“Jim!” the wiry man in his seventies wearing a gray suit and neatly trimmed gray hair under a fedora yelled to the nattily dressed man a little shorter and rounder, but about the same age in a black business suit with a cleanly shaven head. Floating in from different directions, both converged on the driveway leading towards the curved concrete and glass building, past the silver sign declaring “WSB Television & Radio Group. “Are you going to be participating in the drawing tonight?”
“Evening, Marty! Nah, last time that Russian grandmother clocked me with her handbag.” He made an effort to stretch his neck, “my neck hurt for weeks. Way I look at it, my grandkids are on their own!”
“I’m with you, Jim. I thought you were nuts last time, but I get it. What’s it up to this time?”
“Five hundred forty-seven million dollars!”
Jim whistled appreciatively. “That’s a lotta cheddar.”
“Sure is. But I’ll tell you what: I think we’ll have the best show!”
“That’s the truth! The living has their MMA, but that’s nothing like lottery drawings!”
“Mmm hmm!”
Both passed effortlessly through the wall and into the building and into utter bedlam.
Inside the studio, a man in a tuxedo stood quietly on a colorful set with bright monitors showing the “Mega Millions” logo. He held a microphone as he stood in front of two spherical hoppers filled with individually numbered balls.
“How’s that, Ed? Levels okay?” the man said into the microphone. “One, two, three…” He listened to the response from the control room through his earpiece, “Okay, great. Could we get the thermostat up a little? It’s always too cold in here when we do the drawing!”
In front of him, three different camera operators swiveled their oversize cameras as the director keyed each operator to zoom and pan to check their motion before they went live. Off set a few more people stood, but the only real chaos in the room was a nervous buzz in the control room – there was always a little nervous buzz, but most of the people involved were veterans and had helped produce the drawing for years.
That’s what the living saw.
Thousands of ghosts stood shoulder to shoulder crowded around the hoppers. Against the walls, dozens of ghosts floated near the ceiling, observing the mass of ghosts below. Jim and Marty floated up in the northern-most corner of the studio regarding the madness below and in front of them.
“This is gonna be something!” Marty elbowed Jim.
“You know it is!”
“Makes me claustrophobic just looking at ‘em all!”
“Mmm hmm.”
Surveying the mass below, most appeared older – maybe late forties to elderly. Some held notecards with numbers scrawled on them, others lips moved as they silently recited the numbers they wanted. Marty noticed a few younger ghosts cracking their knuckles and bouncing up and down in anticipation. “Uh oh, that’s going to be trouble!”
“Don’t you know it – those punks are just here for the fight.”
“Shame,” Marty shook his head. “Well, I guess it’s lucky no one can die twice!” both roared in laughter.
Jim broke off the laughter, “Shh! Shh, Marty! They’re about to start.”
An announcement over the PA in the studio boomed, “Places people, we’re live in five, four, three,” the voice cut off as the director just off camera pointed to the man on the tuxedo as the red light light up on the camera in the center of the stage as dramatic music swelled and the tuxedoed man held a bright white smile.
“Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. We’ve got a great drawing for you tonight! Five hundred forty-seven million dollars! Let’s get those balls moving!” The hoppers came to life and the balls swirled around wildly inside the transparent globes.
“Oh, Lord, they’re going crazy!” Jim said as the thousands of ghosts pushed in tighter and tighter, the mass of bodies nearly vibrating with anticipation. The mass, relatively quiet until now, began to rise to a din as the closely packed ghosts started cursing at each other and groaning with the strain of the bodies pressing in.
“I’m so glad we’re up here!” Marty shouted over the roar of ghosts as he shook his head.
Neither could hear the Mr. Tuxedo anymore, only the writhing mass, but suddenly he gestured and turned to the hopper.
That was the signal – the draw had begun.
Chaos erupted among the ghosts.
