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  THE LOST

  REFLECTION

  Unleashing the darkest legend of New Orleans

  BRUCE T. JONES

  The Lost Reflection

  by Bruce Jones

  © Copyright 2012 by Bruce Jones

  ISBN 9781938467257

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means - electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other - except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior written permission of the author. This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, corporations, institutions, organizations, events or locales in this novel are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead) is entirely coincidental.

  Published by

  5 Penn Plaza, 23rd floor

  c/o Morgan James Publishing

  New York, NY 10001

  212-574-7939

  www.koehlerbooks.com

  Publisher

  John Köehler

  Executive Editor

  Joe Coccaro

  In an effort to support local communities, raise awareness and funds, Morgan James Publishing donates a percentage of all book sales for the life of each book to Habitat for Humanity Peninsula and Greater Williamsburg. Get involved today, visit www.MorganJamesBuilds.com

  Without the following individuals

  this novel would be but a memory of never was.

  For the creativity and the life given, I thank God.

  For unconditional love and patience:

  Tracy, Andrew, Mallorie, Ryan, and Ali

  For parents, sister, and the entire Jones/Cole clan

  who have filled my life with love

  For all I have had the honor of calling friends

  For publishing and editing me into reality:

  John Köehler, Joe Coccaro, and Cheryl Ross

  and my inspiration Dr. Jack Eli Cole, Sr.

  The journey has just begun.

  Throughout our lives we take our reflection for granted,

  some more than others.

  We wake up and stare, or perhaps merely glance into

  the mirror, knowing the face we see

  is the same as yesterday and the day before.

  Aging slowly with time, reflecting pride or shame,

  happiness or sadness,

  many times not the person we want to see.

  Some have the power to change their reflection,

  most do not.

  There is no hiding from the truth reflected,

  but can you change it?

  What would you give to see that familiar face again,

  the one that has been lost forever?

  CHAPTER 1

  THE NIGHT AIR in Jackson Square clung like a warm and soggy wool blanket—just another August night in the French Quarter. The spicy aroma of Cajun cooking permeated as tourists blended with the vast assortment of locals crowding the marketplace. Deep, earthy blues from a nearby restaurant reverberated off the historic walls of the surrounding structures. Saint Louis Cathedral, the oldest Catholic Church in the country, vigilantly towered over the square. Dim gas-glow flames scintillated from the street lanterns and buildings, scarcely illuminating the carnival atmosphere. Musicians, artists, and gypsies all worked their crafts to the delight of the nightly gatherers.

  Stella LaRue was the oldest and wisest of the gypsy fortune tellers, a throwback to the classic gypsies in Lon Chaney movies of a bygone era. Stella was old, exactly how old nobody knew. An advancing kyphosis had given her a pronounced hump on her back. Crystal-blue eyes, so clear you would swear you could see right through them, highlighted her weathered cinnamon-brown face. Gray hair, tightly pulled back, framed her bandana-covered head. Jewelry excessively draped her neck and wrists. Most of it was worthless, but not to Stella. She valued it all with great reverence. Her mismatched, bright, layered, oversized clothes stated simply that she was a fashion maven.

  She did not waste her talents on the typical tourists. Leaving them to her brethren fortune tellers, Stella would wait, biding her time for the one to approach her. If she sensed there was something of value to share with this person, she would offer them her unique insight.

  Even though the square was crowded with tourists, she felt no calling strong enough to make a little cash. She sat at her table and watched in amusement as many of the other girls worked their craft. They were indeed “working” the crowd, a skill she had taught most of them. Although the majority had never developed the gift Stella possessed, they were all good at mixing a little truth with a healthy dose of bullshit. Occasionally, Stella would casually eavesdrop, forcing herself to conceal a smile of amusement when she heard a good whopper.

