Island of Bones (Haunted Florida Book 1) Read online




  A

  HAUNTED FLORIDA

  NOVEL

  GABY TRIANA

  Copyright © 2018 Gaby Triana

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

  ISBN: 9781983063329 (Paperback Edition)

  ASIN: B07D7RQ4K2 (eBook Edition)

  Characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by author.

  Book cover and interior design by Curtis Sponsler

  Printed and bound in the United States of America

  First printing June 2018

  Published by Alienhead Press

  Miami, FL 33186

  Visit Gaby Triana at www.gabytriana.com

  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

  Book 2 - River of Ghosts

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Also by Gaby Triana

  Author Links

  ONE

  1951

  A weathered old officer from the Key West Police Department stood on my front porch, cigarette clenched between his teeth. “Leanne Drudge?”

  “Yes?” I pushed the screen door open, wondering what this was about.

  “I’m Officer Brady. This here’s Officer Smith.” He gestured to a younger man in uniform standing by the patrol car on the street.

  “What can I do for you gentlemen?” The shrimp in garlic sauce would burn on the stove if he didn’t make this quick.

  “Your husband’s been in a fatal boating accident.” He checked the papers in his hand. “Treasure hunting off the coast of Cuba. On behalf of Monroe County PD, we’re very sorry for your loss. We’ll need you to come down to the station tomorrow. After you’ve had a moment to process, of course.”

  My chest heaved, and my mind erupted into a thousand questions, but I refused to believe him. I gripped the screen door with both hands to keep from falling. “I…I don’t understand.”

  “Your husband’s dead, Mrs. Drudge.” He spoke with the sensitivity of saw grass.

  Yes, I got that part. I just couldn’t understand how.

  Fatal boating accident? Bill was the best boat captain in town. He navigated the seas like he did his wife—carefully. I wasn’t the easiest person to deal with, but he listened for the right breezes, searched good and proper for storm fronts, knew when to avoid thick clouds, when to spearhead right through them. He wouldn’t have had a boating accident any more than he’d have accidentally forgotten to make my heart and body long for him every day and night he was away.

  As the officers waited, an early morning conversation from two days ago haunted me. “Today’s the day, Leanne, baby. I can feel it!” Bill had said, excited about his boating trip. He’d been studying the precise location of a lost Spanish galleon, Nuestra Señora del Pilar, for the last seven years. It was his chance to become more than just a lobster fisherman.

  But something wasn’t right. I felt it in my soul—a darkness.

  I hadn’t known how to tell him. He wouldn’t have listened anyway. “Now, Leanne…” he would’ve said, “this isn’t the time for your mumbo jumbo.”

  My intuition. It’d always been right in the past, and I should’ve stopped him from going. Now I looked at Officer Brady without words, and it all made sense.

  “I can see you’re in shock, Mrs. Drudge. I’ll send someone else over, one of the ladies from the station, or—”

  “I’m fine.” My hand shook on the screen door. My world would never be the same again. What about our dreams? What about Mariel asleep in her crib? What was I supposed to do now?

  Officer Brady glanced at the other patrolman by the car who smiled and nodded at him, a silent idea communicating between them. He turned back to me. “In that case, uh…” He removed his cap, pressed it against his chest. Rise of his left eyebrow. Taunting. Pushing limits. “Mind if we come in?”

  I gaped at his lecherous brown eyes roving over me. Would the people of this town stop at nothing to judge me? Suddenly, I feared his authority with Bill nowhere near to save me. “No. Thank you for coming.” Quickly, I closed the screen and locked the door.

  For a long time, I stood there, staring at the door, feeling my world collapse around me. Then, I willed my feet to move and wandered through the house in a fog. I reached my bedroom and the bed’s edge, sat staring at my reflection while the baby slept. He couldn’t have perished. Not in a boating accident.

  No, no. This was wrong, this was impossible.

  I stood and moved to the kitchen to pour a shot of whiskey, then took it outside into my garden by the inlet. Downing the shot, I stared at the water. It took a moment, but the wave rising behind my chest finally spilled over. It rose until the tears formed, until I looked at the moon sculpture Bill had carved for me, thought I would die if I didn’t let out the pain.

  With a wail, I cursed at God. Told him it was no wonder I never believed in him in the first place. What kind of merciful god would do such a thing to a young woman with a baby? A good god would make sure my husband came home. And if he couldn’t find that treasure he’d been searching for all his life, then he’d at least trap a few lobster to help pay the bills.

  There was no God, just like there was no truth.

  And now, there was nothing worth living for either.

  Only my baby.

  In the coming weeks, Bill’s death was a well-publicized “fact” in Key West, even though there wasn’t a scrap of evidence. But women like me, we don’t take things at face value. We look past the smirks of the fact-people—the reporters, the police. We search beyond the veil. I’d even say we “know” things other people can’t explain.

  It wasn’t no boating accident.

