Tag: John Riley

No. 31

part one by John Riley

The Owners

IN THE QUIET SUBURBAN neighbourhood of Slaughter Bridge, Number 31 Melrose Terrace stood as a symbol of elegance and pride. Mr and Mrs Garnett had bought the terraced house with the proceeds from selling their old family home three years ago. They saw the new place as their sought-after retirement bolt-hole by the sea. The home, beautifully maintained by the previous owners, needed one final job. The Garnetts wanted the front face sand-blasted and had it completed two years ago. However, what remained now was a burnt and scorched facade, tarnishing their beloved residence. The Owners never wanted to move out. The house looked inhabitable, and the black soot staining the front face looked like a shrouded phantom. 

 

The Fireman

According to Fire Marshal J T Smith, the fire started upstairs, confirmed in a report with his signature underlined twice. It started from a faulty old electric blanket that caused the damage.

When the local news team interviewed him outside Melrose Terrace, J T Smith towered above the reporter, spreading his chest of service ribbons, making sure the camera caught them in shot.

What had happened here? Well, he had seen it over 35 years in the fire service. These old blankets readily burst into flames if not looked after and inspected. He said it as if directly issuing a warning you could be next in that Kitchener poster way. They are the fucking bane of my life.

He did not realise the microphone was still live.

 

The Builder

Now, with the insurance people, they wanted damage to the upstairs windows boarded with OSB, and builder Bill Smith was cheaper than the other two quotes and got the job. A lot of his work came from insurance claims. He knew these jobs tied him over in leaner times of the year, keeping his small local business alive.

To get the job done, he enlisted the help of Josh Martin, a labourer, uninterested in the job and only there to fulfil his dole requirements. Josh, more times than not, would have his hands stuffed into his ripped jean pockets while Bill, yet again, repeated how to hold the hammer towards the end and not the tippy-tappy part down the neck. 

Bill struck a deal with the local authorities to provide training for the long-term unemployed. He got money for them, enough to help the cash flow. But he had one condition – he did not want to waste his shit on individuals selling off the tools and supplies he provided them. He had been shat on in the past and hear this, the point pressed home, willing to take any more chances. Josh is on probation according to Bill. Never mind those mard-arses in the training centre, bleating how good he is as a provider. All they wanted was positive outcomes. They repeated it all the time to him. This is more about them getting the dosh for finding a placement more likely. 

 

The Neighbour

“There’s no sign of those damn sheets being replaced. They are a right eye-sore.” Mr Broadbent muttered, nursing a pint at the local pub. His drinking mates nodded sympathetically, knowing all too well the frustration of him banging on about it. He would repeat himself when back home. Mrs Broadbent, a woman of few words and patience that had worn thin, listened to her husband complaining with a forced smile and mentally counted to ten.

Days after the fire, passersby started noticing the peculiar soot-stained phantom shape on the house. It carried a haunting in the minds of those seeing it. Despite its abandonment, some thought the owners still lived there. A few had seen someone caught looking out through the downstairs bay. A pale-looking woman folding a tea towel. Yet, go around the back, and the home is not so bad. It might be that the owners can live in it.

Mr Broadbent, on the other hand, would beg to differ about damage. His yard faces the back of number 31, and the overspill of foam and water from the fire tender killed off his veg patch.

Mrs Broadbent did find a moment to tell the other neighbours when her husband went out to the Dog and Gun. It ended up the only time she could update her friends when he went out. She put Linda right in case she could get her stuff elsewhere. Master has no interest in the veg plot anymore. So, no rhubarb this year.

 

The House

The house happens to be the gable end of a short row. 33 and 35, and then a narrow alley. Then, another three houses continue the row. Opposite the terrace is a cemetery park that once had tended gardens. Over the years, cutbacks had left the council short on gardeners to maintain it. It became a draw for the lost and dispossessed at night and during the day, a communal dog toilet.

The townsfolk of Slaughter Bridge had grown accustomed to the peculiarities of number 31 on Melrose Street. There is something eerie about that house. Something that gave them an uneasy feeling. But not just the house, with the wreaths and bunches of wilted flowers appearing at the front gate. Despite their strange existence, these floral arrangements went largely unnoticed. People hurriedly passed as they took a shortcut onto Harbour Road.

 

Inside No 31

She is folding a hand towel and looking out of the window.

“I wonder who leaves the flowers? Never a card. They must spend a fortune.”

She looks over at him. No reply other than a grunt. Mr Garnett somewhere else and lost in thought, staring at the burnt-out hearth.

Mrs Garnett pulls that face and sighs. She sits on a badly damaged dining chair. She tried to make conversation to fill the uncomfortable silence.

