outside the door. No knock. I didnât hear any footsteps. Itâs just a feeling. But itâs strong. I think someoneâs right outside the door. Are they listening?
I donât move. I donât hear anything. I step closer to the door and slowly put my hand on the door handle. I wait another moment, the handle in my hand, and then I fling the door open. Thereâs no one there. Only my slippers, which I left outside before entering. Iâm not sure why.
I should say Jakeâs slippers. The ones he lent me. I thought Iâd left them facing toward the bathroom. But now theyâre facing out, toward the hall. I canât be sure. I must have left them like that. It must have been me.
I leave the door open but step back toward the sink. I run the tap to wash the bits of dead fly away. A drop of red blood lands in the sink. And another. I catch sight of my nose upside down in the reflection of the faucet. Itâs bleeding. I grab a piece of tissue, ball it up, and press it to my face. Why is my nose bleeding?
I havenât had a nosebleed in years.
I LEAVE THE BATHROOM AND head down the hall. I pass a door that must be for the basement. Itâs open. A narrow, steep staircase leads down. I stop and put my hand against the open door. The slightestmovement, in either direction, causes it to creak. The hinges need grease. On the landing is a small frayed carpet leading to the wooden steps.
From the kitchen, I hear the sound of dishes being washed and conversation. Jake is in there with his parents. I donât feel the need to rush back. Iâll give him some time alone with them.
I canât see much from the top of the stairs. Itâs dark down there. I can hear something coming from the basement, though. I walk forward. I see a white string hanging to my right as I pass through the door. I pull it and a single bulb buzzes on. I hear the sound from below more clearly now. A dull creak, sharper, higher pitched than the hinges. A hushed, whiny, repetitive grind.
Iâm curious to see the basement. Jake said his parents donât use it. So whatâs down there? Whatâs making that sound? The water heater?
The stairs are uneven and precarious. Thereâs no banister. I see a trapdoor made of floorboards is held open on the right side with a metal clip. The stairs would be hidden under the trapdoor when itâs closed. There are scratches, like the scratches on the door in the living room, all over the trapdoor. I run my fingers over them. They arenât very deep. But they look frantic.
I start down. I feel like Iâm entering a sailboatâs lower deck. Without a banister, I use the wall as a guide.
At the bottom I step onto a large slab of concrete. Itâs atop the gravel floor. There isnât much room down here. The beamed ceiling is low. Ahead of me are several shelves holding brown cardboard boxes. Old, damp, stained, and fragile. Lots of dust, dirt.Rows and rows of boxes on shelves. Thereâs so much locked away down here, under the trapdoor. Buried. âWe donât use itâ is what Jake said. âThereâs nothing down there.â Not totally true. Not true at all.
I turn around. Behind me, past the stairs, I see the furnace, a hot water tank, and an electrical panel. Thereâs something else, a piece of equipment. Itâs old, rusty, not operational. Iâm not sure what it is or was.
This room really is little more than a hole in the ground. Probably normal for such an old farmhouse. I imagine it floods in spring. The walls are made of dirt and large hunks of bedrock. They arenât really walls the same way the floor isnât really a floor. No bar or pool table. No table tennis. A few seconds here alone would terrify any kid. Thereâs a smell, too. I donât know what it is. Dank. Uncirculated air. Mold. Rot. What am I doing down here?
Iâm about to head back up when, at the far end of the room, just beyond
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