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Sunday, October 29, 2017

Short Story



Halloween Story


“Come on kids,” Elaine called, “the haunted house walk starts in a half hour. We gotta get going.” 

   The two kids straggled out to the van. They didn’t seem as excited as Elaine but it was typical indifference to what their mother wanted.

            “Isn’t daddy coming?” Jason asked.
            “No, he has to work, now buckle up and let’s get going.”
            The haunted walk was a new event this year. It was the first time Elaine took her kids on anything like this thinking that it would be interesting and even educational. She was curious and liked to do new things with her kids.
            The walk started in an older part of town. The houses dated back nearly two hundred years and were built for the immigrants from the old country, many of whom were gypsies. Elaine had never visited this neighborhood even though she’d lived all her life in the same town. It was strange to be walking along these old streets where the tall old trees reached so high into the dark sky that their branches cast long shadows in the street lights. The group of twenty people stayed close together near the guide who told the history of the place and some stories of the people who lived here.
            “See that house over there,” she said pointing to a narrow, three story brick place with a wooden porch. A pale light shone above the door but the windows were dark, “It was once owned by a woman they said was a witch and cast spells on children. The people were angry and one night, I think it was about this time of year, she was found dead on the sidewalk, right where I’m standing. The police investigated but the case was never solved. It’s said that for years after her ghost appeared every Halloween. Children stopped coming to this street for trick or treat and in fact it is still known around here as the haunted street.”
            “That’s ridiculous,” Jason said to his mom. “There are no such things as ghosts.”
            “Does anyone here believe in ghosts?” asked the guide.
            “I don’t,” said Jason but no one else said anything.
            “You’re a brave boy,” said the guide. “Let’s see what else happened on this street.”
            The group walked toward the railroad track hidden behind a curtain of small trees still carrying some of their summer leaves. The moon broke through the clouds and bathed the street in a silvery glow as they rounded the corner immediately across from a large dark house connected to the road by a tree lined driveway.
            “That’s the house where the mill owner lived. The mill mysteriously burned down years ago and all the people who lived here lost their jobs. It was a company town in those days. We’re going to go into the house. It’s empty now but is being turned into a museum and has been set up as a haunted house for our walk. It will be typical of a nineteenth century home when it is finished,” said the guide. “The last person to live here died twenty years ago and left the place to the town.”
            Elaine felt strange as she walked along the driveway. It seemed as if she had been here before. Déjà vu she thought. Weird! The veranda seemed just as she remembered and she was sure she’d seen the door before. It was dark except for the pale light of the moon and she grabbed the hands of Jason and Cara. “Hold tight kids, it’s spooky here.”
            “Oh, mom,” said Jason.
            “I’m scared,” Cara added.
            “Careful on the steps,” she said as the group climbed onto the veranda. The guide opened the door and turned on a single light. A hall appeared out of the dark stretching into the gloom, a set of stairs went to the second floor on the left side and an alcove appeared looking into a dark room on the right.
            “Welcome to the haunted house,” said the guide. “Go straight back to the kitchen. We’ll gather around the table.”
            Elaine felt funny. She knew where everything was. The picture of an old man on the wall was familiar. Was he her father? No, he was dressed like the Father’s of Confederation but she felt that was who he was. She looked through the alcove and saw familiar furniture silhouetted in the moonlight from the windows. The children pulled her to the kitchen. There was the large cast iron stove that made the room so cozy and warm in the winter. She remembered standing in front of it when she came in from skating on the pond. She shook her head; she had never been here before. What’s happening to me?
            “This is the original kitchen,” said the guide. “In the old days it was the main room in the house and probably the only room that was warm in the winter. The house keeper would cook on that stove and people would eat at this table. It’s likely the family had a maid to cook and clean because they were rich compared to others.”
            “Emily, her name was Emily,” Elaine said unconsciously.
            “I beg your pardon,” said the guide. “Why did you say her name was Emily?”
            “Huh, oh, I’m sorry,” Elaine said.
            “Well, there is a record of a person named Emily who served here. Have you read something about this place?”
            “No, no, I don’t know why I said that,” said Elaine just as the woman named Emily appeared bending over the stove. Emily turned and smiled, her mouth opening as if saying “Welcome back, dear.”
            “Let’s go into the main room now, this way,” said the guide. “It’s dark. I’ll light the coal oil lantern.”
            An orange light flickered ahead of the group. Elaine’s knees were weak but the kids pulled her along with the others. There was the chair her grandfather sat in every afternoon. She used to play on it with her brother. Who’s that? The figure looked like her brother. She doesn’t have a brother. Who can that be? He beckoned her over. She could hear him call her to jump on the old chair. She shook her head, what’s happening to me? The kids pulled her further into the room. She looked for the mirror she knew was on the wall to the right. There it was but she didn’t see anyone reflected in it except a woman dressed in a long gingham skirt, a white buttoned up blouse with a shawl over her shoulders. It looked like her mother. The image in the mirror smiled, a sad smile, a tear appeared in one eye as she waved with a kiss on her lips slowly fading into the gloom.
