Echoes of the Past (21 page)

Read Echoes of the Past Online

Authors: Deborah Mailer

BOOK: Echoes of the Past
10.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“What’s
the point?” she said walking toward the stairs to go and change.

Tom
grabbed at her shoulder. “The point is, love; it’s just you and me. No secrets remember.” Jess remembered the pact they had made after her mother had died. She dropped her bag and hugged him. Tears ran silently down her face.

Tom
pulled her away and wiped the tears from her cheeks. “You go get a quick shower and I will serve the dinner. You do realize you smell like horse.”

Jess
smiled slightly and went up the stairs.

When
she came down Tom was putting the take away onto two plates. He poured the sweet and sour sauce over the chicken balls and set it down in front of her. He carried his chicken curry over and sat across the table from his daughter.

“I’m
sorry, I know I haven’t been listening to you, Jess, but tonight I want to hear it all, everything that has been bothering you, everything that has scared you, and we’ll see if we can work it out together.”

“I
know you don’t believe in this sort of thing Dad, so I know this is hard for you to understand, but sometimes I feel mum. I smell her perfume.”

Tom
looked down at his plate. He did find it hard to hear. If Sara was around why didn’t he feel her, why didn’t he smell her?

“The
dreams I’ve been having are becoming more vivid. Sometimes it’s Olivia and sometimes I see the girl in the picture you have. We are in a dark damp place that smells like earth, it’s a bit like a barn only you go down dirt stairs to get to it. There is a large black box on the floor and a chair in the middle of the room.” Tom looked up at her as she spoke. He knew what she was describing sounded like a murder room. He threw up a silent prayer, in case Sara was there, asking for her guidance. “Then I see Olivia dragging herself across the dirt floor and these huge hands go around her neck.” Jess stopped and looked down at her food. Her appetite was gone and had been replaced with a knot in her stomach. “Anyway, I wake up feeling sick. And when I look round I can feel someone watching me, I feel as though there is someone in the room with me. Sometimes I even see her.” Her words became tenuous. “I know you and Aunt Lee don’t see anything, but I do and it scares me.”

Tom
reached out his hand and cupped his daughter’s in his. Trying hard to disguise his inadequacies, racking his brain for the right thing to say.

“Do
you want to change rooms?” were the only words he could think to say.

Jess
looked at him, she had not thought of something as simple as that.

“Lets
for a moment assume that there are things that we can’t explain. That was your Mother’s room when she was a child. Maybe she knows how upset you are and she is trying to comfort you. Instead, it scares you. As for the dreams. That could be an accumulation of everything that has happened over the last couple of years; you combine that with what we are all talking about in the kitchen at night, you know, missing women and so on, it could explain the dreams.” Tom knew his argument was weak. He waited for her reaction.

“All
right. I can accept that, if you are willing to accept that there may be something here that I can feel and you simply can’t.” Jess stated bluntly.

“I
can go with that. Your Mother always said that men were thick skinned and women were far more sensitive. Maybe this is the kind of thing she meant.”

“Do
you think changing rooms will help?” she asked.

“I
think it is certainly worth a try. We could do it Saturday morning before I go to Edinburgh.”

“I
will be at Uncle Matt’s all day Saturday. We are going to muck out all the stalls for him.”

“All
right, when I get home in Saturday evening we will get it done.”

“Thanks,
Dad.”

“Now
before we go and put on the film, is there anything else that you haven’t told me about?”

Jess
considered for a moment the incident with the Ouija board. She decided that he had yielded as much as she could expect for her in one night. His decision to take her seriously was a big step for a man who believed in nothing he could not see and touch. She shook her head in reply refusing to say the lie out loud.

“One
more thing, Jess, I want to hear about any more of these dreams, they sound disturbing and I don’t want you keeping them to yourself, agreed.”

Jess
smiled. “Agreed.” Her appetite slowly returning they sat in a comfortable silence and finished their meal.

*****

Lee had a light meal while she waited for Elsie to arrive. The atmosphere in the house was a little lighter but she was still on edge. Her brain could not accept what she had seen on the screen earlier that morning, yet she knew it had happened. She glanced into the study to make sure the computer was off. She had no intention of putting it on anytime soon. As soon as Elsie appeared, Lee quickly changed. Elsie smiled to herself and shook her head. She knew Lee had waited for her arrival on purpose, so she was not home alone when she went upstairs.

When
they arrived at the Deer Lodge, there was a buzz in the air. A woman was taking names for people who wished to have a private reading with one of the psychics. Lee and Elsie were only there for the medium. Neither of them wanted a reading.

“No,
you’re better going to someone you know is good if your going to spend the money.” Elsie advised as they took a small table just to the left of the fire. “We’ll see how good this one is, if she starts with all that nonsense of ‘do you know someone with a J in their name’. Then you know she’s just fishing.”

“If
you feel that way why did you want to come?”

Elsie
looked at her with raised eyebrows. “It’s a psychic night, dear, why wouldn’t I want to come.”

Lee
shook her head and got up to go to the bar. “I’ll get us in some drinks, shall I?”

The
lounge began to fill, mostly with women. John Caulder set out a long table with some sandwiches wrapped in cling film for the break. He did not get a lot of pleasure from seeing so many customers in his bar. He did not get much pleasure from anything anymore. He positioned himself back behind the bar ready to serve as the evening began.

A
tall thin woman in her mid-forties started the floorshow. She had long dark hair tied in a ponytail. She introduced herself as Linda. Lee swallowed back a laugh as she began with the typical; ‘Can anyone take a man with the letter
A
in his name?

