Showing posts with label They're only shadows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label They're only shadows. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

The Girl Next Door

“I know a game, but you gotta come over here to play.”

“I can’t without my mom.”

“Sure you can. Just walk around the fence. It’s a secret game just for kids.”

The Chase family had been in their new home for a week, but Christie was still unpacking boxes and setting up the kitchen. She glanced up from the sink and saw her six-year old son Dillon standing next to the weathered privacy fence that cordoned off the backyard, appearing to be talking to himself. Wiping her hands on her pants, Christie walked outside.

“Hey, kiddo, whatchya doing?”

“Talking to Ally, the girl next door.”

“Cool. I didn’t know our neighbors had kids. Hi Ally.” There was no reply.

“I think she went inside,” said Dillon.

“Yeah, probably. Come on, I’ll fix you some lunch.”

Over bowls of mac and cheese, Christie and Dillon sat in unusual silence.

“You’re quiet today. Everything okay?” asked Christie.

“I guess. Ally’s kind of creepy.”

“What makes you say that? I thought maybe I could invite her over here to play.”

Dillon’s eyes widened. “No. I don’t want her to come over here.”

“But why?”

“I just don’t. That’s all.”

The afternoon passed quietly. Dillon played in his room while Christie rearranged the cupboards, giving up on trying to get anything more from him about the girl next door.  Nagged by Dillon’s odd reaction to Ally, Christie decided to introduce herself to the neighbors as a pretext to see for herself what they were like.

She called up the stairs that she’d be outside for a few minutes, and then walked quickly down the sidewalk to the door of Ally’s house. Repeated knocks brought no response and when she peeked in the window, she saw the home was empty.

“There’s no one living there,” a voice called out. Christie turned toward an elderly woman in the next yard wearing gardening gloves. “Something happened to the youngest daughter in the family. Had to institutionalize her. Nasty little thing. The family moved out a few months ago and I won’t say I was sorry to see them go.”

“Thank you,” replied a confused Christie as she walked slowly back and turned down her driveway.

“Mom.” Christie stopped and looked up. Framed by the second story window of his bedroom, Dillon whispered loudly through the screen. “I told you not to ask the neighbor girl over.”

Christie opened her mouth to speak, but instead a terrified shriek escaped when she saw a pair of eyes just over Dillon’s shoulder.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Still more short scary stories

The Nightmare

Jennifer hated working late. The office was old, the neighborhood sketchy and the underground parking lot was dark and creepy. The presentation, however, was tomorrow morning and it still needed work. The clock on her computer read 10:15.

It was 12: 30 when she lifted her head up off of her arm. It took her a moment to fight through the fog, but it finally registered that she’d slept over two hours at her desk. The overhead lights were off and the white glow from her cube was the only illumination in the large open floor. She rushed to finish the presentation and then gathered up her coat, phone and keys.

Not only were the lights off on her floor, the hallway to the elevators was lit only by emergency lights. It was a shadowy, tense walk down the hallway. She pressed the down button repeatedly and angrily with no response. A light at the opposite end of the hallway went out, then another. Methodically, each emergency light went dark, until Jennifer was standing in complete blackness.

Knees trembling, she extended an arm and moved slowly until she touched a wall and then put her back against the surface. A door shut somewhere. Footsteps? How could anyone walk around in the pitch black? The clicks grew louder.

“Hello?” said Jennifer, her voice quivering.

The footsteps stopped.

“Hello?”

Warm breath touched her ear. A person was close enough to breath on her. “Wake up, Jennifer.”

It was 12: 30 when she lifted her head up off of her arm…


Flight 74

The older gentleman next to me in the window seat was staring out at the white carpet of clouds below the plane when he spoke.

“I forgot my pills.”

“Excuse me?” I asked.

He turned toward me. His eyes were red as if he’d been crying, his face ashen. “I forgot my pills.”

“Sorry,” I said, not knowing how else to respond. “We’ll be landing in about a half-hour.”

“I won’t last that long without my pills.”

“Do you have a heart condition? Should I get a flight attendant?”

The man turned back to the window. “No. I’m afraid that won’t help,” he said, with a sense of resignation.

***

“Repeat. This is UA flight 74 requesting permission for an emergency landing. Over.”

“What is the nature of your emergency?”

“There’s something happening in the main cabin. Flight attendants are not responding. We can hear screams….”