  Stella believed in hope and promise, not gloom and despair. Tap dancing around bad fortunes most of the time, she offered only a glimpse of potential tragedy. “What good is it to tell someone they are going to die tomorrow?” she would say. “Better to tell them that a loved one is about to suffer a great tragedy, show love to all near and dear. Tell them only a half-truth, for it’s never wise to share all of life’s mysteries.” Stella could sense bad karma like a mouthful of sour milk. Her purpose, she believed, was to set things right. And that is exactly what she did, masterfully blending truth and fiction. In the end, her message remained an undying constant. Love for another, yourself, the planet, it did not matter. Love conquers all.

  Tonight was slow. There were no spiritual emergencies looming from any of these walking, talking specimens of sociologically decaying humans. Although it was a quiet night, Stella felt there was an ill cast to the moon, but the where or why had not become apparent. Imminently, this was about to change.

  “Good evening, Madame Stella,” a young woman purred in a deep velvety voice as she approached.

  “Good evenin’ to you, Lady Isabelle,” came a raspy, smoking induced reply.

  The old woman was seated at a rickety fold-up card table with mismatched chairs, appearing to be salvaged from the Salvation Army dumpster. On the table was a deck of Tarot cards and a crystal ball concealed by a blue velvet cover.

  Accentuated by brilliant cobalt eyes, Isabelle’s face was hauntingly flawless. Her black hair spiraled down just past her bare shoulders, contrasting against her moonlight-white skin. Tall and slender, she made her routine nightly rounds dressed in low-cut, lacy black attire, crippling the resistance of passing men regardless of female companionship.

  It was ten o’clock, and like most nights, Lady Isabelle was on the prowl, constantly searching for fresh meat. As fate dictated, she was the anointed leader of the modern cult of vampire wanna be’s inhabiting New Orleans. As the stories of vampirism traveled throughout the country, many wayward souls found the city’s dark heritage created an ideal home. This modern-day cult consisted of the classic coffin-by-day-blood-drinker-by-night types, sexual predators, and mindfuckers. But they all shared one common thread: Lady Isabelle was their leader. Her mysterious persona, sex appeal, and gothic style made her matriarch of this bizarre cult of misfits. Her orgasmic consumption of blood was legendary amongst the clan of the “living dead.”

  “It looks like a slow night,” Isabelle began.

  “It’s been steady ’ere, but I’ve got dis uneasy feeling ’bout the spirit ways tonight. I’ve been keepin’ away from d’ose people,” Stella reported as she thumbed in the direction of the tourists littering the square. “I’m jus’ sittin’ ’ere listenin’ to da wind, what little dere is.” Listening to the wind, as Stella put it, was her unique way of connecting with her karma. She claimed that she could hear voices calling, telling of things to be and things that had passed, all carried o
n the soft, gentle breeze that occasionally caressed her senses.

  Periodically, the local police would visit Stella concerning unsolved crimes or missing persons. She would provide them with insight as to what had occurred, but often those clues were jumbled by insensible rantings and ravings from the spirit world. Stella was unable to interpret her messages, as she was in a transient state, totally unaware of the words flowing from her mouth. She existed somewhere between the world of the living and the dead and had no memory of these sessions. Only when the messages were comprehensible and clear did the police find her helpful. Although somewhat inconsistent, her gift was known to many.

  “Lord, child, sit down,” Stella exclaimed, alarmed by a sudden revelation. “It’s you.”

  “What do you mean, it’s me?” Isabelle replied, unaware of Stella’s sudden premonition.

  “I’ve been feelin’ something foul in da wind. Felt it dis morning when I got up. Been feelin’ it all day. Now ’ere you are and it’s plain as the black on your dress. It’s you! I can feel it.”

  Having known Isabelle for many years through frequent nightly visits, they had grown close. Often, the wise gypsy would give stern advice, as one would their child. Like any daughter, Isabelle would choose to ignore or heed the advice. The tone of the warning, along with the belief the old lady’s craft was authentic, instantly sparked Isabelle’s curiosity.

  “What is it? Can you tell me?”

