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Messenger Boy ” Part Two”

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on December 21, 2012
Posted in: Christmas Message, Christmas Story. Tagged: Christmas Eve, Doll, holiday, Johnny, messenger boys, Santa Claus. Leave a comment

The Messenger Boy

Part Two

Mr Brown stood with hands on hips looking down at the boy. Something told him that this child was desperate for the work.

“Look, son, I have customers to serve. Why don’t you have a practise until I’m finished and we’ll talk then?”

“Oh, thank you,” Johnny hauled the bike upright.

He rode up and down the street for over an hour; falling now and then and skinning his knees through his threadbare trousers, but he never gave up. When Mr Brown came out, he was able to cycle up to him and dismount without falling over. He stood with flushed cheeks, triumphant at what he’d achieved.

“I knew you could do it, son,” Mr Brown ruffled his hair. “ You’ve got yourself a job. Its five and a half days a week and the pay is five shillings. I’ll expect you to work the extra day when we’re busy with the Christmas rush and for this you’ll get an extra two shillings. Are we agreed?” He held out his hand.          Christmas Street

Johnny shook, his fingers disappearing in to the man’s huge hand.

“Thank you, sir. I can start in the morning,” he said.

“Good boy, be in at eight sharp.”

It took him quite a while to persuade his mother to let him take the job, but they both knew they needed the money. He told her about the five shillings, but not about the two extra he could earn. She assumed the wages were for a six and a half day week and Johnny was happy to let her think that. His first two shillings were placed as a deposit on the doll in Mrs O Rourke’s window and he swore her to secrecy. It was ten weeks to Christmas and he knew he’d have enough for the doll, with seven shilling left over. With this he intended to buy a coat for his Mother; second hand, but warmer than the one she now wore and a small present for his baby brother. His mind was awash with plans as his little legs pumped up and down like mad, as he cycled from house to house. The customers all liked the thin little boy with the sparkling eyes and they lost no time in telling his employer this. Mr Brown knew from the start he’d chosen well in Johnny and gave him the leftover cakes and bread to take home each night. Slowly the sadness faded in his mother’s eyes and his sister and brother were no longer hungry.

It was Christmas Eve and the shop was busier than ever. Snow and slush lined the side of the roads and made the going tough. Johnny wore two pairs of old socks over his hands in a vain attempt to keep out the cold, but his fingers were frozen. Sometimes, when he dismounted from the bike, his hand retained the bars shape and he had to blow on them to breathe life back into them. At times his hands were so cold, he couldn’t pull the brakes and he took many a tumble. It was now five-o-clock and he was finished for the day. His mother and baby brother’s presents were hidden in the flat, but he still had to collect Cathy’s doll. Mrs O Rourke’s shop didn’t close until half past five so there was plenty of time. He smiled, as he wheeled the bike in to the shop.

http://www.gemmamawdsley.com/   “Sorry, son,” Mr Brown said. “Another order has come in. It’s an important customer and I can’t afford to let them down.”

He named an area over two miles away and Johnny’s heart sank. Mr Brown was a good employer and he couldn’t refuse to go, but he’d never be in time to collect the doll now. He peddled like the wind; the pennies he’d received from grateful customers slapping against his legs. It was six-o-clock when he finally reached O Rourke’s shop and the lights were all out and the door shut tight. He stood on the pavement wanting to cry, but that would not be a manly thing to do. He felt his heart might break until the bell inside the shop tinkled as the door opened.

“Ah, there you are, Johnny.” Mrs O Rourke smiled. “I waited for you; I knew you’d be along.”

He handed her the last payment of one shilling and sixpence and took the brightly-wrapped parcel.

“You’re a good boy, Johnny,” Mrs O Rourke kissed his forehead. “Your mother should be proud of you.”

Mrs O Rourke went back inside her shop and Johnny stood listening as she rammed the bolt in to place. The street was quiet; the last of the shoppers had all gone and he knew as he walked home, his mother would have a fire blazing and there would be plenty to eat. He had done it. He was a man with a job and could take care of his family. He stopped at the door of the flats, looked up at the heavens and whispered a prayer for those in need that night. His eyes were drawn to a light in the sky and there it was; the Christmas Star, shining as brightly as it had done over two thousand years before on another little boy.

Copyright © 2012 Gemma Mawdsley

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Messenger Boy (Part One)

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on December 20, 2012
Posted in: Christmas Message, Christmas Story. Tagged: bike, Christmas, Doll, God, heart-warming, Johnny, messenger boys, Santa, star. Leave a comment

THE MESSENGER BOY

(Part One)

Mrs O Rourke shook her head in wonder as she placed the doll in the window. It was a very beautiful doll by any standards and ordering it had been an impulse she could not resist, but the moment she opened the box she had regretted her lack of common sense. Who in their right mind would pay twelve shillings and sixpence for a toy, she wondered? She was so busy fanning its lace dress and fixing the blond curls that she didn’t notice the bright eyes, watching from outside. Despite the cold of the October morning, six-year-old Cathy Ryan pressed her nose and the palms of her hands against the icy glass and gazed enraptured at the doll. Today was her birthday and for the first time ever, she hadn’t received a present. They never got anything nice now, not since her Daddy died and she felt cheated. The doll caught her eye on the way to school; she was dawdling as always in the footsteps of her big brother, Johnny. The doll’s big, blue eyes and blond curls stopped her in her tracks and she swore she had never seen anything so beautiful in all her life. Her breath made small patches of condensation on the window pane and the glass, still damp with morning dew, made her nose wet.

“Cathy,” her brother stood reflected in the glass. “Will you hurry up; we’ll be late again.”   http://www.gemmamawdsley.com/

He grabbed her hand and dragged her away; terrified of getting a telling off from his teacher. He did well in school and he didn’t want anyone to complain about him; not now, not at this sad time. He felt tears gather in the corners of his eyes and his throat hurt when he thought about his mother. They had left her minutes before, so sad and forlorn, in the cold, two-bedroom flat they were forced to rent after his father died. It was on the top floor of a block of flats over a fish and chip shop. The stink of fish permeated the very bricks of the building and rose in waves from the worn carpet lining the stairs. The stench stuck to his clothes so the neighbourhood children held their noses as he passed by and made exaggerated wafting motions with their hands. There were six flights of wooden stairs to climb and no matter what time of day it was, the stairs were always dark and frightening. At first, he imagined some terrible monster lurking in the shadows on each landing, but now all such thoughts were gone as he assumed the role of man of the house.

Today was the hardest so far since his father’s passing. He realised how upset his mother was at not having a present for his little sister, but times were hard. At twelve, he was old enough to understand this, but his sister was still too young and couldn’t be expected to be as grown-up as he was about the whole birthday thing. His mother tried her best to find a job, but it was difficult. The year was nineteen-forty-two and jobs were hard to come by, especially for a woman with three children and two-year-old Jimmy wouldn’t start school for years.

“Johnny,” Cathy dug her heels in, forcing him to stop. “Do you think that if I’m good and say my prayers every night that Santa will bring me that doll for Christmas?”

“I don’t know, Cathy. It costs a lot of money and Mam barely has enough for food.”

“I know that,” she pouted. “But my teacher says that Christmas is a time of miracles, so I’m going to be very, very good and pray.”

That’s what we need, Johnny thought, a miracle.

When they reached the school gates, he let go of her hand and bent down to speak to her.

“Hold out you hand,” he ordered.