  We never saw him again, Mariel and me, and the months dragged by with achingly slow precision. My one-year-old quickly forgot the spark of her father’s laugh. She stopped glancing at the door in the evenings. And because my life had been cursed the day Bill disappeared at sea, I even lost my family home.

  As a widowed mother with no income of her own, I was forced to sell the only tangible thing I had—Casa de los Cayos—the twenty-eight-year-old house where I’d grown up, married my husband, made Mariel out of love. I lost it to Susannah McCardle, of all people.

  My neighbor, Susannah, had wanted my house from the moment her daughter, Violet, got married last year. A dozen times she’d asked me when I’d planned to move. She wanted to expand, move her daughter in next door, she told me. Make a family compound of the two homes.

  Never was always my reply. This was my house, and my mama’s before me.

  Susannah would scoff and head indoors but always come back out for a smoke. My house needed paint, she’d argue. It needed TLC, a man to care for it whereas that lazy SO
B of mine had done nothing but boat and chase gold, and now look at where that had left me. I should just sell it and move to a cheaper key, she’d tried convincing me.

  I held on as long as I could—another year. Finally, I couldn’t make payments no more. Only so many jars of key lime marmalade sold before the bank account ran dry. Susannah had won in the end. Now, her son-in-law who cut coquina for a living and her hateful bitch daughter, who did nothing but sit on her ass, would live in my house.

  The shame hurt so bad, it burned a hole in my chest.

  With Mariel in my arms, I crossed the gravel front yard, transporting the last of my belongings, stuffing as much as I could into the old Ford. The little girl from down the street watched me from her cross-legged position on the curb.

  From her porch, Susannah watched with that over-plucked high eyebrow of hers. “Told you he would bite the dust out there, leave you like this.” She sucked on her cigarette. “Probably ran into pirates or something.”

  “Shut up, Susannah. Nobody asked you.”

  “It’s better this way, darlin’.” She blew smoke into the late summer air and picked tobacco fragments from her teeth.

  Meanwhile I tried to make the bicycle I’d bought a few years ago with the money I’d earned waitressing fit in the back. It wouldn’t. “You want this?” I asked the little girl witnessing my shame. She stood and gaped, hardly believing I was offering up such a good thing. The bright blue bike was too big for her, but hell, she’d grow into it. Nodding, she took it off my hands.

  The mosaic table Bill made me wouldn’t fit into the truck either. Even Mariel tried telling me this with her big green eyes. Mama? Let it go.

  How could I? He’d meticulously placed each piece of glass with his loving hands. I rested my head on the truck door, wanting to sob pathetically, but I quickly collected myself. I would not let Susannah have the glory of seeing me this way. I’d make this table fit in the car if it killed me.

  “It’s not going to fit, Leanne. Just leave the damn table behind.”

  “I’ll decide what doesn’t fit!” I spit. If I could’ve cast a swarm of flying daggers at her face, I’d have done it.

  Damn it, the table wouldn’t fit.

  From her front porch, Susannah snickered.

  Maybe after I got my life together in Plantation Key, I could save money, return to Key West, and buy back my house. “Don’t get too comfortable,” I told her, reluctantly leaving the mosaic table on the sidewalk. “I’ll be back for it soon.”

  “Over my dead body, you will…”

  Panting in the August heat, I paused to look at her. I absorbed her ugliness and toxic energy. The image would never be erased from my memory as long as I lived. Queen Victorious was most pleased now that this simple woman was not only heartbroken, but emotionally decimated as well. Why did she and everybody else hate me so? Because I didn’t go to church? Because I felt more spiritual sitting in my herb garden than this town would ever be kneeling in the pews?

  Over my dead body…

  Yes. Maybe it would take that. But her dead body wasn’t up to me. My mother had taught me that we didn’t cause harm on others. Karma would take care of that. But I was also tired of living by the rules and getting screwed in the end. Tired of watching others’ ships come in when mine was still lost at sea.

  I closed my eyes and visualized Susannah McCardle’s dead body, rotting, festering in the summer heat. Flies flitting into her mouth laying eggs. The police department knocking on her door. My house on the market again. Me earning it back. I could bend my mind around these visions, but I’d never been very good at manifesting dreams, or else my husband would still be here. I could only hope that Mariel would learn my mother and grandmother’s ways better than I ever could.

  Susannah tapped the porch railing. “Hello, Earth to Leanne.” Her crooked smile matched her flyaway, graying hair.

  Violet stepped onto the porch in curlers and short shorts, tapping her pack of cigarettes. “What’s going on?”

  “Leanne’s finally leaving.”

  “About time.”

  I wouldn’t give them the satisfaction of a reply. I plopped into the grass to pet our black kitty. “We can’t take you with us, Luna,” I whispered. “Apartments don’t allow magical creatures.” I smiled on the verge of tears. Mariel reached out to Luna, too.

  I closed my eyes to visualize.

