Welcome to WEP's Blogfest OCTOBER [=Write-Edit-Publish, formerly 'Romantic Friday Writers'] Challenge for Wednesday 30 October 2013 - 'Haunting'
Here's my text:
The Haunting
Maria
Blixt awoke suddenly, frightened in the middle of the night. She did not know
what had woke her. Was it a loud noise? She felt for the light-switch to turn on
the lamp by her bed. No, nothing was disturbed in her bedroom. Everything
looked as it did when she had gone to bed several hours before.
She
lay back in bed, turned off the lamp and closed her eyes. Had she locked the
door? Yes, of course she had. It was almost Halloween, maybe she was being haunted. What a silly thought! She was no
gullible child anymore, scared of ghost stories that her older brother told her
when they were alone waiting for their parents to come home. No, Maria was a
rational adult and not a frightened little girl running to her mother’s bed after
dreaming nightmares. No, Maria knew that there were no such things as ghosts,
or she had stopped believing in them a long time ago.
Time
is such a strange thing. You live your life and time seems to go slowly when
you are young. But then, somewhere in the middle, things start moving quickly and
suddenly you are not so young anymore. What seems like yesterday, is actually
ten, twenty, thirty or forty years ago.
And as time passes, people die; people you know and love. Maria started
counting all of the people she had known and loved, or at least liked, when she
was a child; all these warm-hearted people who were kind to her; who cared for
her; were no longer living. Ghosts. Are they ghosts now?
She
thought about various aunts and uncles and her grandparents, and even her own parents,
all of whom she missed and wondered where they were now. Have they just
evaporated? Why so many gone? She did not live in a war-torn country; most of
them died of natural causes, and did so when they were quite old. So this must be normal, Maria thought. I am the one who has grown old.
Wouldn’t
it be nice if some of these lovely people could come back to visit, thought Maria, but then shunned
the thought and immediately tried thinking about anything else. Imagine if they returned as ghosts just to
visit me? But what would she say to her grandfather, if he returned for a
visit? Or would he even recognise her? He passed away when she was still a
child. Would he understand that this old woman was once the small child who
looked up to him? Would he understand this and still love her? Or her father? Would
he forgive her for not living exactly the life that he dreamed of for her? Can ghosts
forgive? Can we, the living, forgive?
Maria
did not like where her thoughts were leading her. What was it her father taught
her about how to avoid sleepless nights? In his youth, when he was in the army in
the War, sleeping in damp tents in foreign countries, with bombs flying overhead,
he would just ignore the sounds, close his eyes, and sleep. It was as if he had pulled down a shade over a window. 'Pull the shade down!' he would say. There was nothing they could do if
one of the bombs dropped on their tent. So he would try to sleep and hope for
the best. And by some miracle he did survive the war.
So why am I such a coward? thought Maria, There are no bombs dropping here. But I'll try Daddy's method and just pull down the shade...
After
a time, Maria stop thinking about ghosts, and was almost asleep again, when the
door handle moved. Maria opened her eyes wide.
’What
was that?’
As
the door handle jerked and snapped, Maria jumped out of bed and walked to the
door, watching closely how the door handle turned again and the door was pushed
ajar.
Maria
froze with fear.
But
in the ray of light coming from the hallway, she could see the small
four-legged figure of her own tabby tom, Sammy.
’Oh,
Sammy! You nearly scared the daylights out of me!’ said Maria out loud to the seven-kilo
ginger feline, who looked up at her and replied with a short yap as a greeting.
’Do
you believe in cat-ghosts? I mean, do you have nightmares about cat-ghosts?’ asked Maria scooping up Sammy and carrying him with
her back to bed.
Sammy
lay beside Maria and purred. Both Maria and Sammy were soon sound asleep.
Word count: 759 (NCCO)
Copyright 2013 Anna Christina Wigren Nordeman
P.S.
After reading Yolanda Renee's comment, I feel the need to explain some of the background to this story.
Yes, this story is fictional. I am not Maria Blixt, but I have lent her my own father's story. My dear sweet father, who passed away in July of 2006, had been in the U.S. army during World War II. He was drafted, but because he had a college education, he could become an officer, which probably helped him survive. He was sent to England and then Belgium and Northern France. He landed in Normandy in a troop transport boat, but thankfully was not among the first who landed. As quartermaster it was his responsibility to see that his men had the supplies that they needed. And this could be anything from soap to firewood.
