I had begun seeing shadows. Nothing definite; nothing that I could categorically state was 'something', although each sighting was accompanied by a general feeling of ill-ease that left me wondering if I had imagined everything in the first place.
The shadows were confined, at first, to the periphery. I would catch sight of 'it', something, someone glancing off - against - the edge of my field of vision and that was all there was to it. I could never hold these anomalies fully in my line of sight. I was unable to focus fully on them... Try as I might they vanished, or perhaps... I began to question if they were never really there at all...
I should have paid closer attention perhaps, but in the run-up to Christmas amidst all my other business commitments I was happier to concentrate on getting the job done and dusted before both the deadline and the fast approaching Christmas holiday close-down.
The house clearance would pay well, provided I could finish all my chores on schedule. The list might have seemed endless, but in reality was a piece of cake to someone like myself who managed that kind of extreme removal on a semi-permanent basis.
Should I have been concerned about the shadows? Why should I have been when there were much more pressing matters to attend to... Like where I was going to dispose of all the old, 'unfashionable' brown furniture which was a feature of virtually every one of the houses' nine rooms? Like why the living room - the one that connected the kitchen and the lounge - was so cold all of the time?
"It's Winter, what can I say?" The estate agent attempted to placate me. The other rooms in the house were very warm, to the point where I found it uncomfortable to work in them in anything heavier than a T-shirt. Not the living room though. That was like an ice box.
"Just make sure it is clear of furniture and everything else by the 20th of December. We are going to list the property on the 27th and I expect it to be on the market for no more than two days. I want this pile sold by New Years Day, so I am counting on you to do a good job," he stressed.
It was unnecessary. I always did a good job. That was why I didn't need to advertise anymore. It was all word of mouth and repeat business. I was on the books of every estate agent in the city. Business was booming.
I was curious.
"What happened to the previous owners?" I enquired.
"Owner." He corrected me. "An old girl. Lived on her own after her husband died. No family to speak of; at least - no family you would want to speak of - a distant cousin, inherited everything. Our client now. A very lucky beneficiary - the place is worth a hell of a lot of money."
I could tell. The house was stuffed with treasures. The 'unfashionable brown furniture', for example, was Sheraton - not the mass-produced early 20th Century revivalist reproductions - but genuine Sheraton. That kind of furniture was seriously valuable to the right person. I wasn't that kind of person myself, however, I had several customers who were.
It wasn't just the furniture either. The domain was rammed with fine quality porcelain and ceramics, glass, paintings, silver and jewellery. It lay where I imagined it had perhaps always lain, or at least had laid for quite some time. It appeared now to be unappreciated, unwanted and unloved; although I was sure it hadn't always been that way.
The contents spoke of happier times, more opulent times where wealth and it's trappings had been accepted and assimilated into the very fabric of the building; had become part of the lives of those who once lived there. Like the old girl.
"Alice Freemantle. Born, lived, died here. She was married but never had children. The client says she died of a broken heart after her old man passed away."
"Where?"
As I said, I was curious.
"Right there, in the living room. One of the home helps found her in the armchair. Thought she was asleep at first, apparently, but she had been dead for about two days. She was clutching a photograph of her husband in one of her hands. I guess she just slipped away in the chair, in her sleep."
I made a mental note to dispose of the armchair. I never found the photograph; I figured they must have buried her with it, or burned it with her.
The deadline gave me enough time to complete the task to an expected standard, although was a lot to do on my own. Dennis, my assistant was away with his family, skiing, which meant, seeing as I trusted so few people, that I had to do the bulk of the emptying, cleaning and disposal on my own.
I cleared the bedrooms first, then the huge bathroom. All the linen and clothing went to a local drop-in centre. The suites of furniture - identical in each boudoir - comprising of matching 'his' and 'her' wardrobes, dressing table, night stand, bedside cupboards and chest of drawers - went straight to auction. I estimated their value to be around four or five hundred per set.
The jewellery and personal effects went home with me so that I could sort and evaluate them at a later date, at my leisure. I already knew that my haul would put me in the enviable position of not needing to work again for several months. As I say, the house was a gold mine.
After the bedrooms I moved on to other rooms in the house and it wasn't long before I had the job well under control, with the exception of one room.
It was because of the temperature of the room, I initially convinced myself, that I avoided working in the living room. However as the job neared completion I was aware there were other reasons that had forced me to ignore it for almost the entire time I had been working there; ones which I simply wanted to disregard.
The first time I saw it - them - I must admit it startled me. I was carrying a box of bric-a-brac through the room to my van parked on the drive when I caught something out of the corner of my eye. It was a shape, soft and pale coloured, low and moving at speed to my right.
I must admit it caused me to catch my breath and stop dead still in the centre of the room. My breath, when it eventually escaped from my open mouth, condensed into a grey plume, rising up into the frigid air and it was that, I convinced myself, I had seen. That thought allowed me to continue, but it was not long before I realised my original assessment of the phenomena was incorrect.
Making coffee in the kitchen the following day, I saw a nebulous shape streak past the open doorframe in the living room. Again, it was nothing definite, yet I was certain what I had seen was human.
I immediately checked the front and back doors in case some inquisitive passer-by, or opportunistic thief, had wandered into the house to check on what was inside or what I was doing there; both were locked. Following up on my hunch, I then checked the entire house from top to bottom, room by room. I was entirely alone.