Ghosts tried to climb over each other. Fists were thrown. Jim saw the Russian grandmother wildly waving her purse and clubbing ghosts around her indiscriminately and his hand reflexively rubbed the back of his neck. The punks midway back just started punching and kicking for the sake of causing mayhem. Everyone was trying to get their hands through the plastic and into the hopper to guide the numbers they wanted – they needed – for their loved ones left behind. A usually comely woman with grey-streaked blonde hair, her face contorted into a mask of determination had fought her way to the main hopper and had an arm inside, trying to corral the number 3 ball towards the chute. She pushed the ball down against the ping-ponging other balls and the gust of air that swirled the balls into a maelstrom when she saw a hand reach down over the ball and help guide the 3 ball towards the chute. Astonished by the assistance, she let her determined mask slip a bit and looked up into the blue eyes of a man not much older than she was. He took his eyes off the ball for a heart beat, long enough to throw her a smile before he turned his focus back to the ball. The woman heard a roar and looked up again to see a heavy-set man without a shirt come crashing down on her bodily, her arm painfully wrested out of the hopper, the 3 ball spinning out of control. The heavyset man grinned maniacally at the older man who was helping the now-smooshed woman as he reached an arm in to find the numbers he was looking for. The older man frowned, and then headbutted the bare-chested man in the face. Bare-chesty’s nose erupted in ectoplasm and he roared.
“Twenty!” Mr. Tuxedo announced the first number.
A thunder of groans rose from the ghosts, interspersed with a few cheers here and there. A ghost with honest-to-god boxing gloves and the scarred face an crooked nose to prove he knew how to use them was punching his way to the hopper. He feinted as the Russian grandmother swung her handbag at him and followed with a right hook that laid the Russian Grandmother out as the crowd surged over her.
“Ooh!” Jim and Marty flinched at the same time. “That’s gotta hurt,” Marty added.
The boxer reached the hopper only to receive a tap on his shouder. When he turned, a roundhouse kick from a woman who had to have been twice his age dropped him like a sack of Halloween candy. The elderly blackbelt followed her kick by jabbing her hand into the hopper, nabbing a ball and slamming it into the chute with authority.
“Twenty-two!” Mr. Tuxedo called.
The disappointed groan was louder this time, the cheers fewer. One man hurled his much-smaller wife over the crowd. She tucked at the last moment and crashed into the front of the mass like they were bowling pins. She popped up, reached a hand in and started to move the 30 ball into place, but a hand from one of the fallen would-be bowling pins managed to reach up an arm, grab the small woman’s ankle and yank her down. The 30 ball careened off the side, bouncing a different ball downwards…
“Thirty-nine!”
Groans, cheers, more bloodshed as ghosts clawed – literally – for position and to get their number balls into the chute.
“Fifty-four!”
Jim could see the action changing. Enough peoples numbers hadn’t come up that they started to fall back. Those who still had a chance, though, fought more violently. A burly man fought to get the 50 ball out of the swirling balls when a woman bit the man’s ear clean off but before ear-biter had a chance to capitalize on her canibalizing, another woman placed a hand on either side of the biter’s head and twisted, dropping the woman as her neck broke with a sickening crack causing Jim to think he might be ill.
“Sixty!” Mr. Tuxedo called.
Now things changed.
The second hopper erupted, balls flying. “And for the bonus number…”
Almost all the ghosts were out of it at this point, but for the handful of ghosts for whom this number was critical, the ferocity rose to a fever pitch, the action brutal and swift with spurts of ectoplasm accompanying screams and groans.
“Eighteen!” Mr. Tuxedo called.
No one cheered. A few scattered groans from those still able to groan and still had faculty enough to know what they were groaning about.
Jim looked at the carnage of all the ghosts lying broken and injured carpeting the studio, ghost bodies three-deep in some places. “Wow, that was…just wow.”
“Agreed,” Marty said with a shudder. “Doesn’t look like anyone won.”
“Not this time,” Jim agreed.
