I was very
tired the next day at breakfast. My
sisters whispering to each other would have normally piqued my interest, but
this time I just ignored them. I wanted
to go back to bed before I had even reached the table. My mother was busy fixing my father some eggs
and hadn’t noticed Betty and Deanna being silly at the table. Mom would usually reprimand that kind of
behaviour. Today she seemed hurried in
her activity and the eyes in the back of her head were looking elsewhere.
“Samantha!” my father said so loudly I jumped, and then
realized why he was shouting at me. My
elbow sat in the butter dish pushing the contents out around the edges and
spilling in a sloppy mess on the table.
“Sorry.” I got up, went to the bathroom, and washed my
elbow. The water made a whistling noise
when I turned the knobs on. Then a
breeze coming from the open stairwell doorway brushed past me and the whistling
stopped. Out of the corner of my eye I
thought I saw something moving. I turned
to see what it was and it disappeared from my vision.
“Get in here
and eat your breakfast!” my father demanded as I stood in the doorway of the
stairwell. He could see me from the
table clearly. “and shut that water
off! You are wasting my money!”
I shut off the
water and sat down at my placing. Mom
said a prayer to bless the food and everyone started eating. I was sitting next to my father and could see
the bathroom through the open doorway. I
realized there was a window I had missed when we first walked through the house
because it was hiding behind the stairwell doorway. It looked to me like there was a shadow
between the open door and the window, as if a person was hiding there watching
us eat breakfast.
“Close your
mouth dear and eat please.” Mom said to
me politely. “There is still a good deal
of cleaning and you need your energy.”
I shut my
gaping mouth and then took a bite of my cereal.
It was getting soggy from my wasting time. I knew I should eat it quickly so it didn’t
get any worse, but I couldn’t help wondering what was near the door. I kept staring in that direction and chewing
slowly on my food. Dad must have been
annoyed by it as well because he got up and shut the bathroom door. I still wondered about the shadow but
finished my meal in silence as quickly as I could without being rude. My sisters were nudging each other and
smiling as if they had some kind of secret.
It was Deanna’s
job to do the dishes today so as soon as I was finished eating, mom excused me to a short time of
freedom.
I went to the
bathroom and looked behind the stairwell door; nothing was there. I slowly started ascending the stairwell on
my way to my room and I felt a chill run through me. I looked up above me and the curtains were
blowing out as they had previously. It
looked like a figure standing at the window.
At the third from the top step they fell, just as they had before. This time, to my surprise the window was
closed. I started to turn back to tell
my mom about this and I heard the floor creak in the attic room behind me. I turned back to see the attic door
open. It was not opened a moment ago! I peered into the doorway of the attic and momentarily
was blinded. A reflection of light from
the window was shining on the handle of the axe I had tripped over
previously. I went over to it and picked
the axe up.
“Dad could use
this for the wood out back,” I thought to myself. “Of course, he might make me
chop it if I bring it to him.” I decided
I would not take the chance and placed the axe against the wall of the attic
and left the room. As I walked through
the doorway, the door shut behind me by itself.
My first impulse was to run down the stairs and tell my mom about it; instead,
I went to my room and sat down on my bed.
I was thinking
about the dream I had the night before, the dress my sister had found, the
curtain blowing without a window opened.
These all seemed like clues to me, and I was fond of mysteries. It was exciting to think our house might be
haunted. I had always wanted to meet a
ghost. Then I noticed the box in my room
marked “Sarah”. I hadn’t put it back
away yet. I decided to open it and go
through it more thoroughly.
I pulled out 3
patchwork quilts, one that had pink and blue flowered patches that alternated
with white patches, another that was green and gold with little flowers
embroidered into the patches, and the last one had Holly Hobbie patches that
matched my wallpaper.
At the bottom
of the box I joyously found a picture that had been drawn of our new
house. It had a little girl with blond
hair in pig-tails pale blue eyes and the pale blue dress that looked like the
one my sister Betty had found, a lady with auburn swept back hair in a dark
green dress with green eyes, and a man with brown hair in a brown suit with a
brown bow tie. It was very detailed for
a crayon drawing. I liked the picture
right off and decided to hang it on my wall.
Then I found another picture, this one was a black and white photo of
the same looking people in the drawing.
On the back, it said the name “Fowler” and the date “Sept. 1904”
Just as I was
setting the picture on my desk a gust of wind blew my door shut. My window was open in my room and the tree
was blowing in the wind outside, so it shouldn’t have been such a surprise, but
I fell back against the frame of my bed I jumped so hard from it. My back ached from the sharp pain shooting up
my body. The stinging was incredible. I felt a trickle drip down my backside and
limped off to find my mother.
“What did you
do to yourself!” Mom exclaimed more than
questioned me. “You’ve got blood
everywhere!” She hurried me into the
bathroom where she washed my back with some antiseptic. She blew on it when I winced from the
sting.
“This is too
big for a Band-Aid. Just be careful and
don’t pick at it.” She hugged me. “Now how did it happen?”
“I just lost my
balance and fell against my bed. I don’t
know how it could have cut me.” I was
wondering myself why my clumsiness had suddenly amplified.
