The ghost illusion, p.1

The Ghost Illusion, page 1

 

The Ghost Illusion
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The Ghost Illusion


  Also by Kat Martin

  The Silent Rose

  The Dream

  The Secret

  Hot Rain

  Deep Blue

  Desert Heat

  Midnight Sun

  Against the Wild

  Against the Sky

  Against the Tide

  Into the Fury

  Into the Whirlwind

  Into the Firestorm

  Beyond Reason

  Beyond Danger

  Beyond Control

  Pivot

  The Last Goodnight

  The Last Mile

  One Last Chance

  Peril

  THE GHOST ILLUSION

  KAT MARTIN

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Table of Contents

  Also by

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  ABOUT THE BOOK

  Epigraph

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  CHAPTER THIRTY

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

  CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

  CHAPTER FORTY

  CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

  EPILOGUE

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2022 by Kat Martin

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  Library of Congress Card Catalogue Number: 2023938815

  The K with book logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-4402-9

  First Kensington Hardcover Edition: October 2023

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-4404-3 (ebook)

  ABOUT THE BOOK

  I wanted to write a ghost story. The two I had previously written were both challenging and interesting to write, so I began my usual search for a place to set the novel. England, I thought. Plenty of ghosts in England. I began searching abandoned historic buildings, and that was the beginning of a journey that led me to a place I did not want to go.

  More research pulled me deeper. I am bringing you a tale I felt compelled to write. It is not one I would have chosen. But I believe it is a story I am meant to tell.

  Soon you will understand why.

  They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old.

  Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.

  At the going down of the sun and in the morning

  We will remember them.

  —Laurence Binyon, “For the Fallen”

  CHAPTER ONE

  May

  Sunderland, England

  THE OLD HOUSE CREAKED AND GROANED. EVE SHIVERED AND PULLED her robe a little closer around her. She’d told herself that in time she’d get used to the place, grow accustomed to the ominous sounds and eerie, shifting movements in the shadows, but she had lived in the home she had inherited from her uncle for more than two months and the unsettling disturbances had only grown worse.

  She tried to tell herself it was just her imagination, the wind playing tricks on her, the movement of the wood inside the walls of the hundred-year-old home. But the ghostly moans, whispers, and cruel laughter, the sound of running footsteps in the hallway, were impossible to ignore.

  At those times, the darkness came alive, the air in the room seemed to thicken and pulse, and it took all her will just to make herself breathe.

  Eve shivered as the howl of the wind outside increased, rattling the shutters on the paned-glass windows, but no wind she had ever heard sounded like angry words being whispered in the darkness.

  Rising from the antique rocker in the living room, she moved the chair closer to the fireplace, hoping to dispel the chill. The smokeless coal she was required to burn wasn’t the same as a roaring blaze, but the glowing embers somehow made her feel better.

  A noise in the hall caught her attention and she went still. It was the whispering she had heard before, like men speaking in low tones somewhere just out of sight. Time and again, she had gone to see who was there, but the hall was always empty.

  Goose bumps crept over her skin. Today she had finally done something about it. Setting aside her closed-mindedness, she had gone on the Internet and googled information on ghosts, haunted houses, anything she could think of that might give her some answers.

  It didn’t take long to realize she wasn’t the only person who had trouble with spirits or ghosts or whatever they turned out to be. Not everyone believed in ghosts, but there were people out there who were convinced they were real.

  Eve had sent an email to a group in America called Paranormal Investigations, Inc., a team of experts who traveled the world to research problems like hers. Their website was discreet. No photos of the people who worked there, no names, just a picture of the office in a redbrick building near the waterfront in Seattle. At the bottom, the page simply read, If you need help, we are here for you.

  Interested, but not satisfied with the limited information provided, Eve continued her research. The man who had started the company was a billionaire in Seattle named Ransom King. King owned dozens of extremely profitable corporations, including several hotel chains, one of them the five-star King’s Inns, as well as high-rise buildings, and real-estate developments around the country. He was a good-looking, broad-shouldered man, tall, with blue eyes and wavy black hair.

  Paranormal Investigations wasn’t a business King ran for profit. According to one of myriad articles she’d read about him, researching paranormal phenomena had become his passion, a hunger for knowledge that seemed to have settled deep in his bones. He had founded the company after losing his wife and three-year-old daughter in a car accident. King had been driving the night a violent rainstorm had sent the car careening off the road into a tree.

  Eve could only imagine how grief-stricken he must have been.

