31 Ghosts 2019: October 30 – Right of the Pentuple

So, October is almost over. How do I know? IT’S MY BIRTHDAY! Like my birthday itself, I had a hard time with my story today. It’s not that I’m having a tough time getting older, it’s just that with the fires and evacuations and power loss (I HAVE POWER NOW!!!) it just really overshadowed the celebration of another trip around the sun. But as inevitably as my birthday came, so comes today’s story. Who would you choose to meet?

My grandmother was a witch.

I thought that was just something my dad used to say when he was fed up with having to do another chore for her. “That witch can landscape her own yard with her sorcery!” My mom just sighed and reminded him, “And what do you think her daughter is?”

He died when I was a teenager. Later, my mom explained it was true – not that my Nain should or could do her own landscaping, that she was a witch.

“So she can do spells and stuff?” I asked.

“She can…” she replied in an equivocating tone, “To an extent.” And she talked about the Welsh traditions that powered her spells didn’t hold much power in this country. “She’ll talk to you about it herself when she’s ready.”

She almost died without being ready.

Like, literally, she was on her deathbed. Congestive heart failure. She hadn’t spent a night in the hospital her entire life and now it looked like she would be spending her last nights there. At least that’s what the doctors said. Nain had other ideas. All of us were there – Mom, me, my aunt, her three boys – and Nain said “All of ya, step out for a minute. I have to talk to my girl, Carys.” That’s what she called me. Yeah, I know, my name is Alison. Carys is the diminutive of my middle name Ceridwen and it was the only name my Nain ever called me.

“Mom,” my mother started, “We’re all here for you…”

“Did I stutter?!” she said firmly. “Out! All of ya!” her Old World accent still distinct after most of a lifetime in America.

No one said anything but filed out of the room quickly until it was just my Nain and me.

“Carys, come here, dear.” I did. “What’dya know about me being as gwrach?”

“As what, Nain?”

“Gwrach. Witch. Don’t deny you’d heard about it. Yer ma told me she’d told you.”

“Nothing beyond what she told me, Nain. She just said you were a witch and that you’d tell me about it when you’re ready.”

She took in a deep, contemplative breath and broke into a coughing fit that wracked her thin frame. I was about to call for a doctor when she held her hand up in restraint. She stopped coughing, drew another long breath that wracked as she took it in, then she let it out carefully.

“I guess I thought I’d have all the time in the world,” she smiled. “But I don’t. I don’t even have past sunset,” her gaze went to the window.

“Nain, the doctors said you had a few days–“

“Hush, Carys, they don’t know what they speak of. A few hours is all. And that’s fine. It’s been a good long life. I’m ready. Well,” her eyes fell on me, “Almost ready.

“Carys, the tradition of witch is matrilinear – only woman to woman. But it skips a generation, always. So, yer ma was skipped. But you…” her smile turned mischievous as she pointed a bony finger at me. “You’ll inherit the mantle, Carys.”

“What… what does that mean?”

“Oh, I’m ‘fraid to say not much. This land is bereft of memory and the old world doesn’t hold enough sway to really allow you to do much. With one exception.”

“Oh?”

“The right of the Pentuple.”

“The pentup… what?”

“Pentuple, dear. I don’t have a lot of breath left. Pay attention. You’re 21, yes?”

I nodded.

“Every five years of age – 5, 10, 15, 20, 25” she put emphasis on the 25 as the other milestone ages were past. “Every five years of age you are granted the Right of the Pentuple. In the moments before the clock strikes midnight and your birthday begins, think of someone who isn’t living that you want to spend your day with. Anyone dead is fair game. Do you want to spend the day talking philosophy with Aristotle? Better brush up on your Greek, because for the next 24 hours you’ll get to talk with him. Maybe you’d prefer an English speaker like Amelia Earhart – you wrote that report on her in fourth grade, right?”

“How do you remember that?”

She winked at me. “At ten to twelve on the 29th you focus on dear old Amelia and you can spend your birthday asking her about aviation, her crash, whatever you want – you’ve got her ghost for the day!”

She got serious for a moment and said, “There are some caveats, Carys. This is for you and you alone. Ya can’t have a party of it and bring yer friends around. Just. You. You can’t take them out on the town – ghosts don’t travel well. Get comfortable because those 24 hours are in the same place.”

“I don’t know what to say…” I said honestly.

