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  Edge of the Shadow

  The Wisdom Court Series

  Book One

  by

  Yvonne Montgomery

  Published by ePublishing Works!

  www.epublishingworks.com

  ISBN: 978-1-61417-645-9

  By payment of required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this eBook. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented without the express written permission of copyright owner.

  Please Note

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  The reverse engineering, uploading, and/or distributing of this eBook via the internet or via any other means without the permission of the copyright owner is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author's rights is appreciated.

  Copyright ©2014 by Yvonne Montgomery. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.

  Cover and eBook design by eBook Prep www.ebookprep.com

  Acknowledgments

  My deepest appreciation to Shane M. Ewegen for his immaculate editing skills and ongoing support.

  Special thanks go to Carol Sullivan and the WaterCourse Writers Group.

  I am grateful to the careful readings and suggestions of the following people: Elizabeth Cox, Kay Bergstrom, Gwen Schuster-Haynes, as well as Margot Rounds and Carol Caverly.

  My gratitude to Misty K. Ewegen for help navigating computer issues as well as her literary sensibilities, and to Bob Ewegen for always having my back, and for his acute editorial assessment.

  My thanks to the Boulder Chautauqua Society librarians for their help.

  Thanks to Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers, always a source of information and support.

  Many thanks to Nina Paules and Brian Paules of eBook Prep and ePublishing Works for their help in entering the world of e-publishing.

  This book has had a strange evolution over quite a long time, and I may have forgotten to acknowledge others who helped along the way. Please forgive any oversights, for they are unintentional.

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Acknowledgments

  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

  Meet the Author

  Chapter 1

  "Mistletoe to break the lock." The woman seated at the small table sprinkled leaves into the shallow bowl next to the candle illuminating the room.

  The windows at her back were closed and curtained but the flame fluttered, deepening the red of her upswept hair and gleaming along the silver threads in her robe. Her gaze darted toward the gloom in the corners as she reached into another bag.

  "I call upon the spirits." Spiky thistle leaves fell to the pottery surface. Groping inside a leather pouch she pulled out dry needles. They dropped from her hand as she whispered, "Yew to raise the dead."

  A gauzy sack yielded graying fronds. "Balm of Gilead, manifest the one I seek."

  After a glance down at the ancient book open across her lap she murmured, "Protection born of amaranth. And borage for courage," she added under her breath, releasing the last bits into the container.

  Shadows stirred along the wall as she twisted the candle from the saucer and held it to the herbal mixture, taking care to push her flowing sleeve away from the dish. Pungent smoke drifted upward as she replaced the taper.

  A breath of air touched her and she and turned, half-glimpsing motion but unable to find its source. Again the flame wobbled, and behind her the curtain billowed upward. The border of the coarsely woven material brushed the wick as it fell back into place.

  A tiny spark gnawed along the threads until it blazed.

  * * *

  Andrea Bellamy steered her overloaded Toyota past the wrought-iron fence where a plaque was attached to the gatepost. Wisdom Court was etched in gothic letters.

  The arrow-tipped palings restrained lilacs and forsythia bushes screening the courtyard formed by three houses. Behind them great slabs of reddish sandstone thrust from the mountainside toward blue sky.

  Andrea turned off the engine. Here would be the start of her new life. For the first time since her daughter's birth, she was on her own. For an entire year she would work at becoming a painter. That dream had seen her through the dark days following her husband's death, and had kept her going when her job as a forensic artist at the Tacoma Sheriff's Department became hard to stomach.

  Now her challenge would be to answer the questions haunting her sleep since her acceptance at Wisdom Court. What if she didn't have real talent? Was it too late to develop her skills? Hastily she dug into the handbag on the seat beside her, pulling out the dog-eared letter she'd received from Caldicott Wyntham four months earlier.

  ...You have been chosen to receive a Wyntham Grant from the Wisdom Court Foundation. The grant goes to noteworthy women artists and scholars who have not yet gained the recognition of their peers. Several years ago I purchased one of your paintings, "Between Worlds" and it has sparked my imagination many times since. Your work deserves a greater audience, and it is my hope that the year in Boulder can help you gain it.

  "It will." Andrea whispered the words like a mantra. "It has to." Her living expenses were assured. Art supplies would be paid for and she'd been promised a studio.

  A bird trilled nearby and Andrea glanced up, looking past the rearview mirror. No need to remind herself of the laugh lines at the corners of her eyes, or the silver in her chestnut hair. Forty-three can't be too old for me to change my destiny, she told herself. I won't let it be.

  The car door creaked open and she scooted off the shabby upholstery. Every muscle in her body protested as she tugged at her sweater and tried to dust off her jeans.

  The breeze was crisp with pine and cool on her skin. Still ahead lay meeting the other associates living at Wisdom Court. She pushed a hand through her hair, wishing she'd done more than wash her face at the last gas station. I'll make a great impression, she thought. Not that anyone was around to impress. The courtyard was deserted and quiet, except for a rippling fountain at its center.

