"Horror stories show that the control we believe we have is merely an illusion."
-Clive Barker
***
Getting out of the car, Herb looked at the house and whistled. "Are you sure this dame's not a real witch?" he said.
Herb's wife shushed him. "What kind of a question is that?"
"A good one. Just look at this place."
The old iron gate around the property's dying lawn creaked when he pushed on it, and a winding path of broken stones led up to the tall, dark house with Gothic turrets and staring windows. You'd basically have to be a witch to move in here, he thought. The realtor was probably even running some kind of witch special: "Extra large broom closets, new cauldron included with down payment," that kind of thing.
Herb's wife tsked at the overgrown flower beds as they approached the front door. "This looks so unhealthy," she said. "You don't think Willie caught anything while he was here? From fleas or something?"
Herb thought it was more likely that fleas would get sick from biting their son than the other way around, but said nothing. When he pushed the doorbell he expected it to make a scream, like on an old TV show, but all he got was a perfectly normal ring. And when the door opened, he was surprised again: A pretty young woman with a figure and a big smile stood on the threshold, and she smelled like cinnamon. Herb took off his hat.
"Pardon me, Miss," he said. "We're looking for your...mother?"
The woman's bangs bobbed when she shook her head. "No, you're looking for me. I'm Nancy Brookwood. And you must be Mr. and Mrs. Beaser. Come right in!"
The house was all angles and wood paneling and as dark as pitch on the inside, but it wasn't dirty or rundown. In fact, it seemed tidy and pleasant; cinnamon and other baking scents were everywhere, as well as smells like burning candles and incense. It was immediately one of the most comfortable places Herb had ever been in. No wonder Willie is always trying to sneak over here, he thought.
Furrowing her brow as she followed, Herb's wife said, "Are we expected? We shouldn't be. Oh, that sounds rude, doesn't it?"
The Brookwood woman shook her head again. "Not at all. The only reason I knew you were coming is you're the third parents to stop by today. I'll probably get the whole neighborhood before the weekend is over."
She brought Herb and his wife to a library of sorts, with big windows and thick carpet and a monstrous fireplace. Herb recognized it from Willie's description of the house. A plate of cookies sat on the table, apparently baked just for their arrival.
The Brookwood woman was small, the antique chair she sat in bigger than she was. Sitting showed off her dynamite legs; Herb couldn't take his eyes off them. "Have as much as you want," she said.
Herb blinked. Then he realized she was talking about the cookies.
"Let me understand," said Herb's wife. "You're the only Nancy Brookwood who lives here? I don't mean to be rude, but you're justβ"
"Not what you expected?"
"You're not an old broad with a hump and a glass eye who smells like dead cats, so no, not what we expected," said Herb. His wife shot him a glare that could peel paint, but the Brookwood woman laughed..
"Not yet," she said. "There is another Nancy Brookwood in the family but she's not around at the moment. Mostly it's just me here. I know the assumptions people make; it comes of being a shut-in. But we're here to talk about Willie, aren't we? He's a very smart boy. And such a little cutie. He looks just like you, Mr. Beaser."
He almost grinned, but caught himself. The Brookwood woman's smile thinned out to a knowing expression when she turned to Herb's wife.
"But you don't want Willie coming here after school anymore. That's why you came, isn't it?"
Herb slouched. His wife sat up straighter. She said, "It's nothing personal, Miss Brookwoodβ"
"Nancy."
"It's just that I don't entirely understand what you're doing here with the children every day. I want to be sure that it's not anything...unwholesome."
A stuffed owl decorated a nearby table, and the Brookwood woman touched its tail feathers in an absent way. Herb expected it to move and turn out to have been real all along, but it didn't. He did spot movement underneath her chair, though, and realized that a cat was staring up at them. His wife hated cats, but she didn't seem to have noticed it.
"It's nothing sinister," said the Brookwood woman. "The neighborhood kids just come in after school and I bake them cookies, and they look around the house. It's an old place with lots of interesting rooms and old junk. Kids like to explore." She paused. "And I tell them stories."
"What kind of stories?" Herb said. This was the part that had gotten him out of bed early on a Saturday morning (his only day off from selling mattresses the rest of the week) to come over here. Willie had mentioned stories when Herb got after him for being late coming home so often. It seemed they made quite an impression on the kid, but when Herb asked what kind of stories they were Willie clammed up.
The Brookwood woman shrugged. "You know: ghost stories. The kind children like. Mostly ones my grandmother told me when this was her home. I could tell you one, if you like? So you'll see that they're not so bad."
Herb almost agreed, but when opened his mouth all the spit dried up. Nice as she seemed, he had a feeling that he was better off not sampling Nancy Brookwood's talent for ghost stories; Willie had been having trouble sleeping lately too, and Herb imagined he knew why. To cover himself, he reached for a cookie.
"And as for me, well, I live alone," Nancy continued. "I have a condition that makes it so that I can hardly bear to leave the house, and I get lonely. When the kids started showing up, I found I rather liked having them around."
"Willie says you're a witch." Herb had not really meant to speak up. Words were just flying out of his mouth today, it seemed, and even his wife's Medusa glare couldn't shut him up.
The Brookwood woman nodded, almost enthusiastically. "Oh, I know. Isn't it funny? That's why they came in the first place; you know, daring each other to knock on my door. The first time I answered I think I about scared poor Willie to death. Scared the life right OUT of him."
She laughed again, a much higher, more uncomfortable sound this time.
"But I'm not so bad. Kids like being scared."
"Dr. Wertham says your stories aren't good for Willie," Herb's wife said, sitting on just the very edge of her chair. "He's a very respected child psychologist who spoke at the soroptomists last week. He says stories like yours lead to juvenile delinquency and all sorts of problems."