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Cricket Sawyer
Purple Feather Murders
Lavender Lust
Mysterious lavender haze, which lingers around each victim, seems only
visible to Heather Highmark. The haze defines each person. The fledgling
physic doesn’t yet trust her powers, but someone with a strong lavender aura
is murdering members of the Recreation League one person at a time.
Heather must discover who the lavender feather murderer is before she
strikes again and she loses the two people closest to her in the world. Her
brother Roy and his friend, her lover Langdon Cruise, could be next. Her
only clue is the face in the lavender haze and time is running out.
She is a deadly femme fatale out for revenge against real or perceived
wrongs, and no one is safe.
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Length: 77,000 words
"I’m sure you all know someone who has an office or business persona
and a personal face they use when they are socializing. Take this a step
farther as Elinore Muich does when she becomes Lavender Paige, and you have
a deadly femme fatale out for revenge. If you get in her way she’ll chew you
up and spit your out, going over, under, around, or through you to achieve
her goal. Thus my story Lavender Lust
is born." ~Cricket~ |
Larger Cover
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Cover Art by
Stroud Digitals
LAVENDER LUST
Purple Feather Murders
ISBN: 1-60601-136-7
E-book $4.99

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STORY EXCERPT
Elinore Muich pulled her car
around into the alley beside The Wizard’s Bookstore. She
watched the front entrance until the light over the door was
extinguished, indicating the book store was closed for the
night. The storm had left wide swatches of the city without
power. Fortunately, The Wizard’s was spared, but many of the
streets took on an eerie glow where only those with private
generators had minimal power to remain open.
Everyone was told to stay put
since stray power poles and trees twisted, downed, or in some
way compromised by the storm, made travel hazardous. Elinore
wasn’t worried about storm-weakened poles or trees. She was
worried about a strong-willed young woman who claimed to see
things future and past. She was worried about a young woman
whose powers could wreak havoc with Lavender Paige’s existence
and plans. Elinore was worried because this young woman named
Heather could come between Lavender’s revenge, Lavender’s
justice, and she simply could not allow that to happen.
Those people Lavender targeted
had first targeted her in one way or another. There was no
recourse but to snuff their miserable lights out. How dare they
treat her like a piece of meat, an object of their animal lust?
Vulgar men, vindictive women. The thoughts angered her as she
slid from behind the steering wheel, popping the black
telescoping handle of the black and white umbrella open as she
held it out the door.
The wind tugged at the large
Saks 5th Avenue black and white umbrella and the
stinging rain tried to sneak under it to sully her white London
Fog raincoat. Quickly she pulled herself out of the car, tugged
up the collar of her raincoat to prevent the torrents of bitter
rain from soaking into her.
Elinore knocked at the back
door as Heather had instructed her to do. She felt an almost
clandestine twinge, as though she had suddenly become Mata
Hari or some other spy-worthy woman with a mission. Could
she steel her mind to project only what she willed Heather
Highmark to read from her tarot cards? She wondered. The
girl was an amateur, her powers untested. It wasn’t like she’d
solved some immense mass-murderer’s crime. Elinore had
researched the newspaper archives to find out just how powerful
Heather’s psychic abilities were in helping the police solve
crimes. So far, as she could ascertain, her help had been
minimal to this point. But Elinore also remembered the
admonition from her mentor: “Keep your enemies close, Elinore,
so you will always know what they’re up to,” he had said.
It was impossible to know at
this point if Heather was an enemy. It was true she was helping
Chief Grueder, that bumbling keystone cop, with his
investigation of the—what was it the papers had dubbed them?—ah
yes, ‘Purple Feather Murders’. The hilarity of the press’
unimaginative name, using the killer’s signature purple feather
as the name for the murders, it was so like their narrow minded
small town reportage.
“Ms. Muich, please come in,”
Heather said as she opened the door. The wind swooshed in rain
and a few stray scraps of paper danced across the floor. “Some
storm we had, wasn’t it?” she said.
Elinore twirled her umbrella
to shake the rain from it before closing it. “Bad luck, having
an open umbrella inside a building,” she said by way of
explanation, seeing Heather’s quizzical expression over the
flourish and ritual with the umbrella.
“I’ve heard that, but I’m not
superstitious,” she said, leading the way through the storage
area at the back of the store. “You can hang your coat here if
you wish.” She pointed to an old-fashioned coat tree and handed
Elinore a hanger. She waited while Elinore slipped out of the
white coat. She could see envy in Heather’s eyes as she
carefully draped the coat over the hanger and hung it on the
coat tree. You’ll never go to
London
and buy your coat direct from there, working in a dingy little
bookstore like this, doing tarot card readings during your
off-time,
she wanted to tell her, but she didn’t dare. She didn’t presume
a friendship, especially not of that caliber, where none
existed. Instead she smiled demurely, silently following Heather
to her tarot reading area.
