Wednesday, October 26, 2016

12.                     Shtick or Conceit?

Algernon carried his bundle to the center of the front lawn and dumped the contents. He set to work arranging several inflatable Halloween figures. He plugged them in and Frankenstein’s Monster towered above him. Dracula held his cape wide. The Wolf Man snarled. A witch stirred her cauldron. He set up flood lights, and turned on eerie organ music just loud enough to set the mood, Bach’s toccata and fugue in D minor. This year he decided to attract some attention.
            He went inside to dress. White face paint first, then hues of gray to accentuate the hollows in his face. Blood red surrounded his eyes and stained his mouth. His clothes were not those of any typical zombie, tattered and stained. He wore an authentic Civil War Union uniform jacket, a deep navy blue with the gold braid of a captain, purchased on the internet.  He grabbed a large bowl of assorted candy and stationed himself outside, seated in front of one of the flood lights.
            There was no visible moon. The wind was dead calm. Algernon waited in vain for any activity on his side of the street. No costumed visitors approached. He stood, stretched, then staggered toward the right, narrowly missing Dracula. He pressed his hand to his side in response to sharp pain below his ribs. The wool of his coat was saturated with blood. He searched the surface and found a musket ball hole. Alarm speared his chest.
            Algernon discovered that his legs would not operate normally. He stumbled forward trying to keep his balance with outstretched arms, all movement caught in the flood lights. A group of teenagers across the way noticed his actions and sauntered over to watch the show. His voice sounded like a croaking howl as he tried to summon their aid. They laughed and murmured among themselves. He felt himself losing conscious-ness. He heard applause as he landed face down on the dewy grass.
            A neighbor called an ambulance after she discovered that Algernon was unresponsive to her shouts over the fence. Fearing some prank gone bad, she brought a blanket to cover him until help arrived. She could not rouse him and turned him over on his side. She gasped at the pool of blood beneath him. It was then she knew he was dead.
            The EMTs rushed onto the scene. As they lifted his body onto the stretcher the fabric of his coat began to fall apart as if the thread of the seams had disintegrated. An EMT pulled away the sodden cloth, which fell to the ground. They loaded the stretcher in the ambulance and sped away. Algernon lay still under a dark covering.
            The ambulance arrived at the emergency entrance. The EMTs prepared to remove the stretcher and were astounded to see Algernon sitting erect. His ghoulish face paint accentuated his staring eyes. In emergency, the doctors could find nothing wrong with him, despite the repeated avowals of the EMTs that they had seen a hole in his abdomen that had caused him to bleed out. The doctors and nurses laughed ruefully that they had been the object of a Halloween scam. The EMTs looked ashen and felt an urgent need for strong coffee. Algernon asked for his uniform jacket. More nervous laughter followed him as he left wearing an abandoned hoodie.
            At home, he could find no sign of the Captain’s coat. The four lawn figures were all deflated, each with a small hole in the front. A dark stain muddied the grass. Algernon grinned. He’d had a fittin’ Hallows E’en.

 (604 words)

(conceit = an elaborate metaphor)