“Well, you’ve got the better part of four years to think about your first Pentuple. Now give your Nain a kiss and get the lot of ‘em back in here to say goodbye.”

I leaned over and kissed her on the forehead and then went out to let my family know to go back in. My mom didn’t believe me when I told her Nain said she wasn’t going to last past the sunset. But as the shadows in the room grew longer Nain’s strength faded.

“I’m going to take a nap, I think,” she said, and everyone said their goodbyes to let her rest. I couldn’t keep the tears from falling down my cheeks. “There now, girl,” she said. “It’s not forever.”

Mom told her she would be in the waiting room if she needed anything, then she kissed Nain on the forehead before following me out the door. A few minutes after we all left her heart stopped.

Losing Nain was hard. Losing my dad was brutal, but it was a slow decline from cancer – by the end it was something of a relief, as terrible as that sounds. But Nain… she’d been such an important part of my life I didn’t appreciate fully until she was gone.

Even four years later I thought of her daily, which is why on the eve of my 25th birthday it was she I focused on. I was living on my own in a shitty studio apartment in the flight path of SFO. I’d just broken up with my boyfriend and even if I had finished mourning my Nain, I felt I needed her then. And I had so many questions about this whole witch thing.

I stared at the alarm clock willing it to strike midnight. When the numbers flipped over, I was delighted to hear her Welsh lilt, “I told you it wouldn’t be forever!”

I leapt from my bed and ran into her arms. Real arms! “You’re really here!”

“Well, what’d you expect?”

“Oh, Nain, it’s so good to have you here! We have so much to catch up on!”

“Well, girl, you’ve got twenty-three hours and fifty-eight minutes. Let’s get going!”

And we did. And it was wonderful. We talked about being a witch – she recommended books and places in Wales I needed to go to for research. And we talked about life – mine now and hers then. She showed me the recipes from my childhood that she never wrote down. She even sang me a lullaby she used to when I was a kid. It was a needed catnap. And as midnight approached, I kissed her on the forehead and said goodbye. But it was a happy goodbye because we truly used every minute we had together.

That birthday had a profound impact on my life. Part of it was the ability to let go of my grief, part of it was having the interim time to think about what I wanted to talk to my grandmother about. Part of it, too, was finding out how to become a better witch, a task I took to heart and certainly changed the tenor of my life. I didn’t quit my job and start riding brooms, but I spent my idle time reading books about witchcraft and I traveled to Wales and joined a community I hadn’t known existed.

It also helped me come out. I talked to Nain a little about my sexuality – something I’d always been afraid to even bring up at all when she was alive, and we had a lively conversation that was supportive and encouraging.

As my thirtieth birthday came around, I tried to think about who I wanted to meet. There were a number of important women in the Witch community who I would love to pick their brain. Then there a number of artists who I considered, like Picasso or Van Gogh (obviously), but also Frida Kahlo or Georgia O’Keeffe. I’d recently finished Charlie Chaplin’s autobiography and I thought that would be fascinating.

Ultimately, though, on the eve of my thirtieth birthday I thought of my dad. He died when I was barely in high school and I never got to meet him as an adult. When I heard, “Hey Pumpkin,” it brought me back to that awkward teenager, and we spent the next 24 hours getting to know each other as people. Have you ever came out to your dead dad before? It’s a weird experience, let me tell you!

Unlike after my day with my grandmother was over, it took me a few months to unpack and re-grieve my dad. He was a new person to me now, and I had to both reconcile that with the person I knew as dad as well as let go of this really interesting, complicated, person who screwed things up from time to time and was terrible with money. It didn’t change my life as much as help me re-order it.

And it drew me closer to my mom – if that’s possible – because I got to meet the man she fell in love with and forged a family with. I felt I knew her in ways I never knew, that she could never tell me.

That was before they found her breast cancer. I was 34 and she was having a really tough time with the chemo treatments. As my birthday neared the doctors worried the cancer wasn’t disappearing as they’d hoped and her body was just wrecked.

And so it was on the eve of my birthday I struggled to think of who I wanted to spend the next 24 hours with. I went through the lists I’d made over the years. Eleanor Roosevelt was a strong contender. Malcom X, too, but I’m not sure how he’d feel about a white woman summoning him… Ultimately, though, I just wanted to be with my mom.

And when the clock struck twelve, my mom walked in and said, “Oh my god, I’m dead?”

