31 Ghosts 2018 – Haunted, part 3

The conclusion to the story I started Friday. If you haven’t read parts 1 or 2, I recommend hitting those – this is longer than both of those, but it finished nicely I think. Off to work shortly! Thanks! —Jordy

A banging came from the door leading down to the basement from the outside causing Ricky to jump with a start and Jose hid the pipe he had just taken a hit from. Eyes bugged out he wondered whether he had time to exhale – he did and then furiously swatted at the cloud of smoke as Ricky yelled, “Who is it?”

No response.

“Dude,” Jose said after a moment of silence. “Maybe it’s a ghost.”

As if in response, the door flew open with a crash as it rebounded against the far wall. No ghost, Jason bounded down the stairs.

“Whoa!” Ricky yelled. “I locked that! How’d you get in?!”

“Key,” Jason held it up. “Under the mat?”

Jose erupted in a peel of giggles.

“Oh yeah,” Ricky nodded in recognition.

“Guys, this is an emergency!” Jason said waving his arms.

“Dude, you need to chill!” Jose replied.

“No, I’m serious guys! Jade’s in danger!”

“Jade?” Ricky asked.

“That supposed chick ghost Jason wants to psychically bang.”

“What? No, that’s not… no… it’s not like that…” Jason stammered.

“Me thinks he doth protest too much,” Ricky said with a huge grin and fist-bumped Jose.

“Guys, come on!” he pleaded. “I need your help. She needs your help!”

“What’s going on?” Ricky said.

“So, I went by there earlier this evening–”

“I’m shocked!” Jose interrupted in mock surprise.

“And she called to me from the street! I went in and she threw her arms around me and pleaded for me to save her from this demon thing that’s trying to swallow her soul.”

“Threw her arms around you?” Jose asked suspiciously.

In reality, Jade did call down to him, but specifically it was, “Jason, you good-for-nothing ass! Get up here!” He did, naturally, and she greeted him with, “Where the fuck have you been?!” After that, though, she did admit she was grateful to see him because she needed his help. She explained about the darkness-cloaked thing and how it had managed to get halfway up the stairs – each stair seemed exceptionally difficult for it to climb. But it seemed to be getting angrier, louder, and more insistent with each step. Jason said he did notice an icy cold spot coming up the stairs but couldn’t himself hear the howling. He asked how he could help and Jade didn’t have any ideas, but then something struck Jason…

“Her mom? Isn’t she dead too?” Ricky asked.

“Yeah, I thought that at first, too, but then I thought back our discussions – she had mentioned her dad—”

“Baby Daddy,” Jose clarified.

Jason rolled his eyes, “Jade’s real dad who ran out on her and her mom, and of course her step-father who killed her and himself rather than let her mom get a divorce…”

“But no mention of her mom?” Ricky asked.

“Right! I pulled up the news story while we were up there and sure enough, it mentioned the mom wasn’t home – she survived.”

“How’d Jade deal when you mentioned her mom?” Jose asked.

“That’s the thing, she teared up!”

“You’ve said she’s a pretty hard chick, dude,” Ricky said.

“Right?! I’m thinking we’ve got to find her mom and get her to the house because that’s what Jade’s been hanging around for – that’s why she hasn’t crossed over!”

Jose looked at Ricky. Ricky looked at Jason. Jason looked back and forth between them.

“Shit, bro, that’s some paranormal problem solving! That’s why we made you Elmwood High Paranormal Society President!” Jose nodded and all three traded fist bumps.

“How do we find her? I’m guessing we need to find her like… yesterday.”

“Right. That’s why I need you guys…”

“On it…” Jose said, laptop already open and typing.

“Dude, you’re higher than hell,” Ricky remarked.

“That’s when I get my best work done,” Jose intoned flatly as he focused on his search. Five minutes later, he had a phone number.

“Hi, ma’am,” Jason started into the phone. “You don’t know me, but I was a friend of your daughter Jade’s…” he looked quizzically at the phone in his hand.

