Share

Haunted

Author: Bella Moondragon
last update Last Updated: 2024-10-29 19:42:56

Layla

Bailey dumps an assortment of pastries on a serving platter in the humid, sun drenched kitchen. I lean on the counter and take a sip of my iced latte, praying the caffeine will hit my system and thaw the numbness still gripping my body. 

Whatever happened earlier this morning still has me in somewhat of a trance. I can’t shake the feeling I hadn’t been alone in that upstairs hallway, and especially that I hadn’t been alone in my room. 

“You’re holding that coffee like it’s a weapon.” Bailey giggles, rolling her eyes as she picks up the platter and sets it on the kitchen table. “Are you okay?”

“I didn’t sleep well at all,” I admit, blinking into the unforgiving sunlight. God, it’s hot. It’s not even 8:00 in the morning. and the entire room is already suffocating with heat. I press the plastic cup to my temple and sigh with relief. 

Bailey watches me curiously for a moment then shrugs. “You should go get some rest, then. You’re the night nurse, remember? You should really be getting ready for bed right now.”

“It was a quiet night,” I tell her, the cold coffee easing the pounding in my skull. “I went to bed around two, I think. No alarms at all last night.”

“Well, don’t get used to it. Ms. Penny’s mostly active at night lately. It’s the dementia, you know.”

I nod. I do know that. I also know that Bailey’s right, and I should be upstairs and back in bed, but the thought of being alone right now has my chest tightening and my fingers prickling with adrenaline. “Is the house haunted?” It’s not the first time I’ve asked her.

Bailey sinks into a chair with a sigh, her normally sunny expression fading. “I don’t think so, but you never know with these old houses.” She waves a hand around the room. “Why? Did the pipes keep you up last night?”

“Maybe.” I sit down across from her, my body aching with sudden fatigue. “I’m not really sure what happened. I thought I heard–”

“Hello? Anybody home?” A rich, male voice echoes from the front foyer. 

Bailey rises, a smile brushing over her mouth as she catches my eye. “It’s just the pipes groaning Layla, I swear.”

“Who is that?” I ask, standing. 

“Oh, that’ll be the neighbors. I’m sure they’re here to meet you. Real nice couple, I promise. Come on.” She takes my hand and practically drags me through the narrow hallway toward the foyer. 

A middle aged couple stands in the center of the entryway surrounded by brown paper bags full of groceries. The woman, dressed in a flattering pink floral sundress, beams at us as she turns, a basket full of produce in her hands. “My, my, look at you!” Her neatly curled brown hair bounces on her shoulders as she steps forward, extending the basket in my direction.

The man takes the heavy basket from the woman and gives her a soft, knowing smile. “You haven’t even introduced yourself, Helen. Now you’re forcing vegetables on the poor young woman.”

“I’m getting ahead of myself.” She laughs. “I’m Helen Wilson, and this is my husband Robert. We live just down the road, your closest neighbors.”

“Oh,” I say, giving them a polite smile. “I’m Layla.”

“Well, of course you are, dear! Just look at you. You’re a Gregory, through and through.”

I blush deeply and smile, bobbing my head in thanks. Bailey gives me a knowing look before stepping forward to accept the basket of produce from Robert. “You didn’t have to drive over. I could have picked all of this up myself.”

“Well, Robert here saw your grocery order, and we decided to come pay you a visit,” Helen cuts in, her light brown eyes creasing as she glances from Bailey to me. “Robert owns the grocery store in town, my dear. If you ever need anything, you just let us know.”

“Their number is hanging on the fridge already,” Bailey says with a teasing smile. “You just wanted to come over and see the new nurse, didn’t you?”

Robert chuckles, but Helen looks playfully stricken. “Helen here has been in a fit about it since we found out the news last Sunday at church. Everyone in town is talking about it.”

“Talking about what?” I ask, some of my earlier unease slipping back into place. 

“You, of course,” Helen says with a little wave of her hand. “Now, I didn’t believe it myself when Thomas Hart came to the eleven o’clock service last Sunday and said he had a new nurse coming to the Gregory Estate. We pray over Ms. Penny, regularly, you see, which is why he told us. He’d been calling around for weeks looking for a nurse, calling all the big hospitals. You name it, he called it.” Helen chuckles, beaming up at her husband. “And then, by some miracle, he found you. A descendent, no less. I couldn’t believe it. None of us believed he’d actually had Ms. Penny’s distant cousin coming back to the Gregory estate. We thought this place would fall into the marsh eventually.”

