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Authors: Stacey Rourke

Crane

 

 

Crane

The Legends Saga

Book 1

 

Written by Stacey Rourke

 

 

Copyright 2014. All rights reserved. Published by Anchor Group. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher.

 

 

 

 

Dedication;

Sandra, thank you for sharing my love for the legends and for joining me in my giddiness when I mentioned Sleepy Hollow.

 

 

 

 

 

1

 

If his wife hadn’t let her ass grow to the size of a sofa
, Vic wouldn’t have to cheat. Shrugging his navy blue sport coat over his shoulders, he stepped forward, allowing the hotel room door to shut behind him with a soft thump. A smug smile curled across his face, his chest puffing with pride at his own prowess—thanks in part to those spiffy little blue pills his doctor prescribed. The heels of his wing-tipped loafers clicked against the cement stairs, one impeccably manicured hand running along the handrail as he descended. The rusted metal rail squeaked its protest under the faint touch. Taking its suggestion, he retracted his hand.

Why he humored Karma by letting her drag him to this dive every week, he had no idea.

Her firm little apple bottom isn’t that great
, he mused to himself, snorting a quick, dry laugh.

Of
course
it was. She made good money with it at the Sugar Shack down by the airport. Grinding to R&B’s raunchiest hits, while clad only in a sequin thong. She was a sweet, albeit naïve, girl that believed if she stroked Vic’s …
ahem
, ego just the way he liked, she would someday find a fat rock on her finger and the title of Van Tassel behind her name. Hence her insistence on the flea bag hotel. She had flipped her bleached blonde waves, batted those ridiculous fake eyelashes, and pouted that she couldn’t be seen as the “other woman” by the same crowd she would soon be rubbing elbows with. As if he would
ever
let that happen. Karma’s airbrushed nails and hooker heels would
never
fit into his world. After all, in Tarrytown the Van Tassel name meant something, and not because of the stupid legend the residents of the small glen of Sleepy Hollow mercilessly clung to. No, as one of the founding families they helped build this town. Meaning, here, he might as well be a Rockefeller. A fact he reveled in and would
never
tarnish with outward displays of his cheap conquests … no matter how well she could wiggle.

Vic crossed the parking lot, li
t only by one humming street lamp, with a wide, jovial stride. As he shook his keys from the pocket of his slacks, thumbing the button to unlock the doors, his phone buzzed from the breast pocket of his Armani shirt.

Snatching it from its resting place, he
tapped to answer. “Yello?”

“Don’t you sound chipper for someone working late?” Yvonne slurred
, the only hint he needed that she’d already cracked open tonight’s bottle of wine.

“Why shouldn’t I be chipper?”
he playfully asked, turning to glance back up toward the room Karma had rented. A flash of her blonde locks appeared from behind the stained drapes. He raised his hand in a casual wave, but couldn’t tell from this distance if she returned the gesture. “I just finished showing a multi-million dollar estate that the buyers are
very
interested in, and now I get to head home to my loving wife.”

“Yeah, right,”
Yvonne openly scoffed, her voice muffled by her glass as she took another sip. “We’re the friggin’ Cleavers. Hey, Cassidy is at the mall. I need you pick her up on your—“

Vic
jerked his head to the right, in the direction of the neighboring gas station. Between the normal ebb and flow of rushing traffic, he heard the distinct snap of hoof beats pounding over pavement. “What kind of idiot would bring a horse out this close to the highway?”

“The highway? Where the
hell
are
you, Victor?”

A moment ago the
drum of the approaching rider had been coming from the south of him, Vic was sure of it. Yet somehow, without so much as a faltered step, it shifted to the north. “Stopped for gas, that’s all.” Vic paid little attention to the lie rolling off his tongue as he rose up on tiptoe and craned his neck to peer into the darkness.

“Oh!
” Her momentary flash of accusation was all but forgotten at the exciting prospect of fresh booze. “Are you near Gordon Bleau’s? I need a bottle of Amaretto.”

Vic stifled a cringe
at the thought of his wife’s mixed drink induced wandering hands. If he wanted to fend off an overly Botoxed hag that reeked of booze, he’d go visit Nana at the home. Her old biddy friends loved him, and putting in his time there helped secure his spot in her will. “I’d love to, pet, but I’d hate to keep Cass waiting.”

A hot
, snorted breath heated the exposed skin of Vic’s neck, tickling down the collar of his shirt. He spun, his heart pounding painfully in his chest, and pressed his back to the car door. Chills raced up and down his spine, electrifying his entire body.
Nothing.
There was nothing before him but that lone buzzing light and the seedy motel. “Damn it! Punk kids!”

“And they have a horse?” Yvonne
’s giggle morphed into a hiccup. “You better watch out, Vic. It could be one of those lesser known equestrian gangs.”

