The Ghost and The Haunted Mansion

The Ghost and The Haunted Mansion Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Ghost and The Haunted Mansion Read Online Free PDF
Author: Alice Kimberly
alliance between Bud Napp and his former business rival, Leo Rollins, owner of Rollins Electronics (and seller of gas-powered electric generators). Leo, the big, bearded Desert Storm vet, motorcyclist, and self-described loner, even joined the Quindicott Business Owners Association, an organization he’d shunned since he opened his store a few years ago.
    “Apparently the councilwoman hasn’t exhausted her bag of tricks,” I said.
    “I’m calling an emergency meeting of the Business Association,” Bud declared. “When is your community event space available? I can’t get anything but voice mail on your store’s phone.”
    I chewed my lip, guessing that my aunt was too busy to answer. “That’s a problem, Bud. The Yarn Spinners are meeting tonight—”
    “Who?”
    “The knitting-themed mystery enthusiasts. And Feline Friends are meeting on Wednesday.”
    “What? You’re a pet store now?”
    “They fancy cat mysteries.”
    “Okay. What about Thursday?”
    “No good,” I said. “We have an author signing, then the Culinary Cozy Crew meets, and Friday is the Hard-Boiled Buddies—those are the guys who read the gritty, alcoholic ex-cops-turned-private-investigators mysteries.”
    “Didn’t that tough-guy reading group used to meet at the girly bar on the highway?”
    “Yeah, they did. Until their wives found out.”
    Bud sighed. “Well, the weekend’s no good. The store owners are too busy to meet on weekends. What about Monday?”
    “We have the Seekers until nine or so. If you want, the Quibblers can meet after that, say ten or ten thirty.”
    “If we meet that late, we’re sure to have a lot of no-shows. Who are these Seekers? Maybe you can convince them to reschedule or move their event.”
    “The Seekers are a new occult reading group, and this is their first ever meeting. I can’t just kick them out.”
    In the background I heard the beep, beep, beeping of heavy trucks backing up. “Okay, Pen. Monday at ten. I’ll pass the word.”
    “I’m sorry about what’s happening to you, Bud.”
    “Me, too, Pen. I thought we threw spiteful aristocrats the hell out of here two hundred years ago!”
    Bud ended the call and I tucked the phone in my bag. “I really need some good news.”
    The old girl might cheer you up.
    “Who?”
    The one you came all the way up here to see.
    “Oh, right! Miss Todd!” I threw the car into gear and started speeding away.
    Geez, Louise! Slow down, will ya ?! You want to run over the milkman, too!
    Jack was right. I gritted my teeth and eased up on the gas.
    That’s more like it . . .
    I rolled down Larchmont, the only moving vehicle in the exclusive neighborhood—the oldest and cheapest car, too, given the late-model Mercedes, BMWs, and sports coups parked in the half-moon driveways. No two dwellings looked the same on Larchmont and none of the homes was built later than the 1920s—mainly because once the Great Depression hit, no one in Quindicott could afford to build so lavishly again. Even today, they were occupied by the wealthiest residents in the area—lawyers, doctors, entrepreneurs, deans from nearby St. Francis College, and the children and grandchildren of those who’d inherited fortunes.
    Despite the quiet luxury of manicured lawns and precisely pruned shrubbery, I sorely missed my Cranberry Street. The hustle and hum of life, albeit a hard-working one, was a much more appealing alternative to the stillness of this particular plot.
    A few minutes later, I spotted our destination. “That’s Miss Todd’s mansion, up ahead.” I nodded at the massive home on the high hill at the end of the development.
    Though everyone referred to the Todd place by the catch-all term mansion , a more accurate term was “Second Empire mansard-style Victorian.” (I’d picked up a few things about Victorian architecture from Fiona Finch, who ran the town’s only bed-and-breakfast with her husband, Barney.)
    Miss Todd’s Second Empire was nowhere near as cheery as
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