31 Ghosts 2018: October 19 – Above The River

Sorry for no graphics tonight. I’m on my iPad waiting for Fern to get off work so we can head out to Big Basin. First, though, let’s catch up with an old friend…

“Skip? Got a moment?”

“Yeah, Eddy,” Skip closed the door of the Sheriff’s department Ford Explorer he was about to climb into. “Of course. What’s up?”

“Sorry, Chief, I know you’re on the way out, but, uh, I don’t really know how to ask about this…”

“Oh, goddamnit, Eddy. Not you too!”

Eddy held out his hands. “It’s not me, Skip! But, you know, word gets around…”

“No shit,” Skip said with a deep sigh.

“My wife begged me to ask if you could do her a favor.”

“Marissa? What’s she want in all this?”

“It’s actually her cousin…”

“Is he…” Skip drew a finger across his throat.

“No! No, Diego’s cool. No, he’s living with in this house up on Ridgecrest with a bunch of guys.”

“Okay…”

“And they’re convinced there’s this…”

“Ghost.”

“Ghost. My wife heard that…”

“I can see them…” Skip added, “and maybe I could stop by…”

“Would you?” Eddy said relieved the question was out there.

“Jesus Christ, Eddy.” Skip took off his hat and ran his hand through his hair and sighed. He thought for a moment then said, “Yeah, that’s fine. I can stop by…”

“Tonight? I can text you the address.”

Skip laughed. “Do you want me to bring them pizza, too?”

“They’re more the tamales type…” Eddy smiled.

“After this they’d better be bringing me tamales!”

“I’m sure Marissa will. Thank you, Skip.”

“Hey, Eddy?” Skip stepped closer to the deputy. “Not a word of this, okay? It’s bad enough that rumors are getting around. Shit’s already rolling downhill…”

“Yeah, yeah, Skip. Not a word. I’ll make sure Marissa doesn’t say anything, either.”

“Please,” Skip opened the door to the Explorer.

“Oh, one more thing, Skip?” Eddy stopped him.

“What now?”

“Maybe, you know, don’t show up in uniform… if you know what I mean?”

“No need to make anyone nervous. I’ve got to go take care of Milo. I’ll change and then head over there in,” he looked at his watch. “Hour? Hour and a half? Let ‘em know I’m coming?”

“Thanks Skip!”

“Pork, Eddy.”

“Skip?”

“Tamales. The pork tamales Maria makes.”

“You got it, Skip.”

An hour and a half later, Skip led Milo across a collapsed section of Ridgecrest Drive. Five or six winters ago the hillside above the highway slid, blocking the main thoroughfare for days and taking a good chunk of Ridgecrest Drive down with it. The pace of road repairs — especially in this unincorporated section of rural west county — ran at a glacial pace, and as Skip led Milo across the narrow strip of asphalt that still remained over the chasm he wondered if it would ever get repaired.

Skip knew the address Eddy had texted him. He knew it personally because he and Milo walked this way at least once a week, and he knew it professionally because about a dozen laborers at any given time shared the three bedroom house and packing that many people into that little floor space eventually caused the kind of problems you call the sheriff over… Or the kind of non-problems the white vacationers in the surrounding AirBNBs called the sheriff over, more often than not.

As Skip approached, three men stood on the porch, two smoking cigarettes. “Evening,” Skip said. “Is one of you Diego?”

The two men smoking looked at each other then one said, “No. No Diego here.” The third man laughed.

Skip rolled his eyes. “Eddy sent me. Eddy Rodriguez?”

“Oh, I’m Diego,” said the one who had just denied being Diego. “This is Jesus. Thanks for coming, Sheriff.”

Skip stepped up on the porch, “It’s just Skip tonight, Diego.” He shook both men’s hands. He turned to the man not smoking, “You must be the problem around here.”

Diego and Jesus looked at each other confused.

“You can see me?”

“Yeah, I can see you.” Skip looked at the confused faces around him and said, “It’s your ghost.”

“No shit? He’s right here?” Jesus said.

“No shit,” Skip said looking at the ghost, “You’re right here.”

“I didn’t mean any trouble,” the ghost said.

“I’m sure you didn’t.”

“I just… can’t go until I know my sister is okay.”

“Your sister?”

“I had money I’d saved. I was going to mail it to her in Juarez, but…”

“…But you died.” The ghost nodded. “What’s your name?”

“Enrique. Enrique Perez.”

Skip turned to Diego. “Who is Enrique Perez?”

Diego shook his head. “I don’t know.”

“Did he live here?”

“I haven’t lived here that long…”

Jesus punched Diego in the arm, “Yeah, I remember that dude. I told you about him. He died in that car accident in Windsor last year?”

“Oh, you mean the guy with the head and the…” he motioned with his hands around his head in a flattening gesture.”

“Yeah! That guy!” Jesus said.

“Yeah, I’m that guy,” Enrique said sadly.

“What’d you do with his stuff?” Skip asked.

“Uh… I think Raul boxed it up… Might be in the attic. He didn’t leave any forwarding address or anything…”

“Yeah, my stuff is in the attic. That’s why I hang out there.”

“Let me guess, you guys hear a lot of steps and stuff from the attic?”

“Oh shit,” Jesus said. “That’s Enrique? No shit!”

“Enrique,” Skip turned to him. “Is everything up there for your sister?” Enrique nodded. Skip took out a small steno note pad and a pen. “Alright, what’s her address?” Skip wrote it down, tore the paper out and handed it to Diego. “Send his stuff to his sister at this address. Everything. Do it, and Enrique is out of here. Got it?”

“That’s it?” Diego asked.

“Yeah, that’s it. Don’t forget. Enrique knows me now and he’ll tell me if you don’t.”