  “I don’ know. Maybe Kahlea can say.” Kahlea, Stella’s crystal ball, was her link to the spirit world. But unlike most portals, Kahlea worked, or at least Stella believed so. Whether the globe was indeed a medium, or in fact it was merely her psychic abilities, through Kahlea Stella witnessed glimpses of the future.

  Isabelle did as instructed, sitting and pulling her chair close. Stella began caressing the ball with slow, intimate strokes. Kahlea suddenly developed a steamy condensation from within. Swirling cloud patterns flowed in a clockwise motion, intermittently mixed with dark abstract images that hovered against the current. “I see a man.”

  Isabelle inched forward, attempting to discern the strange images being interpreted. “He comes like a storm. Misery and great danger surround his existence.” The patterns intensified and began to change hues. “I see evil, a great evil rising from da past. It clouds all our futures. Dere is so much death.” Stella paused and reflected. Unwillingly entangled, she fell deeper within the globe.

  Genuine concern inched across Isabelle’s face. Never had Stella sounded such an alarm, or steered her down the wrong path. “Much remains unclear,” the old lady continued in a mesmerized tone. “There is great conflict wit’in dis man.”

  Abruptly, the fog within the ball dissipated, transferring its energy to Stella’s eyes. Her once crystal-blue eyes quickly turned opaque gray, blinding her. Fear welled up in the old woman. “Flee ’ere child. Dere is much danger.”

  “Ohhh,” Stella moaned woefully as she glanced up searching, unable to make out the silhouette of the familiar woman before her. “Kahlea has lost her sight. Some evil from beyond has blinded us. Never before as dis ’appened,” Stella wailed, confused, but not panicked by this anomaly. Isabelle remained transfixed on Kahlea, waiting for the globe to once again burst to life and reveal a sign or restore Stella’s sight. Neither happened.

  The gateway to an ancient evil had been breached and unexpectedly terminated. The evil had indeed blinded Kahlea and Stella. The danger of dwelling in the spirit world is never knowing who will awaken to answer the call of the medium. All of her long life, Stella had encountered spirits of many types, their triumphs and miseries, all laid out within the reaches of her enlightened mind. Even the most sinister of the spirit world could be tamed by her compassion. But the source from which this message came was not to be interpreted, communicated, or reasoned with. Its sole purpose was to forewarn of the unleashing of a great evil to come.

  Stella sat in despair. The frightful calamity foretold paled in nature to the violent disruption from the message. Her eyes painstakingly began to clear as she continued to stare at the blurry silhouette before her. Isabelle’s fine details remained shrouded in haze. “I fear Kahlea ’as been injured. I must take ’er ’ome now,” Stella said as she rose and steadied herself against the table.

  “But Stella, what does all this mean?”

  “It means, child, you must leave dis place. Leave now and don’ return any time soon. Your future remains unclear, but dis man, if you stay, his pain you will endure. You must leave. Dat is the only way.”

  “I can’t leave here, this is my home,” Isabelle proclaimed boldly. “Besides, I have many friends here who will protect me.”

  “I fear dat will not be enough. Dis man brings death to us all. Who lives or dies? Dat vision is lost. I don’t know your part, but if you stay, you will be consumed in dis, dat much is certain,” Stella lectured as she hurriedly gathered her belongings from the table. “Listen to me,” she said, pointing a crooked finger, “I know your people will try to take care of you. I know you believe you ’ave to stay, but please leave. Do dis for ol’ Stella.”

  “I promise I will be careful.” Taking the old lady’s hand into her own, she gazed about the only city she had ever known. “You know I have nowhere else to go. Besides, traveling for my kind is not as simple as packing a suitcase.”

  “Your kind,” Stella huffed, “I been tellin’ you for years ’oney, you need new friends. Good people. D’ose people ain’t doin’ nothin’ but bringin’ you down baby.”

  “I am one of those people,” Isabelle proclaimed stubbornly. “I know you think I can just change my ways, but you are wrong. I am what I am, and no desire to change will ever alter that.”

