A Cloudy Summer Day
By
Leslie Johnson
The air hung from the clouds,
unmoving. It was humid, hot with the anticipation of something … something
wicked and otherworldly.
The dark-haired woman walked down the
gravel road, kicking up the dust behind her. Short little puffs that spread the
detritus onto her toes and sandals. She wasn’t walking with purpose; it was
more like strolling along even though she looked neither left nor right but
kept her eyes locked onto a place in the distance that only she could see.
As I drove past her, I kicked up
enough dust to coat her from head to toe. I wondered where she was going. Was
she heading to my house? Should I have stopped and offered her a ride? As an
older frailer woman, I didn’t pick up hitchhikers. They might overpower me. It
bothered me to feel so vulnerable. I hated getting old.
At the crossroads, I slowed and
looked back. She was still coming this way. But would she continue? She could
go left or right or stay the course. If I hadn’t been in a hurry to get home
before the storm hit, I might have travelled slowly enough to see which
direction she took.
I parked the car and headed to the
backyard, where I hurried to take the clothes off the line. As I turned toward
the house, the first big, fat raindrop landed on my arm. I rushed into the
house and set the basket of clothes on the dining room table.
I stood at the window, folding the
laundry as I watched the storm pelt the ground with force. The wind picked up
and smashed some raindrops against the window. For a minute, the rain took on a
more substantial form as small pellets of hail bounced off the lawn before
settling into tiny white drifts. As quickly as it started, the hail turned back
to rain and soon was falling more gently.
I carried the folded laundry up to
the second floor and put everything away. When I came back down, I noticed a
large puddle of water inside the front door. At first, I thought maybe the
screen door window was up, letting the rain in. Then I noticed water puddles
leading toward the kitchen. My heart leapt into my throat and goosebumps rushed
up my arms. It was then that I remembered the woman on the road. What did she
want from me?
When I came into the room, she was
standing with her back to me, looking out the window over the sink. My heart
raced and my breath caught in my throat as she turned toward me. When I had
driven past, I had thought her to be a young woman in her thirties. Now I saw I
was wrong. She was much older, even older than me.
The crone grinned. Her broken and
rotting teeth were like monuments to something long dead. The stench that
wafted from her made me gag, and my legs trembled before giving way. Sitting on
the floor, I knew I was trapped. There was no possibility of rising and running
before she surpassed me.
“What do you want?” I cried.
A high-pitched cackle broke her
silence. “You know what I want, Velma my dear. I told you I would come. You
just chose not to believe me.”
I remembered. It was a long time ago.
I had been desperate. Desperately in love with Peter, who had eyes for Jillian
and only Jillian. I heard there was a place where, for a small fee, you could
make things happen. It was a gloomy place, down many dark alleys, with twists
and turns. I had gone alone, knowing that my friends would not let me travel to
some place so nefarious.
She was there inside the dank little
shop. There were crystals and potions and tinctures on every surface—shelves
and counters, windowsills and even some herbs hanging on thin threads from the
ceiling. I shuddered as the door slammed closed behind me. Swallowing hard, I
stepped toward her and she looked up from her crystal ball.
“I knew you were coming. I saw you a
long way off. It is time.”
With a wave of her hand, she urged me
closer, and I stepped into her presence. The cold swept around me, freezing my
thoughts. She took my hand and with a long-pointy finger she drew a circle in
the palm, not once but three times. My fingers jerked and my hand tingled and
grew warmer. I didn’t understand a word she was saying, as a peace fell over my
heart and the air cleared.
I don’t remember leaving the shop. I
don’t know how I got home. Life went on as usual for a week, before Peter
stopped and asked me if I wanted to go to the movies. The rest, as they say, is
history. I never asked about Jillian, and he never mentioned her. We married,
had three beautiful babies and eventually we moved to this tiny piece of heaven
outside the city of Madison.
Peter had died earlier this year.
Although I felt the loss, it did not devastate me. I discovered soon after we
married; I was not in love with him, but I could not remove myself from this
marriage forged in black magic.
As she moved toward me, I heard her
words from the past echo inside my head. I had not heeded them. Instead, I
pushed them deep into my subconscious and now she was here to collect. I was
not ready. I could not believe she was here for my soul. Please no, I wanted
her to leave me alone. I wanted to live; so I could enjoy my home without the
restraints of an ailing husband. The freedom of a single life was enticing.
Peter had never wanted to travel, but there were so many cities and sites I
wanted to see before I died. I needed more time.
For years, I rued the day I had made
the deal because Peter was not my perfect mate. She gave him to me because I
had asked and back then, I willingly agreed to pay the cost.
“I don’t want to die.” I cried as I
tried to crawl away from her advancing form. “I still have lots I want to do.
Can we make a deal?”
“What do you have in mind?” she asked
as she slowed her pace.
“You tell me what you want. I’m sure
you want something.”
“I want the flesh of your favourite
grandchild. Bethany. I will take her life and leave you alone. You will die an
old woman many years from now. Or I take you and Bethany lives. Your choice.”
I thought of Bethany. She was only
ten years old. She was beautiful and talented and had a promising future in
front of her. I had lived a decent life and was in my mid-sixties. Not the life
I wanted, but I could not find enough faults to complain about, other than
Peter. I should let her take me, so my granddaughter could live out her
potential.
“You can take Bethany. Just leave me
be.” The words fell from my lips, though I didn’t feel like I had said them.
“Fair enough. You will have twenty
more years. I will come for you again.”
I woke on the floor of the kitchen.
How had I gotten here? I shook my head and wondered about the strange dream I
had. It was unnerving and a little upsetting.
The phone rang. Call display revealed
it was my daughter, Brianne. “Hello my darling. How are you?” I chirped.
“Bethany is dead, Mom. A car hit her
while she was out riding her bike. She’s dead” The anguish of my daughter’s
loss broke through the icy shield around my heart, and I knew then that the
dream had not been a dream.
“What have I done?” I cried.
“What do you mean?” Brianne asked.
“How could you have done anything—we live hours away from you.”
“It was … I was …” I couldn’t go on.
“I will come immediately, Brianne. Just give me time to pack.”
I hung up the phone, but the words
echoed. “Bethany is dead … Bethany is dead …” The voice belonged to the old
crone. Her cackle ran up my spine as I stumbled to the stairs. I never made it
to Brianne’s.
With suitcase in hand, I reached for
the banister at the top of the stairs, when I felt tiny hands push me in the
middle of my back. I tumbled down the stairs, my suitcase falling under, over
and into me. The last thing I remember before I lost consciousness was looking
into the smirking face of my beloved granddaughter.
It was three days before they found
me. I lived twenty more years in a coma, strapped to machines. My mind was
still active, so the doctors hoped for recovery. During this time, I could not
speak or move or do anything for myself. I longed for death every day, but I
knew this was my punishment for allowing my granddaughter to take my place.
Bethany made sure I paid.
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