“Flight 74, you have permission to land…Flight 74, do you read? Flight 74….?


The Tattoo

Head throbbing, stomach churning, I pulled myself up slowly to a sitting position in bed. I hadn’t had a hangover this bad in ages. I remembered meeting my friends Todd and Kip downtown for a drink, but after moving to a second bar, everything goes dark. I hooked up with someone…think her name is Carla. After a minute, she came out of the bathroom, not looking much better than I felt.

“How are you?” I asked.

“I feel like shit,” she declared, sitting on the edge of the bed. “Thank god for cabs. Last thing I remember is the tattoo parlor…”

I tilted my head. “What? Tattoo parlor?”

Carla frowned and pointed. On the back of my hand was a brand new tattoo, the skin around its edges still red and irritated. It was some kind of symbol, like a rune or something. “I tried to talk you out of it.”

“What the fuck? I don’t remember anything. What is it?”

“There was this creepy old lady sitting at the bar and she overheard us talking about tattoos. She drew that on a napkin and gave it to you. Said it was an ancient symbol of protection. Next thing I remember is being in a tattoo place where you got that done.”

I looked at the symbol again. “Protection? Wonder if it works.”

Carla’s head snapped toward me. Her eyes widened and darkened. Her lips curled back to expose teeth like an angry dog. Suddenly, it wasn’t the face of a woman, but of a creature.

“You’re still alive, aren’t you?”