  Intrigued and desperate for help, Eve had filled out the brief contact information form on the website, giving her name, phone number, and address. Her message simply said:

  My name is Eve St. Clair. I’m an American living in England. I think there is something in my house, something dark and sinister that is not of this world. Can you help me? I live alone. I’m not crazy, and I’m not making this up. Please help me if you can.

  She glanced over at the burgundy settee where she had been sleeping for nearly a week. On the surface, it seemed ridiculous, but she couldn’t face going upstairs to her bedroom. Down here, she would at least be able to run if something bad happened.

  She reminded herself to put away the blanket and pillows in the morning before her weekly housekeeper, Mrs. Pennyworth, arrived. The older woman was a notorious gossip. Eve certainly didn’t want her knowing she was too frightened to sleep in her own bed.

  A scratching noise sent a chill sliding down her spine. It was probably just branches outside the window, scraping against the glass. At least that’s what she told herself.

  Eve settled back in the chair and started rocking, the movement easing some of the tension between her shoulder blades. When what sounded like a dozen footsteps thundered down the hall, she prayed she would hear from the Americans soon.

  * * *

  Ransom King sat behind the computer on his wide, glass-topped desk in the King Enterprises’s high-rise building in downtown Seattle. The office was modern, with all the latest high-tech equipment, from a top-of-the-line iMac Pro to a seventy-inch flat screen with a wireless HDMI transmitter and receiver kit.

  A gray leather sofa and chairs provided a comfortable conversation area with a chrome and glass coffee table, and a wall of glass overlooked the harbor and the blue waters of Elliott Bay.

  On the computer screen in front of him, he reread the most recent email message that had come in from Eve St. Clair. They had corresponded several times. Her case loo

ked interesting. Part of her note read:

  I keep praying this isn’t real. If it is, at least I’ll know.

  Ran understood the words in a way few people could. In the months following the accident that had killed his wife, Sabrina, and their daughter, Chrissy, he had seen Rina and Chrissy’s faces in his dreams a hundred times.

  In his dreams. That’s what he’d told himself. But a person didn’t dream in the middle of the afternoon with his eyes open.

  Talking to a shrink hadn’t helped. Every explanation centered around the overwhelming guilt he felt for the death of his wife and child. Which was true, but not a satisfactory explanation of the visions that had continued to plague him.

  Desperate to do something—anything that would give him peace—he had finally gone to a psychic. He had managed to keep his visits secret, but in the end, it hadn’t mattered. Lillian Bouchon had turned out to be a fraud.

  The woman was a fake and a con artist, like most of the charlatans who supposedly possessed supernatural abilities. He had run through a list of them, but during his pursuit of the truth, he’d met people whose abilities were real.

  In a move that had caused him endless ridicule, he had assembled a team of paranormal experts. People with open minds, an interest in the field, and a determination to find answers to age-old questions—or some version of them.

  Kathryn Collins and Jesse Stahl had been his first hires. The best in their fields, Katie handled the video equipment, while Jesse handled audio and other miscellaneous instruments. Ran dug up background information on each case and probed the history, looking into past events that might have influenced whatever was happening on the premises they were investigating.

  A woman named Caroline Barclay had been the first psychic on the team. On certain occasions, she’d been able to sense and communicate with unseen energy, but she wasn’t always successful. Other people followed, mostly women, who seemed to be more intuitive than men.

  Aside from the members of the team he kept on payroll, including a team coordinator to handle the logistics, Ran also brought in part-time help on occasion. A psychometrist named Sarah Owens, who could touch an object and know its past, and a former priest named Lucas Devereaux, formerly known as Father Luke.

  What Ran had seen in the years since his formation of the team had convinced him that spirits were real, and though he’d never made contact with Sabrina or little Chrissy, the visions and dreams had finally faded, allowing him to find a fragile sort of peace.

  Two years ago, he had hired Violet Sutton, a woman he had met in an online chat room for gifted people. Tests supported her claim that she was a sensitive, and occasionally clairvoyant. He had watched her work and hired her.

  Ran glanced back at the screen and thought of the case in England. What the team did could be perilous. It could be wildly exciting, a rush like nothing he had ever felt before. But under certain circumstances, it could be deadly.

  And there was Eve St. Clair, a woman he found surprisingly intriguing. He liked her intelligence and what seemed like sincerity in her emails. From photos he’d seen on social media, she was attractive, with a slender figure and very dark hair. He liked the open-mindedness she had shown in reaching out for help.