She did as he asked and watched as he pulled two paper-wrapped packets from his coat pocket. Each held a small currant scone. Their Mother baked these every night on the griddle over the fire and she was glad they had something to fill their empty bellies during the long school day. Johnny handed Cathy her scone and opening his packet broke his in half and added it to his sister’s. He did this every morning with the promise that he couldn’t eat a full scone and he knew that she could. While she was grateful for the extra food, she wondered how someone as big as her brother couldn’t manage a full one. Her stomach rumbled very loudly at times and she always seemed to be hungry. She saw Johnny at break times wolfing down his lunch and licking the paper clean of crumbs. He was a puzzle, her big brother.

No matter how hard he tried, Johnny couldn’t concentrate on his work that day. His mind kept wondering back to the cold flat where his mother and brother sat sad and hungry. He had to do something to ease their suffering, but what? The bitter autumn wind sliced through his threadbare jumper as he made his way home that afternoon. The wind’s sting carried with it the promise of a hard winter and he knew they’d never survive on what little money his mother had. Please God, he prayed. Help me find a way to feed my family.

It was at that moment he saw it; the answer to his prayers. Grabbing his sister’s hand, he ran her the rest of the way home. After depositing her, breathless at the flat, he mumbled an excuse about leaving a book behind at school and hurried out. He ran as fast as his legs would go, hoping all the while he hadn’t been dreaming. There it was, large as life, in Brown’s window, the sign that read, Messenger Boy Wanted.”http://www.gemmamawdsley.com/

He brushed down his jumper and licking his hand, ran it through his dark, unruly hair. The smell when he entered the shop overwhelmed his empty stomach and made his head spin. Bread, still steaming from the ovens, lined the racks behind the counter and cakes in all the colours of the rainbow vied with the plainer pancakes and scones in shiny, glass cases. He waited behind some ladies as they chatted with Mr Brown until the shop was empty and the man noticed him.

“What can I get you, son?” Mr Brown asked.

The word son made Johnny catch his breath and it took a few seconds before he could speak, but the man waited, patiently.

“ I’ve come about the job, sir,” he nodded at the sign in the window.

“How old are you?” Mr Brown thought the puny boy before him couldn’t be much older than ten.

“ I’m twelve, sir and stronger than I look.”

They stared at one another for a moment and then the man spoke.

“It’s a heavy bike; mind and it would take a strong fellow to hold it.”

“Yes, sir, I could do it,” Johnny said.

“All right,” the man rubbed at his chin. “Wait there.”

As he waited, Johnny looked around at the wondrous things on the shelves until the clackity-clack of the bicycle wheels sounded as Mr Brown wheeled it out from the yard at the back of the shop. He steered it out on to the footpath and handed it to Johnny. The handlebars reached just above his chin and he couldn’t see over the huge wicker basket that was strapped to the front of the bike.

“All right,” Mr Brown said. “Have a go and we’ll see how you get on.”http://www.gemmamawdsley.com/

Once the man let go of the bike, Johnny had to cling on for dear life; it must have weighed a ton. He managed to keep it upright, but when the front wheel went off the kerb, the bike, which was front heavy, took the boy with it.

“Sorry, sir,” Johnny looked up at the man with frightened eyes. “I just slipped, that’s all.”

Part Two tomorrow, folks.

Copyright © Gemma Mawdsley 2012

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Merry Christmas to all.

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on December 17, 2012
Posted in: Ghost. Leave a comment

Hi everyone. On Thursday next I’ll be posting a story on my blog. No horror, just a nice Christmas story, enjoy.

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Revenge is Sweet part Three

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on October 31, 2012
Posted in: Eerie Places, Ghost, Haunted Houses, Paranormal, Vampire or Werewolf, Witchcraft, Witches. Tagged: Cat, Dog, Eerie Places, Horror, Nora, paranormal, scary, Vampire or Werewolf?, Witch-hunt. Leave a comment

Revenge is Sweet part Three

 Lights flickered in the trees and Nora heard the cries of pain even at a distance. It was pitch black in the back garden and the biting wind sent the last of the leaves swirling about her feet. But Nora did not need a light to guide her way. No, the potion ensured she had perfect night vision and she traced the darting movement in the trees as she walked to the edge of the wood. The dog and cat stalked beside her, their padding steps making no sound on the soft ground. They, like their mistress, were feeling the rejuvenating effects of the potion. The crisp, night air overrode the stench of the rubbish dumped at the base of the trees. The wood was such a melancholy place now that the children were all gone and the tree trunks scarred with initials and crude carvings. She placed a hand on the tree nearest to her and felt its pain.

“Poor thing,” she whispered.

The ground was marshy and the fallen leaves crackled beneath her feet as she moved forward. It came again, a piteous cry of pain. Seth growled and she shushed him.                 Revenge by Gemma Mawdsley

“I have to hear,” she patted his head.

The light in the trees was becoming brighter and the scent of burning wood told her it was a fire and not a torch. Such a dangerous thing to do, here among the trees, but she knew those who lit it were not thinking about danger, which was just as well.

She moved closer, but stayed hidden in the shadows. Someone had formed a circle of rocks so at least the fire would not get out of control. The flames were low and her eyes widened when she saw the reason for the cries of pain. Someone was tied to one of the trees, his arms strapped behind the trunk, his face stained crimson. Mark Jones blocked her vision for a moment, but when he moved aside she saw to her horror, that it was his former right hand man who was being held captive.

“I’ll fuckin teach you to mess with my woman,” she heard Jones sneer. “We’ll see how much she likes you when I’m through.”

There were two other with Jones. Nora recognised them from seeing them around the estate and she knew they were trouble. She watched as Jones reached down and pulled a knife from a sheath inside his boot. It’s sharp, serrated edge glittered in the light from the fire.

“Pull down his pants,” Jones ordered one of his men.

The boy screamed and tried to wrestle free from his bonds, but it was useless.

“Please, Mark,” he sobbed. “You’re making a mistake.”

“I’m through listening to you, you cunt,” Jones nodded to the man to do as he ordered.

The boy cried louder as he felt the cold night air on his exposed scrotum.

“Mark, don’t,” he sobbed, but his pleas fell on deaf ears.

“You’ll never be able to screw anyone again,” Jones sneered, waving the knife in the terrified boy’s face.

Nora knew that the boy was the least vicious of the four who stood before her and his cries for mercy tore at her heart and brought with them visions of the burning times. Her sister had begged in the same way as the boy and their cries went unheard. He certainly did not deserve what Jones intended doing to him.

She moved out of the shelter of the trees and stood on the opposite side of the fire.

“What the fuck!” she heard one of the men say and her hackles bristled at his vulgarity.

Mark Jones followed the man’s gaze and turned round.

“What are you doing here, old woman?” He pointed the knife at her.

“I, like you, am here for revenge.”

The men looked at one another and laughed.

“What the fuck do you mean?” Jones eyes glittered will menace.                                                                                    Revengeby gemmamawdsley.com

“You injured me,” she touched the scar above her eye.

“And I’ll do it again,” he warned.

“No, you will not,” Nora felt the dog and cat move up beside her.

“Oh, what,” he swirled the knife around. “They are going to stop me?”

“You’ll find that they will,” Nora reached down and rubbed the dog’s head.

“You better fuck off,” Jones grew tired of her. “When I’m finished here, I’m coming for you next, you old witch.”

Nora began to chant, her words echoing in the silent air.

“What the fuck is she up to now,” Jones shook his head at the other men.

“She’s mad,” one of them muttered. “Nutty as a fruit cake.”

But even the boy had stopped crying and was watching as the flames caused the shape of the animals to swell and grow. Seth, the old dog, arched his back as his rib cage expanded. His mouth grew wider as his teeth grew in to sharp, vicious points. The cat leapt in to a tree, her nails stretching through the pads of her feet and her eyes glowed red among the dark leaves.