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

A girl can't be too careful

“Someone did a background check on you,” read the subject line from a software security firm. Normally she would have sent the unsolicited email directly to the trash, but these weren’t normal times and something told her this could be worth looking into. A girl can’t be too careful these days.
An early December snowstorm choked downtown Minneapolis with a blinding, blustery assault, keeping would be Christmas Shoppers and Warehouse District employees inside for the afternoon. The lunchroom of Hobbs & Linderman, a large design agency in the Twin Cities, was busier than usual as employees grumbled over Lean Cuisine and stale sandwiches from the vending machines. Senior designer Alice Nolan and copywriter Conner Farmington occupied a small table in a corner of the noisy room.
            “Is that a new tat?” asked Conner.
            Alice lifted up her arm. “Yeah. It’s a butterfly with Jeffrey Dahmer’s face.”
            “Of course it is. The expiration date on this cinnamon roll is in Roman numerals.”
            Alice smiled. “Well, since you’ve eaten half of it, I hope that’s not a problem.”
            “I’ve had worse. Do you or do you not find it weird that most of the people we work with on a daily basis are total strangers? I mean, here’s an example. I interact with Janice Dempsey almost every day. Project coordinator. She’s nice, capable, good at her job, but I know exactly nothing about her. No wedding ring. Okay. Not married. A bit gamey and course at times, but not outrageous. Beyond that, nothing. Even though I converse with her probably more than anyone else in my life, I don’t know a damn thing about her.”
            “And this troubles you.”
            “I find it odd. That’s all. On a given workday, I spend more time with you than I spend with my boyfriend. Okay, more conscious time, yet I only know bits and pieces of your life, but it’s a whole lot more than I know about Janice. Do you not find that strange?”
            “I live with two cats who know me better than my parents. Go figure. You gonna eat that pickle?”
            “No.
            “The copy for Dow?”
            “Yeah?” said Alice with a twinge of dread.
            “Full of cryptic satanic references that will make fundamentalist Christians instantly evacuate their bowels when they read it.”
            “That’ll win us more work. Do you really want to know more about Janice Dempsey’s life? And if the answer is yes, why?”
            “My point is a simple one. I spend a lot of my life with a group of people I know nothing about.”
            Alice leaned in. “That can be a good thing.”
            “If you have a lot to hide, maybe.”
            “I wish. Besides, this is 2014. You can find out almost anything about anyone online.”
            “Please. That’s too much like stalking for me.”
            “Listen, you’re interested in the life of Janice Dempsey? In a half-hour of searching I bet I can find out a ton of information about her.”
            “Okay, but why?”
            “Call it a personal challenge.” Conner arched an eyebrow. “Okay. My life is so boring and empty even this sounds exciting.”
            The loft apartment reeked of burnt kale that was left in the skillet too long. Alice chewed on carrot stick and glared at the hardboiled egg sitting in a bed of salt next to her computer that would be her dinner tonight. Punishment for neglect. Janice Dempsey was turning out to be a bit of an enigma. People searches only turned up a Janice Dempsey at her current address in Minnetonka. Nothing relevant earlier than three years ago, when she started at Hobbs & Linderman. A common name, Google churned out hundreds of links related to Janice Dempsey, and the half hour she had originally scheduled for the search turned into an hour and then two. Janice Dempsey disappears after husband’s death. Janice Dempsey wins 100-meter breaststroke for Bemidji State. Janet Dempsey celebrates 94th birthday. Janet Dempsey latest victim in string of Toronto murders. Janice Dempsey to speak at West Coast chiropractor convention. Janet Dempsey promoted to Vice President, Sales at Bennett Medical Supplies. The disappearing Janet Dempsey was intriguing and she went back to that story.
            According to the AP, in 2010, four years ago, Alice noted on a pad next to the computer, Janice Dempsey of Phoenix Arizona reported that her husband Kenneth had committed suicide. Police found Mr. Dempsey’s body on the floor of a bedroom in their house as well as several nearby empty vials of prescription sleeping pills. Mrs. Dempsey said she had gone out for the evening with friends and came home to find her husband unresponsive. An autopsy was performed and evidence was found of a blunt force wound to the back of Mr. Dempsey’s head. When police arrived at the Dempsey’s house three days later, there was no sign of Mrs. Janice Dempsey. All attempts to locate Mrs. Dempsey over the preceding six months turned up nothing.
            There was a grainy, shadowy photo of Mrs. Dempsey with the story. The woman in the picture had dark hair, but when Alice squinted and imagined her with blond tresses, she could see a resemblance to Janice Dempsey at work. The age was about right. Structure of the cheeks…Alice put a hand to her mouth. Oh my god, we may be working with a murderer.
