sailor who wanted to voice his opinion on everything. And that was assuming it was a human. Shayla’s comments on that had left me even more apprehensive. How could this be?

I’d managed to stick my nose into plenty of things where it didn’t belong. Maybe one of those was trying to contact my mother. Gramps always said I didn’t know when to leave well enough alone.

At least I didn’t have to worry about being alone with the ghostly presence. There were people tucked into every corner of the inn. I stretched out in a king-size bed— accompanied by Nancy and Marissa. Both of them had stayed on at the inn to help out. There were several others on chairs and cushions around the room. I could hardly reach the bed without stepping on someone.

Marissa sighed as we lay there, unable to sleep. “I know I should go home tomorrow, but I’m dreading it. You didn’t hear or see anything around or about my place, did you, Dae?”

“No. I’m sorry. Kevin and I were at the Duck Shoppes before we went to help Cailey with that accident. But you’re facing the sound—Gramps said our place was in good shape. Maybe yours is too.”

Nancy sighed too. “I’m not facing the sound. I hope I have something left to go home to.”

I was sure many others felt the same. Staying here at the Blue Whale for one more night put those realizations on hold until morning. But we would all have to face reality tomorrow.

I think, despite not believing it was possible, that I fell asleep. I woke up and looked at my watch—it was almost two thirty A.M. I’d been asleep for at least four hours!

I felt a little better, a little more clearheaded. I knew what I had to do—at least in regard to my father.

The ghostly presence? I lay quietly for about twenty minutes, waiting to see or hear something. There was nothing. Maybe my “ghost” had been nothing more than exhaustion and stress. Maybe I could even attribute what I’d seen to the weather, like the warning ghosts that everyone talked about. It might not have anything to do with the seance.

Sandi? Her death was a tragedy, and I wished I could’ve helped her. But I had to let it go. There was nothing I could do. Unfortunately, terrible things happen. I knew that better than most people, having grown up in the home of the Dare County Sheriff. Gramps had always been careful not to involve me too much, but I’d still heard bad things about our neighbors. I knew even Duck had problems.

Renewed by my four hours of sleep and a confidence born of believing I knew what to do next about each of my problems, I was suddenly hungry. My stomach was growling loudly. Nancy groaned next to me and turned over. I was embarrassed to think I might wake her with my internal noises. Marissa was gone—maybe she was restless too.

Carefully, I inched out of bed and across the old hardwood floor. It squeaked and complained under my weight in places—but that was the only unusual noise I heard. The sleeping crowd around me sighed and muttered but didn’t wake up.

I crept down the hall to the kitchen, hoping there was something light to eat in the fridge. I didn’t want a full meal, just something to tide me over until morning. I knew Nancy and Marissa would thank me for quieting my stomach.

I found some leftover pancakes from breakfast and ate them at the table in the kitchen that Kevin and I usually shared when I visited.

The old inn that had seen many disasters like this storm—and worse—seemed to sleep around me too. It sheltered all of us who weren’t very eager to face the next day and what it might bring. I sipped the last of the fresh milk and sat back in the chair, replete, and felt ready to go home and do whatever else needed to be done.

I let myself glance carefully around the dark kitchen, keeping an eye open for any spirit balls that might be lingering, Nothing. No weird sensations of static electricity, no oppressive, frightening feelings of someone just behind me.

Those scary sightings of spirit balls and hearing someone speaking to me that wasn’t there had probably been triggered by the storm, I decided. A big storm has some odd precursors to it. A doctor once explained that to me when I told him about my storm knee that could predict the weather.

The ghostly presence was nothing more than my old storm knee acting up. I indulged in a banana, put my plate and glass in the sink and headed back to my room for a few more hours of sleep.

I saw a flashlight beam headed toward the bar area and wondered who was up drinking at this time of the morning. Kevin had shooed all of the drinkers out of there last night with a warning about touching any more unopened bottles.  There’d been some grumbling, but the bar patrons had cleared out. I suspected one of the drinkers had probably come back for a late-night snack slightly different than mine.

But when I got to the bar, the room was empty, quiet. I was sure I’d seen a flashlight headed this way. Maybe whoever was holding it had changed their mind and gone back to bed. Which was where I was headed. I yawned and turned to leave.

It was then that I heard the chuckle. There was no other word for it—it was a chuckle. It seemed to come from behind the bar. I approached the long wood slab carefully, thinking the late-night drinker was hiding there. Probably David or Barker.

But as I reached the bar, a light that had nothing to do with any modern-day convenience like a flashlight bloomed in a strange iridescent way. I watched as the light coalesced into a form. And the form was chuckling.

“If this be yer rum, ye be cheated, girl.”

So much for believing my ghostly friend wasn’t real.

Chapter 15

The ghost, if that’s what it was, stood about six feet tall, had thick, shaggy black hair and a mustache. He wore a red coat and a tricorn hat.

Without really thinking, I remarked, “I know you! You’re Rafe Masterson, the pirate.”

He lifted a bottle, shaking out the lace at his wrist. “It’s about time. I thought I would have to introduce myself. You all but walked into me at that blasted archive of foolishness you call a museum. Why the blazes have you kept all that bilge?”

“If we hadn’t, I wouldn’t know who you are,” I reminded him. “I’ve seen your portrait a hundred times. You look exactly the same.”

“Ye see what ye wish.” He shrugged and poured rum into the glass on the bar. “I promise you, I don’t look at all like this fantasy you’ve created. A man doesn’t age well in the grave.”

I almost laughed. It struck me as funny that I was talking to a pirate ghost. Especially the ghost of this pirate—the scourge of Duck, the man whose curse still lived with us. The dread Rafe Masterson.

He drank the rum he’d poured and smacked his lips. “Almost like drinking mother’s milk. Why the blazes do ye water it down? In my day, men would string up a tavern keeper who served slop like this.”

“It’s not watered down,” I explained. “This is probably just different—more refined than what you’re used to.”

“Well, I don’t plan to be here long enough to learn the ins and outs of this godforsaken time.” He set the glass down on the bar with a decided thud. “What the hell do you want of me, girl? Why have you bothered my sleep?”

“Me?” I did laugh now. “You’ve been following me around. Why are you here?”

“Why? Because you called me. Why else would I be here?”

“I didn’t call you—I was calling my mother. Maybe you can leave now and get her for me.” Talking to a ghost wasn’t as hard as I’d expected. Or maybe I was dreaming. I couldn’t tell.

“Yer mum, huh? She must be related. That must mean you’re related, girl. What’s your name?”

“My name is Dae O’Donnell. I’m mayor of Duck, and I assure you, my mother wasn’t related to you.”

“O‘Donnell, eh?” He stroked his chin and peered off into the dark. “I knew an O’Donnell—Lewes O’Donnell. As fine a pirate as I ever sailed with. But no relation. What’s your grandmother’s maiden name?”

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