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What Fears Become Part 17

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I flicked on the flashlight and we held our breath, waiting for the light to reveal some hidden evil, some specter from the past. We didn't see nothing except cardboard boxes piled in one corner and an old, empty picture frame leaning against the wall.

The floor was lined with boards and I tested one with my foot. "Can we walk on these?"

Liza nodded and clamped her hand on my arm, her fingernails digging into my skin as I took a step forward. I kicked at one of the boxes and it slid to the floor with a crash. Its contents tumbled out. Monopoly, Snakes & Ladders, Yahtzee and some other games.

"For crying out loud," I huffed. "There's nothing here. No voices."

"B-but I heard something up here," she said. "I swear I did."



"Well, there's those Poker chips you was looking for last month."

Liza swallowed hard. "How'd they get here? I'm never in my attic."

I rolled my eyes at her, thinking that maybe she came up to her attic lots of times. Maybe she just didn't remember. She'd been having a lot of memory lapses lately. Some days I wondered if she was suffering from Old Timer's Disease.

"Nothing here," I sighed, patting her on the shoulder.

It was when we were putting the games back in the box that we did find something.

A Ouija board.

"It's eeee-vil," Liza said, refusing to touch it.

I scowled. "What'cha mean, evil?"

"It's the devil's board game."

When Liza said this, the attic grew colder than the cemetery in the middle of February. I looked down at the Ouija board, then picked it up. It appeared harmless enough. Wasn't too heavy either. I don't know what got into me, but all of a sudden I was overcome by curiosity.

"I wanna see it," I said stubbornly.

I took the game downstairs, much to Liza's dismay, and put the box on the scratched coffee table. I turned on a lamp then pulled out the board and set it on the table. Tipping the box, I watched a small piece of wood tumble to the floor.

"What's this for?"

Liza explained how you rest your fingers on the wood and ask the spirits a question. She told me that the spirits would push the piece of wood and spell out the answers on the board. I thought, this I gotta see. But Liza wanted nothing to do with it. So me being a good friend and all promised to make her favorite carrot cake if she played the game with me.

We put our fingers on the wood and stared into each other's eyes.

"What should we ask it?" Liza's voice trembled with fear.

"Who are you, Great Spirit?" I asked in a spooky voice.

I tried hard not to laugh at the horrified expression on my friend's face while we waited for an answer. Nothing happened. I was gonna take my hand off when all of a sudden the piece of wood shot out from beneath my fingers.

N.

"Liza," I scolded. "You pushed it."

My friend shook her head, her face whiter than bleached cotton.

I rested my fingers back on the wood and we waited again. We were mesmerized when it moved across to the A.

NA.

Then it moved to the T. Then the A again.

NATA.

Liza leaned forward. "You think it's Natalie Brown from down the road? You know, the lady who died last Sunday."

I shook my head. "Dunno. Let's ask it another question instead."

Me and my big mouth.

I asked the board if it had a message for us. When we read it, Liza and I gasped. Then we shoved the board into the box and stuffed it under the couch.

You're probably wondering what the Ouija board said.

It said: DEATH BOBBY T.

Bobby Truman was the only Bobby T. we knew. And the very next day, he was. .h.i.t by a train when his truck stalled in the crossing. He was only eighteen years old when he died.

The day after that, Liza phoned me and said we had to get rid of the Ouija board. She couldn't have anything that evil in her house. So I met her on the corner and we took the board to the dumpster behind the laundromat and left it there. That was that!

Or so we thought.

Later that night I got a phone call. Liza was hysterical. "Come over, quick!"

When I got to my friend's house, I saw that every light was on.

"What's going on?" I asked when she pushed me into her living room.

And then I saw it.

Right there, in the middle of the coffee table, was the Ouija board.

"Jesus Murphy!" I muttered. "Why'd ya go back and get it?"

Liza swore up and down that she never went back for that board. It had just showed up on her table after suppertime. It still smelled like garbage and laundry soap.

"We have to find out what it wants," I told her. "Then maybe it'll leave you alone."

When we asked, the board came back with...DEATH SERENA U.

Serena Underhill was a girl I taught piano to. She was only 16.

I stared down at the board, then said to Liza, "Pack it up."

We left her house just after eight. She was holding a plastic bag with the board in it. She held it out in front with her fingertips as if she was holding fresh dog c.r.a.p. We walked four blocks down to Ling's Noodle House and shoved the bag into a trashcan just before the garbage truck came. We stood there and watched as all the trash was compacted.

The next day Serena Underhill drowned in Mears Creek.

And by suppertime the Ouija board was back on Liza's table, reeking of sesame oil.

