16
Buttressed by schoolyard rumours and by the liminal power of campfire stories, the legend of the House of Shades had endured in my town’s folklore for at least two generations. Over the years many of my classmates had ridden their bikes along the dirt road that hemmed the property, eyeing the house from a good safe distance. But no one, not even I, ever had gumption enough to cross that property line. I had always suspected that the earth was not quite so solid on the other side of that fence.
The House of Shades did not look as though it had been built so much as plopped down onto its site. Picture a farmhouse with a noticeably lilting frame and bowing eaves, with cupolas and a pitched roof that was practically picked clean of its shingles.
The afternoon that I finally crossed that fence of sagging wire was bright and almost mockingly cheery. I had pedalled to the outskirts, aided by a temperate breeze and the sound of robins chirping their encouragement.
I concealed my bicycle behind some brush and then crossed the great field, slowly, carefully, perhaps even reverentially. Years of neglect had firmed the fallow crop rows into a stout labyrinth whose gutted lines all lured walkers to the same dead-end: the House of Shades. A few stubborn pockets of winter snow lingered in the rows where they sat like dislodged clouds, like the peaks of interred mountains.
‘If only they could see me now,’
I thought,
‘all those schoolyard worms. If only they could know what I was doing . . .’
As my steps pulled the House nearer, I heard the soft click-clatter of the windblown mobiles from the porch. My gaze followed those soft clacking sounds. I paused to consider the garden of crude crosses that hung from the porch roof by various lengths of frizzy butcher’s twine. Though one or two were proper crucifixes of pure-yet-tarnished silver, most of the dangling charms were nothing more than bits of intersecting fencepost, or sticks that had been hastily lashed together. Every one of them was crudely marred with scraps of sanctimonious graffiti:
JESUS SAVS
BLESS THIS HOUSE
SAYETH THE LORD!
CHRISTOURSAVEYOUR
The drooping porch groaned when I added my weight to it. I could feel the clouded glass of the windows, or rather something
behind
those windows, studying me. I ducked to avoid being hit with the swinging shrine and moved to the front door.
The toe of my runner snagged on something flabby, tripping me up. Dust billowed up from the porch beams, and I had to grab the railing to break my fall. Splinters bored into my palm. I shook off whatever had tripped me up, noticing it was a pile of pale fabric. I bent and plucked it free from the rocking chair runner that had kept it pinioned.
The rucksack was well worn, which made my task of biting a pair of eyeholes into it rather easy. I tried not to tug the fraying rips too forcefully; just enough to allow me to see once I’d pulled the sack over my head.
The mask was a bit too droopy for my liking. Its broad weave revealed too much of my face. As I examined my sallow reflection in one of the fractured, dust-fogged windows, it occurred to me that I had unwittingly transformed myself into the condemned man, the lynched scarecrow dangling but not dead from the rigid reach of The Devil’s Finger.
Tucking the spirit-trap under one arm, I clutched the corroded knob on the front door, unfazed at first by the fact that the door had (of course) been left unlocked for me.
The panic did not set in until I had crept in between the great mass of yellowed, water-ruined newspaper bundles that were piled along one wall and the wooden coat rack with its jutting
fleur de lys
hooks of wrought iron. I was inside
the
House. Visiting a tree on a rustic footpath was one matter. Breaching the House of Shades was something else again.
Every town has its reputedly haunted house, and the House of Shades was ours. It was said to be inhabited by not only a ghost, but also a ghoul; a husband and his wife, respectively. The man had died, and tragically—decapitation by a madman’s axe or a plasma-drenched thresher accident or consumed by the pigs in his barn whom he’d mistreated and starved; choose whichever legend best greases your aesthetics. Throughout this period of their being condemned to dwell on different planes, the old widow went about as though her husband was alive, cooking him meals, speaking in his voice, even rumbling into town behind the wheel of his rusted pickup while dressed in his clothes. Rural Canada’s answer to Norman Bates, yes, but a potent drug for kids like me, kids possessed of a certain hunger.
And so there I stood. My sojourn had nothing to do with courage. I was not on some hero’s quest to conquer a fear of ghosts. The whole ordeal was far less calculated, more akin to riding a subconscious undertow, to my attempting to submerge myself in a continuum that normal people only catch in flits and glimmers. Most grow up and leave the playground. Campfires always burn down to smouldering embers, to cold grey ash. Healthy folk follow marked trails out of the shadowy glens; they march until they reach the light.
