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Red Water, Shadows of Camelot Crossing
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Red Water
Shadows of Camelot Crossing
LISA COURTAWAY
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
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Coming Soon!
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Red Water
A Haunting in Stillwater
Some secrets insist on coming to light…
Moving is never easy, especially during a pandemic. But the Weizak family plans to make the best of their transition to Camelot Crossing in the sleepy college town of Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Sure, their quirky new Tudor home is enormous and strangely designed, more like a curious castle than a cozy shelter. But it shouldn’t be that hard to settle in and feel safe.
If only the long vacant house…and its creepy nightly visitor…would cooperate.
What starts with an odd message from their Alexa and mysterious footsteps in the hallway soon evolves into a bizarre haunting that has the entire Weizak family convinced their home is slowly turning against them. Ignoring the unexplained happenings only seems to make things worse.
The house—or its unseen inhabitant—will not rest any longer. No, it will go to any lengths necessary to expose the horrible event that happened decades earlier on its lonely, rain-soaked grounds. But will it drive the Weizaks away before it’s too late?
A new old-fashioned ghost story set in a small college town… Red Water - Shadows of Camelot Crossing will keep you guessing until the very end.
Copyright © 2021 by Lisa Courtaway
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 written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, media, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Editing and Formatting by Three Point Author Services
www.threepointauthorservices.com
Cover Design by Miblart
www.miblart.com
Dedicated to the town of Stillwater, and in loving memory of
Sam Childers, Sr. and C. Kirk.
Her world changed in a flash
She could no longer grow
She was ageless and wandering in a foreign space
Watching life move on
Over time she learned to find her voice again
She would use that voice to make sure her story was told
One
The house leered at them, uninviting under the thick morning clouds. House was too basic a word to describe the massive Tudor. It could legitimately be called a mansion. The Weizaks weren't the mansion type.
The heavy air added to the menacing spirit of the expansive grounds as the family of four exited their SUV to take in their new "forever home." A blanket of dew, remnants of a chilly night, clung to everything and was trapped by the canopy of trees, creating an oppressive atmosphere as the temperature rose higher with each passing minute. Tiny buds of color could be glimpsed dotting the gray forest and sprouting in the brown grass, new life rushing forward to cast out winter's deadening chill.
They all had different opinions regarding the move. Dad, for reasons only a father could dream up, had always longed to live in a quiet, small town, one that still had a forward-thinking sensibility. A college town like rural Stillwater, Oklahoma would be perfect. Home of the OSU Cowboys, Pistol Pete, and numerous quaint traditions, Stillwater had one foot in the past while the other was running toward the future. Saturday tailgating and homecoming parades in the fall—Go, team! This from a man who was far more interested in tech stocks than any team sports, but who only ever strove to make his entire family happy.
Their experience in Tempe, home of the ASU Sun Devils, hadn’t come near the college-town life he had mapped out in budget charts, investment reports, and his dream of the ideal life. Arizona hadn't hit the mark. Just before the twins started kindergarten, the family left the crowded city and searing heat, seeking a slower pace in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Dad's career required the family be uprooted a few times as he sought a balance of work and home life that suited him and his family. The result was a maddening few years in which multiple moves took them from Oklahoma, to Utah, back to Oklahoma and then to Colorado. Dad's fervent wish was that Stillwater would strike the perfect chord, and they could remain and thrive in the tranquil town.
Mom was overjoyed to be leaving the mid-century modern house that never quite worked for them behind in Colorado. Like the previous localities the Weizaks had called home over the years, the Centennial State never tooted Mom's horn. It seemed she didn't fit in anywhere besides her home state of Oklahoma, because they always bounced back to her birthplace. It was as if a magnet twitched inside her soul, always drawing her to return to the humid summers and unpredictable springs. While she never dreamed she'd be back in the town of her alma mater, she had loved her time in Stillwater during her college days, and anything had to be better than Colorado. She never denied the beauty of the mountains; she just hated snow. Tornado Alley did experience the occasional villainous winter storm, but she appreciated the state's tendency to shut down, allowing her to admire the beauty from the safety and comfort of home. Snow days were an anomaly in Colorado. She missed the surprise awakenings, when work and school were put on hold, and complained loudly as she white-knuckled her way to those obligations on the snow-packed Colorado roads in the frigid cold.
