Written by Marina Melo
Edited by Lucas Rafael Ferraz
Translated by Natalle Moura
Copyedited by Vanessa Guedes
In three hundred years haunting homes, nothing too extraordinary had happened to her. It was a job without great excitement, like any other: some living being moved into a private property and disturbed the peace of a respectable spirit, so she was called to deal with the problem. As she was a specialist, only two nights used to be enough to do the job, although on some occasions the person resisted for about a month. There was even a case, an infestation particularly tough, in which she had to push a troublemaker out of the second-floor window. The downside was that she had to put up with the guy’s haunt.
Then the current case arose. She was hired to haunt a fine colonial-style townhouse located in the downtown area, the residency of a lady that was walled alive by her father centuries ago. The poor woman just wanted a peaceful rest, which she achieved for a few years, when her legend made people afraid to buy the house. Everything changed when, years later, the history was forgotten and they decided to transform the building into a pension. That was when the invasion started.
The poor lady could no longer scare away the people, since nowadays little is as scary as the living themselves. However, when she, the specialist, came into play armed with her expertise and presentation, aligned with the best contemporary horror movies, every guest was promptly expelled. Well, except one.
He was kinda skinny, tall, and lanky, like a skeleton, with deep dark circles under his eyes. Initially, she thought that it could be some kind of make-up, like those used by people who like to feign being dead either by fashion or lifestyle. But, as it turned out, it was just a chronic insomnia problem. It was after three in the morning and he was still awake, watching a series in bed. She entered the wall, her ghostly figure appearing surrounded by a thick mist, as she always did. He saw her, but he did not seem impressed by her usually triumphal entry.
“I wondered if any of you would come today,” he said.
She moved toward him, in the best floating style — with bulging eyes and tousled hair in front of her face. She stopped and raised her squalid hands to his neck. The white nightgown slid from her arms, showing her swollen, transparent skin with protuberant and sickly-looking veins.
“In fact, behind this whole theater, you are not that ugly.”
Her eyes widened more, now with shock all over them.
“What?” she unintentionally asked.
“Probably because of the hair over your face,” he said, raising his hand and pushing aside the curtain of her thick black strands.
The ghost recoiled. She was out of character and now it was going to be difficult to regain the scary posture. She knew the situation was complicated, but she didn’t imagine she would deal with that kind of prankster.
"I realized that you all expect me to leave," he said, not giving her time to compose herself. “But, you see, the problem is that I have no plans to leave”.
She crossed her arms.
“You will leave, willingly or not.”
“I'm not afraid of you, honey.”
She smiled, showing some pieces of rotten teeth.
“And do you think all I do is scare?”
For the first time, she saw a flash of fear in his expression. She took the opportunity, moving slowly.
“I steal souls. I throw them into the vacuum of existence and leave the bodies adrift, lost, and empty”, she said, evoking an ominous breeze that penetrated through the window's cracks, howling, and making the room lamp, attached only by a wire, wobble, and flicker. “I kill, but it is not a peaceful death. Your soul will be trapped forever in a world of cold and darkness.”
She left the words to hang in the air to provoke the desired impact. His eyes were fixed on her as if imagining the terrors he would experience.
"Fine by me," he said at last.
The wind stopped.
“What was it?”
“I'm in a bit of a complicated situation out there, you know?”, he justified himself as if to apologize. “There are some guys after me. You can't even imagine what they'll do if they catch me. So, I think I prefer this dark world of yours.”
"But ... But you're going to die," she argued, indignant.
“Die. We’re all going to die, right? Well, you are not dying anymore... Look, I know you must be frustrated and such. But, between us, I think you take yourself too seriously.
“How so?”
“You know, this thing about frightening, about killing.”
She didn't know if he was brave or just too stupid.
“I am a ghost!”
“Exactly. Why don't you leave the world of the living and go have some fun?”
"Because I have a job to do," she said, trying to maintain her dignity. “An important job.”
“Important to whom?”
“To the souls who need me.”
“And what do you get out of it? A paycheck? Do you pay any bills? Do you owe rent?”
The ghost hesitated for a moment, but insisted:
“I like to scare. And I am the best at what I do. I conquered this position with a lot of effort and my horrifying appearance. It was not easy.”
“I don't doubt it. But the truth, dear, is that you work for free.”
She fell silent. In all these years, she had never thought of that. She received nothing, in fact; not even a thank you. She didn't know what her payment would be like if she had one. She was just called, did her job, and fixed the problem. She had gained some fame for her natural talent and, with that, she had only gotten even more work. And that was what her eternity was all about. In a way, she was just a servant.
She collapsed on the bed, her musty robes rustling.
“But I... I don't know how to do anything else.”
He sat down next to her.
“Eita, that was quite an overstatement! There must be something you can do.”
“No, I have been doing only this since my first day. I killed and took the soul of the man who drowned me. That's how I got my own legend.”
“Well... You can travel. See the world. Have you ever been to Paris?”
“No... I never left town.”
“It's your opportunity. Have you ever wondered? The whole world is yours; you don't even have to pay for a ticket, accommodations, or food. Just go floating over the sea. Or disappear here and reappear there, whatever you do. But it should be simple. You have all the time in the world after all.”
She got up from the bed. He was right. For whom she spent all this time haunting houses? More than three hundred years and never had a day off. Much less a vacation. It was time to change her life. Or rather, life path.
“Where are you going?” he asked, eyebrows raised.
"Paris," she said. “Or Rome. I always wanted to visit the Colosseum; it is said that many people died there.”
“Good choice.”
“Well, goodbye. And thanks for the tip.”
And the ghost was gone, crossing the same wall through which she entered, but with much less fuss.
He watched her go and smiled, pleased with his impeccable work. Some missions were more complicated than others. Sometimes, he had to improvise. But, at last, one more case of infestation was solved. Maybe now he could get some sleep. Because, unlike the dead, he had bills to pay and would not go to Paris anytime soon.
Marina Melo
Marina Melo is a writer from Recife and a feminist. She writes on the blog Do Fundo do Mar, has published the independent novel “Um Encontro”, available in Portuguese on Amazon, and the flash fiction "A Dama de Branco" (The Lady in White) through Faísca. She is part of the Recife writer’s group, Writing Coven, a collective of women from the state of Pernambuco.
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