Black Raven Inn: A Paranormal Mystery (Taryn's Camera Book 6) (14 page)

BOOK: Black Raven Inn: A Paranormal Mystery (Taryn's Camera Book 6)
5.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Fourteen


Y
ou don’t look well,” Aker said
as soon as Taryn stepped out of the car.

“I didn’t sleep well last night.”

“It shows,” he replied drily.

Despite the lack of sleep, Taryn was still wired, almost manic. The urge to continue painting was strong in her. She was being incredibly productive which, while not unusual, was still odd considering how poorly she’d felt only days before.

“Listen, I’m going to work in the courtyard today,” she said.

Aker nodded, already heading to the lobby. “Still going to check everything out,” he called over his shoulder.

“Yeah, yeah. I know the drill.”

She was finished unloading her car by the time he returned. He was frowning, however, and Taryn paused, her the bag holding her canvas slung over her shoulder. “What’s up?”

Aker’s face was hard to read behind the stoic expression and big sunglasses but she was fairly good at reading body language; something was clearly wrong.

“Someone’s been here,” he replied.

“They mess anything up?”

Aker shrugged. “Not exactly. They just moved some things around. Nothing looks like it’s missing.”

Taryn produced a thin smile at the thought. “Yeah, well, it’s not like there was much to take…”

“I have learned that people will steal just about anything. Give them a chance and they’ll lift a roll of toilet paper,” he muttered.

“Everything look okay, though?”

One of the few things that scared her was being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Lord knew that had happened to her enough. With the Black Raven Inn, in particular, she was concerned about stumbling upon a drug deal or something else she had no business being at. She’d read the motel’s reviews about it being a hot spot for hookers, dealers, and pimps and even though it was closed old habits died hard. She didn’t want anyone feeling homesick and thinking they needed to return for sentimentality’s sake.

“Looks like someone just went through everything in the lobby and in Parker’s old room,” Aker shrugged. “Maybe just a fan. That happens sometimes. It’s like they don’t care he died more than thirty years ago–they still think they’re going to find one of his cigarettes or something.”

“Do you think that whole thing’s weird?” Taryn asked, setting her tub on the ground. It was getting heavy. “I mean, the people who came here to stay in his room and make little shrines to him? A lot of them weren’t even alive when he died.”

“I don’t find much of anything strange anymore,” he answered. “I’ve been at this job for a long time. Just look at the number of people who visit Graceland. A lot of them were not around in Elvis’ lifetime but they still pay their money to play look-loo in the Jungle Room, file past his grave in somber silence, and walk through the Lisa Marie.”

He had her there; Taryn had also visited Graceland and done those exact same things. She hadn’t felt weird about it at the time.

Still, Parker’s fans actually visited the motel, stayed in a place where a dead body once laid in the parking lot for twenty-four hours without anyone noticing, and slept on the same bed in the same place where their idol accidentally committed suicide. That was more than a little morbid to her.

“Guess I’ll be going to the courtyard,” she said at last.

“Give a yell if you see or hear anything that’s not meant to be there,” Aker advised, settling into his chair. He had a new book today, a biography on Patty Hearst.

“Will do.”

Taryn let herself in through the side door that would take her straight to the courtyard. It was a little bit of a shock, seeing it in present day after spending all evening and all night seeing it in the past.

“Do you need something from me?” She’d been working almost nonstop. Ruby wanted her to make contact with Parker’s ghost, but Taryn didn’t know how to do that. She’d never really intentionally tried to see a ghost before, only hoped they came out.

She didn’t know what she was doing. All she could do was paint.

“If you’re here, can you give me another sign? I don’t know what to do,” she complained. “I don’t know what I’m doing.”

Taryn set her supplies on the ground, put her easel together, and began getting out her paints. She was already starting to get lost in the work again, when something tugged at the ponytail that hung down the middle of her back.

It wasn’t a physical tug, not like someone was standing behind her, but more like a reflexive jerk that had her straightening to attention and looking around. The tiny hairs on the back of her arm stood straight up as a creepy crawling sensation started at the small of her back and worked its way to the nape of her neck.

She shivered in the warm morning light and looked around. She was alone of course, but couldn’t shake the feeling that someone was watching her.

With the satisfaction that Aker was on the other side of the wall, ready to spring into action, Taryn began a slow walk around the perimeter. He was right, someone
had
been there; she could feel it. It was the sensation that she got upon entering a small room just seconds after someone else had left it. She could almost still sense their presence, still feel the disrupted molecules and shift in the air.

Just moments before she’d arrived they’d stood in that very spot, the one she was standing in now, and had looked around at all the motel doors the way she was doing. Their feet had been firmly planted in the same ground, they’d breathed in the same pocket of air. Taryn closed her eyes and inhaled–she could almost taste their scent. A combination of musk and something floral, with just the slightest hint of a bitter undertone.

Miss Dixie was hanging around her neck, a little beat up from Jekyll Island but still working as well as she ever did, and Taryn turned her on now and aimed her at the space before her. Nothing unusual appeared in the shot.

When she made a 180-degree turn, however, and aimed her camera at the distance between her and Room #5 she startled at the results.

The motel room was open in her picture where, in present day, it was closed. A puff of smoke from a cigarette, hidden by the wall, lazily emerged from the room. One lone boot tip protruded from the bottom of the doorway, the rest of its owner concealed in the shadows.

Taryn took a step forward and took another shot, zooming in on the door.

The photo came back without anything unusual setting it apart from the hundreds of others she’d taken at the motel. The door was closed.

Still, it had meant something. She knew that.

As Taryn drew nearer to the door, the sensation of the invisible thing crawling up her back returned, this time even stronger. She stopped and turned and found herself facing the little shrine a few feet from the door.