No, I’m just kidding! That’s so messed up of me! That didn’t happen at all! No, I didn’t kill my mom by thinking of her! Wow, sorry, I had to do that, though! No, my mom is fine. I didn’t make her a ghost by thinking about her. I conjured no one and spent the day with her. We ate cake. We spent quality time together and when the day ended… I still had my mom.

31 Ghosts 2019: October 29 – Ghosted

Some ideas get brainstormed with Fern and I, and sometimes she throws out some ideas which I might seem like I dismiss a little too quickly. But they register, and I roll the idea around until I come up with something. This is a case in point – she suggested the impetus for this story a few weeks ago and it’s taken some time to come to fruition, but the story came around and here it is! Here’s putting the “oo” in “Boo”!

I thought we really had a thing going. He was so sweet over the phone, and he sent me the nicest text messages throughout the day – I mean, not, like, so many that it was creepy or clingy? There’s a fine line there, and Eliot (even his name was cute!) stayed clear of it.

We met online, of course – that’s how everyone meets now, right? I responded to his ad and we messaged on the site for a few days before we transitioned to email, then texting. He never pushed it, which I appreciated because I’d had some serious creeps try to ratchet things up too fast. All, “hey, let’s talk on the phone!” or “What do you mean you don’t want to meet immediately after we exchanged our first messages? I’m a nice guy!”

“A nice guy.”

But not Eliot. He never said he was a nice guy because it was like he wanted to prove he was a nice guy, you know? But I wanted to hear his voice, so we started talking over the phone. And he emailed me a picture and he had this dopey grin that just melted my heart and eyes that just, well, let’s say our conversations didn’t stay PG-13 for long.

What?! I’m a grown ass woman! If I want to talk dirty to a guy I met online I’m entitled to that! Don’t judge me. I mean, you didn’t hear Eliot’s sexy voice. He had this accent I couldn’t place. It was foreign, but I couldn’t tell if it was English, or Australian, or Irish… I’m bad with accents, okay? But, my god, it was hawt.

And so, we agreed to meet.

Okay, in fairness, I pushed for the meet. Hard.

“Look, Gina, I’m all for meeting face to face but I know you’ve been hurt before and I don’t want to rush you into anything.”

And I’m like, “No, I’m totally ready for this. We totally have to meet because you’re driving me crazy and I really want to…” Okay, well, you get the point.

So, we agreed to meet. Over the phone we settled on the time and place. Eight PM. The Starbucks on Cleveland. I sent him an email reminder – which he confirmed. The day of our texts were full of things like, “Can’t wait to see you tonight at 8 at Starbucks on Cleveland,” to which he responded, “I can’t wait either.”

So, when I was at the Starbucks on Cleveland at 8pm and he wasn’t, I got really worried. I texted him. No response. I called him – straight to voicemail. I texted and called him every five minutes for the next hour. Nothing.

The MFer ghosted me.

No messages, no email responses, no nothing. Radio f’ing silence.

I gave him the benefit of the doubt for a day or two – maybe his distant grandmother in London or Sydney or, Dublin got sick and he rushed to her cottage where there’s no internet or cell service or… stupid right?

But that evaporated and I got angry. I sent him selfies flipping him off. I left long voicemails that were really just long strings of profanity strung together.

And of course, I poured through his emails and texts looking for the clues that he was gonna ghost me, right? Because there had to be a clue. I didn’t find any, but I did find he referenced his work – InterCorp.

The next day I called and got the receptionist. “Hi, may I speak to Eliot Day?”

“I’m sorry, who?” he responded.

“Eliot Day? I believe he works there.”

“Well…” the guy started, “He did…”

OMG, is this guy going to tell me Eliot was fired and lied about even working there??

“But he died a few years ago. What is this in regards to? I could put you through to his former manager…”

I hung up.

He died? What the hell?

I went to Google and I found a news article I came across when I googled him previously – don’t judge, you know you do the same damn thing to a guy you’re interested in! It was about a car accident that killed an Eliot Day three years ago, but I brushed that off as some other Eliot Day because my Eliot Day was super hawt and most certainly not dead.

Except… apparently… he was.

But…

I mean…

Move on, Gina, right? So, you were ghosted by a ghost. That’s a fun story to tell on reddit, but beyond that everyone’s gonna think you’re nuts, right?

I was in bed the other night and I had just turned off the light and settled in when I heard a voice in the darkness. “Gina? Don’t be scared.”

