The Ghosts of Varner Creek

BOOK: The Ghosts of Varner Creek
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The Ghosts of Varner Creek

By Michael Weems

Copyright 2011 Michael Weems


An idea, like a ghost, must be spoken to a little before it will explain itself”


Charles Dickens

Chapter 1

Six-twenty a.m., November 3, 1984
.

That dead woman is standing out in the hall by my door again. I wake up, open my eyes, and as I give the old body a stretch I see her out there, still as a statue and fixated on me. She’s been visiting more often of late, eerie damn woman. I wish she’d carry herself somewhere else and quit staring at me like that. I don’t know what she finds so fascinating about me, ‘cept maybe she’s figured out I can see her. I guess that might be something of interest to the likes of her, but it’s only a nuisance to me these days.
Go on and get,
say my thoughts, as though she’d hear them and leave
.
But she doesn’t
. She just stands there. I don’t pay her much mind, though. I’ve gotten used to this one popping up. She's the one that doesn't have a face, just a kind of blur where it should be, like someone smudged her features out. I’ve never seen another one quite like her before, no face and all, but it don't matter. I ignore her just the same.
I got nothing to say to you, ghost, so you might as well go somewhere’s else.
I change my view to looking outside the window. There’s just a hint of orange on the fringe of the gray dawn. Pretty soon there’ll be yellows, reds, and purples, like a child’s watercolor set splashed out over the world. There’s a nice smell drifting in from across the fields, too. It’s the smell of home for those of us who’ve grown up with it, the smell of a cotton crop freshly picked. You’ve got to know what you’re looking for to catch it as it’s almost overpowered by the strong odors of cleansers and medicines in this place, but it’s a beautiful smell. I’ve seen folks who could poke their nose down a glass of wine and come up telling you everything you’d want to know about it. Me, I prefer the smell of the good earth. With it, I can tell you what the cotton crop is looking like this year. The richness and nutrients of the soil outside drift through the air like perfume. The summer heat didn’t scorch the crops too bad this season, and we had ourselves an extra three inches of rain above average this year, just what the cotton wanted. My nose says they had themselves a good harvest this year, and my nose always knows.

The cotton will all be ginned and bundled now, and that means they’ll be having the Harvest Festival soon, a tradition that takes me back. It used to be the biggest thing in town once upon a time. Oh, but it’s been such a long time since I’ve been to a Harvest Festival. I’m so out of touch with the world I don’t rightly know how things are now, except I know the tradition still continues because I hear talk as it gets closer to festival time and we get a new beauty queen who makes a round every year. I just don’t know if it’s as important to folks as it once was. I like to think so, though. I lie here in bed while memories dance in two-step to the sounds of old country and I recall past festivals, past days. I let myself get a little lost in the memory, it being such a nice one. I wonder if that dead woman is still there? I peek back over at my unwelcome guest to find she’s gone.
Good, go haunt somebody who gives a damn, why don’t yah.

I don’t have nothing to say to dead people anymore, seeing as how they’ve never had anything to say to me. I see them now and again standing around like folks who forgot what they were doing and now can’t remember why they are where they are. Used to scare the beJesus outta me in my younger years, but we can get used to all sorts of things, I suppose. I've gotten use to living in this nursing home, for one. Besides the living patients we've got a few residents still here whose bodies were wheeled out a long time ago. Nobody else seems to notice them, but I see them from time to time, including that one, walking down the halls at night or popping up here and there during the day. First time I saw Faceless was one morning when I woke up and there she was at my window as though she were watching the dawn like I so often do. I couldn't see her face but I remember thinking how pretty her hair was, still so shiny and black without a spot of gray, the proverbial black sheep in this place I guess you could say. She was wearing a white cotton nightgown like some I've seen, so I just figured she was just some lady who had wandered out from her room.


You get lost, ma’am?” I asked her. But she didn’t answer.


What room you suppose to be in, ma'am?” I asked politely, trying not to startle her. She didn’t even turn, though. Then I thought she have might be one of them Alzheimer's folks that lost her reasoning so I rang for the nurse.

When she came in I told her in a whisper so as to not offend the lady at the window, “I think this here lady done wandered off from her room.”

That nurse looked around and asked, “What lady, Mr. Mayfield?”

I looked back towards the window and she was gone. Well, I knew right away I’d been fooled. Just another dead person, someone who had passed in my room some time back, I figured.


Never mind,” I told the nurse. “Must have been a dream that woke up with me.”

Faceless has been popping up now and again ever since, though. Why on earth she’d be inclined to visit here is beyond me. Seems like one would be glad to be rid of a place like this. Ghosts like her, as I guess there’s not much else to call them, aren’t all the same, either. Some are skittish and are gone in a flash if they realize you can see them, while others seem to seek out company, like Faceless sometimes does. Some look faint, like only shadows of their former selves, while others look so real it seems like they could sit right down and have a conversation with you, though they never do. At least, I've never had one do it. Those ones just look like they still have thoughts, though. And some, though not many as it’s been my experience, can affect things around them. How they affect things can vary. Sometimes it’s just a chill or an odd feeling you can’t quite place, but there are those rare ones than can do a whole lot more.

Years ago I was in a hotel room on a business trip and I woke up because I felt the mattress get pushed down close by my feet like someone having a sit. At first, I was so sleepy I thought it was my wife getting up to use the restroom, but then I remembered I was in a hotel room and my wife was miles away sleeping in our bed at home. As my mind woke up more, I felt the oddest of sensations.