The l
ightning that flashed on the otherwise calm night was the only omen Vic needed to spur him into action. Throwing himself off the car, his trembling fingers fumbled with the door handle. Behind him, metal hissed free from leather. Slowly—with a cold, hard fist of dread clenching his gut—his head swiveled.


Oh,” he said with a nervous lilt of laughter to the ominous symphony of black before him. “That’s … good. You got me. I really believed for a sec—”

Vic’s
anxious, cracking plea morphed into a scream as the figure pulled back. The blade of their arched sword gleaming gold under the yellow-hued light.

Victor’s hand
s raised in the only defense he could offer. “
No! Noooo
!”

He sucked in one last gasp as metal winged through the air.

“Vic? Victor!” Yvonne screamed, panic clearing her alcohol induced haze. “
What’s happening
?”

The only response she received came in the form of a
ghostly whinny … followed by a soft thump. Her shrieks were muted as the phone tumbled to the ground—right next to Vic’s still rolling head.

 

 

2

Ichabod

Shortly after the Revolutionary War

             

“I feel
we should have been more specific on the terms of our wager, gentlemen.” The carriage rocked under his weight as Rip Van Winkle climbed down, a smirk curling across his chiseled features. He flipped a lock of caramel colored hair from his eyes and straightened his royal blue suit coat, allowing the gold embroidered lapels to lay in symmetrical lines. “When we declared that we three bold, daring bucks would venture to the first town in which one of us secured a job, we should have added the disclaimer that a town is defined as one inhabited by
people
.”

Washington Irving, Irv to his friends,
pushed past the still lamenting Rip. There was no telling how long his ramble would last, and Irv needed to retrieve his satchel from the trunk at the back of the carriage.

“You, sir,
” Irv interrupted, his satchel thumping to the ground at his feet, “are just bothered you were not the first to find acceptable employ. Mostly because, as the women that keep company with you can attest, the only services you provide pay in salves and a burning sensation over the chamber pot.”

Rip’s brow rose in mock shock
. “How lewd a claim! Lewd … with the faintest hint of accuracy.”

Ichabod Crane was the last to exit the carriage.
Some may have called him a handsome man, with his deep mahogany hair that fell to his strong jawline in waves and his almond-shaped eyes framed by lashes his sisters openly envied. Yet, for anyone to make such a claim they would have to actually notice the painfully shy educator. He was more than content to spend his days blending with the background.

Ichabod forced his gaze up in an apologetic nod to the driver on his friend’s beha
lf. The driver snorted in contempt before flicking the reins and spurring the horses onward.

“Without
so much as a good-bye?” Rip
tsk
ed. “And I’d grown so found of staring at the back of his head over these past two days. I fear there will be a nameless driver shaped hole in my heart.”

Irv removed his glasses and cleaned them on the handkerchief from his breast pocket
, his hair puffing around his head in an unruly mess from the nap he’d taken during the last leg of their journey. “You never get the least bit tired of listening to your own voice, do you?”

“Have you heard the
hypnotic symphony of it?” Rip asked, throwing an arm around his friend’s shoulders, much to Irv’s visible annoyance. “Like a divine tune from an angel’s lips.”

Irv rolled his eyes and shoved Rip off of him. “Exactly where are we headed, Crane?”

Ichabod fumbled through his satchel. The spastic quaking of his right hand caused his pocket watch and Bible to jump from the bag, tumbling to the ground before he could locate their travel papers. Rip and Irv bent to retrieve the fallen items, careful not to acknowledge the ailment that caused their friend to lose hold of them.

“The school house
that hired me is in the middle of town.” Ichabod crinkled his nose to scoot his glasses further up its bridge. Shifting his gaze, he squinted over the top of the paper, attempting to match the directions to the structures. “The Hollow Inn, which I believe is that building there, has been kind enough to offer us stay.”

Three sets of eyes stared for the first time at their new home. A
narrow, cobblestone street led into the tiny village of modest dwellings. Most were quaint, plank-board homes whose chimneys puffed thick clouds of grey into a dreary sky that matched their hue. Modern architecture seeped its way into the tiny burg in the form of the occasional brick store front. A river cut through the town, made crossable by an enclosed bridge, which silhouetted the steepled white church that lay beyond it.

“One needn’t remove one
’s shoes to count the business prospects in this glen.” Irv stated and adjusted the strap of his satchel to get a better hold. “Yet even in the midst of a select few, there are sure to be those in need of legal aid. Come, let’s find our rooms and get settled.”