“Oh, I’m–” I clear my throat, planting a polite smile back on my face. “I’m not here because I’m hoping to inherit the estate, not by any means.”

Robert and Helen give me a curious look, but at that same moment, Bailey’s watch begins to beep. “I’d better get Ms. Penny her morning medicine. It was so nice seeing you both!”

“You too, Bailey. I’ll see you on Sunday.” Helen gives Bailey a motherly look of disapproval while Bailey rolls her eyes. “Your mama promised me you’d start coming back to church when you didn’t have to work on the weekends here anymore.”

“I’ll be there on Sunday.” Bailey forces a laugh, waving goodbye before turning toward the stairs and walking out of sight. 

I stand in the foyer with the Wilsons, unsure of what to say, or do. “Uh, thank you so much for the groceries. I better put everything away before things start to melt.”

Helen scoffs, shaking her head. “Let us help you, dear. You’re probably exhausted from being up all night.”

I pick up a few of the bags, which are rather heavy, and balance them on my hips. Now I know who to thank for all the luxurious bath products. “Aunt Penny is actually pretty easy going at night–”

“Oh, no,” Helen says in a low tone as we follow Robert, who is carrying the rest of the groceries in his burly arms, down the narrow hallway toward the kitchen. “I’m talking about the house.”

I pause mid-step, turning to face her. “Wh-what do you mean?”

She eyes me curiously, searching for something behind my eyes. “It’s nothing, dear. These old homes… well, they make a lot of noise, and it’s a different kind of dark when the sun goes down, you know?”

Something in her eyes tells me there’s a lot more she wants to say, but Robert calls out to us from the kitchen. “Better bring me those groceries, miss. Your bags have the eggs and ice cream in them.”

I reluctantly tear my gaze away from Helen and ignore the creeping sensation licking up my spine as I hurry to the kitchen, handing Robert the bags. “I really could have done all this myself. It would’ve given me something to do today–”

“Oh, it’s no bother. I’m sure you have your hands entirely too full with Ms. Penny’s care. Plus, I have been meaning to check out the dining room for some time and always forget when I’m over dropping things off.”

“The dining room?” I ask as he closes the freezer and turns to face me. “What about the dining room?” But Robert is already stepping past me. 

He walks through the narrow kitchen and opens the door leading directly into the formal dining room, which I haven’t spent a single second of time in since arriving. 

Sunlight pours into the narrow space, illuminating the antique eight-person mahogany table in ribbons of gold. Compared to other areas of the house, this room has been renovated recently. 

“Well, the man did a fine job, if I do say so myself.”

“Who?” I ask, watching as Robert narrows his eyes on the intricate floral wallpaper. 

“Curtis hired an artist a while back to come here to repaint the wallpaper, to give it new life. Even though it’s been a while since he painted this  room, it still looks fresh. I will say I was nervous about it. The Historical Society has been gunning to make the Gregory Estate a protected property for years now, and having someone come in and rip up the place didn’t sit well with me, but… looks like the guy just brought the wallpaper back to life, is all.”

“It must have taken that poor man hours to do this,” Helen whispers, her eyes wide as she scans the room. 

I stare at the wallpaper and wonder what’s so damn special about it when Helen turns to me and says, “It’s original to the house, if you can believe it. Two hundred year old wallpaper. Isn’t it just crazy to think about all the dinners served in this room, all of the family members who looked at this very same wallpaper two centuries ago?”

I swallow hard and nod, that creeping sensation only growing in intensity. “I’m sure the ghosts in the house appreciate keeping it the way it’s always been.”

Robert’s hardy laugh cuts through the air, but Helen isn’t laughing. She isn’t smiling, either. She just stares at me with an unreadable expression, her lips softly parted like she’s trying to find the words to tell me something. 

“Well, we best be going. Come on, Helen.”

