Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
this is from the other side.”
One of the Bellevue High girls giggled. I wanted to as well.
Finn was back again and he must have seen my mouth turn up.
He kicked my shoe softly with the toe of his own, made his eyes
spooky big. The sun dipped on cue. An older couple wearing
matching jackets scooted closer together, and he took her hand.
“You wonder, do you, why seashore towns and lighthouses
always have ghosts? Because this is where the violent seas meet
turbulent shore, where ships of men leave loved ones behind, wit-
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nesses to storms and loss and the drowning and crashing of that
loss. There are hundreds of dead sailors right here, right below us
in these waters. This was a major shipping channel back in time
of the tall ships, and the high winds here made passage deadly.
Many ships went missing. The SS
Highport
, The
Williamson
, the
Queen Victoria
, to name just a few. Is it any wonder that the para-
normal activity here is so great? Tragic loss and great fear means
unsettled spirits.”
Beth Louise stopped. You couldn’t help yourself. You looked
out onto those waters. You imagined.
“The sailing vessels, well, let’s come back to those, because
right now we are over the spot of a tragic shipwreck that took
place on April 1, 1921, the wreck of the SS
Governor
, where the
lives lost were not seamen, but a family. The Washbourne fam-
ily, Harry and Lucy asleep on one side of the cabin and their two
young daughters on the other. Imagine the dark night, the deep
waters, cold, cold. The family was sound asleep the moment that
the captain of the SS
Governor
confused the running lights of the
West Hartland
for the inland light of port and proceeded forward,
until the bow of the
West Hartland
slashed through the ship and
divided the Washbourne family cabin right in half.”
“Oh, God,” the woman with the long hair said. Her friend had
her hand to her mouth. I didn’t feel like joking anymore. Beth
Louise’s voice was calm and undramatic. None of this seemed
silly. This was a real and tragic event, and her voice reflected that.
Even Beth Louise herself was not as silly as she first seemed.
“The crew came quickly to their aid, but the young girls
were trapped, unable to be freed. Water was coming in. Water
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Deb Caletti
everywhere. Harry was brought up top, and, against her will, so
was the now hysterical mother, Lucy. The crew worked to move
the rest of the stranded passengers of the now sinking ship
quickly as possible to the
West Hartland.
But while they were
distracted, Lucy broke free of her rescuers and ran to be with
her children. She was never seen again. The ship sank within
twenty minutes.”
Beth Louise looked grim. Now the Bellevue High girls were
holding hands. The sky was dark. A half circle moon hung high.
Those black waves—they did look so, so cold.
“Lucy is said to haunt the area,” Beth Louise said. “She has
been seen numerous times, by sailors and fishermen and locals.
The Pigeon Point Lighthouse keeper at the time, James Shaw,
witnessed the accident. Today, members of the U.S. Coast Guard
have made reports about seeing the woman in her white night-
gown hovering here and at the lighthouse itself, going inside,
disappearing. Searching.”
Obsession
sliced through the waters, and then Jack called
“Come about!” to Finn, and there was the clatter of boom and
sails as the boat turned to parallel the shore. We could see the
lighthouse up ahead, and then nearer and nearer it came, look-
ing eerie against the backdrop of that story. Its tall white column
held another story now, Lucy Washbourne’s, and another, James
Shaw’s. It was stupid, but I shivered. The whole thing was stupid,
but she was a real mother and they were real children. As the boat
slowed in front of the lighthouse, I thought of Sylvie in there. I
wondered what she and Roger were doing at that very moment.
The house looked dark. I thought of Sylvie’s own loss, and about
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loss itself. What loss can do to us. What even the threat of loss
can do.
“And now we move to what is perhaps Bishop Rock’s most
famous spirit, Eliza Bishop. Her husband, Captain Bishop, was
one of the town’s early leaders. His ship,
Glory,
was hit by a sud-
den storm right here in front of the land named for his father. It
was a terrible wind. The rain slammed hard, waves overtook the
boat; the boat, heavy with water, tilted toward the sea. Desperate
men were running and clinging and sliding down the slanting
floorboards, screaming. Many of the townspeople watched the
terrible wreck from the windows of the old meeting hall, which
no longer stands. Eliza herself ran through the storm to the hall.
She saw that ship sinking, and it was obvious no man would
have made it from that wreck alive. She could see the men, her
husband somewhere among them, flailing but unable to be
rescued in the terrible waters just out of reach. She ran to the
lighthouse. The keeper tried to stop her racing up those stairs,
to the upper level, but she stepped outside onto that deck and
leaped to her death on the rocks below.”
“Jesus,” the man with the big belt buckle said.
“She has been seen for years at the lighthouse, and the ghost
ship
Glory
has been witnessed often, sailing these waters with no
crew aboard.”
Jack and Finn came about again, the whip and rattle of the
sails causing the woman in the expensive hippie sandals to jump
and then laugh at herself. Beth Louise was silent. No one else
spoke, either. It seemed the respectful thing to do. Eliza and
Captain Bishop—they were once living people who felt and loved
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Deb Caletti
and who had slept together in their safe bed. The waves looked
tipped in silver as the moon glowed on and on and on.
Jack glided the boat back into port. The jovial mood that
everyone came with seemed to return once we were off those
waters, back in the safety of harbor. People were joking. Someone
asked the Bishop brothers whether they had ever spotted any
spirits out there, and Jack joked that, no, he hadn’t, but he’d once
seen the Virgin Mary in an abalone shell.