            “This is the room where the gentlemen met to talk and smoke after the days work or to read the Bible on Sunday. They would often entertain friends or business associates in here,” said the guide. “We are still looking for period furniture to suit this room but it is hard to find these days. The next room is called the parlor. It is at the front of the house and is usually accessed through the alcove from the hall. It was used for entertaining under very special circumstance. We have set it up to show one of its most important uses.”
            Elaine felt her knees begin to buckle. She knew what she would see in that room and she didn’t want to go there. “Jason, Cara, we’re not going,” she said.
            “Aw mom, it’s just getting interesting,” Jason whined.
            The guide gathered the group at the entrance to the room. “Before we go inside I want to tell you some of the ways the parlor was used. Everyone knows about Funeral Parlors, right, they are the modern version of this room. When a person died in those days they had to make sure they were really dead before the burial. Many times a person might just be in a coma and not really dead. In fact they were so afraid they might still be alive that it was not unusual to place a bell above the grave with a strong cord attached to the hand of the body in the coffin so they could ring for help if they regained consciousness. It was not unusual to hear bells in the cemetery at night in those times even though most of them were being blown by the wind. Even so there are stories of graves being opened to find the inside of the coffin scratched and torn with pieces of cloth caught in the finger nails of the body inside.”
            “That is so weird,” said Jason.
            “I’m scared,” said Cara.
            The guide continued, “Most of the time they placed the deceased in a casket in the parlor and kept it there for a week. Family, friends and neighbours came by to look in on the person and share food and drinks. There was often singing and partying as the people hoped to waken the dead. In fact it was called a Wake. Eventually the family had to accept the fact that their loved one was truly gone. This room has been set up for a wake, please follow me.”
            Jason tugged his reluctant mother and sister into the parlor. Elaine saw the casket on the platform in the middle of the room and people gathered around looking inside. They were not the people on the tour but strangers dressed in old fashioned clothes. She saw her mother crying, her brother staring curiously, her father was welcoming people coming through the alcove. Her knees could hardly hold her but she had to look inside the casket. The tour group formed a physical barrier, the ghost people melted as she moved through them. Slowly she got to the side of the casket, it seemed to take hours, what’s happening? She felt like she was dissolving and then she saw what was in the casket.
            “Oh, no, I can’t be, no, no, please.”
            “Mommy, what’s wrong?” Cara tugged her arm.
            Elaine looked again. It was her, she was in the casket. She looked up at the faces looking down at her. She couldn’t speak, she couldn’t move, she could only look at the faces where her mother, her brother, her friends were staring and crying. She tried to speak, I’m not dead, please, I’m not dead. Then she saw the lid being placed over her and heard the hammer drive the last nail into her coffin.
            Lying alone in the dark the laughing voice of the witch from the other street echoed in her head. Images of that horrible Halloween appeared. She saw her brother and other kids tricking neighbours who didn’t treat. They were at the house of the old witch woman. It was dark. Her brother and another boy crept around to the back. She and her girl friend followed. The boys found the Out House and tipped it over, laughing. A light appeared in the back door. They jumped over the neighbour’s fence but she couldn’t manage it and felt the witch’s bony hand grip her arm. She struggled and slipped away running as a croaked curse echoed in the alley telling her she would die in her own coffin in this and all her future lives. Terrified she ran home, crying and frightened, not knowing what to do.
            The curse soon worked. It was during the winter, she was skating on the pond, the ice broke and she fell into the water under the ice. It was so cold. She looked up at the light but she couldn’t get out. She slowly drifted to the bottom of the pond. Next were images of her mother cradling her, kissing her, calling her to come back but she couldn’t move.
            The sounds of a funeral service penetrated the dark of her coffin. She heard the words and felt the coffin being lowered into the grave. The thumps of dirt falling on it were muffled by the laughter of the witch as a shadow of her mother appeared. The air slowly ran out. She felt her spirit leaving to join the others. Strangely her mother transformed into Cara and behind her was Jason and Tom standing over her.
            “Mommy, come back, please, please,” Cara called, her voice in panic.
            “I think she’s gone,” a voice said sternly.
            “No, not yet,” it was Tom. “Give her more time, please. I know she’s there.”
            “I don’t think she’ll make it, look at the trace, its flat. I’ll give you another hour.”
            She heard and tried to call out. I’m here, I’m alive, don’t turn it off. She struggled. She sensed Cara and reached for her. The effort caused a blip on the electrocardiogram trace.
            “Look, doctor, it’s there,” called Tom.
            “No, it’s not her”, said the doctor. “One more hour, that’s all.”
            She wanted to hold Cara so much. She tried harder, a finger moved, she gasped.
            The witch’s laughter faded and Cara’s voice became stronger. Life returned to Elaine.
            “Daddy, look,” said Cara, “mommy’s finger moved. She’s breathing.”
            Tom bent over and kissed her forehead. An eyelid flickered and opened. She had escaped the curse that had doomed her to die in her own coffin. She was free at last.