“It was very nice to meet you, Miss Layla,” she says, but her voice is strained. She turns to her husband, who is already walking away, cutting through the living room to get back to the front foyer. 

But Helen lingers for a moment, wringing her hands. 

“Is–is everything all right?” I ask, my mouth going dry. 

Helen looks at me over her shoulder and nods, sighing, “These old houses… you never feel entirely alone, do you?”

“No,” I reply, giving her a soft smile.

“I meant it when I said that if you ever need anything, just call. We live on the next property over. It’s only a ten minute drive. You’re welcome anytime, dear. I mean it.”

The force behind her words catches me off guard, like a warning has been laced in between each syllable. 

I watch her walk away, joining her husband in the foyer. I only catch their shadows stretching across the worn rug before they disappear from sight entirely, lost to the glare of the sun. 

Running my hand over my face, I rub the exhaustion from my eyes. I need to sleep. My anxiety and stress, and that creepy, crawly feeling in my stomach…. It’s just a lack of sleep, surely. I can feel the fatigue settling into my bones as I make my way upstairs and turn into my room. 

No musky, leathery scent this time. Just sunlight and the smell of clean linens. 

But the second I lie in bed and close my eyes against the sun, the clunking, creaking noises start up again and blend into what I think are footsteps pacing in front of my door. 

I can’t tell if I’m dreaming or not. 

I should probably get used to it.

Related chapters

  • Whispers of the Devil   A Figure

    LaylaAunt Penny stares ahead, per usual, looking at everything and nothing all at once. I turn a page in the book I’ve been reading aloud to her the past four nights. She recently started a new blood pressure medication that’s supposed to make her feel drowsy, but so far, it’s having the opposite effect. The old woman has been staring into space until 3:00 or 4:00 in the morning the past couple of nights, and I’m running out of ways to keep myself busy. “Don’t!” I say in an exaggerated tone, lifting my voice to imitate the dainty, elegant and high-bred young debutant, the book's heroine. “Please! You know we cannot go any further, Randall. You’ll ruin me!”I swear Aunt Penny’s mouth lifts into a ghost of a smile, her eyes softening and looking far more alive than they had only moments ago. I drop my voice as low as it can go and continue, “You called me a rake once, Juliette…. It’s high time I showed you just how rakish I can be….” I quickly scan the rest of the page and glance up

  • Whispers of the Devil   Bump in the Night

    Layla“Have you ever lost your mind entirely before, Curtis?” Curtis, who is currently fighting to get a chainsaw back in working order, looks up at me with a pinched expression. “I don’t believe so, Miss Layla. But you look like you’re fixin’ to lose yours, I reckon.”Well, he’s not wrong. I run my hand over my face, then through my hair, peering at the old handyman from my perch on the back porch. The overcast day is a welcome relief from the heat, and the choked tree line in the distance looks remarkably innocent compared to last night during the storm. “You need sleep,” he says in a fatherly tone that forces my gaze back to his face. “You look like you’ve been dragged to hell, and even hell didn’t want ya and sent you packin’.”“That’s the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me,” I tease, rolling my eyes. “You’re a real southern gentleman, Curtis.”He waves me off with one of his huge, calloused hands. Curtis is average height and portly, but his strength is truly incredible. H

  • Whispers of the Devil   Dalton

    DaltonI catch the screaming night nurse by the wrist before she can flee back into the hallway. Her deep blue eyes shine like smooth sapphires, alight with fear. “Someone’s on edge,” I say, letting go of her wrist, hoping my touch is enough to tell her I’m real and not one of the many apparitions who haunt this hellhole.I can almost taste her fear. She gapes at me, looking me up and down. “Who the hell are you?”“Who are you?” I ask, sipping from the coffee Bailey so generously made before taking her leave this evening. “Who am I?” she says, stupidly–if I might add. “Uh, yeah?” I stare down at her, drinking her in. Bouncy, thick blonde hair that would probably touch her lower back if she didn’t keep it piled on the top of her head. Slim shoulders, narrow waist. A great rack I’d like to paint if I could ever get her naked. Her nipples are peaked under her white tank-top, and she isn’t wearing a bra, of course. These night nurses get comfortable, fast, especially when they think the