Monday, October 17, 2016

11. Self Possessed at the Midnight Hour


            Why is it that so many awful things, fateful things, happen on Oct.31st?  Great Grandma Jane died on Oct.31st.  Witches were hanged on Oct.31st.  And now, this.
            I used to consider myself ordinary.  I didn’t take to belief in aliens starting our world, angels protecting us (some of us?), and ghosts.  Well, ghosts are a different matter.
At parties, when mohitos allow conversational groups to start discussing embarrassing topics – UFO’s for example, and it comes out what people really dread and secretly think, I always say, “Well, I don’t believe in aliens but I do believe in ghosts.” I am hoping that someone in the alcoholic perfume of the evening will see the comic irony of my declaration.  No one ever does.
            Instead it launches a whispered discussion of hauntings, real experiences, and visitations.  I give up.  Their stories are so ridiculous; do they really expect me, an intellectual thinker, to buy what they’re saying?  Obviously, they fabricate.  None of their tales are real – only mine I realize with a hesitant illumination.  Only mine.
            One of my jobs is giving guided tours in an historic house – home to the Romanovs, famous married writers from the nineteenth century.
            I drifted there by glancing into a local ad paper.  The old house was five minutes away from my house, and I admired the literature produced from the famous, infamous married couple.  After orientation and probation, observation and jumping in like into a freezing lake, I had access to the house, a schedule of tours, and keys.
            I’ve always loved old things, sixties thrift shop dresses with dyed-to-match ostrich feathers, crumbling tomes from the eighteen hundreds like The Man Made of Money by Douglas Jerrolds.  I like things not valued any more – old furs, scarred furniture, unmatched china pieces, and tombstones.  Graveyards.  Yes, I like them, I wish to go to them and sit amongst the long dead.  I feel a peace and welcoming.  They’ve not had visitors for decades, centuries… But I get ahead of myself.
This house that the Romanovs lived in for forty years, it is so rich, so beautiful!  I gasped as if touched when my prospective employer brought me there as part of the interview.  The house itself is large, yet called a ‘cottage’ due to its scallop-patterned roof shingles, the gingerbread detailing along the eves of the gables, and the porches and balconies that presented themselves in the oddest, most unexpected places.  I wished I had lived there, along with them, with the deepest longing of my heart.
            The rooms were configured in a pattern; I would call it unpredictable.  The number of hidden nooks, drawing rooms to draw a mysterious visitor into, stairways to winding hallways and unexpected rooms took my imagination.  I was enchanted from the start.
            How do we know when to trust our senses?  When is it real or are we having a lapse of sanity?  I still wonder to this day.  But there was the little dog.  Even during the                                                                        
orientation tour and the teaching lectures I was aware of it.  At first I thought it was someone’s indulgence, a titled worker taking advantage of privileges, bringing their beloved lap dog to work.  But in an historic site?  Weren’t there rules against such things?  I wouldn’t tell a soul.  I like furry things.  And I like little secrets. 
            Signs of the dog were there from the first day.  A little earthenware dish was tucked into a nook next to the fireplace.  In the front parlor there was a deep blue cushion, tasseled, with tufts of white fur on it.  I smiled when I saw them.  Only I saw them.      
            Although there was a visitor’s center across the green, a costumed interpreter was required to be within the house during open hours.  Being new, I was given this duty.  I didn’t mind.  I love costuming; I make my own, and I loved the house instantly.
            Two weeks into my tenure as a full-fledged employee, I met the family.  I sat in the kitchen/dining room, once used in winter to cook all meals and heat water all the day long.  Wrapped in my white wool shawl, it was a chilly November Tuesday, I sat facing the cold, dark fireplace complete with cauldron, commonplace for all kitchens, and witches’ broom, or hearth broom, to contain flying embers.  No one had come for a tour in the last hour and a half.  I tucked my hands under the shawl, crossed my ankles under my long, flowered, lavender dress under the white pleated apron I had made from a thrift shop drape.
            I closed my eyes and dreamed of a cozy blaze casting encouraging shadows in the room.  Roars of thunder made me jump, then settle, digging my fingers into the thick fur of the small dog on my lap.  The tapping of steady rain on wavy-paned windows soothed me into soft sleep.
