Page 4 of Chaos in Charleston

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Adrenaline hit my veins, just enough to get me excited about the evening. I loved investigating cases, and this one had so much potential. I couldn’t wait to sink my teeth into it.

“Great, let’s get started,” the guide said and led our group onto the dock, over the water, and into the boat… er… ship.

We set up shop in the theater room. Yes, the ship was huge and had a theater onboard. I guess I understood what Dane meant. An entire city on the water. It wasn’t until you were in it that you developed an appreciation for what they’d built and then the men who lived in it.

Our guide and his assistant placed various pieces of equipment along the theater’s staging area as he began his speech. “This ship is actually the fourth vessel to carry the name USS Yorktown.”

“See how he calls it a ship?” Dane whispered in my ear as we moved closer.

I pretended not to hear him.

“The government commissioned this ship in 1943, and it participated in multiple campaigns over the course of its enlistment,” the guide continued. He gave us an overview of the history of the ship, promised us a tour and time to explore on our own, and then reached for the first piece of equipment behind him. “This, my friends, is an EMF detector. Has anyone seen one of these before?”

A few people in our group raised their hands.

“Great,” he said, holding it up to the group. A light flashed red and beeped. “It seems the ghosts are making an appearance early tonight.”

We followed the guide through a quick tour of the ship while he also showed us how to use the various equipment. The death ratio on the USS Yorktown was low, making me skeptical it had a pile of ghosts waiting to kill William, although his EMF detector did beep at various places on the ship. Were they ghosts?

The tour ended back in the theater room with our guides letting participants wander certain parts of the ship on our own. Dane and I both grabbed EMF devices and set out toward the exit of the room.

“Just make sure you stay on the main walkways and don’t leave the ship. Our exit doors are locked to keep others from entering the ship. We’ll have some time to explore the top deck outside when we leave,” the guide yelled at those of us making our way from the room.

We walked out into the main area, and I tried the doorknob of the first room we came to.

Locked.

“Whoa, princess. Let’s not be doing that,” Dane said, trying to stand between me and the door.

I pretended not to hear him. “It’s fine. I’m just testing them.”

“You’re going to be testing us right off this ship,” he said, trying to walk between me and the doors as we made our way in the opposite direction of the other group members.

I paused when our path opened up into three different options. “Why do you guess William was here?”

“He liked ghosts?” Dane said, holding out his EMF device and picking the left option for us.

Another couple from the group passed us, clearly on their way somewhere in particular. How did they remember where things were?

They turned a corner, and I tried another door quickly before Dane stepped in front of it. “He researched many of the city’s haunted stories for his blog.”

“That would have been useful information to have before we started this,” Dane said, walking to the next door before I got there.

What was he all upset about? “I told you about the blog.”

“Not the ghost part. That’s the important part.”

I shrugged, searching for another door or room full of ghosts. “I’m the investigator, and you’re the hired help.”

The muscular, super-hot hired help.

“I hear them talking to me!” a woman yelled back in the direction we came. “They say to get out. Get out now!”

“What the hell?” I asked and turned to walk back the way we came toward the yelling.

At the exit of the theater room, in a red padded chair, a woman with blonde hair sat as if in a trance. In her hands, she had two long rods poking out from sticks where she held them. They flew together in a cross, uncrossed, and then returned.

“We’re all in trouble if we stay here. This is their ship,” she said, her voice sounding far away yet right there.