“What?” Ricky asked.

“She hung up on me!”

“That’s her then,” Ricky declared.

Jose started typing and muttered, “no…. no…. that one’s bad…. Yep. Yeah, got her address.”

“Really? That fast,” Jason asked incredulously.

“Bro, I’ve got supernatural herb-enhanced hacking powers. Do not doubt my key-fu!”

Jason fake bowed, “we’re not worthy!”

Ricky brandished a keyfob and key, “To the Mystery Machine!”

“You’re driving?” Jason asked with an arched eyebrow.

“We’re not taking your skateboard, doofus,” Ricky replied.

“Yeah, no, but will your van start?”

“Ah, that’s they Mystery!”

It did start. They denied Jose’s request for another “Scooby Snack.” Jason called shotgun. In fifteen minutes Jason and Ricky crowded in front of the door of a second story apartment. Jose stood behind them, hands on the railing, staring  mesmerized at the pool in the middle of the complex, glittering with reflected moonlight.

Jason knocked and then cast a look back at Jose. “He’s okay, yeah?”

“Jose? Yeah, he’s just chillin’. He’ll be cool when we need him.”

The door opened a crack, security chain in place. “Who is it?” the woman asked.

“Ma’am,” Jason started, “I called you a few minutes ago. It’s about your daughter, Jade.”

“You boys get out of here before I call the cops! Can’t you leave me alone?!” She started to slam the door but Ricky got his Doc Martin between the door and the Jam.

“Please, ma’am,” Ricky asked more respectfully than Jason had ever heard him. “We’re very sorry to bother you. This is really important. Jason here,” he pointed to his left, “he’s been… communicating with Jade. And she’s in trouble. We think you’re the only one who can help her.”

The woman’s face gradually softened as she let the words sink in. “Jade? What do you know of her?” she said to Jason.

“She’s, err, well, her ghost is still back at the ruins of your old house. She’s stuck there. But tonight she said something is trying to get her, trying to…” he struggled to phrase it right, “trying to take her soul.”

The woman’s expression teetered briefly between belief and incredulity before pitching hard into belief. “And how am I supposed to help?”

“I think she needs to see you again,” Jason said. “To cross over, that is…” he added. “We’ve talked a lot and when I asked about you she got really sad – she never gets sad like that.”

Tears visible, she barked out a laugh at that. “My Jade was always pretty hard,” she smiled sadly.

“Ma’am?” Jason said gently, breaking her reverie. “We really need your help – she really needs your help. And we have to go now. She’s in real trouble.”

The woman closed her eyes, took a slow deep breath before saying, “Okay. Okay, let’s go.”

Ten minutes later Jade watched the headlights approach from the road heading directly for the house. Unlike normal car headlights that then made the dog leg right turn with the road, these careened down the dirt driveway before power-sliding to a stop on the weed-patchy lawn in front of the front door.

“Epic!” Jose said to Ricky as they piled out of the van.

“Sorry, Mrs. Riley,” Jason said to the woman climbing out of the passenger side. The woman… even in the wan tree-dappled moonlight Jade thought she recognized her.

No, couldn’t be… she thought. “Jesus Christ, Jason! Took you long enough! I hope you have something!” she yelled down.

“Oh, we’ve got this!” he yelled back. Then explained to the woman “she’s glad we’re here.”

“That’s not what I said, fuck-nut! Get you and the Scooby Gang up here pronto! That fucker’s like two steps from the top!”

“We’re on it!” Jason yelled back, then translated, “she wants us to hurry.”

All four hurried past the caution tape over the front door and carefully up the brittle, burned stairs. Each and everyone shivered violently as they passed the second step to the top. Jason reached Jade in her room first.

“Jade! You’re okay!”

“Brilliant deduction, Sherlock,” she said, arms crossed, but Jason could see relief in her blue eyes.

“Whoa, shit!” Jose staggered around a dark streak just inside the door. “Is that.”