  Andrea approached the middle building, a tall old farmhouse with a vine-covered front porch, dodging the water pooling like liquid footprints across worn cobblestones. She climbed the steps, took a deep breath and reached for the doorbell. Her hand was shaking. Andrea made a face and pushed the button. After a minute she knocked firmly, and the door swung open.

  She peered inside. In the foyer a staircase climbed to an open landing on the second floor. Light from large windows cast shadows of the railings onto the oaken floor.

  An indescribable od
or reached her nose and she sneezed. Venturing inside, she called, "Hello?" No response.

  Where was everybody? Her ears caught a fragment of sound and she pursued it through an arched doorway. The air was thicker here, the sounds more distinct. She walked down the narrow hallway past a gallery of framed portrait photographs nearly covering the grass-green wallpaper.

  Voices came from an open doorway ahead and Andrea stopped beside it. "How could you have had an open flame so near the curtains?" exclaimed one, and a woman sputtered in apology.

  "'Would-haves and could-haves are broken paving stones on the road to what is,'" was the brusque reply. "Mary Tolliver Bell, eighteen thirty-seven to eighteen ninety-two."

  Andrea choked back a laugh. She'd caught sight of three women seated across the room when a russet whirlwind raced toward her, barking fiercely. Andrea took a hasty step backward from the snarling dachshund whose tail wagged madly even as it continued its fierce warning. The women gaped at her.

  Andrea offered a smile. "Hi. I'm Andrea Bellamy." She raised her voice over the barking. "The new associate."

  "Oh, my sainted aunt," sputtered a tiny woman with hedgehog hair, and all three surged to their feet. The next few minutes passed in a flurry of explanations, all punctuated by the dachshund's crazed yapping.

  "Strudel!" The small woman's face scrunched up at the noise. "Aura Lee, can't you make her hush?"

  The Amazon in stained purple robes bent to grasp the dog's collar, her brassy hair escaping from a clip. "You know how territorial she is, Noreen. I'm sorry," she added to Andrea. "It's been an upsetting day. Usually she's not this bad."

  Andrea leaned down and extended her closed hand for the dachshund to sniff. "She's just doing her job." Strudel licked her knuckles and rolled onto her back, offering her belly for petting. Andrea laughed as she straightened. "Good dog."

  "You can see how ferocious she is." A slender woman regarded her with friendly gray eyes. "I'm Rose Hertzberg, the director here. It's so good to meet you." Her damp silver-blond hair hung to her shoulders, and she appeared unaware of the dark smudge on one cheek.

  Rose motioned Andrea toward an overstuffed sofa. "Have a seat. The fire department left a while ago, and a stiff drink was the only response I could think of. I'll bet you could use one, too, after your trip." She headed for the built-in sideboard holding an array of bottles. "Tell me everything's ready for Andrea, Aura Lee."

  "Um, almost." Aura Lee's face was wreathed in smiles. "Goddess bless!" She sat down next to Andrea and held out one hand. When Andrea offered her own, she grasped it and turned it over, focusing on the palm. She clicked her tongue. "You're a Scorpio, aren't you?"

  Andrea tried to pull away, but the older woman tightened her grip. "My birthday's in July."

  Aura Lee's face fell and she released her hold. "You're a Cancer? I picked up an impression of Scorpio. Something about your eyes, I think, and the color of your aura—"

  "Oh, stop for now, Aura Lee. Let the poor girl catch her breath." Noreen nodded cordially from the wingback chair near the fireplace.

  Andrea blinked. The woman was so small that her legs didn't reach the floor. Her short salt-and-pepper hair stood on end, as if she'd run her fingers through it repeatedly.

  "Miss Wyntham was excited about your acceptance of the grant." Noreen's air of pleasure dimmed. "I'm sorry you won't get to know her."

  Andrea had looked forward to telling Caldicott Wyntham in person just how much the invitation had meant to her. "Isn't she here?"

  Noreen shook her head, eyes somber. "She died a couple of months ago. Didn't you read about it?"

  "Look at her face," murmured Aura Lee. "She didn't know."

  Rose handed Andrea a glass of scotch and sat on the other chair. "I'm so sorry. Caldicott was ill for a short time. I thought I'd notified you, but with all the details..."

  Andrea was surprised at her sharp sense of loss. "I was so busy getting ready to come here. I haven't paid much attention to anything else." She took a quick drink of the scotch and swallowed it with some difficulty. "I'm sorry I won't get to meet her."

  "I'm sure she would have liked you." Aura Lee's mouth worked for a moment. "I'll go fix some tea," she said gruffly. "Come on, Strudel." She strode from the room, the dog trotting behind her.

  Rose looked after her. "She misses Caldicott. So does Strudel."

