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Authors: J. A. Templeton

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BOOK: The Deepest Cut
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“I suggest you wear it night and day. And I would visit the old medieval church in town. The priest keeps blessed holy water in a marble bowl near the altar. I would fill a small bottle or vial with it and keep it with you at all times. This should ward off any evil spirits and protect you from harm.”

Already I felt better, stronger, and as much as I wanted someone like Anne Marie

to help me, I needed to do this alone. I didn’t want to be responsible if Laria hurt anyone.

By the time I left Anne Marie’s house, the sun was starting to set. Ian and I walked to the old medieval church, and I filled the small vial Anne Marie had given to me before I left with holy water. I slid it in my pocket, hoping it would help keep Laria away.

Chapter 21

It was so dark outside—I could barely see my hand in front of my face. A good thing I had Ian with me to lead the way.

I had dressed for the occasion wearing all black from head to toe, and even borrowed one of Shane’s stocking caps to cover my hair.

“You’re trembling,” Ian said, taking my hand within his own as we walked onto the castle grounds. His presence comforted me and gave me strength. He was the reason I was here, I kept reminding myself, trying not to think of life without him.

The castle had never looked more omin-ous, plunged in darkness, the trees surrounding us, whipping in the breeze. It was also freezing, and the wind cut right through me. I couldn’t get close enough to Ian if I tried.

I wondered what was awaiting us tonight.

Would we find the journal and be that much closer to finding answers, or was Laria already waiting for us?

At least I’d taken Anne Marie’s advice and wore the cross necklace, and I had the glass vial of holy water in my pocket.

I don’t know what more I could do to protect us.

Ian squeezed my hand. “I’ll not let anything happen to you, Riley.”

I trusted him completely. The problem was, I didn’t trust Laria. I hated that she had been haunting Anne Marie, and I wondered about her motivation. What would she have to gain by scaring an old woman who had little to do with me, save for having similar abilities and being friends with our housekeeper?

“I’ll be just a second,” Ian said, walking straight through the castle wall and opening

the window. I slipped in and he led me straight toward the servants’ quarters.

I hated sneaking into the castle again. If I were caught, a breaking-and-entering charge would be the least of my problems. I had no idea if I could explain to my dad, or the cops for that matter, why I had done it. If I said anything about searching for an eighteenth-century journal that belonged to a witch who had cursed the ghost I had fallen in love with, my dad would have me committed on the spot.

I held on tight to Ian’s hand, but it didn’t stop me from tripping over my own feet while trying to manage the spiral steps in the dark. I had a flashlight in my back pocket, but I was afraid to turn it on in case a passerby saw it. I didn’t want to alert anyone to my presence, especially since the recent break in.

A part of me wanted to tell Ian to search the basement while I checked out the

upstairs, but I was scared of splitting up.

Terrified to turn around and find Laria staring back at me.

She had gotten under my skin in a big way, and I didn’t know how far she would go in stopping me. Despite the precautions I’d taken with the herbs, the cross necklace, and the holy water, I was still intimated by her after the whole ceiling episode and I always wondered what she would do for an encore.

“The attic is full,” Ian said, shoving the door open.

He wasn’t kidding. My stomach knotted seeing boxes stacked on top of boxes. It would take days to go through everything here, and overlooking something as small as a journal would be easy. Thankfully, there was a window that allowed some moonlight in, and I flipped the flashlight on.

Ian was searching along the floorboards, which reminded me of what I had seen in the vision. The floor hadn’t been wood.

“I don’t think this is it,” I whispered. “It was a solid floor, kind of like concrete or maybe stone.”

“Then let’s check the basement,” he said, taking me by the hand and leading me back down the stairs.

We were just a few steps away from the landing when I heard a loud knocking noise.

We stopped in our tracks. Ian put a finger to his lips and I nodded, my heart thudding hard against my chest.

I prayed it wasn’t someone at the front door. Oh God, what if it was the police?

What if someone had seen me break in?

The knock sounded again, this time from above us; suspiciously close to the room we had just been in.

