Excerpt--Circle of Fire
Madeline Smith didn't believe in ghosts. Not until the night Jon Barnett
walked into her life, anyway. Maddie drew her legs up to her chest and
held them close. Maybe walked was the wrong word to use--his method of
movement seemed more like floating.
Outside her bedroom, the branches of an old elm scraped back and forth
across the tin roofing. The wind howled through the night, an eerie cry
that matched her mood of anticipation and fear. Snow scurried past the
windows, silvery drops that glittered briefly in the light.
It felt oddly fitting to be sitting on her bed, waiting for the arrival of
a ghost while an early winter storm raged outside.
Only he insisted he wasn't a ghost at all.
She tugged the blankets over her knees and wondered if she should stoke
the fire with a little more wood. Maybe the heat would keep him away. Or
maybe he'd gotten tired of his game and simply forgotten about her. Though
she believed the desperation in his eyes was real enough, she just didn't
believe he was real.
Perhaps he was just a figment of her imagination--a last, desperate escape
from the loneliness of her life.
The clock on the mantle began to chime quietly. She turned to look at the
time. One-thirty. Maybe he had forgotten about her...
"Madeline."
She closed her eyes, uncertain whether fear, or the unexpected pleasure of
hearing the low velvet tones of his voice one more time caused the sudden
leap of her heart.
"Madeline," he repeated. This time a hint of urgency touched the warmth of
his voice.
He stood in the shadows to the left of her window. Despite the storm that
raged outside, he wore only a short sleeved black shirt and dark
jeans--the same clothes he'd worn when he had first appeared last night.
Tonight there was something different about him, though.
Tonight he looked afraid.
But he wasn't real, damn it! How could a ghost feel fear?
"Madeline, you must help me."
She closed her heart to the desperate plea in his voice. What he was
asking her to do was impossible.
"I can't." She avoided his gaze and fiddled with the fraying edge of the
blanket. "I don't know you--I don't even believe you exist. How can you
expect me to leave everything I have here on the whim of a ghost?"
"You must!" The sudden sharpness of his voice made her look up. "All I'm
asking is for you to travel across the state, not to another country. Why
are you so afraid to move from your retreat?"
Maddie stared at him. He seemed to understand altogether too much about
her. No one else had seen her fear--not even her sister, who was as close
to her as Maddie ever allowed anyone to get these days.
"There's nothing wrong with being cautious," she said after a moment.
He studied her, amusement flickering briefly in the diamond-bright depths
of his blue eyes. "I never said there was. But life has to be lived. You
cannot hide forever."
She ignored the sliver of alarm in her heart, ignored the whispers that
demanded she ask how he knew so much about her, and raised an eyebrow.
"And what does a ghost know about such things?"
He sighed, running a hand through his overly long hair. In the light of
the fire, slivers of gold seemed to flow through his fingers. "I'm no
ghost, Madeline. But I will be, if you don't help me soon."
Alarm danced through her heart. "What do you mean?"
He walked across to the fire and held out his hands, as if to capture the
warmth of the flames. Hair dusted his arms, golden strands that gleamed in
the firelight. His fingers were long and smooth and tanned. Lord, he
seemed real--and yet, if she looked closely enough, she could see the glow
of the fire through his body.
"I mean that I'm stuck down this damn well and I can't get out. I will
die, Madeline, unless you help me."
Maddie closed her eyes and tried to stifle the rising spiral of fear. Not
for her safety, because she sensed this was one ghost who would cause her
no harm. It was just fear of...what? She didn't know, but there was
something about this apparition that made her very wary.
Perhaps she should play along with him. Surely he'd eventually tire of his
game and leave her alone. Or perhaps she was just going mad--as most of
her so-called friends had insisted she would.
Yet those same friends had never understood what she was, or what she was
capable of doing. Nor had they ever tried to help her.
"Why can't someone else rescue you? You must have friends--why don't you
go haunt them?"
"Believe me, I would if I could."
His tone was dry, and left no doubt he would rather be anywhere else than
with her. Bad news when even a damn ghost doesn't want to be with you. "So
why aren't you?"
He frowned. "I don't know. Some force keeps driving me towards you. I have
no choice in the matter, Madeline. You're all I have."
And you refuse to help me. The unspoken rebuke was in his eyes when he
glanced at her. Maddie bit her lip and looked away, watching the snow
continue its dance past her window. Maybe she was going mad. She was
beginning to feel sorry for a ghost.
