31 Ghosts 2018: October 13 – No Good Deed, part 1

We’re doing another two-parter this weekend (though it might be longer, we’ll see). Tomorrow is my first day off in two weeks, so we’ll see what this turns into then. Until then you might remember a character from last year… —Jordy

“What do we have here?” the tall woman in a black evening gown smiled at the man shivering on the side of the road staring at the smashed car in the street. The blue and red flashing lights from the CHP cruisers blocking the road lit the desolate area but didn’t illuminate either the woman nor the man.

“You… you can see me?” he asked her, eyes wide.

“Yes of course I can,” then turned to regard the scene. The carcass of an enormous elk – or at least what was left of it – littered the road in front of what was left of a late model Toyota Corolla. In front of the elk on the road, highlighted by one of the CHP cruisers headlights lay a black sheet. “Let me guess,” she looked at the gold watch on her slender wrist, then put a finger to her lips, “you were leaving work.” She looked at him, “kitchen staff?”

“Umm, no, waiter,” he blinked confusedly.

“Ah, of course. Black slacks, black button-down, should have seen that… Anyway, you were leaving work after closing, driving maybe a little too fast, weren’t wearing your seatbelt and weren’t expecting an elk to be moseying across the road. How am I doing?”

“Uh…” he started. “Yeah, that’s right,” he said, “But I always wear my seatbelt!” he added.

“Just not this time.”

“Just not this time,” he trailed off guiltily. “Who are you? Some sort of detective?”

“Well, detective was a hobby. A hobby that got me killed, but that’s a longer story.” She turned to him and offered her hand. “Elaine Higby,” she said.

“Jimmy Woo,” he offered his hand. “Why am I so cold, Ms. Higby?”

“Elaine, Jimmy, you’re not at work anymore. You’re cold because you’re dead.” The statement didn’t register. She pointed a manicured finger at the sheet. “That’s you,” she said. “I wasn’t here when it happened, but that elk arrested your cars momentum abruptly shooting you through the windshield,” she pointed to the gaping hole in the shattered windshield of the car, “like human cannonball. Unfortunately,” she traced the path from the windshield to the sheet slowly in the air, “you didn’t have a net.” Turning back to him, “Does that help?”

Eyes wide with incredulity, he shook his head. “No, it doesn’t. I can’t be dead…”

“I’m sorry, Jimmy, but facts are facts…”

“How am I here talking to you?”

“Sorry, let me amend – you’re dead and a ghost.”

“A ghost? What? Why?”

“I don’t really know. There’s usually something about unfinished business – at least that’s why I suspect I’m here still. Then there’s really violent deaths that imprint places…” she regarded him with a wary eye. “No, those generally aren’t particularly conversant… No, I suspect you’re probable the last category: too surprised to know you’re even dead.”

“I can’t be dead!” he insisted.

“Hmm,” she tilted her head. “Well, that makes my case…”

“What about my girlfriend? My son?!” tears started filling his eyes.

“Jimmy,” she said with real concern, “I’m sorry. I really am. Sometimes I can come off a little… I don’t know… flippant.”

“You think?!” he scoffed.

“Guilty,” she replied, holding up a hand in acknowledgement. “It’s just I’ve been up here for a while, just me and the flora and fauna. I guess I’ve gotten a little jaded. But, yes, your girlfriend and your son…” she paused. “They will miss you terribly. But there is no coming back from this,” she said gesturing to the sheet.

“No, no, no…” he stammered, sitting on the guardrail as tears streamed down his face.

“Jimmy, can you listen to me for a moment?” He turned his face up to her. “You don’t want to be here, not like this. Not like me,” she gestured to her dress. “Frankly, I’m stuck here. I’m still figuring out the details, but that’s my reality. That doesn’t have to be yours.”

“What do you mean?” he sniffled and wiped at his eyes.

“You need to acknowledge this,” she waved her hand taking in the scene. “You need to accept you’re not here. That sucks. It’s terrible, and it’s going to be horrible for your girlfriend, your son, and everyone who loves you. But,” she reached down and took his hands, “there’s nothing you can do. You’re gone. You belong with those you love that have already passed on. You need to be with them. The living? They’ll sort all this out. That’s what they do. That’s the human condition.”

