Read Kissing the Werewolf - An Izzy Cooper Novel Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
A loud sigh escaped her lips.
A loud sigh pushed through her thin lips. “I think the Simmons bunch deserved their curse, perhaps not the whole town though.”
Granny chuckled. “We have more than one curse on our heads you know.”
Nodding, she reached over and covered my hand with hers. “If I were the betting kind, I’d bet we are dealing with a whole lot more than the shaman’s curse.”
Now I was confused, not to mention a little uneasy. It would seem Granny had been keeping a lot of secrets.
“What haven’t you told me?” I asked, glaring at her through narrowed eyes.
“Oh put away the claws,” she scoffed. “You don’t scare me, little miss demon dreadful.”
It so wasn’t fair!
How could I be so close to being a demon, but I couldn’t even scare an old lady?
“So what is it?” I asked again.
“Well there’s the curse of old Captain Marsh.”
I shook my head. “That’s a ghost story, not a curse. Besides, I’ve never seen him.”
Leaning back in her chair, Granny gave me one of her, you’re not as smart as you think you are, smiles.
Finally she continued. “That old Indian cursed us alright, but the curse was that when two hundred seasons passed, we would be revisited by all our sins.”
I was still lost and it must have shown on my face. Granny Stella burst out laughing.
And I’d be dead!
“Granny! Would quit blaming everything on the fallen angel situation? It hasn’t been that long since I lost my power, and I didn’t know anything about this then either.”
Granny Stella shrugged. “Who’s to say? Maybe they don’t have the dates right, or perhaps the sins are seeping from the sacred ground that has held them all these years.”
“So what do we do?”
Okay then … so how the hell was I going to find the channel?
For the hundredth time since coming back from the dead, I had to wonder why I couldn’t just have a simple serial killer case to work, like a normal FBI agent?
“Are you going to the office today?” she asked.
“Don’t see as I have much choice,” I nodded. “Maybe it’s going to come down to some good old fashioned police work to figure this out.”
“Happy All Hours,” I put in for her.
“That’s it!” Granny smiled. “Ask Aaron to pick up a gallon of milk and some bread … if you will?”
“Sure Granny.”
After giving her another hug, I got out of there before she decided to get into a discussion about my marital status, as in me still being unmarried. Not that I didn’t appreciate her concern, I just wasn’t as near worried about it as she was.
As far as I was concerned, being single was preferable to getting stuck with some jerk like Jasper.
Maybe it was a good idea to let Uncle Aaron have his view.
The large wooden door that separated WRCK from the rest of the lighthouse was supposed to be closed at all times, but it wasn’t closed. It was standing open just a few inches, which was unusual.
Uncle Aaron always kept it closed on account of outside noise tended to interfere with his broadcasts.
I stood in front of the door, undecided.
Should I knock and risk adding a bit of my own noise pollution to his broadcast, or just barge in?
Shouldn’t there be some kind of music playing, like maybe
an old classic rock tune or some heavy metal?
There was no music at all. Of course that didn’t mean anything. Aaron frequently muted the music so it couldn’t be heard, except for on the radio.
Uncle Aaron must be talking to himself again, or perhaps Muriel had decided to make her presence known to the Warlock of Shipwreck Point.
Imagine my surprise when I discovered that my uncle wasn’t talking to himself. He was actually having a conversation with someone else, and that someone else was Elias. They were both standing near one of the huge windows that surrounded the lantern room.
“Excuse me,” I muttered, nearly swallowing my tongue.
A smile touched Elias’s kissable lips and he gave me an abrupt nod. “No problem. I was on my way out.”
It took some effort, but I managed to make my tongue work. “Hello … and goodbye, I guess.”
Why couldn’t the words come to me as easily as they did Annabelle?
Not me. If there were a hot guy anywhere in the same vicinity as myself, I would put my foot in my mouth every time.
Before I could recover the slightest amount of cool, Elias was already gone.
Once his alpha highness was no longer pushing my hormones into overdrive, I became suspicious.
Uncle Aaron was weird, but he was the kind of weird you couldn’t help but love.
Aaron Osborn was stuck in 1987, and had no desire to catch up to the rest of us. He always dressed as if he were on his way to a 80s, hair metal concert.