“I will?” Enrique asked.

Skip gave him a barely perceptible nod. “If that happens I’m coming back in the Sheriff’s truck. Got it?”

“I’ll go talk to Raul now. I’ll get it off tomorrow, okay Skip?”

“Good.” Skip started to walk off the porch.

“What am I supposed to do now?” Enrique followed him.

“Nothing. Be a good ghost. Be a fucking Casper the Friendly ghost. If Diego doesn’t take care of that,” he threw a glance over his shoulder and Diego nodded and headed inside, “you come find me.”

“Oh, okay….” he said hesitantly.

“And don’t go down by the river.”

“No way,” Enrique said, eyes wide. “That’s where La Llorona lives.”

“Yep,” Skip said. “Have a good night, all,” and Skip and Milo headed for home.

31 Ghosts 2018: October 18 – Footsteps in the Darkness

Fair warning: things are going to be a little short for the next few days (likely). Fern and I are going on a… working vacation. Yeah, that about sums it up. More later, but between working and being out of communication, not sure how much writing is going to get done. Still sticking with my commitment for a ghost story a day, just likely not going to write a haunted War & Peace. Let’s start off with a short one so I can finish packing (camping in Big Basin tomorrow night!) —Jordy
I admit it, I’m a heavy sleeper. I didn’t wake up when the noise first came from downstairs. Lydia shook me awake. “Did you hear that?” she whispered.
I knew she wouldn’t wake me unless it was serious, so I snapped from sleep to careful, quiet attention in zero seconds flat. I listened hard… There it was again. Footsteps. “When did it start,” I looked over at Lydia.
“Just a moment ago.”
“Did you hear the front door? Broken glass?”
She shook her head. “They just… started.”
We listened as the footsteps moved to the kitchen and paused long enough for me to wonder if that was it. It wasn’t. They started back down the hallway. Then they started up the stairs slowly. “Shit,” I whispered as I opened the drawer of my night stand and pulled out my Glock 19 and as quietly as I could racked the slide. The footsteps kept their slow movement up the stairs. I crept out of bed and stood next to the closet with a clear line of sight of the closed door when the door knob started to turn. Then the door inched open slowly, creaking.
“Lydia? Are you awake?” a voice from behind the door whispered.
“Tina?” Lydia said out loud.
The door opened and a tall woman with long black hair cascading down the back of her scarlet blouse. She stepped in and her chunky wedges made the tell-tale steps we were listening to. She looked over and saw me. “Oh! Eric, I’m sorry. I didn’t want to wake you!”
“You didn’t, she did,” I said, unchambered the round in the gun and put it back in the nightstand.
Lydia shrugged innocently, “How was I supposed to know it was just a ghost?”
Lydia looked confused. “Why didn’t you check yourself? Even if it wasn’t me, what? Like a burglar is going to hurt the dead?”
“I was… scared,” she said sheepishly.
Both Lydia and I rolled our eyes.
“Girl, you’ve been dead how long?”
“Three years,” I said, climbing back into bed. “If you ladies will excuse me, the living still need sleep.”
Lydia leapt out of bed and started out of the room with Tina. “So, how’s Maria doing with the new baby?!”
“Oh, dios mio! Never. Stops. Screaming!” They started down the stairs and I rolled over to rest.

31 Ghosts 2018: October 17 – Meeting Your Idols

The woman with the short iron gray hair stood on the staircase that ended at the ceiling. Short of stature, she was able to stand up straight in the shadows near the top of the staircase. The long tapered sleeves of her high-necked long black gown remained crossed over her chest as she regarded the knot of people approaching down the hallway with flashlights.
“If you shine your flashlights over here,” the woman in the lead shone her own light onto the stairway where the woman stood, “you can see one of the infamous staircases leading to nowhere that Sarah Winchester built at the direction of one of her psychic advisers to confuse the spirits of those killed by the rifle her husband championed.” A dozen beams of flashlights crisscrossed up and down the length of the stairway, most at one point passing through the woman at the top of the stairs who remained still, a look on her face as if she had eaten something particularly bitter.
“If you’ll follow me this way,” the leader shined the light back in front of her and the knot of people passed down the hallway.
The woman on the stairs let out a disgruntled sigh.
“Excuse me,” came the voice of a young girl. “Ms. Winchester?”
The woman at the top of the stairs jerked, startled. “Oh goodness!” she said, clutching her chest. “You can see me, dear?” she said regarding the solitary girl who looked to be about fifteen.
The girl nodded.
“My, you look awfully thin, child!”
“Leukemia,” the girl said sadly. She lifted the long black haired wig showing her hairless scalp.
“Oh dear, I’m so sorry,” Ms. Winchester said.
“I grew up down the road,” she pointed west. I always wanted to come here – we drove by it nearly every day. I just died the other day, and my house…” she let out a long slow exhale. “It’s too sad right now.”
“So you came on the flashlight tour?”
“I thought, you know, if you were really here I might…,” she smiled shyly, “Get an autograph?”
For the first time in a hundred years, Sarah Winchester let loose a genuine, belly-shaking laugh. When she recovered and wiped the tears from her eyes, she took the little book from the girl. “What is your name, child?”
“Alice. Alice March.”
“Well,” she said as she scribbled a message and her autograph in the book, “I’m very sorry for your death, Alice March, but I thank you for making my night.”
Alice took the book back. “Thank you, ma’am.” She started to turn then asked, “So, is it true?”
“Is what true, dear?”
“You built all this to keep confuse the ghosts?”
“Are you confused?” Sarah Winchester asked.
Alice shook her head with a smile.
“Exactly,” Sarah smiled back. “I say, if you’re looking for some more names for your book, Steve Jobs is said to haunt his family’s old place in Los Altos…”