“Where I bled out? Yeah, thanks for pointing out that painful memory, asshole,” Jade sneered.

“Yeah,” Jason nodded in translation.

Ricky bounded in behind him and stepped right through the spot. “So, umm, where is she?”

“Right here,” she said flipping Ricky her middle finger.

“She’s right there,” Jason said, pointing to where the invisible Jade stood.

“So?” She asked Jason, “Now that the Extraordinary League of Fuck-offs has convened, what’s the brilliant plan to get this demon off my ass?” She asked. As she finished her sentence, Mrs. Riley tentatively entered the room, hands shaking, tears running unchecked down her cheeks.

Jason looked from the shaky woman to Jade. Jade’s hard countenance sluiced away like melted ice. Her confrontational folded arms dropped to her side, and her eyes welled up. “Mom?” she asked.

“She sees you, Mrs. Riley.”

“She does? Are you sure it’s really her?”

“Jade, what’s something only your mom would know?”

“Isn’t that personal?” Jade asked.

“That’s the point.”

“Tell her… I guess I’m overdue.”

“Really?” Jason asked quizzically. Jade arched an eyebrow. Turning to Mrs. Riley, Jason said, “She says to tell you she’s… overdue?”

Mrs. Riley laughed a crying laugh at that. “We used to have dinner picnics outside the Elmwood Public Library,” she explained. “When we’d get there after they closed she would say, ‘I guess we’re overdue’.” Her face contracted as she fought a sob. When she opened her wet eyes she asked, “Where is she?” Jason pointed to where Jade stood. Mrs. Riley crossed so she stood a few feet from her daughter. “Oh baby,” she cried, “I’m so sorry! I’m so sorry! I should have been here! I should have… it’s my fault, baby!”

“No, mom, no. It’s not your fault. It’s that asshole’s fault. He’s probably burning in hell already. It’s not your fault, mom!”

“She says she doesn’t blame you.” Jason translated. “She blames him completely.”

“That goddamn coward,” Mrs. Riley bit the last word off with more venom than Jason had ever heard.

“Oh mom, I missed you.”

“She said she’s missed you.”

“Oh, baby… I’m so sorry! I didn’t know you were here. I would have come sooner, baby! I’m so sorry. I guess I’m the one overdue.”

“Mom, it’s okay. It’s okay. You’re here now. You’re here now.” Suddenly, what looked like sunlight back lit Jade. She turned to regard the source of the light. “Whoa… is that?” She turned to Jason, “Seriously, is that the fucking light they always talk about?”

Jason shook his head. “I don’t know, but it makes sense…” He turned to Mrs. Riley and the guys, “There’s bright light shining on Jade. She thinks it might be the light.”

“Heaven,” Mrs. Riley mouthed.

“Yeah, I don’t know if I deserve that…” Jade said to Jason, “but it sure feels warm. Should I?”

“Sounds like a better offer than that soul-sucking thing you said’s almost upstairs.”

Jade nodded, “Yeah. I think so.” She crossed to stand in front of her mom and put her arms around her mom. Her mom gasped as she did, then gasped again as Jade’s lighted figure solidified into view as she hugged her. Her mom stared at her as she closed her arms around her daughter for a last hug.

“Holy shit, dude!” Ricky said.

“Fuck, dude, what was in that edible,” Jose asked as they both stared at the now-visible thin girl with long black hair hugging her mom.

When they finally broke the hug, her mom kissed Jade’s forehead hard. Jade smiled and kissed her mom’s forehead in return and then stepped back. “I love you, mommy,” she said with a wide smile. “I have to go now,” she said as a sob wracked her body.

“I know, baby. I know. You’ll be at peace. I’m so sorry! I love you.”

“It’s not your fault, mom. Please don’t blame yourself. Please let it go. Let me go. I will always love you.”

Her mom nodded as she cried.