“Human condition?”

“We love hard, we mourn hard. There wouldn’t be beauty if there wasn’t pain,” she gave him a sad smile. “It sounds cliché, but it’s true.”

“But… I don’t want to be dead!”

“Jimmy, I don’t want to be dead either.” She closed her eyes and shook her head, “we don’t always get what we want. But there’s something you need.”

“What’s that?”

“Peace,” her voice soft. Then she added, “And maybe a hug.” She didn’t finish the last word before Jimmy threw his arms around her in a desperate embrace. She hugged him back as she felt his body wracked in sobs.

After a few moments he pulled back, wiped his face again and said, “I’m really dead.”

“You are, Jimmy, you are.”

Across the street a light erupted that bathed the scene in a warm golden glow.

“Huh,” Elaine said. “So that’s what that looks like.”

“Is that?”

“The ‘light’? Yeah, I think it is. And I think it’s here for you.”

“Really?” he asked. She nodded. “You accepted your death. It’s time to be at peace.”

“Halmi?” he squinted.

Elaine looked after his gaze and barely was able to make out an elderly woman in the light. “Your grandmother?”

Jimmy nodded, a smile on his face.

“Go, Jimmy.” Without a word he stood up and slowly walked across the street. As he did the stooped woman moved far enough out of the light for Elaine to get a good look at the elderly woman. She met Jimmy partway across and hugged him tightly. They separated and she took his hand and started to lead him into the light. He stopped and looked back at Elaine and mouthed the words, “Thank you” before continuing into the light which brightened and then winked out as quickly as it started.

Jimmy was gone.

“Well, shit.” She said with a sigh. “Back to stuck in this goddamn forest with no one to talk to.”

“And yet,” came an accented voice, “You helped that young man pass over.”

Elaine turned startled, “Who are you?!”

“Hello, I’m Saint Andrew Avenillo,” The tall wiry man in a long, white, billowy robe and an aquiline nose spoke with a light Italian accent. “Signorina Elaine, you may call me Andrew. I am the angel of sudden death. I’m here to help signore Jimmy pass on. But it looks like you took care of that for me…”

Part 2

31 Ghosts 2018: October 12 – Curious Kitty

https://pixabay.com/en/cat-orange-cat-ginger-cat-1347176/My fiancé beats me home by an hour on most days, so when I opened the door to our new apartment and found her already in comfy clothes curled up in front of the television I wasn’t surprised. I was, however, surprised by the orange bob-tailed cat purring audibly as it stood on her chest happily accepting purrs.

“Hey Sweetie,” I said by way of greeting. “Where’d the cat come from?”

She giggled as the cat rubbed its face on her outstretched hand and purred louder. “I don’t know!” she laughed. “He was in here when I got home. I figured he must have gotten in through a window or something. I was going to put him out, but he started purring and… his cuteness got the better of me.” She tickled the sides of the cat’s face with the fingertips of both hands. “Didn’t you? Didn’t your cuteness beat me!” she said to the cat in an exaggerated baby voice.

“Huh,” I said, crossing to the couch. The cat, spying another human to pet him, crossed down Amy’s torso and up her outstretched leg to the top of the armrest so I could pet him appropriately. Which, of course, I did. “He is adorable,” I admitted. “Unfortunately, there’s an explicit ‘no pets’ clause in the lease. The owner is meeting me here tomorrow after work to install smoke detectors – we can’t have Mr. Tabby here when the owner gets here.”

Amy gave me an exaggerated pout face, but then agreed, “Yeah, I knew we couldn’t keep him. He’s really healthy so he’s probably one of the neighbor’s cats.” She sat up and scratched behind his ears and started in the baby talk, “Aren’t you just the opportunist? Yes you are!”

“Did you get those Command hooks?” I asked, stepping over one of the as-yet-not-unpacked boxes.

“They’re on the kitchen counter,” she said, and I went into the kitchen looking. “Hey, can we keep him for the night at least?”