Marty sighed, adjusted the fedora, turned to his friend and stuck out his hand. “Well, Jim, that was fun!”
“Yes, yes it was,” Jim said, shaking the proffered hand. “A lot more fun for us then them,” he inclined his head down towards the broken, ectoplasm-streaked mass.
“No doubt, my friend. When they manage to extricate themselves there’s gonna be a hell of a lot of hangovers.”
“You got that right!” they laughed as they floated through the wall and back down the driveway.
“So, Jim, no one won…” he left the statement open as a question.
“See you next Friday?”
“It’ll be over half a billion dollars! I wouldn’t miss that chaos for… half a billion dollars!” they both laughed uproariously and floated off their separate ways.
2018
31 Ghosts 2018: October 9 – Berith
“I get called ‘evil’ a lot. It’s not true. It doesn’t bother me, mind you, but it’s also just not true. I’m no Casper the Friendly Ghost by any stretch of the imagination. I’m just filling a role – ‘doing the needful,’ if you will. Hey, if I didn’t do it, it’d happen eventually and it would be a lot uglier.
“Don’t believe me?”
He slapped a wool cap over his bald pate, “Tag a long with me – I’m going to pick up a new recruit today. Yeah, a funeral home – don’t look so surprised!” He leaned in and cupped his eyes against a plate glass window, then stood and gestured. “Here, take a look. See if you can pick him out. Here’s a hint: he’s the one who doesn’t look dressed for the occasion. Ha! I didn’t notice that guy! No, the guy in the Member’s Only jacket is actually a mourner. He’s just got terrible fashion sense, he’s not dead – not yet at least.
“Yep, you got it in two. The guy dressed in hiking clothes is our guy. Ranger Rick there died some twenty years ago. He was backpacking with his bros when his appendix burst in the middle of nowhere. His friends couldn’t get help in time,” he gestured down with his thumb and blew a raspberry.
“He was out there talking to his buddies about proposing to his sweetie – he even showed them the ring.” He stood silent for a moment, contemplative. “but he died. Didn’t get to propose. So, lo these twenty years he’s been hanging around his girl. It was the ring. He was all tied up with it. When death prevented him from giving it to her on bended knee, he couldn’t pass on. So here he stayed by her. He got the old ball and chain without even having done the deed!
“Ah, Figured that part out already?” he smirked. “Yeah, that’s her in the casket. Breast cancer. I fucking hate cancer. What? Don’t look surprised! Cancer sucks for everyone involved – me included. For the living, they have to watch their loved one waste away. For me, there’s generally enough time to make peace so they tend to pass over pretty easily. Fuck cancer.
“But, yeah, that’s her in the box. The guy in the black suit is her husband – yeah, she married eventually.” He shrugged, “time waits for no ghost. People gotta live, right?
“Anyway, our boy there – his name is Devin – just lost his anchor to this world when she passed. Only child, and his parents died in a car accident years before he did. His friends still raise a glass to him, but that’s not enough to hold him. So, really, he’s got no one. That’s where I step in.” He waggled his dark eyebrows and stepped through the door.
He casually sidled up next to Devin. “I’m truly sorry for your loss, Devin.”
Devin did a double take and then said, “You can see me?”
“See you, hear you… you’re as real to me as any of these people are to each other.” Devin gaped at the stranger. “Name’s Berith,” he extended his hand for Devin to shake. Devin tentatively reached for the outstretched hand and audibly gasped when his fingers closed around something solid.
“I… can’t remember the last time I actually shook a hand,” Devin said, shaking Berith’s hand a little too enthusiastically.
“It’s okay,” Berith smiled, “I get that a lot.”
“Do you?” Devin released the hand. “You look familiar. Who are you?”
“Me?” Berith shrugged, “think of me as a sort of guide.”
“Guide?”
“Sure. Now that Sarah has passed, what’s your plan?”
