book.'
'Can we switch the subject, please?' she said, gazing down at the tabletop.
Kyle was silent for a moment. He flipped the burgers again. 'So nothing I've told you about this freaky
She sighed. 'I signed the lease this afternoon.'
Sydney didn't know what to expect their first few days and nights in the apartment. She wondered if she'd hear strange voices--faraway moaning, laughing, or crying. Maybe the walls would start bleeding or something. Perhaps the lights would flicker for no reason.
If some kind of
The only disturbances were from
She also understood why Eli--who shared pretty much the same view of the beach she had--suddenly wanted binoculars for his birthday.
They had been in the apartment a little over a week and had unpacked the last of the boxes when it happened. Sydney had just switched off her bedside light to go to sleep one Tuesday night. Down the hallway, Eli had already gone to bed. His door had been closed--and the light off--for at least an hour.
She sat up, uncertain whether or not he was talking in his sleep.
Sydney switched on the light and jumped out of bed.
Bewildered, Sydney shook her head.
'Someone came in there--like thirty seconds ago--'
'Honey, it was probably just a dream--'
'I wasn't asleep!' he insisted. 'Somebody's in the house! He came in my room and sat down on the end of my bed. I felt it, Mom! He brushed against my foot. I felt the weight on my bed...'
They searched the apartment, both upstairs and downstairs, including the closets. There was no sign of a break-in.
Eli kept insisting that he'd been awake. He'd heard her using the bathroom about ten minutes before this
Homer had survived the fall, but the bulb had gotten smashed. Eli slipped into his jeans and shoes and helped her clean up the glass. It took him another hour to settle down for bed again. But after that night, he wanted the hallway light on and kept his bedroom door open. The last time Eli had needed a light on so he could go to sleep, he'd been eight years old.
Sydney didn't tell him the place had a vague history of weird occurrences. She didn't have to. He figured it out on his own a week later, after a second, similar late-night episode in his bedroom. He claimed he also heard voices this time--a soft, undecipherable muttering and a woman crying. Eli bought himself a night-light. Sydney thought about doing the same thing. She had her own
She went online and researched how to deal with a ghost. Apparently in some haunted houses, a happy cohabitation of the living and the spirit residents was quite possible. The Web sites recommended acknowledging the ghost, talking to it, and asking it to leave--even shouting at it if necessary.
'Okay, dude, I'm going to bed now,' Eli had taken to announcing some nights--right after brushing his teeth. 'I gotta have my sleep. You need to leave me the hell alone for the next eight hours.' From her study downstairs, Sydney would hear him some nights going through his bedtime monologue. They tried to make jokes and shrug it off as a minor annoyance--just one of those things that came with living there.
But it was still unnerving.
The bathroom seemed to be the center of this paranormal activity. Sydney had a framed Georgia O'Keefe print on the bathroom wall. For no logical reason, it fell to the floor on three different occasions--the glass shattering twice. She finally put the print away and left the wall blank. Twice, water started gushing out of the bathtub faucet on its own--both times late at night. She'd had to crawl out of bed and switch off the valve under the sink. Eli called the occurrences
Sydney suspected her son might have exaggerated some of his own brushes with the supernatural, and maybe--out of boredom or resentment toward her--he'd been triggering the water raids himself.
But one night last week, Sydney had felt that otherworldly
The door to Eli's room had remained shut the entire time.
Sydney often thought the woman who killed herself in this apartment years and years ago must have done it in this bathroom.
Drying off her face, Sydney glanced down at the old, chipped powder blue and white tiled floor and wondered if the body had been discovered here, curled up by the toilet. She knew when people overdosed they sometimes died on or near the toilet. Or perhaps the woman had cut her wrists in the sink or in the bathtub.
Was that why their
A sudden, loud pounding on the door startled her.
'What? What is it, honey?' she called back, a hand over her heart.
'The phone light's blinking,' Eli said. 'You got a message. I checked caller ID. I thought it might be Dad, but it looks like someone in New York.'
'You have one new message,' the computerized recording told her ten minutes later. Sydney had taken the cordless phone out of the kitchen and now sat at her office desk. Nearly all the wall space was taken up by shelves and cabinets full of books, files, and equipment. But there was a small space beneath her window that had framed family photos--and Joe was in some of them. There wasn't one of just him alone.
Eli had the TV on in the living room. Sydney could hear him channel surfing with the remote control. She'd already checked the caller ID. Eli had been right; the call had been from New York. Someone from the network had phoned--probably about an assignment. She was supposed to be on a summer vacation, but that had never stopped them before.