I turned back to her and the cat gave out a well-timed, “Meowr?” that melted any objection I could mount. “Yeah,” I said, “but you’re in charge of any kitty accidents in the night!”

“I’ll keep a wary eye on Senor Flufferbutz!”

When we woke up the next morning we could find no sign of the cat. Imagining he might have hidden in a partially unpacked box, we searched the small apartment looking for him. “He probably went out whatever way he got it,” Amy suggested.

“Agreed,” I said folding closed the lid of a kitchen box, “but I don’t want to leave him in the house if he didn’t. What time do you remember him getting off the bed?”

“I went to the bathroom at three and he was still on the bed when I got back.” She shrugged. “When the alarm went off two hours later he was gone. I don’t remember him actually getting off. Do you?”

I shook my head. “I also want to know how he got in here,” I said. “If he can get in here, what’s to say an opossum or a trash panda can’t get in here?”

“Now that’s a scary thought!” she said folding closed the last box. “Okay, officially not in the house.”

I hugged her and gave her a kiss.

When I got home that evening, the owner of the property climbed out of his black Mercedes just as I pulled into the driveway. And met me with a small toolbox and Home Depot bag in one hand and his other hand out to shake. “Amir,” he shook my hand warmly. “How was work?”

“Good, Mr–“ he cut me off with a tilt of his head, “…Dave. It was good. How are you?”

“I’m well, thanks! I hope this is an okay time for this?”

“Totally fine,” I said, reaching into the backseat of the car for my laptop bag.

“How are you guys liking the place? Are you totally moved in?”

“We absolutely love it! And, yeah, we turned in the keys to our old place on Monday.”

“Glad to have you two!” he said. “My mom loved this place, so I’m glad it’s lived in again.”

“Oh?” I asked, locking the car with the key fob. “She didn’t live here for a while?”

“No, she spent her last year in a nursing facility. I didn’t want to do anything with the place because we kept hoping she’d be able to come home to it.” His eyes took on a glassy sheen with the memory. “Wishful thinking,” he said, a slight catch in his voice.

“I’m sorry, Dave” was all I could think to say.

“Thanks,” he said, deliberately brightening. “Let’s get these things installed so you guys can enjoy your evening!”

We moved to the door and I unlocked it and opened it. I had texted Amy when I left work reminding her I’d be meeting the owner when I got home, so I knew she wouldn’t be surprised by the guest. However, as the door opened I saw the cat standing with an arched back languidly accepting a pet. Amy, froze mid-pet. I quickly turned around to block Dave’s view of the prohibited feline, but he had already seen the cat. What’s worse, his face had completely washed out and his eyes bulged.

For a heartbeat, I admired the tableau: Amy, her face a mask of guilt, the cat wondering why the petting had stopped, and Dave frozen with terror on his face.

I broke the silence by apologizing, “Dave, I’m so sorry, I know the no-pets policy. The cat found a way into the house…”

“That cat!” he stammered.

I appreciated that we were violating the lease, but I thought this flabbergasted performance might be a little of an overreaction…

“That’s my mom’s cat!” he said.

“Oh!” I said, relieved. “He probably came back to his old neighborhood… Was he staying with you or another relative?”

Dave finally took his wide eyes off the cat and moved his gaze to me. “That cat died five years ago.”

“Mrawr?”

