Author's Note:
There is no sex in this story. If that's what you're looking for, read one of my other stories.
A special thanks to blackrandl1958 for organizing this event, and for editing this story. You're a doll. Thank you, also, to my other editor and friend, Pixel the Cat and all my fantastic betas: Laura Lun, BarryJames1952, Spyauth, sbrooks103x, and stev2244. To my dearest friends MsCherylTerra, for coming up with the ending, and to Bebop3, who was so invested in the story that he
wrote
that ending, which I tweaked and included as the last passage.
In this story, ask "why" not "how" and it will all fall into place.
Cheers,
Nora
_______________
🌻
Sunflowers in Bloom
🌻
_______________
On a balmy, purposeless spring weekend in 1965, the stone cottage received its first inhabitant in many years.
It was a small house with only two upstairs bedrooms, a lounge, a tiny attic, one bath and an old kitchen with a breakfast nook in the place of a dining room. The inside of the house was vacant and dusty, a testament to its age and lack of upkeep. The yellow wallpaper in the lounge was peeling, the colour browning around the edges like a used cigarette. The bedrooms had been freshly painted, but they were beige and unbearably boring, and the plumbing was suspiciously rusted. The only good things to be said about the house were in the exterior with its charming stone walls, hanging plants, climbing vines, blooming flower beds, and a lovely bright-blue front door.
"You won't last a fortnight here," Ezra said. He wiped the sweat off his brow with the back of his sleeve, but it only served to smear over his leather jacket. It was a wonder that he'd put it on after having moved furniture all day.
"I don't think it's all bad," said Alfie, plopping down on an armchair. "Nate only needs it for—ah, what did you call it?"
"Inspirational intervention," Ezra supplied for him, rubbing his temples. He casually leaned back against the wall of the lounge and closed his eyes.
Nate nervously scratched the back of his head, looking a little hopeless. The agent had shown him very nice pictures of the surrounding English countryside. In them, the house had looked quaint, just what he'd asked for. He should've taken the cheap rent as a red flag, but it hadn't been the first rash decision he'd made lately. Quitting his job in the city had been rashest of them all.
"He's in shock," Alfie said when too much time had passed.
"Definitely," Ezra agreed with a grin.
"Piss off," Nate said, feeling a bit annoyed by how right they were. In fact, the idea of living alone in the time-worn cottage was starting to sound worse and worse by the second.
It was too late, however, to reconsider his decision. He'd already signed an eighteen-month lease and had spent the better half of his weekend moving in all his belongings, with the help of Alfie and Ezra. All the furniture and boxes were in the home. The typewriter was set up on an old mahogany desk in the smaller of the two bedrooms, which he'd converted into his study. Save for a few boxes that still needed unpacking, he was all set to pursue his dream.
"We'd best get going then," Alfie said, checking his watch. It was half-past five. "Queenie will need to be fed." Queenie was Alfie's cat.
"Mental," Ezra muttered, but he straightened himself from the wall and dug in his back pocket for the keys to the moving lorry. He jangled the keys in front of Alfie, motioning for him to get up from the armchair.
Nate was still debating what to do with himself. In a few moments, he would be completely and utterly alone.
"You listen here,
Nathan,"
Ezra said, looking pleased by the dirty look Nate threw him for using his full name, something that he knew Nate
loathed.
"You ring us if the spirit comes out to scare you. We'll set her straight, won't we, Alf?"
Alfie pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose and rolled his eyes.
Ezra had chatted up some locals at the pub in town the day before, learning that the cottage Nate had leased was, in fact, haunted.
"Oh yes, it's positively dreadful. Poor girl died there ages ago. Don't think she was ever able to move on," a woman had said, leaning in much too close to speak to Ezra. A handful of other women had collected beside him in the pub, watching him with keen interest.
It was no surprise. Ezra was extremely good-looking. He had mastered the "bad boy" look with his leather motorcycle jacket, Black Sabbath t-shirt, and black Doc Martens boots. His arms were covered with tattoos, always had a pack of smokes in his back pocket, and styled his long black hair slicked back from his handsome face.