“Let the boy go,” Nora said.

“Go fuck yourself,” Jones swallowed hard, his eyes darting from the dog to the cat overhead.

“I’ll give you one last chance,” Nora said. “One chance to prove that you are human.”

“I’m going to slit your throat,” Jones hand shook as he pointed the knife at her. “Grab her, lads.”

The two men rushed forward. Seth sprang more wolf than dog and his teeth sank in to the throat of the first man. The cat flew from the tree, her talons tearing through the flesh on the other man’s throat, ripping veins and sending a fountain of blood spraying through the air. The leaves dripped crimson as they fell and lay dying at her feet.

Jones licked his lips and tried to swallow. What he had just witnessed seemed impossible; he wouldn’t have believed it, if he’d not seen it with his own eyes. The dog growled and the sound made the hairs on his head rise.

“I’ll report you for this,” he pretended bravado. “They’ll lock you up.”Revenge by gemmamawdsley.com

He didn’t wait to hear her reply, but took off running through the trees. He would do as he said and she could not allow that to happen. She bent and whispered in the dog’s ear. It took off in pursuit and it was obvious from the screams echoing back that he had found his target. Mark Jones would never trouble anyone again.

“Please, missus,” the captive boy whispered, when Nora picked up the fallen knife.

“I’m not going to hurt you,” Nora walked to the back of the tree and sawed through the ropes.

He fell, overcome from the pain of his beating. Nora knelt and helped him to pull up his pants. He was crying from shock and she pulled a handkerchief from the sleeve of her coat and handed it to him.

“Thanks,” he wiped his face.

“I’ll help you to walk back to the houses and then you are on your own,” she held out her hand. “You will need to call an ambulance. You need hospital care.”

“He took my phone,” the boy nodded towards a pile of beer cans.

Nora pushed them aside and found the phone.

“Call them now,” she said and waited while he dialled with trembling fingers.

He gave the address of her road and leant on her as they started back through the trees.

“You will never speak to anyone about what happened here tonight,” she looked at him from the corner of her eye.

“Who would believe me?” He asked.

“I mean it,” she stopped and turned towards him. “If you breathe a word to anyone, you will suffer the same fate. They might take me away, but my pets will see you are punished.”

“I hear you,” she saw by his face that he understood. “I won’t tell a soul.”

“Good,” she led him in through the back door of her house and out on to the road.

They walked to the end of the street and she left him sitting against a wall. The shrill moan of a siren was drawing closer and she knew he would soon be taken care of.

She stopped and tutted her displeasure at the front of her house where the white of egg glowed like silver snails trails. Little terrors, she shook her head as shells crunched beneath her feet. The estate was quiet for once, as thought those who lived in the nocturnal world sensed danger and had scurried away to their hiding places. Somewhere a dog barked, its sound joining that of the ambulance siren. Nora went inside and closed the door. The dog and cat sat waiting in the kitchen. Both were back to normal, but showing signs of the battle.

“What a mess,” Nora wet a cloth and wiped the blood from the dog’s face.

The cat sat on the draining board and lifted each paw as her mistress cleared away the last of the blood.

The savage attack, as the papers describe it, was the talking point for days, but interest soon trickled off. Jones and the men were known to the police and no one was surprised that they had come to a bad end. A pack of dogs was blamed for the injuries, the nice policeman who called to ask questions told Nora.

“Probably some vicious breed trained to kill,” he patted old Seth on the head. “Not like you, old fellow, eh?”

Some good did come of it though as since that night little old ladies can now walk the streets without fear of harm and the feral cats and dogs are given a wide berth. Nora saw the boy a few times since, but he rushed by and refused to make eye contact with her. He, no doubt, had hinted to others that he knows something about what happened that night, but there are none interested enough to press him on the subject. Tales have grown around the killings and fear and superstition are rife even in these enlightened times. And there is always next year!

Copyright © Gemma Mawdsley 2012

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Revenge is Sweet Part 2

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on October 28, 2012
Posted in: Death Cry, Eerie Places, Ghost, Haunted Houses, Vampire or Werewolf, Witchcraft, Witches. Tagged: Eerie Places, Horror, paranormal, revenge is sweet, The Haunt of Fear, Witchcraft, Women. 2 Comments

The air in the attic smelt musty, mould hung from the rafters, trailing green tendrils that touched her face. Nora brushed them aside and shone her torch around the room. The trunk she was looking for was in the farthest corner and she chose her step with care, picking her way across the joists. If she put one foot wrong it meant plunging through the ceiling. Placing the torch on a box, she fumbled with the ancient lock and nodded in satisfaction as the lid groaned open. The smell from the interior was more pungent than the one surrounding her and she wafted her hand in front of her face. She knelt down, the wood as rough as glass on her tender knees, but she had to find the things she needed. They were all there, just as she’d left them many years ago; the herbs and dried roots, the potions still safe in the bottles and most importantly the grimoire, the book of power that would show her what to do. She stuffed the small bottles and herbs in to the pockets of her cardigan and tucked the book under her arm.

Her eyes travelled to the old suitcase beside the trunk, but she willed herself not to look. It held the few baby clothes she kept and she couldn’t bear to view them, not now. Her daughter, like many of the women in her family, had died before her time.

“Six months,” Nora muttered. “That’s all the time we had together, child.”

No, she could not think about it. She tore her eyes away. There was work to be done.

She was panting as she navigated the joists and relieved when she reached the top of the wooden ladder.

“Move, Seth,” she called to the dog, who was standing sentry at the bottom.

He got out of the way just in time, as the huge book flew down and landed with a thump on the floor. Nora didn’t bother to close the attic door. She would put everything back when she was finished. Seth followed at her heels as she made her way down in to the kitchen. She sat at the table and started to leaf through the book’s yellow and brittle pages.

“Yes, this is the one,” she read aloud words written in an ancient language and the dog cocked his ear at the strange sounds.

Nora spent the next few hours grinding and cooking the things she needed for the spells. She had been a child when she last seen the book put to use and her husband had forbid her to practise any of her strange arts, as he referred to them. She was descended from women of power, a power that lay dormant within her until now.

 

Dusk was falling by the time she was finished. The few streetlights that still had unbroken bulbs came on and a cold mist descended. Nora picked up the animals feeding bowls and scraped food from a tin in to each one. Next she poured some of the potion and mixed it with the food. Before placing it on the floor, she filled a small glass with the same potion and swallowed the lot in one quick gulp. It ran like fire through her body until it reached her stomach where it lay for a moment before spreading its warmth until her senses swam. She gripped the cold sink until the room steadied itself once more.

“It’s all right,” she looked down at the worried faces of the cat and dog.

Placing their bowls on the floor, she urged them to eat.

“Finish it all, my pets,” she smiled as they tucked in.

She felt better than she had in years, empowered, she thought. The hand that stroked the dog’s head was no longer veined and spotted with age. She held it up to the light and wondered at this. There was only one mirror in the house and that hung in the dark hallway. Nora turned on the light and gazed at her reflection. She was seventy-four-years-old and up to a few minutes ago looked every one of her years. Now, she looked younger, not girl young, but the fire within her had knocked at least twenty years off her age. She brought a hand to her face and felt the smoothness of the skin. She had never been a beauty and no one would call her such now, but she looked better. Turning off all the lights, she picked her way through the dark shapes of the furniture in the sitting room and stood at the window. So far no one had called at her house looking for treats, which was just as well, as the yob had taken her meagre few. She dreaded to think what those who were refused would do if they did call. There were childish screams as a small vampire, witch and mummy ran past her gate. They looked like wraiths scampering through the white mist. She sighed and waited for the night to deepen. It was cold in the house, cold and damp. There was no central heating and other than a coal fire nothing to banish the icy fingers creeping along her skin. It was too early in the year to spend money on fuel, so she put on more layers and went to bed earlier when the nights were longer.