Holden could only be pulled away from his Alienware by his iPhone, and in turn could be torn from his iPhone only when absolutely required. So the teen wasn't too bummed by the move. He acted perturbed because garnering sympathy via guilt trips had proven very lucrative over the years, especially when big nuisances were involved, like moving … again. He had mastered the art of profiting from parental penitence. The time and energy involved in moving was brutal, no doubt, but he had never bonded with any new friends in the other towns they had lived. However, he had remained tight with the group he attended elementary school with during the family's longest stint in Tulsa. (Yes, there were two moves to Tulsa. The second was after a disagreeable, but thankfully brief, call-it-a-layover in Salt Lake City, which sent them fleeing back to Tulsa in a matter of months.)
For Holden, every member of his Tulsa crew was never further than a click away. Technology allowed him to hang with his true friends anytime, from any place. And the Weizaks’ new house, while beyond weird, had the perfect setup for his gaming gear. At least it appeared to, in the well-lit, fish-eye lens pictures of the real estate listing. He knew a lot about housing markets and bu
ying decisions by osmosis, it seemed. What a useless mind-suck for a teen.
Hazel, Holden's younger sister—by four minutes—was the most distraught at yet another upheaval. She definitely had the most to lose. Like her best friend in the whole world, Miren Anthony, and the hottest guy ever, Brock Lansing, just to name two things. Okay, so she and Brock weren't an official couple, but there was chemistry there that no one would deny. She was beyond certain that she and Miren would have a lifelong friendship, undying through the twists and turns lives navigate after being chewed up and spit out of the mouth of an award-winning, but terribly haunted, school district. Go, fend for yourselves, young minds; you will thank us forever for preparing you for a successful life! Or so implied the propaganda. At least their two-year stretch in Littleton had brought her and Miren together, at the right moment in time, the right space in their being.
Dipping her reflective, wire-rimmed glasses (the only ones she'd found that didn't get tangled in her long, honey-colored hair) below her eyes, revealing ice-blue orbs that always held a hint of mischief in them, she judgmentally surveyed her new home. Her Labrador pup, Coraline, followed so closely, the dog's shadow was one with her owner's. Hazel approached her twin as he walked over a sketchy wooden bridge, shaking the rickety rail, brown paint flecks falling like snow as he did.
"So, Dad—a moat? Don't see these much on HGTV," said Holden. Directing his speech to Hazel, he spoke from the side of his mouth, his perfect, white teeth, catching the sunlight as it broke free of the morning clouds. "We just need three billy goats to complete this look. I'm pretty sure there's already a hungry troll under here somewhere." He stomped his foot, reanimating the brown dust in a plume. His long hair fell onto Hazel's face as he leaned over the railing. He should have gotten that haircut back in February. If only they had known.
Hazel rolled her eyes at her brother's childish antics. "Be careful; you could be mistaken for one of those goats. You're long overdue for a shave, and you're kind of smelly," she chided as she caught sight of the length of Holden's shadow. It reached far beyond hers. Their shadowy selves were distorted by two years’ worth of fallen leaves compressed into the dry creek bed below, but they couldn't hide the drastic and ever-changing disparity in their sizes. The differences between the two siblings seemed to grow as quickly as Holden did. Even biology played a part in distancing the once thick-as-thieves relationship the two had since they shared a crib. Their connection was never distant but was constantly evolving, and it had grown more evident that each of them had other people they chose more consistently to share their time with. Maybe when they took driver's education together, hopefully soon, the kinship would be revived as they shared the high school experience in a new town. There was no telling how long social distancing would remain gospel to Mom and Dad. Who knew when they'd have the opportunity to meet new people?
"Uh, yeah, it's a drainage thing, I think. There's a seasonal waterfall off the back of the property, just beyond the gazebo," Dad answered, as he struggled with the keys to the giant door.
"Come on, you guys, I'll give you the grand tour!" Mom waved impatiently, urging the teens to get a move on.
A mosquito pierced Hazel's calf with its microscopic lance. Her hand came away tacky with sweat as she eyeballed her kill lying in her palm. Spring in Oklahoma—cue the seasonal waterfall, a flying, blood-sucking bug's dream. As she strode to the front door, in no discernible rush, she realized the constant jingle of dog-tag-on-collar was not close enough to flat tire her well-worn Chucks. Coraline had not blindly followed. Her pup hadn't run off after an alien form of wildlife she had never before encountered, nor was she distracted by the onslaught of new everything assaulting her sensitive snout. Instead, the dog sat bunched with tension, crouched on the ridiculous bridge, her expressive, hazy, gilded eyes laser focused on the front door. A thick tendril of stiffened fur rose along her spine.
"Come on, girl, we don't wanna miss the grand tour." Hazel spoke to the dog in a tone that while lighthearted, carried a tinge of snark. Coraline ignored her person's call as if the command had gone unheard.