“You worry me
with how you are constantly getting hurt.
You need to be more careful.” If
she hadn’t said it so lovingly I would have felt chastised. “Now go find your shoes and tell your sisters
we are invited to a neighbor’s for tea.”
Mom didn’t really drink tea so I assumed she just wanted to meet the people
around us. Apparently, they wanted to
meet us too.
“Be sure to use
your manners, don’t take anything that isn’t offered, and say please and thank
you.” Mom always reminded us the same
things whenever we went anywhere. I
figured by now she would realize we knew how to behave, but I guess she wanted
to make a good impression.
We walked out
the front door and too the brick sidewalk and headed towards the corner or
Dorkus and 15th Street. We
turned around the corner and walked down the hill past two houses before we
stopped.
“This is it.
Remember what I told you.” Mom reminded
us again.
The house was
smaller than ours was. It was only a
single level. It’s deep blue exterior
and white trim looked like a dollhouse I had seen in a magazine. The front yard had a hill of grass with a
curving path that lead from the sidewalk to the large covered cement porch.
The man who
answered the door was a tall heavyset man with dark brown skin, brown eyes and
curly grey black hair. He laughed when
he saw us and opened the screen.
“My wife must
have forgotten you were coming. She has
stepped out for a while, but you’re welcome to join me for my tea.” His voice was deep and melodic. He pushed the screen wider.
“What lovely
children you have Mrs. Cooper.” He
grinned at me as I walked past him into the living room. The room had a small round table with two
chairs on the far side of it with a doily style tablecloth and dishes set out
for a formal tea. I thought it was very
pretty. The sofa and chairs in the room
all were in a Queen Anne style with doilies decorating them. They had a fireplace against the back wall
near the tea table with a mantle full of pictures. Mom nodded in our direction and we sat on the
floor near the sofa.
“Ha ha ha ha
ha.. You can sit on the sofa.” He
reached his hand to me laughing, I took it and shook it as politely as I knew
how. “My name is Gustaphe Richardson,
but you can call me Gus.” My sisters sat
next to me and mom took a chair.
Gus poured some
tea and set it on the coffee table for my mother, then he turned to my sisters
and I, “Do you like sugar cookies?” His eyes gleamed and sparkled with
life. “Sure you do.” He set a cornflower blue china plate of
cookies in front of us and gave us each a glass of milk. “Go on now, help yourself.” He gave us another chuckle and smiled
broadly. His teeth were so white and
straight. He didn’t seem to be as old as
his greying hair suggested.
My sisters took
a cookie each in turn and then I picked one up and bit into it. I was pleased to find they were soft and
sweeter than I expected. My grandmother
made sugar cookies that were crunchy for her tea and I didn’t like them much.
“Thank you,
Gus.” Mom told him as she sipped her tea.
“You’re
welcome.” Gus replied. “I am so glad
that you came to visit. Molly will be
sorry she missed you. It must’ve slipped
her mind she’d invited you. She’s a
little forgetful these days.” He chuckled
again. “She says you have moved into the
old Fowler house.” He continued; my ears perked up.
“I watched that
house get built.” He told us. “I was a
boy then, of course.” Mom smiled at him as he told his story.
“I remember
there was a nice couple that moved in, they had a little girl. She was about my age then. Let me think.
I was about 8 or 9. I lived with
my grandma as my parents died of influenza.
She kept me busy working in the garden all day so I watched them build
the house while I worked. It was the
biggest house on the block at the time, it’s land was right next to Grandma’s
back then. The other homes were built
later after the Great Depression. They
were a strange family. That woman was
always hollerin and fussin about something or other. I was afraid of her. The girl wasn’t allowed out without her
mother, she was kept indoors all day.
Often times I saw her in the upstairs window watching out. Occasionally I swore I heard her crying
there. I never knew for sure. She didn’t look to happy at that window. I just kept away. Too bad what happened to them.”
The front door
opened suddenly and I jumped. My milk
spilled all over the coffee table.
“Oh, no!” I
cried out.
Mom glared at
me, and used her napkin to try to clean up the spill.
“No worries,”
Gus smiled at me and got a towel for me.
“Oh my! I completely forgot. I am so sorry Mrs. Cooper.” Molly Richardson put the bags she was
carrying down on a chair and shook my mother’s hand.
I cleaned up
the mess I had made. I felt so
embarrassed.
“It’s quite
alright Mrs. Richardson. Your husband
has been telling us about when our home was built.”
Molly gave her
husband an angry look. “Don’t you be
fillin their heads with your stories, Gus.”
She looked back at my mother. “I
hope he isn’t frightening you and your girls.
He gets a little carried away at times.
Don’t pay him any mind about that, his memory isn’t all that good.”
My mother
smiled at her. “It’s alright, we are
interested in hearing about it. He isn’t
bothering the girls. He has been quite
the gentleman.” Mom looked around. “I
think I may have your chair Mrs. Richardson.”
“Now, now dear,
you sit and be comfortable. I am just
fine over here. There are
several other children in the neighborhood.
Have you gotten the girls registered for school yet?” Mrs. Richardson poured herself a cup of tea
as Gus excused himself from the room.