  • Whispers of the Devil   Dream or Nightmare

    LaylaI have a type, I’ll admit. Tall, dark, handsome, and mysterious. Dalton, unfortunately, checks off all of those boxes, even if our introductory conversation took an abrupt turn.He obviously picked up on my irrational fear of the house somehow and decided to spin it to his advantage. I got the sense, during our short time together in the kitchen, that he enjoyed trying to scare me.After my conversation with Curtis, I’d come to the conclusion that the house might just harbor bad memories but not ghosts and ghouls. I’d never outwardly admit that I’m more in tune with the energy of certain places, but after working in hospitals my entire career, I’ve often wondered if the things I’ve seen and heard held weight and weren’t just tricks of my mind.Still, having someone else in the house now makes me feel slightly more secure in my surroundings as I go through my nightly routine with Aunt Penny.She’s not near

  • Whispers of the Devil   Wanted

    DaltonThe cigar room on the second floor has been untouched since the early 1930s. The moth-eaten fabric that covers the furniture smells sharply of damp and mildew, and the once lively floral wallpaper is peeling from the walls, revealing horse-hair plaster beneath.I huff a breath as I look around, the darkened corners of the wide, square room beckoning to me. I ignore it, like usual, but that creeping sensation licking up my neck continually steals my attention as I lay out sheets of plastic across the mahogany floor and prepare to repair what wallpaper I can salvage.I’m not sure how I got into this line of work. My dad had been a contractor, and since it had just been me and him growing up, I spent a great deal of time following him from job site to job site, mingling with the various tradesmen and technicians he worked with day in and day out. He got a job in the Garden District in New Orleans–fixing up an old Greek Revival mansi

  • Whispers of the Devil   Dive Bar

    LaylaThe Black Penny in the French Quarter is definitely a dive, but everything is all lush, dark paint and leather, as I follow Bailey and her cousin, Adam, through the darkened threshold into the bar. Beyond the bar, the sidewalk is teeming with nightlife. Music flows through the street, mingling with riotous chatter and the occasionally drunken body swaying to the music in the middle of the road.We’d spent the day exploring New Orleans. I’m full of beignets, and my ears are ringing from the sweet sound of a saxophone as we saddle up to a high-top table near the front of the bar. Adam leaves to order drinks, disappearing into the throng of jazz music and lively conversation.“I’m so glad you came with us tonight!” Bailey exclaims over the noise, leaning in to brush the words directly into my ear. “You’ve been in a trance the past couple of weeks. I thought I’d never be able to get you out of the house!”“What do you mean?” Le

  • Whispers of the Devil   Barefoot in the Dark

    Layla“Uh, is this the address?”I look up, blinking to clear my blurry vision, and see that we’re idling at the rusted front gate to the Gregory Estate.“Yeah, this is it.”“I gotta be honest with you, ma’am. I don’t think my car is going to get down the driveway.” My driver’s not wrong. His sedan practically scrapes the ground as he pulls forward. The decaying concrete juts up in places, forced skyward by the relentless roots cutting through the cement.“It’s fine. I can walk.”“You sure? I could walk you down–”“Don’t worry about it,” I mumble, letting myself out of the car and shutting the door behind me. I take off my heels and rest my bare feet on the cool, solid ground. It feels good. The air is heavy with humidity, but a slight, chilled breeze clears my head enough for my gin-induced stupor to finally give way. “Thanks for the ride.”With that, I walk away, the Uber’s headlights fading be

  • Whispers of the Devil   She’s Mine

    DaltonI should throttle her. That’s exactly what I should have done when I had her pressed against that tree. She’s either completely dense or truly fearless.I honestly don’t know which is worse.Walking around the property at night is not something I’ll allow her to do again, even if it means keeping her chained to her bed. God, the thought of her tied up and at my mercy makes my balls tighten as I stalk around the side of the house toward the detached garage. I throw the door open, forcing the image of Layla naked and prone, her eyes heavy with desire, out of my mind.The garage is cool and dark as I close the door behind me. No one here uses the garage but me. I keep my old truck here, tucked out of sight. I reach through the open passenger window and grab the bottle of scotch I picked up earlier tonight and wrench the lid open. Leaning against the side of my truck, I take a drink. Then another,

