Katy, A Ghost Story (IP)
By Insertponceyfrenchnamehere
- 16326 reads
‘Are you coming?” He asks mildy
And I think - here I am trying to sort out the bloody potatoes and I’m getting hotter and hotter and there he is sounding so calm and reasonable; drives me mad. If he helped more this wouldn’t happen in the first place. You know what? Nothing tastes good when you have to make it all yourself. Once. Just once I wish he'd do it. No scrap that – he makes such a mess when he does, I might as well just sodding do it myself. Next door, in the dining room, I can hear laughter, the chink of knives and forks, one of the girls singing.
“Yes! Just stop hassling”
I know I sound angry. The big bad mummy. It’s how I feel though. It’s a heat of the moment thing, know what I mean? So anyway I’m just about to hurl the whole fucking bowl at the wall, or him, or scream, or something – and one of the girls comes in – and it’s steamy, and I’m cross and I have the stupid oven gloves on and I’m so distracted – and then whichever it is wraps her arms around me tight, and I look down at the top of the little blonde head, and she says “thank you mummy it was delicious”, and out of the corner of my eye I see her put the plate in the sink; then she runs off again, and momentarily I think “Jesus that was quick” but I’m too busy trying to salvage the potatoes to say anything.
When I’m done, I carry them through to the dining room – we always insist on family supper there – it’s such a good example to them isn’t it? Everyone round the table, just as we imagined they would be, chattering, sharing news. I remember talking about it with John when they were babies – it’s a big thing with me, and Lucy looks up and I’m just about to say “put the knife down”- she’s waving it around all over the place, and then she says “Mummy who was the girl running up the stairs just now?”
And then everything stops. Goes into slow motion, if you know what I mean, and this prickly feeling goes through me – starts at the back of my neck and runs through me like an electric shock. I look around, and the girls have barely touched their food – makes sense, it’s only been five minutes since they started, and I say “who came into the kitchen just now?” and my voice sounds weird – breaking into the sudden silence. As I knew they would, they look at me blankly, not understanding. And then John looks up – he knows by now that something’s wrong. He looks puzzled. “No-one” he says. And then I don’t think I can stand up anymore, and I sit down, and they’re all watching me.
Then Lucy says it again, twisting one of her curls around her finger like she does; “who was that girl going upstairs mummy?” And John goes to stand up, but I say “no” quietly. And I get up. I’m shaky, but I can do it, and I go to the stairs and look up: nothing. I put my hand on the banisters, and I start to climb. I know what I’ll find at the top.
I go into each bedroom, checking, although I know there’ll be nothing, the way I check under the bed for Lottie when she swears there’s a monster there. Lastly I go into our bedroom, and I sit down on the bed, because this is where she slept – Katy. We put all three girls in here in the moses basket at first, makes feeding easier at night, then they went into cots in their own rooms at six months. Only Katy never did of course. And as I sit on the bed I remember something else, the only other time something’s happened. The weight on my shoulder, after we lost her. It was how I supported her head. She was never old enough to manage it herself – it must have been about six months after, and I was in here crying – I was already pregnant with Lucy then – and I felt that weight again. I knew what it was of course. There wasn’t one single doubt in my mind, and it wasn’t frightening – I wasn’t scared – the opposite. And I know – I knew when she came into the kitchen just now, I knew it was one of mine – they are all so similar. Makes sense. I’m okay now – really. It was just a bit of a shock. I’m okay now. I’ll go back downstairs again in a minute.
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Comments
Beautifully done
Beautifully done, the elision from hassled and narky, to grief stricken, to accepting.
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This is outrageously good.
This is outrageously good. Beautifully balanced. Thanks for posting.
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Haha!!! Fair point -- no
Haha!!! Fair point -- no excuses now.
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Congrats, insert. It was such
Congrats, insert. It was such a woderful story.
Rich x
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Insertponceyfrenchnamehere
Insertponceyfrenchnamehere; Ilikedthisverymuchbeginningmiddlegreattwistattheend..htieK
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I like the change of emphasis
I like the change of emphasis towards the end. A supernatural incident morphing into a story of grief. Very nicely done. Paul
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from ordinary to extra-ordinary
this would have wrong-footed me if it hadn't been for the title – the ending nicely offset by the humour of the start...
loved the mayhem of the third paragraph, with the vaguest of hints that this is going somewhere sadder... it could have alternatively gone in an out and out humorous direction, would love to see what comic stories you can do in a similar style!
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it's interesting how you choose
which stories to read – shows the importance of a first paragraph!
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great, thanks!
will keep an eye out on the front page...
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Vivid and skilled
Love this - the way it plunges you into the domestic in such a 'real' way, before its twists and turns. Beautifully written and moving. with a real gut-punch end.
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Agreed
Absolutely. You captured the domestic tone and stream of consciousness brilliantly. Have you read Ducks, Newburyport? I've only seen extracts and think it would be too much for my brainfogged brain but it does intrigue me
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/jul/15/ducks-newburyport-by-lucy-...
I like it when people take inspiration from the ordinary, and play with structure and form (even if some of it ends up inpenetrable to me, I like the sense of play.) Want to read more Magic Realism as I love the contrast and sense of magic, and like it when serious messages are hidden within fairy tales and esoteric adventures.
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