Odyssey Pruit paints pictures of the ghosts and spirits she saw in the halls of an old hotel where she worked ten years before. GUY HOGAN doesn’t believe in ghosts. Hogan is hired to guard Odyssey’s pictures for her first art show in the same old hotel. When an early blizzard closes the roads, knocks out the power and telephone, Hogan is trapped in the hotel with Odyssey’s quirky fans. When imps and ghouls make their presence known, Hogan questions his doubts, and the answer could be murder.
Excerpt
Opening Scene
  By noon, the autumn sky had turned from blue to the color of road
  asphalt.  Treetops bent in the winds funneling into the canyon from the
  high peaks.  Stray snowflakes splattered the windshield, turned into tiny
  droplets, and in an instant were gone.  
My best friend and new
  boss, Dalton Cummings, pulled his pick-up into a parking spot at the back of
  the big, white hotel and killed the engine.  “The truck with the
  paintings is supposed to be here in about an hour.”  He pulled up
  the sleeve of his flannel shirt and checked his Timex for the tenth
  time.  “We’ll leave our gear in the pickup.  I’ll
  let the hotel manager know we’re here.  You see if you can
  find,”--He snatched a clipboard from the dashboard and flipped through
  the pages–-“damn it, I can never remember her...” 
          
“Porsche Hurt,” I told
  him.  “Porsche.  Like the car.  Hurt, like
  ouch.” 
“That’s one of those damn made-up New York
  City names if I’ve ever heard one.  Her folks never gave it to
  her.”
“You’ve said that before.”  Then it
  hit me.  I held back the smile.  “I know what’s going
  on.  Ex-game warden Dalton Cummings is nervous about his first paying job
  since retirement.  What could it be?”  I enjoyed the edge I
  had over my friend.
Cummings turned toward the window.  His breath
  painted a gray haze on the glass.
 “Let me guess.” 
  I wanted to see his face, but he wouldn’t turn back.  “The
  man who fought forest fires, rescued lost campers, and saved fish and wildlife
  for generations to come is afraid of a New York woman.”
“That
  ain’t it.”
“Then what?” 
He shook his
  head, and the brim of his Stetson left a mark on the fogged window. 
  “I don’t like hotels,” he mumbled.
“What?”
“Hotels.” 
  He clamped both hands on the steering wheel.  “I’d rather be
  in my own bed.”  He stared straight ahead.  “I do fine
  in a sleepin’ bag in the backcountry.  But there’s
  somethin’ about a little old mint on a fluffy pillow and turned-down
  sheets that makes me all crawly.”  He shook like he was cold. 
  “It’s all too fancy.” 
“Don’t worry.”
  I bit back a laugh. “It’s just two nights.  You probably
  won’t get any sleep anyway.” I couldn’t resist adding one
  more thing.  “The ghosts will keep you awake.”
Cummings
  jerked up on the door handle and glanced sideways at me.  He raised his
  middle finger.  “Screw you, Hogan.” 
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