31 Ghosts 2018: October 11 – Snowstorm

So, this is a true story… right up to stopping in Wells, Nevada. When these events really did happen, we were so broke we managed to find a $29 room in Wendover (and smuggled our cat, Shurik,  inside in a pillowcase!) and couldn’t afford to buy anything to eat that night, so I didn’t venture out, didn’t meet any ghosts. Not saying I wouldn’t have… but I still think of that station wagon full of cowboys and wonder whether they were real or just paying back an eternal debt… —Jordy
They shut the interstate down just after we passed through Reno. In hindsight, I wished we had stayed in Tahoe. But that’s hindsight for you. As it was, we were due back in Logan, Utah for meetings the next morning. The storm that buried the Sierras and Reno seemed at our back as we blasted through Winnemucca, the old 4Runner running a smooth 75 across the desert. The sky above was clear but the crosswind gusts came out of nowhere and would hit us in the side like some angry god trying to shove us off the road. I was used to seeing tumbleweeds from the many times we’d made that drive both ways from Logan to the Bay Area, but I’d never seen as many as the gusts blew across the road; my wife and I gaped at the semi on the other side of the freeway whose grill held at least a dozen of the beige bushes.
The winds were manageable, and I thought we might not have left our fight with the weather back on the California-Nevada border, but as you approach Battle Mountain, the topography of the desert begins to undulate and the arrow-straight road curves here and there to avoid a hill here, an outcropping there – not significantly, mind you, but enough that you need to start paying attention. By the time you get to Elko, the gentle waves of undulations have become choppy seas of asphalt rising and falling more significantly. It was here we could see the trailing edge of the storm, marked by brilliant flashes of lightning hidden by the next rise of mountains on the approaching horizon.
For the most part just rain fell in sheets as the lightning ahead intensified. We gassed up in Elko and pushed onward. We didn’t have time to dally – as it was even without the weather I estimated we’d make it back to our apartment at the University just before midnight. Our late start with the bad weather seemed inauspicious start for this new year, but now watching the lightning flash to the east and hearing the rolling thunder, I wondered just how much trouble we were in and in what shape we’d face January 2.
Outside Wells we started up a pass where signs warned of potential chain control, but at that point it was still raining so I didn’t bother stopping at the lower chain installation shoulder and at least locking the manual hubs on the front wheels of the truck. Soon, though the rain turned to snowflakes. As we climbed, the snow started to stick. A few miles later it became clear that this pass had stalled the storm, as the snow banks on either side of the road formed white walls illuminated by our passing headlights. As we approached the summit I could barely see twenty feet ahead of me and I’d slowed my progress to a veritable crawl after I passed the first Ford Explorer spun off on the side of the road. I lost count of the cars on the side of the road as we crested the summit and started the precipitous descent as I tried to keep my wheels in the already partially covered tracks in front of us. I felt the truck shimmy a bit a few times and cursed myself for not locking the hubs, thus denying us any benefit of the 4-wheel-drive running gear.
Ahead I saw flashing amber light up the snow and shortly found myself behind a snow plow plodding down the grade. I mistakenly thought the safest place would be behind that plow, but almost immediately, he tapped his brakes for some reason and I tapped mine to maintain my buffer behind him. The stab of the brakes was all it took for the truck to lose traction and we started sliding. Panic flooded my system and I tried to regain control of the truck, but we slid steadily, inexorably towards the snowbank on the side of the road. With a fwump the snowbank arrested our slide.
Terrified that someone would crash into us, I immediately slammed the transmission into reverse, but the rear wheels found absolutely no purchase. Without even looking for my gloves I fought the ferocious wind holding the door closed and leapt from the 4Runner and started digging with my hands at the snowbank that engulfed the front wheels to get at the driver’s side wheel hub as the gale blew blinding snow into my eyes. With numb fingers I reached in and turned the notch that locked the wheel to the drive shaft.
As I crossed around the back of the truck a Nevada highway patrol officer slowed. “Are you hurt?” he yelled curtly as the snow blew fiercely into his passenger window.
“No,” I replied.
“Can you get yourself out?”
“I don’t know. I’m gonna try.”
“I’ve got six spin-outs ahead. Three behind, and the same westbound. If you’re still here when I get back we’ll see,” and he started the SUV rolling before he finished talking, window already closing as the studded tires confidently lead him back onto the road where his taillights disappeared into the gale almost instantly. I dug out the hubs on the passenger side and locked that wheel, then teeth chattering I climbed back behind the wheel, started the engine, shifted the drivetrain into 4-wheel-drive and the transmission into reverse and cautiously eased on the throttle. For a moment I thought it would catch, then the wheels started spinning.