            The next day Alice physically pulled Conner into a large coat closet. “She killed her husband.”
            “What are you talking about?”
            “Janice Dempsey. Four years ago, she killed her husband and then assumed a new identity. And she’s working here.”
            “Look at me for a minute. If that’s true, she wouldn’t be calling herself Janice Dempsey. Am I right?”
            What little air there was in Alice’s argument whooshed into the ether. “Uh…okay. Yes, you are right. But…I hate you.”
            “Meet you in the cafeteria at nine-thirty.”
            “Right.”
            The next few days drifted by as days do. Alice licked the wounds to her ego and tried to forget about Janice Dempsey. Who cares? She has secrets, we all have secrets. Then Conner stopped at her cube with a disturbing expression. “Lunch room. Twenty minutes.”
            Twenty minutes later the two sat at a high table in a corner. “What?” asked Alice. “What is it?”
            Conner had to breath deeply several times before responding. “Okay, let me get my self together. I was in vendoland trying to decide what poison I wanted to ingest when Janice came in. We started chit-chatting, she has a Welsh corgi and I just adore Corgis…anyway, I asked her if she grew up here and she said, “No, I grew up in the Southwest. Phoenix.” Phoenix. Where the murderer Janice Dempsey is from.”
            “Holy shit. She admitted it. Wait. Nothing makes any sense. Why would she admit she’s from Phoenix and why would she not change her name?”
            “Honestly, I don’t know, but this is some crazy circumstantial evidence, don’t you think?”
            “Sometimes killers actually get off on taunting the police, leaving clues, like the Zodiac guy.”
            “Yeah, but this seems so blatant.”
            ‘Okay, okay. Let me think. We need to do a stakeout.”
            “What?”
            “A stakeout. Watch her place. See what she does at night.”
            “Why?”
            “Why? Have you never watched a freaking movie in your life? If she’s a killer, she probably has some very strange habits, like going to nightclubs at midnight or walking around the park at—“
            “What park?”
            “Loring Park.”
            “Honey, this is Minneapolis in the middle of winter. Even the craziest killer isn’t going out in this weather…unless it’s to shop.”
            “Hey guys.” It was Janice holding a steaming bowl of something from the microwave. “Mind if I join you?”
            Smiles erupted. “No,” said Alice. “Please do.”
            The two conspirators tried to hide their nervousness. “So are you busy?” asked Alice.
            “Always. Not enough hours in the day. You?”
            “Yeah. Probably going to have to stay late tonight.” Alice immediately regretted volunteering that information.
            “I probably should, but I’m meeting a couple of friends for drinks.”
            “They must be good friends to get you out in a storm like this,” said Conner.
            “Fortunately, we’re meeting at the Republic which is only a two block walk from my place. No driving involved.”
            “Ah, so you live in Uptown,” prodded Alice.
            “Right across from the Lund’s. It’s a fun area and I’m kind of a party girl.”
            Alice gave Conner a quick sideways glance. The conversation turned back to mundane work-related topics. Alice returned to her cube and saw she already had an email from Conner.
            “She’s wearing a wig.”
            Alice tried to distract herself that evening with TV, then a book, and finally her guitar, but she could not get Janice Dempsey out of her head. She was obsessing. It was a trait of hers that she’d always hated, and that had led to her heart being broken more than once and struggles with drugs and alcohol, but it happened whether she wanted it to or not. The truth about Janet Dempsey was her latest all-consuming quest.
Sitting with rigid intent in front of her computer, Alice began searching deeper into Janice Dempsey’s background. From clues in the news article about the murder, she was able to trace Janice back to a wedding announcement in the Phoenix Herald. Her maiden name was Gorman. This led to Arapaho High School where three years earlier senior Janice Gorman was a cheerleader and a member of the track and field team. She graduated with honors. The only other piece of information Alice could find was a police report about responding to a domestic violence situation at the Dempsey house six months prior to the murder. All that this told her was that Janice Dempsey was in a bad marriage. Then she turned her attention to Glenn Dempsey, the murdered husband. He too had gone to Arapaho High where he played football and lettered in several sports. She found an article indicating he had joined the Army after graduating and spent a year in Iraq before returning to Phoenix, where he must have reconnected with Janice. Maybe he suffered from some kind of post-traumatic disorder, thought Alice. She finally gave up, closed her laptop and got ready for bed.
Snow was still falling the next morning and the commute to work was a sloppy nightmare of ice-clogged wipers, spinouts and blaring horns. All that Alice could think about was Janice’s declaration that she was “kind of a party girl.” It was hard to concentrate on her work, and by noon, she’d made up her mind.