She sat in the chair Gus had been occupying.
“No, not just
yet. We are at the end of
unpacking. I thought I would do that at
the end of next week. I understand
school doesn’t start until September here.”
Mom answered her.
“Yes that’s
right. I remember when my children were
getting ready for school. They are all
grown now.” The delicate older lady sat
reminiscing about her past for a moment.
She had a smile on her lips and a dreamy look in her eyes. Her hair was tucked back into a bun and she
wore a nice green silk dress with lace on the collar and cuffs of her
sleeves. She had matching low heeled shoes
with silver buckles on the toes.
Mom sipped the
end of her tea and set the cup down. “Would
you like another cup?” Mrs. Richardson asked her.
“No thank you.” Mom answered her. “How has your day been going?”
“Fine dear, I
went shopping. I thought it was tomorrow
you were coming so I wanted to get some cookies for the girls.”
My sisters and
I giggled a little. Mom looked at us
with raised eyebrows.
“Thank you that
is very kind.” She said. “We should be
going now, though. Perhaps we can do
this again soon. I would love for you to
come over and visit us. How does next
Tuesday sound?”
“Oh that would
be very nice, thank you Mrs. Cooper.
Next Tuesday would be perfect, and please, call me Molly.”
“Yes of course,
and you can call me Gina. I’ll see you next
Tuesday then. Thank you so much
Molly. We’ll see you soon.” Mom looked
at us. “Girls?” We got up and followed our mother out the
door.
“Oh, wait a
moment!” Molly called after us. She
reached into one of her bags and pulled out the same cookies we had been
eating. “This is for your girls. Please let me know if you need any help with
anything.” She handed mom the box of
cookies and shut the screen door after us.
Mom thanked her again and led us down the porch stairs.
As we walked
through the gate of our yard I looked up to my closed bedroom window on the
second story of the house. I thought I
saw someone in the window, but I couldn’t make out the face of the person, it
just looked like a shape. As we entered
the living room Dad looked up from a paper sitting on the sofa.
“Oh, I’m glad
you are back. I got home early so we can
get started on the basement.”
“First these
girls need something other than cookies in their bellies. I’m making lunch.” Mom told him.
Dad nodded and went
back to reading his paper. Deanna
climbed up next to him and snuggled against his arm.
Betty announced
she was going upstairs to play. I followed my mom into the kitchen.
“Can I help?” I
asked her.
“Sure honey,
you can set the table.”
I didn’t really
want to go up to my room just yet. I
hadn’t closed the window before we left and Gus’ story made me wonder what was
really in our home.
After lunch dad
had me cleaning out the basement with him.
He had Deanna and Betty helping this time too. He gave me the broom, Deanna a garbage sack
and Betty the dustpan. Dad led us to the
room he wanted us to sweep up. It was a
strange room with a little door in the upper part of the wall.
“Is that a
crawl space too?” I pointed at the door.
“No Sam, that’s
a coal shaft. In the old days, they
would shovel the coal down through there and it would be stored here until they
needed it to heat the house.” He pointed
to the other side of the room that had a dividing wall in it. “We are going to clean this out and use it
for the wood we chop.”
I swallowed
hard. I had a bad feeling that the “we”
he was talking about was actually me.
It took us a
little over an hour to clean the coal room up to dad’s liking. We were covered with soot from head to
toe. Mom drew us a bath to share. She said it would save on water and keep the
rest of the house from getting dirty.
After I was
cleaned up and dressed again I went to the window at the top of the stairs. I had forgotten for the afternoon about the
story Gus had started to tell us. I
looked out at our yard and saw Gus in his through the chain link fences of the
neighbors. He was working on his garden
in the fading evening light. He looked
up at me and waved. I waved back and
smiled at him. I was about to open the
window and holler at him something when mom called us to dinner. I thought I
heard the floor creaking behind me, without looking I ran down stairs to eat.
At dinner I
started to tell my father about what Gus had told us.
“Rubbish!” He said loudly. “The old man is just pulling your leg, he
hasn’t been around here that long.”
“His wife made
it sound like he was telling a story too.” Mom added in.
“But dad, I
found a picture of them!” I told him.
“humph.” Dad grunted. No one said anything else.
After dinner I
went to my room to get the picture to show my dad. It wasn’t on my desk where I had put it. I got down on the floor and looked under my
chair for it.
“Whatcha doin?”
I hit my head
on the desk backing out.
“Ouch!”
My sister
giggled behind me. I rubbed my head and
looked up at her.
“Did you take
my picture?”
“Nope.”
“Get out of my
room!” I said to her harshly. I wondered
what happened to the photo I found of the Fowlers.
It was a hot
night so I reopened my windows. Every now
and again a breeze would blow into my room.
I sat in front of the windows looking for other kids in the
neighborhood.
At bedtime mom
just said goodnight and turned off the light.
I was a little slow to fall asleep thinking about the noises and shadows
that filled the house; the doors that opened and shut all the time around
me. It was a cross between fear and
excitement that kept my heart beating fast and my mind alive with wonder. I finally dozed off and slept through the
night without any dreams I remembered or mom waking me.