MineA Story by MeratheRestlessBeing an au pair or nanny is the ideal job for many young women, but what if the child you cared for was already claimed by another?Louisa, a willowy strawberry blonde in her
early 20s, stepped out of the steaming hot sauna and wrapped herself in a
fluffy towel. She had overseen the nightly ritual, fed, and put to bed the two
children of her employer, a widower who had to fight for several years to
regain his children from his deceased wife's family in her homeland. It had
been Louisa herself, who had been charged with going to the United States to
pick up the 9 years old boy and 7 years old girl and escort them back to Europe
to their father's home. She hadn't gotten a moment's peace since.
Tonight,
with the aid of a special medicine from an unmarked brown bottle, she had
managed to get the troublesome duo into bed and asleep by 21:00. Really she did
not agree with drugging children, but these children were profoundly disturbed
and difficult, so unlike local children. Their father had had them both
admitted to a local pediatric psychiatric ward several times since their
arrival back in Europe. He had taken advantage of the excellent free universal
Swiss health care system in a bad way to get powerful medicines, that even the
corrupt corporate pharmaceutical racket in America would condone the use of,
for subduing children. Often Louisa pitied the children as much as she feared them.
They had been for nearly 3 years in a foreign country without either their
mother or father, missing the former and taught to hate the latter. Their aura
was so negative around them that it was almost creepy and unnerving. To care
for them, to even be near them, was very draining for her. Secure in the
knowledge that they would sleep for at least 10 hours without rousing though,
Louisa had decided to pamper herself. She put on a plush dressing gown and
poured herself a glass of Limoncello, an Italian lemon liqueur, which she took
with her as she left her bedroom to go watch the snow through the huge bay
window in the living room.
She
had just managed to grope her way about in the darkness to the living room when
there was a sound like a heavy book being dropped on a wooden floor.
Instinctively she turned, ready to scold one of her charges, but could not
discern the figure of anyone else in the darkness. For good measure she said in
her sternness voice anyway, “Get back in bed right now!” After a few more
moments she turned back to the window and drained half her glass to take away
the renewed stress the incident had caused.
Get
out....
Louisa's
scalp tingled and a jolt of electricity shot through her body causing her to
nearly drop her wine glass. It was a job requirement that she be able to speak
and understand American English, but it was still a strange language to her ears.
Surely she hadn't heard what she thought she did. She blushed at her own
silliness and hastily righted her glass. Bright yellow liquid on a stark white
carpet was certain to earn her the wrath of her employer.
This
is my house.....homewrecking.
Deciding
that she must be tired, Louisa finished off what was in her glass and decided
to return to her room to ready herself for bed. The fine hairs on the back of
her neck prickled and stood on end as she groped her way along. It was
completely dark and yet she felt watched.
Red
headed floozie.....
By
accident she stumbled into the master bedroom and did not realize her mistake
until she turned on the light. Her employer had a beautifully decorated bedroom
of red trimmed in black with ornate furniture and a huge bed. There were
pictures everywhere. None of the children, but plenty of him and his beloved.
Clearly he had adored her. The woman's piercing dark eyes, like fiery coals,
glared out from every picture, unsoftened by her round ebony face. Her gaze was
chilling...unforgettable.
Leave
my house....
The
master bedroom door slammed shut nearly taking off Louisa's nose in the
process. Thoroughly spooked she dashed into her own bedroom and locked the
door, trying to rationalize the events like any good sensible Catholic girl.
“You are fine.” She told herself. “The children are fine. Go to bed. Your job
is done for the evening.” Holding tightly to her reaffirmations, she changed
and got into bed, making sure that the two child monitoring devices, one for
each child, were on her night table with volume turned up. To help herself fall
asleep she started on her rosary.
Shwshwh-shwshwh
A scraping and scratching sound came from the monitor tuned into the
boy's bedroom. Louisa paused her prayers to listen for a moment for other signs
that he was awake, before deciding that he was still asleep, and the
noise must be from the wind.
Umph....no
mammie....leave me alone...don't like it when people rub my hair.