“Plan?” Devin looked confused. “I didn’t have a plan…”
“That’s a problem,” Berith nodded solemnly. “See, without a plan, without a guide,” he turned gracefully and caught Devin’s elbow in the crook of his arm and started to lead him back through the door. “You’re going to fall apart – quite literally.”
“Wait!” Devin protested as the started through the door. “I haven’t said goodbye!”
“Devin,” Berith admonished, “You’ve been saying goodbye for twenty years. See, this is the problem. She’s gone. Gone! Poof!” he spread his fingers apart to emphasize his point. “I ask you again, what are you going to do?”
“I… I don’t know. I hadn’t thought of that.”
“Then you’re lucky I came around. I’ve got a purpose for you.”
“Really? Shouldn’t I be moving on?”
“Devin, my boy, that ship sailed.” He cocked a thumb at the casket behind him, “If you didn’t get things settled when she was alive… it’s too late.”
“So… now what?”
“Now you learn how to really make the living realize how lucky they are.”
“How do I do that?”
“Glad you asked!” he snapped his fingers and suddenly they weren’t in front of a funeral house, but instead inside a modest house, lights low, teenagers gathered around a Ouija board. “Here’s a great opportunity to get started. Look at these kids. You ever play with a Ouija board?” Devin nodded. “Fun, right?” Devin nodded again. “But it’s more than harmless little fun. They’re actively opening a portal into our realm.”
“So we warn them?”
“In a manner of speaking.” Berith walked over and leaned over the kids, pushing the planchette around to form letters of his choosing.
“Do,” the kids repeated the first spelled out word. “You,” they said. “Want. To. See. A. Ghost!” they looked at each other excitedly. The one acting as their spokesperson, a boy maybe 17, said “Yes! Yes, we want to see a ghost!”
Berith straightened, turned to Devin, spread his hands theatrically and said, “It’s showtime, Devin!”
“I… I don’t know what to do…”
“Come over here, Devin.” Devin crossed to stand next to Berith. “This boy just invited you in. Touch him and will yourself inside.”
“Isn’t that… like a possession?”
“Devin, he just asked for it! You heard him!”
Devin shook his head, “I don’t know, this doesn’t seem right…”
“Right? You died before you got a chance to propose to your beloved. Was that right? You followed her around while she lived, while she fell in love, while she married… was that right? And now she’s dead and you’re still here. Is that right?”
“…no,” Devin said tentatively.
“And now you’ve got what? Nothing.” Berith said flatly. “You’ve got nothing and no one. This boy just said he wants you to show yourself. Give him a show, Devin.”
“No one,” Devin repeated. “Nothing.”
“That’s right,” Berith said. “Go ahead.”
Devin reached out a hand and touched the boy’s shoulder, closed his eyes in concentration and in a moment, he disappeared as the boy’s eyes widened unnaturally and he became board stiff. The laughing conversation around the table silenced as the boy said in a deep, gravelly voice, “I am here! You wanted me here!” the boy raised his arms slowly and then slammed them down on the table with a crash.
“Toby, is that you?” one of the girls at the table asked.
“There is no Toby,” the boy croaked.
“Toby this isn’t funny….” One of the boys said.
Toby rotated his head towards the boy then opened his mouth and projectile vomited onto the boy. Shrieks erupted around the table as panic engulfed the other participants. There were more demonstrations. Toby cursed, drooled, spit, threw up at least twice more, and finally sagged forward as Devin slid out the back of the limp boy’s body.
“How was that, Devin?”
Devin’s face expressed both exhilaration and confusion. “So easy! So… wow. But that was wrong. That seemed wrong. Is he going to be alright?”
Berith looked at the boy whose friends had already rushed to his side to revive him. “Sure, sure, he’ll be okay.” Berith snapped again, and they stood on an empty street. “The important part is do you think his friends are going to try that again?” Devin shook his head. “Damn right they’re not. Good job. That was fun, right?”