She sat on the threadbare couch and pulled a shawl around her shoulders. The cat came in and leapt up beside her and the dog huddled down at her feet.

“There’s nothing to do but wait for them to come,” she patted the cat. “And they will come. Why wouldn’t they? The street vermin need to have there blood-lust fed and picking on an old women is the easiest way they know.”

The curtains were left open so the blaze from the nearest oil barrel reflected off the glass. Dark shapes circled the flames and cars drew up from time to time, their occupants in need of the poisons that fed their cravings. The chimes on the mantle clocked counted out the hour. It was cold on the stroke of midnight when she heard them outside her door.

“Wait here, my pets,” she stood up straighter than she had in years and went to answer the fist that was beating on the wood.

“Yes,” she was looking straight in to the face of the yob who had scarred her.

He drew back a little, not sure for a moment if it was her. He was with his friend, his right hand man, as she’d heard him referred too and behind him stood his sixteen-year-old girlfriend, a tight top proudly displaying her swollen belly.

Mark Jones, the yob, could not lose face, so rolling his shoulders back; he started his usual tirade of filth. It began in the usual way.

“Your dog nearly bit my little brother,” he jabbed an accusing finger at her. “You better keep the fuckin thing under control, do you hear me, you old witch or I’ll cut its throat.”

I must say I’m surprised,” Nora caught the look between Mark’s girlfriend and his right hand man.

“I’ll give you surprised, you old cow,” he made his fist in to a ball.

Before he could strike, Nora words stopped him.

“I think you words belie your true natural, after all you are willing to raise another man’s child as your own.”

“What?” Spittle flew from his mouth as he struggled to speak.

“Am I the bearer of bad news?” Nora smiled. “So sorry, but the truth must out.”

“Forget her,” his girlfriend pulled at his jacket. “She’s mad, everyone says so.”

“Fuck off,” he shook her off. “What do you mean?” He asked Nora.

“Ask her,” Nora nodded to the girl, who was retreating down the path.

“Hey, come back here,” all thoughts of Nora were forgotten as he took off after her.

She watched as the girl placed both hands beneath her bump and tried to run.

“There’s going to be fuckin murder,” Mark’s right hand man muttered, as he took off after them.

“You don’t know the half of it,” Nora smiled.

 

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Revenge is Sweet

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on October 26, 2012
Posted in: Eerie Places, Ghost, Paranormal, Vampire or Werewolf, Witchcraft, Witches. Tagged: Eerie Places, Ghosts, Halloween, Horror, paranormal, revenge is sweet, scary, Witchcraft. Leave a comment

Nora no longer recognised the housing estate that had been her home for over fifty years. The tidy gardens were now littered with an assortment of rubbish from empty drink cans and broken bottles to other unsavoury things she didn’t dare think about. Most of the surrounding houses were derelict and an attempt had been made at boarding them up. The barriers the council put up to keep the human scavengers out never lasted long. She shivered as she recalled the nights spent listening to the groans of the boards as they were wrenched from their housings. The wood was used to feed the huge oil barrels that blazed each night throughout the estate.      Revenge by Gemma Mawdsley

“Time to go out,” she picked up her cat, which was dozing on a chair and carried her in to the kitchen.

All Hallow’s Eve dawned dry and cold. Perfect weather for the children to do their trick or treating, Nora thought, as she placed the cat on the ground. It looked at her in disgust before turning its tail up and walking away. She smiled at its antics and watched as it made its way to the bottom of the garden. The trees in the little wood outside the wall looked sombre. It was no longer a playground for children, but a dark, sinister place. She ran her hands down the sleeves of her faded cardigan, trying to brush away the cold. The wood was deserted now, but she saw them at night; the dark shapes scurrying through the trees. The glass shards she cemented in to the wall, in the hope of keeping them out, glistened under the watery sunlight, but they did little to add to her sense of security. The little timber gate in the centre of the wall was kicked down countless times and her hands were too old and bent from arthritis to repair it. She walked back inside and turned the key in the lock. It was wishful thinking that the frail door would keep anyone out. Shrugging on her black coat, she tied a scarf under her chain and picked up her old wicker basket.

“Come on, old fellow,” she called to her dog, Seth. “Time to go shopping.”

He looked up at her bleary-eyed and groaned. Like his mistress he did not relish the daily trek to the shops. She warned him to keep his temper in check as the last time he showed his objection to the way the street vermin treated his mistress it had resulted in a visit from the police, with a warning to keep the dog in check or else. He knew she depended on him for company and he could do nothing more than walk by her side and behave in much the same way as the stupid cat. It made him feel worthless, but if he kept his mistress happy then so be it.

“Come along,” she held the door open for him. “You’ll have no dinner otherwise.”

Leaning heavily on her walking stick she started down the path. She didn’t really need the stick, but it would serve as a weapon if need be. It was still too early for the druggies and the dealers. All would be sleeping off the effects of last night. Nora nodded to one or two of the old neighbours, but kept her head down for the most part. It was best not to make eye contact with anyone and as the pavement was cracked it meant she could choose her footing with care. Seth growled, as a mongrel crept out from one of the abandoned houses, but the animal was too ill and staved to offer any threat. There were many such animals roaming the estate; dozens of feral dogs and cats abandoned in much the same way as the houses.

The only shop still open in the area was kitted out like a prison. Stout bars lined the windows and razor wire ran the length of the roof. Nora ordered the few items she needed and packed them in to her basket.

“I see the eye is healing up nicely,” Joe, the shopkeeper remarked on the cut above her eye.

A stone, thrown by one of the yobs had met it marks and the cut required four stitches.

“Yes, thank you,” Nora said. “It’s not too bad now.”

“It’s a bloody disgrace that decent people can’t go about their business in peace.”

Now that he was off on his usual tirade there was nothing for her to do but nod and agree.      Revenge by Gemma Mawdsley

Everyone had an idea of what should be done to better the estate, but no one was acting on it. After saying her goodbyes, she began the short walk home. Seth walked before her, sniffing the ground, searching for new scents. The skeleton of a burnt out car sat on one of the green areas and it became a playground of sorts for some of the children. They were three of them sitting in its ravaged innards now, so Nora crossed the road rather than pass them. They knew she was easy game and would lose no time in picking on her. Things could have been so different, Nora thought if her daughter had lived and her husband hadn’t run off, but that was long ago; too many decades for wishful thinking. She tried to banish such thought from her mind as the loneliness threatened to overwhelm her.

“Look at the witch.”

She picked up her pace and tried to ignore the taunting voice.

“Hey, witch,” the boy ran in front of her and was soon joined by his other two companions.

He was no more than ten or eleven years old and should be in school. Nora knew enough to keep such things to herself and she kept walking.

“Fuckin old witch,” one boy sneered. “Where’s your broom?”

They fell about laughing at this and Nora felt her heart race as they stood in a line blocking her way.

“Let me pass, please,” she hugged her basket closer.

“Let me pass,” the mimicked her soft tone.

Seth bared his teeth and his growls of warning rumbled like thunder in the silence.

“You better watch it,” one of the boys said. “My dad will have that mutt put down if it touches me.”

“Seth will not touch you if you let us pass.”

