View Purchase Options
Catherine Coulter - Grayson Sherbrooke's Otherworldly Adventures Collection: Books 6-8
The Alarming Disturbance at Holyroodhouse, The Night Creature at Storne Hope, The Demon in the Wall
By: Catherine Coulter
series:Grayson Sherbrooke's Otherworldly Adventures
genre: Fiction - Fiction
publication date:06/30/2026
description
The Alarming Disturbance at Holyroodhouse
Cibalto Turduck, Commendator for Holyroodhouse, Queen Victoria's palace in Edinburgh, has a big problem with otherworldly presences wreaking havoc. It's Grayson to the rescue with the help of Pip, P.C., Barnaby, with parents in tow. Prepare to meet Mary, Queen of Scots, her dissolute husband Lord Henry, and of course some really nasty fiends bent on destruction.
The Night Creature at Storne Hope
Thomas Oliver Maxwell Strickland (Max), the newly minted 6th Earl of Storne, wakes in his London apartment to find a young child hiding in his armoire. The child, who calls herself Crispin, is a runaway, but refuses to tell him any more of her story. Max, hopeful to help the child, invites her to stay at his new home, Storne Hope castle.
At Belhaven, Grayson Sherbrooke and Pip are expecting a visit from P.C., Miranda, and Barnaby, who now goes by Brady since being reunited with their family. Grayson learns that Max is with them, and will be taking up residence at Storne Hope castle, which is nearby at Piper's Hill. Grayson tells the tragic history of Storne Hope and the ghost of Lady Hilda who still roams the rooms and halls of the residence.
When one night Crispin claims that she has been visited by Lady Hilda, Max enlists the help of Grayson to further understand the child's secrets, and why Lady Hilda would take any interest. Grayson quickly learns the child hides a startling power, and that the evil she is running from is more terrifying and relentless than anyone could have imagined.
The Demon in the Wall
In Grayson Sherbrooke's eighth thrilling installment, Grayson, Miranda and their three children settle into their new summer residence on the Dindor River, said to have the least rainfall in England. Grayson has made many changes to the residence, but there is one room he insists the children not enter. Why? He simply says, "I don't like the feel of it." So, of course, the children go inside the empty room with its stark white walls, and Pip, nearly six years old, sees a bulge in the wall. P.C. and Barnaby don't see anything else, but when Pip ventures closer, he's sucked into the wall. Naturally Grayson and Miranda follow after him and what happens next is being anything they could imagine. Do enjoy this wild and woolly Otherworldly Adventure.