I, on the other hand, had somehow found myself boring right into the worm-riddled heart of these grim legends. I wondered if one night I would look down to see spring-heels on my shoes or find myself squeezed snugly underneath a trembling child’s bed or inside their closet, waiting to grab tender young wrists, to cause little hearts to permanently seize from fright.
I stepped forward and peered through the French doors, into what had once been a dining room. Cobweb tufts were piled thickly within the carved grooves of the various hutches, rendering their detail work fuzzily vague. The great table, still heaped with the putrid leavings of the Shade-wife and her partner’s last supper, was coated with dust the colour of desert sand. The food had been festering there for so long that it no longer smelled of putrefaction. It was shrunken and desiccated; chicken legs like leathery talons, peas that were shrivelled white pearls.
When I returned to the main foyer, my fear rendered me paralyzed.
There was something in there with me.
Above my head came the low creak of floorboards bowing. This was followed by a trilling squeak.
I suspect that my terror might have taken me over completely had Capricorn not calmed me. It accomplished this by simply making its casket grow frigid in my hand. The chill alerted me to the fact that I had a Shade of my own.
With this skewed sense of security padding me, I moved to the great staircase and began to climb.
The steps were so aged that even my boyish weight was enough to cause them to pop. As I ascended, I heard a noise from behind one of the second storey’s shut doors. The cry was strangled. I would have thought it a kitten’s mewl had it not been speaking words—mangled words that were, to my ear, not in English.
An acrid stench crowded the air on the landing. It was even stronger in the second-storey corridor. The odour was leaking out from behind a bedroom door that was shut snugly in its jamb. Much of it was the pungency of excrement, but there was also another smell—one of illness, likely terminal.
The trap held snugly under my arm, I reached the doorknob, twisted it, pushed the door back.
The lady Shade was flesh, not aethyr. Her enormous body was piled upon an iron-rack bed whose springs screamed as she struggled to sit up. A whistling sound escaped the slack mouth as the Shade faced her intruder.
She was old, very old, and although her body was elephantine, the Shade appeared to be more bloated than obese, as if her sagging flesh had been inflated with noxious gases; ones that incessantly seeped out through the holes in her body. Whatever sickness she had been suffering from had caused most of her hair to fall out, for the top of the Shade’s scalp was spear-bald, gleaming with its own oils. One of her eyes was milky, irisless and likely useless. The other was vividly green. Both cheeks were soaked from the uncontrollable stream of tears that flowed down her face and dribbled down onto the brown-stained, tattered nightgown.
I stood in the doorway, my only movement being the shrinking of my skin around my bones as my fear mounted. I was so stunned by the sight of the Shade that I did not even feel my bladder voiding until my pant leg turned warm and began to drip.
The puffy face began to stretch, exposing black-pink gums that no longer held teeth. The dry groans and hacking sounds might have been her endeavour to scream.
I somehow knew that the Shade was just as scared of me as I was of her. It occurred to me that this fount of local horror had woken to hear her house being breached, and she was now looking upon a rucksack-faced stranger bearing a dirty box.
Our respective horror swirled between us in a ghost dance, the Shade and I basking in an unseen fog of reptile-brain emotion. It was a transcendental moment; each us of being both predator and prey at once. It was sacred.
Capricorn grew warm in my palm, then cold. It began to vibrate.
I crossed the room with a fresh and fiery determination.
When the Shade saw me crawling up onto her mattress, she fell backward with a pathetic whimper.
I hunched down on her enormous breasts like Fuseli’s incubus. I flicked the clasp on the box lid and pressed the spirit-trap against her face. I had to lean with all my weight just to keep the Shade still. I hoped her struggling would not shake Capricorn loose prematurely. I scrabbled upright and squatted down upon the box, using my legs to form a vice on either side of the trap. I had to clutch the greasy iron bed-frame to keep from toppling over.
As the old woman bucked and struggled, I hearkened back to when Capricorn had appeared to me as the faceless feminine, when I had been beneath the box. Capricorn had been grooming me from the very beginning for this day. I began to cackle.
I then pressed down very hard and felt things crunch and buckle beneath me. A moment later the pillow was being painted by two dark streams that were leaking out either side of the box.
The Shade tried to swat me with one of her jaundiced, waxy hands, and then her chest began to sink, pushing out a final stream of reeking gasses.