They eyed the dog warily and moved apart just enough to let her pass. One of them jostled her as she squeezed through and she lost her footing and fell against some railing. She managed to grab one of the rusted bars so she didn’t hit the ground, but she banged her side. Her basket fell from her hands and the contents went spilling out on to the dirty ground. The boys laughed as she staggered to her feet and one of them scooped up the packet of biscuits she’d bought as a rare treat and the bag of sweets for the few children who would call that night. Saliva dripped from Seth’s mouth as he gnashed his teeth and made small lunges at her attackers.

“Don’t,” Nora whispered and the dog drew back.

Tired with their game, the boys started to walk away.

“Thanks for the goodies, witch,” one called over his shoulder.

Nora concentrated on picking up the rest of her shopping. Her side ached and she could feel the bruise begging to form in her skin.

“Come on, Seth,” she was glad of the solidness of the walking stick as her knees shook from fright.

The boys had returned to the burnt out car and their laughter followed her all the way home. It took her a while to get the key in the lock of the front door as her trembling fingers refused to stay still. Placing her basket inside the door, she turned back and looked back to where the boys were sitting. Seth followed her gaze and looked up at her in question.

“Do you know what tonight is boy?” She looked down in to his big eyes. “It’s All Hallow’s. Do you remember, Seth?”

The gleam within his eyes flared until they burned like fire. Of course he remembered, but that was long ago and something his mistress ordered he forget.

“That’s right, boy. Tonight belongs to us and it’s time we showed those who torment us the full meaning of Halloween.”

Her cat, which was lurking in the bushes, ran forward and rubbed against her legs; purring her pleasure at her mistress’s words, because black cats remember too.

copyright © Gemma Mawdsley

 

 

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New Ghost Story

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on October 22, 2012
Posted in: Eerie Places, Ghost, Haunted Houses, Paranormal, Vampire or Werewolf, Witches. Tagged: Eerie Places, ghost, Halloween, Haunted Places, Horror, paranormal, revenge is sweet, Samhain, scary, Trick-or-treating, werewolf, Witchcraft, Women. Leave a comment

Hello to all my friends on WordPress and sorry I haven’t posted for so long. I’m working on my new novel for young adults, Shadow Self and numerous other projects, so it’s been a very busy few months. Just popping in to say that I will be posting a new story for Halloween on Friday next. Well, I couldn’t let the occasions pass without a ghost story. I’m writing it at the moment and I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I am enjoying writing it. Until Friday my friends, stay safe.

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Voices from the Grave?

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on August 20, 2012
Posted in: books, Ghost, Horror of the cover up by catholic church, Industrial schools, Paranormal. Tagged: art, Death, Fiction, Horror, Industrial school, Longsight, Online Writing, The Whispers. 1 Comment

In most of my writings I combine history with horror. Not a hard thing to do as history provides us with more gore than our fragile senses can handle, but something struck me as really odd and a little bit scary last week. When I was researching my novel Whispers, I travelled to a few of those dreadful industrial schools that the catholic church were wardens over. I went to these long-abandoned places for the atmosphere and to get a sense of what the tiny prisoners must have felt when walking through the echoing hallways. All traces of the children have disappeared, except for the markers on the numerous graves. The saddest thing of all was the read the inscriptions, some proclaiming that the child lying beneath the earth, “Died as a boy.” That was all, no date of birth or death, but I digress. I do so, because the horror of that time has been bleached in to my soul and its memories make me angry. Anyway, to get back to what happened. I was reading the Sunday papers and there was an interview with one of those invisible children. He’s a man now and still bears the scars of what happened to him. His story is like so many other that I’ve heard, but there was one thing that made the hairs on the back of my neck rise. He mentioned that twice a year, every year, a child disappeared. I wrote about this very same thing. I am now left to wonder at how much I wrote was fiction?

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Purgatory Part 3

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on July 21, 2012
Posted in: Can a heart be strong enough to survive the grave?, Death Cry, Eerie Places, Ghost, Paranormal. Tagged: Eerie Places, ghost, Ghost Hunters, God, Haunted Houses, Horror, Kitty, Mister, paranormal, Purgatory, revenge is sweet, scary, Shadow. 92 Comments

Purgatory Part 3

A thin mist hovered over the grass and the air was chill when Kitty opened her bedroom window. The sun was a hazy, orange ball against the backdrop of the surrounding trees and it struggled to dispel the last of the night’s lingering darkness. She could have stayed in bed for another hour, but her sleep had been restless of late and it was easier to get up and not lie about tossing and turning. The house was silent and other than the first calling of a songbird there was nothing to disturb her morning prayers. Kneeling down beside the bed she made the sign of the cross and laced the worn rosary beads between her fingers. She asked the usual things of God, protection for her family and those she loved and peace for those lying beneath the earth. Her last plea was one she had repeated over and over for the past three months, but she knew it would not be answered; not now, if the screams echoing across the fields were anything to go by.

Running to the window, she looked across the garden and the wraith-like figure staggering through the mist. The Mister would hear her for sure and then there would be hell to pay. She tip-toed down the stairs in her bare feet, cringing at each creak of the old boards. The cold, stone flags on the kitchen floor burned her warm flesh, but she ignored the discomfort in her need to get outside. The grass was wet with morning dew and sharp stones nipped at her feet, but she took no notice as she ran across to where Ruth had fallen.

“What happened?” Kitty tried to pull her up, but she refused to move.

Ruth’s sobs echoed in the still air and Kitty cast a furtive glance back at the house, praying the Mister wouldn’t hear.

“Stop,” Kitty shook the weeping girl. “Your brother will hear you and you know what will happen then.”

There was no need to ask again what was troubling the girl. It was as Kitty had suspected since the beginning.

“He’s left me,” Ruth beat her hands against her face.

“Stop that,” Kitty pulled her hands away and held them before she did herself harm.

Ruth’s cries had woken Joan and she came running across the grass, her expression a mixture of confusion and fear.

“What in the name of god is wrong with her?” She looked from Kitty to the weeping girl.

“The gypsies have gone,” Kitty hugged Ruth closer as she struggled to break free.

“Come on,” Joan took Ruth beneath her arm and between them they managed to lift the prostate girl. “We’ll take her over to the barn. God help us all if the Mister hears.”

They half carried, half dragged Ruth towards the yawning mouth of the barn. The hay-filled building would be more soundproof and help to muffle her cries. They laid her down in a pile of hay and stood looking at one another, unsure of what to do.

“He said he would take me with him,” Ruth sobbed. “I was to meet him at dawn, but he had already left.”

“I knew this would happen,” Kitty whispered to Joan. “There was something not right about that man.”

She knelt down beside Ruth and took her hand.

“It’s going to be all right,” Kitty said.

“No, it’s never going to be all right again,” Ruth took a handkerchief from the sleeve of her dress and wiped her nose. “I loved him, I really loved him and he said he loved me.”

“Aye, they all say that,” Joan shook her head at the girl’s ignorance.

“I thought he meant it,” Ruth’s voice was hoarse from crying. “We were supposed to get married. I ran down the road trying to find him, but there was no sign of the caravans.”

For a while the two women sat beside her and offered what little comfort they could until Joan said.

“I’ll have to go back inside. The Mister will be up soon and expecting his breakfast.”

Kitty walked with her to the door of the barn.

“What am I going to do with her?” She looked back to where Ruth lay.

“Keep her here until he’s gone. I’ll come back once the coast is clear and we can get her to her room. At least the Mister doesn’t know about this and that’s one thing we can be thankful for.”

“He may find out,” Kitty’s eyes were wide with fear. “She’s been sick these last few mornings.”

“No,” Joan brought a hand to her mouth to still her cry. “You don’t think…?” She left the sentence unfinished.

