Read The Book of Bad Things Online

Authors: Dan Poblocki

The Book of Bad Things (11 page)

O
WEN
C
HASE SAT
at his computer trying to catch up on work, but he could not concentrate. Death and the storm had kept his mind sequestered for the past hour. The rain showed no sign of letting up. It roared against the skylight in the dim office at the rear of his house — the most impressive house in all of the development.

Chase Estates. Owen had named it after himself. So what if the rest of the town thought him to be an egomaniacal pig? If they’d had the money or the clout, he was certain they’d have done the same. The American Way.

Owen had purchased the land from an elderly farmer named Aidan Chambers almost fifteen years prior, decreeing after breaking ground that no other home raised in this development would ever exceed his own five-thousand-plus square feet of living space. And yet, on nights like this, when the rain flew and the wind bellowed, Owen longed for a cozier space, something with less marble, lower ceilings — something like the home he’d grown up in on Long Island, out past the urban reach of New York City.

Sometimes, he imagined his mother was in the next room, baking her famous chocolate-chip cookie pie as he sat and watched those now classic television shows.
Andy Griffith. Mister Ed. I Love Lucy.
These memories haunted him, especially when he was alone in “the palace,” as his wife liked to call their home.

Tonight, however, Owen was not alone. Kitty was upstairs, lying down, having taken something to calm her nerves. She had been torn to pieces when he gave her the news about her mother, Millie, that morning. The rest of the day they’d spent making calls, answering calls, accepting condolences, giving condolences. There’d barely been enough time to consult with the Monsignor and finally with Dalton’s Funeral Home down in the center of Whitechapel before the end of business hours. Now, Owen’s email inbox was flooded, and he felt as though he’d never catch up.

The sound of the rain and the wind was not helping. Nor was his memory of the previous night, when he’d received a very unwelcome visitor …

He wondered if Kitty had an extra of whatever it was she took. Maybe he’d forget about the rest of the work he was trying to catch up on and join her upstairs.

No,
he thought after a moment,
if it happens again, I want to be sure my mind is clear. But a beer wouldn’t hurt, would it?

After struggling to rise from the chair’s sunken seat, he stumbled, exhausted, toward the office door. Swinging it open, he saw the short dark hallway that led to the cavernous foyer beyond. Thankfully, Kitty had left one set of sconces glowing faintly, so that he might find his way to the bottom of the winding grand staircase.

Flicking off the light in the room behind him, Owen continued toward the glow of the foyer, passing by the garage door on his left where he’d stored most of the stuff he taken from the Hermit’s driveway. He paused, his curiosity keeping him still.

Just last night, he’d stood in the same spot, a dull whiskey buzz numbing his limbs, when he’d heard something on the other side of the door. His fuzzy mind quickly provided an image: A couple of the neighborhood delinquents had broken in and were looting his taxidermy trove. Owen had swung the door open with a loud crash. The motion-activated light was already on, and beyond the open garage door a vague indigo dusk obscured his driveway. To his surprise, there were no teenagers rummaging through his belongings; instead, to his horror, he found himself staring into the eyes of Ursula Chambers, who was standing in the direct center of the garage.

She’d been dressed in a silvery purple jogging suit, white stripes running up the sides of her plump legs, her skin sallow, almost gray. As he stared in shock, he noticed streetlights peering back at him through her. He’d clutched at the doorframe to catch himself from fainting. Ursula had turned her head slowly, seeming to take in the scene, the piles of taxidermy animals that had once inhabited her home up on the hill — the fox, the badger, the owl, the hawk — the treasure that Owen had hoped to make a mint from at the Hudson House Auction in the fall.

When Ursula had glanced back in his direction, her eyes flared with anger. She didn’t need to say a word for him to understand what she was trying to communicate: Return the items to the house. Or else.

“Get out of here!” Owen had screamed at the thing. “Get out! Get out! Get out!” By the time Kitty had come running, the apparition had gone. In fact, it had dissolved into nothingness even before he’d spit out the final word of his rampage.

Now, all that seemed like it had been a dream. A vivid hallucination. Something he’d seen in a scary movie. Bad things happened all the time — more often than most people were willing to admit — but
ghosts
? Ghosts existed only in the realm of fiction.

He imagined Millie, her eyes crimson, laughing at him with shimmering Ursula, their voices rising and crackling and piercing the night. How funny to watch a grown man shiver at the thought of two dead old ladies. A real hoot it must be.

Now, to reassure himself, Owen reached out, for the second night in a row, to tug open the door to the garage. This time, the room was pitch dark. Sheets of rain waved against the automatic doors. Quickly, he reached inside and flicked on the lights. Bright fluorescents flickered from the ceiling. The space was empty. Owen released a deep sigh. He chuckled to himself, not feeling particularly jolly, mostly foolish. Had he really thought he’d find them there, waiting for him?

He was about to close the door and head upstairs, when he glanced inside one more time. It was then he noticed that the four dead animals that he’d leaned against his tool storage shelves were gone.

For a moment, Owen thought again of intruders, but quickly, his mind moved on to darker possibilities. Early that morning, he’d meant to head back over to the farmhouse with the animals, right after he’d stopped at his mother-in-law’s house to drive her to the store. After being so shaken by the sight of Ursula standing in his garage the previous night, he figured that whatever easy cash he could have made from the auction was not worth a summertime of nightmares. But of course, the day had made other plans for Owen. For Millie. For Kitty. And so the animals had remained in his garage.

