Posts tagged ‘ghost’

03/13/2013

Aclinic

by Pierce Nahigyan

Strange things were found when the ship sailed over the aclinic line. The wind ceased, the sea calmed. There was a screaming heard briefly, over the last flapping of the mainsails and the snaky twitching of the riggings, like someone we’d left behind calling out to us to come back, turn around. And many a man turned around to see what shrieked. And to a man, none of them would return from the voyage.

Strange things bumped against the hull, strange things that looked like flotsam but moved like eels. And there were no other ships that we saw, nor animals, just these wriggling rags and timber colored fish. They smelled like fish. I asked the captain what bearing to take but he hushed me with a thick, dirty finger. He’d been rubbing his thumb into the bowl of his pipe, burning it, tamping down until there was nothing but a hard sediment of tobacco not fit for smoking. “Don’t speak,” he said. “Keep your eyes to the horizon. Hold fast to the wheel.”

I felt the helm push against me. Despite the pull of the current or the push of the breeze, the tiller ropes growled. And for a moment, while the men turned back to the voice of the crier, I faced the horizon, and the horizon faced me. I felt the vast line of earth and sky glare, and stare. Such a terror lurked behind that red vacancy that I nearly let go of the wheel. I wanted to cry out. My knees knocked like bones drumming the wet boards. But the captain reached for my shoulder, and his fingers bit into me, hard, digging through my pea coat. “Eyes to the horizon,” he commanded. “Don’t lose it.”

The horizon moved.

I held the ship on course for hours, with the captain at my side, his hand never wavering upon my shoulder, and I kept the horizon before me, where I knew it should be, where it sometimes did not seem to stay. And when the darkness came, with it came strange, revolting stars.

No man relieved me. The captain kept the watch. And in the morning half the crew was gone, and the compass swung north once again.

01/21/2013

Aceldama

by Pierce Nahigyan

I met the ghost of Judas Iscariot in Aceldama. His native language was Aramaic but he’d had plenty of time to pick up new words.

I was sitting on a rock in the potter’s field, now reduced to a small square strip of land that led from a courtyard in a fourteenth century monastery. Judas walked past in his sandals, wearing a homespun robe that was brown and rough but was nevertheless clean. His face too, though bearded, was well trimmed. His eyes were black as coals, so that the pupils and the irises seemed one. His lips were wet, and his hair thick, thinning near the crown. He was only somewhat surprised to see me. “You see me,” he said.

At the time I had that queer feeling that arises whenever the supernatural interferes with the waking world. You’ve had it too but you likely shrugged it off as a draft, anxiety, or red sauce. A good deal of modern anxiety comes from the disbelief in ghosts, you know. There isn’t a pill that can stymy their chilly fingers.

Judas sat down next to me and told me his name, and clarified that further by saying which Judas he was. “The Judas, really.”

“That’s odd,” I said. “I heard you were in Hell.”

“I was, for a little while,” he said. “But there’s a door back up to the city. I prefer it here.”

I tugged my backpack tighter around my shoulders, wanting to be kind but not knowing how to proceed in the conversation without asking the question I’m sure he was sick of hearing. Ghosts are not known for their even tempers.

Finally he said it for me. He could read my face well enough. “You want to know if I feel bad about it.”

I nodded.

“Well, yes,” he said. “He was my teacher.”

“So why did you-”

“Because he scared me,” said Judas. “He scared everyone.” The ghost looked at his hands. They were coarse and tan from the desert. He licked his lips. “He scared me,” he said again.

Then he faded away, as ghosts will when their speeches are at an end, or have said all they are willing to say.

11/24/2012

Acclivity

by Pierce Nahigyan

A shriek in the night. What is it? Is it a nocturnal raptor closing in on a small-hearted rodent, its blood pumping as it crosses the earth, running and in its desperation feeling the world slide away, the flatness demand stronger muscles; the grass that scrapes its belly become an acclivity, does the prey climb to the peak only to feel the talons enclose its body and tear from puny lungs the shriek that tears the night? Is it an insect on the tree outside your window? Do its legs saw out that tone, or does it make the noise from a spiracle on some body part whose purpose is alien to your own? It could be a squirrel. Squirrels shriek. It could be the ghost of your first mother. She shrieked outside your window once. Once.

05/11/2012

Abreact

by Pierce Nahigyan

The events that took place inside the house on 201 Hargrove Mango have long been swamped in mystery, the truly comprehensible facts even wrapped in a tangled bracken of spookiness, owing in no small part to Elliot Thompson’s preponderance for strong drink and little regard for facts or what he would often term “book learning.” There were, in his previous criminalities, numerous examples of bad faith, and several notable intoxicated incidents of the young man preying on Mobile’s traditions. Or “superstitions,” to be less charitable.

Inside the house, a decrepit Georgian Gothic (built several hundred miles from anyone who had ever set foot in Georgia), its stained floorboards had taken on nightmarish aspect, the resting place for restless spirits, or sometimes cited as the prime site for Satanic ritual. What the house was, undoubtably was a decrepit wreck, long abandoned by its long destitute and since obliterated aristocracy, and several stories concerning how it got that way, what might be buried under the house, or squirreled within a hidden room, served the community of children and hooligans entertainment to no end at the expense of the unwary, throughout several generations. But aside from a termite colony and a parliament of owls, no inhuman vermin were known to regularly inhabit the place.

Elliot Thompson was squatting in the house after another night on the lam from his old lady – Madame L’Engle down by Olyphant Street – and there was a commotion, a great green flash. Soon the whole town was awakened to the hoops and hollers of Elliot, his ass on fire, hoofing it up the main thoroughfare screaming about ghosts and witches. His abreaction in the jailhouse only confused the issue. The sheriff chose not to commit his statement to public record, something Mobile questioned but, the lot of us without a page of law amongst us, did not press. Yet it could not but embolden the mystique.

Whatever Elliot saw in the house, and whatever it did to him, only increased the moodiness up on Hargrove Mango. It prevailed, and yet Elliot grew less perfidious over time, and folks, by and large, forgot him and his incontinent manner. Come to think of it, it’s been years since I saw him myself. It’s like he vanished into the telling of that house. The myth of it swallowed him up, like a rotten mailbox consumed by crawling weeds.

05/31/2011

Abecedarian

by Pierce Nahigyan

An abecedarian lounging on the stair,
abandoned his studies and turned to thin air;
an incorporeal phantom gave him a fright,
extemporaneously freed from the alphabet’s bite.
From the book’s weathered spine out popped the ghost
bent on foulness at least, a kerfuffle at most,
and set about haunting the poor student forthwith
howling and moaning and indescribably glib
sarcastic, bombastic, ironic, trochaic!
Alarmingly witty, and unwholesomely prosaic!
The abecedarian fled from the hall,
batting the shades taunting his eyeballs.
“Help me! The words! They will not stop coming!”
But halfway across campus he went down stumbling,
bumbling, haphazard, knees knocking apace
he scrabbled in the grass for earthly embrace.
The ghost, all manic and mad and very, very eerie
took pity on the lad and blew away cheery.
Poltergeist gone, the student reclined
safe (maybe) he hoped from meter and rhyme.
Yet pockets of poetry haunted him thereafter,
dangling icicles of verse in metaphoric disaster…

That night over the country alphabet rained good and hard;
twisted similes hit the ground like blood on the sward.
Funky weather filled with letters plopped, splattered and burst
It was purple for days. The worst weather, I durst.

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