It unsettled me. Working alone has it benefits, though I generally preferred to get the job done as quickly as possible and move on to the next assignment. Not having Dennis with me, slowed me down, but more than that, it allowed me to dwell unnaturally long on stuff that had begun to to make me feel uneasy around the house.
Chimeric thought took over. I pondered on possibilities, fanciful and ridiculous. I actually considered the possibility of the spirit of Alice still being with me, trapped in the house. It's what happens when there are unexplainable occurrences that you are unable to discuss logically with another level-headed human being. I began whistling to keep myself company.
Had everything stayed the same I may have even shrugged it all off after a few days as nothing more than fantasies created by my overactive imagination, and eventually forgotten the whole episode. However, on the final day something happened that led me to consider, for the first time in my life, the possibility of supernatural occurrence.
It was the 19th of December, the last day before the deadline I'd given to have the house cleared. Despite my best intentions it had become obvious that I would not be able to clear the remnants of the furniture on my own. In particular I knew I would need help to lift and load a particularly large, heavy and cumbersome aubrey located in the living room. That was why I enlisted the help of Matthew.
We had worked together a few times before and apart from his volatile temper, when things went awry, he was perfectly suited to the house clearance business. He had his own van, he was built like a power-lifter and most importantly, he was completely honest. I trusted him implicitly and could rely on him to work alone at packing smalls without ever worrying if he had taken a fancy to anything I might have missed. After Dennis, he was the only person I could have ever considered employing.
It was sad that I could not use him more often and I told him so, but he was grateful for the opportunity and the chance to make a few extra pounds just before Christmas. The other thing about Matthew that made working with him a pleasure was, that apart from when his anger got the better of him, he always seemed to be happy. It made any job seem like so much less of a chore with his buoyant cheerfulness never too far away.
After arriving early to give us plenty of time in case of any unforeseen problems, I unlocked the house and went straight to the kitchen to make us both a cup of tea. Matthew sat at the table. I had just put the kettle on, when there was a knock at the door. I wasn't expecting any visitors and so was a little curious as to who might be outside at such an early hour. It was one of the neighbours, a dour red-faced woman who was, apparently, 'unimpressed' with the manner in which I had kept her and her husband awake the previous evening.
That was perplexing. I hadn't been at the house the previous evening. I'd finished working there at three in the afternoon.
"Impossible!" She snorted. "Who else could it have been? Turning all the lights in the house on and off all night."
I was genuinely puzzled. Perhaps it was the estate agent, I ventured, checking on the progress of the clearance.
She was having none of it. She folded her arms across her chest and warned me that if it happened again she would call the anti-social behaviour hotline and let them or the police deal with it. I tried to reassure her that I hoped to be finished by 4pm at the very latest, but her blood was up. She warned me again and strode off down the drive without looking back.
"Who was that?" Matthew inquired when I returned to the kitchen.
I told him and he shrugged. It transpired, hearing raised voices, that he thought it might have been the agent reiterating the importance of clearing the house on time. He was unconcerned as soon as he learned it was nothing more ominous than a nosey neighbour. So, with that behind us we drank our tea and started to work.
We worked solidly for more than four hours, humping and lifting, packing the remainder of the small - mainly worthless items, such as pegs and pens and keys - into boxes. I remember we stopped around 10.30am for a cup of coffee and carried on. Whilst Matthew was with me I saw nothing out of the ordinary. It appeared that the peripheral shadows preferred solitary visitors to the house, another indication that the whole idea was fanciful.
Once everything was stowed and loaded we commenced a sweep of the house just to make sure that we hadn't missed anything. I believe we had been very thorough. We emptied the kitchen and filled the bin outside the back door with the mugs we had utilised and any others we hadn't. The coffee, the tea bags, the half-empty bag of sugar and tub of powdered milk all went in with the rubbish. As I said, we were very thorough.
Yet, it appeared that we had overlooked one thing. We were securing the items in the back of the van, ready for transit when Matthew remembered that he had put his jacket down in one of the bedrooms. I continued with the task while he went back inside to retrieve his clothing. He appeared a couple of moments later, with something in his hands.
"You've forgotten something." He said as we walked towards the van. He was carrying a brass cornered writing-slope, a key protruding proudly from the lock.
Impossible I thought. Between the pair of us we had scoured the house from top to bottom. There was nothing, not even a scrap of paper left in there. Where had he found it?
"Your nosey neighbour from this morning has just given it to me."
It didn't seem likely. She hadn't passed me on the drive. I glanced at the houses on both sides, hoping to see her returning to one of them. I didn't. I wondered if perhaps there was a short-cut around the back of the property adjoining the houses.
"She gave me a start, to be honest. I walked into the living room and she just was standing there."
I suddenly felt the hairs on the back of my neck rise. I took the box from him and asked if she had said anything.
"She just said, 'make sure you take this' and handed me the box."
I must have looked ill because Matthew asked me if I was O.K. I felt sick.
I put the box on the tail-lift of his van and slowly opened the lid. Inside was a packet of neatly addressed envelopes all tied together with a length of thin red silk cord. Each letter bore the name Alice and some were prefixed with the endearments 'darling', 'my lovely' or 'my precious'. Beneath them was a single deckle-edged card, marked in ink in the same hand that read 'my sweet Alice'
I turned it over. It was a photograph.
"Why the fuck would your neighbour give you a picture of herself?" Matthew asked.
No comments:
Post a Comment