Authors: Brian Mercer
When I woke up the next morning I was lying on my back. I was very calm and relaxed. Warm. Light. The room on the other side of my closed eyelids seemed unusually bright. I could hear the peaceful tempo of Nicole's breathing beside me and, from beyond the walls of our room, the vague stirring of hotel staff, and even farther, a city waking to a new business day. Gradually, though, I began to feel a presence in the room with us and, before I had time to think about it, I sat up to take a look.
I felt a faint resistance as I lifted myself off the bed, resistance and a sticky tearing sound. The light in the room seemed strangely bright, the colors unusually vivid. I looked first over at Nicole next to me. She was lying in the same position that she'd been in the night before.
Then I looked down at my own pillow. And there, looking back at me, was my own face.
The shock felt like a sharp electric jolt. It took me only a second before I realized what had happened. When I sat up it was with my astral body only; I'd peeled away from my physical body like candy pulling away from its wrapper.
I stayed very calm, just the way I'd been practicing all these weeks in my astral projection class. I'd been told that stray thoughts could affect my ability to stay out of body, so I cleared my head and tried to relax.
Remembering the presence I'd felt earlier, I turned in the direction where I'd sensed it. There, in the corner between a lamp and a reading chair, stood my brother, Chris.
He looked exactly the way I remembered him from the last day of his life. He wore the same navy blue T-shirt, the same brand new blue jeans. His face was freckled and flushed, the way he'd been in life, not that gruesome blue color he'd been when the paramedics had arrived. He just stood there. He wasn't smiling. He wasn't frowning. He was simply watching me.
"Chris?"
My voice sounded hollow. Echo-y. Like I was talking through a tube from far away. Yet I felt full of warmth, full of light. Relief like light flooded through me. I reached out for him and, as I did, I felt something slide out from under me, exactly as if I'd slipped on a wet floor. I fell back hard, slamming into bed and body with a loud and solid
snap!
When I sat up again the room was darker. Colors were only washed-out shades of what they had been before. Everything else was the same. Except for Chris. Chris, who I so desperately needed to talk to, had disappeared.
Becky
Dukes Hotel
Same Morning, 9:45 a.m.
We were eating breakfast in the dining area of our penthouse suite when we heard a knock at the door. Assuming it was room service, delivering the rest of our food, I answered it. I was shocked to see Sir Alex dressed up in a navy pinstriped suit, looking like the London businessmen we'd seen walking home from work the night before.
"Uncle Alex!" Sara cried, embracing him. "How good it is to see you!"
"Eggs, sausages, scones, toast, marmalade, coffee, and tea," Sir Alex said, inventorying the contents of our table. "I see you put my advice into practice."
"We have plenty of food," I said. "Can we offer you anything, Sir Alex?"
"Some tea, please, if it's hot." He took the empty chair at the head of the table. "What, may I ask, is responsible for all these somber faces?"
"It's Cali," I said. "She's just seen her brother, Chris."
"Did you now. Where?"
"In my bedroom this morning. I was out of my body."
"And what did he have to say for himself?"
"Nothing. He was just standing there, looking at me."
"Looking at you or looking
out
after you?"
"Looking out after me?" Cali smiled. "Chris?" She seemed to think about it. "Well, I guess. Why not?"
"Why didn't you talk to him?"
"I got overexcited and slammed back into my body before there was time."
"Ah, well then, not to worry." Sir Alex took a sip of tea. "He'll be back. I apologize for changing the subject so swiftly but our car will be here in a little while and I wanted to brief you before we get started.
"We will be going to Lord Arthur Humphreys' residence in northern London. Lord Humphreys is a prominent member of the House of Lords. He, his wife, and daughter Emily, have been experiencing paranormal disturbances since they moved into their house about eight months ago. They have no pets or other family members living at the residence. It's only the three of them.
"I met with Lord Humphreys yesterday and have had a tour of the house. He's invited the four of you over this morning."
"What do they want us to do?" Nicole asked.
"This morning? Nothing but observe. Walk around the house, pick up impressions, and report what you see, hear, and feel. I suspect they'll want you there for their all-night vigil tonight and, if that's the case, I'll have you back here for a nap and a good meal before having to head back out again."
Cali pushed away her untouched plate and reached for her coffee cup. "What aren't you telling us about these 'disturbances'? Something doesn't smell right."
"The investigators don't want me to bias you by feeding you too much information. They want everything you pick up raw and unfiltered, no matter how confusing, odd, or absurd. Bring your notebooks and nothing else. We leave in ten minutes."
****
"It looks quiet enough," I observed as our van wove through the streets of East Barnet, a suburb in north London.
"Looks can be deceiving," Sir Alex replied. "What do you
feel
? All of you, quickly. The first thing that comes to you. Write it down. What did you get?"
