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The Ghost Of Villa Winter (Canary Islands Mysteries Book 4)

The Ghost Of Villa Winter (Canary Islands Mysteries Book 4)

Book summary

In "The Ghost Of Villa Winter," English psychic Clarissa Wilkinson's vacation in the Canary Islands takes an unexpected turn when she stumbles upon a body hidden in a chest at the mysterious Villa Winter, a secret Nazi base on Fuerteventura. Joining forces with bumbling crime writer Richard Parry, they embark on a thrilling adventure to unravel the clues and unmask the killer in this suspenseful mystery.

Excerpt from The Ghost Of Villa Winter (Canary Islands Mysteries Book 4)

Mid-March, and the day had turned out a little hotter than she cared for but at least the horizon wasn’t hazy. As the sun made a languorous approach to its zenith in a clear sky, she stopped to admire the ocean, a deep turquoise, lapping at the harbour wall. A cool sea breeze shooed away the worst of the heat rising from rock and concrete. The wooden seats, evenly spaced along the short stretch of paving and painted a vivid shade of blue, were empty. No one sat on them, not at this time of day at this time year and even with her sore hip, Clarissa wasn’t tempted.

A quick dart of pain and she altered her stance. Something was not right with that joint. Despite the physio she’d received here, she would need to book an appointment with her doctor as soon as she arrived home from this trip.

Trip? Holiday? Vacation? The last few weeks had been nothing of the sort.

The seats faced the small bay. Behind her, to the north, was a low, rocky headland. To the south, and poking up behind tiers of cuboid dwellings, the mountains. A spray of bougainvillea cascaded down the side of one of the houses built into the rocky cliff over near the restaurant. Palm trees were everywhere, some newly planted, others towering. It was the pretty coastal village of Las Playitas and Clarissa had arranged to meet Claire for lunch. One of those villages too out of the way for the bulk of the tourists, those seeking the safety of the eateries run by the Brits. Here, the fare was authentic, the produce locally sourced, and the prices matched the luxury of the location. Also, there was no beach, not at this end of the village, and the beach at the far end sported black sand. The Brits, of course, wanted white. As did the Germans. Still, just like everywhere else on the holiday island of Fuerteventura, the local authorities had gone to a great deal of trouble, building a promenade at the foreshore that extended all the way along the beach, where an array of outdoor facilities catered for a smattering of small resort hotels.

Having caught the public bus from the larger town of Gran Tarajal, Clarissa had arrived early. She’d spent the spare half hour ambling along the promenade, reflecting on whether to raise with her niece Claire the recent developments concerning Trevor. Probably best to leave it. Claire had fixed in her mind that Trevor was no good and deserved all he got, but that was where Clarissa differed. Whenever she brought up the topic – usually after one of her prison visits – the same conversation took place.

‘He had the stash of cash on him when he was arrested at the airport.’

‘That means nothing.’

‘It means he was planning on leaving the island with money that didn’t belong to him. He should have handed it in.’

‘That doesn’t make him a murderer. He found that rucksack in the pink cave at Puertito del los Molinos. You were there. You know that part’s true.’

‘I just don’t understand why you have to make a pet project out of that flaky author.’

‘Because if I don’t, no one will.’

And it was true. Clarissa had started up a campaign for an appeal and Trevor’s release after hearing the story from Claire and her husband Paco on one of her regular holidays. She couldn’t help feeling sorry for the man. The evidence he had been convicted on was circumstantial. He was in the wrong place at the wrong time, twice. He was a literary thief, yes, having used a transcript he found to inspire his own story, and he was a thief in the finders-keepers sense as well, which did warrant punishment, but he did not kill that priest or the young man washed up on a secluded beach. To her, it was an open and shut case. From the moment she heard about Trevor’s predicament, she decided it was that young man washed up on the beach who had taken the cash from the priest, cash destined for a dog’s home in Venezuela. For a long time, she thought either he had got caught by the vicious ocean or he, too, was murdered by someone for reasons unknown, and the mystery would never be solved until Trevor was absolved of all involvement.