The air seemed to be sucked out of the room and stillness fell over it like no sound would ever be heard in that room again. It was like an invisible sponge was sucking everything up . . . the sounds of the air conditioner and the cars mumbling along the highway outside, the dim light through the windows, even the very air itself. They all seemed to draining away into an unseen hole. I’d never felt anything like it. It was like having a hand put over your mouth and suffocating you, except it was placed over the entire room, suffocating everything within. I sat up and despite the retreating light, I could just make out the silhouette of someone sitting at the foot of the bed. They weren’t moving or doing anything, but I knew what it was. I felt more empty and alone than I’d ever felt, and the feeling seemed to be coming not from within me, but from the one sitting on my bed. Everything was still draining away, and then it was darkness. I panicked a bit. It was like being buried alive in that room. I needed light, something warm and friendly that would break the grip that was beginning to choke me. There were some matches by an ashtray on the night stand, so I grabbed one and slid it along the pack watching the little flame jump to life. Its feeble glow pushed back the darkness a little, and right there in front of me was a pale young man, naked as a jaybird but white as alabaster. He looked like a man, but he didn’t feel like one. He was sitting with his back to me, and he could’ve been an ivory statue someone just carved except they’d made a mess of his head. It sunk in on itself and the back had a big chunk missing, revealing a mangled mess of spongy white tissue that I guess was brain. There wasn’t any blood, though. Not a drop. I figured right away that he must have shot himself in that room or something, because whatever happened in there, he never left. He liked to give me a heart attack because he was so much there like a real person, yet he also seemed to be the source of the hole that had consumed all the life out of the room. When the light from the match hit his face he turned towards me and I could see his hollow eyes, like two pools of swirling black ink. A deep depression flowed over me. As he stared at me I felt like I didn’t want to live anymore. I felt worse than I’d ever felt. Then he opened his mouth like he was going to say something to me, but the only thing that came out was a plume of smoke like the bullet which had killed him had just sped its course to his end. His gaze trailed from me to the smoke, and it seemed as though he realized for a moment what it all meant. The plume disappeared into nothingness and his hand crept to the back of his head and in his eyes I knew he realized the awful truth . . . he knew what he was, and he knew what I was. He was the ghost, the suicide who had sought and found his death in this room, and I was the living, who saw it now as it had happened then. He looked at me and I saw in his expression true emotions. He was scared, angry, and almost seeming to ask something of me. It was like he wanted help, but wanted to hurt me both at once. The black pools of his eyes seemed to churn a little more furiously and the room swayed a bit. Where he had a moment ago sucked the life out of the room, he now seemed to be filling it back up again with his misery and suffering. Emotions pulsed from him to me like the crashing waves of a storm pounding to shore. I felt his rage, anger, and despair . . . I felt all of it and it hurt something terrible.


I’m sorry,” I told him. The words came on their own. I meant it, though. Looking at him, young, lost, angry and afraid, still living out his own suicide in this small room, I felt terribly sorry for him. And the things pouring out of him into that room were the stuff of nightmares. I was sorry for whatever had brought him to his end, and I was sorry there wasn’t anything I could do for him. And I wanted him to stop whatever he was doing that was making me feel the way I was feeling. He didn’t, though. It just got worse and worse so fast I couldn’t understand what was happening. I even found myself crying, yet didn’t know why. I’m not a man to cry much in my life, but the horrible things I felt at that moment were just that overpowering. I felt like I’d forgotten what happiness was, that I’d never love or be loved, that I was nothing but a waste upon the world. I truly wanted to kill myself. “I’m sorry,” I told him again. “There’s nothing else I can do but tell you I’m sorry, so you just stop now.” And to my surprise, he did. The despair broke like a fever and I immediately felt more like myself. He tilted his head to the side and looked at me with a strange expression, curiosity, maybe even pity, I didn’t know. I looked back at him, and for a split second I thought maybe our moment counted for something. Maybe I’d reached him in some meaningful way. In the pools of black that were his eyes, I thought I saw a tear form. But when it fell down his sculpture-like face, it was a tear of blood. Then quickly, more fell behind it and beads of blood droplets formed upon his brow and then they, too, ran. His expression had changed to one of immense anger, like he was suddenly very mad I was in his room and intruding on his loathing. I believe now he’d played his game before, with other people in his room, but they couldn’t see him like I did, and he didn’t like being seen for what he was. The next thing I knew that ghost covered in blood was lunging at me. I thought he was attacking me and I threw my hands up in defense with a flinch, but all I felt was the mattress bounce a little, and when I opened my eyes again he’d disappeared. The room was as it had been before his visit, and not a drop of blood soiled the comforter. He was gone. Thirty seconds later, so was I, thankful I hadn’t been torn apart, and thankful he had lifted from me whatever curse he held in that place. Remembering that one used to keep me up nights, and I’m sure he’s still sittin’ on that bed in the darkness, going over his last moments again and again. And if there’s been an unusual number of suicides in that room over the years . . . well, I just try not to think about such things anymore. I’ve read about possessions and the like in the Good Book, and while he didn’t jump in my body and run me around, I think I know now what possession really is. King Saul himself was haunted by a troubled spirit that made him feel murderous. I’ve never really spoken of it to other people, but there’s no convincing me it wasn’t a spirit like what’s in that hotel room that the Good Book was talking about when it said “unclean spirits”, and that possession is when they fill you up with their own misery.

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