I could hear the activity in the rest of the house.  Footsteps on the stairs led to the wooden hallway overhead, then a distant close of a bedroom door.  I heard the sound of soft singing, as my drowsy mind wandered to the chicken stew for dinner, made with fresh thyme and sage from the herb garden, roasted new potatoes, corn bread and drippings saved from breakfast’s bacon.  I would have to go to the root cellar to choose seven apples to make a savory/sweet compote with cinnamon, nutmeg and sugar grated from the cone.
             A sharp rap jolted me from these musings.  My dog vanished. A tour group of two gentlemen from Austria apologized for startling me.  What was true and what was a dream?  I rose to tell them all I knew about the dwelling, which once housed the ill fated, historically blessed Romanovs.
            As I led them from room to room, I related how Walter Romanov, well-known romantic novelist in 1843, answered the door one stormy night to find Jillian Brown, beautiful and bereft, fainting on the doorstep.  (Their sighs and grasping of hands egged me on.  I’m always at my best with true romantics.)  As he supported her as she fell senseless to the floor, the notion of love at first sight became a corner stone of Romanov’s novels.
            The rest is history, or revisionist history, fodder for interpreters to regale their audiences with sentimental soap-opera mush, if the eyes of their listeners showed the glisten of a tear.  This day, as I moved from room to room, I felt a personal edge to their story.  It was almost as if I were telling gossip instead of historical verbiage.  I told of
their intense courtship, a runaway heiress refusing to marry to join two powerful families, and a gentleman farmer, already known for beautiful, free verse poetry. 
            I felt strangely comfortable in my role of storyteller, almost too close to the story.    I wouldn’t have worried except that I picked up a lace shawl on the second floor, very real to my tour charges, in a theatrical sense, very real to me as I tried to disguise my utter surprise.
            After this, my ‘hallucinations’ visited me on a regular basis.  I never mentioned them to anyone, except as a ‘what if’ topic of discussion.  No one ever came forward with their own intrigues.
            I came to accept my ‘historic tantalizations’ as too much caffeine, too little sleep, a hopeful imagination, a very vivid waking dream.
            Ironically, far from causing problems with my supervisors, I was reaping rave reviews.  “A true-to-life presentation,” exclaimed one evaluation sheet, “complete with theatrical props and artifacts.”  So rated the ever-appearing lace shawl, the scent of apple-spice compote, and flickering red embers in several fireplaces.  My superiors were pleased.   I was shaken and enchanted.
            As the months progressed, the scenes from the past presented more and varied proofs of their existence.  December treated some visitors to a drawing room festooned with pine boughs, the fragrance enough to make the hushed refrain of “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” to grow louder as you paused to listen.  It grew louder with your eyes closed.  I always advised my tourists to close their eyes.
            January, February, March rained an assault on the senses.  Roasted mutton and rosemary made visitors’ mouths water. The whirring of a spinning wheel that always seemed to cease the moment before I opened the door to certain bedrooms.  Spattered ink, half finished letters, inky quills, scattered across the desk in the master bedroom.  Two tiny glasses with claret, half finished, on the bed stand.
            Sometimes items of clothing would be tossed on the beds.  Once a washstand with pitcher and washbasin half full by a roaring fire.  When asked how the historical society paid for fire insurance, I would shrug and say that a good historical perspective was foremost in the minds of the trustees. And then there were the remnants of white fur on my clothes.  My little dog, so warm and loving, visited me every day I was there.
            April and May found sheets of poetry left casually on chairs in various rooms.  “To my Jillian”, on one, “For My Love”, on another.  There were wooden pull toys and blocks in the wide front foyer.  Crumbs were on the floor near the back parlor mantelpiece.  Smudges made by tiny fingers appeared on the wavy windowpanes.
            One hot hazy morning, I was alone, unlocking the house for the day.  The alarm started to jangle.  The thing to do was to unlatch the fragile door to the root cellar, which had been tunneled out under the main floor.  I had descended there once to see the switches and dials for the different alarms and sprinkler systems.  I carefully climbed down the uneven wooden steps and flicked the switch to silence the alarm.  Sometimes it would go off due to heat when some of the doors were left closed.
            The root cellar was enclosed with stone; a large fireplace on one side once used to roast animals took up the wall on one side. I felt an alarming sense of dread.  This was not a good place to be alone to become trapped, to witness infamy.  As I drew my shawl closer and groped for the stairs, I tried to ignore that something dripped thickly from the upstairs floorboards.