From the corner of my eye I saw the sword on the wall shift. I gasped, and moved out of the way, pulling Ian with me. A second later I heard a
whoosh
as the sword fell to the ground, missing me by inches.

Ian urged me forward, and I nearly tripped over my feet in my rush to get away.

The knocking started to intensify, growing louder, more consistent, and all over the place…just like at my house during the séance with Miss Akin and Anne Marie. I wanted to cover my ears, but I forced myself to ignore it as best I could, and focus on the task at hand. We had one shot at this given the family was returning soon.

“Don’t worry, we’ll find it,” Ian said softly as we entered the basement.

I walked down the same hallway from my previous visit and looked into each room, hoping something looked familiar from the vision. I did my best to focus and keep my mind open.

Glancing into a room full of odds-and-ends furniture and workout equipment, I noticed an old-fashioned chest that sat beneath a window, and it instantly triggered my memory.

“The chest.” I flipped on the flashlight, looked at Ian. “I think this is it.”

The sensation that I was on the right track felt stronger the closer I came to the chest. I went down on my knees beside it.

There was no lock on the clasp. My hands trembled as I lifted the lid. Instantly my heart plummeted. The chest was bulging with various items, many wrapped in tissue paper.

I immediately started unloading the items, and Ian helped me, carefully setting each aside. “Hey, I meant to ask you something that’s bothered me about the journal and Laria. I was under the impression that servants back in your day didn’t read, especially women.”

He nodded. “You’re right—many servants didn’t know how to read or write, but my mother felt education was important, and so she had a teacher come in once a week so

that the servants could learn to read and write.”

“Your mom sounds like a kind-hearted soul.”

He grinned. “Yes, she was.”

I had the chest nearly emptied out when I saw an object that was roughly the same size as the journal I had seen in the vision. “I think this is it,” I said to Ian, whose eyes widened.

With trembling hands, I picked it up and unwrapped it. My heart raced as I stared down at the brown leather journal that I had seen in my vision. Excitement rippled along my spine.

A high-pitched scream pierced the quiet, making me nearly jump out of my skin.

I grinned at Ian. We had done it.

· · · · ·

Ian lay beside me on my bed and was fading faster by the second. He had used up so much energy at the castle, and now I brushed my fingers through his soft hair, frustrated that he would be leaving soon. I wanted him to stay with me forever. I was terrified of going back to the way life had been before he’d come rushing into it.

Lonely, sad, depressing.

The journal was on my nightstand. I had flipped through it earlier, but finally put it aside when Ian had grown quiet. He’d seemed almost…disinterested. What was he feeling, I wondered? Was he scared about moving on? Did he worry about what waited him on the other side?

I wound a strand of his hair around my finger. The corners of his mouth curved slightly as he stared at me, but his eyes looked sad. Even more unsettling, the way he watched me made me think that he was trying to memorize my features.

“What’s wrong?” I asked.

He shook his head, took my free hand and brought it to his lips where he softly kissed the backs of my fingers.

My mouth went dry.

I sensed there was something he wanted to say. There was so much
I
wanted to say, but I couldn’t bring myself to say the words.

“Will you come tomorrow?” I asked.

He flickered in and out. “Yes,” he said, before he faded before my eyes.

I fell back onto the bed and sighed at the ceiling. God help me, but I had fallen head-over-heels in love with a ghost. Ian was as real to me as anyone, but to everyone else he was dead. Fighting back tears, I ran my hands down my face.

I picked up the leather journal and fought the need to huff it against the wall. Cussing under my breath, I turned to the first yel-lowed page. It smelled musty and old. Holding the journal in my hands, I couldn’t help

but envision the author of the words, sitting in her small room, scribbling away.

Laria. It was difficult to remember that the creepy ghost who had been haunting and scaring the hell out of me had at one time been young and innocent. A girl who had fallen for a boy who could never be hers. I still wondered at the extent of her and Ian’s relationship, but there was a part of me that didn’t want to know everything.