Maybe it was because Uncle Aaron’s hair was naturally dark, so he didn’t have to dye it. At least he hadn’t started dyeing it yet, but every time I saw him, I noticed a few more gray hairs. It might be only a matter of time before he turned to a box of quick fix.
“Well this is a surprise … but a pleasant one,” he added quickly.
It was then I noticed the spyglass in his hand.
“Um … what did Elias want?” I asked again. “And what were you guys looking at?”
Aaron’s meaty face twisted into a scowl. “Are you planning to bring me in for questioning? If not … I don’t think I have to tell you what we were doing.”
“Ah! You see!” he yelled, pointing an accusing finger at me. “As soon as you put on that badge … the demon inside you takes over.”
“No difference,” he said, shaking his head.
I didn’t bother adding the fact that our short list was
very short
. At this point, Elias was the only person on it.
Sighing, Aaron held up his hand. “Hold your bloomers. I’m going on air in a few seconds.”
It would be just like my uncle to pull a fast one, like going on air just to keep from answering.
Plopping down in his chair, Aaron placed a pair of headphones on his head. When he was set to rock, he looked back at me and held up one finger, which meant, keep your mouth shut!
Aaron pressed some buttons and then sat back in his chair. Turning to me, he removed his headphones.
“Yes, I heard he was one of the suspects in yesterday’s mayhem,” he admitted.
“Well then, you must also know why I’m asking what you two were doing?”
After cleaning it up and restoring it, Aaron kept the spyglass at the station to look out on the sea. He claimed that with the spyglass, he could see a fogbank coming from miles away.
Maybe he could, but I suspected he also used it to spy on the town.
“Was he looking for fog?” I asked, sarcasm dripping from each word.
Throwing me a sour look, Aaron pointed toward the town. “He was looking at something on Eerie Lane … at least that’s the direction he was pointing the spyglass. Elias didn’t exactly tell me what it was he was searching for.”
Arching one brow, I asked, “And you didn’t think to question him?
“You stormed in here before I got a chance,” he scowled.
“You know Granny and gadgets. They are her biggest enemy, as far as she’s concerned.”
That’s when it dawned on me that Granny could be playing matchmaker. It was possible that she’d had some inkling Elias would be at the radio station, and that’s why she’d sent me up here. Never mind that the guy she was trying to set me up with was a werewolf, and a possible serial killer.
I loved Granny Stella with all my heart, but she could be a real pain in the rear end at times.
Going down the spiraling staircase was so much easier than climbing it, and would have been even easier with some real light, and not just dim emergency lights, placed in random locations.
If I were to die again, Mister Grim might decide I was too accident prone to manage redemption, and just mark me down as a lost cause. After all, one had to stay alive long enough to earn salvation.
So out of nowhere, I step on a pair of ghostly white shoes, which happened to be attached to a set of ghostly feet.
Muriel was hovering above me, her ghostly eyes wide with fright. “You okay? Do you need a doctor?”
Probably, but who had time for a doctor? I had to catch a killer and earn some redemption points.
That was too much to say, and I wasn’t in the mood, so I just shook my head.
“What happened down there?” Aaron called from the top of the stairs.
“I’m okay … I just tripped!” I yelled. Though I put as much power in my voice as I could muster, it still sounded extremely weak.
“Need some help?” he asked.
“No, I’m good.” It was a lie, but no way was I going to admit that I was nearly scared to death by a ghost, and not just any ghost, but a friendly ghost.
Maybe Aunt Mandy was right about the friendly ghost thing?
Muriel gave me a sheepish grin. “I’d help you but …”
“I know,” I mumbled, as I was struggling to my feet.
“Sorry. I thought you saw me following you and were just ignoring me, so I jumped in front of you,” she explained.
I had a ghost following me and hadn’t noticed?
What had I been thinking about just before falling?
The lighting sucked … and that I should go question Elias myself! That was it.
This definitely had to stop. I was so caught up in Elias, just thinking about him could turn everything else off?
Damn him anyway!
“I saw Captain Marsh again last night.”
“You nearly killed me to tell me that?” Now I was annoyed.
“Sorry,” Muriel shrugged. “I just thought you’d like to know. Did you find out anything about him?”