Except … they hadn’t. Someone had taken them.

Owen clicked off the fluorescent lights and closed the door, turning back toward the glow of the foyer. “Honey?” he called out as he ambled slowly forward, hoping she might appear at the top landing, arms open, wearing her beauty-queen smile. But his own voice bounced around the house’s entryway.
Honey, honey, honey

If he could have seen himself, could pause to imagine the sight of a six-foot tall, three-hundred pound man tiptoeing breathlessly into the marble foyer, he may have stopped and shook away his fear, doubling over in giddy laughter at his childish behavior, but his mind was keeping pace with his heart, and both had begun to hurt. Just before he crept into the light of the new room, a different sort of sound resonated off the heights of marble and stone. Somewhere in the house a click-clack, click-clack clatter of claws tapped a tile floor.

He froze. Had an animal found its way inside, trying to escape from the storm?

Click-clack. Click-clack. Something was moving through the dining room on the other side of the foyer. Coming closer. If he didn’t go immediately, it would find him standing there. The thought terrified him. Silently, he stepped backward, hoping to hide himself in the hallway’s shadow.

Growling and screeching sounds swirled resonantly around the space, mixing in awful harmony, like off-pitch voices of the children’s choir singing in church on Sundays.

Owen turned and ran. The noise of scrabbling claws erupted behind him. A high-pitched scream followed it, and Owen Chase, barreling toward his office door, released his own desperate howl. He grabbed the knob and swung the door open. He slipped inside, slammed it shut, then turned and leaned against it. He pressed the button in the center of the knob. The lock clicked.

The rain had calmed. The room was dark, his desk a vague silhouette against the far window. Owen felt pressure in his ears, the thudding of his own blood rushing into his head. He clutched his hands to his scalp, stepping silently away from the door. He wondered if this was what going crazy felt like. Or maybe he was in shock from finding Millie dead on the floor. “Kitty!” he called out again and again, shouting until his throat was raw. But then he thought, what if she wakes up? What if she comes downstairs? What if she discovers what was making those noises?

The noises … They’d stopped. He pressed his ear against the door, but the house was now quiet. If there
was
something in the hall, he couldn’t allow his wife to stumble into it. He had to be sure. He turned the knob; the lock snapped open. He pulled on the door, peering into the dim crack. The hall was empty. Either the sounds had been in his head, or the thing had moved on to another part of the house.

Bang!

Something toppled to the floor behind him. As lightning flashed, Owen spun. Perched on his desk were two shapes. Bright images of the hawk and the badger were etched into Owen’s sight. The hawk spread its wings in the darkness. The badger reared up, hissing. Owen raised his arms in defense. The office door creaked open as the other two specimens slipped quietly inside. None of them were quiet for long.

Mr. Stanton told me that a person can be haunted by a memory of something bad. I guess that’s why I started writing in this notebook. My memories.

But most people hear “hauntings,” and they think “ghosts.”

Some say a person can become a ghost if they have unfinished business leftover from their life. They might never have gotten the chance to tell someone that they love them, so their spirit lingers, eternally hopeless. Or a person might have been murdered, and in death, they long to tell the living who it was that wronged them. Either that, or the ghost might try to take their own vengeance.

At the cemetery near my apartment building, there is lots of strange energy, at least according to Janet and Benji. They say they’ve heard all sorts of stories about ghosts haunting the grounds. I’ve always wondered, What kind? The kind that loves? The kind that kills? Or the kind that are only memories?

Once, the three of us went walking there after school. We wandered the twisted paths, up and down hills, snaking past gravestones and monuments. Janet had brought her phone, which has a pretty good camera in it. We came to one spot where a large mausoleum was built into the steep hillside, so that the roof of the weird building actually met the lawn.

Above the door, a name had been carved into the stone. WHITNEY. The entrance had been boarded up. A crooked gate was locked across the boards with rusted chains. Benji was the one who’d noticed that there was space at the bottom of the doorway to see inside. Staring into the darkness, we saw a set of stairs leading down into shadow.

At the bottom of the stairs was a room, and at the back of the room was a wall made up of small compartments. Janet explained that this was where the Whitney family was entombed, that each compartment contained a dead body. I stumbled back, but she leaned forward, pulled her phone from her pocket, and reached through the bars to take a picture.

A weird thing happened when we got back to Janet and Benji’s place. She uploaded the pic to her computer, where we could examine it on a bigger screen. What we saw gave us goose bumps on top of our goose bumps. In the middle of the tomb, there was a bluish mist. And in the middle of the mist, Janet pointed out, a pair of black eyes was staring up at us. We could just make out the shape of a head, thrown back. Its mouth was twisted open. Janet deleted the picture immediately, then yanked the computer’s plug out of the wall, even though I told her that might mess everything up.

Later, when I was trying to sleep, I thought about ghosts. Then I thought about the cemetery and Janet’s picture. I wonder, when I am dead, will my ghost hang around on earth for unfinished business? What business did the figure in the mist have down in the darkness of the tomb? The thing didn’t look human. And then I wondered if what Janet had captured on her camera might be something other than a ghost. But what? A ghoul? A demon? Or something worse? Something I can’t even imagine?

I never got all the way to sleep that night. And I haven’t been back to the cemetery since.

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