,” I said, acutely aware of his hand on my neck. “But there’s more I haven’t told you.”

“What?”

“Steven said Momma had been invited to see a private collection of sixteenth-century English and Native American pieces the week before her death. She called him about it because she was concerned they were stolen.”

David stood and turned to face me. “Why didn’t you tell me this sooner?”

I shrugged. “I don’t know. It was stupid not to. It’s just that it was the first big piece of information I’d heard about my mother’s murder in years, and I needed a few days to absorb it. Besides, my mother died years ago. We had bigger and more pressing issues.”

“Ellie. Any information about your mother’s death is important, even if it doesn’t help us with the curse. It’s important to
you
.”

“Finding Ahone’s mark is our biggest concern,” I sighed. The information seemed like a coincidence, but David was right. There were no coincidences. “Steven said he notified the police, but they couldn’t find any evidence such a collection existed. No one Momma worked with knew anything about it either.”

“So he thinks she made it up?”

“I asked him that and he said no.” I looked up at him. “This morning, I asked Myra if she’d ever heard Daddy mention anything about the Ricardo Estate and she says she did once, years ago.”

“You think the collection your mother surveyed was the Ricardo Estate? If so, it might be related to her death.”

“I don’t know. Steven didn’t call it the Ricardo Estate, but Daddy did—if Myra remembers correctly, that is. She said Daddy was talking on the phone and was secretive.”

“It does seem like there’s a connection. We just need to find a reliable source.”

“After my conversation with Myra this morning, I asked Collin about it on the phone this afternoon, but he refused to tell me anything.”

He scowled. “Like I said, we’ll find a
reliable
source.”

“One more thing.” I shifted my weight. “When the curse broke, the dreams about the animals and the spirits weren’t the only ones I started to have.” I told him about the dreams I’d had about my mother’s death and the bloodstains on the floor of my bedroom.

“So I was really staying in your old room?”

I stood. The familiar anxious feeling I always experienced when I thought about her murder made me jittery. “Yeah.”

“I’m so sorry.” He stepped in front of me and his arm encircled my waist, pulling my head to his chest.

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