Elsie rolled her eyes in disdain. As the woman warmed up, she got a little better, some she got right, some she got wrong. After about thirty minutes of pretty good guess work, she called a break announcing that she would be available in the nook to do private readings if anyone wished.

“Well,
I don’t suppose they’ll be knocking her down,” Elsie remarked.

“Shh,
she might hear.”

“Do
you want another drink?”

“Sure,”
Lee said. “I think John’s about to open the finger buffet.”

“Well,
I hope his food is better than his psychics.”

John
had added hot sausage rolls and some chicken legs to the table. The women lined up for their nibbles and the bar became busier. Another thirty minutes had passed and then the second half of the evening began. This time the woman was much older, closer to her mid-sixties. She was a short curvy woman with grey hair pilled loosely on her head.

“I
get a better feel for this one,” Elsie said as she devoured her sausage rolls.

The
woman cleared her throat and lifted the mike. She did not say a word until everyone in the lounge had stopped talking.

She
welcomed everyone to the hotel and thanked them for coming. She introduced herself as Jean.

“When
I come to you with a message, please don’t give me any information, it can confuse the line. I would also like to hear your voice, so please answer in a clear voice, Yes or No only.” The small yet intimidating woman walked across the bar to where a group of young women were occupying a booth.

“I
have a David here. He is a father figure and he wants to speak with Lisa.” The girls looked at each other in astonishment. A woman in her mid-twenties nodded.

“I
need to hear your voice dear, can you take this man?”

“Yes.
It’s my Dad.”

“No
information please, dear, that’s what you pay me for. He passed in a car accident.” The hushed gasps from the small group confirmed it. “He said he is happy and not to worry, but you should take the opportunity that has come up for you, he says you don’t need to worry about your mother, he will take care of her. Ok, hmm yes” the woman had her eyes cast down as she carried out what seemed to be a private conversation that everyone else could only hear one side off. She looked up and continued with personal information for the young woman. Each time the group would appear astonished with the facts she was producing.

“This
is more like it,” said Elsie as she settled in her seat to enjoy the show. The woman moved around the room, each time the accuracy astounded the person receiving the message.

“The
pregnancy test will be positive.” A roar of laughter rang out at the next table. “It will be a boy first; the second grandchild will be a girl.” The group of older women sat at the edge of their seats hanging on every word. “And you have to butt out and leave the couple to it, he says.” Again more laughter. Still she would continue nodding and speaking to an invisible force that no one else was privy to before moving on to the next person. The woman had been working the floor for forty minutes by now and had the audience in the palm of her hand. If it was a mere parlour trick Lee had no idea how she was doing it. The woman crossed the floor to the where Lee and Elsie were sitting.

The
woman looked at Elsie and smiled. “You have a bit of a gift don’t you.”

Elsie
smiled and tilted her head, refusing to give anything away.

“Well,
Archie said, he sends his love, but you shouldn’t waste money on this sort of thing, he can see you at home for free.” A few chuckles rose from the lounge. “I have a Sara here.” Lee froze for a second. “I’m not sure if it is a mother or a sister vibe she comes in on.”

“I
can take her,” said Lee, The woman was looking between Elsie and Lee.

“She’s
standing at your table, dear; I wasn’t sure which of you she was with. She was killed.”

“Yes,
an accident,” Lee elaborated.

“Not
an accident, dear. She has someone with her. Lydia, Livia?”

“Olivia,”
confirmed Lee. Her eyes started to burn with tears at the conformation of what she already knew.

“Who
is Jess?”

“Jess
is Sara’s daughter, Sara is my sister.”

“Ah,
that’s the mother vibe I’ve been getting. They are both worried about Jess, they want you to protect her, you have to listen to her. Ok, yes.” The woman again cast her eyes to the floor as she spoke to her own private audience. “Ok. They said they did not mean to scare her the other day; they were just trying to get her attention. The box that fell on her, it was important. You have to get that box, dear.” The older woman spoke in a matter-of-fact tone. There was no urgency, just a message.

Lee
sat in dumbfounded silence. She could not believe that the woman could possibly know about the incident in the attic.

“Ok,
yes.” Again, her eyes were cast down at the floor. She lifted her hand to her temples and rubbed them gently. “Ok. They are giving me a lot of information, there is someone with you. You can feel her, she has red hair, she say’s you discovered her? That you woke her. She won’t go away until you end this. Do you understand?”

Lee
shook her head; she had no idea how to end this. “You have to keep Jess safe. I’m going to leave that with you dear.” The woman walked away from the table and stopped. She turned back to Lee. “Your sister is giving you a hug.” The tears began to run silently down Lee’s face as she subconsciously lifted her hand to her shoulder.

“We’re
going to take a short break and then Linda will be back.” The older woman said putting the mike down on the bar. The woman seemed to have aged ten years in the short time that she spent with Lee. Exhausted she sat by the bar with her hand rubbing her forehead.

“Are
you all right, love?” Elsie asked concerned. “She was red hot.”

“I’m
fine. What did she mean by, end it?”

“I
think you have to find out what they want. I’ll get you another drink; you look like you could use it.”

Lee
waited for a second. “I’m going to go, Elsie, I want to go up and get that box from Tom’s.”

Other books

The Weight of a Mustard Seed by Wendell Steavenson
Let the Dance Begin by Lynda Waterhouse
Ozark Retreat by Jerry D. Young
Applaud the Hollow Ghost by David J. Walker
Joshua and the Cowgirl by Sherryl Woods
Bombs on Aunt Dainty by Judith Kerr