I cursed and dried rocking forward and backwards but the truck didn’t budge. I punched the dash and only then noticed on my freezing left hand my wedding ring was gone. I gaped and Anna asked what was up and I just held up my hand missing what was my late father’s wedding ring. As I realized the futility of trying to find a ring in the snowdrift in the dark with near-blizzard winds driving and felt my emotion rising, I heard the whine of a semi and turned to see the 18-wheeler in full slide down the road only to smash into the snowbank with an explosion of white. Just barely off the freeway, that easily could have hit us. I swallowed my emotions, knowing there would be time to deal with them later.
I found my gloves and a cup in lieu of a shovel as I climbed out to clear snow from the wheels in an effort to free us. I could feel the tears freezing on my cheeks as I dug at the snow around the passenger wheels. A pair of headlights bore down on me and I felt adrenaline surge as I thought someone out of control was careening towards us. Relief doused the adrenaline as a rusty early-eighties Country Squire station wagon pulled off onto the shoulder, lights still pointing at me.
The window went down and a man with a cowboy hat leaned out, “Stuck?”
“Yeah,” I said, shielding my eyes from the blowing snow and the blinding headlights.
“Want some help pushing it out?”
“Yeah, absolutely, that would be great! Thank you!”
“Okay,” he said. “But we’ll let you keep digging a while more.”
I couldn’t protest as I turned back to my efforts. Ten minutes later I heard the doors of the old station wagon creak open and four stout cowboys climbed out, all four wearing their Stetsons tight on their heads. The driver pointed to Anna in the passenger seat holding our panicked cat. “Can she drive while we push?”
“Yeah,” and I knocked on the window and relayed the plan. Anna moved to the driver’s seat and started the engine while I put my shoulder into the grill of the 4Runner, the driver cowboy next to me and the other three finding purchase on corners of the truck. We rocked and pushed as Anna surged the engine. Wheels spun then caught, then spun, caught, spun, and finally caught, the truck backing free of the snowbank. Anna moved the truck up and out of the road, and I turned to thank the cowboys. One had already climbed back into the car, while the two others were hurrying to their doors. The driver stood next to me still and I could see the snow gathering on his mustache. “Thank you so much,” I said, shaking his rough hand. “You bet,” he said before hurrying himself to the station wagon. I got back behind the wheel of the 4Runner and started onto the road, around the stuck semi-truck and into the swirling snow.
Mercifully it was only a few white-knuckled miles before the road dropped into Wells. The dark buildings and 24-hour gas station provided evidence of the power of the storm. Despite the more sure-footedness of the 4-wheel drive and the lack of power, in town I could feel the realization of events start to creep up and knew I couldn’t make it much further before breaking down. We pulled into the parking lot of the Motel 6. The middle-aged woman found us a vacant room and checked us in by candlelight and we settled in, grateful to be out of the storm.
Anna fell asleep almost immediately, but sleep eluded me. I told Anna I was going out and gratefully found only light snow flurries when I opened the door. Even in the darkness I could make out the Four Way Bar & Casino across the street and hurried through the weather to see if they were open. Suprisingly, not only was the bar not closed (though the casino was, naturally), at least half a dozen patrons huddled around candles at the round tables. Only a couple sat at the bar, so I took a seat and asked the grizzled bartender for a shot of Jack Daniels and whatever beer he could manage.
I threw back the shot and took a pull on the Budweiser. After regarding me, the bartender asked, so I told him about the slide, the snowbank, losing my ring, and the cowboys. A smile crept over his face when I mentioned the station wagon. “What?” I asked.
“Good to know Jonny and his boys are still out there.”
“Jonny?”
“Killed in a storm twenty years ago. T-boned by a semi.”
I gave him an incredulous look.
The smile faded and he held up his hands in defense. “Hey, I’m not telling you that’s them. Maybe it was some other station wagon full of cowboys. You believe what you need to, buddy.”
“Oh, I’d believe, but forgive me if the ghost good Samaritan sounds a little cliché.”
“Not gonna disagree,” he said. “I’ve worked here for a long time,” he drew out the vowel in “long” like he was counting out the years. “I hear stories like yours during most nasty storms. First time this season,” he nodded. “Like I said, believe it or not.”
“Well, if it was Jonny, I’d buy him a beer,” and I raised the bottle in salute.
I heard the door open behind me. The bartender froze and went white.
“You’re not going to tell me…” I started.
“What’s that I hear about buying me a beer?” the voice came from behind me.