Latest chapter

  • Whispers of the Devil   Bond to This Place

    Zeke“I’m a terrible person.”I’m back on the porch with Miss Penny, who’s regarding me with an unreadable expression. I have no doubt that she knows what happened this morning, the same way she’s aware of everything that goes on in this house.I don’t need her to tell me that I fucked up. I was supposed to warn Julia about the threat Amos poses, not claim her. Even though she’d thought it was a dream, I still had no right to trick her like that. I feel so guilty that I can hardly think about anything else.“Do you regret it?” Miss Penny asks suddenly, breaking me from my cocoon of self pity.I shake my head. “It was amazing,” I admit abashedly. “But I feel like I took advantage of her. How can I ever fix this?”“You start by doing right by her,” she replies sternly. “You need to come clean.”I hate that she’s right. It would be far easier to just pretend it never happened, but I owe Julia so much more than that. She deserves to be treated with honesty and respect.She deserves the tr

  • Whispers of the Devil   Ramblings of a Madwoman

    JuliaTo say I’m royally confused when I wake up is an understatement.I sit up groggily, blinking back sleep. My thoughts are a jumbled mess, and my body still rings from the ghost of this morning’s encounter. Logically, I know it was a dream. So why did it feel so real?An image of Zeke kneeling beside the bed flashes through my mind, and I can’t help but blush at the intensity that flared in his honeyed eyes. But he couldn’t have been here. That’s just silly.“It was just a dream,” I murmur into the empty bedroom, as if the words could convince my harried thoughts.“What was that?” Jake’s voice calls from the en suite bathroom. It takes me a moment to register the sound of the shower, and then realization hits me like a brick.Jake and I fucked last night.And we’d made love this morning, hadn’t we?It still seemed so hazy. I could have sworn it had been Zeke’s face hovering over me as he moved so reverently inside of me. Things with Jake had never been like that. They were either

  • Whispers of the Devil   Taking What's His

    JuliaAs a great woman once said, diamonds are a girl’s best friend.I stand in front of the mirror in the trendy boutique in New Orleans, examining the new strand of precious stones adorning my throat. I’d paid for the mind-blowingly expensive necklace using Jake’s platinum card, which had given me a small sliver of satisfaction.He’d called in the early hours of the morning, begging for me to forgive him. At first, I’d told him that there was no way in hell I’d let him come crawling back to me, but all the while, my heart ached until the burn was almost unbearable.One chance. That’s all I’ll give him.In the meantime, I’ll shamelessly spend down his accounts in preparation for the worst.Because it would be terrible if we divorced, wouldn’t it? I think wistfully of the lifestyle I’ve enjoyed over the last several years, excluding the months spent in solitude on the edge of a fetid swamp. I’d be losing much more than him if I left.Doubt continues to gnaw at me as I gather my bags a

  • Whispers of the Devil   The Man in the Garage

    JuliaI can’t stay here.Jake’s been gone all day. In fact, I hadn’t even heard him leave in the first place, and God only knows where he went. But I’m absolutely sure that I don’t want to be here when he gets back.If he comes back.Would that really be so bad, I wonder? It’s true that I hate it out here at the edge of the festering swamp, locked away in this big empty house with only ghosts for company. But without Jake tying me down, I could go anywhere, do anything.I could even find another man, one who would treat me better than the bastard I’d married.A fine blush rises in my cheeks as the memory of Zeke’s passion whispers across my lips. Guilt trickles through me in its wake. I can’t believe we’d kissed. As terrible as Jake’s actions have been, I’ve never once felt the need to seek out another man.But there is something about Zeke that beckons me, drawing me closer like a lighthouse in the dark. It isn’t just that he’shandsome, or even that he’snice to me. I have the uncanny

  • Whispers of the Devil   Stolen Kiss

    ZekeSomething dreadful happened last night.I’d been out in the swamp, enjoying the sound of the rain pattering off the soft fronds of the ferns in the underbrush when I’d noticed Jake stumbling drunkenly to the garage.Even worse, I watched from the shadows as he spoke to that thing as though he was just making another shady business deal. Though I wasn’t able to hear what Amos demanded, I think I have a pretty good idea what it is.Who it is.I watched Jake stagger around the property for a while before he got into his car and drove off. Good riddance, in my opinion.But I’m concerned for Julia. I don’t trust Jake for a second, and she doesn’t deserve to be used as a pawn in this sick game.And now I’m lingering at her front door, my hand raised and poised to press the doorbell. For a moment, I don’t think I can go through with it, but then the memory of Jake speaking with Amos flashes through my mind, and I know I have no other option. I have to make sure she’s all right.Thinking