Devin looked conflicted for a moment, but just a moment. “Yeah, that was fun. It really was. Did you see the look on their faces when that bile flew?!”
“Right?! We’re just getting started! Give me a moment here and then we’ll find another group of the living to torment, err, remind of the preciousness of life!”
“Sounds great!” Devin said with visible glee.
Berith took a few steps away from Devin and said more quietly. “There, was that evil? I mean, yeah, okay, it wasn’t nice, but what in life – or death – is nice. This kid has a purpose now. Granted that purpose is to wantonly torment the living… we started slow tonight, but Devin’s a quick learner, I can see it. Oh, don’t get all high and mighty on me,” Berith gave a dismissive wave. “If I’d left him there he’d have lost his way, wandered aimlessly, forgotten. Just another wraith wandering pointlessly. He’s got a reason for being now. No, it’s not bad, it’s not evil. It’s just another way of being dead.” Berith crossed his arms and stared menacingly, “Don’t knock it ‘til you tried it.”
31 Ghosts 2018 – Wrights Tunnel
I actually wrote a piece similar to this years ago. I’m something of a digital packrat, so I went looking for it and, to my surprise, came up empty handed. So, I went about recreating it – my mind’s eye remembers the other with less history and more ghosts, but who knows? For the record, all the historical information here is absolutely true, and the tunnel – as well as other tunnels that comprised the San Jose to Santa Cruz line – still exist, though they were caved in and many now reside on private property. Also, I tried to find a good, free image like one of the ones I’ve used so far this month, but none came close to the images of the actual place. Not having been able to get permission to use any of them I’m going picture-less for now. But the twin-waterfall thing? That isn’t a fiction. —Jordy
When I stood before the open concrete maw of the tunnel I doubted whether I should have come at all. I thought of the delightful coffee shops in downtown Los Gatos I could easily get to in just a few minutes. Or, better yet, ten minutes hike back to the car, twenty minutes more and I’d be in Santa Cruz – both possibilities held much better psychic energy than this… Tunnel #3. Also known as the Summit tunnel and most commonly as Wright’s Tunnel, for a short period of time in the 19th century at nearly a mile long this was the second longest tunnel in California. But it didn’t come without a cost.
I passed the two waterfalls on flanking either side of the mouth of the tunnel dumping run-off from recent rains. Intended to open up the lucrative Santa Cruz mountains logging routes to the shipping ports of Alviso and Alameda, this tunnel – the most ambitious of the numerous bored through the hillsides in order to complete the run to Santa Cruz – began in December 1877. Hundreds of Chinese laborers were brought in to pick, dig, and dynamite their way through the mountain even as American attitude towards them soured dramatically; five years later the Chinese Exclusionary act was signed in to law. But despite the rising racist attitudes, the foremen knew the Chinese laborers were the best in the world. Unfortunately, they also saw them as disposable.
It’s mid-day under a cloudy sky as I cross into the tunnel. I know I won’t be able to go too far – the railroad ceased operations in the 1940s and this tunnel was subsequently dynamited at both ends shortly thereafter. Nonetheless, I turn to my flashlight as the sound of the waterfalls recede and darkness envelopes me. My light splashes onto graffiti on the walls – a leering caricature, elaborate tagging script. That’s when I hear the knocking.
It’s coming from much deeper into the tunnel and despite some foreboding, I quickly continue down. After all, the tunnel is collapsed in and there isn’t much further I can go. This is confirmed only a few moments later as the tunnel slopes upwards to the ceiling of the tunnel – the blasted cave-in. And yet, knocking continues seemingly through the solid earth.