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Thoughts on the state of things in September 2017




               The world is being disrupted by the Internet and social media that has existed for only slightly more than twenty years. Uber, Air B and B, Facebook, Twitter, Netflix and many other apps are changing old ways of doing business. The summer of 2017 has produced the worst box-office returns for movies in twenty years. Amazon and on-line retailers are taking market share from retailers even forcing Walmart to compete on-line with better customer service. 

               Disruption is occurring everywhere. Will NAFTA survive and if it does will it benefit the working people in North America? President Trump argues it is the worst agreement that America has ever signed. Maybe so, there is plenty of evidence that people who once had good jobs in factories both in America and Canada have been displaced by low wage workers in Mexico and other countries to the benefit of the small increasingly rich segment of the economy. The financial sector has automated the stock market to react reflexively to incremental information cycles without regard to the long-term effect on the population. Making and losing money in the market is not new but it is now using improved tools to bring more wealth to the already wealthy.

               What happens in America overflows into Canada and western countries to a greater or lesser degree. President Trump was elected by voters who suffered change brought about by NAFTA, other international trade agreements and the significant drain of wealth from the population to the small number of uber wealthy. While Trump may be a hollow shell who is really part of the problem his election could be an early indicator of a popular revolt against the ‘system’. A revolution grows as people react fearfully to events they cannot control when the elite ignore them.

               Could the French Revolution of 1789 to 1799 preview the next months and years in the United States?  Americans rejected the establishment candidate in favour of what appeared to be a rebel. His base remains solid despite how erratically the Trump administration has performed during its first nine months. If the ‘people’ are not satisfied with progress it can seek more aggressive ways to shake up an ineffective government. A leader might arise from the proletariat to lead a revolution that will be challenge ‘big money’ and their privilege. Martin Luther King rose as a leader in the 1960’s to improve the lot of black Americans. He was cut down before the rebellion got out of control but another person with a different pedigree could galvanize the people as Bernie Saunders almost did in the recent election. Time will tell but there are societal ‘wrongs’ to be corrected and the politicians owned by the wealthy class are not capable or willing of addressing.

               My country and province is the same but the establishment remains unchallenged. The last general election produced a government that promised great things for the people and once elected reneged on them. There is a smaller wealthy class in Canada but it is no less in control of how things are done. For example, the federal government plans to throw a bone to the people by allowing the sale of marijuana for recreational use. Ontario, a traditional nannie state, has determined that ‘weed’ will only be available in government owned and run locations the way it controls the sale of alcohol. The model is the evolution alcohol control since prohibition ended in 1927 when purchasers required a booklet to record their purchase delivered from a hidden warehouse in brown paper bags. Now they provide relatively modern retail stores where a limited selection ensures product from many sources remains unavailable. It is operated by very well-paid management who are unstressed by the competitive pressure of free enterprise. The same structure will sell ‘weed’ to citizens ensuring minimal marketing, limited supply, little if any choice and good well-paid secure jobs for a few politically acceptable managers.  Of course, front line employees will be precarious part timers with no product knowledge thus ensuring low costs and high profit for the government to otherwise waste.

               The nanny province of Ontario continues to show no effective change, government is unchallenged and incompetent as witnessed by the electrical supply system, is supportive of wealthy families preferably ‘old money’, friends and political flunkies. I don’t foresee disruption and a popular rebellion here, it’s not the Canadian way.