“Ever since I was a child
visiting my grandparents’ farm in the summer, I’ve loved storms.
They energize me,” Heather said, motioning to Elinore to be
seated at the table. “My grandfather used to sit on the front
porch and cheer on the storms, his German expletives punctuating
the air after each clap of thunder.”
“Every child should have such
fun in a storm. There would no longer be fear, only respect for
Mother Nature’s power,” Elinore said.
There was an air of
camaraderie between them, which seemed to feed on the
electrically charged atmosphere still contained in the stormy
night as Heather spread the silk cloth over the small table.
“I see you’ve been involved
with the police department’s investigation of those murders here
lately,” Elinore said.
“A little. Chief Grueder is
hoping I’ll be able to ‘see’ something at the scene of the
crimes, but I’m afraid my powers are not that strong,” Heather
said, shuffling the cards.
“What does he think you can
see?” she asked more for herself, wanting to know what Heather
might discover about the murders. ‘Keep your enemies close,”
her mentor’s voice echoed again in her mind’s ear.
“I’m not sure. A lead, the
killer’s face, any shred that might get him a place to start
with this case.”
“According to the papers, they
haven’t clue one.”
“Other than the purple
feather, not a thing that they are releasing to the public
anyway, which of course includes me,” she said. “Do you wish to
cut the cards? Then we can begin your reading.”
“I’m sorry. I don’t mean to
keep you. It’s just such a bizarre thing to be happening in our
quiet little town. It fascinates me.” Elinore’s hand hovered
over the cards. She must pull her thoughts to something else,
something safe to project into the selection of the cards.
“With your left hand, and cut
them to the left,” Heather instructed her.
Elinore thought of the
Cummings Account, the edge their bid needed to beat out the
competition. She pulled on the image until Dominique Cummings
and his starched wife, Erlene, appeared before her with the
campaign logo behind them. Then slowly, deliberately, she cut
the tarot card deck in the prescribed manner. If the cards had
the power to know, and if Heather was skilled enough to discern
their meaning, the Cummings account answers would be what she
would read, and nothing about the purple feather murders would
surface.
Heather proceeded to lay out
the cards in the Celtic Cross formation. She had told Elinore on
the previous reading that she felt most comfortable with that
particular arrangement. “As for taking my time, that’s why I’m
here. Relaxing through conversation actually helps focus the
reading,” she said.
The reading took over
forty-five minutes as Heather read and explained the
significance of the various cards. She said she was having
difficulty with some of the reverses as they seemed totally
unrelated to the others. “But as you think about them in the
broader context of your own life at the moment, you may
interpret a meaning in them yourself, something different, one
that I do not see,” she said with a frustrated edge to her
voice.
“Actually, you’ve given me
some very valuable insights into my current project. It really
is insignificant what those other signs may be,” Elinore said,
feeling a clawing at the base of her spine. The reversals, the
anger and resentment she felt, the fools who saw her as the
prostitute Lavender Paige, their desires—hard and bold; they
wanted satisfaction. Oh yes, Elinore could read between the
lines of the moon, the fool, and the rest. She didn’t need or
want Heather to interpret those.
Heather cleared the deck,
shuffling the cards one last time before she replaced them in
the cloth and wrapped them gently, nearly lovingly, Elinore
thought as she pulled several twenty-dollar bills from her
wallet.
“Oh no,” Heather protested. “I
only charge twenty dollars a reading.”
“I insist,” Elinore said,
pushing sixty dollars into Heather’s hand. “You have to eat too,
you know. And you have provided me with a great direction I need
to travel.”
She watched Heather blush.
My, what an innocent, she thought.
If she sensed anything at all about me, she isn’t revealing it.
Heather thanked Elinore and
slipped the money into the leather pouch on the counter.
“Have you had dinner yet?”
Elinore asked.
“No, I haven’t. I usually go
home as Mother has a meal ready for me to reheat.”
“Why not let me buy you dinner
and you can reheat your mother’s cooking tomorrow? It will save
her the work of preparing one meal anyway.”
When Heather hesitated Elinore
added, “I hate storms. I hate eating alone, and I really would
enjoy the pleasure of getting to know you better. I could pick
your brains about some obscure titles I’ve been trying to find.
What do you say?”
“I think I would enjoy that,”
Heather said finally. “Let me finish up front and I’ll be
ready.”
Heather disappeared beyond the
beaded curtain doorway and Elinore slid into her raincoat. She
wished she had bought the black fedora with the white hatband.
