Writing prompt: Its dark and secret heart
Mom-mom,
1934.
My obsession with ghosts started in the sixth grade,
though it had its roots in my grandmother’s death two
years earlier. We were in the kitchen, putting
groceries away when she suddenly clutched at her
throat and started gasping for air, frantically
motioning to the kitchen chair. I stood there,
confused, scared. Finally, I moved the cat, and
Mom-mom collapsed into the empty space.
It was up to me to dial 911. We waited 40 minutes for
the ambulance to come all the way from Elkton. She
was dead or close to it by the time it arrived.
Congestive heart failure. In a couple of weeks, my
mother, her boyfriend, and I moved in with my
grandfather and tried to cope with her absence and
our new living situation.
I’m not sure where the Ouija board
came from. Maybe it was a Christmas present. I
started carrying it around with me, taking it to
school, begging my friends to help me contact my
grandmother. They went along with it and I believed
everything. Mom-mom had a friend named Sam up there
in heaven. Everything was all right, and she was
watching over me.

My mother took the death chair out of the kitchen,
eventually storing it in the attic space over the
garage. I was into sleeping in tight spaces, under
picnic tables, in tiny tents I set up in the
backyard. One night I convinced my best friend to
spend the night in the attic with the chair. The
space was hot and smelled of cut wood and roofing
tar. I kept staring at the empty chair, waiting for
my grandmother to appear.
Over the years, through neglect and hard times, I
kept on waiting. When, as a teenager, I moved to the
Little House adjacent to my grandfather’s place and
felt totally alone, I wished for a sign of her
presence, a sign that someone was watching over me.
Now I know that such hopes are false.