  Noreen nodded. "Caldicott was the heart of this place, and it doesn't feel right without her." She glanced at Rose. "Can you manage here now? I left my computer running when the firemen arrived."

  "Of course."

  "I assume I'll see you this evening, my dear," Noreen said to Andrea. "Welcome to Wisdom Court."

  Rose sighed as Noreen whisked out the door. "We had a small fire here today," she explained. "Not much damage, but everyone's upset."

  "Oh, no! That explains the smell. I'd be upset, too."

  Rose glanced toward the doorway. "I need to check on a couple of things before I take you up to your room. If you can wait just a minute, I'll be right back to get you settled in."

  "That's fine. It'll give me a minute to realize that I'm actually here. I need to..." Andrea paused.

  "To catch up to yourself?" Rose patted her shoulder as she passed by her. "Make yourself at home."

  Andrea sipped the scotch as she wandered through the spacious room, sighing as the muscles in her legs loosened.

  She stopped before a framed eighteenth century map of the Americas. It was easy to picture her daughter, with her brand new teaching degree, pointing at a newer version in her school classroom and answering students' questions. After her walking tour of Scotland, Grace would be teaching in Sacramento.

  Her year at Wisdom Court would make it easier to build a new life without more than Grace's occasional presence. It had been just the two of them for so long. If only David had lived to see the person she'd become.

  With the ease of long practice, Andrea pushed the thought to the back of her mind. For the first time she noticed the gentle sound coming from the window. On the sill she found a small dish fountain where water bubbled over a slab of slate. She smiled at the miniature porcelain crane peering into the tiny pool below it.

  Andrea sank onto the sofa in front of the fireplace and found a coaster for her glass, wondering idly what the burgundy velvet curtains hanging above the mantel covered. She yawned and thought about getting up to see, but the pillows were soft. She slipped into sleep.

  In her dream she drove over endless hills leading to the mountain in front of her, but never drew nearer to it. The rutted road jostled the car, and she bounced on the seat, struggling to hold onto the wheel.

  "What did they do, spike your drink?" asked a deep voice near her ear. Andrea felt a hand on her arm and the shaking began again. "Come on, lady, time to rejoin the world."

  Her eyes flew open. A man was looking down at her and when she started to push herself up he raised his hand in a cautioning gesture. "I didn't mean to startle you." His smile was crooked, his brown eyes assessing." Aura Lee sent me to tell you tea's ready in the kitchen."

  Disoriented, Andrea stared at him, trying to summon a name, not finding one. "Have we met?"

  "Nope. I'm Neal Cameron, on the Wisdom Court board." When he extended his hand, she put her own into it and he pulled her to her feet. "Come on. Aura Lee made scones."

  For someone calling himself a board member, he looked pretty casual. Andrea wondered why he'd come to tea with black streaks on his faded jeans. More were on the rolled-up sleeves of his blue work shirt. She took a closer look as he tugged her down the picture gallery hallway. Neal Cameron was tall and well built and moved with easy assurance. Straight brown hair fell over his forehead and in profile his nose had a bump suggesting it had been broken. His square jaw was set. Nobly searching for the elusive scone, no doubt.

  "Here she is, Aura Lee," he announced as they entered the roomy kitchen. "She was busy dreaming."

  Aura Lee turned from the stove, dismay clouding her blue eyes. She'd
traded the purple caftan for a loose green dress, and her hair was pinned in a neat upsweep. "I'm sorry, dear. I thought you'd need something to eat after that long drive."

  "I am a little hungry." Andrea glanced at Neal. "Thanks for fetching me."

  "Don't mention it." He lifted one brow. "Well now, Aura Lee, I think it's time we got down to basics."

  Rose entered from the door across the room. She, too, had taken time to change clothes. In faded blue jeans and a white sweater, she looked younger than she had before. "Don't you mean down to business? Thanks for helping with the clean-up, Neal." She smiled warmly at him and kissed his cheek. He returned the salute.

  "The wind's coming up," said Aura Lee.

  Rose frowned toward the windows. Outside the light was fading and the aspens near the house fluttered. "Do you think I ought to cover the hot tub?"

  Neal glanced up from the butter dish. "I'll check it when I leave."

  The floury scent of scones made Andrea's stomach growl. Neal shot her a smile. She felt a shift in awareness so powerful that the air changed. Before her eyes, his face began to transform, other features replacing his own until her vision went black. She cried out.

  "Heads up, Rose."

  Andrea heard the faraway voice and the room swam darkly around her. When she felt a warm grip on her shoulders she came back to herself and looked around, blinking. Neal was holding her up, his eyes shadowed with concern. Rose was at his side and behind her Aura Lee was talking.

  Neal pulled her over to a chair at the table and when Andrea felt the edge of it against the back of her knees, she sat down hard, letting her head fall forward. "Sorry." The thinness of her voice frightened her.