Yes, this story is fictional. I am not Maria Blixt, but I have lent her my own father's story. My dear sweet father, who passed away in July of 2006, had been in the U.S. army during World War II. He was drafted, but because he had a college education, he could become an officer, which probably helped him survive. He was sent to England and then Belgium and Northern France. He landed in Normandy in a troop transport boat, but thankfully was not among the first who landed. As quartermaster it was his responsibility to see that his men had the supplies that they needed. And this could be anything from soap to firewood.
On one occasion he and his driver were sent off to purchase something from the local people. This was either in France or in French-speaking Belgium. He was chosen to do this because he was the only one who had studied French in college and was fluent enough to communicate with the locals.
When he and his chauffeur returned, no one was there. Something had happened while they were away getting supplies. A big surge from the German army, most likely. There was just a note saying where they were to go. He never found out if everyone was killed or taken prisoner or just scattered with the wind.
My father never talked about his experiences of the war. It was toward the end of his life that I started asking him questions, but, alas, he had forgotten so much. There was not much he could tell. But he never forgot the fear of sleeping in a tent in Northern France and listening to bombs being dropped overhead. It was unnerving and different people reacted differently to this kind of pressure. My father stopped smoking. He gave it up. Which was a good thing in the long run. But the dampness and cold left him with arthritis and back problems to the end of his days.
He never complained. He said once to me that he was just so happy to be able to come home. Not everyone got to do that.
So this is one of two true stories that have inspired my short story. The other true story is about a cat named Peep, who was so tiny and hungry at birth, on April 5th 2011, that he peeped after food all the time.
One of Peep's siblings was stillborn. I did not want Peep to die too, so I kept feeding him special kitten-milk, in case his mother did not feed him enough. I fed him until he started growing normally and he became a pretty big cat. But the name Peep stuck.
Peep as an adult |
I was worried that Peep may have suffered mental damage due to his early malnutrition. But it turned out that he became a very clever and inventive cat. He learned how to jump up and pull a door handle and then, with the help of his sister, Mathilda, push the door open. The cats worked together! I have seen him do it, so I know how he did it. I had to use a strap to bind the door shut when I wasn't at home, if I did not want the cats to invade my workroom and do mischief there.
The first time I discovered that Peep could open doors was very spooky. It was late at night, well after midnight. I knew that the children were not at home. He opened the door and my heart skipped a beat. I thought I was going to see a ghost! It really scared me.
Peep is first cat on the left |
Peep does not live with me anymore. He is the only one of his mother's kittens that my former husband let move to the farm, a paradise for cats. He can run free outside and climb trees and hunt mice and dream about catching birds.
For my story, I used my ginger boy cat, Lars, to be the door-opener. In reality, none of my remaining cats opens doors anymore. (To my great relief. It makes life easier if they don't.)
For those of you who live with round door knobs, the Swedish or European door handles are what make this story possible. Any dog or larger cat can learn to jump up and hang on the handle and then push with their hind legs open the door and get into a room.
I am going to take a photo of a door handle to show this. But right now I need to take a break.
Best wishes,
Anna
Thursday 31st October 2013
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Today is November first, my father's birthday. He would have been 96 years old today. (Happy Birthday, Daddy! I miss you.) This is what my father looked like when I was in my teens:
Look, I had braces! |
I have received several comments about the door handle or latch. Please look at this photo and tell me what this door-opener is called.
Some of you, who live with round door knobs that require some effort to open with a hand with an opposing thumb, have mentioned a scene from a movie about dinosaurs coming back to life and invading a room thanks to these easy door-openers.
Come on folks, Jurassic Park is fiction! Let's get back to reality! There are times and situations when these door handles are a godsend. There is a wonderful description in Dean Koontz' novel Midnight, about one of the characters' dog who can open these specially installed latch-door handles. This man is a Vietnam-vet and he is paralyzed from the neck or chest or waist down. I think he can only use his left hand. But thanks to this amazing dog, he can live alone in his house. Dean Koontz has written in an afterword that this part of his fictional tale is true and even included an address for readers to send donations to this worthy cause of training dogs who can help people with handicaps.
I can't find my copy of Midnight, so I can't tell you exactly what page this is on. I would just like to defend door handles. They are also easier for people who don't have a helping dog, but who have, for example, arthritic hands and have difficulty grasping and turning a round knob.
Geographically, I am curious as to how widespread door knobs are, and what would you call these door handles that Nancy calls latches? What do your door openers look like where you live?
Best wishes again,
Anna
November 1, 2013
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Best wishes,
Anna
First Commenter:
Yolanda Renee
of
Defending the Pen