Hello! I have written many things, but a steamy ghost story isn't one. This is a work in progress, so it will not be perfectly polished. Please leave constructive and polite feedback. Not intended for those under 18, any similarity to real life persons is an accident, and don't steal my work. Enjoy!
PS: The first few chapters will have no sex, so if you want steamy right away go elsewhere.
Sincerely,
Beatrice
*****
ONE
I hear jazz music from a piano wafting down a corridor through the heavy darkness. An angelic voice is singing, though I can't make out the words. The stars, for a moment, look bright as spotlights through the transparent ceiling of the room. I hear a whispered conversation, but the only word I can make out is "never".
I must find out what is going on, see what is happening in my formerly logical world. It's massively important.
I get out of bed, put on my slippers, slip on my dressing gown and tie it around me, and then I remember that I've never owned a dressing gown. It is a soft grey, with pink trim around the edges. I'm quaking with urgency though, and there's no time to ponder the contents of my wardrobe.
I walk down the stairs, the dull ordinary stairs, but it feels like they go on forever. The music has disappeared, and I wish it hadn't. It comforted me, somehow.
The stairs end and I am walking through a cloudbank. This lasts a moment, until it is disrupted by the music again. It's a loud piano playing what sounds like a funeral march. And then a chilling laugh echoes in my head. I'm pretty sure it's a man's laugh.
"Never, never! You must be joking." It's a woman's voice this time. Her speech is lovely and lilting, and I'm almost certain she was the singer.
"WHAT ARE YOU DOING OUT OF BED?!"
I start. I was sleepwalking again, and there is nothing odd, mysterious, magical, or frightening in front of me. It's just Aunt Liza in a bad mood.
"Go back to your room, Charlotte," she says in a much gentler voice, as she wraps a warm cloud-like shawl around me and guides me back to my room.
***
I never did anything in my sleep until I was ten. I vividly remember the first time it happened, for good reason. I was dreaming that I was at a ball dancing the night away, when I heard a shriek and woke up to find I had nearly walked off the roof. The second time did not come until I was thirteen, and only I knew about that one,... until I fell ill because of standing in the pouring rain.
The response of my family was to make sure I couldn't harm myself or wander into the street, and then pretend it never happened for over a decade. This only made it worse for me: I suffered through nights where I didn't dare close my eyes, out of fear that I would harm someone in my sleep (I never did). My social life was restricted as a child, and even as an adult to a lesser degree (I insisted on going to a local college when the time came so I could sleep at home). It became difficult after a while to focus on my studies or my work, and I was terrified of letting anyone get too physically close.
At this point, my family couldn't pretend this was a little inconvenience I would grow out of, so when I finally decided to find a cure, they were supportive. I went to everyone and tried everything, but it all failed spectacularly. The doctors I visited gave me pills that didn't work, and the therapist I went to turned out to be nothing more than a human whirlpool of quack hypotheses.
The morning after the dream, I was reading the newspaper over warm coffee and a pungent garlic bagel, and the following ad leapt out at me:
ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM STRANGE DREAMS? ARE THEY ENCROACHING OUT YOUR DAY-TO-DAY LIFE?
Then visit Ella HelΓΆise Perot, psychic, 4 Rue de La Chat.
That was how I found myself on the doorstep of Ella Perot, a well-known psychic (or con artist, depending on who you asked). The building was tall white brick with tall, pointed gothic windows. It was about five in the evening on A slightly warm and humid day, just as the sun was sliding out of sight. The light was turning pink, and I was being dive-bombed by blackflies.
As I stood there, I thought I saw a shadowy figure disappear behind the house.
"Hello?" I called out. "Miss Perot? Is that you?"
Nothing.