The store, almost 100 years old, on the ocean
in Sechelt, had stood empty for a few years. We got it for a song. When we
moved in, locals told us it was haunted by the ghost of an old woman who had
died in the store. She hadn’t liked people when she was alive; she did not
welcome us. After the store closed at 11 p.m., sitting downstairs, we could
hear footsteps crossing the floor above. When we went up to check, no one was
there. But once I felt a cold chill go up my spine and knew she was standing right
behind me.
She would move things around on the shelves. I would
go downstairs and find our unlucky “Wandering Jew” plant swinging in its alcove
for no reason – no windows or doors open. One night, all of its branches
pointed at the doorway, the message clear: get out! I decided to throw the
plant away one windy night. It wrapped its tentacles around me and I had to fling
it off me and down the bank.
Things got worse. We opened an arcade; things were
too noisy for the fretful ghost. A huge crack! was heard one morning;
the supporting beam showed a split all the way up. Talk was, the store might slide
right down the hill. The footsteps at midnight continued. I would not give up.
I could live with the ghost more easily than the man I was with at the time.
It did not end well. The store burned down under
mysterious, suspicious circumstances while we were away in Vancouver. The
insurance company didn’t pay. I was left with nothing. The four kids and I
began a new life in Kelowna, my dream store on the ocean gone; my faith in
humanity tested. But my belief in the existence of ghosts was alive and well.
313 words for Magaly’s Pantry of Prose prompt:
Gothic. True story. There was much more to this story, but I only had 313
words. I wrote a bit longer version here.