            On the main floor, bird song pulled me from my foreboding.  The effulgent scent of lilacs drowned my senses from windows that should not be opened.  Music from a pianoforte tinkled a waltz.  My startled thoughts caused me to stumble through a side doorway, lower and recessed under a stairwell.  As I spun into the five sided room, I smoothed my brown hair in the elongated mirror on the wall, tightened the satin belt of my dressing gown, and sank gratefully in front of the round tea table, set with white batten burg lace, a small silver tea service and an exquisite lavender china cup and saucer.  Small herby cakes and jam were on a plate.
            As I refreshed myself with these thoughtful amenities, I thanked Patsy for her kindness in my mind, after the frightening argument I had just had with Walter.  She must have heard and prepared this tiny feast as a restorative.   How well she knew me, knew us.  Little Vixen, my white Pomeranian, entered the room and danced in delirious circles until I offered her come crumbs and scooped her into my lap. Despite the fear and disquiet in my life, there were always these certain comforts.  I sank my fingers into her thick fur and began to doze as I gazed into the flickering, soothing fire.
            Very disquieting, very disquieting indeed.  I would every so often wake in some odd place in the cottage, sometimes clutching what I thought were sheets of poetry, empty fingers, sometimes with the taste of fragrant tea on my lips and a linen napkin on my lap.  No one ever discovered me this way.  Was it luck, or more, were they apprehended should they approach, to some other distraction, on my behalf?
            July, August, and September found me to be number one in recommendations from an exuberant list of visitors.  Happy as this made the administration of our historic site, it did not serve to change my salary of just above minimum wage.
            October, a favorite time of year, sunned its way into the mullion-windowed rooms of the Romanov House.  Walter and Jillian must walk there especially at this beautiful time, I thought.  The crisp breezes and almost chilly temperature made the house cozier, as the light of the candles lit at five PM, made the shadows soft as they leaned against the wall.  The museum closed at four.  Some deceptive magic made the staff in the visitors’ center, and the caretaker in his tiny house in the corner of the square not notice me.  I was often still there. I found it harder and harder to leave.
             When I did pull myself away, I would always be drawn to the wistful little cemetery yard.  I could never leave without visiting there first, partially because I felt a comfort there, as if near a friend and also it was such a wonder to see what flowers or keepsakes would be on the graves.  When I had first mentioned this to a co-worker, Sue Ann, she had laughed thinking I was entertaining her with insider humor.  I knew that the staff considered me brainy and quirky, an adjective I wasn’t quite sure was a compliment.  So I knew never to mention it again.  It was for my observation and enjoyment alone.  It pleased me to see the graves of the beloved dead adorned.
            The management left October to dried leaves and longer shadows. They refused to admit the spirit of approaching Halloween.  They felt it put an unprofessional cast on the historic seriousness of the place.  I learned they had refused many requests by seers, those who claimed to receive contact from the dead, for séances in the house at this time of year. I shivered to think that maybe in this way, others would know what I had seen.  At the same time I relished the thought that the scented past was all mine.
            October 31st was considered to be like any other workday, a lonely Tuesday.  Most visitors would avoid this day.  I was in the old house alone.  I wore a chocolate brown velvet skirt, slightly bustled and longer in the back that swished as I drifted from room to room.  A velvet fitted vest, trimmed with dark brown frogged edging, contained a frilly, cream blouse.  My luxuriant yellow shawl, so woolly, soft and touchable, puddled from my bent elbows.  My hair was upswept; garnets caught the light and dangled from my ears.  My gray kid shoes made soft tapping on the wooden floor.
            Urgent. Something was urgent, sending me from room to room.  What was I looking for?  I had to find it soon.
            As I approached the rear portion of the house where a series of small, specialized rooms were nestled, the library/reading room, a small receiving room, then the pantry/cupboards, the borning room, my heart began to pound in my chest.  I was almost there.
            If I dashed around the corner, as silently as possible, would I catch sight of her?  If I stayed silent, in the hallway near the door, would I hear the voices, mostly her voice telling and explaining, answering occasional questions?  Then, somehow, could I prove this to the others, to Walter?  Hurry.  Carefully.
I threw open the door of the receiving room.  There they were.  There she was.  I shrieked for my husband, shrieked for vindication.  Shrieked, strangled, and fell onto the pointed handle of the candle holder that fell from my hand.  It was midnight; how long till someone came to me?

