The Curse of Hollister House
A Cat in the Attic Mystery
by
Kathi Daley
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright 2019 by Katherine Daley
Version 1.0
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
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
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Preview
Chapter 1
Sunday
When I was a little girl, I would sit with my cat high up in the attic window overlooking the lake, dreaming the dreams only little girls can imagine. Id plot adventures and weave enchanted tales as the seasons turned and the years unwound. It was a magical time, filled with possibilities that existed only in my mind. Id imagined fairies in the forest, mermaids in the lake, and gnomes in the garden. As a child sitting in that window, nothing had seemed impossible, but as a broken adult sitting in the same window a quarter century later, I had to admit, if only to myself, that somewhere along the way, the magic Id once believed in, had died along with my dreams.
Callie, are you up there in the attic? Great-Aunt Gracie called up the stairs.
Yes, Aunt Gracie, I called back.
Is Alastair up there as well?
I glanced at the black cat sitting in the window next to me. He is.
Im going to run to the market to pick up something for dinner. Is there something youd prefer?
Id lost my appetite about the same time Id lost my reason for living, but I supposed I did have to eat. Anything is fine.
Okay, dear. I wont be long.
I pulled the cat into my lap as Gracie drove away. I ran my fingers through his long black fur as I turned slightly and looked around the room, filled with boxes and discarded furniture from generations of Hollisters. As the last Hollister daughter, I knew the house, lakefront property, private dock, and groundskeepers cabin would one day be mine, but to be perfectly honest, I wasnt sure I wanted it.
Setting the cat on the floor, I unfolded myself from the window. I wrote my nameCalliope Rose Collinsin the dust covering one of the tables that had been stored by some previous resident. I remembered doing the same thing as a child living in this house after my parents died, and somehow, in that moment, I felt connected to that child and the dreams shed once held in a way I hadnt in a very long time. Id done my best to go after those dreams and bring my fantasies into reality. But along the way, Id learned that what we plan for and what we are destined to have dont always line up.
Alastair darted under a sheet that was draped across an old sofa. I supposed if you were a cat, the attic was filled with all sorts of magical places to explore. I could hear him swatting at something beneath the covering as I wandered around the large space, opening boxes and sifting through the contents inside. When I was a child, the boxes and their contents had seemed like treasures. The old clothes left by ancestors long gone had provided hours of entertainment as I tried on each piece and let my imagination take me where it might. The old top hat had become a magicians hat, the costume jewelry a queens dowry, and the yellowed wedding dress a ball gown. The books stored in the boxes had provided hours of escape, the old art supplies a creative outlet, and the old piano, which some ancestor had schlepped all the way up to the attic before I was even born, a window to my soul.
Id found a safe haven in this attic. Not only had I found solace during a time when little could comfort me, but Id also found meaning and passion for the one thing that had pierced my grief and mattered. Pausing, I turned and looked around the room, searching for the piano. I remembered the first time Id stumbled across the fascinating device that would deliver wonderful music with the touch of a finger. Id been enchanted from the first keystroke and had begged Gracie to teach me to play. And she had. Shed taught me the notes and how to read music, but it was the hours spent alone with the melodies that existed only in my imagination that cemented a love affair that I was sure would last a lifetime. I looked down at my hands. Using my right forefinger, I traced the long scar that ran down my left arm from elbow to wrist. I tried to move fingers that, at times, refused to cooperate. Everyone said Id been lucky. Everyone said that it could have been so much worse. Everyone said that having a life without music was better than having no life at all.
They were wrong.
I swallowed hard and forced myself to move on. While the attic was dusty, crowded, and unorganized, I did appreciate that everyone that had lived in the house had left something of themselves behind. Even Id left boxes of old toys and outgrown clothing when Id moved away. I wondered why Aunt Gracie hadnt just taken all this junk to the secondhand store, but I supposed if she did, some future resident of the house would be robbed of the opportunity to play dress up and spin tales of salty pirates and kidnapped princesses the way I had.
Longing pierced my heart as I opened a box of photos. I picked up an old Polaroid of my parents on their wedding day. They looked so happy, so optimistic about the future. My mother and I looked a lot alike. Dark hair, dark eyes, a petite frame barely reaching five feet in height. My father, in contrast, had been tall and blond. His blue eyes sparkled with happiness as he stared back at the photographer. I knew Id joined the couple and created a family just ten months after the photo had been taken, and four years after that, the people I most depended on would be forever ripped from my life.
Setting the box of photos aside, I lifted the sheet in search of the cat. Alastair, I called.
Meow, he responded from across the room.
I turned and tried to home in on his exact location. There were a lot of objects for something as small as a cat to hide behind, so I started across the attic in the general direction of the meow. I supposed if I didnt find him by the time Gracie returned, Id just leave the door ajar and hed find his own way out. I maneuvered carefully through sheet-covered furniture and dust-covered boxes, jumping involuntarily as I bumped into the dressmakers mannequin. I remember how terrified Id been of the lifelike shape when Id first seen it. As a four-year-old, Id been sure the form came to life when no one was looking. Gracie had been patient with me, taking her time to convince me that the stuffed dressmakers tool wasnt real. It had taken several months, but eventually, I stopped screaming every time I saw the dang thing.
Aunt Gracie had always had a lot of patience. After my parents died, I felt so alone in the world, but Gracie had taken her time with me. Shed tried very hard to make me feel at home in my new surroundings, but I never really had until shed introduced me to the attic and the magic that could be found in the little room beneath the rafters. Old houses, with their history, their lifelines, and their curses fascinated me. Despite the tragedy that seemed to be connected to my own family home, I loved the idea of longevity, and places where multiple generations shared a single space.
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