April 11, 1786

Today I am no longer a scullery maid, spending my days on hands and knees, and working until my hands crack and bleed. Now I am the cook’s assistant, and already I believe she is pleased. Tomorrow I shall work extra hard in the hope that one day I will at-tain the position of lady’s maid. Father told me he is very proud.

April 18, 1786

I am so very weary. Never did I realize working as a cook’s assistant would be so tedious. I wake before dawn, and spend the first hour of my morning gathering eggs and hauling milk to the kitchen. The buckets are so heavy, but I try not to complain.

Cook does not let me help with any of the actual cooking yet, but I feel in time if I prove myself worthy, that she will. The MacKinnon’s sons return from their travels tomorrow, which means all servants have been asked to lend a hand with the preparations. It is quite the celebration since they have been away for years now. I have requested to help serve at dinner. I believe cook is considering this, since she has asked if I have a nice dress to wear. I hope I am chosen!

April 19, 1786

I served the family tonight. I was so nervous I nearly spilled the soup all over the eldest son. I remember him as a handsome boy, but never did I dream he would grow to be such a beautiful man. Eyes of blue and hair darker than midnight, he had all the female servants aflutter. Such a charming man! His younger brother is handsome as well, but much more quiet and reserved.

May 1, 1786

I LOVE IAN MACKINNON.

My insides twisted at the bold words staring back at me. I took a deep breath and continued reading.

I can think of little else but him.

Indeed, it is difficult to get through

my duties each day. I yearn to be with him and must be careful to keep my thoughts to myself, for my father would never approve. He would say I have reached too high for my station, but I do not care. I want only to be with Ian.

I quickly flipped the page.

May 3, 1786

Tonight I meet with the others.

Father would be horrified to know I am involved with such individuals, and yet I am intrigued by what I have learned so far. In fact, I believe the elixir has made a difference with Lady MacKinnon’s cough. Indeed, I hope by helping her she will look at me more favorably, and perhaps one day I shall serve as lady’s maid to her or one of her daughters.

May 11, 1786

The past week has been wonderful.

I have spent an hour of each night with Ian. He reads poetry to me, and I have found him to be a thoughtful and compassionate companion.

May 21, 1786

I have not written in some time.

My duties have kept me busy, and life was wonderful until Margot Murray arrived. I hate that woman with all that I am. Worse still, Ian has not been the same since she walked through the castle doors. Cook says she is here for only a short time, but any time is too long. I must not fear, for surely Ian would not like a woman of such loose moral standing. I heard the reason she is here is because she fell in love with a footman, and her father is desperate to find a wealthy

suitor for her to marry. Tonight I meet with the others, and Elsa will know what to do.

May 24, 1786

The spell did not work. He is as smitten with her as he had been from the start. If there were a way to use her as part of the ceremony, I would do so. Yet I fear due to her status, her absence would not go unnoticed.

My stomach clenched. Was she talking about a sacrifice when she spoke of the ceremony? Is that what I had seen in my dream?

Could it be that they actually did kill people?

And what was this about spells?

May 28, 1786

I saw them kiss in the north meadow today. I was out gathering berries when I heard their laughter. She in

her expensive gown of gold silk. What does he find so fascinating about her?

She is not so beautiful. I wish she would leave soon. I have heard cook say her parents plan to take her to London for a month, and their departure cannot come soon enough for me.

As I continued reading, the entries sounded more desperate and talk of “the others”

more frequent. Even as I read back over the entries, I still couldn’t see where the relationship between Ian and Laria had gone beyond friendship. It sounded more like a crush or flirtation. My heart missed a beat when Laria made mention of a love spell again, and in the margins she listed several herbs and one or two items I couldn’t even pronounce.

June 2, 1786

Margot is ill. I cannot imagine what made her sick so suddenly.

The short entry made the hair on my arms stand on end. Laria had tried poisoning Margot? I could almost envision Laria writing those words, a smug smile on her lips.

The bedroom light flickered, as did the lamp on my nightstand. The air around me turned colder, a mist developed, and a figure slowly emerged.

BOOK: The Deepest Cut
3.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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