Chapter 2: The Invisible Girl in Room Thirteen by Stephen Simpson
As I grew older, I learned to never be a scared girl. I never worried about things which went bump in the night but standing in front of this door, I could feel an awareness I had not known before making a connection to things yet unknown.
Before my mum dropped me off here at boarding school and drove away again without a backwards glance, she tried to convince me why it would be good for me to come here. I pretended not to see she did not want to admit me being out of the way would be good for her and my stepfather.
She met my father here, but they did not really get to know
each other until they met at a Christmas party at her parents’ house
approximately nine months before I was born.
Before my dad died and my mum married my stepfather, she
used to tell me I was invincible, but if you replaced just two of the letters
in that word it would be what I had become.
I was twelve when my mum remarried and that was when I
became invisible. Not invisible in a haunting the living from the grave kind of
way, more like the unseen living kind.
Maybe she only wanted me to follow in her footsteps, to be
educated in the proper English way, to rub shoulders with snobs and lower
royalties. Maybe she thought I would find the love of my life like she did
until he died. Maybe, always so many maybes.
This was only one of the reasons I was standing here with a
Ouija board under my arm.
I shivered when I heard the wind howling around the corners
of the old boarding house and my eyes darted nervously toward the door with the
painted over numbers: 13
Rachel reached to take my hand, the bangles on her scarred
wrist made a jangling noise. She had a wild mop of short, blonde, curly hair
and a round face to match. Even though the shape of her face was round, the
rest of her was really skinny so she looked a little top-heavy. “Don’t be
afraid, Alison,” she said. “Even if Lily is still in there, it’s not as if she
can hurt you, you know.”
Rachel and Sinéad took me under their wing when I arrived a
week ago, but they were both a year older and I did not know if they were
trustworthy as they were essentially part of the group who instigated this
initiation, a dare I had no choice but to accept.
It was rumoured, Lily, the girl who used to reside in this
room, fifteen years ago killed herself on the thirteenth of February, the day
before Valentine’s Day. Witnesses saw her walking into the mist shrouded lake
behind the boarding house. They said, she killed herself because of a boy.
Rachel insisted, rubbing her wrist and making her bangles
knock against each other like dull sounding Christmas bells, “If her ghost is
in there, you can ask why she killed herself. Was it really just about a boy?”
Sinéad had the largest eyes I had ever seen. It was not ugly
or humongous in a grotesque kind of way, it was breathtakingly beautiful. They
were so green it looked eerie. Her long brown hair hung dead straight down past
her shoulders and the tips brushed across her forearms. She said with an
excited tone in her voice, “Last night, I read this magazine and in it, it says
science has confirmed at the moment of death the body releases a sort of
radiation. They called it an electromagnetic field. So… When somebody dies
within a closed space, this force will imprint itself on the furniture and
walls.”
“I thought you said she drowned in the lake?” I said.
I did not know if I could go into a room which had been
standing empty for over a decade and a half after someone had died in it, even
if I needed to prove myself.
She ignored me. “That’s why some people believe if somebody
in the house died, all containers should be emptied of water because the water
has been contaminated with the spirit of the dead person. It seems souls are
attracted to water for some reason.” Her eyes darted between Rachel and me, to
see if we could confirm whether this was true or not.
If I was going to go into this room, I had to ignore her
stories of ghosts and souls. “You cannot believe everything you read,” I
insisted.
Rachel asked, “Why then is this room always locked up? In
all the years I’ve been here, no-one has ever stayed in it.”
“What if there isn’t even a ghost and the school board is
just superstitious about the number thirteen?” I asked.
Rachel shrugged me off. “So, are you scared?”
“I wasn’t when I accepted the dare, but now the two of you
are talking about all these supernatural things and it’s freaking me out.”
Since I had accepted the challenge, I had been dreading the
night of February the thirteenth.
Every time I walked past the fearsome door, I felt shivers
scurry down my back. I could not avoid the door and had to walk by it several
times a day by no choice of my own.
The boarding house was a two-storey building in the shape of
a capital I. I lived on the first floor, five doors away from door number
thirteen. Room number thirteen was the last room next to the large staircase
which connected all the floors, so if I wanted to go anywhere I had to walk
past that door which always felt like a black hole waiting to suck me into its
depths if I lingered too long.
Rachel pulled a key from her pocket. “It’s time,” she
announced and inched past me.
It was too late to wonder but I had to know. “How come you
have a key?”
“I’ve had this key for a while,” she said with a shrug.
“But, why?”
Sinéad nudged me with her elbow and whispered, “Rachel has
issues.”
Rachel looked over her shoulder and gave Sinéad an annoyed
look.
Sinéad winked. “Just kidding.” She faced me and mouthed,
“She really does.”
Rachel sighed. “I’m just interested in all things
paranormal, so one day I’d like to come here myself.”
I said, hopeful, “You can take my place. Do the dare
instead.”
“I’m not ready yet,” she said.
I felt insulted. She was not ready, but I was being forced
to complete a dare just to prove I am worthy of being here at this boarding
school, a place I did not even want to be in the first place.
She pushed the key into the lock.
I really did not want to do this.
Sinéad stood behind me and I felt a little claustrophobic
standing between the two of them.
The only thought running repeatedly through my mind as I
heard the key turn in the lock, was I don’t want to do this. I don’t want to
do this.
The door swung open on stiff hinges which had not moved for
a long time and made a soft moaning sound.
A gust ruffled the bangs from my forehead. The air smelled
stale and musty, undisturbed for ages. I wondered where the sudden blast of
wind had come from.
Sinéad shrieked softly and Rachel turned around to face her
as she stepped aside. “Shh, do you want to wake the dead?”
They both giggled as if it was funny.
I don’t want to do this. I don’t want to do this. The
words did not leave my lips.
Slowly I shuffled into the room, while they stayed on the
other side of the threshold, being careful not to let their feet touch the
boundary.
My breath frosted out of my mouth, just by stepping into the
room and goose bumps erupted on my bare arms. The room was really cold, like
walking out of a warm house on a cold winters’ day. I shivered as I tried to
fold my arms across my chest whilst still holding on to the Ouija board.
The light from the corridor shined into the room and only
fell on the standard single bed, bedside table, chest of drawers and study
desk. I could see the faded, daisy-printed curtains like the ones decorating my
room hanging in front of the window. In the dim light, the paint on the walls
was the identical shade of dark with age eggshell and the tiles on the floor
were the same green as outside in the corridor.
The light did not reach the corners of the small,
rectangular room and where the shadows remained it was dark, devoid of any
colour and gloomy. It was not dark enough so someone or something could hide in
them, but it still made me feel fearful. The shadows moved like they were
breathing, and I quickly lifted my hand to rub my eyes.
Even though everything looked the same, it was not. The room
had a different feel. It felt empty, cold and lonely.
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