“You’re going to stake out her place?” asked Conner.
“Yep. From dusk ‘till dawn. It’s Friday, she’s a party girl, and I’m going to find out what she’s hiding.”
“Maybe we’re taking this thing a bit too far. Maybe she did murder her husband, but that was years ago. She could have turned over a new leaf and put that all behind her. Maybe her husband was abusive and deserved it. We don’ know.”
“And maybe she’s looking for her next victim. I’m not calling the cops. Yet. Why is she wearing a wig? No one wears a wig anymore.”
“Cancer?”
“She admitted she was from Phoenix. It doesn’t take a genius to put two and two together.”
“Alice, I just don’t think it’s a great idea. You’re going to sit in your car freezing to death while she’s up in her bedroom sleeping. What is the point?”
“I thought you were with me on this.”
Conner looked down at his salad and sighed. “Call me if you find out anything.”
Having watched what time Janice normally left over the past few days, Alice was lying on the front seat of her car as Janice drove by toward the parking lot exit. Alice followed behind cautiously, thankful the falling snow acted as a bit of camouflage on the drive from downtown to Uptown. Finally, Janice turned onto a narrow side street and parked her car. Alice drove by and then doubled back. After several minutes looking for an open space, she found that the parking lot of Lund’s grocery store offered the perfect vantage point for observing both the apartment building and the suspect’s car. She opened the thermos she’d brought with her filling the cabin with the comforting aroma of coffee. An hour passed, then another. Lights were on in several apartments, others were dark and lifeless. Alice had to turn the car on every ten or fifteen minutes to whisk the snow off of the glass. It was now ten o’clock and hers was one of only a few cars still in the parking lot. She began thinking that, as much as she hated to admit it, Conner may have been right. This was an exercise in futility. And it was damned cold. She rested her forehead on the steering wheel. There were three sharp wraps on the window next to her. Alice jumped and turned toward a dark face only inches away. She screamed instinctively, but covered her mouth with her hand when she recognized the face belonged to Janice. Not knowing what else to do, she rolled down the window.
“Hey,” said Janice smiling. “I thought that was you.”
Squirming, digging deep for something logical, Alice stuttered. “I…yeah…wow…I…only store in town that carries my brand of…olive oil.”
“You’re cooking this late. You must be a night owl like me.”
“I am. When I can’t sleep, I’ll just cook something. You know?”
“I’m just coming back from a club. As long as you’re here why don’t you come up for a drink.”
“Oh, thanks but—“
“Just across the street. Come on.”
Alice smiled and nodded. She followed Janice across the icy street and into the faux Mediterranean stucco apartment building. On the third floor, Janice pulled out her keys and they entered the dark apartment. Alice was both anxious and full if anticipation. She was going to get a glimpse into Janice’s private life, something that never would have happened otherwise. She rationalized that even if the woman did kill her husband, she wasn’t necessarily someone who killed innocent people. There was probably a good reason for her one dramatic act of violence, as Conner suggested.
Lights came on and Alice absorbed her surroundings like a sponge. The living room was sparse, with two large brown leather chairs and a couch. A modern glass coffee table sat on a tan accent rug. It was oddly….
“So,” said Janice, throwing her coat on the back of the couch. “What would you like? I’ve got wine, vodka, some gin…”
“A glass of wine would be great.”
“You got it. Sit. Make yourself comfortable.”
Alice did as she was told. Janice bustled around in the kitchen. There was an odor lingering in the air that was oddly musky.
Janice set the wine glass on the side table next to Alice’s chair and returned to the kitchen. “Wow, I still can’t get over the coincidence of running into you across the street from my place. Weird.”
“Yeah, weird,” said Alice, picking up the glass and taking a sip of wine. “Mmm. This is good.”
“Oh, thanks. I dated someone once who was very into wine and I got spoiled on the good stuff.” Janice came back into the room with a glass of something clear and sat down on the couch.
Alice took another drink. “Was that in Phoenix?”
Janice smiled. “No. I hate to admit this, but I told our friend Conner a little white lie.”
The temperature in the room suddenly flared up and Alice was sweating. Her hands started trembling. “A lie?”
“I’m not really from Phoenix.”
Panicking, Alice realized her vision was starting to blur. “Wait. What…what’s going on?”
“Actually, I’m Canadian,” said Janice, who reached up and pulled off her wig, revealing a head of short-cropped, coarse black hair.
             Blinking furiously, clawing at the arms of the chair, Alice tried to remain conscious. Janice pealed off her eyelashes.
“Grew up in Toronto. Great city.”
Muscles went limp and the sound of glass shattering on the hardwood floor was the last thing Alice ever heard.