Jade stepped back and turned to Jason. “Thanks, asshole!” she said with a smile then moved in and kissed him on the cheek. “You were more than a little stalkerish – think about shit – but I’d be lying if I said I didn’t appreciate the company.”

“Thanks,” was all Jason could say as he blushed and smiled back.

“And thank you, she gestured to her mom. You really did come through for me.”

“Eh, it was nothing,” Jason said.

“Don’t get cocky, kid,” she smiled back. She turned towards her mom, “Okay, mom, I’m going to go I think. I love you!”

“I love you, baby!”

“Bye!” she said and stepped backwards where her already brightly lit figure appeared to be absorbed by light which brightened and then winked out, leaving the people in the room blinking in the darkness.

Before anyone could say anything they felt the shuddering of the floor and heard the creaking of the fire-damaged wood. “Earthquake!” Ricky yelled. “Let’s get out of here!”

Everyone hurried down the rickety stairway as the shaking intensified. The strairway itself collapsed as Jason, brinigng up the rear, was three steps from the ground floor. He fell forward and Jose caught him. Mrs. Riley burst into the front yard first, followed by Ricky and Jose helping a staggering Jason. As soon as they made it out to the van, they turned and watched as the house began to collapse, attic falling into second story, floor giving way. Jason looked up at the window he had seen Jade staring out every night these last months as the wall folded in with a crash. The four stepped back as the bottom floor collapsed, the mass of blackened, broken wood and drywall fell with an enormous crash into the basement.

Everything went silent after the din. Neighbors came out to see what happened.

“Dude! That was epic!” Jose broke the silence. “Who’s up for pizza?” he asked.

31 Ghosts 2018: October 6 – Haunted, part 2

Okay, honestly, I didn’t intend to split this story like this. Really, I knew I was going to revisit Jade again this month, but I thought it would be later this month. I slept in a little today and when I woke I realized I have a gig today that’s going to run well past midnight and I’d miss my deadline. And now here I am and I don’t have the conclusion finished yet. So, Jade’s story has turned into a little trilogy! This is part two, and I’ll get you part three tomorrow before I head off to another gig (no rest for the wicked!). Thanks! —Jordy.
Jade woke with a start, unsure of what woke her. Listening hard in the darkness she heard it again… the creaky hinges of the door from the kitchen. “The wind,” she told herself. “Just the wind…”
She remembered the night before with Jason and his friends and she was pissed. “Will that kid ever get the hint?” she said as she bounded through the door, down the stairs, turned towards the kitchen and stopped abruptly. Blocking the doorway to the kitchen – taking up the entire doorway, really – stood an enormous hooded figure. The hood, though, didn’t appear to be any sort of actual fabric. Instead, the hood seemed to be made of darkness itself. The figure slowly raised an arm towards Jade, the darkness cloak falling back to reveal a bleached skeleton hand, one bony index finger extended towards Jane.
That’s when the howling started.
The noise began low and barely audible, but quickly rose to a deafening level. Long ago, Jade and her dad – her real dad, before he ran out on them – had spent an evening below the flight path of the Elmwood International Airport and lay on a blanket in the bed of his pickup and watched the jets take off right over their heads. The roar from the figure reminded her of those screaming jet engines – only louder.
The figure rotated its hand and curled its finger in a “come here” gesture. Hurricane-level winds whipped up behind her and nearly knocked her off her feet, pushing her towards the figure, the winds making its cloak of darkness swirl around, blotting out everything around it.
After the initial gust didn’t cause her to fall the intensity of the wind increased. She fell to one knee, her long black hair streaming in front her horizontally. Jade reached out and grabbed the banister at the foot of the stairs and held on tightly as the wind gained velocity and started to push her bodily closer to the figure.
“Oh hell no,” she said and pulled herself to the banister. The stairwell seemed to block the worst of the wind, and she managed to get to her feet and start up the stairs, the wind slackening as she climbed. At the top of the stairs she looked down. The wind had abated, but the howling continued. The figure moved slowly from the kitchen doorway to the foot of the stairs. It turned its blacked-out cowl towards her and continued to howl…. But it didn’t move up the stairs. Yet. Since Jade had died, she didn’t actually feel anything. Well, she could be startled, sure, but cold, hot, tired, hungry… nothing. She slept out of boredom. But now, with that howling, she felt pure, cold terror the likes of which brought back the final minutes of her life – seeing the gun, hearing the report, smelling the fire, feeling the heat… There was no gun, no asshole homicidal step-father… but somehow Jade was more scared than ever. She sensed she stood in real danger of losing more than her life. Her soul, she realized, was in danger. That thing couldn’t come up the stairs… but she had the impression that wasn’t a permanent impediment. As she watched, the figure floated around the base of the stairs howling.
Jade ran for her room, slammed the charred door on its single hinge. She ran to the empty window and stared out on the yard quiet in the mid-day sun, and the street beyond. The oak tree had dropped half of its leaves already. The whole scene seemed so… bucolic. Oh, except that she was dead and trapped upstairs in a half burned out house with some sort of soul-sucking demon trying to take her to oblivion. She knew she couldn’t leave – she tried once. It wasn’t pleasant. And, more importantly, it didn’t work then and wouldn’t offer her an escape now. She looked down to where Jason and his friends stood last night. That wasn’t twelve hours ago…
“Jason!” she thought hopefully. Then she realized what she had said and her face curled as if she’d bitten into a lemon. “Jason,” she said bitterly. “Shit…” Since he discovered her here a month ago while “ghost hunting,” as he called it, he’d visited like clockwork every goddamn night. Why night? She had no fucking idea. She was sure she’d asked once but didn’t pay attention to what he’d said. She rolled her eyes. The howling intensified and changed tenor downstairs. She sensed the thing making progress on how to get upstairs. She couldn’t believe it, but she thought, “Jason might be able to help…”
She hated the thought. She hated that she might be right. And she hated that she’d have to wait hours until the sun went down and he came by – if he came by. She wondered if this time he might take her rejection seriously and stay away. No, she thought, he’ll come again. That’s him. But, she thought as a new, colder chill ran through her, will it be in time…