While simultaneously burrowing deeper into the covers of her bed to
fend off another more electifying cold chill, Louisa picked up the handheld device
and called to the boy, “Zion? Are you awake? Do you need me?” The boy did not
answer. The monitor was silent again. That suited her fine since she did not
want to get out of bed or leave her room any more that night.
THUMP-THUD-BAM
Louisa sat bolt upright in bed as the walls of her own bedroom
shook. Without much choice now, she hurried into her dressing gown and
slippers, then left her room to go check on the children. Oddly despite the
loud banging and scratching, neither of the children were calling to her in
fright. Surely they had heard the commotion too. Even the neighbors had heard
it and if she didn't get it under control very soon, the police were sure to
turn up because of the country's strict noise laws. A situation to be avoided
at all cost.
She
arrived at the first child's door and after finding that it would not budge,
banged on it calling out to the little girl, “Amity? Are you alright? Please
open the door!” The door would not budge and behind it there was silence. It
seemed all was well with the girl, even if Louisa could not access the child to
verify this.
Inside
the boy's room, she found something straight out of the movie Poltergeist. Zion
lay tucked up in his bed, precisely as Louisa had left him hours earlier,
asleep, nearly comatose. Though his bed was shaking violently he did not awake.
If he was not causing the commotion, who or rather what was? “Blessed Father!”
She stammered taking a cautious step into the room, before this door was
slammed on her too. This time it was her heel instead of her nose that nearly
got taken off, trapping her inside the room instead of out. For a moment she
had the instinct to turn and try to pry the door open to save herself, but
quickly recalled that if anything bad happened to this boy, she would be held
responsible and wouldn't be able to blame some fantasy that she wasn't even
sure herself was real. The curse of her people was that they were very
practical and still quite religious compared to other countries in Europe. No
one would believe her.
He's
not yours'....get out!
Ignoring the voice from nowhere, Louisa took small halting steps
towards Zion's levitating and rocking bed. When she reached its' side, she
stiffened herself against a spine jerking chill and dragged him out of bed,
buckling slightly as his seemingly lanky lightweight body proved to be quite
heavy. In the hopes that it would protect him for whatever was present, she
slipped her rosary around his neck. Zion gave an agonized scream.
Get
out! He's not yours'.
Louisa felt herself become paralyzed. She had the child in her arms
and she could manage his weight enough not to drop him, but her feet refused to
respond. No matter how much she willed herself to go forward she remained
frozen in place. Instinctively she knew that if she dropped the child the
feeling would go away though. Still asleep, Zion began to mumble.
Mammie.....don't
be mad at Nanny. Daddy's never home. I wanna go with you. With you always....
Louisa sank to the floor as blackness overcame her.
She
woke in a heap on the floor sometime after sunrise. In a panic she looked
around. Guided by moaning and when she raised her head, it was possible to see
Zion laid in his bed. He was soaked through with sweat, thrashing about, and
burning up with fever. Though he was in a dreadful state, she was relieved to
see him there in his bed. It made it seem like all was normal and nothing out
of the ordinary had happened.
After
a quick peek to check on his sister, who was still asleep&looked well
enough, Louisa returned to Zion's room with a cloth and a basin of cold water
to sponge away some of the sweat and heat. His coffee colored hair, normally
short with a neat fringe, was askew, sticking up in cowlicks and he breathed
like he'd just run a triathlon, his bronzed complexion deeply rosy as if he had
a bad sunburn though it was the middle of winter. She soaked the cloth and
washed off his face, moving from his forehead down to his neck.
When
the cloth touched his neck he yelped. Gingerly Louisa caught his head as he
thrashed it and pinning his head gently to his pillow, left side up, felt her heart
skip a beat. Two huge inflamed welts throbbed, radiating heat. She squinted to
be certain that her eyes were not playing tricks on her, but there was no
mistaking it. She had known that shape for her entire life, from her youngest
years, even before either of her parents' faces were engraved in her mind. The
welts formed a cross.
With
a stifled scream of horror Louisa stumbled backwards and nearly fell as she
stepped on something other than carpet. Scattered at her feet were the beads of
her favorite rosary. The same one she had put on Zion the night before.