It would have complemented the outfit. She felt so James Bondish
watching her plan to move in on Heather—getting her to relax and
become a friend. She would need her to get to Roy. Yes Roy…let’s
not forget he was her real mission. She would dare anyone to
come between her and Roy Highmark. There was a man who was not a
filthy pig like the rest of them. That goal, and keeping Heather
from helping with the murder investigation, were her two new
priorities and, it would seem, get one and she’d have them both.
You devious, clever woman you, she said to herself,
giving Heather a broad smile as she followed her out the back
door. Elinore popped the button on the telescoping umbrella and
sheltered them both from the driving rain. Their feet made
little split-splat noises in the puddle alleyway.
“Let’s take my car. I’ll bring
you back to pick up yours later,” Elinore suggested between
claps of thunder as the sky was illuminated with bursts of
fireworks–like lightening.
* * * *
Obviously removing him from
the mangled car proceeded without his help or knowledge, since
he found himself on a stretcher in an ambulance with sirens
blaring. He felt the lurching, slowing, careening around corners
as he struggled to open his eyes. Were ambulance drivers ex
NASCAR racers? As he was jostled to and fro, he groaned. Nothing
like being injured further in an ambulance, he thought.
“There are so many downed
trees and power lines it’s difficult to navigate through them,”
the attendant taking his vital signs explained as they traveled.
At least Langdon assumed that
was what he was doing. He wanted to shout at him— meanwhile
you’re going to drive one of my broken ribs into my lungs or
snap my neck and completely paralyze me. Slow down, he
thought he managed to shout through clenched teeth.
Apparently the thought didn’t
form the words. All he heard was the groan forced from him as
they bounced in and out of a pothole, or over something;
whatever it was he felt violated, abused, and oh so tired. The
welcome blackness encircled him again and he let it transport
him into that place beyond pain.
“Sir, sir,” the voice said
beyond the darkness. As soon as you can call me by name, I’ll
open my eyes. I’ll talk to you then, he thought as he
drifted away from the voice and the jolting, jarring sensation
of the ambulance and its screeching siren on its race to the
hospital.
Langdon felt a jolt as the
stretcher was removed from the ambulance and hit the concrete.
There was a rush of orderlies surrounding the cart. Brightly lit
corridors whizzed by as he squinted his eyes to the pain and the
brightness of his surroundings. He could hear doors
automatically bounce open ahead of them. He could smell the
sterile antiseptic odor of the hospital and ether—how come he
could distinguish ether?
“Crushed leg, possible
fractured ribs, internal injuries, slight concussion,” he heard
talk around him, and about him. He knew the routine. How many
victims had he seen escorted through emergency channels in the
same manner? “Accident. Tree, power poles. No idea how long he
was trapped. Dehydration.”
All words he was familiar
with, all words he found it hard to associate with himself—but
the pain was real and it was everywhere and every doorway they
passed through delivered a pair of excruciating jolts as gurney
wheels clunked over the track way between the doors.
At last they stopped.
“Transfer on three,” he heard. He braced himself for the lift
and thud of reposition as his body was lifted by sheet and
tossed to the slab of examination table. He felt like a numbered
piece of meat. Weren’t any of these people ever patients? Didn’t
they know what it felt like to be pulled, pushed, prodded,
lifted, poked and plopped? He groaned again as the air was
jarred out of his lungs from the impact of the maneuver.
His clothes were cut away.
Wait, wait! Calvin Kline’s clothes, hullo? he tried to say
but the effort tired him. Who will pay for replacing them?
he wondered, thinking of his meager policeman’s salary. Never
mind, he was a homicide detective. No, correct that. Lead
homicide detective; never been shot in the line of duty, never
hospitalized in the line of duty—until now. The pain became red
flashes in his brain as IVs were attached, x-rays ordered,
pain killers–did someone say painkillers?
Some hours later, bounced once
again from stretcher gurney to hospital bed, the painkillers had
taken blissful effect. His ribs were taped and leg splinted
until the swelling went down.
“Is there someone we can call
for you? Someone who will notice you aren’t home?”
“As a matter-of-fact my boss,
Chief Grueder. I’m his lead homicide detective. He might notice
if I don’t show up by six,” he managed out of the fog of drugs
meant to relieve the pain from his multiple fractures. They
thickened his tongue and made it hard for him to talk. His mind
seemed to float in and out of a haze. Was he too drugged?
The cautious thought clawed at his insides.
“What time is it?”
“Noon,” she said.
“You’ve already contacted my
boss and cohorts then? There is no one else to notify.”
The redhead nodded. She looked
like she was about to ask him something else, but then seemed to
change her mind. She turned to leave and said over her shoulder,
“If you need anything, just ring. We’re open all night just like
K-Mart” Then she laughed.
