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28 lines, a poetic story that takes place in autumn in a typical suburban neighborhood. |
Suburban Haunt We lost again: trash can Monty with the local black bear. My neighbor walks over as I pick up my trash. "You really should get the metal cans, the ones that lock," he says. I smile and nod. Across the street, the old Hampstead house has no trash cans out this week, same as last. "Does anyone live there?" I ask the neighbor. "Don't think so," he says, rolling an apple core towards me with his shoe. I keep an eye out for the bear the rest of the day, knowing he'll probably wait for night to circle back. I noticed that the front door of the Hampstead house is wide open, perhaps kicked loose by the autumn wind. I put on my jacket and head over to close it. As I get to the door, I notice the dining room chairs scattered on their sides and dusty curtains pulled from their rods. I call out but no response. I hear furniture being moved around upstairs. I walk up the stairs, my heart a startled sparrow wanting to escape. At the top of the stairs, a black figure appears from one of the bedrooms. I scream and it runs in front of me, down the stairs, and out the open door. I notice a picture on the wall of an elderly couple. My neighbor shows up at the front porch and asks "What the hell was that thing?" I am about to tell him it was the bear but stop myself. Instead I tell him, "It was a dark spirit, a ghost I was forced to battle and won." His eyes are the shape of large marbles. I pull the front door closed behind me and step out into the cold air. When he asks why did I even come over to the house, I reply: "How was I supposed to know it was haunted?" |