31 Ghosts 2018: October 5 – Haunted

Photo by Eric Muhr on Unsplash

Jade woke with a start, unsure of what woke her. Listening hard in the darkness she heard it again… the creaky hinges of the door from the kitchen. “The wind,” she told herself. “Just the wind…”

Then the footsteps started. “House settling?” she thought. The footsteps continued and seemed to be getting closer. She frantically searched the room for something she could use to fight off whatever approached one step after the other. The steps started cautiously up the creaking stairwell. She stared at her closed door and could see a glow coming up nearer with every step. Time running out, she hurried behind the door hoping maybe she could get the jump on whatever it was when it came in through the door. The door knob began to turn slowly. She could feel the door start to open and then she could see one foot enter, a hand on the door, then a man’s head came into view.

“Aaah!” she screamed, shoving at the door.

“Aaah!” the man screamed back, dropping his flashlight to the floor.

“Oh shit, Jason, it’s just you…” she said, her voice dripping with disappointment as she crossed back to her bed.

“Jade! I’m so glad you’re here!” the man scrambled for his dropped flashlight. “I missed you!”

“Jason, just go, okay?”

Jade, come on,” he pleaded as he moved to sit next to her on the bed. “Give me a chance!”

“Jason, it’s not going to work.”

“Look, I know we’re different, but we can make it work…”

“For fuck’s sake!” She stood up again and walked to the far window. “It’s not enough that my sicko stepfather shot me and left me clinging to life while he set this goddamn place on fire. No, now you’ve got to come around every fucking day telling me you’re in love with me.” She whirled on him, “This is hell. That’s what this is, Jason. Hell.” She stopped abruptly and stabbed the air towards him, “Are you Satan? Jason? Maybe a lesser demon? Come on, you can tell me….”

