THE SATYR’S CURSE III: REDEMPTION
by Alexandrea Weis
Since returning from Fairview Plantation, Jazzmyn Livaudais
has noticed strange occurrences in her Garden District home. She attributes the
ghostly happenings to Julian Devereau.
Trapped in a world between death and life, Julian waits.
Jazzmyn is torn between her feelings for him, and her impending nuptials to her
temperamental chef, Kyle Baker.
But before she can consider Julian’s fate, she must deal
with a detective eager to solve the horrific murders of women that have plagued
New Orleans for decades. The detective suspects Julian is the killer, and his
frequent visits to The Sweet Note are putting everyone on edge.
With Julian’s time running out, Jazzmyn discovers there may
be another spirit hanging around her home. One who is out to settle an old score.
Will Jazzmyn rescue Julian from his self-imposed limbo? And
what will happen if he returns?
When one curse ends, another can begin. Beware The Satyr’s
Curse.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~
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Excerpt:
“Do you miss the demon, Jazzmyn?”
“He’s not a demon.” Jazzmyn carefully
weighed her words. “Do you think …? I keep wondering if he’s all right.”
Ms. Helen’s unsettling sigh carried
through the bedroom. “That satyr man has crossed over. He’s where he’s supposed
to be.”
“Is he?” Jazzmyn questioningly raised her
eyebrows.
“Do you know somethin’ I don’t, child?”
Jazzmyn motioned to the newest daisy
painted on the wall. “That just appeared last night.”
Ms. Helen inspected the flower. “I
thought you said you painted them daisies.”
“No, that’s what I told Kyle to keep him
from asking too many questions. I can’t paint. They just appeared.” Jazzmyn
rubbed her hands together. “They’re a lot like the ones Julian put in Jackie’s
bedroom at Fairview Plantation. If I didn’t know better, I’d say they’re
exactly like the ones he painted.”
Ms. Helen spun around. Her coffee-colored
skin paled.
“That’s not all. Last night, Kyle found
Odette’s painting hanging sideways on the mantle. This morning, the coffeemaker
had been turned on and filled with coffee before either one of us got up.”
Ms. Helen’s brown eyes grew in size. “Do
you think it’s the demon?”
“Who else could it be?” Jazzmyn gestured
to the flower on the wall. “He had a fondness for painting, loved coffee before
he was cursed, and who else would turn Odette’s picture on its side like that?”
“What you’re suggestin’ would mean he’s
finding a way back to you.”
“But when I came back from Fairview, you
said he was trapped. How can he come back?”
“I’m not sure. I’ve never seen such a
thing.” Ms. Helen knitted her brow. “You told me he was the one who threw the
pot on the fire, not you. And you never spoke the words banishing him.”
“Yes, the curse was lifted, and he
disappeared into a ball of green light after the pot exploded.” Jazzmyn tossed
up a hand. “So?”
“If the ritual wasn’t completed, that
might allow him to move back and forth between this world and the place where
he’s trapped,” Ms. Helen warned in a dark voice.
Jazzmyn shivered as if enveloped by an
icy breeze. “Which means he might be trying to get back to me.” She faced her
daughter, sitting in her crib. “Back to Jackie.”
“Julian’s paid his debt to your family
and to those he wronged, but you didn’t force him out of your life, Jazzmyn.
Julian sent himself away. That tie to you and his daughter may have left a door
open somewhere.”
“What door?”
Ms. Helen waved her hand high in the air.
“The door that lies between this world and the next. A portal through which
spirits can cross over.”
“Because I didn’t complete the ritual,
he’s able to come back and forth through this door?” Jazzmyn gripped the
railing of Jackie’s pink crib. “Are you sure about this?”
Ms. Helen put a reassuring her hand on
Jazzmyn’s shoulder. “He’s bound to you and his daughter. It’s those ties that
probably kept him from crossing over completely.”
“Is Julian a ghost, haunting my house?”
“Ghosts are dead people trapped on this
earth, but your demon ain’t dead. Far from it.”
Jazzmyn was overcome by a wave of
dizziness as what Ms. Helen was proposing sunk in. “Are you saying he’s alive,
physically, somewhere?”
“If you’d performed the ritual like Ms.
Evangeline instructed, your satyr man would have been sent to his rest. His
physical body would have died. But you didn’t perform the ritual, at least not
all of it.”
Jazzmyn glared at the woman, dumbfounded.
“You never said anything about his being alive and trapped. I thought he was a
spirit, and no longer living.”
Ms. Helen sighed and looked Jazzmyn up
and down. “So do you want to get rid of your satyr man for good?”
Jazzmyn said nothing but glanced down at
her baby in the crib.
“What about your crazy chef?” Ms. Helen pressed.
“Kyle plans on marryin’ you in October. You got any idea what you’re gonna tell
him?”
Jazzmyn sagged against the crib, unable
to bear the weight of her emotions. “I don’t know what I feel for either man
right now.”
“You’re gonna have to decide, Jazzmyn.
Sooner than later, you’ll have to let one man go.”
About the
Author:
From New Orleans, Alexandrea Weis was
raised in the motion picture industry and began writing stories at the age of
eight. In college, she studied nursing and went on to teach at a local
university. After several years in the medical field, she decided to pick up
the pen once again and began her first novel, TO MY SENSES. Since that time,
she has published many novels. Infusing the rich tapestry of her hometown into
her award-winning books, she believes that creating vivid characters makes a
story memorable.
Alexandrea Weis is also a
certified/permitted wildlife rehabber with the Louisiana Wildlife and
Fisheries. When she is not writing, she rescues orphaned and injured wildlife.
She is married and lives in New Orleans.
Happy Reading Everyone!
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