The d
ismal pallor of the sky was set against the deep brown foliage of late fall, of those last clinging leaves that had yet to join the corpses of their fallen brethren that covered the ground and crunched underfoot. Add to that the fog hanging low across the ground and the town seemed to possess an almost ethereal feel. Perhaps that was to blame for the beads of sweat suddenly dampening Ichabod’s upper lip. He patted them away with his handkerchief before hiding the cloth in his pocket and offering a nod of greeting to an elderly man and woman who had watched their approach from the porch of their cottage. Instead of returning his greeting, the man seized the woman, which Ichabod assumed to be his wife, by her upper arm and ushered her quickly into the house. The door slammed and latched behind them. The further into town they ventured, the more of the same odd behavior they found. As the cloak of night settled in, and the newcomers paraded down the street, any townspeople they happened upon scurried into their home, pulling the shutters and bolting the doors.

“Where have you brought us, Ichabod Crane?”
Rip attempted a tone of nonchalance, yet the nervous quake in his chuckle gave away the truth.

“Perhaps they know of your reputation
,” the soft-spoken schoolmaster jabbed, “And have busied themselves locking away their daughter’s virtues.”

Irv and Rip stopped walking and exchanged looks
that resembled maternal pride.


Not only have we managed to get him to speak, but also to jest.” Irv beamed.


If that
is
the case, then
we
should have been the ones awarded the Badge of Military Merit.” Rip’s eyes widened to goose eggs the second the words slipped from his lips.

Ichabod’s shoulders
instantly curled inward, his gaze drifting to the ground. “The inn is right up here.” He shuffled on without glancing back to see if his friends were following.

Irv’s lips disappeared in a thin
, white line as he smacked Rip in the shoulder with the back of his hand. Rip rubbed his shoulder and nodded, accepting his just punishment for the huge faux pas.

The
remainder of their hike was made in an uncomfortable silence, until their journey reached its conclusion in the foyer of The Hollow Inn. The Colonial style two-story was decorated by humble means. Even so, it radiated with warmth and the smell of fresh cinnamon loaf. While the lamps still burned within, the mahogany desk in the foyer was empty. The only sign of life came from the great room to their right where a rocking chair in front of the fireplace swayed. Back and forth it creaked, yet all they could see of its inhabitant was a thin pair of bony ankles that disappeared into tattered house shoes.

“Dark grows near,
sense the fear,” a voice, possessing the deep rasp of death, croaked in the sing-song tempo of a nursery rhyme.

“Cloak of night,

brings Horseman’s plight.

His pricy toll,

will be a soul.

Run and hide,

before his ride.

Or the dead—
“ The face of a haggard old woman peeked around the back of the chair, her mouth open in a wide, toothless grin. A shock of white hair framed her ghastly face, falling to gaunt shoulders in wiry wisps. “—Shall claim ye head.”

“Mother! That’s enough! You’ll scare our guests away!” The interruption
came from a robust woman with a welcoming smile as she sauntered in from the kitchen, the floorboards creaking beneath her feet. “You’ll have to forgive her. She hasn’t been the same since Papa died, and that was thirty
long
years ago. Now, I suppose you would be Mr. Crane, Mr. Irving, and Mr. Van Winkle?” Before the three men could even nod in agreement, she pushed on in a long winded ramble that left no opportunity for interruption. “Well, my name is Roselynn Tremaine, however around here everyone calls me Mama Rosa. Don’t know why, I have never had any littles of my own, but I find it charming so I do not ask. Let me be the first to welcome you to Sleepy Hollow and to thank you three for serving our country. I was able to get you each rooms of your own, just as you requested.” She swiveled to retrieve three bronze keys from the three separate pegs and splayed them on the counter between them. “Was not much of an act of luck, we only get the occasional merchants come to town to sell their wares. Availability is seldom a concern, which only means we will be happy to house you as long as you like! Breakfast is at seven, lunch at noon, and we sup at five. Even so, if you ever need a little something to tide you over in between, do not be afraid to ask! No one goes hungry under my roof.”

Ichabod directed his smile to the
floorboards, the mystery of how she got the nickname “Mama” revealed.

“Oh,” she continued
, “I suppose I should mention the curfew.”

Irv’s head snapped back as if she’d slapped him. “Curfew? Surely as a business owner you can
not expect paying guests—“

“Oh, it
is not
my
curfew, sir.” Mama Rosa’s second chin wobbled with the adamant shake of her head. “Not even a governed matter, far as I know. More a … precaution, taken and adhered to by all the residents not to go out after dark. Just how we do things around here, I am sure you can appreciate that?”

While Irv and Rip exchanged dubious glances, it was Ichabod that shrugged and offered Mama Rosa a timid smile.
“Who are we to judge the ways of a town we have yet to properly meet?”

The sincerity of his smile wavered, interrupted by a loud cackle from the next room. Ichabod didn’t want to look. Yet, with a gulp, he let his gaze slide
slowly to the frightening old woman. Air slipped over her gums in a steady hiss. Her stare was directed at Ichabod alone as she dragged the tip of her index finger across her throat.

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