It was still faded and messy from the elements. The ceramic angel with the vacant eyes was missing a wing; the gazing ball was cracked down the middle. A film had settled over the candles, guitar picks, and stone crosses. Letters were soggy messages and bleached by the sun until they were unreadable.

In the middle of the mess, however, was a Celtic cross. It stood upright when most everything else had been knocked over from wind and neglect. Its color had been untouched by the sun or rain. It was still a brilliant shade of jade.

As Taryn knelt down beside the shrine and peered at the fixture, the tiny words scrawled across the bottom caught her attention.

“’May the sun shine warm upon your face,” she quietly read aloud, the carving blazing brighter with each word of the traditional Irish prayer she read.

“Until we meet again.” The soft words were whispered gravely in her ear, the seductiveness not lost on her. The hot breath on her neck was sweet and tasted faintly of wine. She could almost feel the touch of lips on her clammy skin, their heat and suppleness spreading a warmth through her body that wasn’t unwelcome. The other body that encircled her was invisible but she could feel both its strength and fragility engulfing her. Closing her eyes, she could see strong hands resting on knees on either side of her–the long, pale fingers gentle and pale. If she leaned back just a little she thought she might feel the heat on her back.

Taryn wasn’t scared. It occurred to her that she should be, but she wasn’t. In fact, she was a little aroused.

Seconds later the presence was gone and she was once again alone, just a single woman stooping before a cluttered shrine to a minor star whose light had ceased to shine long before she was born–a name that would almost certainly mean nothing to the newest generation.

Taryn stood and shivered; without warning, dark clouds had inked out the sun and a breeze was stirring. A Happy Meal box blew past her and danced around the shrine, coming to land next to an empty, cut-out bleach bottle. The juxtaposition of childhood innocence next to what she could only assume to be drug paraphernalia kicked her in the gut.

She shook her head.

In a moment of lucidity and break from the manic it became clear to Taryn that she’d need to be careful with this job. It wasn’t like the others she’d had. This one might be dangerous to her in a completely different way.

As she walked back to her easel, feeling jittery from the nervous energy that built inside her, one thing was for sure, she was certain that she’d been led to the shrine on purpose.

Someone had been there recently, someone who had left the cross for Parker.

“Someone with something heavy on their mind,” Taryn whispered aloud.

The courtyard did not reply.

On Taryn’s iPod, Emmylou sang about crying a river for a man, a river that was too deep and wide for her to ever swim across.

 

Taryn
sat
in her living room, her phone in hand, and tried to process the news she’d received earlier.

The phone call had been from her doctor. Well, not from her doctor, but from her doctor’s
office
. She hadn’t even heard from the physician herself, but from the scheduling clerk.

Her primary care doctor would no longer be managing her pain. Instead, she’d been referred to a pain management specialist; a doctor whom, upon Taryn’s quick internet research, received scathing reviews with phrases like “wouldn’t send my dog to him” jumping out and not exactly instilling confidence within her.

“The doctor will get you through the rest of the month,” the scheduling clerk had informed her, “but, after that, you should be in with Dr. Hanan. Is that okay?”

Is that okay?
What was Taryn supposed to say to that?

No
?

Because no, that was
not
okay. Her doctor had not mentioned that to Taryn on her last visit, had not warned her in any way that she’d be dropping that aspect of Taryn’s care. This news had come totally out of the blue.

“I don’t understand,” Taryn had told the clerk in a whisper. “Why is she sending me to someone else?”

“I’m not sure,” came the clipped reply. “You’ll need to talk to her about it yourself.”

Taryn, who had the doctor’s cell phone number in cases of emergency, had sent her a text. That was four hours ago. She hadn’t heard anything in return.

It was silly, of course, but Taryn felt rejected. She felt as though she’d done something wrong and now Dr. Culver didn’t want her.

Her parents were gone, her grandmother was gone, her fiancé was gone, and now not even her doctor wanted her.

“But I’ve done everything
right
,” she insisted to her belongings. “I’ve been a model patient. I always take my medicine on time. I keep a pain journal. I’ve never broken our contract, always let her know when I’m hospitalized, have never asked for an early prescription… The only time I haven’t had any drugs in my system during a test was when I had the flu and kept throwing them up.”

The inconsiderate room remained silent.

She loved her doctor, trusted her. She’d been with her since her parents died. Her doctor knew more about her than anyone, outside of Matt.

When she was twelve, Matt had joined the Science Club. For the first time in probably
ever
he had friends outside of Taryn–boys who shared interests with him. One day Matt had called her after school, full of exciting news.

“We’ve decided that after we graduate we’re going to buy a big boat and sail around the world, solving mysteries like the Loch Ness Monster and the Bermuda Triangle,” he’d boasted.

Taryn, who was just starting to really feel the stirrings of interest for the opposite sex, had felt a tug she didn’t fully understand. She just knew that she
had
to be on that boat, too.

“Can I come, too?” She’d asked it with confidence, certain he wouldn’t leave her behind.

“Sorry,” he’d replied instead. “All the positions have been filled.”

It was silly, but she’d hung up the phone and cried.

She remembered that moment now and cried again, although she couldn’t be entirely certain what the tears were for. 

 

Other books

The Shape of a Pocket by John Berger
Kerry by Grace Livingston Hill
Secret Daughter by Shilpi Somaya Gowda
The Dead Queen's Garden by Nicola Slade
The Lost Songs by Cooney, Caroline B.
Deadly Inheritance by Janet Laurence
Amanda McCabe by The Rules of Love
The Day We Disappeared by Lucy Robinson