Southern Haunts (26 page)

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Authors: Stuart Jaffe

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Private Investigators, #Supernatural, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Religion & Spirituality, #Occult, #Ghosts & Haunted Houses, #North Carolina, #Paranormal, #Ghosts, #brothel, #urban fantasy, #Mystery, #prohibition

BOOK: Southern Haunts
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Thinking ill of them didn’t change matters, though. He had broken his promise to her, and he had destroyed Milton Hull before she could enact her attack on Tucker and the rest of the Hull family. Seeing Ms. High Heels made him think that Mother Hope wouldn’t forget about any of it. He would have to be careful.

When he sat next to Sandra in the waiting room, she raised a concerned look. “What’s the matter?”

“I’ll tell you later. Nothing to do about it now, anyway.”

Drummond soared in laughing. “It’s done! It’s done! Admittedly, premature and the little squirt’s got to be taken care of by the doctors and watched carefully, but Shawnee had her baby. Healthy and all is well.”

Sandra said, “Well, is it a boy or a girl?”

“No, no. I’m no spoiler. Besides, that’s a father’s honor. Wayne’s coming down the hall now, so you just wait.”

Indeed, moments later, Wayne entered the waiting room. Max found it difficult to connect the man he saw with the man who, only hours earlier, had been controlled by an evil force. Now, all that stood before Max and Sandra was a proud father.

“It’s a boy,” Wayne said.

Everyone rose to their feet to congratulate him and smile and laugh. None of it felt forced. The room filled with genuine care.

Wayne continued, “He’s good and healthy. Little but they said he’ll be fine. Probably be stuck in here for another month or so, but he’ll be okay.”

“That’s wonderful,” Max said. “Does he have name?”

With an odd, sheepish look, Wayne said, “Is your ghost in here?”

Sandra said, “You mean Drummond? Yes, he’s here.”

“Well, if it’s okay with you all, Shawnee and I would like to name our boy Maxwell Drummond Darian.”

Drummond’s joyful eruption trumped the exultations from the rest of the room.

“I guess that’s a
yes
,” Wayne said.

Because the baby was premature, Max and Sandra understood they would not get to see him right away. They congratulated Wayne once more and walked to their car. Drummond couldn’t be stopped by the staff, so he floated through the walls and spent much of the next day cooing over little Maxwell Drummond.

As Max and Sandra neared their car, he put his arm around her. “We don’t always get to win this big. We better savor this one.”

Sandra agreed. “I have to ask, though, is this enough for you? Having a baby with your name? It might be the closest you ever get to having a son.”

Max took her chin in his hand and gently kissed her lips. “This is all I need or want.”

“You sure?”

“Tell you what — let’s go home and not make a baby.”

They stood in the parking lot, holding each other and gazing into each other’s eyes.

 

Afterword

 

When I started this series, I thought these Afterword sections would be a chance to jot down a few historical facts about the book and leave it at that. I suspected there would a few readers who found these tidbits interesting and so I kept the whole thing short and sweet. Well, it turns out that a lot of you folks really like this part. It’s one of the top comments I get in fan mail. So, while I still believe in keeping an Afterword short, I will endeavor to give you guys a little more this time around.

To start with, let me hit the big points. The brothel on Elizabeth Street and the twelve days of scandal surrounding it are both real. The Winston-Salem Journal editor, Santford Martin, who went at this story hard and perhaps fabricated a few details which turned out to scare the higher-ups in this city was a real man. In fact, all the historical details of the scandal are true. Including that the entire thing started because Grace Renner decided to shoplift a hat instead of paying for it. An oddity in itself since she should have had no trouble paying when one considers the lucrative business she and her sister ran. The details of the house are mostly accurate. I had the fortunate opportunity to privately tour the place. However, I changed a few minor details to aid the flow of the story, and most importantly, to the best of my knowledge, there is no tunnel beneath the houses on Elizabeth Street. There is a blue house two doors down, but that’s the only real detail about the Darian’s home in this book.

Also true is the entire history of the Casper Company, including the way Prohibition destroyed the company. John L. Casper’s mysterious behavior toward the end of his life and his eventually demise in Mexico is also true. For those of you who want an even clearer picture of what the blue bottles are like, google Casper Whiskey Bottles Images and you should find plenty of Casper Blue bottles to gaze upon. And if you're really into it all, there are bottle collectors who sell them.

Finally, the tragedy of the Winston reservoir cracking open and flooding the northern section of the city is also true. There are some startling pictures of the aftermath which can be found in newspaper archives and online photo histories of the area. These photos show in stark black and white the devastation all that water caused.

All other characters, including Floyd Johnson, Freddie Robertson, and Milton Hull are fictions of my imagination.

 

Waiting for the next Max Porter book hurts!

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Duncan Rose, sleight-of-hand magician and card cheat, accidently slips back in time to 1934. Swindling his way through this bizarre new world, he searches for a doorway home. Until a ruthless mobster takes notice - a man who wants to use time travel for his own purposes.

To get home, Duncan will need all his card skills, but more importantly, he'll need to trust those around him or risk losing everything.

 

REAL MAGIC is an exciting time travel fantasy packed with real card tricks designed specifically for this story by renowned card magician, Cameron Francis.

 

Get your copy today and happy reading!

 

The Links:

 

AMAZON

 

AMAZON UK

 

Acknowledgements

 

Some books require the help of only a few people; some require the help of many. All require thanks from the author, for no book is created entirely alone. Special thanks this time around go to Alex Matsuro for her books on the paranormal and her help in understanding how real paranormal investigators operate. I took a lot of liberties with the information she provided, so for those of you who know about these things, any part of the way Libby and her team operate that seems wrong is my fault alone. Thanks to my Launch Team for all their help and support. Extra thanks to Lisa Gall and Lyn Findlay for their proofreading skills. Also, a big thanks, a huge thanks, a magnificent-sized thanks to Kimberly Gordon for allowing me to walk through her home and take pictures in an attempt to get the details of the brothel correct. This novel quite literally would not have happened without her generosity. And to be clear, the woman that owns the brothel house in this book is in no way meant to be a reflection upon her. Only the house is real, not the characters. Finally, thanks to my wife and son who make this adventure worthwhile. And, of course, thanks to you folks, my readers. I’ve said it before, and I mean it: if you keep reading Max Porter books, I’ll keep writing them. Without you, none of this really matters.

 About the Author

Stuart Jaffe is the author of
 
The Max Porter Paranormal-Mysteries, The Malja Chronicles,
 
the
 
Gillian Boone
 
novels,
 
The Bluesman
 
series,
 
Real Magic, After The Crash,
 
and much more. His short stories have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies. For those who keep count, the latest animal listing is as follows: one dog, four cats, one albino corn snake, one Brazilian black tarantula, three aquatic turtles, seven chickens, and a horse. Thankfully, the chickens and the horse do not live inside the house.

Copyright

Southern Haunts
 is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

SOUTHERN HAUNTS

  All rights reserved.

Copyright © 2015 by Stuart Jaffe

Cover art by Jeff Dekal

First Edition: December, 2015

Table of Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Afterword

Copyright

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