Copyright Oggbashan October 2020
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
The ghosts in this story are like Harry Potter's Theastrals -- audible, visible and tangible to those who have lost a loved one.
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I wanted a city centre flat. Although I have a reasonable income, it is erratic because I am self-employed. I couldn't get a large enough mortgage to afford an existing flat. But there was a former garment factory above three shops that had planning permission to convert to residential. It was in a poor state of repair, roughly patched after it had been hit by a bomb in the 1940 blitz.
About three months ago both my parents had died within a week of each other. I had inherited as their only child but I would far rather have had my parents alive. I could afford to buy it outright and my income would mean I could have it repaired and converted. When fixed it would be a large three bedroom flat very close to the city centre, with a back yard and off-street parking for three cars. In that location, parking would be very valuable. I could live and work from there.
But the estate agent insisted that I had to know that the factory building was haunted. I couldn't abort the purchase if the ghosts were a problem. The haunting would be written into the purchase documentation. I wasn't really concerned about ghosts. My parents still seemed to be with me, sometimes appearing at the edges of my vision and I heard them in my head.
Apparently the factory had been a sweatshop producing Indian women's clothing in 1940. At the time there were very few manufacturers of Indian clothing in the UK and it had been operating three shifts for seven days a week. The night that the bomb hit there had been only four women at work. More would have arrived at midnight but at half-past eleven the earlier shift had left and the next shift hadn't arrived. The four women were working overtime. They had been killed outright by the blast.
The four women were supposed to haunt the building. Unlike many ghosts they weren't normally seen. All four had been strong-willed women who had run their husbands. They resented any man visiting them at work, even the factory's owner.
If he, or any man, interrupted their work, they would pounce on him and wrap him up in sarees until he was just a silk-sheathed bundle, gagged into silence and not released until the end of their shift. The owner had taken to avoiding the time that the four women would be their own, only coming when they were with the rest of their colleagues.
As ghosts, if any man was in the former factory during what would have been their overtime, i.e. after nine pm and before midnight he would find that four ghostly women would wrap him in sarees, gag him with multiple scarves, and leave him lying on the floor until after midnight when his bonds would vanish.
I was impatient to move in. My business was running accounting software for a number of small businesses based in the city. Until the builders had finished their basic work, I renting a flat in a suburb twenty miles away, commuting and paying an exorbitant sum for a rabbit hutch of an office in the city. They had to replace the roof, roughly patched in the late 1940s, rewire, and install a new kitchen and bathroom before I could live on site. Once that work was done I could redecorate at a slower pace. There was a lift that wasn't operational and hadn't been for decades.
Three months after I had bought the former factory, I had a bed in the only bedroom that had been decorated and I had an office with fast broadband. It was a Wednesday evening. I had given notice on the rentals on my flat and office and although the leases on my former flat and office wouldn't end until Saturday, I had moved in early. The kitchen, family bathroom and the ensuite in my bedroom were finished. The other two bedrooms had the bare stud work for the ensuites but no fittings yet. The builders had left because the plasterwork was drying. They would return on Monday for a few more days and then I would decorate at my leisure. I had been working since noon when I had finished moving in and now I was just deleting a whole series of spam emails. I hadn't noticed the time, just after nine o'clock, a couple of hours after I had drunk my last coffee.
Suddenly a long Indian scarf wrapped around my upper body, securing me to my wheeled chair. Almost before that had been tied tight my lower face had been covered in another scarf wound around several times and knotted. A further scarf had fixed my ankles and a fourth scarf was tightening around my waist. A mass of material came over my head. I had just recognised it as a blue cotton saree petticoat when it was knotted around my neck, not tight, but tightly enough that it wouldn't pass my chin. Another petticoat came over and was tied around me above my elbows then a third around my waist. If my arms hadn't been tied with scarves already, the petticoats would have made them immobile.
Slowly many hands wound a saree around my body, pulling each layer before pushing the end into the waistband of a knotted petticoat. That saree was followed by three more until I was helplessly wrapped. I struggled but I was a securely sheathed bundle, unable to extricate myself. The wheeled chair was moved away from my computer and turned around so my back was to it. The overhead light was switched off.
Slowly I became aware of four indistinct shapes standing in front of me. As my eyes adjusted I could see four small women dressed in sarees. Each of them was just over five feet tall and slim. They seemed to be smiling at me as if they were pleased with themselves.
One of them spoke.
"Well, Malcolm, you have interrupted our work. You can stay there until we have finished and think why you bought a haunted building. You are our victim until we decide if and when to release you. Before we go, perhaps we should introduce ourselves since we are now your tenants. I'm Jiya. This..."
One of the four stepped forward.
"..is Sajni. The other two are Aashi and Charvi."
"We are pleased," Charvi said, "That you, Malcolm, are such a young man. The only man who spent the night here before you was in his sixties and decided one night of us four was too much, so he left and never came back. We hope you will stay. You might enjoy us. We'll enjoy you. But, until then, contemplate your predicament. You are wrapped and gagged by ghosts and no one will rescue you..."
They walked out of the room. I tried to struggle free but I was too effectively bound. The ties were soft but there was just too much material wrapped around me. I was aware of an exotic perfume from the scarf just below my nose. In 1940 it must have been very unusual. I seemed to hear the whirr of industrial sewing machines, the machines that were long gone.
After about a quarter of an hour my computer went into sleep mode and the display switched off. The glow from that had been the only light in the room and now I was in darkness. I tried to release myself again but failed. I resigned myself to waiting until they returned. I dozed, too aware that I was helplessly wrapped in sarees.
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Much later I was listening in the darkness. I became aware of the soft sound of sandals on a bare floor. Bare floor? Except for the incomplete bedrooms I had carpet everywhere. The sound stopped and then I heard the sandals in the family bathroom and kitchen. I was barely aware of four swathed shapes standing in front of me. My eyes blinked as the light switched on. Unlike before the four women appeared almost solid, with a faint shimmer as if they were holograms, not real people.