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Amanda Stevens - The Abandoned

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Amanda Stevens The Abandoned
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The Abandoned

The Graveyard Queen Series

Amanda Stevens

There are rules for dealing with ghosts Too bad Ree Hutchins doesnt know them - photo 1


There are rules for dealing with ghosts. Too bad Ree Hutchins doesnt know them.

When her favorite patient at a private mental hospital passes away, psychology student Ree Hutchins mourns the elderly womans death. But more unsettling is her growing suspicion that something unnatural is shadowing her.

Amateur ghost hunter Hayden Priest believes Ree is being haunted. Even Amelia Gray, known in Charleston as The Graveyard Queen, senses a gathering darkness. Driven by a force she doesnt understand, Ree is compelled to uncover an old secret and put abandoned souls to restbefore she is locked away forever.

An ebook exclusive prequel to The Graveyard Queen series.


Dear Reader,

Please allow me to introduce Miss Amelia Gray, aka The Graveyard Queen. Shes a taphophile, a blogger and a cemetery restorer who sees ghosts. Hungry ghosts. Greedy, grasping, ravenous ghosts. In order to protect herself from these netherworld parasites, Amelia has always followed her father rules.

BUTa haunted police detective has entered her world and his ghosts have tried to make contact. Another has coerced her into a deadly (!) alliance and shes just discovered a whole new realm of nasty specters called the Others. Oh, and a deranged taphophile is using gravestone symbolism to target victims.

And its not even Tuesday yet.

You, too, can enter Amelias misty world via The Graveyard Queen Series The Restorer (May 2011), The Kingdom (November 2011) and The Prophet (May 2012)available wherever MIRA Books are sold.

For more mysterious goings-on, please arrange a viewing at www.thegraveyardqueen.com and/or www.amandastevens.com.

Happy restorations!

Amanda Stevens

CONTENTS
VIOLET

Ree Hutchins was dozing at the old womans bedside, a dog-eared copy of The Call of the Wild open on her lap, when Violet Tisdale passed away.

Exhausted from her hectic schedule, Ree had fallen asleep reading from the leather-bound edition Miss Violet always kept on her nightstand. Ree often wondered how many times the old woman had heard Bucks story during her confinement at the Milton H. Farrante Psychiatric Hospital. She was well into her eighties and had been institutionalized for as long as anyone could remember. Other than her clothing and toiletries, the book was the only personal item in her quarters, although the inscription in the front read: To my daughter, Ilsa, on the occasion of her tenth birthday. June 3, 1915.

No doubt the tattered volume was a hand-me-down from some former staff member or another patient perhaps, because no one could remember the last time Miss Violet had a visitor.

Ree shivered awake as a chill seeped into the room. The fluorescent reading lamp over her shoulder flickered and she would later remember that the clock on the nightstand had stopped precisely at 8:30. Twilight had fallen, which meant shed been asleep for close to an hour. Miss Violet lay propped against her pillows, eyes open but unseeing, lips parted but forever silent. She hadnt been gone long. Her wrist was still warm where Ree felt for a pulse.

Closing the book, Ree set it aside and rose to summon a nurse. Trudy McIntyre came at once with a stethoscope and mirror, and after a cursory examination, left to notify the proper authorities. Ree didnt know what else to do so she followed her out.

What about next of kin?

Trudy was an efficient woman with a careworn face and weary eyes. Shed been at the hospital for a very long time. There is no next of kin that I know of. I expect Dr. Farrante will handle the arrangements himself. He always does in cases like this.

At the mere mention of his name, Rees heart fluttered. Dr. Nicholas Farrante was out of her league and much too old for any serious romantic notions, but that didnt stop her and every other female student in the Emerson University psych department from hanging on his every word. Not that Ree wouldnt have found Experimental Psychology and Human Aging fascinating regardless of the professor, but Dr. Farrante brought so much to the classroom beyond his charm and charisma. The niche his family had carved in the field of developmental psychology was astounding, going all the way back to his grandfather, Dr. Milton H. Farrante, who had been a student of Wilhelm Wundt, the father of modern psychology.

Milton had opened the facility in the early 1900s and for nearly a century, it had remained one of the preeminent private psychiatric hospitals in the country. Ree was lucky to have been accepted as a volunteer because even the unpaid positions were quickly snapped up, usually by other grad students whose families had a lot more clout than hers.

Following Trudy to her desk, Ree battled an inexplicable urge to glance over her shoulder. Can we at least check the files? There must be someone out there who would want to know about Miss Violet.

Trudy looked up with a heavy sigh. Honey, Ive been here for over twenty-five years, and in all that time, not a single, solitary soul has ever paid that old woman a visit. Im sure her familys all gone by now. Or else they just dont care. Anyway, its out of my hands. As I said, Dr. Farrante will handle the arrangements. Hes always taken good care of Miss Violet.

Ree couldnt argue with that. Miss Violets private suitebedroom, bath and sitting areawas located in the south wing of the hospital, a quiet, sunny area with peaceful garden views. Ree could imagine Miss Violet sitting there year after year, watching the seasons pass by. Waiting for spring. Waiting for the violets outside her window to bloom.

Trudy picked up a thick packet from her desk and handed it to Ree. Here. If you want to make yourself useful, take this up to Dr. Farrantes office. Im sure hes gone for the night so just leave it on his assistants desk.

Ree glanced back down the hallway. What about Miss Violet?

What about her?

It just seems so sad, leaving her all alone like that.

Trudys face softened and she gave Rees arm a motherly pat. Youve done all you can for her. More than anyone else has bothered in years. Now its time to let her go.

She was right, of course, and Ree honestly didnt know why the death had hit her so hard. Shed only been working there a couple of months and at Miss Violets age, her passing wasnt unexpected. Given her circumstances, some would call it a blessing. She was free now.

But Ree couldnt shake the lingering pall as she climbed the stairs to Dr. Farrantes second-floor office. The swish of her sneakers sounded like whispers and she found herself turning yet again to check the hallway behind her.

The outer office door was open and she took a quick peek inside before entering. The spacious suite was much as she would have imaginedsubdued and tasteful, from the soft brown leather furniture to the thick Oriental rugs on the teak floors. She walked across the room and placed the package squarely in the center of the desk so the assistant would see it first thing when she arrived the next morning.

It wasnt until Ree turned to leave that she realized the set of double doors leading into Dr. Farrantes office was also open, though only a crack. The sound of his voice stopped her cold and she paused, not meaning to eavesdrop so much as she wanted to savor the timbre of that rich baritone.

Then she heard a second voice and as the conversation continued and Dr. Farrantes anger became apparent, she was too afraid to move, too worried that the telltale squeak of a loose floorboard might give her presence away.

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