Neither Alfie nor Nate resented him for it. They'd known him so long that they could only see him for what he was: a fiercely loyal friend, the kind that could be counted on to show up at a moment's notice in light of any crisis, no matter how big or small. He was a jokester, that wasn't a lie, but it was always in harmless fun. There was so much more to Ezra than he let on. Only his best mates knew that no matter how cool he acted, deep down, he was just like them: friendly, likable, funny, and deeply self-conscious—hell, they were all just human.
The three of them had been mates since attending the same boarding school as kids, bunking together in the same dorm while kicking up destruction everywhere else; pulling pranks on the staff, sneaking out to the girls' building at night, smuggling back alcohol from their parents' liquor cabinets after holiday—what stupid troublesome thing
hadn't
they done?
In all that time, the three had become more brothers than friends.
"Wooooooo,"
Ezra said, wiggling his fingers as he did his best (rather terrible) impression of a ghost.
"I think they made it all up," Alfie said, talking about the townspeople. "We've been here all weekend. I haven't seen any sort of spirit."
"Oh, there are
some
spirits here," Ezra said, gesturing to the fully-stocked bar cart in the corner of the lounge. He seemed to have forgotten that he was just about to drive himself and Alfie home (Alfie still didn't have a driver's licence, bless him).
"Get out," Nate said, taking Ezra by the shoulders. He led him to the front door, yelping when Ezra reached back and seductively ran his hands up Nate's arms.
Alfie trailed out after them, snickering until Ezra blew him a kiss and winked.
"Real pervert, you are," he grumbled.
Nate walked Ezra down the drive and right up to the rented moving lorry parked by the walkway. It looked out of place amongst all the greenery.
Taking in his surroundings, Nate was comforted by how beautiful the landscape was. Rolling hills, cheerful neighboring homes, twittering birds, and the fresh sweet scent of honeysuckle. There was a large oak tree on the property, casting a bit of shade from the sun that had already begun to set. It really was a lovely place if the interior of the cottage could be excused.
Ezra turned when Nate released him. "All right, mate," he said. "You sure I can't convince you to come back to the land of the living?" He was referring to the city.
Nate nodded. "This'll be good for me. I'll finally be able to finish my novel."
That would be the novel that he'd been trying to write since age sixteen, the one that he thought about constantly and wrote and rewrote and spent many sleepless nights editing and revising. The very same novel for which he'd quit his job in accounting. For the millionth time that weekend, Nate felt unsure of his decision.
Years of school wasted on an accounting degree. Far away from all my friends and family. Depleting all of my savings. I've gone mental.
"You used to be scared of ghosts, you know," Ezra reminded Nate.
"Yeah, when we were
kids."
Alfie reached over and gave Nate a one-armed hug, assuring him not to worry as he was positively certain that the odds of the cottage being haunted were zero to none. Alfie wasn't the kind to believe in anything of that sort. He was bookish, often no-nonsense, possessing a rather dark, dry sense of humour, and dressed a bit like a dad, much like a middle-aged man stuck in a twenty-five-year-old's body—a far cry from the innocent-faced schoolboy who had smiled sweetly in his teachers' faces after setting off stink bombs in the corridors with his best mates. "You two corrupted me!" was the excuse he gave now when his behaviour in school was ever mentioned.
"Thanks, Alf," Nate said, returning the hug. He was feeling both nervous and excited. In the city he'd lived with Ezra in a cramped flat, and before that he'd always been at the boarding school or at his family's estate in Wiltshire. He'd never truly lived on his own.
Ezra was good at reading him. "We're all waiting on you to write that best-seller," he said warmly. "And Alfie and I will pop in every weekend to check that the ghost hasn't murdered you, of course."
Alfie shot him a disapproving look. "C'mon," he said, rounding the lorry to get into the passenger seat.
Ezra clapped a hand on Nate's shoulder. "Stay focused. You'll make a killing once it's done."
"Drive safe, Ez. Don't get into too much trouble without me."
"Wouldn't dream of it," Ezra said, smiling. He hugged him, supplied him with another amusing warning about ghosts, and got into the lorry. The engine started up with a sputtering roar, shaking as Ezra shifted it into gear.
Nate stood on the walkway and waved, watching his friends drive away down the road. He watched after them for a long while, shading the sun from his eyes with a hand until the lorry was just a speck in the distance. It was dark by the time he looked away, the lorry already long gone.
He shivered from the evening breeze, and let out a sigh and made his way back to the cottage. It was his first true venture into the unknown.