  I imagined no happiness—zero, not a single scrap of it—ever entering Casa de los Cayos again as long as I wasn’t there to make it happen it. Mariel clung to me, so still, eyes wide. Baby girl knew what I was up to, already learning, showing respect for the craft. Wondering what sorcery Mama was conjuring up this time.

  “May this house and all who live in it suffer.” My voice shook. “For without us, it is no longer a home.”

  Blowing out slowly, I envisioned my charged breath traveling, crossing the lawn and curling around Susannah, Violet, and the entire McCardle Family. It snaked over to my property and enveloped that too. As I belted in Mariel and stepped into the driver’s seat, cranking on the engine, I stared at Susannah one last time. It was hard to ignore the victory in her eyes.

  My lovely pink and white home, like the inside of a conch shell, seemed to sag just then. It called to me, begged me not to go. Not to worry, I would make things right, even if it took a lifetime. I would be back, whatever it took.

  “So mote it be,” I whispered then drove off down Overseas Highway.

  TWO

  Present Day

  Miles away, Nana fell into a coma, as my boyfriend got down on one knee.

  Not to propose riverside at the Museum of Science in Boston, no. That would’ve been cute and romantic, considering it was where Zachary and I had first met two years ago this very night. It was to pick up my IMAX ticket that had fallen out of my pocket, and the look on his face said it all.

  “Ellie, we need to talk.”

  Ugh, famous last words.

  I’d worried about this happening so much over the last month, sometimes I felt I’d caused it. Now here we were, staring at the St. Charles River, and I could almost envision everything he was about to say like a script in a bad, made-for-TV movie.

  “This has nothing to do with you,” he assured me. “It’s me. I think…I think I need to be alone for a while.” He wasn’t sure what he needed, what he wanted, he added. Some time off would help him figure it all out.

  I sat there avoiding the deep hazel eyes I’d never get lost in again.

  For two years, I’d given my energy to Zachary when I could’ve spent that precious time with my ailing grandmother. Two years wasted. When he was done with his monologue, he asked if we could stay friends, and I gave him the middle finger.

  That night at my grandmother’s bedside, I deleted him off all social media, because who needed Zachary Fucking Bowman condescendingly telling me I’d always be in his heart? Meanwhile he commented on Amada Payne’s posts at least eighteen times a day. Didn’t know what he needed, my ass.

  I took Nana’s wrinkled, lukewarm hand and pressed my cheek to it. “You were right. You’re always right, Nana.” She didn’t move or acknowledge me.

  Nana always said I’d know when the right man came along. I’d know because he’d adore me the way my grandfather adored her. He’d kiss me passionately before leaving home. There’d be a sparkle to his eye. I was lucky if I could get Zachary to put down his phone during dinner, much less look at me in any special way.

  “But no offense, Nana…that kind of love doesn’t exist anymore.”

  I should’ve been here when she slipped away. I should’ve listened to her mutter stories about the old days, about that house in Key West, about a mural designed in ocean colors, and an island I’d only seen in one faded photo. A house that’d haunted her dreams until a few days ago when she’d whispered its name in her sleep—Casa de los Cayos.

  Instead, no thanks to Zachary’s sorry ass, I hadn’t been at her bedside to
say goodbye. I never saw those green eyes again. Nana died in her sleep two weeks later.

  When my mother told me that my grandmother had left me a small sum of money, enough to keep me alive a couple of months, I quit my job at the middle school two weeks before classes began. My principal wanted to know where she was going to find a remedial math teacher at this late hour, but I just couldn’t deal.

  I needed to get over losing Nana, Zachary, my worthless life. To get over how stupid and blind I’d been for two years. I needed a reboot on life, and I was pretty sure how I wanted to start.

  Sitting at my mother’s kitchen table, I stared at the brown box containing Nana’s cremated remains. Inside the box wasn’t just my grandmother, but every story she’d ever told me, every memory she’d ever recalled.

  “What do we do with all her stuff in storage?” I asked.

  Mom unfolded her hands, waved them around. “Keep whatever we want. The rest we sell or give away. She didn’t have much, Ellie.” She refolded her hands.

  “I know.” Nana had worked most of her life. First as a receptionist, then as a lunch lady at my mom’s middle school in Key Largo, then they moved to Fort Lauderdale, then Savannah, then honestly, I had no idea how they ended up in Boston.

  But it was clear she was never the same after my grandfather died, because my mother always talked about growing up with a sad woman who’d always longed for her childhood home. For an idyllic life she’d had with my boat captain grandfather before he disappeared. When I was little, I used to dream about this old life of hers—literally dream of colored tiles and glossy palm fronds, of drinking lemonade on a wooden porch, of a black cat whose name I never knew. I always woke up feeling like I’d actually been there.

  “All she ever wanted was to return to Key West.” My mother scoffed. “For all the good the island did her.”

  I stared at the brown box. “Then, let’s take her back.”

  “I don’t want to,” Mom said, point blank. “She had so many bad memories there, I just can’t.”