"Why would you be able to reach a complete stranger and not anyone of real
use to you?"
"I don't know."
But the look he gave her was keen, as if he did know but didn't believe
she'd understand.
"If you want my help, you at least owe it to me to be honest."
"Fair enough." He turned his back to the fire, but kept his hands behind
him, as if still trying to warm them. "Whatever this force is, it brings
with it a sense of danger. And it's connected with you, somehow."
He seemed to say an awful lot without actually saying anything, Maddie
noted. Maybe her ghost had been a politician in a former life.
"That made everything so much clearer," she said dryly.
He shot her a look that was half amusement, half frustration. "Someone
close to you is in danger, and somehow, they're drawing me to you."
Besides her sister, the only other person who qualified as being close was
Jayne's son, Evan. Neither of them had the sort of power Jon was talking
about. No, she thought grimly, there was only one misfit left in their
small family unit.
"So how did you end up in the well?"
"Someone shot me when I was out exploring." He shrugged. "I must have
fallen into it."
Maddie raised an eyebrow. From what she could see of him, there was
remarkably little evidence of a bullet wound. "Then you are dead."
He sighed and closed his eyes. "I was hit in the arm. The fall could have
killed me but I was...lucky."
The arm closest to her was a suntanned brown, well- muscled and remarkably
free of wounds. His hands were still firmly clasped together, which surely
wouldn't be possible if the other arm had a hole blown in it. Maybe it was
her ghost who was mad, not she.
"Why don't you just shout for help?"
"As I explained before, I can't take the risk. Someone is out to get me.
If they think I'm still alive, they'll just find me and finish the job."
A chill ran through her. "It could have been an accident."
"No."
She closed her eyes at the soft certainty in his voice. "If I come to help
you, my life could be in danger."
"How would they know you're there to help me? You'd just be another
tourist passing by."
The sudden weariness in his voice made her look at him. His form had faded
slightly, merging with the night. Something was wrong, something more than
the fact he'd been shot. And she sensed he wouldn't tell her what. "Who do
you mean by they?"
"I'm not exactly sure. But someone in this town knew why I was here, and
they moved pretty swiftly to get rid of me."
"Then tell me what town you're in, and why you're there." If he was going
to continue haunting her, she should at least try to understand a little
more about him.
He stared at her, then shook his head. "How many times do I have to repeat
myself before you believe in me?"
His voice held an edge of desperation that made her wince. Yet last night
she'd been too busy trying to convince herself he was nothing more than a
vivid dream to really listen to anything he said. "You mentioned some
town--Sherbrook, wasn't it?"
He closed his eyes for a moment, as if battling to remain calm. "Sherbrook
is the name of the inn. The place is Taurin Bay."
An odd sense of foreboding ran through her. Evan had attended a school
camp in Taurin Bay not so long ago. Jayne had gone along as cook and chief
pot-washer. "That force you said was driving you to me--was it male or
female?"
"Male." He paused, eyes narrowing. "Why?"
Evan--something told her it was Evan. Maddie licked her lips and wondered
if she should call her sister--or was she just worrying over nothing
again?
"Maddie, what's wrong?"
She stared at him blankly for a moment. "My sister has a thirteen year old
son called Evan. Both of them were in Taurin Bay last month."
"Damn!" Jon ran a hand through his hair, then abruptly walked forward,
stopping only when his knees touched the side of her bed.
He was close, so close. She could see the rise and fall of his chest, felt
the whisper of his breath wash across her skin. Could smell him, a faint
scent of cologne mixed with hints of earth and sweat. But he wasn't real,
damn it!
"In the last eight months, sixteen teenagers have been taken from their
homes and haven't been seen alive again. In each case, no locks or windows
were disturbed. And each time, the teenager was taken on the next full
moon after their families returned from Taurin Bay."
Her heart leapt. She raised a hand to her throat and tried to remain calm.
"Evan is safe at home. This is ridiculous."
"Someone is drawing me here, Madeline. Someone who knows he's in danger.
You're the connection between us. Tonight is a full moon. Go call your
sister."
She scrambled off the bed and ran to the bedroom door. Then she hesitated,
looking back at Jon. He hadn't moved, but his body had faded, losing its
shape to the darkness. Only his blue eyes were still bright.
"Go call her," he said. "Then come to me. Save me."