“I do,” Kitty felt her own eyes fill up with tears.

From inside the barn Ruth sobbed and cried out.

“I don’t want to live any more. I want to die.”

“She should be careful what she wishes for,” Joan said. “When the Mister finds out there’s going to be murder.”

Ruth’s pregnancy became impossible to disguise and by her sixth month her brother was beginning to notice that something was wrong. He teased her about growing fat, but his eyes strayed from the few morsels of food on her plate to her ashen face. Joan and Kitty stood outside the dining room door and listened as he roared with rage. “How could she bring such shame on the family?” He bellowed.

Ruth sobbed and begged him to forgive her, but he would not be placated.

“You’ll name the culprit,” John said. “And by god he’ll marry you.”

The women edged closer to the door and tried to hear Ruth’s reply, but it was obvious from what happened next that she told him the truth. There was the sound of furniture being overthrown and the door crashed open.

“I suppose you knew about this?”

He didn’t wait to hear the women’s answer, but rushed by them and out in to the yard. He returned in seconds holding a bamboo cane.

“Please, Mister,” Kitty tried to catch his arm as he passed, but he shook her aside.

He went in to the dining room where Ruth still sat in shocked silence and slammed the door. Her screams mingled with the swishing of the cane as it fell again and again until the women could bear it no longer.

“Stop,” Kitty screamed, and grabbed on to the arm welding the cane.

He was so strong he lifted her off the floor, but she held on.

“You’ll kill her and the child,” Joan said, as she helped the injured girl to her feet.

“Good, I hope she dies,” John was crying with temper. “Her and her bastard.”

He was so overcome with rage and disgust that he made no attempt to stop the women as they led his sister from the room. They took her upstairs and pulled off the torn clothes to get a better view of the damage. Ruth’s back, legs and arms were criss-crossed with the marks of the cane. In many place the skin had split and was bleeding. Joan went to the kitchen to fetch the things she needed to tend to the injuries.

“What’s going to become of me?” Ruth looked up at Kitty.

“I don’t know pet,” Kitty reached out and brushed a lock of Ruth’s sweat-soaked hair from off her forehead. “We’ll have to wait until your brother calms down.”

“Look,” Ruth lifted the blanket that the women had covered her with. “He even hit the baby.”

An angry-looking welt was raised high on Ruth’s swollen belly.

“The baby will be all right,” Kitty assured her, but she was wrong in that assumption.

John did relent in the end. After much pleading from Kitty and Joan he decided that his sister could remain in the house, but she was never to step foot outside the property again. When the child was born it was to be sent away for adoption. Ruth had no other choice than to agree to these conditions at a time when there was no outside help for women in her position. From the moment John learned about his sister’s pregnancy, he never spoke another word to her unless absolutely necessary and this would remain so up until the day he died over forty years later. From then it became a house of whispers and long, dead silences. It was worse after the birth of Eve, Ruth’s daughter. Kitty and Joan looked down at the newborn and crossed themselves with fear. It was obvious from the child’s face that something serious was wrong. They went to the Mister and begged him to get a doctor, but he refused. Still, the child lived.

“Such a strange-looking baby,” Ruth stared down at her sleeping child. “Don’t you think she looks like a fairy?”

“If you say so,” Kitty did not want to voice her opinion.

The child would remain with her mother as John realised no one would want to adopted, what he considered, a monster. He spoke to Ruth just the once on the day after Eve’s birth.

“Your baby is cursed,” he told the distressed girl. “You will be reminded every day of your sin, when you look in to her face.”

As the time passed the child’s disabilities became more obvious. She was unable to sit up unaided until she was a year old. It was later still when she took her first tentative steps on legs not designed for walking. Ruth saw none of the child’s flaws and greeted each action as any new mother would, but soon even she had to admit that there was something very wrong with her daughter. Eve’s eyes were mere slits and a large forehead dominated her little face. Her mouth was twisted so her teeth grew crooked. She dribbled when she tried to form words that never made any sense. Despite her suffering Eve was a pleasant child who thrived on the love and support of her mother and the other women. She knew nothing but love as she played around the house and the small section of garden that John made available to her. There were never any callers at the farm now as John had erected No Trespassing notices. He had also sold all of his stock, so there was no need to take on any more seasonal staff. He planted crops where the sheep had once grazed and other than the few farm hands tied to the cottages on the estate; there was no one to witness what he called his shame. Eve had no idea who he was, and other than running from him whenever he appeared, she stayed out of his way. Something primeval warned that he was a bad man. Sadly, this was true. His sister’s shame had changed him and he was bitter and spiteful. The anger he felt came to a head one particularly bad winter when the trees hung heavy with snow and the crying of the bitter north wind heralded many to their graves. Eve’s coughing echoed through the house until he was forced to shout at his sister to “keep that bastard quiet.”

Ruth sat in bed holding the child and listening to the wheezing that accompanied each gasping breath. Kitty and Joan gave what little money they had and sent for a doctor who diagnosed pneumonia. The child would need medicine and certain foods if she was to recover. Despite the cold, John had forbidden the women to light the fire in his sister’s room so the air was freezing, the bedclothes damp to the touch. This was just one of the many tortures he liked to inflict on Ruth and her child. Worried to distraction, Ruth went to him one evening as he sat beside the blazing kitchen fire. She explained her need for money and begged him to help her. Without replying John stood and went in to the room he used as an office. He returned carrying an old shoe box and sat back down beside the fire. Ruth felt her heart swell with relief when he removed the lid to expose its contents. Layer upon layer of banknotes lay inside.

“I don’t need much,” Kitty and Joan heard her say. “A few pounds will make all the difference. Just enough to buy the medicine that Eve needs.”

“Let me show you exactly what I think of you and your bastard,” John said.

Ruth watched in open-mouthed horror as he picked handfuls of the notes out of the box and threw them on the fire. The green of the pound notes, the red of the ten shilling notes were scattered in to the fire where eager fingers of flame reached out for them. She ran sobbing from the room unable to watch such an evil act, sure that because of it her daughter would die. John did not get his wish and Eve, despite his worst efforts, recovered. She lived in to her fifteenth year and during that time the women never left her side. They surrounded her with love and guarded her like feral dogs. It was because of this care that she lived as long as she did. It was obvious from her disabilities that she was not meant to reach adulthood and her passing was a gentle one. She went to sleep with the feel of her mother’s kiss on her cheek, but she never awoke. Ruth was by now in her thirties and all signs of the beauty she once was had flown. The death of her daughter aged her still as she mourned her loss for the rest of her life. Kitty and Joan paid for the small plot in the graveyard and other than Ruth; they were the only ones there to mourn a child that few knew existed.

Decades passed, seasons came and went, but everything stayed the same within the house. Joan became too old to continue with her work and went to live with her sister in the next county. The loss of her going was hard on Ruth and Kitty and they moved like silent ghosts between the kitchen and the bedrooms, the centre of their world. What money they had came from the few geese and turkeys the Mister allowed Kitty to breed in one of the outbuildings. Any leftover milk was churned to make butter that she sold when she went to market each Saturday. John no longer cared where his sister went so Ruth had free rein within the yard, but she went no further. She was terrified of the neighbours prying eyes and pitying looks.

John became ill. It started off as a cold and then, like his poor, neglected niece it turned in to something much worse.

“It’s the consumption, I’m afraid,” the doctor informed the women.

Everyone knew about the disease called Tuberculosis and the way it ravaged the sufferer’s body.

“It’s bad,” the doctor continued. “I can’t see him lasting for much longer. The only thing you can do is keep him warm and try to get him to drink plenty of fluids.”