  “And so it is,” Stella sighed, gazed up to the heavens, then back to Isabelle. “We are what we are, and dere’s no denyin’ dat. I know you ’ave no faith, but I pray, God be wit’ you.” With that, Stella broke hold of Isabelle’s hand and finished packing her belongings into a worn tapestry bag.

  Isabelle stood and watched Stella clumsily disappear around the corner. Silently, she contemplated the dire warning. But no man controlled her destiny. And after all, it was only one man. Besides, Stella did not know everything. She had never seen or believed in Isabelle’s peculiar circumstances. With the old gypsy gone, Isabelle scoffed defiantly, “What do you know of my kind?”

  CHAPTER 2

  STARING OUT THE window of the Boeing 757, daydreams occupy my thoughts, which permits me a temporary disconnect from the intensity of life. On the plane there are no bullets, bombs, or assassins. Thanks to the castrations of homeland security, my fellow passengers are relatively harmless and rather boring. Lost in a daydream, I am shielded from meaningless encounters.

  My profession demands I travel frequently, leaving no real home, few true friends, and certainly no serious romantic relationship. It was not like I did not try once, years ago. After that debacle, the notion of being attached to one woman became somewhat unappealing. Years passed, and I found the energy required for a relationship was better spent in other directions.

  New York was the perfect fit for my lifestyle. I was raised in the city by my Aunt Rena. She was a large, robust woman with a heavy Romanian accent and a smile for everyone she met. Her size was only surpassed by her love of life.

  Having no memory of my parents, who were killed during the early years of the Cold War, Rena filled in filtered details as she saw fit. According to Rena, I was smuggled out, only an infant, as Communism began sweeping Eastern Europe. Vague details and general descriptions were the shallow roots I possessed. My family history, as well as half of the Romanian population, were destroyed during the war. Sadly, Rena and I were the only survivors of our family.

  As a young adult, my interest led me to study computer technology at the University of Virginia. Thanks to Uncle Sam, I became a spook before finishing my degree. My forte with data encryption and foreign languages launched a career neither envisioned nor desired. It went like this: a m
undane dinner meeting with the dean of computer sciences, two-hour limo ride to Washington, sign your name on the dotted line, handshake, and bam, I was a spook. For a financially crippled junior in college, that kind of money was impossible to refuse. Oddly enough, I never stepped foot on campus again, but magically a degree appeared about a year later. CIA magic.

  And like the waves of the ocean, the magic never stopped. Computer geek extraordinaire, to field agent, to assassin—how does that happen? It was kind of a subtle thing. Subtle like a charging bull. If I knew what they had in mind for me, I would have bolted out the door and sprinted all the way back to UVA. One day while deciphering codes, a coworker suggested we go down to the pistol range to blow off some steam. Having done this on many occasions, he assured me I would love it. I had never even held a gun before, but after six hours of encryption, the thought of shooting something sounded appealing.

  Appeal turned to love, then obsession. I could not get enough of the cold steely grip, the testosterone-pumping action of squeezing the trigger, the buck of the recoil, the smell of spent powder, and sound of the bullet singeing the air it dissected. In short order, I graduated to assault rifles. I made new friends there, very intense friends. They enjoyed sharing many aspects of their unique training in which I always participated, as a tagalong, so to speak. Now my daily regiment consisted of training—hand-to-hand combat, tactical assault, explosive devices, and occasionally computer work. Oddly, I never put two and two together until it was too late.

  My first mission was rather simple. Sneak into the former Soviet Union, hack into an army general’s computer, download a variety of top secret files, and get back home alive. Yep, piece of cake. Perhaps it was time to reconsider that sprint back to UVA. But in a bizarre way, the danger beckoned me.

  Spencer and Davis, two cowboys that had been thrown off the bull a few times too many, were in charge of the mission. The mission was a huge success, except Spencer got shot, Davis killed, and I had to waste two border guards crossing back into West Germany. Lesson seventy-eight—we were all expendable. The death of Buck Davis passed without notice. After all, we were on a mission that theoretically never happened. Quite frankly, we were not all expected to return.