Not that any row is going on between them, more like they are both waiting or perhaps thinking about their lucky escape from a fatality. It has left them stunned and lingering in this limbo for weeks.

Mr Garnett sometimes turns his head to look at her as if ready to say something.

Mrs Garnett speaks.

“I am sure I hear lots of different voices coming from next door when I listen to the wall.” She says, spoken with that shrill voice of hers. “I never see anybody go in and out.” She changes tack. “The flowers are beautiful, they might not last though. Turn as quick as the moon changes face.”

They sit at different ends of the room. The place is worst for wear because of fire damage and everything dripping wet damp from the hosing.

Mrs Garnett tries to fill the void with more conversation. She might as well be talking to herself, but bless Mr Garnett, still probably in shock. They have lived in this house for just 3 years, till Death does us part…

Mrs Garnett hears a familiar noise. She listens and is not keen on answering. She tries to think of something else.

The latest flowers she took in quickly and also retrieved the card. That proved a first. She wanted to keep them from that stranger. That way, he had no excuse to come and enquire about them. Another thing, she no longer had her glasses to know who they were from because they had melted in the fire.

“I can’t say I’ve seen the stranger next but one? I wonder if they rent the house? I wonder if they hear those different voices through the wall?”

She tried to read the card, holding it at a distance before making out the words. She read it aloud. Mr Garnett looked worryingly at her.

To Mr and Mrs Garnett – forever in our hearts – Rest in Peace – All at No. 66.

You could say something dropped after all this time about what happens next and arriving at a point when they know beyond the moment. It became the first thing to block out when it had happened.

A knock on the front door startled them both.

Nervous and flashing an anxious look at one another, they clasped hands and shuffled along to see who waited at the door.

Mrs Garnett thought the shadow beyond the glass pane could be the stranger from the house a few doors down.

They looked again at each other, and Mr Garnett nodded.

The first thing they saw at the feet of the stranger – two large carpetbags, and they both thought the same thought he had come to collect…

 

Outside No 31

Outside, the soot-stained wall didn’t so much resemble a ghostly phantom anymore. The staining looked to be fading. Bits of it had started to wash away in the gentle rain shower.

 

next part two

The Ghostly World Fictional Ghost Stories

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CRAFTED MINIATURE eBOOK STORIES – ONE SITTING – SHORT READ STORIES

 

Splinters from the Source

…from a vision and a memory allowed…

…My thanks to Mr Jess Header for his patience and time…

 

Splinters from the Source by John Riley

IT IS AN ESTABLISHMENT ROOTED at the corner of crossroads called The Halfway House and built of hard stone set down upon the earth centuries ago.

A place where lost souls frequent and drown their sorrows with half-empty glasses. Upon the tabletop, the news is a familiar headline and destined for chip papers tomorrow.

Two gather, huddled around and bent over like hags staring into the abyss.

One has a question while the room shadows grow darker around the edge. Might a light extinguished? Or do you not notice the night creeps closer?

What can we remember? Not much, if anything at all. Let me say my friend, you are a good listener.

Remember the wailing banshee that sings out in minor key laments? A sad refrain atop the gates where solemn processions pass that parade of lost souls, and the truth is, my friend, we should have endured it to the end.

I’ve still one more round, even though last orders called again, and back there, the night holds onto such strange things.

Deciding there would be no more tomorrows, a time when downed a glass full of sorrows, sang a little rhyme mother taught as a babe to lay down to die. But, in the blinking of an eye, returning on a road straight to hell.

I guess I’m trying to help you in some small way. You’ve forgotten what you know and what came before, friend. I’m telling you, fella, you’re familiar, a little deja vu, see, the same old soul just wearing a different overcoat.

Stay a little while, take one more for the road and trust me, see it out, live for a new tomorrow, or it’ll be my round again and in the company of another. Are we the same or no different?

-end-

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The Storm Ghosts

We present to you the following diary entry. This handwritten piece, found with a bundle of other notes, was chosen for inclusion.

Among other antique objects was a wax cylinder, suitable for a headphonogram machine presently undergoing repair work.

The Storm Ghosts

DO NOT JUDGE ME MORE THAN A fellow man who expresses his labour through hard sweat and brawn. Would such a man ever face the eternal battle I have fought each day? Would I have followed my kin than answer the call___ Why have you abandoned me?

Haunt me if you must, for your presence terrifies me while lurking in dark shadows. Can you not grant me mercy from all I see with your eyes? What more must I endure when I see what you see? Do you not observe that I wander far from those I have abandoned? I have become a hermit, complete with a lantern, held high, searching in more ways than you know for the light.