            Blinking, I struggled to open my eyes.  My visitors stood transfixed, amazed at what they considered to be fabulous acting ability.  I let go of the doorjamb, took a deep breath, and continued, “She died on this spot. She fainted and fell impaled on her candle holder.  Her blood seeped through the gaps in the floorboards, down into the root cellar. Some say the stain is still there.  If we were to return tonight at the midnight hour, we would be sure to see her life’s blood pooling on the stone.  Jillian Romanov, gifted author, married to Walter Romanov for forty years, died from the fright of seeing ghosts on Halloween, 1884.”

(2,752 words)

10. Suspension of Belief


            Lia glanced down at her full skirt and diaphanous blouse with the sequined border. She did not remember dressing in this lavender gown of sorts. And where were her shoes? She gazed at her image in the antique mirror above her dresser and decided her look to be eccentric at best. But there were venues accepting of outliers. Like museums and historical societies. She had an appointment at 3 o’clock.
            “Seeking “ghost” to haunt the halls of Volodymyr Castle. No experience necessary. Interest in history a plus.”
            She’d spoken to the executive director. A board member had the bright idea to boost visitation by upgrading the usual docent interaction with a more direct connection to the past.
            “Lia Maelstrom? George Feris. Please have a seat. I must say that at first glance you fit the bill. A lavender dress, silvery blonde hair and an ethereal air, you seem to have a feel for this kind of work.”
            “Oh, I, …thank you,” said Lia feeling a bit tripped up. “I’ve always loved Volodymyr Castle since forever. I already know its halls and rooms. I’d love to work here.”
            “Your job would not be to give a tour. Rather you would create atmosphere by promoting an air of mystery. As you may know, this house had its share of tragedy and intrigue. Most people know the stories. We hope to bring it alive. The last few seasons have been rather slow. Hard to compete with contemporary attractions.”
            Her job, she was given to understand, was to be unavailable to the public in that she would never speak or answer inquiries. She would strive to show herself sparingly, peering from windows, drifting across landings, exiting doorways. Visitors would spy her in mirrored reflection, notice her hand brushing the door jamb. Just her sort of job thought Lia who knew herself to be a bit shy of strangers. A kind of theatrical fleeing was required.
            At home settled in her bed her lips curled into a tiny smile as she thought that she may actually frighten someone.
            Lia’s first week in the castle sparked her creative spirit. She made a collection of instrumentals inspired by Khachaturian’s Masquerade Waltz that she kept playing softly. The scent of lavender and spice lingered in the rooms. A gossamer scarf draped on a sofa would be gone when guests passed through a sitting room again. Goblets would be drained of ruby wine. Candles would be alight or showing a last whiff of smoke. Personal effects would be left as if their owner would just return. Lia received rave reviews that her haunting methods were well received. The museum staff decided to expand tours to night hours when the ghost would excite the imaginations of those more inclined to the macabre.
            One such tour had Lia disturbed. Her usual spectral touches were in place. As she passed through the castle on soft soled feet with the ease afforded by ballroom dancing shoes she noticed unexpected details. The French doors were left open wide blowing the gossamer curtains wildly into the drawing room. A fire was started in the hearth of the servant’s quarters common area.  A broken glass lay smashed on the stone floor of the great kitchen. Someone else was in the castle.
            Waiting on the main floor for the tour group to descend from above, she heard laughter. Odd, the elderly guide, Milton, rarely made jokes, and certainly never in the master bedroom where domestic tragedy had occurred. She knew his discourse by heart. Then a large dog’s scrabbling claws and throaty huffing presaged his reckless charge down the stairs directly to Lia’s hiding spot behind the wing-back chair. Raucous howls caused her to shrink to the ground. He exited through the French doors.
            Lia covered her mouth to stifle a shriek and dashed into the dining hall.  A bloody knife lay on the white damask table cloth. She jumped backwards into strong arms that grasped her securely. Turning to gaze into a man’s face the scream she’d hoped to prevent tore from her. She struggled as he pulled her into a small library beyond the stairs.
            “You scare easily,” he laughed.
            “You can release me if you please,” snorted Lia, annoyed at his cavalier attitude. “What are you doing here tonight? I work alone.”
            “Do you? I heard the museum folk were hoping to broaden the old place’s appeal and I thought I’d join in the fun. I’ve..”
            “Please, you think it’s fun to stain the white linens and allow the weather into the house? And how did you ever get permission to let that enormous hound in here?”
            “That’s my dog, Hunt.”
            “He almost gave me away!”
            “I sent him to find you. I’ve always thought the legacy of the castle would be better served if they had the nerve to be innovative like this. If some artifacts, easily replaced get soiled or destroyed what of it? This isn’t a mausoleum. It should be alive as it once was.”
            “Alive,” said Lia. “People died here.”
            “Have you ever stopped to think of how many residences have seen the deaths of inhabitants? Violently or otherwise?”
            “You’ve been working for the historical society for a while then?”
            “You could say that. I try to direct things if I can. I’ve been whispering in their ears, visiting their dreams, pushing them to bridge the stretch from life to death, past to present.”
            “You mean that you…” said Lia, pausing to swallow, “are, a…”
            “Non-living person of the past who has never yet left? Yes.”
            “I don’t believe in that possibility.”
            “Surely you do now.”

            Lia extended her hand. “I thought I was the only one.”

(950 words)