"Coraline, come," Hazel said firmly. The dog's movement was barely perceivable as she inched cautiously toward Hazel. Growing inpatient, as much with the oppressive air as with the dog, Hazel approached and gave the pup a nudge. Impatience yielded to alarm as the docile dog snapped at her with a snarl.
“Coraline, what's gotten into you? I know it's creepy, but it's home now.” Taking the dog by the collar, she dragged her to the front porch.
Dad was able to get the key to work and stood at the door that had a barred hatch in place of a peephole. With a slight puffing of his chest, pride being the exhale, he announced ceremoniously, "Welcome to Weizak Manor!" He swung the door inward, ignoring the screech of metal-on-metal as the oxidized hinges struggled to function after their lengthy dormancy.
Phineas, Mom's spoiled Chihuahua, breached the threshold first, wedging himself between Mom's feet, somehow not tripping her. Mom and Dad, then Holden followed behind. Hazel didn't relax her grip on Coraline's collar as she made eye contact with the pup, silently willing her to do the walking thing on her own. The dog made no indication that entering the house voluntarily was in the cards. Lurching forward, with a tug of the collar, Hazel nearly collided with the door as it shut in her face.
The absurd hatch opened, revealing Holden's dramatically shifty green eyes. "Halt, who goes there?" he hurled the question out the over-sized opening.
"Your mom. Let me in, now!"
"Shots fired," he spoke as he closed the latch to the peephole and opened the door. "Hate to throw shade, but Weizak Manner is too extravagant for this crib. ’Ye Olde Weizak Inn' seems more appropriate. Who designed this place, Shrek? It's a bloody trip back in time, m'lady," he finished in an amazingly realistic cockney accent.
"Yeah, not so sure I get the hype." She pushed past her brother, stifling an abrupt giggle. The medieval character of the house's exterior was mimicked in the dungeon-like entryway. Sounds bounced off the stone floors and a massive staircase, echoing through Gothic, arched doorways down hallways that branched off from the preposterous foyer. The chandelier had most definitely been smuggled out of an ancient castle nestled someplace across the pond, near a foggy bog. Its heavy iron chain held a ring of faux candles. Very mid-fifteenth century chic.
Mom was already lost within the walls of the house, a flurry of excited energy. "You've got to come see this kitchen! Double ovens, Haze! Double ovens!"
Hazel set out with an air of one touring a historic landmark, not of one exploring her own home. Who in the 1980s had decided to build a house in such odd form? She followed the sounds reverberating beyond the dining room and found herself in a short hallway lined with leaded glass cabinets. Wispy gray filaments spun by spiders, hopefully long gone, seemed to appear out of nowhere, and softly tickled her face as she pressed on. "Mom, where are you? This place is whack."
As she turned corner, she was face to—well, shoulders—with Holden. "Go to the light, Carol Ann," he joked.
"Only if you aren't there," she said, skirting around him to enter the kitchen. Thankfully, this room was a bit more updated than the Dickensian kitchen she had pictured in her mind. There was no open fire with a pig on a spit, no bundles of drying herbs hanging from the beams. But it was enormous, with enough space to cook for an army, and featured an overbearing island in the middle that could seat at least six. Despite the room’s size, it had a coziness that the other rooms so far had not.
"What do you think of that butler's pantry?" her mom inquired as she sidestepped Coraline, the dog rushing to the window in a huff. Beyond the picture window, which provided natural light for the dim room, the pup spotted motion and would not deny herself the opportunity to boast her protective bark.
"Quiet, Coraline," Hazel admonished, as she approached the window to see what stirred the dog's instinct. At the garden's edge, descending into the thick brush, was a flock of wild turkeys.
"Thanksgi
ving's going to be fresh," Holden remarked.
The view from the window left little doubt as to why Dad had been drawn to this place. A swimming pool stretched just off the expansive, stone patio. Although still covered by a thick canvas tarp, whose green hue was almost indiscernible under the thick blanket of leaves, it was easy to envision the inviting water that lay beneath. The encircling trees fed a sense of utter isolation, as if they had landed on an island, and what lay beyond was uncharted territory. The garden would need some work and the gazebo needed a fresh coat of paint. The list of projects warranted by this new acquisition seemed endless. No doubt Dad had the logistics carefully plotted on a spreadsheet somewhere on his hard drive.
"Wait till you see the laundry room!" Mom raved. "Spoiler alert … it isn't in the kitchen!" she said with a youthful squeal. She couldn't resist taking a jab at the vastly different home they left behind in Colorado. In the two years they inhabited the solid, but small house, not a day passed that she hadn't complained about the washer and dryer being in the kitchen, as well as the tiny bathrooms and almost nonexistent closets. The pendulum swung in the opposite direction now. She could never complain about anything being too small in this house.