To whom it may concern, I have little time to write a warning for those sceptical as I was. Much should be learnt from ancient tales expressed in romantic prose, for I did not take heed of the duality of nature. Do not dismiss these words, for they may protect you should you come by a fate witnessed by this writer.

Heed the warning these ancient signs foretell, for it is the hour.

Allow me, good people, an audience with you. I speak to you in all hope that you may save yourselves. In days approaching, they will enter from violent storms and electrical disturbances beyond what you have witnessed before; they will materialise from a supernatural vortex.

At the fading of the light, the drawing of a heavy grey veil darkens shadows and snuffs out the light. They will come. I plead with you all that this is no ramblings of a madman. I pray none of you are damned through ignorance. Please, I implore you and all that will hear my message. Understand and do not dismiss my words.

As they come closer, their growing intense presence is felt within the closeness and stillness of a charged night. Be cautious when a thunderstorm gathers across the land, its deep subliminal vibrations shaking our inner core. For it will do. I know it will.

All places on land succumb. Know this. One and all are vulnerable to a weakening of their vibration. Fear grows ignited by the lightning, the boom of thunder, and the roar of a wild wind.

Heed the warning that such a night is at its height from fear, brought to the forefront of the minds of mortals.

People do not seek out spectral forms. For they will seek you always. Such is the case when imagination gets the better of you when fear overwhelms all rationale.

Be mindful of the storm ghosts, fated creatures appearing suddenly in the quickness of a lightning flash. They all stand ready, illuminated, wide-eyed, drawn, gaping mouths dropped open.

Know their immediate appearance when the lights flicker. And, in a darkened room and closed eye, when a sudden flash of light flashes on and off, they are now here.

The lost crew from storm sunken sea ships, phantoms washed up by raging storms revisiting old haunts.

Know one thing to see one is to carry its haunting. It remains an entity attachment, seeking forever to prolong its fear so that it may exist alongside you.

Know this as well, for although touched by the fearful haunting, its presence within you awakens awareness and heightened senses, part of the realm beyond the veil of death.

If you experience a strange insight, wakefulness beyond the physical realm, ask yourself, would you seek help and return to a state you would describe as blindness…

 

Typed from original handwritten diary entry.

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A Haunting Curiosity

by John Riley

WHEN CEO JESS HEADER started his walk of shame the length of HypnoTech club lounge, he did so knowing sixty invited guests heard the foul-mouth drunken rant from his wife, Linda. Spelt out loud and clear over the PA system. She let the world and its wife know everything.

She’d timed that embarrassment just when he stood at the wrong end of the room to stop her. Damn it! Jess had let his guard down, making small talk with Miles Platting, he wasn’t expecting to see here today. So, two surprises. Should he expect a third? These things come in threes?

Why for Christ’s sake didn’t Dave on the desk mute the mic? Bloody useless. Then again, he be no match for Linda bulldozing across the dias to snatch the microphone. Dave stood there red-faced, gesturing about what choice did he have.

Jess couldn’t get out of the room quick enough. She’d not only humiliated him but also embarrassed herself.

He somehow knew today would end up like this. He just knew it. Because company duty had brought them together. An awards ceremony acknowledging the great and good. You might as well have planted a bomb to go off. For that is more-or-less what the organisers had arranged.

Cometh the hour Linda exploded on the microphone, a megaton drop from up high.

Jess reeling and out of his mind heading for his car. His thoughts homing in on Linda’s brother, Clive, that cretin. He bloody well knew what was going to happen.

Clive on to it the moment Linda let rip. Him reckoned the rant was toe-curling misery and something shareable. The room had filled with an awkward silence. But not the socials, the row captured and uploaded before Jess had walked the room length.

Linda swung around.
“Here, get that down your neck.”
Lou offered another glass of wine.
Linda tottered back, dropping on the seat and glaring to the exit.

Meanwhile Dave tried to rescue the evening with a joke that fell flat. Made worse with that low murmering from an audience rejecting his attempt. Anyone else would have wanted  to crawl away unseen, not Dave.

Linda wallowed in self-pity. How had the pair of them endured thirty years of marriage together? Every day row after row. She said he started them, and he claimed her mental illness needed treatment over some past trauma coming to the surface. Like it was always her fault.

But, and the real surprise, they have a son, not at home but living somewhere. And another bone to chew on for Jess sending bank transfers like she had some goddamn money tree.

Linda stayed in her silence as the others picked up the laughter. Her face set long. She detached from all that was going on. She resents being here. Just then, Beth laughed at some poor joke from Clive. Linda looked on, like silently questioning Clive.

“Well, you didn’t hold back, I’ll say that for you.” Lou said.
“Said what needed to be said.” Linda still staring beyond. “The only time I’d get an audience for them to know what he is.”
“Yeah.” Lou sighed, taking the drink.