The
one with the beautiful carved ivory crucifix.......
“Why
did you make Mammie mad?” Zion fluttered his eyelids and looked up at her, his
dark green eyes in slits.
Certain
now that it was not a dream and scared senseless, Louisa snapped back at him
angrily. “Mummy? How can you call It, Mummy? That demon was trying to kill us!”
Instantly
she was made to regret her words as another cold chill, so powerful that it
forced her head to jerk so violently she got whiplash and took her breath away,
came on. She did not care what her
employer said. How much he had brushed her off when she attempted to tell him
about the small eerie incidents that began a few days after she had retrieved his
children for him. She knew, she just knew
that someone or something was not pleased with something and the target was
her. Since she was expected to stay and keep putting up with the circumstances,
not him, action had to be taken sooner rather than later. From the local
parish, a priest was summoned to come at once.
“Good
Morning, Father.” Louisa barely had the children and herself dressed and
presentable before the enlisted help arrived.
The
Priest had a Bible, crucifix, and a little bottle of Holy water with him.
Before he could come inside he crossed himself and drew a cross on the
apartment door with holy water. He walked through the home doing the same:
saying blessings, reading scriptures, and sprinkling holy water. When they
arrived at the children’s bedrooms, he went into the boy’s room without
prompting and confirmed Louisa’s suspicions. “This child is under attack.
Something evil and unholy has attached itself to him. Tell me, is there
anything that he has that a spirit could’ve attached itself to, in order to
follow him back here?”
Louisa
was certain that there was not, because the children’s father had not wanted
anything from his wife’s family aside from his children, no toys and not even a
change of clothes. They had everything they could ever need or want waiting for
them in their father’s home and Louisa had even been instructed to take with
her clothing to dress the children in for the flight back to Switzerland. They
hadn’t been allowed to bring a single thing back with them. While she was
explaining this to the priest, she noticed something odd.
“What
are you doing?” She asked Zion, who sat on his bed cross-legged with his back
turned to them, like he was not aware of their presence. As she approached him
he fell forward and started screaming to be left alone. “It must be the fever!”
Louisa apologized to the priest for her charge’s temper tantrum. While she was
trying to pull him back out of the ball he had wrapped himself into, she
noticed that he had something in his lap. She had not seen this toy before, a
soft plush pig, and knew that it had not been bought for him by his father,
which could only mean one thing. “Where did you get this?” She demanded
harshly. “You have been hiding it haven’t you, because you know your father would
not permit this?”
“From
Mammie.” Zion replied sullenly. “On the day before she died.”
“And
how did you hide it to bring with you?”
“I
had it inside my shirt and when I was in the bathroom changing into the new
clothes, I just put it in my new shirt.” He announced triumphantly. Then his
voice turned cold and defiant, “And you won’t take it away from me, so get
out!”
Louisa
knew that, regardless of the boy’s tantrum, the toy had to go. The priest
finished his blessings and left, unable to do anymore. He did not need to,
because Louisa was going to finish the job herself that evening.
Again
she got the children properly bathed, fed, drugged, and tucked into bed by
21:00. Thirty minutes after she was certain the children were all except
unconscious, she entered Zion’s bedroom and pried the piglet from his arms,
realizing that he most likely slept with it at night and somehow managed to
fight off the drugged induce fog to put it away before she came to get him up
in the mornings. In any case, he did not rouse when she took it from him and
would not miss it before morning, by which time it would no longer exist.
Louisa
had delayed putting out the fireplace in the apartment’s living room that
evening for a very specific reason. The fire was roaring and strong, embers
flying when she removed the shield. She watched the pig disintegrate while she
sipped another well-earned glass of Limoncello. © 2016 MeratheRestless |
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1 Review Added on November 1, 2016 Last Updated on November 8, 2016 Tags: ghost, paranormal, haunting, possession AuthorMeratheRestlessNDAboutReally there's not much to tell. I study in university, work a part time job, go to Kingdom Hall twice a week, out preaching at least twice per month, and spend the rest of my time at home. Don't like.. more..Writing
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