Last Kiss Goodbye

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Book: Read Last Kiss Goodbye for Free Online
Authors: Rita Herron
Tags: Suspense
mountains, trees and rivers were all inhabited by spirits—spirits that never knew human form. Rattlesnake Mountain once held pits of rattlesnakes that the practitioners of hoodoo and voodoo used for their evil spells. The sorcerers were given a Christian name, then a secret name, that was used only for black magic purposes.
    Daisy delivered the soup. “Here you go, sweetie.”
    “Thanks. This looks delicious.”
    “You still working on the scrapbook on the town?” Daisy asked.
    Ivy nodded and sipped her iced tea. “Yes.”
    “My daughter and I are making a scrapbook of my grandbaby. We’re even thinking of starting a scrapbooking club.”
    “Really?” Ivy smiled. “My mother used to belong to one of those.” At least her adopted mother, Miss Nellie, had. That club and the popularity of scrapbooking had actually triggered her idea for the magazine.
    “You see that chapel?” Daisy pointed to the photograph on the wall. “The locals call it the Chapel of Forever. It’s where Hughie and I got married. Legend says that if you marry in that chapel, your marriage will last through eternity.”
    Ivy made a mental note to add that bit of folklore to her magazine feature article. “Do you know when or how the legend got started?”
    “No, but I’ll check around and see if someone else does. Maybe Miss Gussy. She’s been around longer than me.”
    The bell on the door tinkled, and they both glanced up as an odd, elderly woman stepped inside. Dressed in all black, in a long skirt that nearly touched the floor, a hat and veil that half covered her wrinkled face, and army boots with thick socks rolled over the edges, she was almost spooky. Two other ladies whispered and gave her a wide berth as they left. Two teenagers got up and hurried toward the door. Another woman followed the eccentric lady in, the polar opposite in appearance. Platinum-blond hair formed a pile of curls on top of her head, gaudy costume jewelry adorned every finger and a skintight, bloodred dress dipped low enough to reveal massive cleavage that a man could get lost in. Shiny white, knee-high boots hugged her killer legs and completed the outfit.
    “I cannot believe the two of them have the nerve to show up here,” Daisy said.
    Ivy frowned. “Who are they?”
    “The one in the red, that’s Talulah. She’s the head mistress down on Red Row.”
    “Red Row?”
    Daisy leaned closer. “The row of trailers where all her prostitutes live. A seedy place that no decent citizen would ever visit.”
    But the men probably kept them in business, Ivy thought, as the two women moved to the rear and grabbed a booth, ignoring the stares and blatant whispers.
    “And the other woman?”
    “Lady Bella Rue. She calls herself a root doctor. Folks say she’s a lady of darkness, that she’s connected to the moon, the spirits and the devil himself. Even killed her own boy, though no one could prove it.”
    Ivy sipped her tea, her curiosity spiked.
    “I think folks around here were just too scared of her to pursue it,” Daisy continued. “They say she’s a seer to boot.”
    “You mean she can see the future?”
    Daisy nodded. “Some people think she cast a spell on the town—that’s what brings all the evil when it rains. The kudzu sparkles yellow sometimes, then other times has this metallic blue-green mist rising from it. Folks say Lady Bella Rue’s tears of guilt turn the kudzu those odd colors, or maybe it’s devil’s breath.” Daisy hesitated long enough to inhale a breath. “Better stay away from her. If you anger her, she might put a hex on you. Once she does, bad luck and death will follow you the rest of your life.”
    Ivy’s hand trembled as she placed her glass on the table. Bad luck and death had already been a part of her life, and had brought her here now.
    A strained silence fell across the room, the rain pounding the roof accentuating the tension. It was almost as if the townspeople sensed winter and death were imminent. That these

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