Langdon tried to take stock of
himself, but it was hardly fair given the medication he was
being fed intravenously, sedated nearly to ecstasy. How could a
thunder storm…? Then he remembered—the wind, the howling wind,
the roaring freight-train wind. How, he wondered, had
his city faired? No one was talking about the storm. He
hadn’t overheard any conversations. Sleep came. He was awakened
by the sounds of breakfast carts clinking, clanging and
squeaking breakfast to the patients. His stomach reminded him he
hadn’t eaten since…he couldn’t remember. He strained to see if
there was a clock somewhere. Where was
his watch?
“Good morning.” An
over-cheerful, over-zealous, pudgy, black woman zipped in with
his breakfast tray, placed it on his tray table and turned to
zip out.
“Wait. What time is it?” he
asked.
“A bright and sunny five
forty-five a.m.,” she chirped. She disappeared like she had
floated in on a treadmill and was merely a robot used to deliver
meals.
Langdon strained to reach for
the phone on the nightstand. He had to call the chief. Someone
else would have to watch Heather until he got his walking cast
on. Heather. Had the storm done anything to her or her
bookstore? She was certainly in the storm’s path. Why hadn’t
there been any warning about the severity of the storm? Or had
he missed it?
He dialed the Chief’s cell
phone number; he knew Chief Grueder would be on his way to
police headquarters if he wasn’t already there.
“You what? You’re where? Oh,
that’s right they called earlier—How long?” Chief Grueder nearly
shouted into his ear.
Langdon explained his
predicament to the chief as best he could, promising he would
let him know how long before he could resume investigating the
purple feather murders. “I can do desk work once I get the cast
on, I would imagine,” he said, feeling guilty about being laid
up when they were already so short-handed.
“It’s not like you planned
this, it’s not like you tried to get yourself half killed on
purpose,” Chief Grueder said. “We’ll have to pull some doubles
until you come back on board, that’s all.”
“What does this do to the tail
for Heather and her brother?” Langdon asked, knowing full well
they didn’t have enough manpower before—nothing had changed
that, they still didn’t.
There was a long nervous
silence. Chief Grueder cleared his throat twice and excused
himself while someone had him sign papers and another person
argued over an assignment. The man said he had already put in
fifty-six hours this week—“how could all this be happening
nearly before my day started?” Langdon heard him say to someone
else in the room. “I really didn’t need to hear Langdon would be
out of commission for any length of time.” The background
chatter carried as well as the Chief’s voice over the phone.
Langdon felt even worse now
that the chief assured him they would somehow manage without him
until he healed some. They would not, however, be tailing the
Highmark’s or anyone else from the recreation league. “There
simply is no man power,” Grueder said. Langdon promised to call
him as soon as the doctor told him what, when, where, how long
before he’d be back.
”Hey good buddy, I’m afraid
I’m out of commission for a while. Busted leg, couple ribs,
won’t know exactly how extensive until I see the doc,”
“You sure do it up good when
you do it,” Roy teased.
“I have a favor to ask you,”
Langdon paused wondering how much he needed or dared confide to
Roy.
“Shoot, if I can I will, you
know that.” Roy’s response was without hesitation or
qualification.
“It’s Heather. Well Heather
and you. What we’ve been able to figure out so far is, this
serial killer is targeting rec league players, specifically—your
or our, team. This means that Heather, by association, and
because she’s helping the police, is also in danger.”
“Holy smokes. I see where
you’re coming from.”
“I was assigned to tail her,
but of course, now that’s impossible.”
“Don’t worry, I’ll keep a
close eye on her.”
Langdon breathed a little
easier. Now if he enlisted Heather to keep an eye on her
brother… He called Heather and asked her to watch Roy’s back.
“I’ve been thinking the same
things and talked Sandy into keeping a close eye on Roy,”
Heather said. “You can bet I will, too. This may not be
anything, but what about you?”
“What do you mean? I’m going
to be out of commission until I get my ribs healed some. Can’t
use crutches right now and it’s too soon to put this leg in a
walking cast.”
“No, I meant, who’s going to
watch your back? You’re part of the Rec. League too, you know.”
Langdon had thought about
that, but given his job, he already had a partner and other cops
watching his back. “Don’t worry about me. I’ll be fine.”
“You’re even more vulnerable
right now, though,” she said and then added, “Be careful,”
before she hung up.
She cared—she actually cared.
Maybe there was hope for him yet. He had to get out of the
hospital. He had to get back on his feet. Heather needed to be
guarded and he was just the guy to do it. He cursed the pain in
his ribs as he stretched to replace the phone. A new
determination stiffened his spine. He would protect Heather one
way or another.
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Copyright © 2008
All rights reserved, Siren-BookStrand, Inc.
Cannot be reproduced in whole or in part in any form without expressly permitted to do so in writing from the
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