Bone Island 03 - Ghost Moon
lived here with her grandfather, the clutter had been at a minimum. There had still been strange objects everywhere: a hundred-year-old stuffed leopard on a dais, mounted heads on the wall—none of them killed by her family, and none less than a century old—native American art, dream catchers, Indian statues of Kali and other gods and goddesses, Roman busts, wiccan wands and so on. The items had been displayed on the wall, or in etageres, or freestanding on mounts. Now…items were everywhere, boxes were everywhere, and the objects on the walls were strewn with dust and spiderwebs. Cutter’s glass-encased six-foot bookstand—which had held priceless first editions of many works—was open, and it seemed that the spiders and other crawling creatures had done their damage in there, as well. Sawdust andpacking material was strewn haphazardly here and there, almost as if Cutter—or someone else—had been feverishly looking for something special among the endless supply of things in the house.
    Standing there, looking around, she felt a sinking sensation. The work this place was going to require would be enormous. And yet…they had been her grandfather’s treasures. Joe Richter had his will and his detailed papers on where things should go. Only Cutter would have known what had value, what belonged in a museum, and what had been sentimental to him.
    A prickly sensation teased her spine, and she looked around quickly, having the eerie feeling once again of being watched. She didn’t know how that was possible, except that….
    Well, actually, anyone could be hiding just about anywhere.
    She walked forward and turned on more lights. She frowned as she surveyed all the boxes and crates. She had nearly reached the kitchen when she heard someone on the porch.
    They would knock—if they were legitimate.
    They didn’t knock. She heard a scratching sound, and something like metal against metal.
    With her heart in her throat, she went flying across the room. She reached for the poker in the stand by the fireplace and grabbed the ash sweep instead. No matter; there was no time. She flew for the light switch, turned it off and dived behind one of the boxes.
    A second later, she heard the knob twist; the door was unlocked.
    Had she locked it again after she came in? She couldn’t remember.
    The door creaked open. She heard footsteps, and then nothing. Whoever was there was just standing, listening.
    Seconds ticked by with nothing, nothing except the pounding of her heart.
    Then, as if the intruder could hear that pounding, he zoned in on her exact location. The footsteps came closer and closer….
    And he was right in front of her. In a second, she would be pinned in place, trapped where she crouched in fear….
    She shot up, swinging the metal ash sweep. She heard a hoarse cry as the rod connected with flesh, but then it was pulled out of her hand and a body tackled her length, sending her, and him, crashing down between the boxes.
    “Bastard!” she raged, struggling desperately.
    Her attacker went still.
    “Kelsey?”
    She knew the voice. Years dissipated. She knew the voice well.
    The boy had changed. The long, lean, muscled body bearing down on hers had definitely changed.
    “Liam?” she breathed.
    “Good God, Kelsey!” he said.
    For another split second, he was on top of her, vital, tense, a mass of flesh and sinew like a brick prison wall that lived and breathed…and then he was up, reaching for her hand, hauling her to her feet.
    “Kelsey!” he said again, rubbing his arm, staring at her in the shadows.
    “Liam,” she said.
    Then he turned away from her and walked toward the light switch, and the eeriness of the night was filled with a glow of rationality once again.

3
    I t was good—and strange—to see Kelsey after so many years. The promise of great beauty that she’d always shown had come to full fruition, and the awkward, embarrassed smile she was giving Liam was nothing short of pure charm.
    Kelsey had

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