I shrieked, turned on the light, and grabbed for the baseball bat by my bed. “I don’t know how you got in here you pervert, but I’m gonna bash your nuts in!” I yelled, bat cocked at the empty room.

“Gina,” the voice came again. I recognized the way it said my name.

“Eliot?”

“It’s me, Gina,” and a figure materialized or is it apparated? Or is that some Harry Potter crap? Okay, materialized. I recognized the dopey grin and the eyes…

“What the hell, Eliot?! You couldn’t tell me you were all,” I gestured to him, “Dead?”

“I’m sorry, Gina, I… I didn’t know how to tell you…”

“But, you’re a ghost! How could you email and text and talk…”

“I admit I’ve gotten pretty good at manipulating electronic devices over the years.”

“I’ll say,” I said. “But why’d you agree to meet if you knew you couldn’t?”

“Because… I didn’t want to let you down.”

“Well, you did.”

“Well, I did.”

“Big time.”

“Yes, big time.”

We stood there staring at each other. Finally, I said, “So… now what?”

“We could keep talking. I really like you, Gina…”

“But you’re dead. You’re a ghost. What kind of relationship can I have with a ghost?”

“I thought we really connected.”

“We did. But, I mean, what if I want, you know, more than just talking,” I realized that sounded bad and quickly added, “I mean, hanging out or something.”

“I don’t have to be this visible ghost,” he disappeared and his voice came velvety behind my right ear. “I can just be near you.” Part of me wanted to call him a perv ghost, but if I’m honest, I got chills – and not the scary kind. The weak-in-the-knees kind.

“Is…” I stammered, “Is that… all you can do?”

The voice came into my other ear now, just as velvety, just as softly, “Why don’t you put down that bat and I’ll show you.”

I put the bat down. I got into bed. I’m not telling you anymore. Okay, okay, we’re still, uh, seeing each other or whatever. It’s fun. It’s no pressure. It’s fantastic. Yeah, sure, it’s a little weird, but it’s also hella hawt.

Don’t judge me!

31 Ghosts 2019: October 28 – Blackout

The power outages here have made posting challenging. So, I apologize for being a little backlogged. Here’s what can happen when the lights go out.

The worst night in my life was the night after I bought this house.

I was warned it was haunted, but I don’t believe in ghosts, right? And when I looked at the house in the daylight with the real estate agent things were fine. It was a beautiful house built in 1901. The previous owner took meticulous care of the place and did an extensive renovation where he replaced existing windows with larger ones and added additional windows and skylights, all while still keeping to the aesthetic of the house.

I noticed the industrial diesel generator on a pad in the corner of the yard and asked Patty, my agent about it. “Does this place lose power a lot? How could he justify that beast of a generator?”

“I was told that his mother lived here for some time and her health conditions required continuous power and that any interruption would mean debilitation or death.”

Inspectors pored over the place looking for faults and came away empty. The guy who inspected the foundation said he hadn’t seen a place so solidly built. “Great bones!” he said.

Just before I signed the papers, the seller’s agent said, “I do have one disclosure we haven’t mentioned.”

I laughed, “I’ve had people going over this place from the attic to the basement and everything in between. Sewer, electrical, water, foundation – I know more about this house than I did my last one. What disclosure could you possibly have?”

“Well, pursuant to California law, I am obligated to tell you this place is haunted.”

“Haunted?” I said incredulously. “The state of California is into ghosts now?”

“Not really,” she explained. “It’s not a question of whether they believe ghosts exist or not, but case law has held that unidentified disturbances generally classified as ‘hauntings’ are disruptive enough that regardless of whether you believe in a haunting or ghosts, such a thing must be legally disclosed.”

I was speechless.

Taking my silence for understanding, she said, “Sign here to acknowledge that you’ve been duly informed that this house is haunted.”

“Oh yeah,” I said chuckling, “Let’s get these papers signed so I can take possession – possession? Get it – of my haunted house!”

Escrow closed and I moved in and that day was wonderful. I went upstairs, showered, got dressed for bed, climbed into my fresh sheets, and turned my nightstand light off.

All hell broke loose.