           
           
           

            

Friday, March 21, 2014

There are Secrets…

Rain droplets spattered on the mahogany coffin lid. The day was gray and grim, with a chilly late September storm enveloping the graveside ceremony. A cluster of men, women and children holding black umbrellas stood in a horseshoe around the hole in the earth and the coffin poised above it. An elderly priest with a wisp of fluttering grey hair stood under a canvas tent top, holding the bible in his left hand like a tray of appetizers, imploring the Lord to accept the ever-faithful William Paul Keppler into his heavenly mansion. Sarah Keppler-Hardt, William’s eldest daughter, stood solemnly under her husband Brandon’s umbrella.
The coffin was finally lowered into the muddy abyss and mourners shuffled by Sarah and her younger sister Amy, hugging them mechanically and whispering words of condolence. As the last guests made their way through the small cemetery to their cars, Sarah took Amy’s hand.
            “How’re you doing?”
            “I’ll be better once I get out of this place. I can’t believe Mom didn’t want to come,” responded Amy.
            “There are days when she doesn’t even remember being married.”
            “Does it mean Alzheimer’s is in our future?”
            “Why don’t you stop by the house before you leave town to warm up? I’ll make some coffee.”
            Fifteen minutes later, Amy was peeling off her raincoat in the entryway while Sarah bustled around the kitchen. Brandon disappeared upstairs and Amy joined her sister at the kitchen table.
            “Can’t I talk you into spending the night?” asked Sarah.
            “Thanks, but I’ve got to work tomorrow and it’s a seven hour drive back to Chicago. The coffee will help. When are you moving?”
            “We have a bid on this place, so it might be soon. There are sill things of Mom and Dad’s to go through. I have mixed feelings about moving into the house we grew up in. Freaks me out a bit.”
            “Yeah, I can appreciate that,” said Amy, her gaze fixed on some distant event. “But you’ll have a lot more room, and once you’ve painted and got your furniture in there, it’ll be fine.”
            “You couldn’t wait to get out of there.”
            “That had to do with the occupants of the house, not the structure itself.”
            Sarah put a hand over her sister’s. “I know. Sorry.”
            “It’s okay. I just got so tired of the ‘Do as I say, not as I do’ act.”
            “I can relate.”
            “I always felt like they were putting on an act in front of us. Like, they were hiding their true selves and wearing the parent mask only when they were around us.”
            “I’m no expert, but I think that’s what all parents do.”
            “I suppose, but I didn’t feel that way around my friend’s parents. Anyway that’s old news. Thanks for the coffee, but I should get on the road.”
            Sarah stood on the porch and waved as her sister pulled out of the driveway and disappeared down the misty street. She regretted alluding to the past, but it was pretty hard not to do after you’d spent 17 years living with a person. Although she always tried to be the adult big sister, she empathized with Amy’s feelings about their parents. They never seemed to be genuinely engaged.
            The house sold and Sarah and Brandon spent time at their new home painting, tearing out old carpet and cleaning. Two weeks later they were officially moved in, although stacks of boxes were piled up in almost every room. Throughout the move, Sarah reminisced about events that happened in this room and that, some that were happy and others that brought tears to her eyes.
            Boxes of seasonal decorations went directly to the basement. Even as an adult, Sarah didn’t feel comfortable in the large, musty room. Shelves that looked older than the house lined two walls, and there were several pieces of her parent’s furniture connected by cobwebs piled in a far corner. Small rectangular windows let in dull, dust-filled beams of sunlight that did little to warm up the room. She remembered having nightmares about the basement as a child and would only come down the steep stairs if someone else, usually her sister, joined her. Sarah wiped her damp palms on her jeans and trotted back up to the kitchen, closing the door behind her.
            Two days later Sarah found herself back in the basement with Brandon putting more boxes up on shelves. Brandon knocked a screwdriver off of a shelf and bent down to pick it up.
            “Hey, what’s this?” he asked, kneeling down to inspect what appeared to be a doorbell button on the wall hidden under a shelf.
Sarah came over and looked. “I have no idea.”
“Should I push it?” he said smiling. Before she could answer he pushed it. There was a slight “snap” from somewhere and the entire shelf structure swung out slowly like a large door. “What the fucking fuck?” he asked. Behind the bookcase was a wood door with a padlock on it. Sarah’s expression grew concerned. Brandon turned toward her expectantly. “A secret room? You had a secret room and you never said anything to me about it?”
“I didn’t know about it,” said Sarah weakly.
“Come on. You’re kidding me.”
“No. Honestly, I had no idea it was there.
“So you don’t have a clue as to what’s behind the door?”
“No.” Her answer was tentative, and she didn’t know why.
            “And you don’t know where the key is.”
            “No. Of course not.”
            “Could be…treasure, Matey.”
            Like an excited child, Brandon rummaged through a box full of tools, pulled out a crowbar and began violently twisting and turning the lock. Sarah went upstairs to the kitchen, trying to understand the odd feelings she was experiencing. How could she not know about a secret room in the basement? What was her family hiding? She became apprehensive. Maybe I don’t want to know what’s behind the door, she thought, busying herself with tedious tasks. Ten minutes later there was a triumphant cry from below. “Got it.” Curiosity pulled her to the stairs.