"I saw trees, streams, mud, and soldiers," Nicole said. "Muddy, dirty soldiers."
"I saw horses," Sara added. "It was like some of them were dead or dying."
"I saw like a tree on fire," I said.
"Mmm, very interesting," Sir Alex remarked. "Symbolic imagery, do you think, or literal?"
I shrugged.
"All right. Cali, what did you get?"
"I didn't pick up anything."
"That's all right, that's all right. Don't force it. Let it come."
Sir Alex punched a number into his mobile phone. "We're arriving now."
Our van turned onto Oakleigh Park and quickly into the gravel drive of Lord Humphreys' house. Men on either side of the gate moved in to close it as soon as we were inside. The van pulled around to the back of the house and came to a stop on a small strip near the lush back garden. A second van was parked here, a black one, windowless, its back doors open to expose computers, video cameras, and what looked like miles of extension cords.
The driver helped Sir Alex out while the girls and I wandered around the leafy garden. In the distance we could hear the trickle of a little creek that passed behind the house.
The back door opened and a tall, slender man wearing a blue sweater and khaki pants emerged. He shook Sir Alex's hand. "Headmaster, good morning. These are the students you told me about?"
"Thomas Banks, this is Nicole, Cali, Becky, and my grandniece, Sara."
"Pleased to make your acquaintance. I don't mean to rush you, but if I could get you to come inside, Lord Humphreys is rather obsessed about the comings and goings to and from his residence remaining as discreet as possible. Please, follow me."
"Lord Humphreys is at home this morning?" Sir Alex asked.
"No. He's at the office, as it were. And Emily and her mum are out as well. It's just us until late this afternoon. I'd like you to meet some of the other members of my team. This is Brooks. Archie. There are others faffing about, setting up equipment. Sir Alex explained this morning's exercise? I apologize for keeping you in the dark like this. I'm afraid my American counterpart is suspicious of information obtained in this way and was resistant to having you come at all, but I'm afraid we're rather desperate at the moment, so he's relented. Where is Tyson?" This last was to Archie, who'd been walking by with a tripod and bundles of electrical cords. Archie shook his head and shrugged.
"All right, you'll meet him soon enough."
I examined the kitchen décor, a strange mixture of modern and rustic. It was difficult to guess the age of the house after what appeared to be several remodels, but it
felt
a hundred, maybe two hundred years old.
"I should give you a tour of the house," Thomas said.
"Perhaps," Sir Alex interjected, "let's let them explore on their own, gather their own first impressions."
"Right. Of course. I wouldn't want to contaminate anyone's radar with what I'm thinking or feeling."
"Nicole and Becky, why don't you start with the cellar. Cali and Sara, please follow me. I'll show you up to the attic. Spend about ten to fifteen minutes on each floor and write down your impressions." Sir Alex glanced at his watch. "Why don't we meet down here in forty-five minutes to an hour to compare notes."
Cali looked longingly at Nicole before following Sir Alex and Sara out of the room. Thomas directed Nicole and me toward the stairs leading to the basement and the two of us descended the steep, narrow steps on our own.
The basement extended the full length of the house. The side nearest the stairs looked newly finished with grey-painted concrete floors, fluorescent lights, a washer, dryer, and closet of cleaning supplies. The north end of the basement was paved with weathered brick and filled with junk piled high, loose, and in boxes. There were no lights on that side. The basement just receded into shadow, giving the impression that it continued perpetually into the dark.
I ambled around the electrical box, feeling elusively unpleasant, before gradually moving toward the dark side of the basement. Nicole stood at the edge of the shadows, peering into the gloom.
"What's wrong?" I asked.
"Do you feel it?"
I took a deep breath and closed my eyes. I sensed something moving in the dark. It felt heavy... familiar.
"This is where it manifests," Nicole explained. "This is where it comes in."
"Where what comes in?"
Nicole shook her head. We each wrote our impressions in our notepads.
"You want to go back there?" asked Nicole, motioning toward the shadows.
"I will if you will."
We clutched hands and advanced down a part in the clutter, what looked to be the main aisle. The junk stored here was a mishmash of items from several previous owners. I found myself reading the energy projecting from the artifacts, reliving old family memories from as far back as when men's fashions included straw hats, handlebar mustaches, and loud plaid suits. I was trying to make sense and sort out each image when a deep sadness reached into my chest. A rank odor, like burning compost, accompanied it.
"Let's go back now," Nicole said, her face masked in shadow. On the light side of the basement, we individually took more notes and then climbed the stairs to the main floor.
On the ground level we wandered up and down the hall, from kitchen to dining room, study to lounge, occasionally passing one of Thomas's crew taping cords to the floor or setting up cameras and sensors. We didn't speak to each other or even stay together, but we both seemed to be individually drawn back again and again to the lounge.
