The
Mirror
The
antique mirror couldn’t have been more perfect for the wall above her bedroom dresser.
It took Janine six months of searching to find just the right one after her ex
took the previous mirror out of spite. Prick, she thought, smiling. You lose.
That
night, her Kindle on her lap, a glass of wine on the bedside table, Janine
relaxed against her pillows, engrossed in her latest novel. Her phone rang and she checked the number. It
was her ex, Randy. Her eyes rolled and she disconnected, not in the mood for
any more drama.
Then,
out of the corner of her eye, she saw a shadow move in the mirror. The only
light in the room was from a small lamp on her bedside table, and she got up
and went to her new purchase. At first, everything seemed as it should, but
soon an image formed of her ex-husband sitting on the bed holding a handgun and
looking upset. She gasped and turned her head, but no one was there, and when
she turned back, the image was gone.
As
a person who took the paranormal seriously, Janine called her ex back, but
there was no answer. Panicked, she dialed 911 and told the dispatcher she
thought Randy might be suicidal. He was a prick, but they had history, and she
didn’t want to see him do this.
Fifteen
minutes passed and her phone rang.
“This
is Officer Duncan, Miss Melano. We’ve located your ex-husband’s car.”
“Yes?”
“It’s
parked in front of your house.”
Karla
Should Have Known
As
the paper’s editor, I was becoming concerned about one of my best reporters,
Karla. We had history, even dated for a while until she called it off,
complaining I was too vindictive. Whatever.
I
had a paper to run, so I kept an eye on her and could see Karla growing more
and more paranoid by the day, claiming that a mysterious person wearing
sunglasses and a baseball cap was stalking her.
We
went to lunch one afternoon and she continuously looked around the room, her
eyes scanning faces, her own face muscles twitching nervously. I tried to get
her to talk about who would be watching her (besides the NSA), and she said she
wasn’t sure, but that it could have something to do with a story she did about
a local religious cult last year. I tried to help, but other than suggesting
she see a therapist, which I regretted immediately, I was pretty useless.
Karla’s
mental state deteriorated further, and she was finally hospitalized and getting
the care she desperately needed, or so I thought. Shortly after my most recent
visit, the hospital called and said Karla had committed suicide by jumping from
her fourth-floor window.
That
evening, as I walked to my car in the lot, I pulled a pair of sunglasses and a
baseball cap out of my briefcase and tossed them into a trashcan. Of all people,
Karla should have known. Dumping me has its consequences.
Cozmo
Cleaning the disaster area that was her son Tim’s bedroom
was never an enjoyable task. There were always piles of smelly clothes to go
through, plates with moldy leftovers and empty energy drink cans everywhere.
Jen was on her hands and knees checking under the bed when she discovered a
Ouija board and planchette.
When Tim came home from school, she confronted him about it.
“What’s the big deal?” he asked. With a little more probing,
Jen found out Tim and his friends communicated with a spirit named Cozmo. “He
said to never tell anyone about him or…”
“Or what?”
“Or he’d come to the house and kill me.”
“It’s all rubbish, you know,” insisted Jen. “There’s a
scientific reason why the pointer moves and it doesn’t have anything to do with
ghosts or spirits. It’s called the ideomoter effect. You’re too old to be
wasting your time on this nonsense.”
Despite Tim’s angry protests, Jen threw out the board.
In the early hours of the morning, Jen got up to use the
bathroom and noticed a dim light escaping from Tim’s room. She opened the door
and found her son sitting on the edge of his bed, eyes wide with terror.
“Honey, what’s wrong?”
Tim slowly raised his hand and pointed in her direction.
Confused, she looked behind the door.
“Nothing there,” she said, suddenly inhaling the stench of
decaying flesh as an arm wrapped around her throat and squeezed.
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