Now I know what you're thinking. You're thinking that Liza went out and got back that board. I admit it. I was thinking the same thing. So when she called me that night, I went over and got the board. Then I took the bus to the ocean by myself. I walked along the boardwalk on the water's edge and flung that Ouija board out as far as I could. I waited while it was dragged out to sea and I stayed there until I saw that gawdd.a.m.n board sink into the ocean.

Half an hour later, I got home and found Liza sobbing on my front porch. In her hands she held a sopping wet Ouija board.

Oh my Jesus, and all that's above! I was more than shocked. For the first time in my life I was deathly afraid.

Realizing that we had no choice, we sat at my kitchen table with the board between us.

"What on G.o.d's green earth do you want?" I yelled.

My fingers tingled as the wood slowly slid across the board.

U.

I thought of Ursula Bigelow or Ugene Pierce.

The wood stayed where it was.

"U?" Liza moaned. "What does that mean?"

We waited for the board to spell more, but the wood didn't move.

Liza bit her lip. "We asked what it wants. I-I think it wants us."

Suddenly the room vibrated and we heard a wicked laugh echo through the house. We s.n.a.t.c.hed back our hands and watched the wood race around the board.

LIZASHAR "We gotta get rid of this thing," I said.

"We tried that!" Liza cried. "But it just keeps coming back."

When I glanced at the fireplace in my living room, I got an idea. We built us a fire and when it was blazing hot we fed it pieces of the box.

"Put another log on the fire," I sang bitterly, tossing the wood piece into the flames.

Together we threw the Ouija board into the fire and watched as it slowly crumpled on the edges. When it ignited, we let out a sigh of relief. Me and Liza stayed there, arm in arm, watching the letters slowly fry until the board turned to ashes. And then the smell hit us. The stench of rot and decay was awfullike an Easter egg long forgotten after Easter.

That was the night before last.

Yesterday morning, I found Liza on her front lawndead of a broken neck. Beside her lay the Ouija board with one small scorch mark on its edge.

The sky is blood-red over the lake and the air tastes like death.

I have to hurry. I don't think I got much time left. The board said both of us, so I know it's coming for me next. I'm so afraid, but I have to try to get rid of this thing one last time and I have to let everyone know the truth. I was the one who opened Pandora's Box. I'm the one who needs to close it.

Just so it's clear, Liza and I tried throwing the Ouija board in a dumpster and a trashcan. I threw it in the ocean and when that didn't work, we both watched it burn in the fireplace. Each and every time, the gawdawful evil thing ended up back at Liza's.

Then again, Liza never could throw anything away. A pack rat. That's what she was.

And my best friend.

I'm writing this letter and watching the Ouija board burn. This time I soaked it in lighter fluid, and when it's done burning I'm gonna take the ashes and bury them by the lake.

When we asked it that first night what its name was, we should have waited. Actually, we never should have asked in the first place.

NATA I know now that only one other letter was missing and that if I held a mirror to it, the word would read backwardthe devil of all evils. SATAN!

He's coming for me. I can feel it in my bones. It's all my fault. I was curious. And you know what they say about curiosity.

I have to get these ashes to the lake.

Be back later...I hope.

Sharon Kaye On February 13th,, my aunt Sharon was found lying near Aurora Lake, her gaping eyes frozen in fear and her hands blistered and burnt. The coroner said she drowned. But I think something else killed hersomething insidious and older than time.

While packing away my aunt's belongings at her lakeside cottage, I discovered this letter in a box of old party games. Curious, I read the letter and then reached into the box, pulling out something damp and slightly scorched. A OUIJA board.

You know what they say about curiosity...

About Cheryl Kaye Tardif Cheryl Kaye Tardif is a bestselling, award-winning, Vancouver-born suspense author now residing in Edmonton, AB. All of her works touch on some element of suspense or mystery, with an emotional hook.

Her novels include: Divine Justice, Children of the Fog, Whale Song, The River, and Divine Intervention. She's also the author of these new releases: Remote Control, a novelette, and Skeletons in the Closet & Other Creepy Stories, a collection of suspense/horror stories.

In 2004, Cheryl was nominated for the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Arts Award. In 2006, she was a contestant on A Total Write-Off!, a reality TV game show. In 2009, she placed in the semi-finals of Dorchester Publis.h.i.+ng's "Next Best Cellar" contest with her romantic suspense Lancelot's Lady, which is written under the pen name of Cherish D'Angelo. In 2010, Lancelot's Lady won an Editor's Choice Award from Textnovel.

A full-time writer, Cheryl has presented at many events. She has been featured on TV and radio, and in newspapers and magazines across Canada and the USA.

When asked what she does, Cheryl replies: "I kill people off for a living."

http://www.cherylktardif.com.

Waiting Near.

Joseph Patrick McFarlane.

Fragments Thomas Bossert..

FRY DAY.

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