            Twisting a fall of her long brown hair with her fingers, Sarah found Brandon standing in a space about the size of a typical bedroom, his arms outstretched, wearing a triumphant look. A single overhead light illuminated the cold room, which clearly wasn’t built for food storage. White soundproof panels covered the walls and ceiling. The floor was concrete with a large drainage grate in the middle of the room. Benches attached to the wall lined the longer section of the room. The smell was overwhelmingly earthy and musty, but there was also a tinge of smoke lingering in the air. It was bare of any visual hints as to its use, but it felt oppressive to Sarah and her eyes teared up.
            “Do you remember something?” asked Brandon.
            “No. I just don’t like it in here.”
            “It’s creepy. I’ll give you that. What the hell were your parents into?”
            She gave him a, “How-could-you-ask-such-a-thing” look and left the room.
            Brandon considered going after her, but the lure of high strangeness in the most common of places kept his feet from moving. Taking a second look around, he noticed details he’d initially missed. There was an air vent high on the wall that brought in fresh air and a dead bolt lock on the inside of the door. He knelt down and discovered four dark marks on the floor in a rectangular pattern, like the scars table legs might make. His mind ticked off possibilities, but he couldn’t come up with a satisfying explanation for the purpose of the room, and was especially puzzled by the need for drainage in the floor. An additional subtle odor in the air caught his attention. He could swear he smelled bleach.
            Sarah stood impatiently at her bedroom window, phone to her ear, waiting for her sister to answer.
            “Sarah?”
            “Did you know about the secret room in the basement?”
            “What? What’s wrong?”
            “A secret room behind the shelves. I was just in it.”
            “Honestly, I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Sarah tried to speak, but her throat was clinching and tears started cascading down her cheeks. “Sarah? Are you okay?”
            “No.”
            “Listen, it’s Friday. I’ll book a flight and be there later this evening.”
            “No, that’s crazy,” said Sarah.
            “So is what you’re saying. I’ll call you when I get in.” The phone went dead.
            Amy, still wearing her coat, stood in the middle of the secret room with a bewildered expression. “I really don’t understand. What is this place?”
            Sarah leaned against the wall, just beyond the room’s threshold in the basement. “You had no idea this was here?”
            Amy turned and locked in on her sister’s eyes. “Not a clue. How could they keep this a secret for seventeen years? What’s it for?”
            “There’s one way we might find out,” said Sarah.
            “She can hardly remember what happened ten minutes ago, let alone the past thirty years.”
            “I know, but every once in a while there’s a moment of lucidity. Maybe we can tap into one. This…is such a weird thing, she might remember.”
            A short time later, Sarah and Amy traversed the hallways of the Webster Assisted Living Center on their way to their mother’s room. They stopped at room 148, each stealing a moment to inhale the stale, urine tainted air before entering. The room was dark and stuffy as usual. A small TV glowed in a corner with its sound off. Elizabeth sat hunched over and sleeping in her Lay-Z-Boy. The women looked at each other and then Sarah reached out and touched her mother’s bony shoulder. It took several gentle prods to get Elizabeth to stir from her slumber. As she did she looked around the room as if everything was new to her.
            “Mom, it’s Sarah and Amy.”
            Gauzy, marble eyes searched in confusion until they finally rested on Sarah’s face. Gaunt, her skin pale yellow, Elizabeth wore a stained housecoat and slippers, her thin silver hair a rat’s nest of neglect. She brought a bony hand up and brushed Sarah’s cheek.
            “Amy, my sweetheart.”
            “It’s Sarah, Mom, but Amy’s right here.”
            Amy leaned in. “Mom, it’s me.”
            “How nice. Is dinner ready?”
            Sarah knelt down and rested her hands on the arm of the chair. “I’m sure they’ll be serving dinner soon.”
            “The food here is horrible,” confided Elizabeth. “I swear they’re trying to poison me. Where’s William? Why hasn’t he been here to visit me?”
            Sarah knew this was going to be difficult. “Mom, can I ask you a question?”
            “Of course, Dear.”
            “It’s about the…secret room, in the basement.”
            “The what?”
            “Remember in your house, where you used to live with William. In the basement of that house, there was a secret room. Do you remember?”
            Elizabeth’s expression went through several transitions before it settled on agitation. “No one’s supposed to know about that.”
            Sarah shot a glance at Amy. “Right. You’re right, but we found it today. What is it?”
            An orderly poked her head in the door. “You all doing okay?”
            “Fine,” said Amy.
            “That’s the one who stole things from my purse,” said Elizabeth.
            “Mom,” coaxed the patient Sarah. “You were talking about the secret room in the basement of our house.”
            Elizabeth’s gaze turned to the window. “It was truly amazing.”
            “What was?” asked Amy.
            “You can’t tell anyone, William said.”
            “You can tell us. We’re family.”