I tried to shift gears, to pick up the new mood, but I felt weighted
down. The deep feelings of other people’s grief and passion and
tragedy—we drew those things to us; we made them romantic and
dreamlike and luridly fascinating. We made them into stories. You
could forget, then, that a girl, a real girl, could stand at the banks of
Greenlake with her heart beating in her throat, her shoes sinking
into the mud. You could forget that Mrs. Bishop felt her life was
over. You could come to think that real fear, real danger, was a far-
away thing. Romantic and dreamlike and luridly fascinating, but not
real, even as you felt it, the phone vibrating in your pocket right then.
Three calls from Christian and one from my father.
Finn jumped from the boat. Took my face in his hands. “I
didn’t hear a word of any of that, because all I could think was
how beautiful you looked in that moonlight,” he said.
I smiled. “Kiss me, because I’d better get home,” I said.
He did. His face was cold against my cold face.
“Thanks for putting up with that just to see me,” he said.
I pretended I thought it was stupid, too. I didn’t want to con-
fess that it disturbed me. “So, Mr. Finn. What do you think about
all of that? If there are ghosts,
why
are there ghosts?”
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He kissed the tip of my nose. “People who can’t let go?”
“We feel sorry for them, though. They’re ‘tormented’ . . .”
“Yeah” he said. “But they scare the shit out of people because
they can’t move on. Selfish.”
“Metaphor,” I said.
But Finn didn’t care about metaphors. He kissed me again.
“Do you want me to walk you to your car?”
I did want him to, but I shook my head. I wouldn’t let him
see how much the dark was scaring me, the sound of the water
against the pilings of the dock, the old wood groaning and creak-
ing as it shifted. “See you tomorrow?”
“Great,” he said.
I walked away, turned to wave. I wished I could run to my
car, but he was watching and it would have been embarrassing.
I wanted to, though. Everything inside was
urging
. I unlocked
my door in a hurry. I got in and locked all of the doors around
me. The street was empty and quiet except for the noise that
spilled from Butch’s Harbor Bar when a couple opened the door
to go in. The steering wheel was cold, the seat, too. I turned on
the engine and blasted the heater and drove home too fast, my
phone right by my hip in the pocket of Cleo’s jacket, those mes-
sages from Christian too close to my body.
I drove through town, down the winding beach road that
hugged the coast. I watched my rearview mirror for lights, but it
was just all darkness stretched out behind me. I saw the house,
our house, sitting at the tip of Possession Point, a yellowish glow
coming from the windows. As I approached, a Jeep passed me.
Sylvie Genovese going home.
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Deb Caletti
I pulled into the driveway. Smoke was coming from our
chimney. My father had lit a fire. Intimate ambience, which could
have been irritating, only it wasn’t. The thought of warmth and
home sounded like a great relief, a place to reach that I hadn’t yet
reached. The distance between the car and the inside seemed so
far still, with all that dark space out there, with that endless beach
grass high enough to hide in, the black banks of rock, the piles of
driftwood right outside my window.
I turned off the engine and looked around before I stepped
out, and I almost ran to that front door. I flung it open and shut it
hard behind me, safe. I was out of breath. At least, I felt the heavi-
ness in my chest that meant I was trying to get air. Drowning
must feel like that.
“Jesus,” I said. I put my hand to my heart, like I’d been
chased and now I had made it. I looked around. The fire was
still popping and snapping, but sleepily, in that winding down
way that meant they’d had a long evening together. There were
candles in candlesticks on the table. The wax dripped down; the
candles were burnt to only a few inches high.
My father was in the bathroom. I heard him. And then he
came out and stared at me, and his face looked strange. His eyes
looked puffy, small slits. I was glad to see him, though. I needed
to tell him.
“He called me again. I know he’s here.”
“We’re going on Monday, Clara. There’s a courthouse in
Anacortes. We’re going to get that restraining order as soon as
the doors open. But there’s something we need to talk about
now.”
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I didn’t say anything. My back was still to the front door. I
understood something. “Whatever your big secret is, you told
Sylvie, didn’t you?”
“Come and sit down.”
It seemed like a terrible disloyalty, him telling her first.
Whatever it was, he was my father and this was my business. It
didn’t feel safe inside there anymore. Inside, outside—nowhere
felt safe. “I don’t want to know your big secret.”
“Clara Pea.”
“Don’t call me that.”
“I should have told you a long time ago, but I couldn’t.”
We stayed there, standing. In the movies, you always see
people sitting down for Big News. People always say that, too,
they urge you to sit before it comes. But sitting is one step further
from the chance to flee. Standing is closer to
away.
“Your mother . . .”
“I don’t want this.”
“I’ve lied to you. I’ve got a hundred good reasons why, but it
doesn’t change the fact that I never told you the truth.”
“I don’t need the truth.”
“Clara, please.” I didn’t want to be told, but he needed to tell.
You could see it. The words had been pressing at him from the
inside for so long and long and long like words do, like secret
shame does. Words must finally be said; they press their way out.
Words came from his fingertips every day, onto pages that were
read by thousands of people, but these private words, they stayed
inside where they didn’t belong, building strength and weight,
shoving harder until they were bigger than he was.
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Deb Caletti
“It’s your problem,” I said. My back was still to the door.
“She didn’t die of an aneurysm,” he said.