I sat meditatively on the rocking chair, my eyes directed toward the music box on top of the piano, when Nicole walked up to it and played the first three chords of "Clair de Lune," the phantom song she and Cali had heard in our next-door parlor at Waltham. Nicole had barely finished the last notes when she jerked back, as if bitten. She looked at me, shook her head, opened her notepad and started writing.
Cali and Sara thumped down the stairs from the second floor. Cali looked pale and disconcerted. Nicole and I took that as our cue to make our way up to the next level.
There were more cameras, tripods, and electrical cords already set up here. Nicole wandered down the hall toward the master bedroom, while I moved in the opposite direction. When I walked into what I assumed was Emily's room, I heard two people whispering.
"Look, look. There's another one."
"I see. 'ow many
are
there?"
Thinking I might be overhearing members of Thomas's team, I called out, "Hello? Who's there?"
There was a pause. Then one of the voices said,
"Ohhh. She can
'ear
us."
"Hello?" Realizing there was nobody there, I took a half-dozen steps back out of the room and into the hall where Nicole was standing.
"Did you say something?"
I shook my head, tapping my index finger to my lips in a motion of silence. I pointed into Emily's room. "I don't think we're alone."
Nicole peered inside. The room was cluttered but nothing looked out of the ordinary. She tentatively stepped inside and I followed her.
There definitely was something in there with us. I could feel them, even
smell
them. An aroma hung in the air like old grass clippings, a scent from my babysitting days that I associated with sweaty boys. I'd overheard two of them, but it felt like there might be more. I sensed the presence of three or four but there could have been as many as six. I wrote this down.
We spent another few minutes wandering up and down the hall before climbing the stairs to the attic. Here the house's oppressive atmosphere altered drastically. Like the basement, the room ran the length of the house and, also like the basement, there were boxes stored here. That's where the similarities ended.
This space was bright and airy. The three dormer windows on either side of the slanted rooflines were open, letting in a gentle morning breeze. Unlike the dead, trapped air in the cellar, the energy here was alive and full of motion. The room was bursting with reflected light.
While there were items stored here, they all seemed to be possessions of the Humphreys that they had yet to find places for downstairs. Furniture and boxes were piled here and there; nothing like the overwhelming mass of old junk in the basement.
I wandered down to the far end of the attic and crouched over a plastic dog with a rope leash.
"I like it up here," Nicole called out from the other side of the room. "It's so fresh and bright. If I was fixin' to sleep anywhere, it would be up here."
I opened my mouth to answer her when a male voice said, "Hey there, Scarlett. Where abouts you from?"
"Macon, Georgia. Originally."
"Me, I hail from Shreveport, Louisiana. Shreveport and points beyond."
"Ah. You must be Tyson."
"And you must be one of them gypsy gals that Tommy sent for."
I made my way back toward the attic stairs and peered out from around a pile of boxes. As soon as I saw the guy standing next to Nicole, my stomach and heart seemed to grasp each other and plunge together, falling, spinning, down into my shoes.
HBR!
In high school, my friends and I had developed an elaborate rating system to grade boys â C-, B+, A, F, etc. â based on a complex algorithm of Looks, Hair, Clothes, Car, and Wealth. The rating system did not include an A+, however. To achieve the coveted top spot on what became known in our circle of friends as the Becky-Ashley Scale, a boy had to meet one specific criterion: upon first glimpsing the boy, your first reaction had to be
Hot Beyond Recognition!
It was known as the HBR test and it had to be your first reaction. "If you have to
think
about it," Ashley used to say, "HBR? Not HBR? Then your answer has to be no."
HBR!
I stepped out from behind the boxes. Tyson glanced over at me, looked back at Nicole, then back at me. His eyes widened, his mouth dropped open, and he took a step back.
"Hey there, Jailbait. Who might you be?"
I felt my forehead crinkle. "Uh, I'm
Becky
, and I'm eighteen years old."
"Sure you are, darlin'. Whatever you say." To Nicole, "I couldn't help but overhear your talk about the attic feeling safe. My thoughts exactly. In fact, I'm tryin' to convince Tommy to set up our command post here. I was wonderin' if you'd mind givin' me your thoughts on this area back over this way." He gently took hold of Nicole's right hand and elbow and guided her toward the far side of the attic. "Now, I was thinkin' we'd set up a table back here with the computers, maybe put a cot over there, in case someone needs to rest a spell, get their second wind..."
I crossed my arms over my chest and shook my head.
Are you kidding me? Who does that guy think he is?
Disgusted, I took a few steps toward the stairs leading out of the attic when I remembered Jenny's singsong voice.
He's co-o-o-o-oming.
Who's coming?
I came to an ambling stop at the top of the stairs.
"The one you've been waiting for."