It was seeing Marlene entering the club when Linda knew something was wrong. Marlene looked flustered, walking with tight little steps against the wrap of her dress. She came towards her, face red and puffing.

“It’s Jess, Linda. He fell getting into his car. He’s unconscious. Pete called for an ambulance. I think you better come outside.”

Jess lay flat out on the gravel when Linda saw him.

A small group from the party had gathered around Jess, and they parted to let her through. George, a family friend, had just driven over to join them at the function. He pushed through, panting like he ready to collapse and join Jess laid out by his side. He got close to Linda, supporting her arm and lowered themselves beside Jess.

June and Kay noticed George. They clocked his lingering grip around Linda’s waist.

“Jess, you could have waited while we got home.” Linda choked, stroking his forehead – he felt so cold.
“Where’s the ambulance, George?” Linda asked, worried.

****

Jess had time alone to reflect in his hospital bed before Linda arrived. When she did, it only took four minutes to start hostilities.
“You’ve made some big mistakes. The deals you’ve thrown away.”
And so it starts, thought Jess. He stared way ahead at some distant spot.
“You’ve made a right old mess of things now.” She pulled that face.
“How did you even begin to think I wouldn’t know?” She pointed the rolled-up magazine she came in with at him.
She drew into herself all tense.
“Marlene naively thinks it’s your illness.” Linda mocked her faux concern through clenched teeth.
Jess said nothing except the heart monitor bleeps began to speed up.

Well, pill-popping Jess Header had made mistakes in his long life. Lost many deals towards the end, massive ones as well. And yes, made a right old mess of things. You could say the cancer affected his pickled brain.
Not the reason, thinks Linda.
“He doesn’t try to think! He’s just lazy! Doesn’t try. Won’t try!”
Jess, returning fire, hammering home his point. “Show me a person who hasn’t made mistakes!”
“Woman! You don’t stop! You’ve no room to talk. Christ! You throw money away on rubbish…never worn.”
“Well that’s because you never take me anywhere.”
“I do, but you become an embrassement. Do you ever realise how much you put away. Eh? Do you? Same old…same old…Hell, you might say some mistakes shouldn’t have been born! Know what I’m saying..! Eh..! You hear me? You’re not listening now, are you? Have you lost it?”
They both clock the bleeping heart rate monitor, which doesn’t stop them.
“All those pills you’ve taken!” Linda vents. “Vitamins, a load of eyewash. You don’t know what you’ve taken, and all those blue ones you’ve necked. I didn’t know where to put my face at the Mayor’s ball. You’d look like you’d grown another leg sticking out like it did entering the room before you did!”

A silence lingered. No winners yet, and seconds out for round two.

Well, believe it or not, Jess Header has the time, for the moment, to reflect on his mistakes.

He’s old enough to have seen many enemies meet their maker and answer for their crimes. Not Jess, well not yet, because he worked out something the other night, and knowing what he knows now, reckon he’s stumbled on something while slowly dying in his hospital bed.

The point is he’s been trying to contact his younger hedonistic self through dreams.

He’s convinced we’re not to know by the powers that each one of us can alter our timeline. He’s found information that his younger self could benefit from knowing.

“Forearmed is forewarned,” as if the tap to the nose says, I know a secret that you don’t.

Linda sighed, wrapping her arms and legs tightly, pulling that face again. Neither spoke.

He isn’t going public with this knowledge, no way, any person trying to put forward such a revelation would look like a buffoon, and experience can be a cruel teacher, thought Jess.

He has no friends anymore, something of a loose cannon, especially when not taking the red pills. Even George had stopped visiting.

Maybe it was the length of silence when the mood changed. Just for a second or so, something altered. Jess reached out.

“We should never have met, eh never had clapped eyes on each other.”
She looked at him and softened her gaze at the sudden change in tone.

She sat with him most days, observing the frustrations. He slept more often. The doctors blamed the disease. Linda felt the loss without a fight to pick with him. He looked weaker. She sat with him, each time aware of how lonely her life had become.

Jess slept, like he wanted it to be encouraged and became frustrated when it wasn’t happening. He’d tried to explain something, but Linda thought it ramblings. For Jess, in his dreams, he tried to make his headstrong younger self understand to avert his present fate.

He woke, like yanked out. Another thought rushed in. He needed them to understand, and he needed to be heard.

Jess had got it in his head that the doctors were thinking of changing his medication. He’s getting overly possessive, telling them to leave his goddamn pills alone and him wanting to sleep all the time. It was his only chance to change things for the better. He just needed a few more dreams, which are crucial for his life and that of another. She didn’t know it but was dependent on him getting it right.

-end-

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