Kitty felt her blood turn cold when she saw the way Ruth’s eyes hardened at the news.

“We’ll see to him,” she assured the doctor.

That night the women, both by now in their early sixties, sat by the fire and listened to the barking coughing overhead.

“I’ll take him up a cup of tea,” Kitty eased her way out of the chair.

“Stay there,” Ruth waved her back in to her seat. “Remember what he did when I asked him for help?”

Over the next few days Kitty tried to smuggle the odd pitcher of water in to the sick man’s room, but more often than not Ruth stopped her.

“I’ll see to him,” she told the frightened woman.

John’s bed was awash with blood. It stained his pillows and sheets and had caked on to his slivery whiskers where it lay like fire on snow.

“Will you get me a drink for god’s sake,” he rasped up at his sister.

“You want some water?” she held out the pitcher.

“Yes, please, I’m dying of thirst,” his lined tongue licked parched lips in anticipation.

“Here’s your water,” Ruth tipped the pitcher and allowed the water to cascade on to the floor.

Her brother looked up at her in confusion.

“Remember the night I came to you asking for money for my child,” her body shook with anger. “Remember what you did with the money?”

She didn’t wait for a reply, but hobbled away as fast as her aching bones would allow. By morning he was dead.

As his only surviving relative Ruth inherited the estate. Those who still worked on the farm were paid off and given the deeds to the cottages they lived in. There were sufficient funds to keep Ruth and her faithful Kitty in comfort till the end of their days and at first they enjoyed the freedom this gave them. The luxuries they had so long been denied were ordered and the wine cellar restocked. The first few months after John’s death were not the happiest that Ruth had ever known, because she would never be truly happy again, but there was a sense of peace. Until the anniversary of his death. It was winter and a fire burned brightly in Ruth’s room. Outside an angry wind screamed around the house and the first patters of snow rapped on the window pane. She was sleepy after a good dinner and a few glasses of port, when the gentle rapping on her door roused her.

“I think there’s someone downstairs,” Kitty poked her head in.

Living in such an isolated area, the terror of intruders was never far from their mind. Slipping on her dressing gown, Ruth reached for the loaded shotgun she kept under her bed.

“Stay behind me,” she whispered, as they made their way down the creaking stairs.

The hallway was dark and freezing, much colder than seemed possible. Their breaths rose in white plumes before them as they inched their way towards the light that was coming from under the kitchen door.

“Did you leave a light on?” Ruth whispered.

“No, and the fire was low, so there must be someone in there,” Kitty’s said.

Placing herself in the centre of the closed door, Ruth raised the rifle.

“Open it now,” she whispered.

Kitty pushed hard on the wood until it swung open and bounced against the wall behind it. The sound of the crash hung in the air, but did nothing to distract the intruder.

“Sweet Mother of God,” Kitty brought a trembling hand to her heart.

Ruth lowered the gun and staggered against the wall, where she stayed leaning for support. Neither woman could believe what they were witnessing. The fire was blazing as it had in the past and seated before it was the ghost of John Nesbit. His face was as young as it had been on the dreadful night and his actions unchanged as he threw handfuls of banknotes in to the leaping flames. Once again the green and red fluttered in some unholy draught before being shrivelled to ash. Seemingly pleased with his work he turned to where the old women stood and his smile was a leer of pure evil.

How long the vision lasted Kitty doesn’t remember, but it faded within seconds she imagines. I shivered and tried not to look out at the darkening sky. The pattering of rain on the window seemed amplified in the quiet of the kitchen.

“How’s that for a story?” Tom asked.

I shook my head, too overcome to speak. Kitty sipped at her whiskey before wiping a tear from her eye.

“Not done with tormenting her in life, he wouldn’t leave her alone in death,” she sighed. “Every year after that, on the anniversary of his death he comes back to haunt her. Well, not any more,” she looked again at the empty chair beside the long-dead fire.

“Why didn’t she leave?” I asked.

“She was as stubborn as he was, and it was only the one night.”

I couldn’t believe what she was saying. Only the one night!

“I used to lock myself in my room, but Ruth, she went down and faced him every time,” Kitty said.

“It’s terrible,” I said. “And in a way they were both cruel.”

“Oh, I make no excuse for Ruth, but tell me something,” Kitty leaned closer to me. “What would you be capable of if someone harmed your child?”

I knew she was right. None of us knows what we are capable of in such circumstances, but still, I like to think I’d feel some compassion.

“It’s stopped raining,” Tom looked towards the sky and small ray of sunlight trying to part the dark clouds. “We better be off. Do you want to come with us, Kitty?”

“No, I have a few things to sort out here and Timmy Rush is coming to collect me and take me to the station.”

I shook her small hand, the flesh paper thin so I felt the bones beneath.

“I hope you’ll be happy,” I said.

“I will, child,” she assured me. “Ruth left me well provided for and the sale of the land will make sure I never want for nothing.”

“What are you going to do with all the furniture?”

There were some fine antique bits and pieces lying around and it seemed a shame to let them rot.

“I’m sending the bigger pieces to auction,” Kitty said. “You’re welcome to take something as a keepsake if you like.”

“No, thank you,” I said. “I didn’t know Ruth well enough for that.”

“You’ll see to that?” Kitty nodded at the chair in the corner.

“I will indeed,” Tom assured her.

With that we left her and walked out in to the welcoming coolness of the evening breeze. The world had that fresh washed feel that it does after the rain and it was glad to be free of the cloying confines of the kitchen.

“It’s a strange old place,” Tom said, sensing my unease.

We stopped for a moment and looked back at the house. I could have been taken by its beauty, had I not known its history. It is beginning to show signs of neglect and nettles grow along the walls. Once we walked out through the gate I was aware of the silent fields surrounding us and imagined the past ghosts of grazing sheep.

“I remember I saw Ruth once,” I linked my arm through Tom’s. “She was in the shop in the village. Tell me about her?”

“No one knew her really well other than Kitty,” he said. “She seemed old before her time. I can’t say I spoke to her more than a handful of times and only then to pass the time of day. She had a nice face. It showed little of her suffering, but she had a resigned look. I imagined her as kind, I don’t know why. She appeared to be one of those women who wouldn’t dream of putting anyone to trouble on her behalf, do you know what I mean?”

“Yes, I remember her as tiny and sort of bent,” I said. “She was dressed all in black when I saw her.”

“That was the way she always dressed,” Tom said. “She never stopped mourning the death of her daughter. In later years her shoulders were slumped under the weight of her grief. It was a sad, little life.”

“What does Kitty want you to do with the chair?” I asked.

“She wants me to burn it,” he smiled. “She’s afraid that if it goes to auction it will be haunted.”

“Don’t you think that’s possible?”

“No, he’s done with tormenting her now. Well, in life that is. None of us know what happens in the next world.”

Our voices startled the birds as we walked beneath the archway of trees. They rustled the leaves and squawked their annoyance at our intrusion. The canopy provided by the trees, that I once thought pleasing now seemed to be closing in on us. The darting shapes of the birds overhead provoked anxiety rather than pleasure, and I was glad when we reached the end of the lane and heard the normal, everyday sound of traffic.

 Copyright©2012 Gemma Mawdsley

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Purgatory Part 2

Posted by Gemma Mawdsley Blog on July 13, 2012
Posted in: Can a heart be strong enough to survive the grave?, Eerie Places, Ghost, Paranormal. Tagged: Eerie Places, first hand experience, ghost, Haunted Houses, Haunted Places, Horror, paranormal, Purgatory, revenge is sweet, scary. Leave a comment

It’s strange how hauntings begin. One imagines they happen because of some dreadful, violent act, the sudden spilling of blood and taking of a life, but this is not always the case. The worst haunting are those of love turned to hate, when anger and misery eats away at the soul and strips the spirit of its most human qualities. But the young know little of such things and Kitty never imagined, as she set off that first morning, that she was about to become entwined in a nightmare from which there was no waking.