I saw the red eyes at the foot of my bed first. Then I felt the hands on my throat. I fought the grip with one hand and reached for the lamp with my left. As soon as I barely touched the lamp the hands around my throat released and a force hurtled me bodily from the bed. I landed in a heap and unseen hands immediately grabbed and punched me and I could feel them clawing up my body to my throat again. I scrambled for the staircase where a shove knocked my feet out from under me and I fell hard on the stairs, smacking my head into a banister while rolling down stair after stair. At the foot of the stairs I tried to stand, but I had broken my ankle in the fall. I could feel blood on my face from a gash. I didn’t feel hands and took that as a mercy until I heard footsteps start down the stairs after me.

I lost my mind with terror and dragged myself towards the front door as best I could. The steps kept coming down in an unhurried way that scared me even more. It was a predator toying with its injured prey. I reached the door, stretched up to unlock the deadbolt and unlock the knob. I threw open the door and started belly crawling out yelling, “Help! Someone help– “ I didn’t finish the sentence before powerful hands grabbed my ankles and pulled me back into the darkness, slamming the door behind me. Mercifully, I lost consciousness pretty quickly after that.

The next morning my neighbor found me bloody, severely beaten, and unconscious on my front porch. I had no recollection of how I got there. I remembered getting pulled back inside, so the fact that I ended up outside but just on the porch led me to assume that when whatever it was finished having its fun with me it set me out there like a used, discarded dish towel.

The toll at the hospital beggared the imagination: severe concussion, contusions, deep bruising over 90% of my body. Broken ankle, sprained wrist, fractured arm, a dislocated shoulder, and a collapsed lung.

The police were called in. A sweet detective asked me gently about whether this was a case of domestic violence and that I could open up to her. When I told her that I was beaten as soon as I turned my lights off, the police searched the house and found no sign of forced entry. The front door was actually locked with my house keys still inside. No fingerprints, nothing stolen…

I wasn’t healthy enough to discharge for another two weeks. During that time an old man came to visit. He brought flowers and a bottle of whiskey, bless his heart. “Do I know you?”

He shook his head. “You don’t. But I feel this is at least partly my fault. I’m the previous owner of your house.

“I told my agent that I had to warn you about the Darkness, but she insisted that the ‘haunted house’ clause would be enough. I knew she was wrong in my heart… I’m so terribly sorry.”

“You said ‘The Darkness’?”

“It’s an evil that possesses that house,” he started and I could see the color drain out of his face. “I learned the hard way, like you. Why do you think I opened up all those windows and skylights and that generator? I always wanted there to be light in that house no. matter. What.” He punctuated the last three words with jabs of his finger.”

“The generator wasn’t for your mother?”

“My… No, my mother died years before I bought that place. She never set foot in it. It was to keep The Darkness at bay. You lose power for a heartbeat and that sucker kicks on – the batteries in the basement cover the seconds between losing power and the generator coming online. As long as you leave a light on in every room, you’ll never lose light. But,” he held up a finger, “If you turn the lights off…” he waggled the finger, “There’s nothing to stop it from coming at you.”

“Yeah, I found that out.”

“Me too!” he said. “Broke my hip the first night and choked me out. I couldn’t believe I survived.”

“But you stayed? Why not move?”

“Same reason you aren’t going to move. First, you just bought the place and you’re so invested you can’t exactly buy another place or afford to sell it. And second, you feel a sort of… responsibility. I know I did – I couldn’t just turn that, that, thing over to someone else.”

“Except you did.”

He hung his head. “I did. I guess I thought enough precautions…”

“So what do I do now?”

“Leave the lights on.”

And I did. I left a light on in every room always. I was meticulous about maintaining the generator. I installed solar panels and upgraded the old batteries in the basement to Tesla Powercells. That house would stay lit like a Christmas tree even after the apocalypse hit.

Or, so I thought.

The rain started and floods were predicted, but I’ve seen the maps, I’m not in a floodplain. And then the basement started taking on water and newscasters were talking about this being a “Once in a millennia” kind of storm and said things like “defying recorded history.” But this place isn’t in a flood area, so I didn’t evacuate. Hell, I’m the only one in ten square miles with electricity!

But I woke from a dead sleep an hour ago to a huge roar. The levee on the east side of town collapsed. I watched from the upstairs window as a huge wall of water swamped the generator. But the batteries should still hold. I went downstairs to check on them… and that’s when I noticed the water pouring in and rising fast. I retreated upstairs and I’m writing this as the lights are flickering. I just heard what sounded like laughter. What’s that? Oh my god, it sounds like growling. The lights just flickered. The water must be reaching the Powercells.

The lights just went out.

Pray for m­–