Progress on the tunnel was slow going. The shifting geology of the mountain played havoc with picks and blasting. Sandstone and clay would slide back into the tunnels despite round-the-clock shits. Progress was measured at only five feet a day and the initial optimistic 10-month completion deadline was buried as a wistful pipedream under so much muck and mud. Methane gas started to seep into the tunnels, overcoming some workers. A year later and 2300 feet into the mountain, tar-like petroleum began oozing into through the cracks in the rock and were burned off every few minutes to avoid a buildup. Unfortunately, that regimen proved not to be enough, and in February of 1879 a foreman lighting a the fuse of a demolition dynamite charge instead set off a pocket of methane. The blast blew back out the mouth of the tunnel – past where I just walked – killing five laborers. Despite the explosion and loss of life, work continued. Another crew began boring north from the other side of the mountain intending to meet the larger contingent boring south from the town of Wright.
I turn away from the cave-in and head back for the light at the tunnel’s mouth when the sound of the knocking fades away, replaced by a rumbling noise. At first I think it’s a truck or low flying plane outside, but then I feel the rumble through the soles of my boots. I turn back to the cave-in, the direction the rumbling seems to be coming from and shining the light I no longer see the dirt rising to the roof of the tunnel but just an open chasm. Then, rushing up the chasm comes a wall of light and pure fire and fury. I close my eyes and fall to my knees as the light rushes towards me. I can see the light brighter and brighter through closed lids and I wait for the heat and searing burn as the roar overtakes me… but it doesn’t come. The light fades, the rumble dissipates. Silence. I struggle to regain my breathing. I turn back to the entrance, and, sure enough, I can make out the waterfalls at the mouth of the tunnel.
I take few steps towards it, though and the light at the end of the tunnel is blotted out by bodies running into the tunnel. Dozens of men running towards me, yelling. I shine my light on them and see they are Chinese. I turn and follow them with my gaze as they rush past me. I see them coursing into the tunnel, back down from where the explosion came from. Suddenly, a massive rumble sounds again more ferocious than the first, and again, a sheet of light, fire, and flame roils up engulfing the men that just passed me, flowing over and through me without touching me, and flowing out the opening in the mountain.
There were two blasts, they reported. The first, just before midnight in November 1879, when completion seemed close at hand – indeed the north and south tunnels were thought to be separated by less than a thousand feet – ignited a pocket of gas nearly 2,700 feet into the south bore. Twenty-one men – mostly Chinese laborers, naturally – died in that initial blast. Their fellow miners did indeed rush in to try to rescue any survivors, only to be caught in a second, more massive blast. The explosions cost a total of 32 lives and caused construction to grind to a halt – mostly due to the Chinese laborers refusing to go back in. Cornish miners were brought in to try to finish the tunnel.
When the Cornish emigrated from Great Britain they brought with them the story of the “Tommyknockers” – imps who would pester miners. As they worked their way through the mines of the West, however, the term evolved from its faerie past into a more paranormal phenomenon. Miners would report hearing pick axes and shovels down abandoned mine shafts. “Tommyknockers,” they would say. Perhaps it’s the Tommyknockers I hear as the roar dissipates to silence to that eerie knocking beyond the cave-in. After the blast, the sound of the ghosts digging is welcome, albeit something that makes my skin crawl.
Alas, unhappy with the pace of the Cornish miners – just half of the 8-feet-a-day the Chinese managed – the company raised wages and brought in a new crew of Chinese workers unfamiliar with the carnage they would be tunneling through. March 13th of the following year, the Chinese and Cornish miners punched through the last of the rock, joining the south and north bores into the single tunnel.
As I make my way past the waterfalls, the echoing of the phantom blasts still ringing in my ears, I think of the relative futility of all the effort. The railroad opened in 1880. Just over 25 years later the tunnel would close due to the 1906 quake which shifted part of the mountain five feet northwest. The tunnel re-opened three years later, but operation would fall off with the rise of the automobile and the completion of the Glenwood highway over the hills. By the time the big storm of 1940 washed out a section of track, the decision was made to abandon the line and seal the tunnels.
Just as time and Progress marched on, leaving the tunnel entrance to water runoff and graffiti, so do I scramble up to the roadside where my car is parked, and I head back to the highway that ultimately bypassed the tunnel.