Jason stood up. “I’m not Satan, Jade. It’s me! Jason! High school?”

“Oh, I remember. I thought that was hell then! How wrong I was. And do you remember I turned you down then, too?”

“Well… sure, but this is different…”

“Different? Because I’m dead? Eww, necrophilia much?”

“I can see you!” he declared.

“Lucky me!” she rolled her eyes.

“That’s got to mean something! It’s a sign, you know?”

“A sign god hates me enough to worse-than-kill-me.” Jason was about to reply but Jade held up a hand, “Shh! What’s that?” she said listening.

“Jason?!” someone whisper-yelled outside. “Where are you?!”

“Maybe he’s not here…” another voice whispered.

“Are you kidding? He had such a hard on about coming here tonight.”

“Heh, you said ‘hard on’ and ‘coming’” Both boys laugh-whispered.

Jade arched an eyebrow at Jason. “Friends of yours, clearly…”

“I can explain…”

“You don’t have to. Really. Just go. Leave! Vamoose! Leave me haunt in peace!”

Jason backed out of the room bumping into the wall at least twice and tripping over the door before he hurried down the stairs and out the front door.

Jade leaned out the charred, empty windowsill and stared down at the two boys as Jason panted out of the house. “Guys! Guys!” Jason panted as he caught up with friends. “I’m glad you came.”

The two boys looked at each other silent for a moment and then broke into cackling laughter. “You said ‘came’!” one laughed.

“Real mature, guys. This? This is how the Elmwood High Paranormal Society comports itself? Really, Jose?  Ricky? Very professional…” Jason shook his head disapprovingly, hands on his hips.

“Dude…” Ricky stopped laughing. “Don’t be a dillweed.”

“Seriously,” Jose agreed. “Where were you anyway? We’ve been out here for like, what? Half an hour?”

“At least,” Ricky said.

“You guys just got here.”

“You don’t know that!”

“No, I seriously do. I was right up there when you got here,” he pointed to the window where Jade looked down on them. “Communicating with an actual ghost.”

“Who would like him to take his bitch-ass home and take his friends with him!” Jade called down.

“They can’t hear you!” Jason called up.

“Heh, I know!” Jade yelled back. “And this makes you look like even more of a dork,” she laughed.

“Dude, who are you talking to?” Ricky asked.

“The ghost,” Jason replied as if it were obvious.

Jose looked between Jason and the empty upstairs window and back several times. “There’s nothing there, man. Did you stop taking your meds?”

“Jose! I’m fine! Look, there’s a ghost up there. She’s up there!”

“He didn’t answer the question, dude,” Ricky said to Jose and they fist-bumped. He turned to Jason, “Look dude, we’re here because we thought there might be something in this creepy-ass place. I mean, shit, that dude killed his family here… that’s… serious! But you’re acting really weird, dude.”

“Ricky! Jose! I’m fine, okay? Let’s go inside, let’s investigate. Come on,” he took a step towards the house.

The other boys remained rooted, looking at each other and giving each other little shakes of their heads. “Hey, Jason,” Jose started, “as vice-president of the Elmwood High Paranormal Society, I think you’re, uh, too obsessed with this place. I think we should call it a night.”

“As secretary of the Elmwood High Paranormal Society,” Ricky added, “I second that motion.”

“I’m president, guys! We should go in!”

“And the vote?” Jose asked the air and then both he and Ricky said “Aye!”

“Cool,” Ricky said, “Motion carries. We’re outta here, Jason.”

The two started walking off towards the street. “What time does the Round Table close?” Jose asked Ricky.

“Ten I think. You wanna see if we can my brother to buy us beer?”

“Guys!” Jason called after them exasperated.

“Toodles!” Jade called down to Jason.

Jason looked up at Jade, then back to the street, then back up to Jade, “I’ll be back!”

“I won’t wait up! Take your time! Take years! Seriously. Just go away.”