Kitty Morgan carried the small bundle that was made up of all her worldly possessions round the back of the house. Despite the warm weather she felt cold and nervous as she tapped on the door. She had just reached her sixteenth year and after much negotiation on her parents’ part, she was offered the job of live in maid at the Nesbit house. It was one of the finest in the district and she knew she was lucky to get taken on there, but this was her first time away from home and she was already missing her family. Her knock was answered by a stern-faced old woman, who stood eyeing her from head to toe.

“Well, what do you want?” She asked.

“I’m Kitty Morgan, Mam, I’m supposed to start work here today,” Kitty said.

“Ah, Mary’s girl,” the woman’s face brightened when she realised who Kitty was. “I was in service with your mother years ago. Come in girl and sit yourself down, I’m Joan by the way.”

It was a relief to find the old woman’s sour looks belied her true nature and within minutes they were chatting away like old friends. Kitty was to have a room at the top of the house and next door to Joan. It was a thrill to have a room of her own and so unlike at home where they were packed in like sardines. Once she had unpacked her few belongings Kitty went down to the kitchen.

“There’s just the two of us to run this whole place,” Joan told her. “So you’ll have your hands full fetching and carrying.”

“I’m no stranger to hard work,” Kitty assured her.

“I dare say you’re not,” Joan smiled. “Not if you’re anything like your mother.”

The hours flew by as Kitty was taught what her duties entailed. There were just two people living in the house, Joan informed her, a man she called The Mister and his young sister Ruth.

“You’re about the same age,” Joan said, opening a door on the first floor. “This is her room.”

Kitty was dazzled by what she saw. She had imagined a room such as this, but only in her dreams. A heavy wine, brocade quilt covered the bed and sunlight gleamed off the polished mahogany furniture.

“Have a look in here,” Joan whispered, opening a wardrobe.

Kitty gasped at the rainbow of coloured dresses hanging inside.

“Miss Ruth has over twenty evening dresses,” Joan stroked the rich fabrics lovingly, her own thoughts mirroring those of Kitty’s.

What they wouldn’t give to have just one of the fine dresses.

Both brother and sister were out at a local fair and wouldn’t be back until that evening. It would be Kitty’s job to help at table and she was anxious for her first glimpse of her new employers. She worked in the kitchen beside Joan for the next few hours, helping prepare the food for the evening meal. Her heart began to beat faster when she heard the sound of horse hooves on the yard outside.

“They’re back at last,” Joan’s face was flushed from the heat of the stove as she brushed a lock of hair from her face. “And about time too. The dinner would have spoiled if they’d been any longer. Run up and help Miss Ruth change,” she said to Kitty.

The hallway was silent as Kitty climbed the stairs. She tapped on the door to Ruth’s room and waited for her order to enter. The young woman sitting at the dressing table was as lovely as her surroundings.

“Hello, who are you?” Her blond curls bounced as she turned and surveyed the new arrival.

“I’m Kitty,Miss.I’m the new maid.”

“Someone my own age at last,” Ruth dazzling blue eyes filled with delight. “You have no idea how boring it’s been with only Joan to talk too. Come and help me with my hair, Kitty.”

Ruth talked non-stop as Kitty brushed and piled the hair in to order, so by the time she was finished she knew most of what there was to know about her new mistress. Later, in the dining room, she saw her new master for the first time and she was taken aback by the difference in the pair. Anyone who didn’t know them might mistake them for an unlikely married couple. John, the brother, was a big fellow and would have passed for handsome were it not for his eyes. They were small and set deep in to his face giving him a mean and watchful look. Perhaps it was this that caused the local girls to shy away or it may have been something more primeval, a sense of danger that warned of things to come. Still, he seemed content with his lot, according to Joan and the love he showered on his sister could not be faulted. Ruth was fourteen years his junior and tiny compared to her brother. Their mother died shortly after giving birth to Ruth and when their father passed away ten years later it was left to John to take the place of both parents, a job he did well and without a grumble. Kitty saw very little of him as the weeks passed. He worked on the farm most days and came in to the house only at meal times. Ruth on the other hand, became a good friend and the young girls were forever whispering and sharing secrets. Joan had to scold Kitty on numerous occasions and remind her that was there to work and was not a guest in the house. And so the months passed. Happy, carefree months filled with wonder for the young Kitty until He came. It started out innocently enough. It was lambing season and both Joan and Kitty were run off their feet providing meals for those hired on to help at that busy time. One night, as she served at table, she heard John tell his sister.

“I took on some gypsies today to help out. There’s not as many able bodied men about since the war and they seem a decent lot.”

Gypsies, the young girls stole fleeting glances at one another, how romantic.

“They’re parked in the field behind the orchard,” John continued. “There are three men, a father and two sons and a woman I take to be the mother.”

“Do they have horse drawn caravans?” Ruth asked.

She had only ever seen gypsies in books and expected them to live up to her imaginings.

“They have, but that’s no business of yours Miss,” he scowled at his sister. “You’re to keep well clear of them, understand?”

“Yes, John,” Ruth pouted. “I was only asking.”

“That’s all well and good, but I don’t want to hear stories about you hanging around there.”

“I won’t,” she winked at kitty.

The lure of the gypsy camp proved too much and later that night when John was gone to the pub, Ruth came down in to the kitchen.

“Is it all right if Kitty comes for a walk with me?” She asked Joan.

“Yes, a bit of fresh air will do her good,” Joan nodded at Kitty. “Off you go.”

The girls were soon running hand in hand across the fields and out in to the orchard. Using the trees as shields, they crept closer to the wall dividing them from the gypsies and hid behind the bushes. The air was cold and a fierce fire blazed in front of the caravans. There were two men and a woman huddled round the flames. The girls watched as a door opened in one of the caravans and a man stepped out. He was huge and the wooden steps groaned under his weight as he climbed down. His hair fell in coal black curls to his shoulders and despite his size he walked with graceful, panther-like movements towards the small group.

“Let’s go back,” Kitty urged.

She had a strange feeling in her stomach. It was unlike anything she had felt before and she longed for the safety of her room.

“No,” Ruth hissed. “I want to see his face.”

“Your brother will kill us if he finds out,” Kitty hoped this would break the spell.

“I don’t care,” Ruth said, louder than intended.

Her voice carried in the still, night air.

“What have we here?”

They looked up from their hiding place and in to the blackest eyes they had ever seen.

“I’m Ruth, from the house,” Ruth stood up, pulling Kitty with her.

“Won’t you come and join us ladies?” He waved towards the fire and his watching family.

“No, we have to go back,” Kitty said.

“We have time,” Ruth turned and glared at her.

“Let me help you,” he leaned over the low wall and scooped Ruth up in to his arms.

Her squeals of laughter echoed as he lifted her over and placed her down beside him.

“There’s a gate further down,” Kitty said, when he turned to her.

She turned and ran down the length of the orchard and by the time she got to the campfire Ruth was sitting beside the dark gypsy and gazing up in to his eyes. The family were friendly enough and at any other time Kitty would have thought the whole thing a wonderful adventure, but not now. Not when she saw the look on Ruth’s face as she stared in adoration at Rory, the man who would destroy her life. No one could have predicted the meeting would lead to a chain of events so horrifying in their cruelty that they would linger on for decades and reach with searching fingers from the silence of the grave.

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