            Yellow teeth appeared behind a sudden smile. “Remember how we used to play hide and seek?”
            Sarah’s expression morphed from expectant to perturbed at the sudden change of topic. “Yes. We remember.”
            “But every time we played, Amy used to hide in that broom closet off of the laundry room. She thought it was the best hiding place in the world. Lord, we caught her every time. Silly girl.”
            “Okay, Mom.”
            “And tell William to come visit me.”
            The late afternoon sky was a low grey blanket and the air was brisk. Sarah and Amy walked in silence across the parking lot amid swirling leaves, pulling their coats around themselves, each lost in the disconnected words of their fading mother. Once inside the car, Sarah turned to Amy. “What do you think she meant by ‘It was truly amazing?’”
            “No idea. Why do you think she brought up playing hide and seek as kids?”
            Sarah pulled the car out onto the highway. “I think we should check out the closet as soon as we get back.”
            Brooms, a vacuum, and bottles and cans of cleaning fluids were now sitting out on the kitchen floor as Sarah and Amy surveyed the small closet off of the kitchen. There was one row of shelving about chest level that ran across the three interior walls. Barely enough room for the two of them, the women bumped into each other as they searched for anything that might be out of the ordinary.
            “Look. Up there,” pointed Amy.  In one corner, near the ceiling there was a paper patch about ten inches long and four inches high. Sarah brought in a step stool that allowed her to reach the paper.
            “It’s covering a hole,” she announced, and then poked her fingers in and started tearing away the brittle covering. Reaching into the dark crevice, she pulled out a black scrapbook and blew off a layer of dust. The women looked at each other, knowing that it was hidden for a reason, and that they may find out much more than they wanted to about their parents and the secret room. Sarah stepped down off the stool with a determined expression.
            “Come on,” she instructed Amy.
            They sat on the couch next to each other with the book laying unopened on the coffee table.
            “Are you ready?” asked Sarah.
            “No, but let’s do this.”
            Sarah turned over the cover. On the first page, three photos were stuck to the thick, black material. Written in the margin next to the photos: “1967 - success.” The images were dark and not well focused, but they appeared to show a group of black robed people sitting in the secret room on the benches against the walls, six on each side. Hoods hid their faces in shadows. In the middle of the room was a waist high, rectangular table like one you might see in an old medical school photo. Candles are burning in wall sconces. Both women shook their heads in disbelief.
            “This is before either of us was born. What the hell are they doing?” asked Amy.
            Sarah reluctantly reached down and turned the page. It took a few moments for the subject matter of the seven photos to reach clarity, and when it did, both Sarah and Amy gasped. Now lying on the table was a naked body. It wasn’t the body of a living person, but a corpse. Patches of flesh hung from the body like torn material. Skin and muscle were missing along the person’s arms and legs, exposing sections of bone. Insects and time had ravaged the face and lips were missing, exposing grinning rows of rotted teeth. The body was in such a state of decay it was impossible to tell if it was a man or a woman. A robed individual stood at the feet of the corpse, hands held out, palms up, seeming to be praying or chanting, but the face was hidden. Amy’s hand came to her mouth as she tried to hold back the nausea. Scanning the photos, Sarah came to the fifth in the series.
            “Oh my God,” she cried aloud.
            In this photo, the upper body of the corpse has risen several inches off of the table. As the robed person supplicates, the subsequent photos record the dead body sitting up until it is perpendicular, its spine poking through the thin skin of its back. Amy took her right hand and angrily pushed the book off of the table onto the floor. Sobbing, Sarah wrapped her younger sister in her arms and they both clung to each other in a state of shock and disbelief.
            “This is insanity. What were they doing?” asked Amy.
            “I want answers.”
            “What?”
            Visibly upset, Sarah got up and retrieved the book. “I want to know what in the fuck is going on here. What does this mean? Is it some kind of sick Halloween prank? Get your coat, we’re going to the Webster Center.”
            They didn’t talk in the car as Sarah drove through the light drizzle, her hands turning white from gripping the steering wheel. The shock of seeing what their parents were involved in had both of them shaking with disgust and anger. Tires screeched as she turned quickly into a parking slot and stopped. Sarah, the book tucked under her arm, and Amy marched across the wet lot to the Center entrance. The small, round receptionist smiled as the women passed, but the gesture wasn’t returned. Sarah pushed open the door to room 148. Elizabeth wasn’t there.
            “Excuse me,” called Sarah as they approached the reception desk.
            “Yes?” the woman managed to say through her perpetual grin.
            “Elizabeth Keppler. She’s not in her room. Do you know where she is?”
            The woman referred to a log in front of her. “Oh right. Her husband came in about thirty minutes ago and took her for a walk.”
            “What?” whispered Amy.
            “I know it’s none of my business,” she said, leaning in and lowering her voice, “but that man don’t look well. Not well at all.”