Claire was adamant her aunt shouldn’t be wasting her time on a person of ill-repute. They’d been over it and over it. There was no point trying to persuade the intractable. Besides, Clarissa thought, as she stopped in a parcel of shade to gaze out at the brilliance of the ocean, she wasn’t preoccupied with the appeal. She was much more interested to hear from Trevor, the only Brit in the Tahiche prison in Lanzarote – Fuerteventura didn’t have one – his opinion of an inmate who was released only last week. And then there was Trevor’s view of one of his visitors, a prison counsellor assigned to help him mend his evil ways. Clarissa looked forward to hearing that as well.

She was convinced she had discovered a way of freeing Trevor. She had the evidence in her handbag. She had an appointment with her lawyer that very afternoon at three, and she would call in to see Inspector García at the police station after that. She just needed to sort out the facts of the last weekend in her mind. Come to terms with what had happened on the so-called Villa Winter guided tour.

Would there be in an inquest? Or just a funeral.

Part of her wished Claire had forgotten about their lunch date and she could enjoy a plate of grilled fish from the morning’s catch in solitude, but she caught sight of that unmistakable shower of copper hair falling on slender shoulders and she stepped out into the sun to greet her niece.

Four days earlier, and a current of intrigue pulsed through her as the tour bus swung into the bus station’s service road, coming to a sudden stop in the drop-off area. She was standing on the concourse, about ten paces back. Nearby, a small group comprising the tour party were gathered. It was eight o’clock and the sun already had a bit of a sting to it. There was no shade. A trickle of people wandered past and headed through the entrance of the rather grand bus station building to her rear. All of the public buses that entered the service road went around to the parking bays at the back. The tour bus didn’t belong in the station, that much was clear. Clarissa shot a look behind her. Judging by the puzzled and annoyed looks the officials inside the building were giving the invading vehicle, she anticipated a fracas at any moment and wondered why the tour operator hadn’t arranged an alternative pick-up location.

Leaving the engine running, the driver stepped out of the vehicle which, on reflection, could scarcely be called a regular bus. It was a minibus painted to look like a zebra and set high off the ground on large wheels, and appeared to seat about sixteen passengers. No wonder the leaflet had mentioned the need to book early. In the absence of a photo of the bus, when she’d first read the leaflet, Clarissa had imagined a standard sized, luxury coach, not a van. Taking in the dusty, beat-up vehicle, she began to wonder what she’d paid for, indeed what sort of adventure altogether lay in store.

Misgivings crowded around her. She should have paid attention to the planetary alignment taking place that weekend. No good would come of that particular arrangement of Saturn, Pluto and Mars, not when a Scorpio Moon was involved. Back in her apartment she’d taken another look at the stars, this time at the positions of all the heavenly spheres. She’d noted Venus and Mercury were favourably placed near Neptune. Astrology was all about balance and the weight of possibilities. She’d ignored the heavyweights and gone with Venus. Get out of Puerto del Rosario, Claire had said. What’s the point of coming here on holiday and corralling yourself in that dusty port town when there’s the whole island to enjoy? Claire, as usual, had a point. It was an ironically Venusian point.

Clarissa had arrived on the island three weeks before, escaping a dreary, wet winter after the slew of Christmas and New Year social obligations was over, obligations that encroached on much of January due to her friends’ birthdays and a number of funerals. She’d already taken advantage of the public bus service and had lunch in half a dozen villages, inland and coastal, and was rather tiring of playing tourist when her sole reason for the trip, other than her niece, was to visit that poor man Trevor in prison in Lanzarote and see what could be done about his release. So far, not much. With her trip coming to an end, frustration and impatience had put her in ill humour, ill humour reinforced by a dull cramp in her hip, the result of misplacing her foot in a dip in the sand when she was walking along the beach at El Cotillo the other day. She should have taken a couple of anti-inflammatories before setting off this morning but she’d forgotten. A quick rummage in her canvas bag and she found she’d also forgotten to bring any with her.