  • Whispers of the Devil   Repercussions

    JakeOh God, what have I done?Panic and desperation crash over me in unrelenting tidal waves, dragging me under until I’m drowning in them. I’m sitting on the bed in the guest room, holding my head in my hands and rocking back and forth.I don’t know how long I’ve been here. Hours, probably. At some point, I’d stumbled down to the kitchen to grab a bottle of whiskey. It sits on the floor by my feet, the amber liquid significantly drained.The alcohol hadn’t helped. I’m unable to numb the tumult that roils inside of me.I hit my wife.She deserved it.The cold, foreign voice slithers through my mind, and I groan, trying to drown it out.I’ve done a lot of questionable things over the years, some more legal than others. And maybe, just maybe, I’d said things to intentionally hurt Julia in the past, but I’d never physically harmed her.Until tonight.She was asking for it.“Shut up!” I whimper, clawing at my temples. “Shut up!”I stand and start pacing in the small space between the bed

  • Whispers of the Devil   A Slap in the Face

    JuliaTears well in my eyes, threatening to spill over. But I know that if I start crying, I won’t be able to stop.“Get a fucking grip,” I mutter to myself.I’m lying on the couch in the living room, attempting to watch my favorite reality TV show. After I confronted Jake earlier, I haven’t been able to focus. Racing thoughts flutter through my brain like paper in the wind. I’d optimistically heated up a frozen dinner, but I’d only been able to pick at it before my nausea had overpowered my desire to eat. Now the meal sits, cold and congealed, on the coffee table, all but forgotten.I know I could call Nina for support, but I don’t want to go there until I have all of the facts. And the truth is, I don’t really have many of those at all right now.Yes, Jake’s reaction to my questions all but confirmed my suspicions that he’s nothing more than a cheating bastard. I have no doubt that he’s up to his old tricks, but this time, I’m not going to let him off so easily. I need cold, hard pr

  • Whispers of the Devil   Something's in the Shadows

    JakeI’m not a coward.It’s not like I was scared and ran away because a fucking light bulb broke, or because the ensuing darkness seemed bigger somehow, alive. No, it was because I simply had business to attend to. At least, that’s what I tell myself as I pull up in front of the house at the edge of the swamp.Julia probably hadn’t even cared that I’d gone. After all, I’d texted her that I had to go out, and she hadn’t ever responded. Did she even notice I left? God, she sure knows how to make a guy feel wanted in his marriage.A streak of lightning skitters across the leaden sky, followed quickly by a peal of thunder so loud that the car practically rattles around me. It’s not raining yet, though the clouds that loom overhead are the color of a fresh bruise and promise an imminent downpour. Not wanting to ruin my vehicle, I decide to park in the garage instead of the driveway.The rain starts just as I pull inside. Water roars against the roof, and once closed, the automatic door do

  • Whispers of the Devil   Help from Beyond the Grave

    ZekeGod, I feel so alive.I close my eyes and let the relentless eye of the sun beat down on me. What does it see when it looks at me? A man? Something more? Something less?And what does Julia see, I wonder?I know it’s dangerous to let my thoughts wander down this path, but it’s as though my mind has become untethered with possibilities. My hand curls around a phantom mug, remembering the feeling of the smooth porcelain against my palm and the heat radiating through my hand as Julia had questioned me with increasing interest.I’d just had coffee with Julia Carter.She wore no makeup, and her hair was mussed from sleep, but that had somehow only made her more beautiful. Her eyes, as green as moss, shone in the fresh morning light. I had the overwhelming urge to reach out and touch her, to brush my fingertips over the soft curve of her lips, but propriety stopped me in my tracks.I wouldn’t disrespect Julia like that. She is too good for me to be thinking about her in such a way.To

DMCA.com Protection Status