  And there was the fear she worked so hard to hide. If what she was reporting was true, Eve might have good reason to be afraid.

  Making a sudden decision, Ran called his executive assistant and asked her to clear his schedule for the next three days. If the team found something or encountered some kind of trouble, he would be there.

  Ran checked his gold Rolex. Ten a.m. in Seattle. Six p.m. in Sunderland, England. He’d go out, maybe walk down to the Bell Harbor Marina, where he kept his forty-foot sailboat. He loved that boat, loved being out on the water, loved the solitude, the peace that usually eluded him.

  Maybe when he returned, he’d find a message on his computer.

  Maybe he’d have another email from Eve.

  CHAPTER TWO

  THE OFFICES OF PARANORMAL INVESTIGATIONS, INC. SAT ON THE ground floor of a four-story brick building on Alaskan Way, across from the Seattle Aquarium. There were restaurants all along the quay, and through the windows, the blue waters of Elliott Bay sparkled in the morning sun.

  The guard in the lobby, an older, gray-haired man named Mitch, sat behind a computer at the front desk. He waved as Ran walked past. Ran waved back and continued down the hall to the conference room.

  Like the rest of the offices, the conference room had a homey feel, with exposed redbrick walls, wide-plank, golden oak floors, and comfortable leather seating. Four familiar faces looked up from their cell phone screens and smiled at him from their places around the long oak table.

  “Hey, boss.” Jesse Stahl, his audio expert, a good-looking African American man, lifted a hand in greeting.

  “Morning,” Ran said.

  Next to Jesse, Kathryn “Katie” Collins, a thirty-year-old blonde who knew her way around a video camera like the pro she was, tucked her cell phone into her pocket. “I’m really hoping you have something for us to do. I’m going crazy sitting around the office.” After a dry spell, all of them were edgy, ready to get back to work.

  “There’s a house in Sunderland, England,” Ran said. “Looks promising so far.”

  Katie grinned. “I’ve never been to England.”

  “Neither have I,” Jesse said, obviously intrigued.

  Next at the table, Violet Sutton, the sensitive on the team, shifted in her leather swivel chair. “Actually, Britain’s kind of dreary. But with all the old buildings, there are certainly plenty of ghosts.”

  Violet was in her early sixties, with silver hair she wore swept back in a twist. She tended to mother team members, including him. Ran adored her.

  The fourth person in the room, Constance Dutton, was the team coordinator. A forty-year-old woman with light brown hair cut in a bob, Connie made all the travel arrangements and handled anything else that came up. Though she didn’t go with them, she took care of everyone’s needs and managed to keep all of them happy and under control.

  Ran turned at the sound of the door opening as another person entered the conference room.

  Like Ran, Zane Tanner was a tall man, about an inch shorter than Ran’s six feet two, with a leaner build. He had brown eyes, a square jaw, and dark brown hair with faint auburn highlights. He wore it cut short, unlike Ran’s black hair, which curled over the collar of his blue knit pullover, reminding him he needed it cut. Zane’s worn brown bomber jacket seemed to be a permanent fixture.

  “Sorry I’m late,” Zane said, shedding the jacket. “I had a flat tire on the way over.” He smiled. “Not a made-up excuse, I promise.”

  Ran turned back to the others. “We’re adding another member to the team. Katie, Jesse, Violet, and Connie, meet Zane Tanner. Zane’s a PI and former Green Beret. He’s going to be helping with the research and also provide security when we need it. Which may be the situation with our newest case.”

  “Nice to meet you, Zane,” Violet said.

  “Welcome,” said Katie, smiling brightly. With her honey-blond hair and big blue eyes, Katie was a guy magnet. She was a notorious flirt, but her interest in men rarely went deeper than the surface. She was extremely smart, and selective in the men she dated, which meant she spent a lot of time alone.

  Jesse rose and extended a hand to Zane, who leaned across the table to shake. “Good to meet you,” Jesse said. “Welcome to the team.”

  “Thanks,” Zane said.

  Connie waved a greeting, while Violet and Katie shook Zane’s hand. Zane smiled. “I look forward to getting to know all of you better as time goes on.”

  They sat back down, Ran taking his usual place at the head of the table. Connie was team coordinator, but Ransom King was the boss.

  “I forwarded each of you the email we received from a woman named Eve St. Clair,” Ran said. “As usual, I had her thoroughly checked out. Zane has a contact in the UK who was able to fill in the blanks.” He turned to the newest member of the team. “Zane?”

 

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