A Philadelphia mansion plays host to uninvited death
1777: In the throes of the Revolutionary War, Landon Mansion is commandeered by British Lord âButcherâ Bedford. He stabs Lucy Tarletonâwho spurned his king and his loveâleaving her to die in her fatherâs arms.
Now: After the dayâs final tour, docent Allison Leigh makes her rounds while locking upâ¦and finds a colleague slumped over Bedfordâs desk, impaled on his own replica bayonet.
Resident ghosts may be the stock-in-trade of stately Philadelphia homes, but Allisonâa noted historianâis indignant at the prospect of âghost huntersâ investigating this apparent murder.
Agent Tyler Montague knows his hauntings and his history. But while Allison is skeptical of the newcomer, a second mysterious murder occurs. Has âButcherâ Bedford resurfaced? Or is there another malevolent force at work in Landon Mansion? Wary, yet deeply attracted, Allison has to trust in Tyler and work with him to discover just what uninvited guestâdead or aliveâhas taken over the house. Or their lives could become history!
Praise for the novels of Heather Graham
âGraham deftly weaves elements of mystery, the paranormal and romance into a tight plot that will keep the reader guessing at the true nature of the killerâs evil.â
âPublishers Weekly on The Unseen
âSuspenseful and dark. The culture and history surrounding San Antonio and the Alamo are described in detail. The transitions between past and present flow seamlessly, and the main characters are interesting and their connection to one another is believable.â
âRT Book Reviews on The Unseen
âIf you like mixing a bit of the creepy with a dash of sinister and spine-chilling reading with your romance, be sure to read Heather Grahamâs latestâ¦Graham does a great job of blending just a bit of paranormal with real, human evil.â
âMiami Herald on Unhallowed Ground
âThe paranormal elements are integral to the unrelentingly suspenseful plot, the characters are likable, the romance convincing and, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Grahamâs atmospheric depiction of a lost city is especially poignant.â
âBooklist on Ghost Walk
âGrahamâs rich, balanced thriller sizzles with equal parts suspense, romance and the paranormalâall of it nail-biting.â
âPublishers Weekly on The Vision
âAn incredible storyteller.â
âLos Angeles Daily News
âGreat writing and excellent characters make Wicked a terrific read⦠The undercurrent of mystery and suspense will keep readers riveted.â
âRomance Reviews Today
To the great city of Philadelphia, and to my favorite Pennsylvanians in the world, Gail Spence Crosbie and Ann Spenceâand to Jimmy, Megan, Spencer and Anthony Crosbie
Prologue
It was a beautiful time of day, close to dusk, at a beautiful time of year, early fall. Philadelphiaâs Tarleton-Dandridge House sat back from the street, majestic and stately, in the light that had just begun to fade, as fine and poignant as an old building could be, a proud remnant of an era long gone, yet ever remembered.
Julian Mitchell almost felt guilty. Almost. He couldnât quite manage guilt; he was too ecstatic over his day, still pumped with enthusiasm and the beat of the music heâd been playing. He enjoyed being a guide at the Tarleton-Dandridge, but today heâd had to ditch it. The audition had been important and, much as he loved his job, he loved the idea of working full-time as a guitarist more. Sure, it was great dressing up and playing with the band in Old Town, but he had dreams of being a real rock star. Now, however, he had to slip back into the houseâand suck up to Allison. She was their unofficial leader, head of the guides or docents at the Tarleton-Dandridge, and if she forgave him, the others would, too.
He saw that one group of guests had already entered the house with their guide and that another, the last group of the day, was assembling just outside the main door. He could see Allison Leigh to the side of the house near the gate, welcoming those who were gathering for the final tour. Allison was dressed in the typical fashion of the Revolutionary eraâthe typical high fashion of the Revolutionary era, since female guides wore clothing along the lines of that which wouldâve been worn by Lucy Tarleton, the martyred heroine of the house. The male guides dressed as Lord Brian Bradley, the British general known as âBeastâ Bradley, who had occupied the house.
They all looked pretty cool in their clothing, he thought. But especially Allison. She was beautiful to begin with, even if she was kind of a nerd. A real academic. But she did bear a resemblance to the heroine she played, Lucy Tarleton. Theyâd all remarked on her resemblance to the painting in the house and those in various museums, but there was no evidence that she was a descendent of the woman. And if anyone would know, Allison would, since she was a historian. Maybe it was the clothing that gave her the look.