She hung back as she waited to board the bus, assessing the other passengers, hopeful of decent company. Perhaps it was her jaundiced mood, but not one of them held any appeal, not the dreadlocked and evenly tanned young man in his sleeveless t-shirt or his equally tanned companion – they’d evidently left behind their surfboards – not the pigeon pair of plump, nondescript women of middle age and Anglo-Saxon appearance, not the pale and frail, sparrow of a woman with legs so spindly they appeared like sticks beneath her loose capris, and especially not the rather tall and undeniably handsome man with come-hither eyes who would have been a real a charmer, no doubt, in his day. He looked about a decade younger than herself and seemed to exude the kind of unjustified self-assurance of the overly pampered. He, she decided, was trouble. Always trouble, those who stand out in a crowd, and she was not disposed to accommodate his sort of company. She determined to sit well away from him, preferably at the opposite end of the so-called tour bus which, she thought, would likely have a series of single seats along one side and if that were the case, she would choose one of those.

The wind picked up a little, parting the bottom edge of her blouse below the last button, a disconcerting tendency of loose blouses designed to hang over trousers, especially when the designer skimped on length. Manufacturers ought to include an additional button nearer the hem for women like her, women of a certain age, women who didn’t want the world to see any portion of their midriff. She’d have worn a spencer had she realised, but then again, it was too darn warm for that. The lack of a button was just another minor irritation adding to an already irritable humour.

She was in half a mind to march off, forfeiting her ticket in favour of a quiet day in her apartment. As if in agreement, the sky to the east had turned milky. She knew what that meant. The island was in for another dust storm, or calima, as it was known locally. Not ideal, but you couldn’t arrange your activities around the dust. You’d never do anything. Hopefully, it wouldn’t be too bad.

In the three weeks of her stay, the dust had come and gone and come and gone and she had been untroubled by it. Only, this particular day would be somewhat ruined if that easterly air flow strengthened. Still, she reminded herself she would happily put up with a bit of dust in preference to the British cold and damp that seeped into her bones and made her joints ache. She was not getting any younger. And in a sudden revolt against her jaundice, she determined to make the most of the day, regardless of the dust, regardless of the van-cum-bus and the motley passengers, regardless of the stars, regardless. This was Fuerteventura, and she was going to do her absolute best to enjoy what remained of her time here even if it killed her.

She’d come to favour Fuerteventura as her holiday destination ever since Claire tempted her here with talk of her haunted house. After three visits to Claire’s mansion in Tiscamanita, she’d taken to booking a city apartment eager for a different sort of experience to the almost cloistered existence Claire seemed bent on leading with her photographer husband Paco. They’d become stay-at-homes and Clarissa suspected it was the influence of that ruin she’d restored with most of its rooms looking inwards on the patio. An ancient house with some ancient ghosts rattling around inside. She’d stopped telling Claire the place still had some unearthly visitors after Paco told her in a private moment to drop the subject. They’d done all they could to expunge the supernatural elements and whatever vestiges remained were best left unacknowledged. Clarissa took no offence. Instead, she switched focus and booked an apartment in Puerto del Rosario, the better to pursue her own interests away from judgemental eyes. The close proximity of the various offices of government and law were also beneficial when it came to Trevor and her campaign for his freedom. Besides, since they’d started hosting a writing group and a book group and running short courses in photography, there were evenings when Claire and Paco’s historic house lost its monastic air and transformed into a drop-in centre for friends and neighbours. In the evenings, Clarissa favoured her privacy.

The apartment was situated above a bakery opposite a much-used plaza and there was every amenity close to hand. The owners had decked the rooms out with antique looking furniture which appealed to her. The place was spotless too, something she had come to expect from the Spanish. She also enjoyed the cosmopolitan atmosphere of the tiny city, the presence of Moroccans and Venezuelans, and the absence of tourists except when a cruise ship docked at the port. Yes, the city had been a wise choice. After all, she would never have come across the leaflet advertising a fascinating tour of Villa Winter otherwise.

It had been an odd moment of happenstance that she was departing her table in a busy café the other week as a woman came in hoping to sit down. It was as Clarissa was standing up and the woman was sitting down that the leaflet tumbled from the woman’s hand and fell to the floor and Clarissa picked it up. The woman thanked her and insisted she keep it. A spare, and the tour was really very good, she’d said. Lunch at a restaurant in the small village of Cofete was included in the price, making the outing rather a bargain.

She was jolted out of her reflections when one of the officials in the bus station called out. Eager to avoid a confrontation with the two uniformed men staring him down from inside the bus station and another who looked to be heading his way, the driver – a tall, suave man decked in an oversized safari-suit – flung open the van’s side door and began hurrying the passengers aboard.

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