I wanted to give you a whole set of curious objects today.
Haunted objects. They represent a haunted city. Instead, I gave myself
nightmares. They're perfectly ordinary objects in perfectly ordinary places. They still give me nightmares.
This is isn’t the first time I’ve done that. Given myself nightmares. A friend is an
expert in the ghosts that haunt Canberra and she gave me a tour so that I could
use them in my novel, The Time of the
Ghosts. There is a plane at the Australian War Memorial I can’t look at for
other people have looked at it and seen the dead pilot looking out at them. There
is a staircase at a local high school where a hanging woman floats, her feet
just a bit too high above the stair. There is an empty ballroom in a major
hotel where, if you walk past at the wrong time, you can hear someone’s finger
running over the edge of all the glasses at once, making you want to scream.
There is no-one there. There is never anyone there.
I have been in the room where one of our Prime Ministers died. He haunts it, I'm told. There is no-one there either. There is never anyone there.
This was to be my Cabinet of Curiosities. Many objects, all
haunted: the plane, the staircase, the ballroom and those glasses were just the
beginning.
Instead, I find myself thinking of the car. It burns. It’s a
1976 electric blue Toyota Celica. If you travel the wrong road at the wrong
time, you will see it burning. 1985 was when it crashed, and rumour has it that
the people who answer the emergency phone line gets calls about it regularly. This
happened in a place I know, and I’m very grateful I do not drive, for I do not
want to see the car. I do not want to go into the ballroom, I will not look in the
cockpit of that plane and I refuse to go anywhere near that staircase.
My Halloween present to you is a spooky, haunted Cabinet of
Curiosities. My insult to injury is that I’m writing this just after midnight. Five
minutes ago the burning car seemed the object I least wanted to haunt my dreams. Right now, I’m thinking of the dead pilot
looking out of that ancient airplane.
I’m not ready to go to bed anymore.
Are you all right, Gillian? Are you there? Speak to us...
ReplyDeleteMade me laugh, Sue!
ReplyDeleteGillian, being one of those boring, hard-headed people, I would want to ask the emergency line operators if they'd ever even heard of this burning car and, if do, how many calls they got about it. A good story will go round the world before the truth gets its boots on.
And I would be into that ballroom instanter. "Keep the noise down, there are living people trying to get some peace around here." I would stand by that aeroplane, tapping my foot, waiting for this pilot to put in an appearance.
I would love to see a ghost, but I'm told that the above attitude ensures I never will. I'm not scared of ghosts - I outrank them, I'm alive. It's living people that give me the willies.